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INSIDE: The hunt is on for Easter eggs.

PAGE 6A

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

PAIN, PROFIT FLOW FROM CALIFORNIA DROUGHT PAGE 1B

Wyden
pushes
wildfire
funding
Payments for
counties also
have his support
By Bill Theobald
USA Today

WASHINGTON Congress is
making progress on two issues
of special importance to the
West: fighting wildfires and
providing funding to counties
with large chunks of federally
owned land.
And on the latter, thousands
of counties and school districts
that were receiving funding
through the expired Secure Rural Schools program could see a
quick injection of federal funds
after Congress returns April 13
from its two-week spring break.
On wildfires, Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, and Mike Crapo,
R-Idaho, joined before the recess to attach a provision to the
Senate budget resolution that
should ease the way for a new
funding mechanism for fighting the most severe wildfires.
Under
the
new plan, funding for these
fires would be
treated the same
as other disasWyden
ters such as hurricanes.
This structure would reduce
what is known as fire borrowing, where the Forest Service
and the Department of Interior
raid funds to fight fires with
money that would have been
used to help reduce the risk and
severity of fires. Since 2002, the
agencies have exceeded their
budgets for fighting fires 11
times.
The Senate bill that outlines
the new system, called the Wildfire Disaster Funding Act, is
sponsored by Wyden. It has 12
co-sponsors, including Oregons
other Democratic senator, Jeff
Merkley; Colorados Michael
Bennett, a Democrat, and Cory
Gardner, a Republican; and
Californias Dianne Feinstein, a
Democrat.
The House version of the bill,
sponsored by Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, already has 65 cosponsors evenly split between
the parties. They include the entire Oregon House delegation;
Reps. Raul Grijalva and Kyr-

Hayes as FLO
What emails tell us about First Lady of Oregon
MORE ONLINE

By Hannah Hoffman
Statesman Journal

For all the headlines she has


made, Cylvia Hayes has been largely unknown to Oregonians.
She stood beside former Gov.
John Kitzhaber at two inaugurations
and made waves during his second
campaign as secrets from her past
came to life. She was known for her
interest in policies on poverty and
green energy. Her consulting company, 3E Strategies, was infamous
for its contracts with the state of
Oregon and some of Kitzhabers
colleagues.

Read previous stories about Cylvia Hayes


at StatesmanJournal.com

For all that, it has never been


clear what kind of person she is
who she is behind the public persona.
The 94,000 emails released Friday by Gov. Kate Browns office
begin to paint a picture of Kitzhabers fiancee. Statesman Journal
reporters have examined a small
percentage of the documents, but
they show some aspects of Hayes
that previously could only be

guessed at.
The records belong to Hayes
three personal email accounts, and
they are all correspondence with
her colleagues in Kitzhabers office.
Some of the details contained
within them are simply colorful bits
and pieces.
Hayes referred to herself as
FLO First Lady of Oregon. She
often signed off her emails with,
Peace. She liked shows such as
Battlestar Galactica, Scandal
and Grimm.
Technology was not her strong
See EMAILS, Page 5A

From furniture repairs to Battlestar Galactica,


Hayes used state-paid staff for household duties
By Tracy Loew
Statesman Journal

Former Oregon first lady Cylvia


Hayes used her taxpayer-funded
staff to schedule meetings, book
flights and arrange talking points
related to her official duties.
Previously released documents
show she also used state-paid staff
to book travel and schedule meetings related to her private consulting business prohibited under
Oregon ethics rules.

A new release of Hayes emails


shows she used state staff to perform routine household duties, such
as sorting out cable television problems and changing her cats litter.
Arghhhh! Hayes emailed Mary
Rowinski, a state-paid assistant, at
9:14 p.m. on a Sunday night last
April. None of the channels are
showing and it says I do not (have) a
subscription to view Battlestar Gallactica (sic). This is so fricking frustrating at this point.
I have no words, Rowinski

responded.
About three weeks earlier, Hayes
had emailed Rowinski at 7:09 p.m. to
complain that she could not get
Revolution, Scandal or Grimm
at Mahonia Hall, the governors
official residence.
The day after the Battlestar
Galactica problem, Rowinski got a
response that many other Comcast
customers would envy: The company issued a refund and an apology.
See HAYES, Page 5A

See WYDEN, Page 4A

55 HIGH

37 LOW

2014

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2015
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2A

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

THAT WAS THE WEEK THAT WAS

NEWS QUIZ

Drug spending, Amtrak and education budgets


1. Drug prices have been going up for a long time. However, during 2014,
drug spending saw its largest annual increase since 2003. How much did the
average spending on prescription drugs rise last year?
A. 9.4 percent
B. 10.3 percent
C. 13.1 percent
D. 14.6 percent
2. Columnist Victor Panichkul wants you to extend your culinary comfort
zone. To help you along, he offered a look at six foods you should consider
on your next shopping trip as a substitute for a more common food. What
did he recommend as an alternative to ground beef?
A. Ground tofu
B. Ground goat
C. Ground buffalo
D. Ground elk
3. The Oregon Department of Transportation might now have enough money to fund the Amtrak line between Portland and Eugene. How much will it
cost to cover the route during the 2015-17 biennium?
A. $5.2 million
B. $10.4 million
C. $17.6 million
D. $28.1 million
4. On Monday, some of musics most influential artists including Beyonce, Jay Z
and Madonna held a press conference
to announce a new music streaming
service (which has actually been
around for a while). What is the
name of the service?
A. Thump
B. Noise
C. Tidal
D. Pump
5. A public hearing was held Wednesday morning at the Capitol on
expanding the background checks for gun purchases. On Thursday, Sen.
Kim Thatcher, R-Keizer, proposed a different solution to ensure that felons
are not able to purchase guns. What did she purpose?
A. Tattooing the letter F on the right index finger of all felons
B. Requiring all gun purchasers to swear they are not felons before buying a
weapon
C. Retinal eye scans to compare against a new database of convicted felons
D. Marking the drivers licenses, permits and identification cards of felons to
reflect their felon status
6. The Willamette Queen was pulled onto dry land this week to allow inspectors to look under the vessel. How much does the sternwheeler weigh?
A. 86 tons
B. 103 tons
C. 94 tons
D. 53 tons
7. The Oregon House of Representatives passed a K-12 education budget
this week along a 35-25 party-line vote. The budget includes a 9 percent
increase. How much was the budget that was passed?
A. $9.34 billion
B. $7.255 billion
C. $6.892 billion
D. $10.239 billion
8. The Salem Police Department announced the debut of a new tool to report crimes. What is the new system?
A. Blue and red boxes will be placed around the city with forms to fill out
B. Integration with Siri so all you have to do is say Siri, I need to report a
crime and you are taken to a Salem police voice mailbox
C. A website to report non-emergency crimes that do not require an officer
response
D. Personalized flood lights: You can purchase and register your own signal
design with the department and turn on when you have a crime to report
9. John Stewart announced a few weeks ago
that he was leaving The Daily Show at
some point this year. This week, Comedy
Central announced his replacement. Who is
it?
A. Justin Bieber
B. Will Ferrell
C. Trevor Noah
D. Kathy Griffin
10. On Friday, Gov. Kate Brown released 94,000 of Cylvia Hayes emails, consisting of 330,000 pages. Deep inside these pages, Hayes revealed her affection for several TV shows. Which of these shows is on her want-to watch
list?
A. Real Housewives of D.C.
B. The Following
C. Battlestar Galactica
B. Glee
Scoring guide: 10 correct: Expert; 7-9 correct: Advanced; 4-6 correct: Intermediate; 2-3 correct: Rookie; 0-1 correct: Newbie.
Answers: 1. (C); 2. (C); 3. (D); 4. (C); 5. (D); 6. (A); 7. (B); 8. (C); 9. (C); 10. (C)

StatesmanJournal.com

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StatesmanJournal.com

LOCAL FIRST

How to become an urban farmer


Classes teach
both old pros
and first-timers

Nicole Barbuch
leaves the urban
farmer class at
Pringle Creek
Community on
March 14 with
pots already
planted with
seeds.

Cindy Ulshafer
Special to the Statesman Journal

Both first-time sowers and


veteran gardeners signed up to
attend a series of urban farmer
classes being held at Pringle
Creek Community. Under the
tutelage of Colleen Owen, who
is the gardener and beekeeper
of the community, students took
a class on March 14 focused on
collecting and starting seeds.
The class began inside the
community center Painters
Hal where Owen talked about
seed choices. Use the seed catalogs as references to learn
about plants you are considering, she suggested. Different
plants thrive in different climates. If you have seeds remaining from past seasons,
even three years old, theres a
good chance they will still
sprout. Because the students
will have access to the community garden on the property and
be there frequently, Owen
urged them to get acquainted.
We want people to talk to
each other, she said.
Dennis Ulrich shared a recycling tip with the class: Use toilet paper rolls, scoring halfway
up the sides and folding the
flaps under to form the bottom
like a small pot. Stuff a bit of paper towel in the bottom, fill with
dirt, and plant seeds. Worms
will like the material as it
breaks down as well as keeping
the plant roots intact, he said.
I love the little hints from
everybody. Ive had a garden
for years, said Eileen Harder,
but she was gleaning any bit of
new information that would
help her plants grow better.
Students picked through
boxes of donated flower and
vegetable seeds from Botanical
Interests, Territorial Seed Company and Ferry-Morse. They
were even able to find some
heirloom organic seeds among
the packets. Students had also
brought their own seeds.
The class then moved outside to one of the restored Lord
& Burnham glasshouses, built
in the 1930s. The greenhouses
are used by Pringle Creek residents and are available to the
students while their seeds germinate in the warmth and sun

PHOTOS BY CINDY
ULSHAFER / SPECIAL
TO THE STATESMAN
JOURNAL

Shelley Joyce, clockwise from front left, Larry Weaver, September Hawks,
Annette James and Madeline Osborne share a bench during the class.

Eileen Harder, seated, and Meagan McFarland listen to teacher Colleen


Own during the urban farmer class at Pringle Creek Community.

afforded by the glass roofs.


Owen told the participants they
could plant seeds and leave
them there, or they could take
them home. The students
helped themselves to small
pots, filling them with a soil
mixture from a wheelbarrow.
Owen said her favorite soil contains compost, peat, perlite and
natural fertilizer with minerals.
Vanda Baughman was start-

beets, which she was planting at


the time. You can eat the
greens and then the whole
thing, said Osborne as they
planted seeds elbow to elbow.
Kale, carrots, cucumber,
eggplant and tomatoes were in
September Hawks seed packets. She planned to return for
the next class about composting
and soil. Meanwhile, the students are responsible for keep-

ing late-producing crops early


peppers, tomatoes, and winter squash that need a longer
growing season. She poked
seeds carefully into the dirt.
Sustainable gardening is part
of our future, she stated to her
bench mate Shelley Joyce.
Madeline Osborne mentored
Annette James, giving the firsttime gardener tips about planting and sharing the benefits of

Wyden

Are interest rates


going to drop?
Probably not.
Will your kitchen
remodel itself?
Definitely not.

3.99%

APR ( and

up ) on Home Equity Loans.

With rates at 60-year lows, you can remodel your


kitchen for as little as $249/month. Apply now, before
rates go up. Call 877-888-3650 to get started or visit
key.com/HomeEquity101. Turn to Key

Your actual APR and payment amount will vary based on your credit qualications, loan amount, term, occupancy, lien
position, collateral and whether or not you are eligible for and/or choose to take advantage of the available discounts.
Renance transactions that exceed 100% of your current KeyBank debt may be eligible for this offer. Subject to credit
approval. Application must be submitted by 6/30/15 and loan must be booked by 7/31/15. The stated APR includes a
waiver of $125.00 origination fee if you have a Key Privilege Select Checking Account at the time of application. The APR
will be adjusted to include the $125.00 origination fee otherwise. It also includes a 0.25% rate discount for choosing
automatic deduction of payments from a KeyBank checking or savings account. The APR is based on a loan amount
of $40,000.00, with a 240-month term and a monthly payment of $242.18. The payment example does not include
amounts for taxes and premiums for required insurance. Hazard and (if applicable) ood insurance are required on the real
property securing the loan. Closing cost waiver applies on loan applications of $250,000.00 or less. NY loans
over $250,000.00 pay mortgage tax ranging from $0.50 to $2.80 per $100.00 total loan amount. Rate data
sourced from federalreserve.gov/releases/h15/data.htm. 2015 KeyCorp. KeyBank is Member FDIC.
25

Continued from Page 1A

sten Sinema, both D-Ariz.; Matt Salmon,


R-Ariz.; Dina Titus, D-Nev.; Mark Amodei, R-Nev.; and Devin Nunes, R-Calif.
During the last Congress, the House
version of the bill had 140 co-sponsors,
and 236 conservation, recreation, timber,
tribal and other organizations signed a
letter supporting the measure.
Americans across the West whose
homes and lives are threatened by massive wildfires every year will tell you
wildfires are no less destructive or devastating than hurricanes, tornadoes and
floods, Wyden said. Yet no other agencies are required to pay for natural disasters out of their regular budgets.
He said during floor debate on the budget plan that the drought means we
could literally have enormous fires
what could be virtual infernos
throughout the West this summer.
The Senate budget resolution, which
was approved 52-46, also includes a provision that would pave the way for reducing hazardous fuel and other steps to improve the health of forests.
We believe that thinning our forests
is one of the best ways to control the ballooning costs of fighting wildfires, Republican Sens. John McCain and Jeff
Flake of Arizona said in a joint statement.
Some conservation groups, however,
would not support language in the provision that ties forest cleanup with increasing timber production on federal lands,
said Alan Rowsome, senior director of
government relations for lands at The
Wilderness Society.
The House budget resolution does not
include language about wildfires. And
Rowsome said a real sign of progress will
be if wildfire provisions end up in a compromise budget resolution the House and
Senate will attempt to negotiate.
Wyden is also behind language in the
Senate budget resolution that would extend the Payment in Lieu of Taxes and the
Secure Rural Schools programs.
PILT provides federal payments to local governments to help offset losses in
property taxes in counties with large
swaths of federal land within their
boundaries. Funding for the program expires Sept. 30.
A total of $442 million in PILT funds
will be distributed in June, up from $425
million in 2014.
PILT is also not part of the Housepassed 2016 budget resolution, but its
proponents are optimistic because a bipartisan group of more than 100 House
members sent a letter to leadership urging full funding for the program.
Democratic Reps. Jared Polis of Colorado and Ann Kirkpatrick of Arizona

ing their seeds moist during


germination. I heard two women making plans to take turns
watering each others plots.
I think its working really
great, and people are interacting, said Owen.
Cindy Ulshafer is a freelance
writer covering events in South
Salem. Contact her at
c_ulshafer@yahoo.com to be
considered for coverage.

FEDERAL PAYMENTS
Oregon counties received these amounts in
2014 under the Payments in Lieu of Taxes
program. Amounts are expected to increase
this year.
BAKER
BENTON
CLACKAMAS
CLATSOP
COLUMBIA
COOS
CROOK
CURRY
DESCHUTES
DOUGLAS
GILLIAM
GRANT
HARNEY
HOOD RIVER
JACKSON
JEFFERSON
JOSEPHINE
KLAMATH
LAKE
LANE
LINCOLN
LINN
MALHEUR
MARION
MORROW
MULTNOMAH
POLK
SHERMAN
TILLAMOOK
UMATILLA
UNION
WALLOWA
WASCO
WASHINGTON
WHEELER
YAMHILL

$784,574
$107,355
$570,787
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were among the lead authors of the letter.


The Secure Rural Schools program,
which expired in 2014, provided money to
counties and schools where there is a lot
of federally owned forest land.
On its last day before the recess, the
House included approval for SRS funding for 2014 and 2015 in a bill that changed
the formula for how doctors are reimbursed by Medicare.
Brian Namey, a spokesman for the National Association of Counties, said an extension would provide a total of about
$500 million to 720 counties and 4,000
school districts in 41 states.
wtheobal@gannett.com or follow on Twitter
@BillTheobald

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

5A

Oregon considers increasing speed limit


Associated Press

SALEM Oregonians could


begin flying along certain highways at 75 mph after lawmakers heard testimony Friday on a
bill upping speed limits from 65
mph on interstate highways.
Under the proposal, passenger cars would be able to go 10
mph faster than the current limit. It also ups the speed limit on
state highways to 65 mph. Certain vehicles, such as trucks and
school busses, would have to

stick to the 55-mph limit on interstate and state highways.


Republican state Rep. Cliff
Bentz of Ontario sponsored the
bill. Safety improvements to vehicles, such as air bags, GPS
systems and seatbelts, mean the
current speed limits are no
longer as necessary to keep
drivers safe, he said. He also
noted motorists used to be able
to drive along at 75 mph before
the speed limits were dropped
to save gas in the early 1970s.
The problem is that at one

time we did drive at 75 mph way


before the cars were as safe as
they are now and the state survived, Bentz said. He also noted boosting the speed limit
could help bring the state closer
together by allowing people living in rural areas to travel faster.
Troy Costales, an administrator at the state Department
of Transportation, cautioned
lawmakers at the public hearing that increasing the speed
limit might lead to more crash-

es and fatalities.
While we can change the
laws of man, we cant change
the laws of nature. When speed
goes up for every 10 miles an
hour it doubles the energy released when something happens. So a small mistake becomes a big mistake at the higher speeds, Costales said.
The Oregon Speed Zone Review Panel did a review of
speed limits on interstate highways in 2004, Costales said, after a law allowed the agency to

Emails
Continued from Page 1A

suit.
Emails show Hayes requesting training on Facebook, referencing laptop meltdowns
and fighting her Comcast service. (She also appeared to
have some trouble operating
the remote for the Mahonia
Hall fireplace.)
She had to be told where to
find a photo center when she
realized the governors staff
photographer could not take
her passport photo.
She harbored a strong admiration for Bill and Hillary
Clinton.
She and Kitzhaber both
shared early aspirations toward careers in marine biology.
She could be effusive and
kind at unexpected times. For
example, in an email from
April 2014, she responded to a
memo from energy policy
adviser Margi Hoffmann with
one line: Pure magic Ms.
Hoffmann!
The emails also show a
woman who could be self-aggrandizing and self-important.
In April 2014, she emailed
her assistant, Mary Rowinski,
and essentially invited herself
to one of Kitzhabers meetings.
Please work on setting a
meeting with me and Sean
Robbins, the new Director of
Business Oregon. It may be
that something is in the works
for a meeting with him and
Gov so I could work into that
one. If not, Id like a separate
meeting with him. Anytime in
the next month would be fine,
Hayes wrote.
Kitzhabers secretary, Jan
Murdock, replied: He starts
with Business Oregon on May
1st. I am going to be setting up
a time for the Governor to
meet with Sean, so Ill coordinate so that the three of them
can meet at the same time.
At other times, Hayes clearly believed she and Kitzhaber
should have some import for
national-level politicians.
In August 2012, she asked
then-Chief of Staff Curtis Robinhold about bringing the Clintons to Oregon for unspecified
reasons. (Kitzhaber was not
campaigning that year.)
Robinhold replied:
You may recall that at the
time of our previous conversation I asked Dan (Carol) to look
into options for getting him out
here. Dan talked to the Clinton
team, who suggested that if we
want to get him out here in any
form (other than on an Obama
campaign swing, which is out
of our hands) it would likely

Hayes
Continued from Page 1A

Please let the First Lady


know that we are sorry for the
inconvenience, Comcast customer service supervisor Cin-

SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL

Cylvia Hayes, former Gov. John Kitzhabers fiancee, adopted two cats from The Humane Society.

MORE ONLINE

cost us in the range of $100k.


We would need to plan to raise
that money from non-state
sources which seemed to be
off the table for us given the
large number of other things
we have going on right now.
If you would like to revisit
the topic of raising the money,
let me know. I just dont think
it fits our mission-critical list
at this time. Im going to copy
Dan on this note and will ask
him to fill in any of the blanks
that I might have missed on
the costs associated with traveling Clintons.
During the same month,
Hayes had demands while
preparing for a trip to Washington, D.C.
Can you help me set up my
upcoming DC trip? In addition
to the meetings with JK that I
would like to attend (Sec. of
Interior, etc.) Id like to set
meetings with the following:
USDA Undersecretary Kevin
Concannon, Lucy Caluetti
(Scott Nelson contact), and a
couple of others that I will
send along, she wrote to Rowinski.
In April 2014, Hayes asked
Carol to use his DC connec-

tions to find a way for our


NW team to garner an invitation to an event hosted by
U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry regarding ocean health.
In an email from July 2012,
she reacted badly when she
found out the audience at a
Portland Timbers soccer game
would not be what she had
anticipated.
This has been a screwy
event. I was never told it was a
second string game. I was told
they expected a crowd of at
least 20,000. I think the Food
Bank thinks that this will become an ongoing event. Id like
to see it handled differently if
so, she wrote to Murdock.
Repeatedly, records show
Hayes as someone difficult to
schedule for.
She often peppered Rowinski with questions about meetings, and she often was unavailable when others needed
her.
In an exchange from April
2014, natural resources adviser
Gabriela Goldfarb asked for
time to speak with Hayes,
proposing blocks of time about
an hour long.
In response, Hayes wrote, I

could do 3:15 for 15 minutes.


Lets try for another time,
Goldfarb said.
During the same month,
Hoffmann tried to include
Hayes in a call that Hoffmann
thought was scheduled ahead
of time.
I had been informed that
you both knew I could not
make the next couple of weeks
meeting at this time but that I
probably could after that,
Hayes said.
They are notable, in part,
for what they do not contain.
There are few examples in
the emails the Statesman Journal has examined so far of
Hayes discussing policy, floating ideas or debating concepts.
She did not engage in many
substantial conversations via
email, nor did she send notes
or follow-up comments after
meetings.
She was often copied on
memos and policy briefings,
but Hayes apparently offered
her own quite rarely.
This does not appear to fit
with the role Hayes tried to
create for herself. She pushed
to be included in senior staff
meetings, over the objections
of former Chief of Staff Robinhold, and she sometimes
spoke on behalf of the Kitzhaber administration.
However, with some excep-

dy Cook wrote Rowinski.


During that time, Rowinski
also spent time helping furnish
Mahonia Hall:
I would be open to a round
table for sure, Hayes wrote
Rowinski on March 19, 2014.
Might be nice to have a cool
round rug and a round table.

Definitely open to other options.


She took on pet duty:
Will you please check cat
boxes and food next week?
Thanks so much! Hayes wrote
Rowinski on March 16, 2014.
And Rowinski began overseeing newspaper starts and

stops at the home:


I hope this isnt too much
of a pain Hayes wrote Rowinski on April 1, 2014. I will
only do this when I am going to
be at or away from Mahonia
for a decent chunk of time.
Also that month, Rowinksi
was charged with arranging to

Read previous stories about Cylvia Hayes at StatesmanJournal.com

establish speeds up to 70 mph


for passenger vehicles and 65
mph for trucks on interstate
highways. They decided the
safety of drivers outweighed
any benefit that came with raising the speed limit.
This isnt the first effort to
increase speed limits. In 2011,
two Republicans tried to amend
legislation to raise the speed
limit in rural Oregon interstates
to 75 mph. Former Gov. John
Kitzhaber also vetoed a 1999 attempt to raise the speed limit.

tions in energy policy, she


seemed not to engage in substantive policy conversations.
In fact, on at least one occasion, it appears clear that Chief
of Staff Mike Bonetto, who
replaced Robinhold in 2014,
wanted Hayes to contribute
more to the senior staff conversations.
Staffer Grace Roth wrote to
Hayes, Greetings. Just a
friendly reminder that weekly
reports are due on Mondays a
9:00am if possible. That allows
me time to compile and Mike
to review before getting out at
the end of the day.
At other times, Hayes
seemed to pass off work to
Rowinski and Murdock.
She asked Rowinski to write
a letter of recommendation for
a graduate student in China,
who had asked Hayes for one.
She said she would fill in details later and handed off the
students resume and information to her secretary.
Hayes also asked Rowinski
to create handouts and a Power
Point presentation that she
would present at a CareOregon
event in May 2014.
Also absent from the emails
the Statesman Journal has
examined so far are the personal moments co-workers
often share. She appeared not
to share funny stories, weekend plans or snide remarks
about dull meetings or even to
make lunch plans with anyone
in Kitzhabers office.
Only one exchange shows a
more personal side.
An email string in August
2012 between Hayes and former Gov. Ted Kulongoskis
wife, Mary Oberst, shows the
two women arranging to have
coffee or lunch to catch up
after losing touch.
Hi Cylvia, I hope youre
having a good summer. Youve
crossed my mind several times
in the last two weeks, for no
particular reason, so I figured
Id better just check in and
make sure youre OK. OK?
Oberst wrote.
In a telling moment, Hayes
replied, clearly referencing a
past conversation between the
two women and hinting at the
difficulty she had adjusting to
her role in Kitzhabers world.
I am doing great so, so
much better than when we last
spoke. I now have my feet
under me and feel like I am
being very well used in this
strange (I trust you know what
I mean) position, Hayes said.
It is just delightful to know
that you have been thinking of
me. Thanks so much for that.
hhoffman@statesmanjournal.com,
(503) 399-6719 or follow at
twitter.com/HannahKHoffman

have Hayes master bedroom


fireplace serviced, the emails
show, and with arranging repairs for two upholstered
chairs in the room.
tloew@statesmanjournal.com,
(503) 399-6779 or follow at
Twitter.com/SJWatchdog

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6A

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

THE HUNT IS ON FOR EASTER EGGS


By Alexa Armstrong

Above:
Children look
for eggs
during an
Easter egg
hunt Saturday
at the Historic
Deepwood
Estate in
Salem.
Left: Knowlen
McCullough, 3,
participates in
Saturdays
Easter egg
hunt at the
Historic
Deepwood
Estate.

Statesman Journal

Chaos ensued at the Historic Deepwood Estate as


children dashed around the garden with one thing on
their minds: candy.
Deepwood was one of several Easter egg hunts that
took place Saturday, including the egg hunt at Salems
Riverfront Carousel, the The Salvation Army Ray &
Joan Kroc Corps Community Centers Easter Egg Hunt
that led kids on a wild goose chase for more than 10,000
eggs, and the second annual Easter Egg Hunt and Community Event at Belcrest Memorial Park.
If you missed Saturdays hunts, there will be plenty
more Sunday.
Connection Life Church
Where: 255 College Drive NW, Salem
When: 10 to 11:30 a.m.
Ages: 10 and younger
Prince of Peace Church
Where: 1525 Glen Creek Road NW, Salem
When: following the 10:45 a.m. service
Light House Farm Sanctuary
Where: 36831 Richardson Gap Road, Scio
When: 1 to 4 p.m.
What: Easter egg hunt, farm animal feeding

PHOTOS BY
DANIELLE
PETERSON /
STATESMAN
JOURNAL

aarmstrong@statesmanjournal.com; (503) 399-6745 or


follow on Twitter at @AlexaArletta

FREE CLASSES FOR FAMILY MEMBERS & CAREGIVERS

Children fill
their baskets
with colorful
eggs during
an Easter
egg hunt
Saturday at
the Historic
Deepwood
Estate.

If youre caring for someone


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Oregon Care Partners is
a collaboration of aging
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Our free classes are for:
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25

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Our Oregon
g

LIVING TOM
MCCALL'S LEGACY

Bees relocated to Ashland


Colony of 40,000
to 50,000 moved
in Locust trunk
Tony Boom
Ashland Daily Tidings

ASHLAND From 40,000 to


50,000 bees have kept their old
home but are in a new location.
College of the MelissaeCenter
for Sacred Beekeeping moved a
10-foot long, up to one-ton Locust
trunk that houses the colony
from Talent to Jackson Wellsprings on the north side of Ashland and planted it upright Tuesday.
A three-and-one-half hour
long operation from pickup to installation in the ground was undertaken slowly. Backhoe operator Tony Corsini, a beekeeper,
changed strategies as required,
re-rigging the trunk at Wellsprings when a first attempt to
raise it ran into troubles.
Thats the most delicate
thing I have ever done with a
backhoe. Ive never done anything that sensitive, said Corsini, who has worked in construction and landscaping. I just
wanted to make sure we could

get it upright before dark.


Tuesdays operation was the
largest colony move ever undertaken by Laura Ferguson, college director. The college moved
a two and one-half foot long colony out of a tree in Talent in September and installed a 300pound trunk with colony nearby
a couple weeks ago at its Wellsprings campus.
They are a survivor colony
because they havent received
any treatment for bee fungus.
We want the fresh genetics that
are able to survive, said Ferguson. Colonies that are treated
have been shown to be less fertile and shorter-lived, she said.
The colony is a survivor in another sense also.
The bees had been in the tree
at Marie and Dick Martins home
in the 6300 block of Colver Road
for five years, but several safety
concerns prompted their removal.
I have little ones, great
grandchildren. I was afraid they
would swarm and sting them,
said Marie Martin.
The tree was also rotting
the bees were in a hollow cavity
in the base and was a danger to
the house. The tree was probably
about three-and-one-half stories
tall and was there when she
moved in 46 years ago.

Capital Press

SALEM A bill meant to encourage the construction of artificial beaver dams in Oregons
Malheur Lake drainage basin to
improve stream conditions has
divided environmental groups.
House Bill 3217 would create
a pilot project in the area
streamlining the permitting

process for these structures,


which are intended to restore
stream functions to the benefit
of the environment and landowners.
The Oregon Natural Desert
Association is supporting the
legislation but several other environmental groups came out
against it during a March 31
hearing before the House Committee on Rural Communities,

CALENDAR
THURSDAY
Luckiamute Watershed
Councils board meeting:
Participate in the discussion of
council business, 7 p.m., Monmouth Volunteer Hall, 144 S.
Warren St., Monmouth. (503)
837-0237.

FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY
Upcycle Oregon: featuring
upcycled artwork by Oregon
artists, and highlighting re-use,
reduction, and upcycling efforts
statewide, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday and noon to 4 p.m.
Saturday. Artist reception 4 to 5
p.m. Friday and an "Upcycled
Fashion" show Saturday, Oregon State Capitol, Galleria, 900
Court St. NE. Free. (971) 2085869, www.up
cycleoregon.org.

SATURDAY

ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS

Backhoe operator Tony Corsini, a beekeeper, carefully relocates a log with a


bee colony containing some 50,000 bees.

Fake beaver dam bill is divisive


Mateusz Perkowski

Land Use and Water.


Currently, landowners who
hope build artificial beaver
dams must undergo a difficult
permitting process, said Rep.
Brian Clem, D-Salem.
While they may benefit from
better forage conditions, the expense and bureacratic hurdles
prevent many landowners from
pursuing such projects, he said.

ABOUT EARTHFIX
EarthFix is a partnership of seven
public media stations in the Pacific
Northwest. Look for environmental
coverage at earthfix.opb.org. For
information, email EarthFix at
earthfix@opb.org.

earth411: Information and


Solutions for a Better Tomorrow: A family-friendly, zero
waste, educational event hosted
by the City of Salem, Oregon
and the Straub Environmental
Center. Vendors will be present
to provide information, demonstrations, and/or activities that
help community members learn
about the environment and
how to build community resilience. In addition to educational booths, there will be activities, food, and entertainment,
10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Salems Riverfront Park, Amphitheater and
south meadow, 101 Front St. NE.
$3 or 3 cans of food for MarionPolk Food Share. (503) 391-4145,
www.straubenviron
mentalcenter.org.
Marine Science Day 2015:
HMSC will open its doors for a
peek at the cutting-edge research, education and outreach
in marine sciences that makes
this marine laboratory unique.
Meet researchers from Oregon
State University and government agency partners, 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m., Hatfield Marine
Science Center, 2030 SE Marine
Science Drive, Newport. Free.
(541) 961-8113, http://hmsc.oregonstate.edu/mari
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8A

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Tools help find canyon mines


Lidar improves
public, fire safety

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25

StatesmanJournal.com

LOCAL FIRST

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Santiam Canyon mining operations of yore coupled with seasonally dry trends of recent years combine to create potential safety hazards for foresters and public safety
crews such as firefighters.
Fortunately, new marking and
mapping of abandoned mine sites in
the North Santiam Mining District
has emerged following a four-year
project using lidar (light detection
and ranging). The project is a welcome one for those who work in the
Willamette National Forest, within
which the mining district falls.
Oregon Department of Geology
and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI)
Earth Science Information Officer
Ali Ryan said the U.S. Forest Service initiated the project to inventory mine sites and features, primarily with safety issues in mind.
USFS was particularly interested in knowing where mine openings
had been closed with foam, because
it accelerates fires, Ryan said.
One historically-related bonus
that arose through the project was
an appreciation of the tenacity and
perseverance of those who once
mined the canyon.
The mountains are rugged, with
steep, densely forested terrain,
said Clark Niewendorp, industrial
minerals geologist with DOGAMI.
Prospectors had to be extremely
motivated to get in there.
A March, 1985, report issued
through the U.S. Department of Agriculture titled Little North Santiam Mining District Cultural Resource Inventory Report indicates
that initial mining in the region
dates back to 1860 with claims filed
in the Marion County Clerks Office.
The report preparer, archeologist James B. Cox Jr., noted:
Most of the available accounts
speak of the tremendous potential
of the area. This potential has never
been realized. Investment in mineral development in this area runs
into the millions of dollars, but reported production between 1880
and 1947 totalled $25,000 (Anon.,
1951).
Ryan said some mining resumed
in later years; in 1977 the Shiny
Rock Mining Corporation reopened
the Ruth Mine and development of
several other claims. Mining in the
district ceased in 1992 with the clo-

SPECIAL TO THE STAYTON MAIL

Clark Niewendorp, industrial minerals geologist with the Oregon Department of


Geology and Mineral Industries, examines the entrance of an abandoned mine in
the North Santiam Mining District.

sure of the Ruth Mine.


The decades since have seen the
hundreds of former mine features
overtaken by the regions heavy
vegetation. DOGAMIs use of lidar
to uncover these mine features has
paid huge dividends: the projects
maps reveal 226 abandoned mine
features in the district, including
mine entrances, exploration pits,
and waste rock areas; previous
mapping showed only 58 abandoned
mine features.
We can now see an incredibly
detailed image of the earths surface, Niewendorp said. Lidar imagery has real value for inventorying abandoned mine land, because it
can show mine openings that
werent well documented, or that
were even completely unknown.
Thats good news for foresters
and firefighters.
Lidar aids in the inventory and
closure of abandoned mine features
with the aim to protect public safe-

ty, said Ruth Seegar, a U.S. Forest


Service minerals geologist for
western and central Oregon and
western Washington.
Ryan said the four-year project
came together incrementally with
lidar technology providing the
foundation.
Geologists first identified likely abandoned mine features with lidar, then field (workers) verified
those features, she said. Finally
we created the inventory maps.
The safety elements go beyond
just forestry personnel.
The area is widely used for recreation, Ryan added. Oregons
had a few dry years; the combination of people and dry conditions
can lead to fire. Knowing where
mine features are helps keep firefighters safe should a fire happen.
jmuch@StatesmanJournal.com or
(503) 769-6338, cell (503) 508-8157 or
follow at twitter.com/justinmuch

Growing hemp
returns to center
stage as pot
rules change
Once outlawed, this fiber
will be allowed in 10 states
Associated Press

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25

LOVELAND, Colo. Once banned because it is a close


cousin to marijuana, hemp is coming back in Colorado
and now has its own convention, attracting international interest as a new crop for farmers struggling to
find new crops to stay afloat.
Hemp, which is fiber drawn from marijuana plants,
was outlawed in 1937, but a new Colorado law allows it.
However, farmers are still trying to find ways to get
their plants and seeds to market because federal law
still heavily regulates the industry.
Ten states went ahead and allowed the growing of
hemp. Those states are Colorado, Washington, California, Kentucky, Maine, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon,
Vermont and West Virginia.
The plants return to legitimacy could clear the way
for U.S. farmers to compete in an industry currently
dominated by China.
The expo, featuring 70 companies and organization,
is focusing on industrial hemp. Hemp contains less than
0.3 percent of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana.
Plants surpassing that amount cannot be used commercially. Over 1 percent of THC is considered potentially
intoxicating.
We have a lot of work to do to educate the public
about what hemp is and to educate the farmers interested in bringing hemp back to America. There is a lot of
interest from farmers to grow, said Morris Beegle, the
Hemp Expo coordinator.
The expo will showcase products made from hemp,
including paper, food, rope and clothing. There will also
be legal experts on hand.
The seeds cannot be transported from state to state,
said Ed Lehrburger, one of three founders of Fort Luptons PureVision Technology, a biomass processing facility with a focus on turning hemp into different usable
products.
Hemp regulations were updated in Colorado under
new rules after voters approved the use of medicinal
and recreational marijuana. Industrial hemp must be
registered and is subject to sampling for THC content.
Growing sites must be specified and those boundaries
must be maintained, the Greeley Tribune reported.
National legislation is in the works in an attempt to
exclude industrial hemp from marijuana under the
Controlled Substances Act.
The Drug Enforcement Agency still enforces federal law on Schedule 1 drug imports, which classifies
hemp among heroin, LSD, MDMA and marijuana.

S NOW
StatesmanJournal.com

Pedestrian killed
in Albany hit-and-run
A man died in a pedestrianinvolved hit and run crash on
Century Drive near Kizer Avenue in Albany sometime late
Friday or early Saturday, Oregon State Police Lt. Josh
Brooks said.
Investigators believe that a
silver compact or mid-sized
sedan was northbound on Century Drive near Kizer Avenue

By Jeff Barnard
Associated Press

West Coast fisheries


managers will likely shut
down sardine fishing this
year as numbers decline,
echoing a previous collapse that decimated a
thriving industry and increasing worries that other species might be withheld from the commercial
market.
Fishermen are resigned to not being able to
get sardines, but they
hope the Pacific Fishery
Management Council will
not be so concerned that it
sets the level for incidental catch of sardines at zero, shutting down other
fisheries, such as mackerel, anchovies and market
squid, which often swim
with sardines.
Sardines were a thriving fishery on the West
Coast from World War I
through World War II. Today, there are about 100
boats with permits to fish
on the West Coast.

GET THE LATEST


NEWS, UPDATED
THROUGHOUT THE
DAY, AT YOUR
FINGERTIPS

between 11 p.m. Friday and


7:15 a.m. Saturday, when it
struck and killed the pedestrian, Brooks said.
The State Police and the
Linn County Major Crash team
are asking for help finding the
vehicle involved. The car is
thought to have a missing passenger-side mirror and damage to its passenger-side headlight and bumper.
Anyone with information is
asked to call the Oregon State

Website: StatesmanJournal.com Mobile: Go to m.StatesmanJournal.com


iPhone & Android apps: Download free from app store Tablet: Go to tablet.StatesmanJournal.com
Mobile: Go to m.StatesmanJournal.com Twitter: @Salem_Statesman
Facebook: Facebook.com/StatesmanJournal Alerts to email inbox: Sign up at StatesmanJournal.com/newsletters

Police Northern Command


Center at (800) 452-7888.
Alexa Armstrong

Police warn public


of phone scam
The Salem Police Department is asking the public to
watch out for a phone scam in
which callers are representing
themselves as Salem Police
Chief Jerry Moore and FBI
agents.

The scammers appear to


call from numbers that show
up as US Government or
City of Salem, on caller identification systems. They inform victims that they have
won the Publishers Clearninghouse Sweepstakes, but in
order to collect the winnings,
victims must confirm their
identity by wiring $1,000 to
Mexico.
There are multiple types of
phone scams that occur on a

regular basis, Lt. Dave Okada,


spokesman for the Salem Police Department said.
Often times the suspects
will impersonate police officers.
The department suggests
looking up the phone numbers
of the agencies that appear on
caller ID, dont give out passwords or account information
and dont wire money to anyone you dont know.
Alexa Armstrong

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Residential and business burglaries: 100 Commercial St. NE, 2300


Heath St. S.
Stolen vehicles: 4300 25th Ave.
NE, 4500 43rd Ave. NE.
Traffic crashes: Friday: 4:53
p.m., 700 Edgewater St. NW;
5:34 p.m., Sunnyside and Boone
roads SE; 6:29 p.m., Center and
Commercial streets NE; 9:49
p.m., Rickey Street and Lancaster
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Final cost 1.50-37.13.
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Traffic crashes: Friday: 7:58


p.m., Lockhaven Drive and
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DALLAS
Traffic crashes: Friday: 3:35
p.m., Salem-Dallas Highway NW.

MARION COUNTY
Residential and business burglaries: 4800 Chinook Court SE, 5100
Ike Mooney Road NE.
Stolen vehicles: 7900 Cascade
Highway SE, 6200 Fiddlers Lane
SE, 100 Village East Way SE.

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Traffic crashes: Friday: 5:38


p.m., Kuebler Boulevard and
27th Avenue SE; 9:54 p.m., State
Street and Lancaster Drive SE;
Saturday: 6:03 a.m., 6300
Silverton Road NE.

MONMOUTH
Stolen vehicles: 300 Main St. W.
Traffic crashes: Saturday: 2:23
a.m., Monmouth Avenue and
Main Street; 2:49 p.m., Pacific
Highway and Clay Street.

POLK COUNTY

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Residential and business burglaries: 3500 Salem-Dallas Highway


NW.
Traffic crashes: Friday: 2:31 p.m.,
22500 Black Rock Road.

FIRE
SALEM
Reported in the 24 hours ending
at 4 p.m. Saturday:
Friday
11:22 p.m.: nonstructure fire,
1400 25th St. NE, extinguished.
Saturday
12:15 a.m.: house fire, 13th and
D streets NE, investigated.

ORIG. PRICES ARE OFFERING PRICES, AND SAVINGS MAY NOT BE BASED ON ACTUAL SALES. SOME ORIG. PRICES NOT IN EFFECT DURING THE PAST 90 DAYS. EXTRA SAVINGS IN
EFFECT THROUGH 4/7/15. Our lowest prices of the season refers to our spring season from February 1-April 20, 2015 & may be lowered as part of a clearance. *Intermediate price reductions
may have been taken. Jewelry photo may be enlarged or enhanced to show detail. Fine jewelry at select stores, log on to macys.com for locations. Almost all gemstones have been treated to
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10A

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SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

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25

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USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL

SECTION B

**

IN MONEY

IN NEWS

Capitalism with
a conscience

With clock ticking on Iran


nuke deal, 3 key hurdles

04.05.15
NOAH BERGER, BLOOMBERG

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

WHATS HAPPENING

ONLINE

Were on a real collision course


with a very dark reality.

TODAYS
MUST-READS

Dave Puglia, senior vice president


of the Western Growers Association

Traffic
cameras
create
political
furor

MATT KARTOZIAN, USA TODAY SPORTS

In Chicago, voters
may put foot down

uOpening Day:
Were there as
Cardinals and Cubs
play ball.
uOpening Day:
Full database of
MLB salaries

Aamer Madhani
@AamerISmad
USA TODAY

TODAY ON TV
ABC This Week: California
Gov. Jerry Brown,
Philadelphia Archbishop
Charles Chaput.
CBS Face the Nation:
Energy Secretary Ernest
Moniz; Sen. Lindsey
Graham, R-S.C.,
former senator Rick
Santorum, R-Pa.
CNN State of the Union:
Sen. Dianne Feinstein,
D-Calif.; religion
roundtable.
Fox News Sunday:
Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn.;
Washington, D.C.,
Archbishop Cardinal
Donald Wuerl.
NBC Meet the Press:
Louisiana Gov.
Bobby Jindal; baseball
Commissioner Rob
Manfred; Archbishop
of New York Cardinal
Timothy Dolan.
Find it all at usatoday.com
and on our free apps.

FREDERIC J. BROWN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Some California farmers are switching from growing vegetables to crops that need less water.

PAIN, PROFIT FLOW


FROM DROUGHT

California farmers, others face


challenges, huge economic hit
Elizabeth Weise
and Doyle Rice
USA TODAY

This is an edition of USA TODAY


provided for Statesman Journal. An
expanded version of USA TODAY is
available at newsstands or by
subscription, and at usatoday.com.

Find USA TODAY Sports in todays local


sports section.

USA SNAPSHOTS

Celebrating Easter
What adults say are among
their top Easter Sunday plans:

SAN FRANCISCO Californias punishing drought which led to the


rst mandatory statewide water
restrictions in state history last
week will bring more pain to
some businesses and prosperity
to others if it doesnt let up soon.
Now in its fourth year, the
drought has already left a swath
of losers from farmers and ski
areas to golf courses and wildlife
but also a few winners, as businesses and innovators nd ways
to adapt to what might be the future climate of California.
Were on a real collision
course with a very dark reality,
says Dave Puglia, senior vice
president of the Western Growers Association in Irvine, Calif., a
grower and packer trade group.

WHO GETS HURT ...


Visit familyy
and friends

57%

Cook holiday
meal

55%
51%

Attend church
Watch TV

42%

Source Prosper Insights & Analytics/


NRF survey of 6,106 adults
ANNE R. CAREY AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

The mix of crops thats traditionally grown is changing. Farmers


are plowing up elds where they
used to grow vegetables like broccoli, carrots and tomatoes to put
in nut and fruit trees, which demand less water.
Cotton has gone from 1.5 million acres to almost nothing.
Were cutting way back on rice.
The number of dairy cows is
probably going to fall by 100,000

or so, said Dan Sumner, a professor of agricultural economics at


the University of California-Davis.
The toll on the states agriculture industry will get heavier and
U.S. consumers outside California
may feel it, too, when they notice
some supermarket favorites seem
less plentiful. About half of the
fresh produce consumed in the
U.S. and one-third of the nations
organic produce is grown in the
states fertile Central Valley.
Retail price spikes are unlikely
because of the drought, however.
Only a small portion of what
shoppers pay is based on what
farmers get for their crops
shipping, handling, packaging
and marketing expenses are collectively bigger. Plus, food prices
are often set on a global scale of
supply and demand, so in a vast
world marketplace, Californias
drought may not be a big factor,
Sumner says.
Already, 17,000 jobs have been
lost in the Central Valley, says
Steve Lyle of the California Department of Food and Agriculture.
California
employed
348,900 people in agriculture in
2013.
About 1 million acres are now
idle due to the drought, according
to the University of California-Davis.

CALIFORNIA DROUGHT:
WINNERS AND LOSERS

WINNERS
Low-water use
appliance
manufacturers:
Reduce consumption
of water in homes.
Xeriscaping and
garden suppliers:
Landscaping that
reduces or eliminates
the need for water from
irrigation.
Desalination plants:
Tapping the limitless
water supply from the
Pacific.
LOSERS
Agriculture:
Thousands of jobs
lost and at least
$1.5 billion in losses.
Ski areas:
Record-low snowpack
was bad for winter
sports
Boating:
Low water levels in
lakes and reservoirs a
blow to recreation.
Source USA TODAY research
DOYLE RICE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

CHICAGO In the most contentious mayoral race Chicago has


seen in decades, there has been
plenty of debate about the citys
crushing pension debt, declining
credit rating and incumbent
Mayor Rahm Emanuels decision
to shutter 50 schools with low
enrollment.
But another issue that is gnawing at Chicagoans keeps popping
up: anger over red-light cameras.
The angst in the nations thirdlargest city, where a red-light
camera violation will set you back
$100, is hardly an anomaly. From
South Florida to Southern California, the use of red-light cameras by law enforcement agencies
has emerged as one of the most
contentious issues in local and
state politics.
In Chicago, which has the most
expansive use of red-light cameras in the country, the public
outrage over red lights has been
louder than most.

Its been
exposed for what
it really is ... a
way for the city of
Chicago to create
a slush fund.
Mark Wallace, a South Side resident
who has been hit over $1,000 in tickets

A recent Chicago Tribune/ARP


Research poll found that nearly
three out of four Chicagoans
want Emanuel to eliminate or reduce the use of the cameras,
which are used for the detection,
photographing and ning of leadfooted drivers who blow red
lights.
Emanuels opponent in Tuesdays runoff election, Cook County Commissioner Jesus Chuy
Garcia, has repeatedly hit the
mayor for what he calls the redlight ripoff and made the issue a
central part of his effort to win
the mayoral race. If elected, Garcia has vowed to eliminate their
use altogether.
The red-light camera system
here has also been dogged by
criticism from motorists and activists who say Chicagos threesecond yellow lights (the minimum time under federal law) are
too short, leaving drivers with the
choice of running through a light
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Militants vow further bloodbath in Kenya; ve arrested


Tonny Onyulo
and Doug Stanglin
USA TODAY
GARISSA , KENYA

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, speaking


only hours after militants threatened
another
bloodbath,
warned Saturday of harsh measures against anyone who assists
terrorists or helps spread radicalism, particularly Islamic religious schools and rogue imams
in mosques.
The Somalia-based militant
group al-Shabab, which has
claimed responsibility for the

killings at Garissa University


College on Thursday, warned on
Saturday that more violence was
in store for other Kenyan cities.
Kenyatta said it was time to
be honest with ourselves, about
the source of radicalism that
breeds terrorism. He ignored
claims by al-Shabab that their
attacks were in response to Kenya sending troops into Somalia
beginning in 2011 to ght
militants.
His remarks came on the heels
of an announcement by the Interior Ministry that ve people had
been arrested in connection with
the Garissa siege. Interior Minis-

A survivor of
an attack by
Islamist
gunmen
claimed by
al-Shabab on
a university
campus in
Garissa,
northern
Kenya, is
comforted
by a colleague in
Nairobi on
Saturday.
TONY KARUMBA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

try spokesman Mwenda Njoka


said on Twitter that three of the
suspects were picked up trying
to cross into Somalia.
He said the three are associates of Mohamed Mohamud,
also known as Dulyadin Gamadhere, a former teacher at a
Kenyan Madrassa Islamic school
who authorities say coordinated
the attack on Garissa University
College.
Kenyan authorities have put a
$220,000 bounty for information leading to Gamadheres arrest, the Associated Press
reported.
Stanglin reported from McLean, Va.

2B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

**

TOLL ON CALIF. AGRICULTURE WILL GROW

The water level is lower than normal in this irrigation


channel near Bakerseld, Calif.

FREDERIC J. BROWN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

v CONTINUED FROM 1B

The major part of one of


Americas most productive farming regions could run out of all
water and be unable to farm in
the next number of years, says
Puglia, the Western Growers Association executive. Thats what
the future looks like, which is
why people are so scared.
Researchers are still calculating this years potential impact.
The economic hit to the state in
2015 could be $3 billion, compared with $2 billion last year,
says Richard Howitt, an agriculture and resource economics expert at the University of
California-Davis.
He estimates that 20,000 more
jobs could be lost, including in agriculture and food production.
Wildlife will be squeezed too
not to mention the lucrative tourist dollars it pulls from sportsmen, hikers and other outdoor
enthusiasts. Snowmelt runoff
plays an important role for sh
and other aquatic species since
its the primary source of summertime ow for many of the
Wests rivers and streams, according to Leon Szeptycki, executive
director of Stanford Universitys
Water in the West program.
That will affect both endangered species such as the Delta
smelt and recreational sh such
as salmon and steelhead.
The lack of snowpack will
mean acutely low ows for these

Desalination may slake thirst


Doyle Rice
and Elizabeth Weise
USA TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO California has a
giant reservoir to its west that
could supply the parched state. It
is called the Pacic Ocean.
To tap this salty resource, desalination plants and related
technology are being introduced
or revived in the state.
Part of Gov. Jerry Browns executive order last week to manage water included streamlining
the permitting process for water
infrastructure projects such as
desalination facilities.
The $1 billion Carlsbad desalination plant, south of Los Angeles, is scheduled to open in 2016.

streams, and many of them will


run dry, he said. The impacts on
aquatic life and ecosystems is potentially staggering.
... AND WHO BENEFITS

Businesses ready to help consumers and businesses change their


behavior and save them money
through lower water bills
should do well in Californias
browner landscape.
With strict water use rules
coming, anyone who wants a yard

Santa Barbara has a mothballed desalinization plant from


the 1990s that was built after
Californias previous severe
drought from 1986 to 1991. The
City Council is considering
whether to bring it back into operation.
Towns in Monterey County,
including Carmel, are also exploring desalination plants.
The problem with desalination
is that its energy-intensive and
expensive.
The holy grail of desalination is
to draw on renewable power to
remove salt from ocean water.
Thats where all natural fresh water comes from solar energy
evaporates the water, which rises
into the atmosphere, leaving the
salt in the ocean and then falling

as pure rain.
So far, no ones found an efficient way to mimic Mother Nature, but engineers are trying. A
competition that gets underway
Monday in Alamogordo, N.M., at
the edge of the White Sands desert, is one attempt to nd that
particular grail.
Five teams of engineers will
deploy machines theyve built to
run on renewable energy to provide clean water as part of USAID
Global Development Labs Securing Water for Food initiative.
They are vying to win the
Desal Prize, by producing cost-efcient, durable and easy-tomaintain water purication units.

that doesnt look like a dust bowl


needs to redesign and replant.
Lawns are out, rocks and watersipping ground covers like sage,
yarrow and iceplant are in.
People are coming out of the
woodwork to get water-efficient
gardens now, says Eva Knoppel,
who owns Garden of Eva Landscape Design in Los Angeles.
She specializes in xeriscape
garden design. Xeros means dry
in Greek and xeriscaped gardens
are designed to require very little

water, using drought-tolerant


plants.
Knoppel installs rainwater collection systems as well as crafting
gray-water systems that reuse
bath, shower and washing machine water to irrigate gardens.
Three years ago, I got maybe
one call a week from people who
wanted to transform their gardens. Now Im getting two or
three calls a day, says Knoppel.
Nurseries are stocking more
hardy dry-weather plants native

Rice reported from McLean, Va.

to California and the Mediterranean region.


Succulents like agave, aloe and
hen and chicks are popular, as are
perennial grasses like sedge and
blue oat. Manzanita and ceanothus, sometimes called California lilac, are both increasingly
must-have plants for modern
yards because, once established,
they need little water.
Appliance
sales
havent
changed drastically so far because
water-efficient clothes and dishwashers have been widely used
for years now, reports Bob Harrison with Aztec Appliance in San
Diego.
Even so, he says, he hears more
people mention water efficiency
in his showroom.
In laundry equipment in particular, thats where we hear it,
says Harrison, whos been selling
appliances for 30 years. San Diego literally is a desert thats
parked next to the ocean. Weve
got to think about it.
EYES ON THE FUTURE

This being California, the


drought could spur innovation.
Wilshire Country Club in Los
Angeles has effectively remade
the roughs on its golf course into
desert by converting them into
dry patches, which use less water.
California has 1,140 golf
courses,
according
to
GolfLink.com.
Rice reported from McLean, Va.

Ferguson, Mo., shone a light on police tactics


v CONTINUED FROM 1B

and picking up a hefty ne or


braking suddenly and risking the
chance of being rear-ended.
A bribery scandal involving a
top city transportation official
and executives from the citys former red-light camera vendor
which was selected by Emanuels
predecessor, Richard M. Daley
hasnt helped engender trust.
Its been exposed for what it
really is, said Mark Wallace, a
resident of Chicagos South Side
who has been hit with more than
$1,000 in red-light camera tickets
and has led protests in the city
over the use of cameras. Its
nothing more than a way for the
city of Chicago to create a slush
fund that brings in a lot of
revenue.
Proponents say the cameras
change drivers behavior, make
roadways safer and allow law enforcement to better use their
officers.
Opponents, however, point to
studies that show that the cameras dont reduce accidents. They
also argue the cameras tread on
treacherous
constitutional
ground, because municipalities
are effectively contracting out police work to private companies.
At least nine states (Arkansas,
Maine, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, South Carolina, South Dakota and West
Virginia) have laws on the books
that prohibit or signicantly reduce the ability of law enforcement agencies to use red-light
cameras.
Currently, 459 communities
throughout the USA use red-light

SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES

Mayor Rahm Emanuel, facing a runoff vote Tuesday to stay in


office, has had to answer to Chicagoans over traffic cameras.
cameras, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
That number is down from the
2012 peak use of red-light cameras, when 540 communities
were employing them.
Joseph Hummer, an engineering professor at Wayne State University in Detroit who has studied
the effectiveness of red-light
cameras, said that the cameras
have long been a hot-button issue
for many communities.
But the publics awareness
about municipalities aggressively
pursuing revenues may be growing in the aftermath of the unrest
in Ferguson, Mo., Hummer said.
The months of protests in Ferguson were triggered by the
shooting death last August of an
unarmed black teenager by a

white police officer. But a Justice


Department report released in
March found that racial tensions
had been festering long before
Browns death, in large part because Ferguson police had aggressively enforced laws with an
eye on raising revenue through
tickets and nes instead of looking out for the safety of residents.
People are much more aware
after Ferguson of law enforcement tactics that look like they
are intended for just raising revenue, and theyve had enough,
Hummer said.
In California, Assemblyman
Matthew Harper, a Republican
from Orange County, recently introduced legislation that will prohibit the installation of new
red-light traffic cameras in the

state and will require safety studies of existing cameras.


In Ohio, the cities of Akron,
Columbus, Dayton, Springeld
and Toledo are suing the state after it passed a law that requires a
police officer to be present at
camera locations to witness violations for citations to be issued.
The cities say the law, which
was set to go into effect last week,
defeats the purpose of the cameras, and the law amounts to an
unconstitutional ban. A Lucas
County judge granted a preliminary injunction allowing Toledo
to continue to issue citations
from traffic cameras while the
lawsuits are sorted out.
Last month in Florida, two
Broward County traffic judges
tossed out 24,000 red-light camera ticket cases, voiding more
than $6 million in nes by ruling
the program violated state law.
The judges concluded that communities were delegating police
authority to its private camera
provider and violating state law
which says only law enforcement
can issue violations.
There are also battles over redlight cameras legal and legislative boiling in Colorado, Iowa,
New Jersey, New York and
Tennessee.
In Chicago, Emanuel has touted the citys red-light camera program for reducing dangerous
right-angle, or T-bone, crashes.
But a Chicago Tribune report last
year found that while cameras in
Chicago reduced T-bone crashes
that caused injuries by 15%, they
increased rear-end crashes that
caused injuries by 22%.
The mayor announced weeks

ago he would remove cameras at


25 of the 174 intersections and reduce the penalty for rst time-offenders. Thats in addition to
cameras that were brought down
at 16 intersections earlier in
Emanuels term.

Corrections & Clarifications


USA TODAY is committed
to accuracy. To reach us,
contact Standards Editor
Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com.
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youre responding to
content online or in the
newspaper.

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USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

**

3B

NATION/WORLD
ON POLITICS
Catalina Camia
@ccamia
USA TODAY

Indianas
religious freedom law became
fodder for the 2016 presidential
campaign as Republicans such
as Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz
defended Gov. Mike Pence. More
headlines:

WASHINGTON

INTERESTING

DANESE KENON, THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR

Former U.S. senator Evan Bayh

INDIANA
BAYHS BUZZ

DREW ANGERER, GETTY IMAGES

U.S. Sen. Al Franken

FRANKEN GOADS LETTERMAN


ON JOINING SENATE RACE
If Al Franken can go from
Saturday Night Live to the U.S.
Senate, why cant David
Letterman make a similar leap?
Franken, now a Democratic
senator representing Minnesota,
joked with his friend that he
could get back at Indiana Gov.
Mike Pence for the states
religious freedom law by going
home and running for the
Senate. Theres an open seat
there, Franken said, referring to
the retirement of GOP Sen. Dan
Coats. Look, when people come
to me young people they
say, how do I become a United
States senator? ... Do about 35 or
40 years of comedy and then run
for the Senate. Its worked every
time. Letterman signs off from
his late-night show in May.
RUBIO TO ANNOUNCE
SOMETHING ON APRIL 13
Sen. Marco Rubio has a big
announcement coming, but he
wasnt quite ready to say what
hes doing. The signs point to the
Florida senator declaring hes
running for president. Appearing
on Fox News, Rubio directed
viewers to his website for ticket
details. Ill announce something
on April 13th, and I hope you all
watch, he said. Rubio later
conrmed the event will be at
Miamis Freedom Tower, long a
rst stop for exiles eeing the
Castro regime in Cuba.

ERIC FRANCIS, GETTY IMAGES

Sen. Ted Cruz is third in a new poll.

CRUZ MOVES UP IN POLLING


Sen. Ted Cruzs strategy to
become the rst officially
declared presidential candidate
appears to be paying off.
Several polls released since his
March 23 announcement show
the Texas senator with upward
movement. In a CBS News
survey, 37% of Republicans now
say they would consider voting
for Cruz to be their partys
standard-bearer. An ABC
News/Washington Post survey
has Cruz with 12% support from
Republicans and GOP-leaning
independents, trailing only Jeb
Bush (21%) and Scott Walker
(13%). Cruzs status as the only
official candidate in the race
ends Tuesday when Sen. Rand
Paul of Kentucky is set to
announce his candidacy.
KLOBUCHAR TO GIVE BACK
MONEY FROM MENENDEZ
Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., will
return campaign contributions
from indicted Sen. Robert
Menendez, D-N.J. He was
charged with 14 criminal counts,
stemming from a bribery
scheme to help a political donor
and friend in exchange for
nearly $1 million in gifts and
campaign contributions.
Menendez pleaded not guilty.
The Associated Press rst
reported the decision by
Klobuchar, who is not accused of
wrongdoing. Politico reports Sen.
Michael Bennet, D-Colo., will
donate $10,000 to charity
equal to campaign funds he
received in 2010 from a
Menendez committee.

OMalley
pitching
populist
melody

Former senator Evan Bayh


probably wont attempt a
comeback now that Republican
Sen. Dan Coats is retiring, but
until he offers a Sherman-esque
refusal to run, his actions suggest
it might just might remain a
possibility. Bayh is sitting on $10
million in his campaign account,
and he weighed in on Indianas
controversial Religious Freedom
Restoration Act. Every day this
is left to fester out there, our state
is held up to further damage and
attack, so clearly something
needs to be done, Bayh told The
Huffington Post. Which is exactly
what a Democratic candidate for
the Senate might say.

SENATE
RACES
RIGHT NOW

Susan Davis
USA TODAY

The 2016 Senate


battleeld is still evolving,
and the most interesting
races, candidates and
trends will remain in ux
until Election Day. In an
attempt to help you
digest the campaign along
the way, USA TODAY will
offer periodic takes on
the most interesting
things happening in
Senate races.

JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES

Attorney General Kamala Harris

CALIFORNIA
THE GOP BALLOT

Fact is, the top Democrat that


emerges from Californias open
primary state Attorney General
Kamala Harris is the early
front-runner will be the
prohibitive favorite to win the
Senate seat next year. But that
doesnt mean Republicans arent
going to put up a ght. At least six
Republicans have jumped into
the race, including two former
state GOP party chairmen, Tom
Del Beccaro and Duf Sundheim,
and Assemblyman Rocky Chavez.
Any Republican in California will
face an uphill battle running
statewide, but the debate might
shine a light on what West Coast
conservatism looks like in 2016.

JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY

VAN HOLLENS HAUL

Democratic Rep. Chris Van


Hollen is working to lock up his
status as the early front-runner
for his partys nomination to
succeed Sen. Barbara Mikulski.
On Wednesday, he reported a
more than $1 million fundraising
haul in the four weeks since
Mikulski announced her
retirement. Van Hollen has
amassed a $2.5 million war chest
to kick off what could be a
bruising primary. Rep. Donna
Edwards is the only other
candidate formally in the race
and she enjoys the backing of
EMILYs List, a group that helps
Democratic women who support
abortion rights. A half-dozen
contenders could still jump in.

As Americans hunt Easter eggs


Sunday, people in China will burn
banknotes from hell and torch
iPhones to please dead relatives.
Each year, Chinas Tomb
Sweeping Festival sparks creative
moves by entrepreneurs trying to
cash in on the tradition of honoring the deceased and giving them
a comfortable afterlife. Made
from paper and foil, the fake
phones and other items sell for
cents or a couple of dollars at
street stalls and online. They
compete with fake money a
staple offering and a widening
array of other paper gifts that
people place or burn beside the
tombs of family members.
The three-day national holiday
of Qingming runs through Monday and includes a massive homage today to the legendary Yellow
Emperor at a temple in Shaanxi
province. Chinese citizens are invited to mourn online at a new
Beijing government platform
commemorating martyrs who
died ghting Japan between 1937
and 1945.
Calum MacLeod
TRANSGENDER SOLDIER
IS TWEETING FROM PRISON

Chelsea Manning, the soldier


convicted of leaking national security secrets, joined Twitter this
week from prison.
Fitzgibbon Media, a communications rm, is writing tweets dictated on a phone by the inmate,
previously known as Bradley
Manning. The company, which

USA TODAY
NASHUA , N. H .

With his shirtsleeves rolled up but his tie still in


place, Martin OMalley is singing
to the Young Democrats.
OMalley, a former two-term
Maryland governor and likely
presidential candidate, usually
plays in an Irish rock band, but
tonights tune is This Land Is
Your Land, a song thats both patriotic and political: It was written by Woody Guthrie as a leftist
rebuke to God Bless America.
Thats OMalleys pitch to voters right now: a call to greatness
combined with populist rage
against Wall Street, similar to
that of Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the
Massachusetts Democrat who
has resisted calls to run for president herself. While the prospect
of a Warren candidacy has stirred
excitement among many liberal
activists, OMalleys much more
likely bid has so far failed to register in opinion polls.
Whether his new message resonates with voters in coming
months could determine whether
he can emerge as a credible alternative to Hillary Clinton.
OMalley proposes reinstating
the Glass-Steagall separation of
commercial and investment

U.S. Sen. John McCain


ALEX WONG, GETTY IMAGES

U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson

WISCONSIN
THE REMATCH

GOP Sen. Ron Johnson may get a


chance to prove his 2010 Tea
Party-fueled upset victory over
Democratic Sen. Russ Feingold
wasnt a uke. A Johnson-Feingold
rematch may be the Senate
do-over both Republicans and
Democrats are angling for the
most in 2016. Feingold hasnt
announced, but hes traveling the
state to gauge support for a bid.
Johnson, who self-funded nearly
$9 million of his money in 2010,
has announced he wont
self-nance again. Johnson will
report a $1.2 million rst-quarter
haul to kick off the cycle.

ARIZONA
RETIREMENT WATCH

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., told


CNN in December that he would
most likely run for re-election,
but its April and he still hasnt
made a rm announcement about
his political future. By comparison,
McCain made clear by November
2008 that he would run again in
2010. If McCain opts to retire, he
would avoid a potentially nasty
GOP primary and trigger an
open-seat general election race,
and it would continue a steady
stream of exits among the Senates
longest-serving, and best-known,
legislators. In recent elections, the
Senate has averaged about six
retirements. So far in 2016, just
four senators have announced
they will not run again.

IN BRIEF
CHINA APPEASES SOULS
IN SPRINGTIME TRADITION

Martha T. Moore

WIN MCNAMEE, GETTY IMAGES

U.S. Rep. Chris Van Hollen

MARYLAND

Ex-Md. governor
crafts a new message
for New Hampshire

FEATHERS FLY WORLDWIDE

NIKLAS HALLN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Revelers stage a mass pillow ght in Londons Trafalgar Square


on the seventh annual International Pillow Fight Day. Over 100
cities joined in the event meant to create urban playgrounds.
has about 1,920 followers, made
the announcement on Twitter on
Friday. Within a day, Manning
gained 33,100 followers.
The soldier was convicted of
sending classied documents to
the anti-secrecy websiteWikiLeaks. Manning is serving a 35year prison sentence and is eligible for parole in about seven
years.
Yamiche Alcindor
7 POLICE OFFICERS FACE
FIRINGS OVER RACIST TEXTS

San Francisco Police Chief


Greg Suhr recommended the ring of seven officers who sent or
received text messages that spoke
of lynching African-Americans
and burning crosses.

Suhr said Friday he has asked a


police oversight committee to approve dismissing the suspended
officers accused of sending racist
and homophobic text messages.
Six others face disciplinary actions such as reassignment to positions with no contact with the
public. Another officer tied to the
investigation has resigned.
The text messages, sent in 2011
and 2012, are of such despicable
thinking that those responsible
clearly fall below the minimum
standards required to be a police
officer, Suhr said in a statement.
Lawyers for the officers deny
the texts represent their clients
opinions, but were nave banter
to cope with stressful jobs.
Jon Swartz

JOSH T. REYNOLDS FOR USA TODAY

Martin OMalley, shown singing to


New Hampshire Young Democrats,
barely registers in polls.

banks and a breakup of banks


considered too big to fail.
There is no reason that billionaires should crowd us out
from our democracy, OMalley
told the crowd Tuesday night.
Until recently, OMalleys pitch
focused on his record as an effective, data-driven mayor and governor. He still talks about the
need for elected leaders to get
things done, but in a Politics and
Eggs breakfast in Bedford, N.H.,
he focused on concentration of
wealth and falling wages for the
middle class. When did he start
channeling Warren? Its not a
matter of getting religion, he told
USA TODAY in an interview
Tuesday. Its a matter of getting
how badly this behavior damaged
people throughout our country.
New Hampshire Democrats
are longtime Clinton fans, but
OMalley gets a warm welcome
because voters here like a contested presidential primary.
OMalley, 52, mentions Clinton
as little as possible, though his
references to fresh leadership
arent hard to gure out.
As for where he differs on issues, he opposes the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact and is
no fan of NAFTA.
But OMalley, who says hell
announce a decision on running
before spring is over, doubts his
own party is willing to impose the
regulations on Wall Street he
wants. For 30 years, we have followed this economic story that
sought to change rules, change
laws, change regulations to concentrate wealth at the very top,
he says. That concentrated
wealth now totally owns, in my
opinion, the Republican Party
and is trying to totally intimidate
the Democratic Party. And in
many cases theyre succeeding.

4B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

**

WORLD

PHOTOS BY CALUM MACLEOD, USA TODAY

In southwest Tajikistan, horsemen compete to grab a headless sheep and carry it through a goal marked by mounds of earth in the traditional game of buzkashi.

Tajikistan faces tougher times


Impoverished nations workers depend on Russia I want to stay
Calum MacLeod
USA TODAY
ISTIKLOL , TAJIKISTAN
Hundreds of men on horseback
wearing Soviet tank helmets
fought in the traditional sport of
buzkashi at last months festival
of Navruz for a chance to win a
cow, carpet, camel or a car.
Those are major prizes in this
Central Asian republic, which
was once part of the Soviet
Union and is now one of the
worlds poorest countries.
The celebration to welcome
the Persian new year offered
only temporary relief from a
looming economic crisis that exposes the vulnerability of this
nation of 8 million people.
As Navruz heralds springtime,
Nurik Babaev, 27, seeks another
construction job in distant Russia, where up to 1 million Tajik
workers roughly half of all
working-age males provide
cheap, seasonal labor.
Russias recession and the
crash of its currency have
shrunk the value of salaries,
while work permits have become
tougher to get, he said, enjoying

the buzkashi in Istiklol, 40 miles


from the Afghan border.
I want to stay in Tajikistan,
but there are no jobs here, said
Babaev, who has spent several
months each year laboring in
Moscow for the past decade. I
get so tired working there.
The money Tajik migrants
send home amounts to half of
the economy and makes Tajikistan the worlds most remittance-dependent
country,
according to the World Bank.
Russias economic woes, combined with weak export prices
for aluminum and cotton, will
slow Tajik GDP growth to 4%
this year, from 6.7% in 2014, the
Asian Development Bank forecast in March.
Worries about money and
family separation are commonplace. In the capital, Dushanbe,
student Ahliddin Rahmonov, 18,
misses his father, who works in
Moscow so Rahmonov and his
three brothers can stay in
school.
At Navruz, its important to
be together. But the ruble fall
has made life tougher, and the
ticket home is too expensive,
Rahmonov said.

in Tajikistan,
but there are
no jobs here.
Nurik Babaev

A man wears a tank helmet to


protect his head in buzkashi.
He studies hydroelectric engineering and hopes for a career at
home, because hydropower
ranks among the few potential
exports of mountainous, landlocked Tajikistan. President

Emomali Rahmon, 62, promises


the country will gain prosperity
as an energy hub, given just 7%
of the land is suitable for growing crops.
Portraits of the authoritarian
ruler, who has led the nation for
23 years, stand everywhere. We
like him. He cares so much
about the people, Rahmonov
said as he watched Navruz dances in a public park.
Other residents question the
presidents policies. Its bread
and circuses, like the old (Roman) emperors, Abdumalik Kadirov, a media expert, said about
the state-funded celebrations.
Last month, the presidents
office pledged to construct the
regions biggest theater, a project
that follows building the worlds
tallest agpole and largest teahouse.
The government should take
steps to compensate the (economic) losers. Instead the state
announces a plan to build a

theater, Kadirov said, adding


that graft, which is rampant in
Tajikistan, could plague the new
project.
In Takob village, north of the
capital and beside the mountain
snow line, farmer Baraka Niyozov, 48, hoped for peace and
smoother roads in 2015. He last
worked in Moscow two years
ago, earning $2,000 in six
months, but he warned fellow
Tajiks that many people get
cheated there and not paid.
These days, the whole country
feels cheated, said Tajik artist
Safarov Rakhim, 63, who grew
up in a Soviet orphanage. Other
nations take advantage of Tajikistan. We are a weak nation,
Rakhim said.
His latest painting has references to the unequal revenue
deal for a Russian hydroelectric
project being built in Tajikistan.
The artists wife cares for their
sons children in Moscow, and
their daughter raises a family in
Turkey.
My dream is that my children
and grandchildren live in their
motherland, and it is a prosperous country. I wish that they
were proud of their country,
Rakhim said from his Dushanbe
studio. It will happen but will
take a long time.

Analysis: Iran nuclear deal


facing very tough road ahead
Oren Dorell
@OrenDorell
USA TODAY

The framework nuclear agreement announced Thursday between world powers and Iran sets
the stage for Congress and foreign nations to try to change or
kill a nal deal.
The United States, United
Kingdom, France, Russia, China
and Germany reached an understanding with Iran on limits to
Irans nuclear program in return
for lifting crippling economic
sanctions.
Negotiators now have until
June 30 to ll in the critical details to assure Iran it will get relief from the sanctions as soon as
possible, and guarantee the world
powers that Iran wont develop a
nuclear weapon. Lying in wait are
Congress, Irans enemies in the
Middle East, and difficult issues
that may reshape, delay or doom
a nal accord.
CONGRESS: NOT SO FAST

President Obama wants a nal


agreement that is short of a formal treaty to skirt approval by a

skeptical Congress, which might


make changes unacceptable to
Iran. Not so fast, lawmakers say.
The Senate Foreign Relations
Committee will take up legislation that requires congressional
approval of a nuclear deal, committee Chairman Bob Corker, RTenn., said.
If a nal agreement is
reached, the American people,
through their elected representatives, must have the opportunity
to weigh in to ensure the deal truly can eliminate the threat of
Irans nuclear program and hold
the regime accountable, Corker
said.
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.,
who has co-sponsored the bill
and had expressed skepticism as
the deal was emerging, said hell
be giving the framework a very
careful look.
Schumers emergence as the
next Senate Democratic leader
could give critics now mostly
Republicans more clout, said
Mark Dubowitz, executive director of the Foundation for Defense
of Democracies, who has testied
before Congress on Iran
sanctions.
Schumer is being lobbied

heavily by both his pro-Israel


constituents and the White
House, Dubowitz said. Hell be
the bellwether for which way wavering Democrats go on this.
A second Senate bill would increase sanctions on Iran after
June 30 if there is no comprehensive agreement by then. Obama
has said he would veto both bills
because they would derail the
talks.
ISRAEL: PUT SCREWS TO IRAN

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin


Netanyahu, a vehement opponent of any deal that leaves Irans
nuclear program intact, has already launched a fresh round of
sharp attacks. Hes trying to rally
Congress, other world powers
and Irans rivals in the Middle
East such as Saudi Arabia to
demand a stronger deal that ensures Iran wont develop a nuclear bomb in secret.
Israel could disrupt the negotiations by assassinating Irans nuclear scientists and sabotaging or
attacking its nuclear facilities,
which Iran has accused Israel of
doing in the past. That could
scuttle a nal deal, said George
Perkovich, an expert on nuclear

BEHROUZ MEHRI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Iranian newspapers, with front-page stories on the nuclear


negotiations, are displayed for sale in Tehran on Saturday.
proliferation at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
DEVIL IN THE DETAILS

The framework agreement left


key details to be ironed out, including the pace of sanctions relief, when and to what extent Iran
will explain evidence of a past nuclear weapons program which
it denies ever having and when
it will take the steps spelled out in
the deal.
The Obama administration
and Iran showed they interpret
the deal differently just within a
few hours of its announcement.

Secretary of State John Kerry


said that in return for Irans future cooperation, relief from U.S.
and international sanctions will
be provided in phases. Iran
could begin qualifying for such
relief as soon as four months to a
year after any agreement begins,
Kerry said.
Irans Foreign Minister Javad
Zarif, however, tweeted a response that denied sanctions relief would be gradual. Iran/5+1
Statement: US will cease the application of ALL nuclear-related
secondary economic and nancial sanctions. Is this gradual?

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

**

5B

ACHOO! ITS SPRING ALLERGY SEASON


The unusually cold winter in the central and eastern U.S. has delayed the start of the pollen season. It is starting to ramp up in the
Southeast and the southern Mid-Atlantic and the central Plains.

ALLERGY FORECAST AND THE TOP 10 ALLERGY CITIES1


LOW

LOW-MEDIUM

MEDIUM

MEDIUM-HIGH

HIGH

Wash.
Maine
Mont.

N.D.

Minn.

Vt.
N.H.

Ore.

N.Y.

Wis.

Idaho

Mass.

S.D.
Mich.

Wyo.

Pa.

Iowa
Neb.

Nev.

8
Ill.

Utah

Kan.

Calif.

N.J.

Ohio
Md.

Ind.
W.
Va.

Colo.

Va.

Del.

10

Mo.
Ky.

3
Ariz.

Providence

R.I.
Conn.

Okla.

5
N.C.

Tenn.

Ark.

N.M.

S.C.
Miss.

1
La.

Texas

1 The rankings are based on


pollen counts, medication usage
and the number of allergists in a
community.
As of April 2, data for Hawaii and
Alaska are not available.

Fla.

6
McAllen

TREE POLLEN
(As of April 1)

LOW

Ga.
Ala.

GRASS POLLEN
HIGH

FACTS ABOUT ALLERGIES

LOW

MOLD SPORES
HIGH

LOW

HIGH

SPRING IS IN THE AIR


Allergy sufferers can often trace their sniffles back to tree pollen, the primary allergen in the spring. Weather
conditions determine pollen concentrations.

1
1 IN 5

Windy, dry days allow the


pollen particles to float freely
through the
air.

Allergy symptoms often


start when pollen
counts exceed 50
grains per cubic meter.

Heavy rains wash


airborne pollens out of
the air, providing some
relief for allergy
sufferers.

Winds

Americans suffer from some


form of allergies

Rain

ALLERGY TIME

Pollen
grains

Pollen counts are


typically highest
between

5 a.m.
and

10 a.m.
50 million
Estimated number of
Americans who suffer from all
types of allergies including
indoor/outdoor, food and
drug, latex, insect, skin and
eye allergies.

$14.5 billion
The estimated annual cost
of allergies.

Home sick
Allergies are the 5th-leading
chronic disease and a major
cause of work absenteeism
for adults.

$12.3 billion
is for direct costs including
$1.3 billion for doctor office visits
and $11 billion for medications.

4
ALLERGY SEASONS

The three main allergy seasons in the U.S. are:


Tree pollen in the spring.

AVOIDING ALLERGIES
Watch the pollen count. If pollen counts
are high, you may want to avoid outdoor
activities during early morning hours. (Find
pollen level sites such as Pollen.com and
the Weather.com)

Grass in late spring and early summer.

When driving, keep your car windows


closed.

Ragweed in late summer and fall.

When you're home, keep your bedroom


windows closed.

The time of the tree pollen season is most variable,


because it's dependent on winter weather. The
other seasons are not as variable, because they
depend more on the amount of daylight.

Sources The Weather Channel; Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America; Pollen.com; Estelle Levetin, University of Tulsa
DOYLE RICE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

Heavy spring rains can promote grass


growth, which can lead to greater
concentration of grass pollen later in
the spring and into early summer.

If you've been outdoors, take a shower


and wash your hair to get rid of any pollen.

6B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

**

MONEY
MONEYLINE

@marcodellacava
USA TODAY

Beth Belton
@bethbelton
USA TODAY

Marc Benioff is
having his way with a plate of
scrambled eggs and chicken-apple sausage at a cliffside diner
overlooking the Pacic.
Casual in a sweatshirt and
baseball cap, hes easy to confuse
for a tourist, unless you happen
to know that the logo on both
items UCSF Benioff Childrens
Hospital is the result of the
$200 million the Salesforce.com
founder gave to the facility that
now bears his name.
Just look at that, Benioff, 50,
tells USA TODAY, gesturing at
the majestic view. We live in a
physical nirvana. Im just saying,
lets also make it a business nirvana, a K-12 nirvana, a social justice
nirvana. Its a doable thing.
Benioffs big pronouncements
and large philanthropic footprint
are well known here in the techfocused Bay Area. But now that
the rest of the country knows his
name, many may wonder who he
is and why he cares.
Last week, Benioff led a group
of tech CEOs in opposing Indianas new Religious Freedom
Restoration Act on the grounds
that it was both discriminatory
toward gays and lesbians and
harmful to business-recruiting
efforts.
As Republican Gov. Mike
Pence struggled to tweak the
bills language supporters
sought legal protection for business owners if they denied services to the LGBT community
based on religious beliefs Benioff urged his customers to
avoid the state and offered relocation checks for employees.
Other CEOs followed his impassioned lead.
Apple CEO Tim Cook wrote an
op-ed essay for The Washington
Post. PayPal co-founder Max Levchin rallied dozens of signatures
for an open letter to legislators.
And Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman penned a blog post saying it
would be unconscionable to do
business in a state that etched
discrimination into law.
Weve been out there attracting attention and operating on a
scale were not used to, and I have
to say its not a comfortable feeling, he says in a soft voice that
belies his towering 65 frame.
Benioff stops to tuck voluminous curls under his hat.
I didnt understand this was
part of a larger matrix and it was
all going to implode, and I also
didnt know wed be so inspiring
to other business leaders, he
says.
Thats because the tech leader
is convinced something bigger is
brewing, a business-led movement perhaps unprecedented in
the countrys history.
SAN FRANCISCO

BUSINESS SURVEILLANCE
GREECE IS HANGING ON
In a nutshell: Greece wont
default on payments to the International Monetary Fund this
week even though government
coffers are nearly empty, according to a report by Bloomberg
News on Saturday.
The star: Finance minister Yanis
Varoufakis is set to meet IMF
Managing Director Christine
Lagarde in Washington today to
discuss the Greek governments
pending reform package. The
goal is to avoid the nation defaulting on its debt and exiting
the euro.
The money: The nancially beleaguered nation has an IMF
payment of about $494 million
due Thursday. And the government is in talks with European
Union officials, who are withholding aid payments until a
deal is reached on economic
overhauls, Bloomberg reports.

MICHAEL KOVAC, GETTY IMAGES, FOR VANITY FAIR

IN THE HOT SEAT


TALK ABOUT A PAYDAY
Discovery Communications
David Zaslav was awarded
$156.1 million in compensation
last year, making him one of the
highest-paid CEOs in corporate
America. And its about ve times
the compensation he earned in
2013. What gives? The bulk of his
pay package comes from stock
and option awards that will vest
over the course of a new six-year
contract he signed early last
year, according to the companys
proxy ling released late Friday.
Go gure. The companys stock
fell by 25% last year.

JEWEL SAMAD, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

ON THE FRONT BURNER


WE CAN DREAM, CANT WE?
Luxury is a huge trend at the 2015
New York International Auto
Show and nothing illustrates that
better than the uber-luxurious
Aston Martin Vulcan, on display
at the Javits Center. Only 34 of
the vehicles will be manufactured, each of carbon ber. The
sale price is a cool $2.8 million.
But heres why: Vulcan tops
speeds of over 200 mph and can
go from 0 to 60 mph in three
seconds. Vroom!
WHOS ONLINE
YOU DONT HAVE
TO DO IT ALONE
Doing your taxes this week?
Check out the latest tips and
advice to make ling as
painless as possible at
usatoday.com/money/

USA SNAPSHOTS

Older folks
stay mum
Percentage who think its not
socially appropriate to talk with
friends about personal budget,
taxes, etc., by age group:
18 - 34
35 - 54
55+

CHANGE AGENTS

Marco della Cava

41%
63%
77%

Source GoBank survey of 1,030 adults


JAE YANG AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

BENIOFF
WANTS
TO LEAD
CHANGE
SALESFORCE CEO:
USA NEEDS
COMPASSIONATE
CAPITALISM

We live in
a physical
nirvana. ... Lets
also make it a
... social justice
nirvana. Its a
doable thing.
Marc Benioff, founder of Salesforce.com

Think back to the social issues


of the 1960s and its difficult to
imagine a leading CEO taking a
stand on civil rights or the Vietnam War. But, in the future, before people do something like
this (law in Indiana), theyre going to have to look for the business communitys support, says
Benioff, leaning forward.
He pushes his plate aside and
bears down. We CEOs, were all
over the world, he says. Were
talking to the presidents of other
countries often, negotiating our
own issues with them directly often. So we need to be consulted
as an integral part of the ecosystem, not like something on the
side called business.
Part of that is down to the
force of Benioffs personality.
When he tells you he mentors
young tech entrepreneurs, what
he really means is he isnt afraid
to act like their big brother.
Hes a gentle giant, but he
wont adjust his message for an
audience and he will beat you
over the head with a point of view
if you do not have one, says Levchin, 39, now CEO of online nancial services company Affirm.
Stoppelman credits Benioff
with persuading him to have Yelp
adopt a version of Salesforces 11-1 giving strategy, where 1% of
the companys equity, product
and employee time is donated to
the local community. (To date,
Salesforce Foundation has donated $80 million in grants and
840,000 hours of time, and allowed 24,000 non-prots to run
Salesforces cloud computing
platform for free or at discounted
rates.)
Benioff shrugs off such admiring compliments. Theyre just
my friends, and when I am thinking about something, I call them,
he says.
Benioff goes on admiringly
about Walmart CEO Doug
McMillon, who is urging Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a Republican, to veto a law similar to
Indianas, saying it undermines
the spirit of inclusion.
Thats unprecedented, frankly, that a business leader would
go straight to the governor, but
Walmart is like a nation-state
without nuclear weapons, he
says, allowing himself a laugh. I
tell you one thing, if Doug calls
the premier of China, he answers
the phone. If (Hutchinson) calls
the premier, he is not answering.
Benioff was precocious, starting a company at 15 and becoming an Oracle vice president at 26
before in 1999 starting Salesforce, which is valued at $36 billion, a tenth of which is the
founders estimated net worth.
USA TODAYs Change Agents series
highlights innovators and entrepreneurs looking to change business and
culture with their vision. Email della
Cava at mdellacava@usatoday.com.

DAN ESCOBAR

CUTTING THE CORD

Sony makes play for streaming TV market


New
service
available
only to
PS4
and PS3
owners
in a few
cities for
now

Mike Snider
@MikeSnider
USA TODAY

Sony has entered the cord-cutting game with its new streaming
TV service, PlayStation Vue.
For now, only PlayStation 4
and PS3 owners in Chicago, New
York and Philadelphia can sign up
for the service, which starts at
about $50 a month.
But Sony does plan to expand
into new cities later this year.
This past week, it let me testdrive the service from my home
near Washington, D.C.
On its face, PlayStation Vue answers some cord-cutting prayers
that even Sling TV, which went
live last month, does not. For
starters, it has more channels
more than 50 in the entry-level
package and more than 85 in the
$69.95 monthly package.
And for those who cant use an
antenna or dont want to use
one to get local TV signals,
PlayStation Vue has live broadcasts from local affiliates for CBS,
Fox, NBC and Telemundo.
An obvious shortcoming: content from Disney including ABC,

SONY PLAYSTATION

ESPN and Disney channels.


Among the other channels on
board: Comedy Central, CNBC,
Discovery Channel, FX, Fox Business and Fox News Channel, USA
Network, Food Network, Nickelodeon, TBS and USA.
At the next-highest monthly
price level ($59.99), Vue has regional sports networks. The
$69.99-a-month package tosses in
more than 25 additional channels, including Fox College Sports
networks and the FXM movie
channel and Palladia.
Like Sling TV, theres no contract and theres no new equip-

Sony PlayStation Vue


has more
than 50 channels in its
entry-level
package, and
it goes up
from there.

ment needed; you just download


it as an app. For now, Sling TV is
available nationwide on more devices including computers, Amazon Fire, Roku and Xbox One.
Sony says PlayStation Vue will
soon be available on iPad and
other devices.
Vues functionality rivals that
of Sling TV, too. A guide shows
you everything available to watch.
Live TV can be paused, fast-forwarded and reversed.
You can tag a favorite show and
its episodes will be stored in the
cloud for four weeks. And you can
record individual programs that
can be found in My Shows.
Video quality is very good. The
service might appeal to homes
with multiple PlayStation owners
because up to three people can
watch different Vue content simultaneously on one account.
But there are some obvious
shortcomings. The $50-$70 price
range approaches that of some
current pay-TV packages. And
considering that Vue doesnt have
ESPN, many consumers might
have to subscribe to Sling TV, too.
Cutting the Cord is a regular column
covering Net TV and ways to get it

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

SundaySports
y p
CAN THE EXPOS RETURN TO MONTREAL? PAGE 6C

OSU FOOTBALL

Passing game work in progress


OREGON STATE
FOOTBALL

Offense adjusting to new system


By Gary Horowitz
Statesman Journal

CORVALLIS Spring football


has been about change for the
Oregon State football team.
New coaching staff. New nohuddle, spread offense. New 3-4
defense.
Add a new starter at quarterback that is yet to be determined and theres a lot for players to process.
So when first year coach Gary Andersen said you can always be better for sure after
Saturdays practice at Reser
Stadium, that should not be
viewed as a negative.

Coach: Gary Andersen, first season

I think its important that we


remember where were at in
this whole process, Andersen
said.
With the departure of fouryear starting quarterback Sean
Mannion, the Pac 12s career
leader in passing yards with
13,600, much attention has been
focused on the quarterback
competition.
Sophomore Luke Del Rio,
redshirt freshman Nick Mitchell and true freshman Seth Collins continue to share reps, and
the passing game remains a
work in progress.

Starters returning: Nine on offense, two on defense


Spring game: 1 p.m. April 18, Reser
Stadium (Pac-12 Networks). Tickets
are $6 apiece or $5 with the purchase of four or more. For ticket
information, call (800) GO-BEAVS or
visit beavertickets.com
Season opener: 5 p.m. Sept. 4 vs.
Weber State, Reser Stadium
BRENT DRINKUT/STATESMAN JOURNAL

Oregon State quarterbacks Seth


Collins (4), Marcus McMaryion (3)
and Nick Mitchell (14) go through
drills during practice.

See OSU, Page 3C

WISCONSIN 71, KENTUCKY 64

DUKE 81,
MICHIGAN STATE 61

Devils
roll to
title
game
By Jim O'Connell
Associated Press

AP

Kentuckys Willie Cauley-Stein walks off the court as Wisconsin players celebrate the Badgers 71-64 victory in the national semifinal on Saturday.

NOBODYS
PERFECT
Badgers to play for title after handing UK 1st loss

By Eddie Pells
Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS Nobody ever said they were


perfect. Now, the Kentucky Wildcats arent undefeated, either.
The hard-nosed Wisconsin Badgers did what
nobody else could Saturday night knocking off
the Wildcats 71-64 behind 20 points and 11 rebounds from Frank Kaminsky and a clutch comeback down the stretch.
Now, its Wisconsin heading to the final to play
Duke, an 81-61 winner over Michigan State in the
earlier and much less entertaining semifinal.
It gives us another 40 minutes, I know that,
said Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan, who leads the Badgers to their first final since 1941.
And Kentucky has a long ride home, finishing
the season at 38-1 two wins short of becoming
the first undefeated team in college basketball
since the 1975-76 Indiana Hoosiers. Instead, these

NBA-ready group of Wildcats join the star-studded 1991 UNLV team as the latest to take an undefeated record into the Final Four but lose in the
semifinals.
So much has been made of Kentuckys unflappability when things dont look so good like
when the Wildcats got outplayed against Notre
Dame last week but somehow pulled out a twopoint win to make it to Indy.
This time, though, it was Wisconsin that came
up clutch.
Trailing by four and gasping for breath after
going 6 minutes without a bucket, the Badgers
(36-3) responded with an 8-0 run to take a lead
Kentucky couldnt overcome.
Kaminsky and Bronson Koenig went 7 for 8
from the line over the last 24 seconds to seal the
win.
Kentuckys last, best chance came while trailing by three with 12 seconds left. But Karl-Anthony Towns received the ball in the post and got
fouled. He made only one free throw, and from
there, Wisconsin iced it from the line.

INDIANAPOLIS Two star


freshmen, a solid senior and
some of the trademark defense
Duke has long been known for
have the Blue Devils back in the
national championship game.
And in Indianapolis, no less.
Justise Winslow scored 19
points, fellow freshman Jahlil
Okafor added 18 and senior
Quinn Cook had 17 to lead topseeded Duke to an 81-61 victory
over Michigan State on Saturday and into yet another title
game in the city known for a
500-mile auto race.
The Blue Devils won it all in
Indianapolis in 1991, their first
under Mike Krzyzewski. The
winningest mens Division I
coachhas a 9-3 record in national semifinal games, led them to
their fourth and most recent title in 2010.
The citys great, and even if
we didnt win tonight the city
would still be great and the venue would be great, Krzyzewski
said. This team, though, deserved to be in it. So it makes it
even better. Theyve been so
good in this tournament and the
stage has not been too big for
them.
The start against Michigan
State didnt look too promising
for a trip to Monday nights title
game. The Spartans were ahead
14-6 just 4 minutes into the
game, making five of their first
seven shots and the first four
they took from beyond the 3point line.
Things changed and in a hurry.
After the first four minutes,
we were a different team. We
played great basketball tonight,

See DUKE, Page 3C

DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP

Duke's Jahlil Okafor grabs a


rebound against Michigan State's
Colby Wollenman during their
national semifinal game Saturday.

REACH US: sports@StatesmanJournal.com, (503) 399-6611

2C

Sports

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

TRAIL BLAZERS ONLINE

StatesmanJournal.com

RECRUITING

Oregon adds 2 football commits


By Pete Martini
Statesman Journal

DON RYAN/AP

Portland Trail Blazers forward LaMarcus Aldridge, right,


drives on New Orleans Pelicans forward Anthony Davis
during the first half in Portland, Ore., on Saturday.

FOR LAST NIGHTS SCORE AND GAME


INFO VISIT STATESMANJOURNAL.COM

Oregons football team landed


two recruits this week, bringing the
2016 recruiting class up to seven
commits.
Jacob Capra, a consensus threestar offensive lineman from Auburn, California, committed on
Thursday. At 6-foot-5, 265 pounds,
Capra is rated by Rivals.com as the
24th-best offensive lineman in the

BASEBALL
LOCAL SCORES

COLLEGE BASEBALL
Vanderbilt at Georgia..................................................9 a.m., CH425 SEC
Texas at Oklahoma State......................................11 a.m., CH411 ESPNU

COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Oregon at UCLA ..........................................................Noon, CH36 ESPN2
Alabama at Kentucky ..........................................12:30 p.m., CH425 SEC
Mississippi State at Arkansas .....................................3 p.m., CH425 SEC

COLLEGE WOMENS BASKETBALL


FINAL FOUR
South Carolina vs. Notre Dame ..........................3:30 p.m., CH35 ESPN

CLASS 4A
Scappoose 6, North Marion 5 (8)
Tillamook 3, Stayton 2
CLASS 3A
Warrenton 11, Willamina 1

CLASS 4A
Scappoose 6, North Marion 5 (8): Emry
Patterson went 3-for-4 with an RBI and a
double to lead the host Huskies, but the
Indians came away with the extra-innings
win on Saturday.
Scappoose
North Marion

SOFTBALL

COLLEGE WOMENS LACROSSE

LOCAL SCORES

California at Oregon..............................................1 p.m., CH420 PAC-12

202 001 01 6 10 3
201 010 10 5 9 2

Forteny, Millar (4), Nelson (6), Parsons (7), Johnson (8) and
Backus. Ensign, Robinson (3), Kendall (4), Beachy (5), Schmitz
(6) and Barrell. Win Parsons; Loss Schmitz. 2B Ramon
(NM), Patterson (NM).
Records: Scappoose (6-3), North Marion (3-8).

Maryland vs. Connecticut ..........................................6 p.m., CH35 ESPN

Stanford at Colorado ...........................................11 a.m., CH420 PAC-12

CLASS 4A
Cascade at Seaside (DH), late
CLASS 3A
Warrenton/Jewell 7-2, Willamina 4-1 (9)

PGA, Shell Houston Open .......................................10 a.m., CH33 GOLF

WEST VALLEY
Dayton 14, Amity 0 (5 innings): The Pirates jumped all over the Warriors in the
early innings as they cruised to a win on
Friday.

PGA, Shell Houston Open .............................................Noon, CH8 KGW

Amity
Dayton

GOLF
Drive, Chip and Putt Championship.......................6 a.m., CH33 GOLF

LPGA, ANA Inspiration...............................................2 p.m., CH33 GOLF

HOCKEY
NHL, Pittsburgh at Philadelphia.................................9 a.m., CH8 KGW
NHL, Washington at Detroit.....................................2 p.m., CH418 NHL
NHL, St. Louis at Chicago ..................................4:30 p.m., CH32 NBCSN

MLB
Cardinals at Cubs ........................5 p.m., CH36 ESPN2; Radio 1080 AM

NBA
Rockets at Thunder ......................10 a.m., CH2 KATU; Radio 1080 AM
Bulls at Cavaliers .....................12:30 p.m., CH2 KATU; Radio 1080 AM
Warriors at Spurs.........................................................4 p.m., CH416 NBA
Clippers at Lakers...................................................6:30 p.m., CH416 NBA

SOCCER
EPL, Burnely vs. Tottenham Hotspur..............5:30 a.m., CH32 NBCSN

back Brady Breeze (Portland),


three-star tight end Cam McCormick (Bend), four-star quarterback
Seth Green (Allen, Texas), four-star
wide receiver Theo Howard (Westlake Village, California) and threestar wide receiver Dillon Mitchell
(Memphis, Tennessee).
Oregons 2016 recruiting class
currently ranks 13th in the nation
and No. 1 in the Pac-12 Conference,
according to 247 Sports.

Livingston hit a two-out, two-run double


in the seventh of the nightcap to give Chemeketa the lead.
Chemeketa 6-6, Corban JV 2-5 (11 innings): The Storm took two from the Warriors JV team on Saturday.
In the first game, Nick Livingston went
2-for-4 with two RBIs and a triple.
Game 2 needed 11 innings to determine
a winner as Kris Jackson pitched 4 1/3 innings of relief where he didnt allow a single hit. The Storms Drew Seater went 3for-7 on the afternoon, but it was his third
hit that sent everyone home happy as he
drove in the winning run in the bottom of
the 11th.
Corban 6-6, Oregon Tech 3-1: The Warriors took both games of a doubleheader
against the Owls.
In the first game, Corban used a four
run fourth inning to jump ahead of the
Owls and hold on as Adam Shumka recorded his seventh save of the season.
In Game 2, Corban starting pitcher Tony
Davidson pushed his record to 2-3 on the
year with a complete game performance.
Davidson gave up 10 hits on the afternoon, but only allowed one run for the
Owls to cross home.
Nic Coffman provided the offensive
power in the game for the Warriors by going 3-for-4 with four RBIs.
Pacific 8-8, Willamette 4-1: A rough final
three innings in the first game paved the
way for a Boxers sweep over the Bearcats.
Willamette was up 3-1 heading into the
top of the seventh, but from there the
Boxers scored seven runs over the final
three innings to secure the win.
Willamette had two-hit days from Austin Hagarty, Hunter Gallant, Tiras Koon
and Gordie Clary, but could only push four
runs total across the plate.
In the second game, Pacific jumped out
to an early 3-0 lead by the top of the third
and never looked back.
Willamette was held to just four hits in
the second game. The Bearcats (18-9, 10-8)
will play a doubleheader at noon on Tuesday at Puget Sound.

the first inning and then padding their


lead with one in the sixth and another
pair in the seventh.
Leadoff batter Kelsie Gardner led the
way for Western Oregon (15-22, 7-5
GNAC) in the defeat, going 3-for-4 while
Lexi Jennings added a two-run homer in
the fifth.
Jenning also had a homer in the sixth inning of Game 2, but this time it was a solo
shot. She did pick up another RBI earlier in
the game as she reached on a fielders
choice and scored Jourdan Williams in the
first inning after Kuulei Siolo singled
home Zoe Clark and Amanda Evola.
Willamette 9-8, Puget Sound 0 (5)-0 (6):
The Bearcat pitching trio of Jade Smith,
Victoria Bradshaw and Hayley Glantz
combined to keep the visiting Loggers
scoreless Saturday as Jenna King had two
hits in both games to lead the way on offense.
King also had an RBI in the first game
and two in the second for Willamette (1117, 8-10 Northwest Conference), while
Kayla Rieger went 2-for-4 with three RBIs
and a triple in the nightcap.
Smith pitched the first three innings of
the opener for the win against Puget
Sound (4-26, 1-17 NWC) and Bradshaw
picked up the save in two innings of relief.
Glantz tossed a complete game in the circle for the shutout win in game 2.
Corban 13-8, College of Idaho 11-2: The
host Warriors swept the Yotes on Saturday as Kyrianna Sorensens five-hit day led
the offensive output.
Sorensen, a Sprague graduate, went 3for-4 with an RBI in the opener for Corban
(30-9, 13-4 CCC) and then followed that
up by going 2-for-4 with two RBIs in the
second game.
Anne Binschus also had a pair of multihit games for the Warriors, with two hits
in each contest while Kali Van Cleave and
Taylor Eilders both launched homers in
the first game.
Clackamas CC 6-5, Chemeketa 2-4 (8): The
Storm were swept Saturday by the host
Cougars as Rayne Sylvster went 2-for-4 in
Game 1and Ashlea Bowden hit a homer in
each game.
Clackamas rallied in the second contest
and won on a walk-off single in the eighth
after Chemeketa built a 4-0 lead in the
first three frames.
Statesman Journal

AREA
HIGHLIGHTS
HIGH SCHOOLS

TODAY
ON THE AIR

2016 class.
Oregon also received a commitment from defensive back Troy
Warner on Friday. Scout.com has
Warner rated as a four-star recruit,
and Rivals has him as a three-star
talent. At 6-foot-2, 185 pounds, Warner is ranked by Rivals as the 25thbest defensive back in the 2016
class.
In addition to Capra and Warner,
the Ducks 2016 class has commitments from four-star defensive

000 00 0 3 5
383 0x 1412 1

Pendergraft and Dumler. Ray, Couch (4) and Ringnalda.


Win Ray; Loss Pendergraft.
Records: Amity (2-2), Dayton (8-2).

COLLEGES
BASEBALL
Central Washington 6-9, Western Oregon
3-4: The visiting Wolves dropped a pair of
games against the Wildcats on Saturday
as Garret Harpole led the losing effort in
the opener with a 2-for-4 outing, plus a
double and a homer, while Marcus Hinkle
paced the offense in the nightcap, going
2-for-4 with a homer.
Western Oregon (16-18, 12-7 GNAC)
gave up 23 hits on the day compared to its
total of 12.
Chemeketa 5-4, Linfield JV 1-2: The Storm
swept the Wildcats JV team on Friday as
Kendall Motes tossed a complete game
four-hitter to win Game 1 and then Nick

EPL, Sunderland vs. Newcastle United................8 a.m., CH32 NBCSN

SOFTBALL
Western Oregon 5-6, St. Martins 9-1: The
visiting Wolves battled back from an early
defeat to take the nightcap against the
Saints on Saturday, scoring three runs in

MLS, Real Salt Lake at San Jose..............................2 p.m., CH36 ESPN2


MLS, Philadelphia at Kansas City ..............................4 p.m., CH408 FS1

TENNIS

SCOREBOARD
COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Miami Open, mens final ..........................................10 a.m., CH35 ESPN


Events are accurate and up-to-date as of press time

TODAY
IN THE AREA
COLLEGE BASEBALL

Mens NCAA Tournament Glance


All times PDT/MST
FINAL FOUR
At Lucas Oil Stadium
Indianapolis
National Semifinals
Saturday, April 4
Duke 81, Michigan State 61
Wisconsin 71, Kentucky 64
National Championship
Monday, April 6
Duke (34-4) vs. Wisconsin (36-3), 6 p.m.
Womens NCAA Tournament Glance
All times PDT/MST
FINAL FOUR
At Tampa, Fla.
National Semifinals
Sunday, April 5
Notre Dame (35-2) vs. South Carolina (34-2),
3:30 p.m.
UConn (36-1) vs. Maryland (34-2), 5:30 p.m.
National Championship
Tuesday, April 7
Semifinal winners, 5:30 p.m.

Michigan State at Oregon, Noon

COLLEGE WOMENS GOLF


Oregon State at the Rebel Intercollegiate in Oxford, Miss.

COLLEGE WOMENS LACROSSE


California at Oregon, 1 p.m.

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

MLB
All times PDT/MST
Saturdays Games
Detroit 1, Tampa Bay 0
Philadelphia 6, Pittsburgh 4
N.Y. Yankees 4, Washington 3
Boston 4, Minnesota 2
Toronto 9, Cincinnati 1
Texas 4, N.Y. Mets 4, tie
Milwaukee 4, Cleveland 3
Atlanta 5, Baltimore 3
Seattle 6, Colorado 3
San Francisco 2, Oakland 1
Kansas City 3, Houston 1
Arizona 4, Chicago Cubs 2
L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers, late
Sundays Game
St. Louis (Wainwright 0-0) at Chicago Cubs
(Lester 0-0), 5:05 p.m.

GOLF
PGA-Houston Open Par Scores
Saturday
At Golf Club of Houston
The Tournament
Humble, Texas

Purse: $5.9 million


Yardage: 7,441; Par: 72
Third Round
Jordan Spieth
69-66-67Scott Piercy
63-74-66Johnson Wagner
69-68-66Austin Cook
68-65-70Shawn Stefani
66-69-69Kelvin Day
68-69-68Paul Casey
68-69-68Charles Howell III
66-70-69Russell Henley
69-68-68Patrick Reed
68-71-67Keegan Bradley
70-66-70Cameron Tringale
68-70-69Sergio Garcia
67-71-69Alex Cejka
65-72-70Michael Putnam
68-68-71Hunter Mahan
67-68-72Luke Guthrie
66-68-73-

202
203
203
203
204
205
205
205
205
206
206
207
207
207
207
207
207

LPGA-Ana Inspiration Par Scores


Saturday
At Mission Hills Country Club
Dinah Shore Tournament Course
Rancho Mirage, Calif.
Purse: $2.5 million
Yardage: 6,769; Par: 72
Third Round

-14
-13
-13
-13
-12
-11
-11
-11
-11
-10
-10
-9
-9
-9
-9
-9
-9

Sei Young Kim


Stacy Lewis
Ariya Jutanugarn
Brittany Lincicome
Morgan Pressel
Shanshan Feng
Moriya Jutanugarn
Jenny Shin
Anna Nordqvist
Pat Hurst
Mi Hyang Lee
So Yeon Ryu
Lexi Thompson
Karrie Webb
Carlota Ciganda
Marina Alex
Inbee Park
Mirim Lee

72-65-6972-69-6871-73-6672-68-7067-72-7171-70-7071-70-7071-69-7171-72-6971-71-7074-68-7069-72-7172-69-7174-72-6774-71-6873-71-6974-69-7071-70-72-

206 -10
209 -7
210 -6
210 -6
210 -6
211 -5
211 -5
211 -5
212 -4
212 -4
212 -4
212 -4
212 -4
213 -3
213 -3
213 -3
213 -3
213 -3

TRANSACTIONS
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
ATLANTA HAWKS Signed F Austin Daye
to a multiyear contract.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NHL Fined New Jersey F Scott Gomez
$1,478.49 for elbowing Montreal D Alexei
Emelin during an April 3 game.

Oregon at UCLA, Noon

COLLEGE MENS TENNIS

DUCKS ROUNDUP

California at Oregon, Noon

COLLEGE WOMENS TENNIS


Oregon at California, Noon
Events are accurate and up-to-date as of press time

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Oregon softball freshman Lauren Lindvall belted a three-run homer in the top of
the seventh as the No. 1-ranked Ducks rallied from three runs down to beat No. 8ranked UCLA 6-4 on Saturday.
The Bruins scored four times in the bottom of the second to take a 4-1 lead over
Oregon and held steady through the middle innings. It wasnt until the top of the
seventh inning where the Ducks were
able to gain some traction on a comeback.
The Ducks strung together a couple of
singles in the inning and with the score
4-2, thats when Lindvall connected on the
home run to put Oregon ahead for good.
Karissa Hovinga (8-1) got the win for
Oregon as she pitched 5 1/3 innings in relief allowing only three hits and striking
out four.

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Michigan State 9, Oregon 4: The host


Ducks built a 2-0 lead off a pair of RBI singles, but the Spartans scored two in the
third and another four in the fifth to run
away with the victory on Saturday.
Oregon blew through five pitchers,
with each surrendering at least one
earned run, and has now lost six of its last
seven games.
Matt Eureste, Phil Craig-St. Louis and
Scott Heineman each had a pair of hits for
the Ducks (18-14, 2-7 Pac-12) but it wasnt
enough to stop a Michigan State offense
led by Anthony Chekys 3-for-5 outing.
Cam Vieaux picked up the win for the
Spartans (15-14, 2-4 Big Ten). He pitched
six innings, struck out seven and gave up
three earned runs on six hits.
Michigan State
Oregon

002 040 021 9 11 0


110 010 100 4 8 1

Vieaux, Misiewicz (7), Borkovich (8) and Roskelly. Harber,


Stiles (3), Warren (8), Hostert (8) and Chase, Susnara. Win
Vieaux; Loss Stiles. 2B Troop (MSU), Heineman (ORE);
HR Gibson (MSU).

Michigan State 2, Oregon 1 (11): Cam Gibsons RBI single down the line in the 11th
inning capped the visiting Spartans rally
and doomed the Ducks on Friday.
Oregon got on the board first in the
sixth inning when a bases loaded walk by
Joe Mockbee of Austin Grebeck scored
Brandon Cuddy.
Michigan State would tie things at 1-1in
eighth when Will Salter singled to left
field and scored Ryan Krill.
Mockeby and Joe Kinley combined to
hold the Ducks hitless the rest of the way
while Mockbee, who relieved Spartans
starter Mick VanVossen in the sixth frame,
finished with nine strikeouts in 4.2 innings
to earn the win.
Oregon only mustered two hits in the
contest, one by Jakob Goldfarb and another by Mark Karaviotiss, while the
Michigan State pitching trio walked the
hosts eight times.
Michigan State
Oregon

000 000 010 01 2 7 0


000 001 000 00 1 2 1

VanVossen, Mockbee (6), Kinley (11) and Roskelly. Irvin, Graham (6), Nogosek (8), Cleavinger (11) and Susnara. Win
Mockbee; Loss Cleavinger.

TRACK AND FIELD


Molly Grabill ran a personal best in the
womens 10,000 with a time of 33:33.20,
which was good for 20th overall in the
event and ranks 10th on the Oregon alltime list.
Sophomore Maggie Schmaedicks set a
personal best of her own, finishing second with a time of 33:46.14 in the second
heat of the 10,000.
The mens team saw the quartet of Eric

Jenkins, Edward Cheserek, Travis Neuman


and Matthew Melancon finish their
10,000-meter race within 10 seconds of
each other. Cheserek and Jenkins finished
side-by-side with times of 29:04.06 and
29:04.08, while Neuman and Melancon
finished at 29:09.39 and 29:10.38, respectively.

MENS TENNIS
No. 33 California 5, No. 51 Oregon 2: Despite wins from Simons Stevens at No. 3
singles and Jayson Amos at No. 4 singles,
the host Ducks lost to the Golden Bears on
Saturday.
Oregon dropped to 11-8 overall and 0-4
in the Pac-12 while California is now 16-5
and 4-0.

WOMENS TENNIS
No. 3 Cal 6, No. 62 Oregon 1: Oregons
womens tennis team had a tough day on
the court against Pac-12 opponent Cal.
The Ducks Nia Rose was the lone bright
spot for Oregon on the day as she won her
singles match against No. 22 Klara Fabikove 6-4, 7-6 (4).
Roses victory has given her top-25 upsets over singles opponents in back-toback weeks.

SAND VOLLEYBALL
Washington d. Oregon 5-0: No Ducks duo
managed to win a set in their season
opening loss against the Huskies on Saturday in Portland as seven of the eight
sets were decided by five points or more.
Statesman Journal

Sports

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

3C

OREGON FOOTBALL

Nelson moves across scrimmage line


OREGON FOOTBALL

By Pete Martini
Statesman Journal

EUGENE Charles Nelson

wants to win, no matter what his


role is on the team.
The Oregon sophomore from
Daytona Beach, Florida, has
moved from wide receiver to
defensive back this spring to
help the Ducks fill a need after
losing three starters.
I just want to help the team
any way possible, whichever
way that is, and thats OK with
me, said Nelson, who had 23
catches for 327 yards and five
touchdowns for the Ducks last
year.
After the Ducks lost to Ohio
State in the national championship game on Jan. 12, the coaching staff approached Nelson
about the possible change of position.
After the national championship game, it was up for
grabs, coaches talked about it,
but there was no permanent decision, Nelson said. I was OK
with it. Im willing to help the
team wherever its needed.
Coaches felt like it was a better
move for me in the future-wise,
and things like that. So I went
ahead and told them Im OK
with it.
Oregon coach Mark Helfrich
said the decision to move Nelson to defense was to help create competition at defensive
back.
I think Charles is a guy, intellectually and football-wise,
he is a very smart kid, and he

Coach: Mark Helfrich, third season

CHARLES NELSON

Last seasons record: 13-2, Pac-12


champion

School: Oregon
Year: Sophomore

Last seasons final national


ranking: No. 2

Position: Defensive back


(wide receiver last season)

2015 spring game: 11 a.m. May 2,


Autzen Stadium

Ht./Wt.: 5-8 / 170

2015 season opener: Sept. 5 vs.


Eastern Washington, Autzen Stadium

Hometown: Daytona Beach,


Florida

JAIME VALDEZ-USA TODAY SPORTS

Oregons Charles Nelson


scores a touchdown against
South Dakota lastyear. Now,
hell try to prevent scoring.

could move back and not miss


too many beats, which is not normal, Helfrich said. Just his
skillset and his attitude was tremendous. When you start to talk
to a guy about a position change,
a lot of times its: Well, yeah, Ill
do it. But in his case, its: Yep,
Im in. You know, and hes a
great teammate and loves to
compete and run and hit, and so
well see.
The Ducks lost defensive
back starters Ifo Ekpre-Olomu,
Erick Dargan and Troy Hill, all
seniors last season.
Oregon returns starting
safety Reggie Daniels, as well
as Chris Seisay, who started the
Rose Bowl and national championship game at cornerback in

place of the injured Ekpre-Olomu.


Other players competing for
playing time at defensive back
include Tyree Robinson, Arrion
Springs, Juwaan Williams, Khalil Oliver and Ugo Amadi.
And then there is Nelson.
He is learning quick, Seisay said about Nelson. Its big
(having Nelson on defense) because hes an explosive player.
He has real good cover skills.
Hes just an athlete, so you could
put him anywhere safety, corner, nickel. Hell just make
some plays.
Oregon defensive coordinator Don Pellum said he is excited to have Nelson in the secondary.

Charles is probably one of


the best tacklers on our team,
and probably one of the fastest
players on our team, Pellum
said. And so his impact in the
secondary, I think its going to
be dramatic. Hes fast. Hes
tough, and real exciting to
watch.
Oregon offensive coordinator Scott Frost said he thinks
Nelson will excel at defensive
back.
Charles is one of the better
football players Ive been
around, Frost said. He came
in, and it took a little while for
him to learn it, but once he did,
he was impressive, not just
catching the football, but also
running with it, blocking, play-

ing special teams. And I have no


doubt that Charles will be great
wherever we have him.
Nelson, who was a three-star
recruit in the Ducks 2014 class,
said the transition is going well
so far this spring.
Its going good, you know,
its a new beginning, Nelson
said. A lot of things to learn. A
new coach to take advice from,
and Im just learning as it goes.
Nelson is part of the defensive unit this spring, but the
door is open that he could be
used on offense again in the future.
Right now, its just an experiment during spring, Nelson said. If everything is going
well, then Ill just stay there.
But if Im not getting it, and
nothing is really happening,
then they said I could always go
back to offense.
pmartini@StatesmanJournal.com
or (503) 399-6730 or
Twitter.com/PeteMartiniSJ

BEAVERS ROUNDUP

BRENT DRINKUT/STATESMAN JOURNAL

Oregon State wide receiver Jordan Villamin celebrates


crossing the goal line during practice inside Reser Stadium on
Saturday.

OSU
Continued from Page 1C

Im proud of the kids


efforts, Andersen said.
I wouldnt say Im overly
excited where we sit in
some areas, especially
our ability to throw the
ball effectively.
Its not unusual for the
defense to be ahead of the
offense in spring practice, or in fall camp for
that matter.
And thats especially
true right now at OSU. Del
Rio, who played sparingly
in three games last season
and attempted 18 passes,
is the only signal caller on
the roster with college
game experience.
Theres still a timing
issue, Andersen said. At
the end of the day its a
new offense and its new
quarterbacks.
Thats
where we are.
There were few completions from any of the
quarterbacks during Saturdays practice.
We may not have executed the way we want to,
but were getting those
mental reps where we can
continue to develop and
improve on our game,
Mitchell said.
The Beavers have
plenty of talent back at
wide receiver, led by junior Victor Bolden, who
had a team-high 72 receptions for 798 yards last
season and two touchdowns, and sophomore
Jordan Villamin (38578-6).
Unlike the pro-style offense under former coach
Mike Riley, the spread requires a quarterback with
mobility. That seems to favor Mitchell and Collins.
But at this point, Del
Rio is probably the most
accurate passer.
Were still trying to
get all the tempo and timing down, but well get it,
Villamin said. I have no
lack of confidence in what
our quarterbacks and receivers can do. We should
be fine.
OSU defensive players
arent making a big deal of
having the upper hand
thus far.
It was like that ever

since Ive been here.


Thats what happens,
senior defenisve tackle
Jaswha James said. The
defense is more reaction,
were just flying to the
ball and making plays.
The offense takes
time, but once they get it
perfected its gonna be
like a machine.
Ground and pound:
Until the passing game
comes around, it would
come as no surprise to see
the Beavers lean on a running game led by senior
Storm Woods, who ran for
a team-high 766 yards last
season.
Add
junior
Chris
Brown and sophomore
Damien Haskins to the
equation and the Beavers
have three experienced
running backs.
What were trying to
do right now is just develop a real run game. Something we can hang our hat
on, running backs coach
Telly
Lockette
said.
When times get tough,
we can run the ball.
Lockette said in college football you can implement different offensive schemes, but the best
teams can ground and
pound.
Game-like
atmosphere: Junior safety Cyril
Noland-Lewis said its always enjoyable to practice at Reser.
Its definitely a gamelike atmosphere, said
Noland-Lewis, who had an
interception in Saturdays
practice. Well take the
few fans, 20, 100, whatever it is. A little music, a
little energy from the
players and coaches as
well, that goes a long
way.
Six practices remain:
The Beavers, who returned to practice this
week after taking two
weeks off for finals and
spring break, have six
spring practices remaining, including the spring
game April 18 at Reser.
OSU will have its second full scrimmage next
Saturday from 11:30 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m. at Reser. The
public is welcome.
ghorowitz@Statesman
Journal.com, (503) 399-6726
or Twitter.com/ghorowitz

The Oregon State baseball team collapsed by giving up five runs in the
eighth inning on Saturday to No. 9 UCLA
en route to a 10-5 loss in Los Angeles.
The teams entered the penultimate inning knotted at 5-5, but pair of doubles
and a single with two outs provided the
Bruins with a five-run cushion entering
the final frame. That final frame saw
UCLA pitcher David Berg shut down Oregon State in order.
The Beavers (22-9, 5-4 Pac-12) had an
early 5-2 lead, clustering all its runs in a
fourth inning that was capped by Elliott
Cary hitting a two-run homer down the
right-field line. Billy King started the
scoring with a groundout and then Kyle
Nobach singled up the middle for two
runs before Cary connected for his longball.
Oregon State starter Travis Eckert lasted only 4.2 innings against the Bruins
(23-6, 10-2 Pac-12) and gave up four
earned runs on seven hits.
Oregon State
UCLA

000 500 000 5 6 0


002 111 05x 10 14 2

Eckert, Reser (5), Tweedt (6), Heimlich (6), Pomeroy (8),


Hickey (8) and Ice. Canning, Poteet (4), Forbes (7), Virant (7),
Dyer (7), Berg (8) and Miller Jr. Win Berg; Loss Heimlich.
2B Persico (UCLA), Stephens (UCLA) 2, Peterson (UCLA),
Chatterton (UCLA); 3B Bono (UCLA); HR Cary (OSU).

No. 9 UCLA 4, Oregon State 1: Gabe Clark


went 3-for-4 on Friday night but the visiting Beavers fell to the Bruins at Jackie
Robinson Stadium.
Kyle Nobach drove in Oregon States
lone run in the seventh inning with a
two-out double past the first baseman
that put the tying run at the plate. However, pinch hitter Billy King hit a slicing
ball that was caught by running UCLA
center fielder Christoph Bono.

Duke
Continued from Page 1C

especially on the defensive end,


Krzyzewski said.
Defensively, it was a team effort, just the way Krzyzewski has
stressed for his 35 seasons at
Duke. What had been wide open 3pointers early for Michigan State
became contested shots and when
the Blue Devils started getting up
and into the Spartans, the points
were suddenly tough to come by.
They did a good job of taking
me away, said Michigan States
Denzel Valentine, who had nine of
his 22 points in that opening run, including three 3-pointers. I got hot,
and they started denying a little bit

25

Drew Rasmussen started for the Beavers and lasted 5.2 innings before being
relieved by Mak Fox.
The win went to Grant Watson, who
struck out six and walked one for the
Bruins in six scoreless innings.
Oregon State
UCLA

000 000 100 1 5 2


001 102 00x 4 8 1

Rasmussen, Fox (6), Flemer (7) and Lund, Ice. Watson,


Forbes (7), Dyer (7), Berg (9) and Miller Jr. Win Watson;
Loss Rasmussen. 2B Clark (OSU), Nobach (OSU), Miller
Jr. (UCLA).

SOFTBALL
Arizona 7-22, Oregon State 2-3: The
Beavers hosted a doubleheader against
the Wildcats and were no match for Arizona.
Oregon State was limited in offense as
Mikela Manewa was the only Beavers
player to have a multi-hit game. That
came in the first game where Manewa
went 2-for-3.
After the three-game sweep from Arizona, the Beavers (23-14, 4-8 Pac-12) will
host Utah at home starting Friday for a
three-game series.

GYMNASTICS
NCAA Norman Regional: Madeline Gardiner won the all-around, while the Beavers took second to Oklahoma on Saturday with a total of 196.750 and advance
to the National Semifinals in Fort Worth,
Texas on April 17.
The host Sooners scored a total of
197.625 for first place in the regional.
Gardiner finished with a total of
39.350 to claim the individual all-around
by 0.100 points over North Carolina

and started forcing us to take bad


shots and the next thing you know
they had the lead.
The two Duke freshmen put up
some impressive stats in their first
Final Four game. Winslow, who
played through some early foul
trouble, had nine rebounds and
was 5 for 7 from the field, while
Okafor grabbed six rebounds and
was 7 for 11 from the field.
I dont think we started the
game out with the intensity we
needed, Cook said. When we got
down early Coach got on us and the
last 36 minutes we played one of
our better games. Its definitely
hard out there, but we just strung
some stops together and great defense led to great offense.
Denzel Valentine had 11 rebounds for the Spartans (27-12)

States Brittni Watkins.


Taylor Keeker was Oregon States other top performer, finishing tied for second on the vault at 9.925, 0.025 points
off the pace of winner Ali Jackson of
Oklahoma.

MENS GOLF
ASU Thunderbird Invitational: The Beavers took 11th at the tournament in
Phoenix on Saturday, finishing with a
three-round total of 29-over 869.
Alex Franklin led the way individually
for Oregon State, shooting an even 210
to finish tied for eighth.
Arizona State won the team crown at
25-under, while Jon Rahm won the medalist honors at 15-under for the Sun Devils.

WOMENS ROWING
Oregon State Classic: The Varsity 8
swept No. 17 Louisville and Minnesota,
while the Second Varsity 8 went 3-1
against the Cardinals and the Gophers at
the Dexter Reservoir in Lowell.
Oregon State also went 4-0 against
Oregon in the Open 8 and 4 races.

TRACK & FIELD


Stanford Invitational: Helen Ann Haun
set a school record in the pole vault on
Saturday in Palo Alto, California, clearing a height of 12 feet, breaking the
mark she shared with Annie Sidor by
more than four inches.
Statesman Journal

while Travis Trice added 16 points.


A win on Monday night against
Wisconsin would mean a fifth national title for Krzyzewski, breaking a tie with Kentuckys Adolph
Rupp and leaving him behind only
John Wooden, who won 10 at UCLA.
Its an amazing thing, I mean,
just to be in the Final Four, but to
play on Monday night is the ultimate honor, Krzyzewski said. I
hope our guys get their rest and we
can get the same type of effort we
got tonight.
Now theyve got a chance to
play for a national championship,
and damn, damn how great is
that?
The Blue Devils have won 17 of
18, with the only loss to Notre
Dame in the semifinals of the ACC
tournament.

4C

Sports

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

StatesmanJournal.com

NBA TODAY
STANDINGS

SATURDAYS GAMES

SCOREBOARD

EASTERN
CONFERENCE

HOME team in caps.

Hornets 92, 76ers 91


PHILADELPHIA (91)
Grant 3-7 2-4 10, Noel 1-2 0-0 2, Aldemir 2-4
4-6 8, Smith 6-20 2-4 15, Covington 4-10 4-4
15, Robinson III 3-7 0-0 7, Sims 1-5 2-2 4,
Mbah a Moute 1-7 5-8 8, Thompson 3-8 5-5
14, Sampson 4-6 0-0 8. Totals 28-76 24-33
91.
CHARLOTTE (92)
Taylor 2-4 3-3 7, Ma.Williams 3-7 5-6 11, Biyombo 3-4 3-4 9, Walker 11-21 2-2 24, Henderson 3-12 0-0 7, M. Williams 5-17 8-8 18,
Hairston 3-10 0-0 6, Vonleh 3-6 0-0 6, Stephenson 0-3 0-0 0, Maxiell 2-2 0-0 4. Totals
35-86 21-23 92.

L Pct

GB

z-Atlanta

57

19 .750

x-Cleveland

49

27 .645

x-Chicago

46

30 .605

11

y-Toronto

45

32 .584 1212

x-Washington

44

33 .571 1312

Milwaukee

38

39 .494 1912

Brooklyn

35

41 .461

Boston

35

42 .455 2212

Miami

34

42 .447

23

Indiana

33

43 .434

24

Charlotte

33

43 .434

24

Detroit

30

47 .390 2712

Orlando

24

53 .312 3312

Philadelphia

18

59 .234 3912

New York

14

62 .184

22

43

WESTERN
CONFERENCE
W

L Pct

GB

z-Golden State

62

13 .827

x-Houston

52

24 .684 1012

x-Memphis

52

25 .675

11

y-Portland

49

26 .653

x-L.A. Clippers

50

26 .658 1212

x-San Antonio

50

26 .658 1212

Dallas

46

30 .605 1612

Oklahoma City

42

34 .553 2012

New Orleans

41

34 .547

Phoenix

38

38 .500 2412

Utah

34

41 .453

Denver

28

48 .368 3412

Sacramento

26

49 .347

36

L.A. Lakers

20

55 .267

42

Minnesota
16
x-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division
z-clinched conference

13

21

Fridays results
Washington 101, New York 87
Indiana 93, Charlotte 74
Milwaukee 110, Boston 101
Brooklyn 114, Toronto 109
Chicago 88, Detroit 82
Memphis 100, Oklahoma City 92
Orlando 97, Minnesota 84
San Antonio 123, Denver 93
New Orleans 101, Sacramento 95
Portland 107, L.A. Lakers 77
Today
All times Pacific
Houston at Oklahoma City, 10 a.m.
Chicago at Cleveland, 12:30 p.m.
Miami at Indiana, 3 p.m.
Golden State at San Antonio, 4 p.m.
Philadelphia at New York, 4:30 p.m.
Utah at Sacramento, 6 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers, 6:30 p.m.
Monday
Portland at Brooklyn, 6 p.m.
Tuesday
Phoenix at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m.
Charlotte at Miami, 4:30 p.m.
Golden State at New Orleans, 5 p.m.
San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m.
Minnesota at Sacaramento, 7 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m.

HAWKS 131, Nets 99: Al Horford and DeMarre Carroll


scored 20 points each to help the Hawks match a franchise
record with their 57th win. However, the Hawks lost forward
Paul Millsap to a right shoulder injury in a collision with
Brooklyns Earl Clark with 1:52 left in the first half.
PISTONS 99, Heat 98: Reggie Jackson scored 15 of his 29
points in the fourth quarter, including the winning layup with 5
seconds remaining. Andre Drummond had 11 points and 17
rebounds for his 44th double-double, Kentavious CaldwellPope scored 19 points and Anthony Tolliver added 15 for the
Pistons. Detroit rallied from 15 down in the fourth.
Wizards 92, GRIZZLIES 83: Bradley Beal scored 20 and John
Wall added 18 points and 14 assists for the Wizards, who won
their third straight. Drew Gooden added 16 for Washington,
connecting on 6 of 10 shots, including 3 of 5 from outside the
arc. Rasual Butler added 10 for the Wizards. Marc Gasol led
Memphis with 18 points, while Mike Conley scored 14 points.
Celtics 117, RAPTORS 116 (OT): Marcus Smart hit a buzzerbeating layup in overtime for Boston. With 2.6 seconds left and
Boston trailing by one, Smart took a pass from a driving Isaiah
Thomas and sneaked behind the collapsing Toronto defense
to score the winning basket, silencing the sellout crowd.

28

60 .211 4612

RESULTS AND
SCHEDULE

HORNETS 92, 76ers 91 : Gerald Hendersons driving layup


with 6 seconds left lifted the Hornets to a win over the 76ers.
Kemba Walker had 24 points and Mo Williams added 18 as
the Hornets won despite playing without three starters, including center Al Jefferson. Henderson struggled all night,
missing 10 of his first 12 shots.

Magic 97, BUCKS 90: Tobias Harris had 23 points and 10


rebounds and Nikola Vucevic scored 20 points. Victor Oladipo added 15 points to help Orlando get their second road win
in two nights after losing 12 straight away from home. Harris
made a career-best five 3-pointers on nine attempts.
Warriors at MAVERICKS (late) : The top-seeded and Pacific
Division-champion Warriors will shoot for a 12th straight win.
They are 27-11 as the visitor and recently went unbeaten on a
four-game jaunt from March 24-31. Golden State is 16-1 since
early March and handed the Phoenix Suns a 107-106 defeat its
last time out on Thursday in the desert.
Clippers at NUGGETS (late) : The Clippers jockey for positioning in the Western Conference playoff race against the
Denver Nuggets. The Clippers clinched their postseason berth,
but their seeding is nowhere close to being decided. They are
even with San Antonio for fifth in the West and only two
games out of the No. 2 spot with six to play.
Jazz at SUNS (late): The Suns' playoff chances are on life
support, but they'll keep fighting versus the Jazz. Phoenix is
four games behind Oklahoma City for the eighth spot in the
Western Conference with six to play. The Jazz have won three
straight including a win over Denver, 98-84, on Wednesday.
Pelicans at TRAIL BLAZERS (late) : The Pelicans have their
sights set on reaching the playoffs and look to win a fifth
straight game Saturday against the Trail Blazers. The Pelicans
have defeated the LA Lakers and Sacramento Kings on this
three- game road trip and recorded a 101-95 triumph in California's capital Friday night thanks to Eric Gordon's 21 points.
The Trail Blazers clinched the Northwest title earlier Friday
when Memphis beat Oklahoma City.

Philadelphia
Charlotte

16
19

35
30

18
23

22
20

91
92

3-Point GoalsPhiladelphia 11-26 (Thompson 3-5, Covington 3-6, Grant 2-3, Robinson
III 1-2, Mbah a Moute 1-3, Smith 1-5, Sims 0-1,
Sampson 0-1), Charlotte 1-13 (Henderson 1-1,
Walker 0-1, Ma.Williams 0-2, Hairston 0-3, M.
Williams 0-6). Fouled OutNone. ReboundsPhiladelphia 57 (Smith 9), Charlotte 53 (Biyombo 9). AssistsPhiladelphia
13 (Smith 5), Charlotte 13 (M. Williams 5). Total FoulsPhiladelphia 24, Charlotte 20.
A17,286 (19,077).
Hawks 131, Nets 99
BROOKLYN (99)
Johnson 1-5 1-2 4, Young 7-13 0-0 14, Lopez
5-8 1-2 11, Williams 3-8 2-2 10, Brown 1-6 0-0
3, Bogdanovic 8-11 0-0 19, Jack 5-9 3-3 14,
Plumlee 1-2 0-2 2, Clark 4-8 1-2 11, Jefferson
3-5 1-2 7, Morris 1-4 0-0 2, Jordan 0-1 2-2 2.
Totals 39-80 11-17 99.
ATLANTA (131)
Carroll 7-9 2-4 20, Millsap 1-5 6-6 8, Horford
10-13 0-1 20, Teague 8-12 0-0 17, Korver 3-6
1-1 10, Antic 3-5 1-1 9, Bazemore 4-4 0-0 11,
Mack 4-7 2-2 10, Sefolosha 4-9 2-2 12, Muscala 2-2 2-2 7, Scott 1-3 0-0 2, Jenkins 2-6 0-0
5, Brand 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 49-82 16-19 131.
Brooklyn
Atlanta

22
31

26
35

23
42

28
23

99
131

3-Point GoalsBrooklyn 10-23 (Bogdanovic 3-5, Clark 2-3, Williams 2-4, Jack 1-2, Johnson 1-2, Brown 1-3, Young 0-1, Morris 0-1, Jefferson 0-2), Atlanta 17-33 (Carroll 4-5, Bazemore 3-3, Korver 3-5, Antic 2-3, Sefolosha
2-4, Muscala 1-1, Teague 1-2, Jenkins 1-5, Horford 0-1, Millsap 0-1, Scott 0-1, Mack 0-2).
Fouled OutNone. ReboundsBrooklyn
44 (Young 8), Atlanta 39 (Carroll 8). AssistsBrooklyn 22 (Jack 6), Atlanta 40 (Teague
8). Total FoulsBrooklyn 15, Atlanta 16.
TechnicalsBogdanovic.
A18,769
(18,729).
Pistons 99, Heat 98
MIAMI (98)
Deng 4-113-4 13,Haslem 3-6 0-0 6,Whiteside
5-9 3-7 13, G.Dragic 7-12 5-6 21, Wade 11-18
2-3 24, Chalmers 3-7 2-2 9, Walker 0-5 3-3 3,
Andersen 1-1 0-0 2, Johnson 0-3 0-0 0, Ennis
3-5 1-1 7. Totals 37-77 19-26 98.
DETROIT (99)
Butler 3-3 1-1 9, Tolliver 5-11 0-0 15, Drummond 5-8 1-1 11, Jackson 11-18 5-7 29, Caldwell-Pope 6-16 5-8 19, Lucas III 1-4 0-0 2,
Prince 2-7 3-6 7, Meeks 1-4 0-0 2, Anthony 1-1
0-0 2, Williams 1-1 0-0 3. Totals 36-73 15-23
99.
Miami
Detroit

24
29

31
21

26
22

17
27

98
99

3-Point GoalsMiami 5-20 (G.Dragic 2-4,


Deng 2-5, Chalmers 1-3, Ennis 0-1, Johnson
0-1, Haslem 0-1, Wade 0-2, Walker 0-3), Detroit 12-26 (Tolliver 5-9, Butler 2-2, Jackson
2-4, Caldwell-Pope 2-6, Williams 1-1, Prince
0-1, Lucas III 0-1, Meeks 0-2). Fouled OutNone. ReboundsMiami 48 (Whiteside
12), Detroit 44 (Drummond 17). AssistsMiami 19 (G.Dragic 7),Detroit 20 (Jackson
11). Total FoulsMiami 20, Detroit 21.
A16,133 (22,076).
Wizards 92, Grizzlies 83
WASHINGTON (92)
Porter 3-7 0-0 7, Gooden 6-10 1-1 16, Gortat
2-5 2-2 6, Wall 7-15 3-3 18, Beal 10-21 0-0 20,
Butler 4-9 0-0 10, Sessions 3-6 2-2 9, Humphries 1-4 0-2 2, Seraphin 2-2 0-0 4. Totals
38-79 8-10 92.

JEREMY BREVARD-USA TODAY SPORTS

Charlotte Hornets guard Kemba Walker goes up for a shot


against the Philadelphia 76ers at Time Warner Cable Arena.

MEMPHIS (83)
Je.Green 3-7 3-4 9, Randolph 3-5 0-0 6, Gasol
7-13 4-6 18, Conley 5-15 4-4 14, Lee 4-9 0-0 8,
Koufos 2-3 0-1 4, Calathes 1-4 0-0 2, Carter
2-6 0-0 5, Udrih 2-7 2-2 6, Ja.Green 2-4 0-0 4,
Adams 3-8 1-1 7. Totals 34-81 14-18 83.
Washington
Memphis

29
18

20
20

22
21

21
24

92
83

3-Point GoalsWashington 8-22 (Gooden


3-5, Butler 2-3, Sessions 1-1, Porter 1-3, Wall
1-3, Humphries 0-1, Beal 0-6), Memphis 1-15
(Carter 1-2, Gasol 0-1, Udrih 0-1, Je.Green 0-1,
Calathes 0-1, Adams 0-2, Lee 0-2, Conley
0-5). Fouled OutNone. ReboundsWashington 45 (Gortat 8), Memphis 49
(Gasol 11). AssistsWashington 24 (Wall
14), Memphis 23 (Conley 8). Total FoulsWashington 18, Memphis 15. A18,119
(18,119).
Raptors 116, Celtics 117
BOSTON (117)
Turner 9-17 0-0 18, Bass 4-9 3-5 11, Zeller 8-10
4-6 20, Smart 6-9 1-3 15, Bradley 3-13 0-0 7,
Thomas 10-19 2-2 25, Crowder 1-4 1-2 3, Olynyk 5-10 4-4 16, Jerebko 1-3 0-0 2, Sullinger
0-3 0-0 0. Totals 47-97 15-22 117.
TORONTO (116)
Ross 1-3 1-2 4, Hansbrough 5-5 8-8 18, Valanciunas 5-12 2-3 12, Vasquez 3-9 0-0 8, DeRozan 14-25 10-12 38, Williams 9-17 6-8 27,
Patterson 0-7 0-0 0, Hayes 0-1 0-0 0, J.Johnson 3-4 3-5 9. Totals 40-83 30-38 116.
Boston
Toronto

15
24

32
23

34
23

23
34

13
12

117
116

3-Point GoalsBoston 8-26 (Thomas 3-8,


Olynyk 2-5, Smart 2-5, Bradley 1-3, Sullinger
0-1, Crowder 0-2, Turner 0-2), Toronto 6-23
(Williams 3-8, Vasquez 2-6, Ross 1-3, DeRozan 0-1, Patterson 0-5). Fouled OutHansbrough. ReboundsBoston 51(Zeller 9), Toronto 57 (Valanciunas 14). AssistsBoston
26 (Turner 10), Toronto 15 (Williams 4). Total
FoulsBoston 28, Toronto 22. A19,800
(19,800).
Magic 97, Bucks 90
ORLANDO (97)
Harris 8-15 2-3 23, Dedmon 2-3 1-2 5, Vucevic
10-17 0-1 20, Payton 4-111-110, Oladipo 6-19
2-3 15, A.Gordon 5-6 0-0 10, Green 3-10 3-3
10,Nicholson 2-5 0-0 4. Totals 40-86 9-13 97.
MILWAUKEE (90)
Antetokounmpo 3-12 2-2 8, Ilyasova 7-13 2-5
18, Pachulia 2-4 0-0 4, Carter-Williams 4-14
0-0 8, Middleton 6-16 3-4 15, Mayo 6-10 0-1
14, Henson 5-9 0-110, Dudley 3-4 0-0 7, Bayless 3-7 0-0 6. Totals 39-89 7-13 90.
Orlando
Milwaukee

22
31

29
22

21
20

25
17

97
90

3-Point GoalsOrlando 8-21 (Harris 5-9,


Payton 1-2, Green 1-3, Oladipo 1-5, Nicholson
0-1, A.Gordon 0-1), Milwaukee 5-16 (Ilyasova
2-2, Mayo 2-5, Dudley 1-2, Carter-Williams
0-1,Bayless 0-3,Middleton 0-3).Fouled OutNone. ReboundsOrlando 53 (A.Gordon

12), Milwaukee 53 (Carter-Williams 10). AssistsOrlando 23 (Payton 11), Milwaukee 26


(Carter-Williams 9). Total FoulsOrlando
13, Milwaukee 19. TechnicalsOrlando
Coach Borrego, Payton. A14,090 (18,717).

LEADERS
Through Friday
Scoring
G FG FT PTS
Harden, HOU
75 604 661 2063
Westbrook, OKC 61 552 500 1675
James, CLE
65 596 361 1667
Davis, NOR
61 582 330 1495
Cousins, SAC
58 487 419 1395
Curry, GOL
73 593 293 1736
Aldridge, POR
67 623 291 1570
Griffin, LAC
61 528 286 1352
Irving, CLE
71 554 299 1553
Thompson, GOL 70 547 210 1518
Wade, MIA
56 460 253 1200
Lillard, POR
75 536 320 1573
Gay, SAC
67 499 324 1399
Butler, CHI
60 393 364 1213
DeRozan, TOR
55 364 330 1079
Vucevic, ORL
68 587 153 1329
Hayward, UTA
72 466 359 1406
Paul, LAC
76 534 267 1461
Ellis, DAL
75 568 224 1441
Gasol, CHI
72 528 271 1339
FG Percentage
FG FGA
Jordan, LAC
345 488
A. Johnson, TOR
293 510
Valanciunas, TOR
349 609
Gortat, WAS
402 713
Mozgov, CLE
287 516
Zeller, BOS
311 569
Davis, NOR
582 1081
Favors, UTA
460 863
Horford, ATL
469 884
Vucevic, ORL
587 1113
Rebounds
G OFF DEF TOT
Jordan, LAC
76 364 761 1125
Drummond, DET 76 405 613 1018
Cousins, SAC
58 181 554 735
Gasol, CHI
72 203 646 849
Chandler, DAL
70 274 519 793
Vucevic, ORL
68 225 539 764
Randolph, MEM 65 208 479 687
Monroe, DET
64 217 451 668
Davis, NOR
61 158 474 632
Aldridge, POR
67 167 520 687
Assists
G AST
Paul, LAC
76 775
Wall, WAS
76 758
Lawson, DEN
71 675
Westbrook, OKC
61 527
Rondo, DAL
63 503
Curry, GOL
73 569
James, CLE
65 473
Teague, ATL
67 470
Harden, HOU
75 522
Lowry, TOR
66 454

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OR-0000360405

AVG
27.5
27.5
25.6
24.5
24.1
23.8
23.4
22.2
21.9
21.7
21.4
21.0
20.9
20.2
19.6
19.5
19.5
19.2
19.2
18.6
PCT
.707
.575
.573
.564
.556
.547
.538
.533
.531
.527
AVG
14.8
13.4
12.7
11.8
11.3
11.2
10.6
10.4
10.4
10.3
AVG
10.2
10.0
9.5
8.6
8.0
7.8
7.3
7.0
7.0
6.9

Sports

StatesmanJournal.com

WNIT

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

5C

NCAA WOMENS FINAL FOUR

Duke coachs scouting report


By Joanne P. McCallie
Associated Press

TAMPA, Fla. Duke coach Joanne P. McCallie takes a look at


the games in the womens Final
Four. Her Blue Devils played all
four teams this year.

South CarolinaNotre Dame

TYLER EVERT/AP

UCLA players celebrate after their 62-60 win over West Virginia in the
WNIT championship game in Charleston, W.Va., on Saturday.

Blame Canada: UCLA


edges West Virginia
By John Raby
Associated Press

CHARLESTON, W.Va. The


gap in the middle of West Virginias defense was a repeating invitation that UCLA
freshman Jordin Canada
couldnt pass up.
Canada drove to the basket
often and scored a season-high
31 points to lead UCLA to a 6260 win over West Virginia for
the Womens National Invitation Tournament championship Saturday.
Canada was the only double-figure scorer for the Bruins (19-18) and was selected
the tournaments Most Valuable Player.
The driving lane was wide
open, Canada said. I just
tried to attack the basket as
much as I can.
West Virginia had success
in keeping UCLAs Kari Korver and Nirra Fields in check.
Korver had made 12 of 17 3pointers in her three previous
games and was limited to five
points Saturday. Fields, who

had averaged 20 points in the


tournament, finished with two
points on 0 of 9 shooting.
But West Virginias focus
on Korver and Fields meant
more chances for Canada.
They had to expend a lot of
defensive energy to take those
two guards away, said UCLA
coach Cori Close, who said
that made the decision easy to
let Canada keep shooting.
Late in the game, all I was
like is keep the ball in her
hands, get out of her way,
Close said.
Canada made 9 of 19 shots
and 13 of 15 free throws.
Give her credit, said West
Virginia coach Mike Carey.
She attacked.
The same wasnt true for
West Virginia, which had trouble getting close looks at the
basket against UCLAs zone
defense and was whistled for
several shot clock violations.
We were going east and
west instead of north and
south, Carey said. You want
to know why Canada got 31?
She went north and south.

Tempo, tempo, tempo. Whoever can dictate the pace of this


game has a better chance of
winning it. Both teams can get
up and down the floor, but its
more to South Carolinas liking
to get post players involved.
Each team has a dynamic
player who can take a game
over with Jewell Loyd of Notre
Dame and Tiffany Mitchell of
South Carolina. Loyd can do almost anything she wants on the
floor offensively and she can
take over a game when she
needs to.
Mitchell is more about controlling the flow of the game
and taking over when needed.
The other interesting matchup is the two freshmen. Aja Wilson and Brianna Turner were
predicted to be the top two
freshmen coming into this season. How will Muffet McGraw
utilize Turner against the big
front line of the Gamecocks?
Wilson hit the key tip-in to
beat us and wasnt a huge factor
in the win over Florida State.
Notre Dame definitely has
the experience going for them
having been to five straight Final Fours while this is South
Carolinas first. Although Dawn
Staley was here a few times as a
player, its a different entity
when youre worrying as a
coach about all the different
time demands put on your team.
Also as a player, the ball is in
your hands when the games on
the line. As a coach you just
hope they make the right
choices.

PAT SULLIVAN/AP

Duke coach Joanne P. McCallies team played all four of the teams in the
Women's Final Four.

If the game does come to the


end in a tight contest, South Carolina has been in a few of those
this season, including a onepoint win over Duke. Notre
Dame has had just one contest
come down to the final possession.

Maryland-Connecticut
To see what Maryland has
been able to do to get back to the
Final Four for a second straight
season after losing Alyssa
Thomas is impressive. The Terrapins guard play is much better this season with Lexie
Brown and Laurin Mincy leading the way.
While both Notre Dame and
South Carolina saw Connecticut
this season, Maryland hasnt.
Its always tough when you
havent played them in a year to
adjust to the pace at which they
play the game. What helps
Maryland is that most of this
team did play against the Huskies last season.
Unlike last season, when the

Serv ces

Terrapins made the Final Four


for the first time since their national championship in 2006,
Maryland knows how to handle
the pressure of the big stage
better.
That said, no one has been
here more often than UConn
lately it seems. They have been
to eight straight Final Fours for
a reason.
They have five players on
the court who can score in a variety of ways and also play such
great defense. Starting with
Breanna Stewart, who is nearly
impossible to guard because
she is so versatile. Throw in Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis and how
well shes shooting in the tournament. Not to mention the play
of Morgan Tuck and this team is
difficult to matchup with. Who
are you going to stop?
They dont take bad shots and
pass the ball so effectively to
get pretty much whatever shot
they want. They also play such
great defense that isnt cookie
cutter. They take away what
you want to do.

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6C

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

QUOTE OF THE DAY


FOR THEM TO
STEP UP AND DO
WHAT THEY DID, IT
JUST GOES TO SHOW
THAT WE ARE TRYING
TO CHANGE THINGS.
Derrick Gordon, the first openly gay Division I
mens basketball player, on the NCAAs
leadership against the state of Indianas
Religious Freedom Restoration Act
DAVID BUTLER FOR USA TODAY SPORTS

SPORTSLINE
FIRST WORD
ITS JUST LIKE THE
MICHAEL SAM
SITUATION IF HE WASNT
GAY, HE WOULD HAVE GONE
UNDRAFTED.
Jaguars defensive tackle
SenDerrick Marks, talking to
TMZ.com about the NFLs hiring of
Sarah Thomas as its rst female
official.

WILLIAMS BY GEOFF BURKE, USA TODAY SPORTS

MAGIC NUMBER

ERIC BOLTE, USA TODAY SPORTS

Miami Open titles for Serena


Williams, putting her with Chris
Evert, Martina Navratilova and
Steffi Graf as the only women to
win the same tennis tournament
at least eight times.

Two exhibition games Friday and Saturday featuring the Reds and Blue Jays drew a total of 96,545 fans in Montreal.

MONTREAL HOPES TO
PLAY REAL BALL AGAIN
Former Expos,
fans turn out
for exhibitions
Paul White

HUNTER BY KIM KLEMENT, USA TODAY SPORTS

TWEET OF THE DAY


@toriihunter48
FINALLY, SPRING
TRAINING IS OVER! FROM
TANNING TO FREEZING MY
BUTT OFF.
Twins outelder Torii Hunter.
Minnesota opens the season
Monday at the Tigers, with whom
Hunter played the last two
seasons.
ALMOST LAST WORD
SOMETIMES WHAT I SEE ...
IS YOU HAVE A LOT OF
PERSONNEL THAT ARE IN
POSITIONS OF POWER THAT
DONT HAVE REAL FOOTBALL
BACKGROUNDS.
Former NFL quarterback Jeff
Garcia, criticizing the 49ers front
office.
LAST WORD
ITS ALMOST LIKE BEING
DRAFTED AGAIN ... ITS THAT
SAME FEEL.
Pacers star Paul George, who will
make his season debut today
against the Heat. George broke
his right leg during a Team USA
scrimmage a little more than
eight months ago.
Edited by Casey Moore

USA SNAPSHOTS

High-scoring
affairs
Most points combined in an
NCAA Division I womens
basketball championship game:

1986: Texas (97)


vs. Southern Cal (81)

178

1990: Stanford (88)


vs. Auburn (81)

169

1998: Tennessee (93)


vs. Louisiana Tech (75)

168

1993: Texas Tech (84)


vs. Ohio State (82)

166

Source NCAA
ELLEN J. HORROW AND A. GONZALEZ, USA TODAY

@PBJWhite
USA TODAY Sports

Its been more than a


decade since baseball turned its
back on Montreal ... or was it the
other way around?
It no longer matters, judging
by the citys lovefest for the game,
a time-warp weekend that was a
wistful combination of nostalgia
and hope.
Were in Phase Two of our
journey, says Warren Cromartie,
the former Montreal Expos player who founded the Montreal
Baseball Project with an ambitious and formidable goal of
bringing back the major league
game played there for 36 seasons.
It was surreal for me, says Jason Marquis, the Cincinnati Reds
pitcher who started one of two
exhibition games against the Toronto Blue Jays this weekend, his
rst appearance at Olympic Stadium since 2004, the Expos nal
season.
It brings back good memories
playing here. These fans are
great. I remember they were
great back in the day. It would be
nice to see a team get back up
here, get a new stadium. Its always a fun city to come to.
The total of four games this
year and last year drew an average of 48,224 fans, including
50,231 on Saturday, to the stadium, which but for a new video
board looked remarkably as it
did when the Expos became the
Washington Nationals after the
2004 season. Except for the people in the seats. Each of this
weekends crowds was larger than
any single-game attendance for
the nal 404 home games of the
Expos existence.
When Marquis last pitched in
Montreal, the announced attendance was 5,611 in a season that
bottomed out with a crowd of
3,609. Two years earlier, amid annual expectations any season
could be the teams last, the Expos drew less than 4,000 four
times, with a low of 2,134.
Thats the stigma the city has
been trying to erase with this second consecutive year of bringing
in the Blue Jays, who were Canadas second big-league team after
MONTREAL

the Expos but now can add to the


attraction with Russell Martin,
who grew up in Montreal, as their
catcher.
Martin took the same subway
ride this weekend that he used to
make with his dad, who played
the pregame national anthems
Friday on his saxophone.
I still remember when I was
12 years old, being a fan, Martin
says. Here I am wearing a bigleague uniform, going to play in
front of family and friends. I
think when I go to sleep tonight
Im going to have a lot of good
things to think about.
STADIUM KEY TO RETURN

Theyre trying to market good


things in Montreal.
A sign with the Expos logo on
the left-eld wall says, On me
souvient (I remember) edition
1994.
Thats the 1994 team that had
the best record in baseball before
a work stoppage ended the season in August, one of the events
blamed for the games eventual
downward spiral in Montreal.
They honored former Expos
Vladimir Guerrero, Orlando Cabrera and Tony Perez during the
weekend. Fans chanted, Lets go
Expos. Everything but the bright
orange mascot Youppi, now the
property of hockeys Montreal
Canadiens.
It feels like a regular-season
game, Blue Jays manager John
Gibbons says. The fans love it. I
know we enjoy coming here and
doing this. Everybodys making a
little money, too.
Making enough to at least get
Major League Baseballs attention, though its not easy to come
up with a scenario that could put
a team in Montreal anytime soon.
The games like those are important as an initial test of the
level of interest that the market
has in the game, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred says. When
you have the kind of success
youve had in Montreal, you kind
of pass the rst initial test of
whether its a market that could
support baseball.
Hence Cromarties advance to
Phase Two, whether that be a
place to play or a team to play
there. Both are much more imposing than selling tickets twice a
year.
MLB has given no indication of
any expansion plans in the foreseeable future, leaving relocation
as the option. The Tampa Bay
Rays have made clear their dissatisfaction with their stadium

ERIC BOLTE, USA TODAY SPORTS

A fan expresses her hope for baseballs return to Montreal


during Fridays exhibition game at Olympic Stadium.
situation but have a lease that
runs through 2027. The Oakland
Athletics are in an ongoing dispute that involves the San Francisco Giants and MLB in their
attempt to get a new ballpark, but
Manfred says he expects a resolution there.
If nothing else, Montreal gives
MLB the stalking horse a place
where teams angling for a new
ballpark can threaten to move
it hasnt had since the Expos
lled the void in Washington.
A stadium is the potential dealmaker in Montreal, too.
The key thing in Montreal
would be to have a plan for an adequate facility that could support
baseball over the long haul,
Manfred says. I dont expect
people to go into the ground and
build a facility without some sort
of commitment that they are going to get a team, but I do think
that you need a plan and a commitment to how that plan is going
to be executed.
WE WANT TO REDO STORY

Which brings us back to the chain


of events that doomed the Expos.
The 1994 experience soured
the city and its fans but, in reality,
there was plenty more, from
changing ownership with declining allegiance to the city to a government reluctant to part with
money it doesnt have in the rst
place to a business community no

more inclined to get behind the


necessary downtown stadium.
Plug all that into the time
warp, too.
Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre says, Im a bit of an ambassador for baseball in Montreal.
People miss baseball. It is clearly
in our DNA. We want to redo the
story.
But he also says its clearly up
to the private sector to work with
ownership of a potential team to
make a new stadium happen. His
city and its province are in debt.
So far, there has been no visible
movement in the business community. A 2013 feasibility study
commissioned by Montreals
Chamber of Commerce recommended a 36,000-seat open-air
facility using Minneapolis Target
Field as a comparison.
For now, Montreal fans can
scream and dream for two days
and provide a hint of what those
1994 playoffs would have felt like,
and Martin can offer that its
pretty special just to be in Montreal this time of the year.
As for the future?
I dont know if Im qualied to
make an assessment, Martin
says. My passion tells me Id love
it. I think there are a lot of fans
who share the same passion I
have for the game. If you have a
good team anywhere, people will
come out. People show up to
watch people win.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

7C

MASTERS

10

Phil Mickelson is hoping to win his


fourth green
jacket.

PLAYERS
TO WATCH
World No. 1
Rory McIlroy needs a
Masters
victory to
complete a
career
Grand
Slam.

Phil Mickelson

Age: 44
Country: USA
PGA Tour record: Has won
ve majors, including three Masters. Is a U.S. Open title away from a
career Grand Slam. He has 42 victories and $75 million in earnings.
Masters record: Won in 2004,
2006, 2010. Has made the cut 20
times in 22 starts and owns
14 top-10 nishes.
How he got here: Qualied
four ways, but hes a lifer with
the three wins.

JASON GETZ,
USA TODAY SPORTS

Last year: Missed cut for rst


time since 1997.
Why he can win: With three
wins in 10 years, the question more
likely to be asked is, Why wont he
win? But he missed the cut last
year and hasnt played great golf
since the start of 2014. He hadnt
played Mickelson golf this year until
this week at the Shell Houston
Open. Still, if Phil ashes back to his
previous Augusta performances, you
can look for him on Sunday. And
this is his favorite place to play golf.

PETER CASEY,
USA TODAY
SPORTS

Rory McIlroy
Age: 25
Country: Northern Ireland
PGA Tour record: Has nine
wins and 40 top-10 nishes. Has
earned $23.6 million, with a U.S.
Open, British Open and two PGA
Championship titles.
Masters record: Has made ve
cuts in six. Held four-shot, 54-hole
lead in 2011 before a nal-round 80
crushed him.
How he got here: Having won
the U.S. Open, British Open and the

PGA in the past ve years will do


it, and he has done all three.
Last year: Tied for eighth
Why he can win: Putting has
been his biggest obstacle at Augusta
National. But he is the No. 1 golfer
in the world, and his collapse in
2011 hasnt haunted him. And he
certainly has had good days at
Augusta. Now well see if he
can put four consecutive good
days together and complete
a career Grand Slam.

Bubba Watson

Adam Scott

Dustin Johnson

Age: 36
Country: USA
PGA Tour record: Seven victories
and $27.7 million in earnings
Masters record:
Has not missed the
cut in six starts and
won in 2012 and 14.
How he got here:
Past winners get
lifetime passes, and
he has won it twice.
Last year: Won
by three shots over
Jordan Spieth and
Jonas Blixt.
Why he can win:
Watson will not have JAKE ROTH, USA TODAY SPORTS
Bubba Watson is
played for four
weeks before teeing aiming for his third
title in four years.
off, but he only
played one round in four weeks before
winning last year. He loves the course,
and vice versa. His power and ability to
cut the ball with his driver provides him a
huge advantage. The last time he played
as the defending champion he was uncomfortable from the get-go and nished
in a tie for 50th. He said hes better prepared for this go-round.

Age: 34
Country: Australia
PGA Tour record: 11 wins and
$37.7 million in earnings.
Masters record: Has one win
and four top-10
nishes in 13 starts.
How he got
here: Lifetime pass
with his 2013 win.
Last year: Tied
for 14th
Why he can
win: Because he
has done it before.
And despite
ROB SCHUMACHER,
changes off the
USA TODAY SPORTS
course hes newly New dad Adam
Scott
married and behas gone back to a
broomstick putter.
came a father in
February and on
the course he has a new caddie hes a
seasoned veteran who can handle pressure. Hes going back to a broomstick
putter, which he used in winning in 2013,
after struggling with a conventionallength putter this year. He remains one
of the best ball-strikers and is a threat
if the putter cooperates.

Age: 30
Country: USA
PGA Tour record: Nine wins and
$26.5 million in earnings.
Masters record: Has not had
a top-10 nish in
ve tournaments.
How he got
here: Qualied
four ways, including a Tour
victory in 2015.
Last year:
Missed cut
Why he can
win: Hes tanned,
JASON GETZ, USA TODAY SPORTS
rested and ready
Dustin Johnson is
after enduring
looking for his rst
personal probmajor victory.
lems in 2014. He
has threatened in majors before the
2010 U.S. Open, 2010 PGA and the 2011
British Open. Augusta National is right
up his alley as far as length and trajectory. And he already has one win under
his belt in 2015.

Jordan Spieth

Jason Day

Age: 21
Country: USA
PGA Tour record: Two victories and
$10.1 million in earnings before age 22.
Masters record:
Finished second in
his rst start in 2014.
How he got here:
He qualies three
ways, but the most
direct was tying for
second last year.
Last year: Tied
for second
Why he can win:
Hes royally honked
off that he didnt win
last year. He had the
lead before bogeys at
ROB SCHUMACHER,
Nos. 8 and 9 cost
USA TODAY SPORTS
him, and he still cant Jordan Spieth, who
gure out what hap- came up short a year
pened with his chip ago, has been hot.
shot on the eighth.
Hes young and hungry. And he won the
2015 Valspar Championship with shortgame wizardry, clutch play and a big dose
of cool. That was his third worldwide win
in four months. Then he added a runnerup nish two weeks later. Look out.

Age: 27
Country: Australia
PGA Tour record: Three wins and
$19.5 million in earnings
Masters record:
Four starts with two
top-three nishes,
including second in
2011 and third in
2013.
How he got here:
Qualied four ways,
but tying for fourth
in last years U.S.
Open is probably the
most direct.
Last year: Tied
for 20th
Why he can win:
His game just ts
JAKE ROTH, USA TODAY SPORTS
Jason Day hopes to
Augusta National.
improve on his 20thHe has plenty of
place nish in 2014.
repower tee to
green and plenty of
touch around and on the greens. His
performances at Augusta in 2011 and
2013 make it necessary to put him on the
list of guys who can hoist the hardware
on Sunday at the Masters for years to
come.

Martin Kaymer

Jimmy Walker
Age: 36
Country: USA
PGA Tour record: Five wins and
$15.4 million in earnings.
Masters record: Tied for eighth in
rst Masters last year.
How he got here: Qualied four ways,
but his top-10
nish last year got
him another
invite.
Last year: Tied
for eighth.
Why he can
win: The only
two-time winner
this season played
well in his Masters
debut. He has won
ve of his last 37
starts and the
late-bloomer is
JASON GETZ, USA TODAY SPORTS
playing the best
Jimmy Walker tied for
eighth in his rst Masgolf of his life. In
ters a year ago.
winning the Valero Texas Open two weeks before the
Masters, he displayed the perfect blueprint for Augusta extreme length and
solid putting. Youth is not always served,
and Walker has been dynamite as he has
aged. Whether its winning PGA Tour
events or having a stellar Ryder Cup, hes
playing the best golf of his life.

Age: 30
Country: Germany
PGA Tour record: Three wins and
$8.6 million in
career earnings.
Masters record: Has made
three cuts in
seven
appearances.
How he got
here: Qualied
ve ways, but
being a past U.S.
Open and PGA
Championship
winner will do it.
JASON GETZ, USA TODAY SPORTS
Last year:
Martin Kaymer is
Tied for 31st
condent that he can
nally tame Augusta.
Why he can
win: For years
Kaymer was bewitched at Augusta because he couldnt call upon a draw when
he wanted to gain distance with his tee
shots. Now, after years of practice, he can
condently call upon his ability to draw
the ball right-to-left. And when you have
two major titles, youve proved to yourself and everyone you have the game to
win anywhere, including Augusta.

Henrik Stenson
Age: 39
Country: Sweden
PGA Tour record: Four wins and
$17.1 million in
earnings.
Masters record: Has made six
cuts in nine starts.
Best nish is tie
for 14th last year.
How he got
here: Qualied
three ways, with
his top-four nishes in the PGA
Championship
and U.S. Open the
most direct.
ROB SCHUMACHER,
Last year: Tied
USA TODAY SPORTS
for 14th
Henrik Stenson aims
Why he can
to put together four
win: He hasnt
solid rounds.
been outstanding
but has been solid at Augusta. But hes
too good of a golfer to not put together
four rounds one of these years and
threaten to get his rst green jacket. His
ball-striking alone makes him a threat,
but the epic greens at Augusta National
have been his nemesis.

ABOUT THE MASTERS


TV: Thursday, 3-7:30
p.m, ESPN; Friday, 3-7:30
p.m., ESPN; Saturday,
3-7 p.m. ET, CBS; Sunday,
2-7 p.m., CBS.

Purse:
$9 million.
FedExCup
points: 600

Last year: Bubba Watson


red a nal-round 69 to win
his second green jacket by
three shots over Jonas Blixt
and Jordan Spieth.

Most victories: Jack Nicklaus


holds the record with six (1963,
1965, 1966, 1972, 1975, 1986).
Tiger Woods and Arnold Palmer
are next with four each.

Widest margin of
victory: Woods
holds the record
with a 12-stroke
victory in 1997.

Wire-to-wire champions: Four


golfers have recorded wire-to-wire
victories: Raymond Floyd (1976),
Nicklaus (1972), Palmer (1960) and
Craig Wood (1941).

Full
coverage
at golf
.usatoday
.com

8C

Weather & Sports

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

THE MID-WILLAMETTE VALLEY


Variable clouds today
with spotty showers.
Winds south becoming southwest 4-8
mph. Spotty showers
tonight. Winds south
4-8 mph.

TODAY

High

Monday

LOCAL WEATHER

Tuesday

Wednesday Thursday

Low

Local Forecast
Portland
57/39

Variable clouds
with a shower

Cloudy with a
shower or two

58/42

64/42

38 51 52

37

REGIONAL WEATHER

Friday

6 a.m Noon 6 p.m

55

StatesmanJournal.com

Variable cloudi- Mostly sunny and


ness
pleasant

61/39

Cloudy with
afternoon rain

64/38

62/44

Beaverton
55/37
Oregon City
55/38
McMinnville
54/37
Woodburn
SALEM
54/37
55/37
Corvallis
54/34

Shown is todays weather. Temperatures are todays highs and tonights lows.

Pendleton
49/33

The Dalles
57/34

Newberg
54/37

La Grande
44/28

SALEM
Prineville
45/23

Lebanon
54/36

Newport
51/41

Springeld
53/33
Coos Bay
52/39

Ontario
56/32

Bend
43/23

Burns
45/22

Medford
51/34

Klamath Falls
42/20

LOCAL ALMANAC

RIVER LEVELS

Temperatures
High/low ......................................... 57/37
Normal high/low ............................. 59/39
Record high/low ...... 79 (1966)/27 (2009)

Precipitation
24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace
Record .................................... 0.53 (1937)
Month to date (normal) ........... 0.56 (0.44)
Season to date (normal) ..... 29.88 (31.34)

Todays Pollen Index


Trees
Grass
Weeds
Molds
Source: National Allergy Bureau

Todays UV Index and RealFeel Temp

57

56

50

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index


number, the greater the need for eye and skin
protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High;
8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. The patented
AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is
an exclusive index of effective temperature based
on eight weather factors.

Air Quality Index

Yesterdays reading

SKY WATCH

As of 7 a.m. Saturday

Salem through 6 p.m. yesterday

8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon

Lakeview
43/18

Todays Forecast

0-50 Good; 51-100 Moderate; 101-150 Unhealthy


for sensitive groups; 151-200 Unhealthy; 201-300
Very Unhealthy; 301-500 Hazardous
OR Department of Environmental Protection

Willamette River
Flow(cfs) Stage(ft.) Change(ft.)
Eugene
1970
9.60
-0.06
Harrisburg
6300
2.90
-0.08
Corvallis
7200 11.50
-0.09
Albany
8100
4.50
-0.10
Salem
14800
7.50
-0.10
North Santlam River
Mehama
2700
4.14
+0.01
Santlam River
Jefferson
4800
3.93
-0.05
Columbia River
Vancouver
N.A.
5.72
+0.28
Nestucca River
Near Beaver
780
5.48
+0.03
Siletz River
Siletz
1220
4.58
+0.08
Alsea River
Near Tidewater 1080
3.77
+0.01

TIDES

Yaquina Bay and River at Newport


High
Ht.
Low
1:25 a.m.
7.7
7:49 a.m.
2:04 p.m.
6.8
7:47 p.m.
Depoe Bay
High
Ht.
Low
1:08 a.m.
8.0
7:34 a.m.
1:47 p.m.
7.1
7:32 p.m.
Netarts Bay at Netarts
High
Ht.
Low
1:58 a.m.
6.5
8:45 a.m.
2:37 p.m.
5.8
8:43 p.m.
Tillamook Bay at Bay City
High
Ht.
Low
2:14 a.m.
6.7
9:07 a.m.
2:53 p.m.
6.0
9:05 p.m.
Tillamook Bay at Tillamook
High
Ht.
Low
2:33 a.m.
6.2
10:22 a.m.
3:12 p.m.
5.5
10:20 p.m.
Willamette River at Portland
High
Ht.
Low
7:38 a.m.
0.0
4:07 a.m.
8:18 p.m.
0.0
4:39 p.m.

Ht.
0.3
1.6
Ht.
0.3
1.7
Ht.
0.3
1.3
Ht.
0.2
1.2
Ht.
0.2
0.9
Ht.
0.0
0.0

Sun and Moon

New
Apr 18

First
Apr 25

Full
May 3

Solunar Tables
Major periods last up to two hours after the
time listed. Minor periods are much shorter.

Today 7:21a
Mon. 8:13a
Tue. 9:07a
Wed. 10:03a
Thu. 11:00a
Fri. 11:57a

Today

P.M.
MINOR MAJOR

1:09a 7:44p 1:33p


2:01a 8:37p 2:25p
2:54a 9:32p 3:19p
3:50a 10:29p 4:16p
4:47a 11:27p 5:14p
5:43a
---- 6:11p

Monday

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

48/29/t
54/39/c
43/23/sn
57/36/sh
45/22/sf
55/34/sh
51/41/t
51/40/sh
47/33/t
42/20/sn
43/18/sh
44/28/sf
57/37/sh
51/41/sh

49/35/sh
58/40/sh
44/27/c
56/36/sh
47/26/pc
56/40/sh
56/41/r
55/42/sh
49/36/sh
45/29/sh
47/26/c
50/29/c
59/38/c
54/42/sh

North Bend
Olympia
Ontario
Pendleton
Portland
Redding
Redmond
Seattle
Spokane
Tacoma
Tri-Cities
Vancouver
Walla Walla
Yakima

52/39/t
58/35/c
56/32/sn
49/33/pc
57/39/sh
57/39/r
44/22/sn
56/42/c
53/35/c
56/37/c
56/36/pc
55/39/c
50/37/sh
56/33/pc

54/44/sh
57/37/sh
57/29/sh
56/34/c
59/44/c
58/45/r
47/27/c
56/43/sh
48/33/c
57/37/sh
60/37/c
55/38/pc
57/37/c
61/36/c

Today

Monday

Today

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Athens
Baghdad
Beijing
Berlin
Buenos Aires
Cairo
Dublin
Hong Kong
Jerusalem

62/57/c
83/58/s
63/39/s
49/30/pc
76/53/s
79/60/s
54/39/pc
83/74/pc
67/51/s

67/53/pc
87/59/s
57/35/c
48/29/pc
70/57/s
84/63/s
58/39/pc
84/73/r
73/53/s

London
Madrid
Manila
Mexico City
Montreal
Moscow
Paris
Rio de Janeiro
Rome

55/40/pc
71/43/s
90/78/t
77/52/pc
34/22/sf
41/30/c
51/34/pc
87/75/pc
57/43/sh

60/40/pc
66/45/pc
93/77/t
78/51/pc
41/29/pc
42/29/pc
54/35/s
82/72/r
58/40/s

Today

Monday

NATIONAL WEATHER

Sunrise today ........................ 6:46 a.m.


Sunset tonight ..................... 7:44 p.m.
Moonrise today .................... 9:14 p.m.
Moonset today ...................... 7:26 a.m.

A.M.
MINOR MAJOR

Monday

Hi/Lo/W

Ashland
Astoria
Bend
Boise
Burns
Eugene
Eureka
Florence
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls
Lakeview
La Grande
Longview
Newport

Today

Last
Apr 11

Mostly cloudy today; periods of snow,


accumulating 1-3 inches, except a
couple of showers of rain or snow
across the north. Some snow tonight,
accumulating 1-3 inches.

City

WORLD CITIES

Ashland
48/29

49

Baker
44/23

Roseburg
55/35

Brookings
49/41

42

John Day
40/28

Variable cloudiness today. A couple of


showers and a thunderstorm; arriving
during the afternoon in the north. A
couple of showers tonight. Showers
tomorrow.

REGIONAL CITIES
Today

Tillamook
53/39

Coastal Forecast

Mountain Forecast

Albany
54/35
Eugene
55/34

Astoria
54/39

Variable cloudiness today. A couple


of showers; arriving in the afternoon
across the north. Mostly cloudy tonight
with a couple of showers. Spotty
showers tomorrow.

Monday

Today

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Singapore
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto

90/80/t
74/60/pc
60/54/r
39/29/sf

91/79/t
77/59/r
70/53/c
44/32/sh

Today

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Baltimore
Boston
Chicago
Charlotte
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu

76/45/s
44/35/pc
69/51/s
65/43/s
48/36/pc
64/41/pc
68/49/s
65/47/s
60/41/pc
66/59/t
72/41/pc
71/49/s
60/35/c
83/70/sh

75/44/s
46/36/r
69/61/t
70/51/s
46/39/sh
61/45/c
70/58/t
62/55/t
61/51/sh
80/66/sh
72/39/pc
69/52/t
60/46/c
82/70/t

Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Miami
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
Missoula
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Omaha

75/67/c
64/46/s
65/50/pc
79/54/s
71/53/pc
84/72/pc
55/37/c
52/37/c
47/26/sh
69/51/pc
77/69/t
60/45/pc
64/56/t
72/47/s

84/68/pc
61/55/c
73/58/t
73/51/s
66/53/s
83/73/pc
50/39/c
44/35/r
47/24/sn
69/60/t
83/70/sh
65/50/pc
85/65/pc
71/50/t

Orlando
Palm Springs
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Reno
Sacramento
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Diego
San Francisco
Tampa
Tucson
Washington, DC

83/67/pc
85/56/s
63/45/pc
89/61/s
61/39/pc
53/31/c
60/40/sh
67/51/pc
69/43/c
69/60/pc
61/48/sh
86/70/pc
88/51/s
69/50/s

87/67/pc
78/51/s
68/53/s
84/58/s
64/50/pc
55/37/c
66/48/c
71/62/c
58/39/sh
66/57/pc
65/51/c
85/70/s
85/51/s
72/58/s

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow urries, sn-snow, i-ice.

-10s

In the Sky

Easter Sunday is the Sunday following the


full moon (April 4) after the vernal equinox
(March 20).

Showers

-0s

T-storms

0s
10s

Rain

Source: Jim Todd OMSI

Flurries

ROAD CONDITIONS

20s
30s
40s

Go to Statesman
Journal.com/Roadcams
to nd updated information
on road conditions

Snow

Ice

WEATHER HISTORY

Tambora, a volcano in Indonesia, erupted


on April 5, 1815, sending 30 cubic miles of
dust into the atmosphere and caused the
year without a summer in 1816.

Cold
Front
Warm
Front

50s
60s
70s
80s
90s
100s

Forecasts and graphics provided by


AccuWeather, Inc. 2015

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

Stationary
Front

110s

CACTUS LEAGUE: MARINERS 6, ROCKIES 3

GOLF ROUNDUP

Morrison homers
in Seattles victory

Spieth holds 1-shot lead over Cook

By Mike Cranston
Associated Press

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. Eddie


Butler was shaky in his final audition for a starting job, giving
up a two-run home run to Logan
Morrison and balking in a run in
the Colorado Rockies 6-3 loss to
the Seattle Mariners on Saturday.
Manager Walt Weiss wanted
to see the 24-year-old pitch effectively after the right-hander
didnt get out of the first inning
in his last start due to a tired
shoulder. Butler said he was
healthy, but was charged with
five runs and six hits while getting seven outs.
Everything felt good with
that, but just a couple bad pitches today, Butler said.
Weiss said theyll decide Sunday whether Butler or Christian
Bergman gets the last roster
spot.
Seattle starter Taijuan Walk-

25

er, finished spring training with


a 0.67 ERA, more than enough to
earn the fourth rotation spot.
Robinson Cano and Nelson
Cruz each singled off Butler before exiting early in the teams
final exhibition game.
Morrison credits his hitting
coach with helping him bust out
of a slump.
Howard Johnson kind of
banned me from the cage. I was
taking too many swings, Morrison said. It wasnt any more
than I was taking in Seattle, but
its a little cooler in Seattle.
Morrison said he got too
technical as he went 0 for 19 before clearing out all the noise.
He followed Fridays RBI single
by crushing Butlers misplaced
fastball to left in his first at-bat.
It was a nice way to head into
Mondays opener against the
Los Angeles Angels.
Cant wait to play in front of
a sold-out crowd, he said.

HOUSTON Jordan Spieths


pre-Masters run of extraordinary golf continued Saturday
as the 21-year-old Texas native
shot a 5-under-par 67 to take a
one-shot lead over three players through 54 holes of the
Houston Open.
A victory Sunday would be
Spieths third on the PGA Tour
and make him the second
youngest after Tiger Woods
with three titles since 1940. It
would also allow him to wrest
the lead in the point standings
away from Jimmy Walker and
further boost his confidence
ahead of the seasons first major championship in Augusta,
Georgia, next week. Spieth
was the runner-up to Bubba
Watson there last spring.
Spieth sank a 41-foot birdie
putt from just off the green on
the par-3 16, to get to 14 under
par, where he finished. He is a
career-best No. 4 in the World
Golf Rankings.
Today was as comfortable
as Ive ever been with the lead
on a weekend, Spieth said. I
wanted to get into contention

a tournament its going to be


good for you the next time you
tee up, he said.
Austin Cook, who gained entry into the field through the
Monday qualifier, is tied for
second at 203 with first-round
leader Scott Piercy and Johnson Wagner, the Houston
Opens 2008 champion.

GEORGE BRIDGES/AP

Jordan Spieth hits his second shot


on the 15th hole during the third
round of the Houston Open golf
tournament on Saturday.

as much as I could prior to the


Masters, to have as much experience as I could to limit those
nerves. This feels really good.
(Sunday) Ill certainly have
nerves, but hopefully Ill give
myself a chance to win. Then
Ill take even more confidence
into next week.
Anytime you can close out

LPGA: Sei Young Kim made two


late birdies Saturday to take a threestroke lead in the ANA Inspiration.
The long-hitting South Korean
player shot a 3-under 69 to reach 10
under at Mission Hills with a round
left in the years first major.
Kim holed a downhill 18-footer
from the fringe on the par-4 16th
and made a 10-foot birdie putt on
the par-3 17th. She two-putted for
par from the back fringe on the
par-5 18th.
Stacy Lewis was second after a 68.
She bogeyed Nos. 15 and 17 and
missed a 6-foot birdie putt on 18.
Morgan Pressel, Brittany Lincicome and Ariya Jutanugarn were 6
under. Lincicome drove into the water on 18 and closed with a 70. Pressel had a 71, and Jutanugarn shot 66.
Wire services

1D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Mid-Valley
y
LOCAL FIRST

CAPI LYNN / STATESMAN JOURNAL

A 1941 Chevy pickup is parked in front of the Fussy Duck on Commercial Street SE on Wednesday. The Fussy Duck is a retail store that sells gifts, home decor,
funky junk and more. Owner Risa Cowley bought the truck to draw attention to the store.

41 Chevy truck is show piece


Vehicle draws attention
to the Fussy Duck store
At least a couple times a month, someone
stops by the Fussy Duck not to shop for gifts
or home decor, but to ask about the rusty old
pickup in the parking lot.
What year is it? Is it for sale? One person
offered $10,000 on the spot.
Its usually gentlemen, and they come in
and want to talk to my husband, store owner Risa Cowley said. Thats when he tells
them, Its not mine, its hers.
She bought the 1941 Chevy truck a year
ago, shortly after the Fussy Duck opened at
its current location, 3170 Commercial St. SE.
And she bought it for one reason only to
draw attention to the store.

We call it a show piece, she said. It


draws your eye up to the store. If you look at
a lot of fun, funky junk kind of stores, a lot
of them have trucks as display pieces.
She purchased it locally from a man who
had two of the same
year and model and
decided to restore the
other one. Her husband
Jim, for the record,
didnt want her to buy
it, although he now
recognizes the benefits
Capi Lynn
of it being a billboard
F O RWA R D T H I S
for the business.
Risa Cowley didnt
know any history about the truck, referring
me to the previous owner, Tim Fleming. He
acquired the truck about five years earlier
from an 89-year-old man in La Grande who

once operated a towing service.


He drove it for years and used it in his
business, Fleming said. When it wasnt
serviceable, it was sitting outside for years.
Cowley has no idea what the truck is
worth the truck sold for $655 retail in 1941
but she said she got a good deal on it.
Fleming even delivered it and helped park it
where it is today, under the stores towering
street-front sign.
The body of the vehicle, which Cowley
fondly calls the Fussy Duck Truck, is intact
but there are many dents and cracks. Two of
the windows are broken, and the one on the
passenger side has rows of clear tape covering it. A couple of the tires could use some
air. Stenciled on the wooden bed of the truck
is Troop 118.
See TRUCK, Page 2D

Saturday Seder
symbolizes journey
By Alexa Armstrong
Statesman Journal

Abbey Vanderbeek stirred a


huge bowl of sliced potatoes
seasoned with fresh rosemary
and olive oil.
Also in Temple Beth Sholoms kitchen, her fellow congregation members busily prepared salmon and ratatouille
for Saturdays community Seder in Salem, the evening meal
that marks the beginning of

Li Tubman
prepares the
holiday candles
prior to the
start of a
Community
Passover Seder
on Saturday at
Temple Beth
Sholom in
South Salem.

Passover.
We are celebrating life, and
being together, Vanderbeek
said.
In the center of every table at
the meal sat a communal plate
the Seder plate of boiled
eggs, spring herbs, strips of
horseradish, a mixture of diced
apples and chopped walnuts, a
beet and matzo bread.
And at the table of Rabbi Yis-

DANIELLE
PETERSON /
STATESMAN
JOURNAL

See SEDER, Page 10D

SJ NOW
SATURDAY'S LOTTERY

A Facebook post reprinted Saturday on


Page 6A, the Daily Download page, was
incorrect. The post should have identified
the Corban University sports player as
Deen Castronovos niece.

Megabucks:
4-13-17-38-39-41
Jackpot: $2.2 million;
0 winners
5 of 6: 2 winners,
$952.50
4 of 6: 265 winners,
$46.90

CORRECTIONS

Pick 4
1 p.m.: 2-8-1-9;
4 p.m.: 6-9-5-1;
7 p.m.: 0-0-0-3;
10 p.m.: N/A
Win For Life:
17-45-51-66

To report a correction or clarification, call


the newsroom at (503) 399-6773.

REACH US: Don Currie, local editor, (503) 399-6677; dcurrie@StatesmanJournal.com

Sharing

Urban
farmers

Recognizing positive stories


that drive us forward

Classes teach veterans and


and novices alike the basics of
urban gardening. Page 4A

Powerball:
33-39-40-41-54
Powerball: 28
Lucky Lines:
1-5-12-14-19-23-26-32

GoodNews
25

CORRECTION

2D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Eugene slams brakes on Uber


Ride-sharing
service owes city
$66,000 in fines
Associated Press

EUGENE Easter Sunday


marks the end of Uber in Eugene, at least for now.
The Register-Guard newspaper reported Saturday that a
hearings official imposed a civil
penalty of $1,500 a day on the
ride-service company after deciding it is violating city code.
Moreover, the official upheld
penalties levied by the city,
which means Uber must pay
$66,000 in fines accrued since
February.
The hearings officials decision reaffirms what the city has
said all along, Eugene officials
said in a statement late Friday.
Uber needs to apply for a Public Passenger Vehicle Company
License in order to operate legally in Eugene.
Uber said on its Eugene blog
that it must make the difficult
decision to pause operations,
starting at 10 a.m. Sunday.
Uber started service in Eugene about seven months ago,
allowing people to use a smartphone app to hail and electronically pay a driver who has
signed up with Uber and uses
his or her privately owned vehi-

DANIELLE PETERSON / STATESMAN JOURNAL

The Uber app as shown from an iPhone. In Eugene, the ride-booking service is suspending operations starting
Sunday over a city code issue. Uber owes the city $66,000 in fines accrued since February,

cle to transport passengers.


As in many other places, Uber ran into problems with existing taxi regulations.

The city views Uber as a


transportation company subject to the citys licensing requirements. Uber maintains it

is basically a technology company that links customers to


drivers who are independent
contractors, and that the citys

policies and regulations dont


apply.
The citys statement said
Mayor Kitty Piercy and staff
met with Uber representatives
last month and offered them the
opportunity to operate legally
under a temporary operating
agreement.
The proposal did not require Uber to meet the same requirements as taxis, the statement said, just the three minimum safety requirements.
Those requirements were:
Driver background checks
through the police departments
law-enforcement database.
Proof of adequate commercial liability insurance.
Verification of vehicle
maintenance and safety equipment.
A sticking point has been the
requirement that the company
provide what the city considers
adequate insurance for the time
when an Uber driver is seeking
a passenger but does not have
one.
An Uber spokeswoman said
the company has worked out a
deal with several major insurance companies to provide commercial insurance to cover the
period when a driver is looking
for a passenger. The limit that
was agreed on at this point, however, was $1 million per incident, lower than the $1.3 million
required by Eugene.

DIVORCES
The following are divorces received between March 27 and April
2. For more, go to StatesmanJournal.com/Records.

MARION COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT


Divorces granted
Candy Juarez Candy and Johnny W. Pagan Jr.; Boyce Ray Wakefield and Rhonda Sue Wakefield; Karen A. Roth and Stephen E.
Roth; Ashley Chanthakhoun and Michael Chanthakhoun; Trishah
Susanna Schwartz and Justin Charles Schwartz; Michael Larry
Starkey and Dona Rae Starkey; Troy D. Kirkland and Gloria J.
Kirkland; Cassandra L. Flowers and Harry E. Flowers; Deborah Rae
Romano and William George Shortis; Yessica Yazmin Chavez
Olvera and Leonardo Gonzalez Perez; Jessica A. Ovalle and Hugo
V. Rocha; Kodi Walters and Michael Walters; Maria Consuelo
Flores and Joel DeJesus Bermundez; Arthur B. Cummins and
Pamela J. Cummins; Katherine L. Strubel and Thomas J. Strubel;
Stacie Lynn Watts and Lawrence B. Watts; Doreen Ann Backus
and Fred Albert Hibben; Lynda J. Stein and William F. Stein; Luis
Alberto Galindo-Muniz and Laura Marie Galindo; Eric Cassidy and
Danielle Cassidy; Tricia Ann Bates and Ryan Michael Bates; Susan
Christine Vollmer and William Alan Vollmer; David Richard Earnest and Cheryl Lynn Earnest; Victoria Simmons and Joey Simmons; Maria Guadalupe Estrada-Silva and Jesus Estrada-Alvarez;
Janine Carranza Wisniewski and Michael Wisniewski; Tera Christine Spradling and Jennifer Lee Spradling; Jason Riley Pacheco
and Michelle Lynn Pacheco; Mildred Sue Courson and Kenneth D.
Courson; Fran Boone Collins and Clenard Howard Collins; Nancy
L. Hatch and Scott C. Hatch; Andrew S. McCoy and Brooke N.
McCoy; Hilda Murillo and Alejandro Maciel; Desseare Ellen Jones
and Arion Gerald Jones; Jason A. Tuck and Karen P. Tuck; Michael
Henry Wilt and Breanne Wilt; Todd Alan Pote and Sandy Cristi
Pote.
CAPI LYNN / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Retirement May Be Far Off,


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FINANCIAL ADVISOR
South | 503-363-0445

Michael Wooters Bridgette Walker

Mario Montiel

The 1941 Chevy truck parked in front of the Fussy Duck on Commercial Street SE has a long hood with rugged front fenders and
a bold front grill. Chevy trucks from 1941 to 1946 are known as The Art Deco Series and are somewhat rare.

Truck
Continued from Page 1D

There is no for sale sign in the


window. But that doesnt stop car
enthusiasts from inquiring, like
the gentleman who offered her
$10,000 for the truck.
I dont know if he was serious,
Cowley said. But I said no.
Chevy trucks from 1941 to 1946
are known as The Art Deco Series. They have long hoods and
small cabs with rugged front fenders and bold front grills. The
trucks are somewhat rare because
of a limited production span. Chevy halted production for the civilian market after the United States
entered World War II and didnt
resume until late 1945.
Everything is for sale in Cowleys business, though, right?
It would have to be a pretty
good offer, she said. I looked for
months and months and months
for a truck like this even when I
was at the old store and couldnt
find one in the price range I was

looking for.
She saw this one on Craigslist
when she was caring for her ailing
mother. She couldnt leave her
moms side, so she called Fleming,
told him she wanted to buy it, and
then asked if he could go to the
Fussy Duck, where her husband
could write him a check. The man
sent his wife to the shop, and the
deal was done.
I didnt even look at it, Cowley
said. All I saw was pictures.
She didnt care what year it
was. She just wanted a vintage
truck.
I like the style, and I like the
rust, she said. It sounds so silly,
but I like rust.
Electrical power has been extended to the area where the truck
is parked. During the holidays, it
was decorated with a lit Christmas
tree.
Eventually, wed like to decorate it for certain times of the
year, Cowley said.
She has other ideas of trimming
the truck, including filling the bed
with produce and flowers to make
it look like it just returned from

the farmers market.


Fleming, who lives in South
Salem and drives by the truck all
the time, warned her to expect
offers if she planned to put it on
display. He also warned her that
its parts could be susceptible to
theft.
Weve screwed everything
shut. You cant get into it, Cowley
said.
Its sole purpose to is to lure
people inside the store, which is
set back considerably from Commercial Street SE. And it has
worked, to Jim Cowleys surprise.
Business is better than ever at the
Fussy Duck, which opened in Salem five years ago.
Hes learned a lot since hes
been working with the women, his
wife said.
Forward This appears Wednesdays
and Sundays and highlights the people,
places and organizations of the
Mid-Willamette Valley. Contact Capi
Lynn at clynn@StatesmanJournal.com
or (503) 399-6710, or follow her the rest
of the week on Twitter @CapiLynn and
Facebook @CapiLynnSJ.

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

LOCAL FIRST

3D

Causes
CALENDAR
TODAY
Easter egg hunt and fundraiser:
Collect brightly colored eggs filled with
treats that you can feed to the animals.
Visit with Helen, the American bison.
Other activities include door prizes and
more. 1 to 4 p.m., Lighthouse Farm
Sanctuary, 36831 Richardson Gap Road,
Scio. $10 suggested donation. (503)
394-4486,
www.lighthousefarmsanctuary.org.

THURSDAY
Victor Point School chili feed and
auction: Hosted by Victor Points Parent
Teacher Community Club, the 40-plusyear-old event raises money for students
and teachers at this rural K-8 school. Its
a dinner, dessert and huge raffle, featuring more than 100 items. Cakewalk will
feature baked goods made by school
families. 5 to 8 p.m., Victor Point School,
1175 Victor Point Road SE, Silverton.
Meal tickets are $5 for adults, $3 for
children and seniors. Raffle tickets are
$1; ticket-holders need not be present to
win. (503) 873-4987.
PETtalks: Ideas for Caring: Guest
speaker will discuss caring for pets. Light
refreshments provided. 6 to 8 p.m.,
Willamette Humane Society, Education
Hall, 4246 Turner Rd SE. $5 suggested
donation. (503) 585-5900,
https://whs4pets.org/services/
behavior-training/pet-talks/.

ASHLEY SMITH / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Lisa Heitmann talks with her daughter Guinevere Cooper, left, 6, while she holds 16-month-old Rosetta Shields, a friends baby,
Thursday at the Salem Interfaith Hospitality Networks day center in Salem.

THURSDAY-SATURDAY

Loving their neighbors


Interfaith network
unites to shelter
homeless families
By Kaellen Hessel
Statesman Journal

hurches will be packed


Sundayfor Easter, but
those same buildings
stand vacant most nights
of the week.
Through Salem Interfaith Hospitality Network, 18 congregations
have banded together to provide
some of the only available emergency housing for homeless families in
Marion and Polk counties.
These churches rotate hosting the
families a week at a time. Families
eat dinner and sleep at the churches
and then spend their days at school,
at work, or at the nonprofits day center as they search for jobs and permanent housing.
All families that went through Interfaiths program last year moved
into their own homes, Executive Director T.J. Putman said. Since the
network began in 1999, more than
1,000 children and their parents have
been served, he said.
The network is made up of Christian churches, ranging from Protestant to Catholic to nondenominational, and a Unitarian congregation, but
others are able to join.
Its a tenet of every faith to love
your neighbor, Putman said.
Four families have spent the past
week staying at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Salem,
5090 Center St. NE. Volunteers prepared dinner, welcomed guests and
spent the night. Volunteers at the
congregation have activities available in the evenings, but oftentimes
families are so exhausted by the end
of they day go to their own rooms,
said Samantha Scales, office manager.

503-589-9844

Upcycle Oregon: featuring upcycled


artwork by Oregon artists, and highlighting re-use, reduction and upcycling
efforts statewide. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday and noon to 4 p.m. Saturday.
Artist reception 4 to 5 p.m. Friday and
an "Upcycled Fashion" show Saturday.
Oregon State Capitol, Galleria, 900
Court St. NE. Free. (971) 208-5869,
www.upcycleoregon.org.

GET INVOLVED

Salem Interfaith Hospitality


Network is in need of a new van.
The 15-passenger van they use to
shuttle families between the
churches and day center has a
broken heater and other problems, said Executive Director T.J.
Putman.

SATURDAY
Alexias Cozy Covers blanket making
day: Create blankets of all types for
foster children, youth and others in
need. Fleece and quilt top kits available
for you to sew. Donations of completed
quilts, quilt tops, other blankets and
blanket-making supplies are needed. 10
a.m. to 2 p.m., Salem Evangelical Church,
455 Locust St. NE. Free. (503) 576-1775.

To volunteer or make a donation, contact Putman at tj@salemihn.org or (503) 370-9752.

In the three weeks the Shieldses


have been in the program, theyve
bonded with the other families. Everyone feels like theyre in this together, Cara Shields said. Her fellow
guests have offered to baby-sit her
16-month-old daughter, Rosetta,
while she ran errands. Its wonderful
to have that kind of trust, she said.
This has been a really wonderful
experience, and thats not something
you expect out of this kind of situation, Shields said.
Interfaith was inundated with
families looking for shelter after the
YWCA shuttered its shelter and The
Salvation Army stopped serving
families in 2013.
In July, Interfaith started a rental
assistance program where the organization pays for families security
deposit and first six months of rent
while providing case management.
The families then take on the financial responsibility.
Now, the network is housing families in Salem and Keizer but is looking to expand in Polk County. It held a
pilot program at Christs Church in
Monmouth recently that was supported by several churches in the
county.
We have the resources in our
faith community to end homelessness, and I think we can do that, Putman said.

Walk MS 2015: Bringing more than


5,000 people together to rally for a
good cause and raise critical funds that
benefit the nearly 8,000 people living
with MS in Oregon and Southwest
Washington. 10 a.m., Riverfront Park,
200 Water St. NE. No fundraising minimum; encouraging everyone to invite
four friends and family members to
contribute $35 each. (503) 445-8342,
www.walkMSoregon.com.
Ice cream social: Current and prospective volunteers at the Salem Art Association are encouraged to celebrate each
other and their efforts. 1 to 3 p.m., Bush
Barn Art Center, 600 Mission St. SE. Free.
(503) 581-2228, www.salemart.org.
Spring fashion show and tea: A
fundraiser to support the activities of
the senior center, the show features a
formal tea, refreshments and a fashion
show of the finest clothing and accessories from the centers Nifty Thrifty Rummage Center and gift shop. 2 to 4 p.m.,
South Salem Senior Center, 6450 Fairway
Ave. SE. $5. Must purchase in advance.
(503) 588-0748.

THROUGH APRIL
Fabric Drive: Three nonprofit organizations, CAFA, PAL, and Alexias Cozy
Covers, all in the Salem area need your
unwanted fabric. Donate cotton and
home dec fabrics. Fabric will be measured, folded and sold at the fabric fair
in May. Proceeds benefit spay/neuter
programs for dogs and cats in the community, as well as Alexias Cozy Covers in
making blankets for people in need. Call
or text to donate. (503) 409-2543.

Reporter

Forward This

Out and About

Calendar

Editorial Assistant

Editor

KAELLEN HESSEL

CAPI LYNN

LEANN MOORE

LEE CLARKSON

DAN BENDER

Phone: (503) 399-6743


Email: khessel@
StatesmanJournal.com
Twitter: @KaellenHessel

Phone: (503) 399-6710


Email: clynn
@StatesmanJournal.com

MARY LOUISE
VANNATTA

Phone: (503) 399-6785


Email: calendar@StatesmanJournal.com
Upload your events at
www.statesmanjournal.com/calendar

Phone: (503) 399-6833


Email: lclarkson@
StatesmanJournal.com

Phone: (503) 399-6731


Email: dbender@
StatesmanJournal.com
Twitter: @DanBender_SJ

Email: outandaboutsj
@live.com

503-589-9844

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Everything the organization does


is through the local church, Putman
said. Churches provide housing,
food, in-kind donations and volunteers. Sixteen additional churches
support the organization but dont
provide housing. These partnerships
keep the nonprofits overhead costs
minimal, Putman said.
Although the nonprofit is faithbased, theres no requirement for
participating families to practice a
faith or participate in any religious
activities. The churches and their
volunteers live out their faith
through their actions rather than
their words, Putman said.
The only criteria for eligibility are
that families must have kids, be willing to work to regain their independence, pass a background check and
pass a drug test, Putman said.
Families tend to stay in the program for about 35 days, Putman said.
During that time, a case manager
helps meet each familys needs. Lifeskills classes are offered each week.
They cover parenting, budgeting,
CPR and first aid, how to be a good
tenant, credit counseling, conflict
resolution, and self-care. A case manager continues to follow up with families after theyve been placed in a
permanent home.
The day center, at 1055 Edgewater
St. NW, is meant to feel like a home. It
features living rooms where families
can bond or meet with a case manager, a play room overflowing with
toys and a well-engineered box fort, a
kitchen, a laundry room and a computer room.
Most shelters are segregated by
gender, meaning that homeless families must split up in order to stay
there.
The Shields family became homeless in February after Cara Shields
lost her job as a switchboard operator to automation. Her husband receives disability pay, but it wasnt
enough to support them.
Our big issue was staying together, and thats something thats really
hard to find, Cara Shields said.

Used book sale: 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday; 9


a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday; 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday. Stayton Community Center,
400 W Virginia St., Stayton. (503) 7698886, www.folstore.org.

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StatesmanJournal.com

Causes
SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Monthly giving increases donors impact


Summer is coming, and the director
of your favorite nonprofit may be worried.
This is especially true for charities
that depend heavily on donors to fund
their missions. It
makes sense if you
think about it; summer means many
distractions.
Perhaps even
now you are planning a really cool
Phil McCorkle vacation, or maybe
S M A RT G I V I N G
all the great weather we have been
appreciating has
you looking eagerly ahead to summer activities you will enjoy. Youre not alone
and, since so many of us cram so much
into our June through August, we forget
to support our nonprofits.
Summer is statistically one of the two
slowest times of the year for charitable
donations. The other dip occurs in January to February, right after the tradition-

al holiday giving season.


Since expenses happen every month
of the year, dips in income can mean that
the nonprofit must tap reserves to operate in the lean months, trusting that the
months with strong donations will be
good enough to make up the difference.
If you want to help your favorite charity eliminate this boom-or-bust cycle,
there is an easy answer. Consider becoming a monthly sustainer donor by completing a form that gives your chosen
nonprofit permission to automatically
deduct your donation from your account
each month.
For a nonprofit, a core group of sustainer donors means dependable income
that can be counted upon all year long.
That gives the organizations leaders
confidence in planning and the ability to
make mission-necessary expenditures
even during months when traditional donated income lags. In short, it helps them
do a better job of achieving the mission
you care about.
Monthly giving has its advantages for

you, too. Once you sign up, you no longer


have to find and address an envelope,
write a check, buy a stamp, and drive to
the post office. It allows you to plan and
budget your contributing so that you
know exactly how much support you are
providing to your favorite charity.
There is another advantage of sustainer giving that is often overlooked. As
a donor, you are probably giving because
you believe in a cause. It is equally likely
that you wish you could have a larger impact.
Most people find that monthly giving
allows them to comfortably increase
their support. For example, it tends to be
a lot easier to give $50 a month than it is
to write one check for $500. But, if you do
the math at the end of the year, you will
find that you have actually contributed
$600, and that is a bigger impact for your
charity. Typically, the nonprofit will mail
you one summary report of all your contributions at the end of the year for use in
preparing your taxes.
Always, you retain control of your do-

nating. Stopping or changing your


monthly giving at any time is as
easy as a phone call, an email or a letter
to your nonprofit.
The sum of all these advantages make
monthly sustainer giving something you
may want to explore as a way to support
all the charities you care about.
I look at it this way: If you are planning that vacation, chances are that you
are making arrangements with a neighbor to care for your home by picking up
your mail and watering your lawn. Similarly, signing up as a monthly sustainer
donor assures your favorite nonprofit is
cared for while you are away. And, you
just might ease the worry of a nonprofit
director wondering how to accomplish
the mission during an uncertain summer.
Phil McCorkle is president of the Center for
Community Innovation, a Salem-based
nonprofit whose mission is to strengthen
and support area nonprofits. He can be
reached at pmccorkle@ccioregon.org.

GET INVOLVED
Adaptive Riding Institute: Volunteers needed to help with riding
sessions. Adaptive Riding Institute is a nonprofit that provides therapeutic recreational horseback riding for children and adults with
disabilities in the Salem area. (503) 743-3890, www.adaptiveridingin
stitute.org.
AARP Driver Safety Program: Volunteers teach the six-hour classroom refresher course for experienced motorists. Training and materials are provided. $15 for AARP members/$20 non-AARP members.
(503) 320-8246, www.aarp.org/drive.
American Cancer Societys Cancer Resource Center in Salem
Hospital: Seeking volunteers to help patients and their families get
the information they need regarding diagnosis, treatment and free
services. (503) 795-3914, julie.robertson@cancer.org.
American Cancer Society Road To Recovery: Seeking volunteer
drivers to help get community members battling cancer to their
treatments. (503) 795-3971, lily.westlund@cancer.org.
American Red Cross Blood Drive: Seeking volunteers to help with
blood drive events and serve as administrative assistants. (503) 7791263, marisa.wyckoff@redcross.org.
American Red Cross Disaster Relief: Seeking local and national
disaster volunteers. (503) 585-5414, volunteer.cascades@redcross.org.
American Wildlife Foundation: Seeking volunteers in areas of
operation including animal care, landscape maintenance, education
programs and pen construction and repair. (971) 227-4036 or
www.awildfound.org.

CASA of Marion County: Seeks volunteers to advocate in court to


help abused and neglected children in foster care find safe, permanent homes. Training provided. (503) 934-1298,
lene.garrett@state.or.us.
Center for Hope & Safety: Seeking English and Spanish-speaking
volunteers to provide emotional support and local resources on a
24-hour crisis hotline (and occasionally in person). Center for Hope &
Safety is a Marion County nonprofit that provides services to victims
and survivors of domestic and sexual violence. Training provided.
(503) 378-1572 or volunteer@hopeandsafety.org.
City of Salem: Seeking volunteers for the Citizens Advisory Traffic
Commission, Citizen Budget Committee, Civil Service Commission,
Downtown Advisory Board, Housing & Urban Development Advisory
Commission, Human Rights & Relations Advisory Committee, North
Gateway Redevelopment Advisory Board, Salem Housing Advisory
Committee, Senior Center Advisory Commission, Salem Social Services
Advisory Board and West Salem Redevelopment Advisory Board.
(503) 588-6255, Ext. 7269, kwest@cityofsalem.net,
www.cityofsalem.net/boardsandcommissions.
Deepwood Gardeners: Seeking individuals to join this group of
dedicated volunteers that have been servicing the gardens for 35
years. Official work time is Mondays from 9 a.m. to noon. The group
works most of the year except for cold and wet months. The group
also helps Friends of Deepwood decorate the house for the holiday
season. Contact Karen at (503) 749-3039 or Georgia at (503) 3939452.

Birthright of Salem: Help women who are pregnant or think they


might be pregnant by providing free pregnancy tests, listening to
their stories and finding resources and clothing for them and their
babies. (503) 585-2273.

Department of Human Resources: Seeking volunteers for clerical


and transportation positions. Clerical volunteers are utilized in offices
and branches throughout Marion, Polk and Yamhill counties. Transportation volunteers drive children and adults to appointments. (503)
373-7502, www.oregon.gov/dhs/volunteer.

Boys & Girls Club of Salem, Marion and Polk Counties: Volunteers needed to help prepare and serve daily hot meals to our members. Opportunities available at four sites Monday to Friday. Email
ecardella@bgc-salem.org to apply, www.bgc-salem.org.

Disabled American Veterans Transportation Network: Seeking


volunteer drivers for the Salem area. Must be a licensed Oregon
driver and pass a physical conducted by the Veterans Administration.
(800) 949-1004, Ext. 55042.

Bush Barn Art Center: Seeking volunteers to assist gallery staff in


greeting the public, installing exhibitions, working with artists and
planning special events. Flexible hours. (503) 581-2228, catherine@sa
lemart.org, www.salemart.org.

Eagle Charter School: Looking to expand its board of directors,


which meets on the third Thursday of each month.
www.eaglecharterschoolsalem.org, (503) 339-7114.

Frank Lloyd Wrights Gordon House: Seeking volunteers interested in guiding tours, gardening, office work, collections maintenance, special events and more. The work of the staff and volunteers
support the fundraising needs and mission of education. The Gordon
House is the only Frank Lloyd Wright building in Oregon and the
only one open to the public in the Pacific Northwest. The Gordon
House exemplifies the Usonian architectural style of iconic American
architect Frank Lloyd Wright. www.thegordonhouse.org/volunteers.
Friends of the Jefferson Public Library: In need of corporate
sponsors and volunteers. The library has been determined to be
severely structurally deficient and is collapsing, literally and figuratively, under increased demand for services. (541) 327-2423,
library2010@q.com.
Friends of Oregon School for the Deaf: Seeks a volunteer to take
minutes at monthly board meetings. Occasionally design publicity
materials, assist with mailings and help with fundraising activities.
couoh_@hotmail.com.
Friends of Silver Falls State Park: Seeking volunteers to work in
the Nature Store. Meet people from all over the world, answer
questions and help park visitors get as much enjoyment as possible.
(503) 873-8735, admin@friendsofsilverfalls.net,
www.friendsofsilverfalls.net.
Gentiva Hospice: Volunteers visit with patients for companionship,
support and respite. They also help patients at meal times. Volunteers must be at least 18 years old and be able to visit the patients
wherever they live. (503) 574-2900, Ext. 213, (866) 977-2752, bben
nett@odyshealth.com.
Historic Deepwood Estate: Seeking history buffs to lead tours of
the house. Will train. (503) 363-1825, info@historicdeepwoodes
tate.org.
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Advisory Committee: The twelve-member committee will meet monthly to provide
oversight of the Marion County Community Developmental Disabilities Program as the disability issues advisory committee. Members are appointed by the Board of Commissioners to serve four-year
terms and must be at least 18 years old. The county is looking for
individuals or family members from the developmental disabilities
community, service providers and advocates to serve on the committee. (503) 588-7990, ccrocker@co.marion.or.us, or
http://www.co.marion.or.us/BS/VOL/.
Joys of Living Assistance Dogs: Seeking volunteer puppy raisers
to care for, train and socialize puppies. Raisers attend weekly training
classes with puppy so both can learn together. New batch of puppies
ready for volunteer homes soon. (503) 551-4572, www.facebook.com/
JLADjoydogs.

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Keizer Heritage Center: Seeking volunteers in event hosting,


museum hostess and/or office help and special tasks. (503) 393-9660,
www.keizerheritage.org.
Lighthouse Farm Sanctuary: Volunteer each Saturday from 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m. and each Wednesday from 10 a.m. to noon to help care for
the animals that call the sanctuary their home. (503) 394-4486,
www.lighthousefarmsanctuary.org.

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Marion County District Attorneys Office, Victim Assistance


Division: Seeking volunteers to provide victims with emotional and
informational support through the criminal justice process, in addition to accompanying them to court and appropriate resource referrals. Training provided. Spanish speakers also needed. (503) 5883571, www.co.marion.or.us\DA\victimassistance.
Marion County Historical Society WHC Library Archives: Seeking volunteers to help with research on local historical topics and
data entry. (503) 585-7012 or amyv@willametteheritage.org.
Marion County Retired & Senior Volunteer Program: Program
designed for community members ages 55 and older. Six RSVP volunteer placement stations in Silverton/Mount Angel. (503) 982-5388,
marta.trinidad@ci.woodburn.or.us.
PanCAN: Volunteer opportunities for several core leader roles, as
well as general support for our pancreatic cancer awareness and
fundraising walk in November: Portland PurpleStride 2014. Contact
Affiliate Coordinator Debra Mayer at dmayer@pancanvolunteer.org.

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Easter egg hunting at the Community Easter Egg Hunt and Party at Our Saviors Lutheran Church on March 28.

Our Saviors Lutheran Church hosts community hunt, party


I remember the community Easter egg hunts that
took place when I was a very little girl. Our Saviors
Lutheran Church continued the tradition March 28 at
the Community Easter Egg Hunt and Party. We were
fortunate that while the grass was damp, the sun was
peeking through the clouds and childrens treats remained dry on the lawn.
The church staff worked for
weeks to plan the program, collect candy from the congregation and stuff the plastic eggs
used in the hunt. Childrens Ministry Director Sarah Aguilar
supervised the activity, along
Out & About
with volunteer Annelise HartM A RY L O U I S E
inger.
VA N NAT TA
Families started by joining a
kid-friendly musical opening and
a puppet show. Pastors Tom Hux and Don Brandt
were involved in providing a positive message that
focused on the true meaning of Easter for Christians.
Brandts wife, Susan; son, Jason; daughter-in-law,
Natalie; and grandchildren, Mya and Kyra, also enjoyed the morning.
Children were divided into age groups and were

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they were anxious to get going, I caught Daniel and
Ryley Stuckrath and Genesis and Everson Williams
to grab a picture. The egg hunt began and ended in
minutes as the children moved at top speed and not
a piece of Laffy Taffy was left untouched.
The fun wasnt over, though, as the gym opened up
for games and crafts. Kellie Nguyen and Alexis Salchenberg monitored an egg-shaped bean bag toss
game, Suzie Costic and Brenda Kraschel helped with
crafts, Julie Francis painted faces, and Pastor Hux
and Bryce MacGregor helped print pictures of guests
with the bunny. While many children were reluctant,
Kason and Hinton Ralston happily posed.
Our Saviors Lutheran Church, at 1770 Baxter Road
SE, was founded in 1960. The church has Saturday
night and Sunday morning services, along with various studies and youth activities. The Ark Angels
School at the church has classes for preschool to second-grade students. For more information, visit
www.OurSaviorsSalem.org or call (503) 399-8601.
Mary Louise VanNatta is the Out and About Columnist for
the Statesman Journal. Invite her to your event at
OutandAboutSJ@live.com.

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6D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Opinion

Opinion pages constitute a modern town square, where readers should find a variety of
viewpoints ones that will challenge their own as well as complement their own.

OUR
VIEWPOINT

Hayes emails raise need for reform


C

ylvia Hayes 94,000 emails that


were released late Friday underscore how clueless she was.
They also show that state government
remains stuck somewhere in the 20th
century.
Much has been written about Hayes
seemingly inappropriate mixing of her
personal ambitions, her role as first
lady to Gov. John Kitzhaber, and her
private consulting business. The
330,000 pages of emails and attachments certainly help flesh out that
picture. But they also raise deep questions about the proper role of a contemporary first lady, or first gentleman, and the use of state resources in
supporting that role.
Gov. Kate Brown has already said
that her husband, Dan Little, will have
no policy role in her administration as
first gentleman. She, he and the governors staff also will not accept outside
compensation for any work related to
state government.
But what of future first gentlemen
and first ladies?

Hayes sought expanded public and


private roles that were unprecedented
for a first lady. For someone with a
more sophisticated understanding of
effective personal and government
relationships, that might not have been
a problem.
It certainly is conceivable that a
governor could want to appoint her or
his spouse or companion to a highprofile role. President John F. Kennedy
named brother Robert Kennedy as
attorney general a controversial but
profound choice and President Bill
Clinton tried to have Hillary Clinton
lead national health care reform. A
strong argument can be made that
America is being shortchanged by
having Michelle Obama, a brilliant and
exceptionally talented individual, fulfill a largely traditional first-lady role
in President Barack Obamas administration.
For Hayes part, the emails reinforce that she simply didnt get it.
She sometimes treated the governors
staff as her personal errand-runners.

Such is the danger of falling in love


with the trappings of a position instead
of respecting the role and dignity of
that position.
The emails illustrate why the state
both the executive and legislative
branches must establish 21st-century guidelines for the function of the
first spouse or first companion. Public
employees also need an ethics office or
ombudsman to whom they can turn,
without fear of reprisal, if they see
those guidelines being abused.
Trust but verify, as popularized
with President Ronald Reagan, applies
throughout government. Oregonians
should be able to trust their local,
state and national governments. But
the processes also must be in place
to verify that the trust is being honored.
Brown took an important step early
on by committing to the public release
of the emails that were requested by
the U.S. Department of Justice, which
is investigating Hayes and Kitzhaber.
The DOJ subpoenaed the emails in

February, and the state completed its


review on March 30. Four state lawyers had worked full time for three
weeks reviewing and redacting records, and other staff members had
devoted about 100 hours, as well. The
state then had a vendor upload and
prepare all the documents in a way
that they could be accessed by the
public.
Once the vendors work was
completed, the governors office
had planned to release the emails Friday morning. But the massive amount
of documents crashed the computer
system, delaying release until afternoon.
Brown and her staff deserve credit
for making them publicly available as
soon as possible, in contrast to the
Kitzhaber administration, and for doing so without charge.
Few Oregonians might read all
330,000 pages. But the issues they
raise should cause the Legislature and
the governors office to make thoughtful changes in state policies.

Readers argue value of Hayes emails


RAPID RESPONSE

On Friday afternoon, the governors


office released 94,000 emails and attachments from three personal accounts used by Cylvia Hayes, the companion of former Gov. John Kitzhaber.
Gov. Kate Browns office posted the
emails for public view after turning
them over to the Department of Justice. That prompted us to pose these
questions to our corps of Rapid Responders:
Does posting the emails strengthen
or weaken (or neither) your faith that
state government is being transparent,
especially about the Kitzhaber-Hayes
investigations?
If you have read some of the
emails, what have you gleaned from
them?

Interested in joining our corps of Rapid Responders?


Email Executive Editor Michael Davis at mdavis4@
StatesmanJournal.com with your full legal name,
address, telephone number and email address.
All applications are vetted for authenticity. Each
Thursday afternoon we submit a question to the
members of the Rapid Response team. They have
until noon Friday to submit a response. All of
the responses are published Saturday afternoon
at StatesmanJournal.com. Some responses are
published in the Sunday paper.

What they said


Neither. No matter what, its still
related directly to politics and I dont
trust politicians.
Tina Blacksmith, Salem
It does neither for me. I havent read
any of the emails and dont plan to. I am
trusting my elected officials to work
their way through them and make an
informed decision as to what to do. If I
cant trust them to do that, then we
need new officials. Hopefully, they
wont waste too much time doing it.
Emily Duerfeldt, McMinnville
No, the release of the emails by Gov.
Brown does not strengthen my faith
that state government is being more
transparent. First, these emails were
already turned over to the FBI by subpoena and were already a public rec-

LETTERS

ord. For the governor to refuse to make


them available to the public would put
her in the position of a coverup. So she
was just protecting herself from scandal.
Larry R. George, Salem

available. It will take someone with


more time and patience than I have to
find information that was worth the
trouble. I have enough trouble keeping
up with my own email.
Richard Pine, Salem

It is positive for the government in


this case. All can see what was said.
The law will still prevail as the case will
be tried. Transparency is really important for our leadership right now to
exhibit.
Ann Watters, Salem

While this information release does


imply greater transparency, the Friday
afternoon timing of the dump and the
ongoing nature of the investigation do
raise questions about the wisdom and
motive of doing so at this time. Might
this action affect the outcome improperly?
Erin Cramer, Stayton

My faith in government is not impacted, but I agree with Gov. Browns


decision to err on the side of openness.
From what I could see, many of the
emails are still under review and not

The new governors swift kick of


emails to the public does nothing to
strengthen my faith in transparency in

VISUAL VIEWPOINT

Enough of the special


treatment for owners of
the sternwheeler boat
How is it that the Willamette Queen
sternwheeler can commandeer our
public boat ramp for three days? Did
we not not pay them $250,000 for five
years so that we could build a pedestrian bridge for three weeks a year of
high water?
I went to the public boat launch
Tuesday and Wednesday and could not
launch my boat because the Willamette
Queen was being inspected.
How far are we expected to bend
over for the Chesbroughs to keep the
sternwheeler at our riverfront? I feel
like I have been taken advantage of.
The sign at the boat ramp says that
we have 15 minutes usage only, yet the
Queen gets 48 hours plus?
C.E. Emery
Salem

Outcomes-based funding is a
harmful distraction from issue
The Higher Education Coordinating

Commissions proposed outcomesbased funding model would be extremely detrimental to rural universities instead of being the quick financial

fix that many make it out to be.


This model pits public universities
against one another, making them compete for shares of the higher education

government. Those in power and those


wannabees hovering close to them, too
often, come to believe the rules for
ethical conduct dont apply to them. My
sad takeaway from scanning emails is
how many staff were aware something
was amiss, yet it took the Feds to let
sunshine in.
G. Mick McLean, Lincoln City
It certainly will make the investigation more clear for everyone. It may
make the governmental officials and
ones in the background hesitant to use
emails and start doing it only verbally,
where we will again lose transparency.
We see that way too much was done in
secret for too long.
William K. Dettwyler, Salem
Transparency always strengths my
faith in any organization. I would rather
know the good, the bad, the trite, the
eyebrow-raising than what an imagination can conjure. We human beings are
so easily seduced by power or nearness
to power.
Anita Blanchard , Salem

budget.
The model inevitably harms rural
schools because they serve communities that are already less likely to meet
the desired outcomes. Rural schools
also face higher operation costs than
their city counterparts because they
lack the advantages of economies of
scale. The dismantling of university
shared services has already placed a
bigger burden on rural students.
Consider the potential loss of rural
colleges in Oregon. Southern Oregon
University and Eastern Oregon University are already struggling through
retrenchment due to many years of
disinvestment from the Oregon Legislature.
With an outcomes-based funding
model, the lack of support these schools
would receive from the state would
hike up tuition and destroy access to
college for Oregons low-income and
rural communities.
Outcomes-based funding is not a
cure-all for our higher education woes,
but rather a distraction from the fundamental problem of insufficient state
funding for our public universities.
Torii Uyehara
Ashland

JOIN THE CONVERSATION


LETTERS

INCLUDE

ONLINE

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EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS

For publication of 200 words or fewer, 500 words for guest opinions. You
may submit a letter every 60 days. Submissions are subject to editing and
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Additional opinions are presented


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(503) 399-6864 or
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Opinion.

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President and Publisher
MICHAEL DAVIS, Executive Editor
DICK HUGHES, Editorial Page Editor

Columns, letters, guest opinions, blogs, Facebook posts and cartoons represent the views of their authors. Editorials ... Our Viewpoint ...
represent the composite view of the StatesmanJournal Editorial Board and are the institutional voice of the newspaper.
EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR: Dick Hughes, (503) 399-6727; dhughes@StatesmanJournal.com; twitter.com/DickHughes

Contact the Editorial Board:


Salemed@StatesmanJournal.com

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

7D

Opinion

Why is it so hard to fund K-12?


The Oregon House of Representatives has passed a $7.255 billion K-12
education budget. The voting was along
party lines.
Democrats, who control the state
House and Senate, voted yes for the
$7.255 billion, which fairly closely follows the $7.235 billion K-12 funding
suggested in the
Democratic Ways
and Means cochairs budget.
Republicans voted
no, arguing that
K-12 should be
getting more fundDan Lucas
ing. Some
C O M M E N TA RY
Republicans felt
the K-12 funding
should be as high as $8 billion.
Democrats agree that K-12 needs
more funding, yet they voted for the
$7.255 billion anyway. Why would they
do that? Back in the third week of
March, Sen. Jeff Kruse, R-Roseburg,
explained, The answer is very simple,
(Democrats) want to set up a scenario
where tax increases are necessary and
they also want to take the Kicker away
from the people unnecessarily if indeed
it does kick.
The Democrats have already begun
telegraphing their next moves, and it
looks as if Sen. Kruse was right.

Rep. Phil Barnhart, D-Eugene, says


in his newsletter, Getting to the (K-12)
funding levels that are really needed
wont be possible with our current revenue system, where the largest and most
profitable businesses pay among the
lowest effective tax rates in the nation. Sen. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland, wrote in a recent newsletter, we
may still find ourselves unable to keep
any of those new revenues because the
kicker will have kicked the only way
well be able to get additional money to
K-12 is by voting to hold back or modify
the kicker.
This is a tried-and-true approach for
Democrats in Oregon. Back during
Measures 66 and 67 in 2010, Democrats
told Oregonians its for the kids. But
after those measures passed, K-12 funding was actually cut $150 million while
other agencies, most notably the state
Department of Human Services, saw an
increase. DHS alone increased $330
million in that budget cycle (general
and Lottery funds).
There is $1.8 billion of increased
revenue in the coming $18.5 billion
2015-2017 Oregon general and lottery
funds budget. Funding K-12 education
at $8 billion would still leave $405 million of increases available to other
budget areas. Thats on top of the $2
billion of increased revenue already

contained in the current $16.75 billion


budget.
But its never enough, is it? There is
an infinite number of good things that
government can do. But in order for
some people to get free or subsidized
college or health care from the government, some other people have to pay
for those free things in the form of
higher taxes.
Oregonians have shown a willingness to raise taxes on other people, but
a reluctance to raise taxes on themselves. Oregonians voted for more
taxes on businesses and the rich with
Measures 66 and 67, but soundly
defeated Measure 86 last November.
Measure 86 would have let the state
borrow money to create a fund where
the investment returns paid for college
financial aid. Taxpayers would have
been on the hook to repay the principal,
expected to be $100 million, and they
said no to that.
Interestingly, around $23 million of
the increased state revenue not going
to K-12 in the co-chairs budget is to
increase the Oregon Opportunity Grant
college aid that doesnt have be repaid for eligible students from families with adjusted gross income of less
than $70,000. According to their
website, Opportunity Grants are funded primarily by Oregon taxpayers.

ONLINE
Go to statesmanjournal.com/media/latest/
opinion to view Editorial cartoons: School,
including political cartoons about education
funding in Oregon.

Looks like the Democrat-controlled


Legislature has found a way to circumvent the will of the Measure 86 voters.
Spending someone elses money is
more likely to result in solutions like
that, to just looking for more money to
give college students. A better approach would be to find out why college
tuitions are increasing nearly twice as
fast as medical costs and then start
taking steps to reduce tuitions.
If were ever going to get to stable
and adequate K-12 funding in Oregon,
were going to have to stop the bait-andswitch budgeting approach used by
Oregon Democrats. Were going to have
to truly prioritize K-12 funding and stop
viewing taxpayer dollars as an endless
supply of other peoples money to do
good things with.
Dan Lucas of Salem is an independent
researcher and policy advocate, and the
chief editor for the blog Oregon Catalyst.
Follow his work at www.dan-lucas.com or
contact him at dan_lucas@ymail.com.

California water crisis is a real issue


SAN DIEGO In the Bible, Jesus
turns water into wine. But in California,
there are those who would take that
miracle in the other direction.
The Golden State needs water, and
lots of it. The place has been parched
for the past four years as it suffers
through a record drought the worst
one since California started keeping
records 120 years ago.
Think of California which boasts
the worlds eighth-largest economy, and
whose name conjures up images of a
coastal paradise of lush golf courses,
picture-perfect landscapes and abundant waterfalls
having to ask Arizona to borrow a
glass of water.
Actually, neighbor, could we
make that 1.5 million acre-feet of
Ruben
water?
Navarrette Jr.
One acre foot of
C O M M E N TA RY
water equals
about 325,000
gallons. And 1.5 million acre-feet would
cover the 25 percent reduction in water
usage over the next nine months that
Californians have been ordered to
achieve.
Gov. Jerry Brown has announced the
Golden States first-ever mandatory
statewide water restrictions. Brown is
instructing the State Water Resources
Control Board to compel cities and
towns to cut back drastically.
Other restrictions include cuts in
water use on college campuses, golf
courses, cemeteries and other sprawling green spaces. Large farms are exempted, but farmers will have to document more carefully how much water
they use.
State officials claim that they will
impose fines if necessary to force compliance from individuals, but they also
say that they hope many Californians
will comply voluntarily. People can
expect the usual lectures from public
officials about taking quicker showers,
washing cars less often, and watering
lawns more sporadically.
Brown hit those notes as he announced the water restrictions in a
news conference southwest of Lake
Tahoe.

Were in a new era, he said. The


idea of your nice little green grass getting lots of water every day, thats going to be a thing of the past.
The California water crisis the
one weve heard about, but most Cali-

fornians havent experienced up to now


just got real.
Too many folks believe that, as long
as something comes out when they turn
on the faucet, theres no problem. In
fact, according to media reports, there

are towns in Central California where


people lack running water. They use
donated bottled water to cook, bathe,
even use the toilet.
It matters that Brown was in the
Sierra Nevada mountains, a picturesque setting where the reality was
unavoidable. Reporters stood on dry
brown grass that would normally, this
time of year, be covered in snow.
Thats one of the keys to this story.
Those who know about water policy
will tell you that, while its refreshing to
have scattered rain, what really matters is snowpack. For farmers, thats
the storage fund for a not-so-rainy day.
Dear water advocates: You have my
attention. Organizations such as the
California Water Alliance, which was
founded by farming interests in 2009,
have been like a town crier that was
ignored. These groups warned us this
sort of crisis was coming. Some people
listened. Many didnt.
Most of the water in the state goes to
farming, which supplies more than half
the produce in the United States, while
Californias overall agricultural industry brings in more than $45 billion a
year. But even farmers are divided
depending on how water-intensive their
crops are. The folks growing lettuce,
broccoli, peaches or avocados have
been up in arms because they need lots
of water. Sadly, those with crops that
get by with less water have largely
been on the sidelines.
In my case, Im sorry it took so long
for the message to get through. I may
have been born and raised in the once
fertile farmland of Central California,
but since moving back to the state 10
years ago Ive been living in a city.
And for the last few years, along with
other city dwellers, Ive been deluding
myself into thinking that this water
crisis I kept hearing so much about was
someone elses problem.
I was so wrong. Its my problem too.
Im ashamed to admit that, for a while,
I lost sight of this reality. Still, in California, on this issue, theres plenty of
shame to go around.
Ruben Navarrette Jr. writes for the
Washington Post Writers Group, 1150 15th St.
NW, Washington, DC 20071. Send email to
ruben@rubennavarrette.com.

Support Klamath agreements to help feed the world


The Family Farm Alliance board of
directors formally supports the concept
captured in recent Senate legislation to
advance the settlement agreements
developed for the Klamath River watershed.
The Alliance is a grassroots, nonprofit organization that represents
family farmers, ranchers, agricultural
water purveyors and allied industries
in the 17 western states. We have long
advocated that the best solutions to the
challenges faced by western irrigators
come from the ground up, driven by
local interests.
The three Klamath agreements
the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, the Klamath Hydro-Electric
Settlement Agreement and the Upper
Klamath Basin Comprehensive Agreement reflect an intensive effort that
has consumed much of the last decade.
Without these agreements successfully making it through Congress, local
irrigators face no protection from enforcement of significant tribal water
rights, no viable plan for dealing with
the Endangered Species Act issues and
no identifiable path for working toward

Dan Keppen

Patrick OToole

GUEST OPINION

GUEST OPINION

target power rates that are similar to


other western agricultural regions.
Our organization views the Klamath
settlement agreements in a fairly
straightforward way: This approach
provides the best means of keeping
basin family farmers and ranchers in
the business of producing food and
fiber for our country and the world.
The settlement agreements are a
unique solution that advances this critical need. What happens or does not
happen for Klamath Basin irrigators
could set a precedent, not only for all
western family farms and ranches, but
also for other areas of the country
where agricultural production is beset
with environmental challenges.

Understandably, the idea of removing dams is a sticking point for some in


the agricultural community, and the
alliance does not universally endorse
the removal of dams. In fact, the alliance is a leading proponent of creating
more surface water storage in the west.
Alliance representatives have been
invited to testify before congressional
committees several times to offer up
ideas intended to streamline existing
daunting and expensive permitting
processes. In 2014, the alliance released
a white paper on the need for new, appropriate storage projects, which was
intended to support related legislative
efforts pushed in Congress.
Thus, the potential impacts and precedents of removing any dam are concerns to us as advocates for irrigated
agriculture.
The alliance endorses advancing the
Klamath agreements in Congress because, overall, they are good for irrigated agriculture in the Klamath Basin.
We see the agreements as unique to the
Klamath Basin and its issues and their
dam-removal components have no bearing on other agricultural regions deci-

sion-making. Moreover, no irrigation


dams or flood control dams are removed as part of these settlements.
In this instance, agricultural producers stand to gain increased water
supply reliability in exchange for the
expected fish passage benefits associated with removal of these dams, a
measure supported by the dams owners, PacifiCorp.
Our job is to advocate for approaches that keep farmers and ranchers in
business so they can continue to feed
and clothe the world. Reliable water is
an essential component to this approach in the west.
Patrick OToole, a Wyoming cattle and
sheep rancher, is president of the Family
Farm Alliance. He is a former member of
the Wyoming Legislature and 2014 recipient
of the Leopold Conservation Award. Contact
him at h2otoole@gmail.com.
Dan Keppen of Klamath Falls has over 25
years of experience in western water
resources engineering and policy. He has
served as executive director of the Family
Farm Alliance for 10 years and can be
reached at dankeppen@charter.net.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Funerals Today

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Clell R. Radmacher

June 24, 1940 - March 18, 2015

SALEM - Clell R. Radmacher


was born on June 24, 1940
(No services are listed for today).
in Portland, OR to Ewald and
Marjorie Radmacher and went
Obituaries and Guest Book available online at
home to be with his Savior on
www.StatesmanJournal.com
March 18, 2015. Clell graduated
The Statesman Journal Obituary Office is open
from Pendleton High School
Monday - Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
and attended Multnomah Bible
Obituaries must be submitted by 1 p.m.
College. He started his 24 year
You can reach us by phone at 503-399-6794 ,
career with the US Forest Service
email at obituary@statesmanjournal.com, or by going to our
followed by 16 years as facilities
www.StatesmanJournal.com/Obituaries
website,
manager for Calvary Church in
Kristine (Kris) Teresa
Los Gatos, CA and then moved to Salem, OR where he
Carl
M.
Emmert
October 31, 1931 - March 30, 2015
Kostenborder
was a much-loved Salem-Keizer school bus driver for
June 3, 1987 - December 19, 2014
Celebration of Life April 11 at
6 years. On Dec 30, 1961 Clell married his high school
11
am
Foothills
Church
in
Molalla,
A celebration of her life will be
Saturday, April 18, 2015 at 2:00 OR.
sweetheart, Marilyn Coulombe and they shared 53 years
P.M. at Pringle Creek Community,
together. He is also survived by daughters, Shelley (Tim)
Painters Hall, 3911 Village Center
Dr S, Salem, Oregon.
Sherman, Karin (Graydon) Knappett and Kristin (Jeff )
Brenda M. Myers
February 24, 1947 - April 1, 2015
Goodwin; 6 grandchildren, Andrew Sherman, Stephen
De Cosby
Memorial Service to be held
February 11, 1940 - March 27, 2015
on April 7, 2015 at 11AM at Scio (Katie) Sherman, Seth Goodwin, Hailey (Kaleb) Forseen,
In keeping with Des request, Christian Church. Arrangements
no public services will be held. entrusted to Weddle Funeral Katie & Brianna Knappett and 4 great grandchildren. A
Assisting is Virgil T. Golden Funeral Services.
Life Celebration will be held at Salem First Baptist on
Service.
April 9 at 11 AM. In lieu of flowers, gifts may be made
Cornelia
Corkie
Colen
to the New Property Fund of Salem First Baptist in Clells
Leona
P. Jennison
November 3, 1932 - January 3, 2015
August 4, 1915 - March 16, 2015
Memorial Service will be held memory. Arrangements by Restlawn Funeral Home.
Arrangements through Gates
Kingsley, Culver City CA. Memorial
service at St. Bedes Parish, Mar
Vista, CA on April 26, 2015 at 1 pm.

on April 11th, 10am at St. Pauls


Episcopal Church, Salem.

Helen
Laurence Keyser
July 7, 1916 - April 2, 2015

W.
Wes Galloway
May 9, 1925 - March 25, 2015

SALEM - No services will be


held. Arrangements by Unger
Funeral Chapel, Silverton.

Dorothy Prange

At his request there were no


formal services.

185 Memorials & Markers

Cliord N. Swift

December 29, 1925 - March 29, 2015

MILL CITY - No
information provided.

service

Capital Monument Co.


140 Hoyt St. S
503-363-6887

Kenneth Wayne Hall

August 3, 1952 - April 1, 2015

Kenneth Wayne Hall, a


resident of Salem, Oregon, died
on April 1, 2015 in Salem. He was
62 years of age.
Kenneth was born on August
3, 1952 in Silverton, Oregon ad
was the son of Oller and Marietta
(Scharback) Hall. He graduated
from Silverton High School in
1971 and enlisted in the Navy.
He worked as a Janitor for the
Silverton School District and for
the State Hospital.
Kenneth was a self-taught painter and guitarist. He
enjoyed riding his Harley Davidson.
He is survived by his siblings, Larry Hall of Salem,
Linda (husband, Bob) Reis of Salem, Darlene (husband,
Alan) Spaulding of Lynden, Washington and Jerry (wife,
Patty) Hall of Keizer along with many nieces and nephews.
A private family service will be held at a later date.
Contributions may be made in memory of Kenneth to
the Union Gospel Mission. Howell, Edwards, Doerksen
Funeral Home is handling the arrangements. You can
view Kenneths online memorial at www.hed-fh.com.

Deloris M. Dee Hamilton


December 1, 1923 - March 29, 2015

Dee Hamilton, 91, passed away Sunday, March 29,


2015 at Salem Hospital after a short illness. Dee was
born December 1, 1923 in Sioux City, IA the daughter of
Christian and Meta Soegaard. She and her mother moved
to Berkeley, CA in 1938 after the death of her father. She
met Howard, the love of her life, when they were both
juniors at Berkeley High School. They were married in
1944 during World War II and lived happily for 42 years
until his death in 1986.
Dee and Howard had three children and lived in the
San Francisco Bay Area until 1957, when they moved to
Salem. In their later years, they loved to travel and play
golf. Dee continued to play until 2009, when she retired
her golf clubs. She also enjoyed playing bridge and
volunteered with the Salem Boosters at Walton House.
Dee was a member of Westminster Presbyterian Church
for over fifty years.
Dee is survived by three children: Christie (Dennis)
Batterman, Newberg, OR, Janice (Dennis) Pierce,
Newberg, OR, and Robert Hamilton, Salem, OR; 4
grandchildren, and 7 great-grandchildren. In addition
to her husband, she was preceded in death by a sister:
Dorothy Strauss, a brother: Donald Soegaard, and a
daughter-in-law: Barbara Hamilton.
A Celebration of Life service will be held at 3:00pm
on Sunday, April 19, 2015 at Westminster Presbyterian
Church, 3737 Liberty Rd SE, Salem, OR 97302. In lieu
of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the
Building Fund at Westminster Presbyterian Church.
Assisting the family is Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service.

Beverly R. Weekly

February 15, 1931 - February 27, 2015

Beverly R .Weekly was born


on February 15, 1931 and left this
earth February 27, 2015 at age 84.
She lived in Salem her entire life.
She is survived by her husband
Robert R. Weekly, daughter Karen
K. DEagle, son James C. DEagle
and
daughter-in-law
Dana
DEagle, granddaughters Flora
and Fauna. Survivors also include
sister Glenda K. Hart, brother-inlaw William E. Hart, nephew Tracy
Hart and his children Rachael, Jacob, and Joseph; niece
Malia and William Phillips and their children Amy and
Abbey.
She is preceded in death by her parents Conrad and
Florence Fox, first husband Ambrose DEagle, BeBe and
Cloudy Weekly, and Bella and Max DEagle.
She married Robert June 1, 1978 at the Reno
Nevada Courthouse and they spent thirty seven years
inseparable. Beverly worked for the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters. After twenty eight years she
retired to stay at home to be a homemaker. She enjoyed
reading and cooking. She and Bob purchased a retreat in
Florence Oregon where they spent weekends for fifteen
years with family and friends enjoying the ocean air,
parties and telling stories around the fire-pit.
Beverly is best remembered for her love of laughter
and has been known as Bubbles since a young age.
Everyone who knew her was blessed by her laughter and
joy of life. A private celebration of life will be held April
18th, 2015. In lieu of flowers, donations will be greatly
appreciated, made in Beverlys name to the Union Gospel
Mission/Simonka Place (PO Box 431, Salem, OR 97303).
Assisting the family is Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service.

May 5, 1920 March 26, 2015

Dorothy was born in


Aberdeen, S. Dakota to Helen and
Joe Biegler. When Dorothy was
16, the family moved to Oregon.
She met her soul mate, Conrad
Prange, and they married in 1943.
They had 6 children and she is
survived by 5: sons Mike (Sharon)
Prange and Joe Prange; daughters
Marge (Don) Kucera, Ginny (Ric)
McNall and Beth Boock.
In 1975 Conrad and Dorothy
moved to Omaha, Nebraska and later to Denver, Colorado
when Conrad changed careers. When they retired they
moved back to Oregon to be closer to family.
Dorothy enjoyed playing bridge and golf and loved
socializing with friends and family. She was Grandma
and Great Dot to her 10 grandchildren and 4 greatgrandchildren.
She is preceded in death by her husband Conrad,
daughter Helen Butsch, and sons-in-law Paul Butsch and
Dennis Boock.
Thank you to Tierra Rose for taking loving care of our
mom.
Memorial service will held at St. Joseph Catholic
Church in Salem on April 7th at 10:30 a.m. In lieu of
flowers, donations can be made to your favorite charity.
Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service is assisting the family.

Molly Rebecca Walker

Anna Lee Freitag

September 25, 1924 March 21, 2015

Anna passed away on Saturday, March 21st at


Harmony Adult Foster Care Home in Albany, OR. She was
born to Lum and Elise Hollingsworth in their farm house
on Spicer Drive outside of Lebanon, OR.
In 1947 she married Forrest Freitag and shortly after
bought their farm in the Jefferson area where they raised
crops, animals and a large family garden with lots of
dahlia flowers. Mom was known for taking in baby lambs
and chicks and nursing them to good health.
In later years she started entering flower shows,
and later became a certified floral arrangement judge,
judging many flower shows and county fairs.
She was a member of the Oregon State Federation
of Garden Clubs, judges counsel, Lebanon, Fircrest,
Grandprarie, Salem Rose Society, and Grow & Show
Garden Clubs. She also was a member of the Capital
Arrangers Guild in Salem.
Anna competed at the Oregon State Fair for over 40
years showing landscaped gardens, large floral themed
indoor displays and many floral arrangements and fruits
and vegetables.
She also volunteered for the clubs at the Christmas
Green Show at the State Fairgrounds selling homemade
decorations, and also entering arrangements for the
show.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Forrest,
and brother, Neal. She is survived by her sons, Jim and
Lee. At her request no service will be held. Aasum-Dufour
Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

Jason Robert Cunningham


October 25, 1974 March 28, 2015

Jason Cunningham, 40,


passed away Saturday, March
28, 2015 in Meza, AZ. He was
born in Corvallis, Oregon to Bob
Cunningham and Phyllis McCall.
Jason grew up in Salem, and
graduated from South Salem
High School. After receiving an
Associates Degree in Electrical
Engineering at ITT Tech and
graduating with Honors, he
accepted a positon with Decatur
Electronics in Phoenix, AZ.
Jason is survived by his wife, Marty; daughters
Kyrsten and Ashley; son Robert; mother Phyllis (Bill)
McCall; father Bob (Karen) Cunningham; sister Amanda;
and 7 nieces and nephews. He is preceded in death by
his brother, Eric.
Jason loved camping, fishing, riding motorcycles
and especially loved fixing things. Jason was quick to
help others and will be missed by so many.
A memorial service will be held at West Salem
Foursquare Church, 3094 Gehlar Rd NW, Salem, OR
97304, on Friday, April 10, 2015, at 12:00 Noon.
In lieu of flower, contributions can be made in
memory of Jason to Crisis Chaplaincy Services, PO Box
1018, Turner OR 97392. Assisting the family is Virgil T.
Golden Funeral Service.

October 31, 1958 - March 30, 2015

Molly Rebecca Walker of


Salem, beloved wife of James
Rockwell Walker, lost her life to
mental illness on March 30, 2015.
Molly was born in Gold Beach on
October 31, 1958 to Robert and
Betty Templeman Van Leer, and
attended local public schools,
graduating from Gold Beach High
in 1976.
Molly
briefly
attended
Southwestern
Oregon
Community College in Coos Bay, then joined her family
at the Curry County Reporter where she continued to
work as an owner and editor until 2008. Most recently
Molly worked for the Yamhill News-Register from 2008
to 2014 where she wrote features, business columns and
covered religious topics in the local community until the
end of October 2014 when she took a hiatus from work
to assist Jim with his Rotary preparation for becoming
District Governor in 2015-16.
Molly and Jim were married in 1983, blending four
boys into a family unit including Dale, Jim, Rob and Chris.
Theirs was a very happy marriage as the two joined their
souls and began their journey through life. They were
almost inseparable, and enjoyed lifes little pleasures, like
spending time with family and friends.
Mollys upbringing led her to have a passion for
gardening and the outdoors although she will be
remembered by most for her passion and dedication
to community journalism. She dedicated herself to
providing a medium to her communities for gathering
local information as well as being a supporter of local
causes. Her tireless efforts and practical advice were
never un-noticed by those around her as she assisted
breaking down the gender barrier in Rotary by joining
the organization in 1988 and was recognized as the Gold
Beach Citizen of the Year in 1995. She also served as the
Gold Beach Rotary club president in 1997-98 and helped
in making Rotary a family legacy by including husband
Jim on many of her initiatives and helping him become a
leader in District 5110.
Molly and Jim enjoyed most of their hobbies
together, which included sports car racing, hiking
local trails and roads, attending family sporting events,
spoiling their grandkids and visiting family. They also
enjoyed traveling having visited much of the United
States, Canada, the Cooke Islands, Africa, Europe and
Australia. While traveling Molly, being the big hugger
type, often sidestepped the offered handshake for a
warm embrace and enjoyed exploring new cultures and
making new friends.
She is missed terribly by her husband; two sons
and families: Rob and Becca of Toronto, Canada, Chris
and Emily of Medford; two stepsons: Dale Walker of
South Beach, and Jim and Kathi Walker of Salem; her
sisters: Sherry and Scott Wills of Portland, Amy and Doug
Bornemeier of Milwaukee, and Sally and Dave Shuey of
Portland; plus her seven grandchildren: Alex and Greyson
Walker (parents: Jim and Kathi), Travis, Caleb and Olivia
(Chris and Emily), and Sadie and Charlie (Rob and Becca).
Molly is also survived by nieces and nephews Jordan
and Maya Shuey and Jon and Anna Bornemeier.
Everyone who met Molly loved her for her genuine
interest in them and her infectious smile and bubbly
personality. She loved her community, her family and
sharing almost 32 years with husband Jim, her children,
grandchildren and sisters and families.
Rest in peace, my wonderful, beautiful wife and best
friend, Molly. Youll live forever in our hearts.
Cremation services were provided by Virgil T. Golden
Funeral Service of Salem, and a memorial service is
scheduled for 2 p.m. Saturday, April 11 at Bethany
Lutheran Church in Gold Beach.

City View

Funeral Home
Cemetery
& Crematorium

Family owned & operated since 1893

The great gift of Easter


is hope
www.city viewfh.com

503-363-8652
390 Hoyt St S Salem
Above Historic Pioneer Cemetery

OR-0000360629

We listen.
We care.
We have a variety of urns
for scattering, placement
in a cemetery or a home.
Locally owned since 1949, we provide
cremations from direct cremation to
memorial and celebration of life services.

akleaf
O
Crematory

25

8D

VIRGIL T. GOLDEN FUNERAL SERVICE

605 Commercial St SE, Salem

vtgolden.com

503-364-2257

Salem
412 Lancaster Drive NE
Salem, OR 97301
(503) 581-6265

Low Cost
Cremation & Burial
Funerals & Memorials
Simple Direct Cremation $495
Simple Direct Burial $550
Traditional Funeral $1975
Discount Priced Caskets, Urns
And Other Memorial Items

Privately owned cremation facility


A Family Owned Oregon Business

www.ANewTradition.com
25

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

LOCAL FIRST

COURT RECORDS

BIRTHS
Catherine E. Stover, M.A., L.P.C.

The following are new complaints, foreclosures


criminal convictions received between March 27
and April 2. For more, go to StatesmanJournal.com/Records.

State of North Dakota County of Burleigh vs. RWs


Truck Shop LLC, Brian Rybloom.

MARION COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT


New complaints

NCEP, LLC vs. Debra Regele.

Asset Management Outsourcing Recoveries Inc. vs.


Mickey Bare.
Asset Management Outsourcing Recoveries Inc. vs.
Heather Hager.

Melissa Gray vs. Travis Harris.

Asset Management Outsourcing Recoveries Inc. vs.


Juan J. Sifuentez, Yolanda Sifuentez.

Steve Resch vs. Vincent Webb.

Bobbie Newton vs. Doni Jo Howe.

Brooke Marie Bowman vs. Max J. Harmon.

Midland Funding LLC vs. Tracy Cates.

Acctcorp International of Salem vs. Eileen Turner.

Ray Klein Inc. vs. Danielle Marie Welsh, Timothy


Welsh.

Jeffrey Collins Utter vs. Walt Beglau.


B & G Ditchen, LLC vs. Golden Valley Farms, LLC.

Morgan Nelson vs. Rescue Carpenter, Inc., David


M. Peschong.

American Express Centurion Bank vs. Jeffrey


Freeman.

Roland Lee Smith vs. Jeff Premo.

Marion and Polk Schools Credit Union vs. Mearl


Capelle.
Marion and Polk Schools Credit Union vs. Eli
Jeremiah Huie.
The Equitable Finance Company vs. Steven Craig
Duncan.
The Equitable Finance Company vs. Maritza Pallanez, Juan Carlos Carrillo.

JD Duarte vs. Jennifer Smith, et al.

CSO Financial, Inc. vs. Clarke Adam Ralls, Jamie


Nicole Ralls.

William Wolfard vs. Kathryn Rieger.


Asset Management Outsourcing Recoveries Inc. vs.
Luis Brambila, Jose Brambila.

Midland Funding LLC vs. Mark Reed.

Mitzi Eleanor Heiden vs. Ruben Rocha, Safeco


Insurance Company of Oregon.

Asset Management Outsourcing Recoveries Inc. vs.


Charlene Robinson.

State of North Dakota County of Burleigh vs. RWs


Trucking & Hauling LLC, Brian Rybloom.

Monroe Bank & Trust vs. Thomas Sliwka.

Curtis Lee Hollins vs. Guy Hall.

JD Duarte vs. David Garren, et al.

The Equitable Finance Company vs. Derek G.


Pinkerton.

Signature Real Estate Inc. vs. Paul Forbes, Athena


Forbes.

Sharon Rose Brand vs. Joseph S. Regimbal, Holly


Ann Regimbal.

The Vandermay Law Firm vs. Shannon Maisar.

Brittany Crossing vs. Kaci Hall, All Others.

The Equitable Finance Company vs. Benjamin


James Smith.

Reed Townhomes LLC vs. Tony Medina, Crystal


Nichols, All Others.

The Equitable Finance Company vs. Tasia N. Cuesta.

Elwaco vs. Jerry Smith.

State of Oregon, ex rel. Ellen F. Rosenblum Attorney General for the State of Oregon vs. Henry
Cricket Group, LLC, Maximillian, Inc., Liberty
Publishers Service, Inc., Orbital Publishing Group,
Inc., Express Publishers Service, Inc., et al.

The Vandermay Law Firm vs. Roy Enquist.


The Vandermay Law Firm vs. Andrew Watson,
Alice Watson.
The Vandermay Law Firm vs. Jason Asbill, Diane
Asbill, A. Scott Asbill.
Cso Financial Inc aka Credit Services of Oregon vs.
Dustin James Baker.
Cso Financial Inc aka Credit Services of Oregon vs.
Maura Anne Schomus.
Atlas Financial Services vs. Jennifer Karnes, Sarah
Karnes.
Atlas Financial Services vs. Christie Christensen.
Quick Collect vs. James Moyer, Terri Moyer.
AcctCorp International of Salem vs. Kenneth
Childress.
Guillermo De Paz vs. Olga Soto, Karen Sobrak.
Marty Mayfield vs. Robert Morris, M.S., L.P.C.,

Bluestone & Hockley Realty, Doing Business As


Bluestone & Hockley Real Estate Services vs. Thomas Graff, All Others.
Laurel Gate Court vs. Justino Acosto Pantaleon.
Pat Gander vs. Jessica Snegirev, All Others.

Jimmy Lee Thompson vs. GEICO Casualty Company, a Maryland Corporation.

The Vandermay Law Firm vs. David Haslebacher,


Beverly Haslebacher.

Merchants Acceptance Corp. vs. Jacob Stallsworth.

The Vandermay Law Firm vs. Robert Blodgett,


David Blodgett.

Jefferson Capital Systems LLC vs. Jose Hernandez.

Asset Management Outsourcing Recoveries Inc. vs.


Don Newkirk.

Jefferson Capital Systems LLC vs. Terry Wolf.

Asset Management Outsourcing Recoveries Inc. vs.


Lloyd Borkholder.
Asset Management Outsourcing Recoveries Inc. vs.
Steven Eyman.

Larry Zeek, Ollie Zeek vs. Mary A. Zeek Trust.

Jefferson Capital Systems LLC vs. William R. Grover.

The following are birth announcements received between March 28 and April 3. For more,
go to StatesmanJournal.com/Records.

SALEM HOSPITAL
Bergam, Everly Rae: To Jessica Guerrero and
Zack Bergam, Salem, 8 pounds 7 ounces, April 1.
Bizon, Deklin Ryker: To Kayla Gamma and
Trevor Bizon, Salem, 7 pounds 2 ounces,
March 31.
Blauvelt, Clara Renee: To Alyssa Blauvelt and
Isaac Ledezma, Salem, 6 pounds 10 ounces,
April 1.
Carr, Henry Patrick: To Alyssa Holdsclaw and
Steven Kyle Carr, Salem, 7 pounds 6 ounces,
March 29.
Fraenza, Mason Cole: To Tabitha and Bryan
Fraenza, Salem, 7 pounds 2 ounces, March 30.
Gergen, Brian James: To Alanna and Eric
Gergen, Salem, 9 pounds 5 ounces, April 1.
Green, Brody Jaxson Lee: To Catherine Twete
and Alex Green, Salem, 7 pounds, March 26.
Loftin, Owen Matthew: To Erika and Colby
Loftin, Stayton, 7 pounds 7 ounces, March 29.
Patton, Jaxson James: To Ashley Chandler and
Justin Patton, Dallas, 7 pounds 13 ounces,
March 26.
Pickett, Allyson Mae: To Michelle and Brian
Pickett, Salem, 8 pounds 4 ounces, March 25.
Smith, Irie Rain: To Alisha Wareham and
James Smith, Salem, 7 pounds 4 ounces,
March 25.
Tippett, Lyah Mae: To Laila Lawson and Jordan Tippett, Salem, 7 pounds 3 ounces,
March 29.
Weimer, Scottlynn Grace: To Melissa and
Josiah Weimer, Salem, 6 pounds 14 ounces,
March 30.

Jefferson Capital Systems LLC vs. Jerrilee Lewis.

Wyler, Carter Glen: To Shelby and Jacob,


Aumsville, 8 pounds 15 ounces, April 3.

Raymond L. Borschowa, Gertrude C. Borschowa,


Lawrence A. Borschowa vs. Patricia Graber, Kermit
Lee Stewart, Donna Ray Northey, Janice Fogg.

Zielinski, Alyce Day: To Kattie and Josh Zielinski, Salem, 5 pounds 12 ounces, April 2.

DUII CONVICTIONS
The following are DUII convictions received March 30. For more, go to StatesmanJournal.com/Records.

UNDER THE INFLUENCE


The following residents of Marion and
Polk counties have been convicted of
driving under the influence of intoxicants, according to records provided by
the state Driver and Motor Vehicle Services Division. Included are the defendants name, age, address, date of conviction and the court.

SSGT Louis O Lucas


Farrell, James Michael: 52, 4190 45th
Ave. NE, Salem, Feb. 6, Marion.
Flaming, Hilary Janelle: 32, 12800 Clow
Corner Road, Dallas, Feb. 24, Benton.
Frays, Megan Sue: 23, 236 Filbert Way,
Silverton, Feb. 6, Marion.
Garcia, Salvador: 52, 13814 Woodburn
Monitor Road, Woodburn, Feb. 19,
Marion.
Garcia Quiros, Florencio: 38, 3848
Sunnyview Road NE, Salem, Feb. 17,
Salem.

Antonio, Zaid Victorio: 41, 7777 Battle


Creek Road SE, Salem, Jan. 13, Marion.

Garcia Tolentino, Domingo: 38, 1125


16th St. SE, Salem, Feb. 6, Marion.

Arellano Aguiar, Antonio: 39, 2605


Monarch Ct. NE, Salem, Feb. 18, Marion.

Grube, Aaron Matthew: 20, 1894


Liberty St. NE, Salem, Jan. 26, Marion.

Behringer, Robert Charles: 25, 9972


Brownell Drive SE, Aumsville, Feb. 13,
Linn.

Johnson, Benjamin Allen: 20, 4665


Edwin Court NE, Salem, Feb. 19, Marion.

Carlson, Kayla Leona: 25, 1334 Rhoda


Lane, Independence, Feb. 11, Monmouth.

Large, Desiree Lynn: 37, 137 Olympic


Ave. SE, Salem, Feb. 23, Salem.

Lopez Gutierrez, Miguel Agustin: 58,


750 Hardcastle Ave., Woodburn, Feb. 10,
Marion.

Skillings, Jacob Boone: 22, 5264 Tree


Haven Road SE, Sublimity, Jan. 13,
Marion.

Martin, Ron Leigh: 40, 277 Edwards


Road S, Monmouth, Feb. 11, Monmouth.

Solis Rojas, Jaime: 31, 1204 James St.,


Woodburn, Feb. 10, Marion.

McMurtry, Andrew Michael: 26, 188


Walnut Drive S, Monmouth, Feb. 11,
Monmouth.

Solorio Torres, Gerardo: 34, 3649


Hawthorne Ave. NE, Salem, Jan. 29,
Marion.

Medrano Aburto, Osiel M.: 22, 8457


Darley Road SE, Aumsville, Feb. 10, Marion.

Stevenson, Craig Douglas: 54, 656 SE


Azalea Ave., Dallas, Feb. 17, Lane.

Morris, Jessica Opal Jean: 22, 5134


Nordic Ct. N, Keizer, Feb. 12, Dallas.

Stewart, Kristopher Drew: 29, 38172


Franklin Butte Road, Scio, Feb. 6, Linn.

Ochoa Oliveros, Maria Guadalupe: 27,


4831 Cougar Ct. SE, Salem, Feb. 3, Marion.

Suarez Berumen, Manuel Alejandro:


29, 3853 Ward Drive NE, Salem, Feb. 17,
Marion.

Offield, Jessica Nicole: 28, 1152 Orchard


Ct. N, Keizer, Feb. 20, Marion.

Tennis, Amber Lee: 36, 178 Oakmont Ct.


SE, Salem, Feb. 20, Linn.

Perdue, Sage Danielle: 42, 788 Lockhaven Drive NE, Keizer, Feb. 20, Linn.

Zavala Corona, Israel: 29, 4667 Treeside


Drive NE, Salem, Feb. 12, Marion.

Rookstool, Maria: 43, 2375 Madison St.


NE, Salem, Feb. 19, Marion.

REUNIONS
SCHOOLS
Cascade High School class of 1965:
50-year class reunion, June 11-13. June 11
events include Scramble Golf Tournament
at Santiam Golf Club and no-host gathering 6 p.m. at the Wooden Nickel in Sublimity; June 12 dinner cruise on the Willamette Queen Sternwheeler; and June 13
is a pig roast with all the fixings. All
events require RSVP except the gathering
at Wooden Nickel. Alumni of other
Cascade classes are welcome. Sharon
Hanson, (503) 851-8957, sharonh@wbcable.net.
Central High School classes 70s and
80s multi-class reunion: Aug. 8 at
Riverview Park Amphitheater. Food, fun,
adult beverages and live music. $15 per
person or $25 per family if paid by May 1.
Like us on Facebook and register ASAP!
Fundraiser and food drive for the local
Ella Curran food bank so please bring two
cans of food per person. Contact Sherry
Lindley-Lowells, (503) 931-3201, sherrylowells@comcast.net.
Gervais High School classes of 1962 to
1968: Seven classes of Gervais alumni are
invited for a fun night of no host bar,
dinner and music, Aug. 1 at Bob Zielinskis
Scenic Valley Vineyards and new Farm
Museum. Barbara Neliton, (503) 3936439, barbara.neliton@gmail.com.

1962: Monthly class luncheons, 11:30 a.m.,


second Thursday of each month at Izzys
on Lancaster Drive NE. kb7scc@wildblue.net.
Gervais High School class of 1970:
45-year class reunion, Aug. 15 at McNary
Restaurant & Lounge. RSVP to Rita Rasmussen at (503) 580-0612 or Frank or
Karen Slyter at (503) 538-1942.
Independence High School all-school
annual reunion: Luncheon, Aug. 22 at
Henry Hill multipurpose room. $15. To
register, send check to ISH Reunion, PO
Box 291, Independence, OR 97351. Al
Oppliger, (503) 838-1353, jcoppliger@aol.com.
Independence High School class of
1950: 65-year class reunion, Aug. 21 at
Rock-n-Rogers at Farrols Restaurant in
Rickreall. Al Oppliger, (503) 838-1353,
jcoppliger@aol.com.
Lebanon High School class of 1959:
56th class reunion, Aug. 8 at Santiam
Place. Festivities begin at 5 p.m. with
registration and happy hour, then dinner
at 6:30 p.m. Judy Peters, (503) 910-9018 or
(503) 838-6216, judejj03@hotmail.com.
McNary High School class of 1975:
40-year class reunion, Aug. 7 and 8.
mcnaryhighschool1975@gmail.com or
McNary 1975 Reunion c/o 1156 Manzanita
Way NE Keizer, OR 97303-3545.

Gervais High School all-class reunion:


All alumni are invited to join the class of
1955, 5 to 10 p.m. Sept. 26 at Silverton
Elks. RSVP to Pat Hupp, (503) 873-2608 or
Larry Jebousek, (503) 871-8262.

North Salem High School class of


1956: Class luncheon, 11:30 a.m. first
Friday of each month. Contact: Diane,
(503) 364-1104 or judy, (503) 393-7070.

Gervais Union High School class of

North Salem High School class of


1957: No-host luncheon meetings fourth

Thursday of each month at Keizer Elks,


4250 Cherry Ave. NE, Keizer. Contact:
Donna Kelley-Dayton, (503) 881-2123.
North Salem High School class of
1958: Class luncheon, noon second Friday
of each month at Keizer Elks Lodge.
Contact: Judie Mapes, (503) 390-0960.
North Salem High School class of
1960: Gathering of classmates, 11:30 a.m.
third Wednesday of each month at Keizer
Elks Lodge. Contact: Becky, (503)
390-1225.
North Salem High School class of
1965: 50-year class reunion, July 31 at
Northwest Wine Studies Center. (425)
644-1044, info@ReunionsWithClass.com.
Register at www.ReunionsWithClass.com
North Salem High School class of
1970: 45-year class reunion, Aug. 14 and
15. Friday informal gathering place at the
Lucey Barn. Saturday golf scramble;
dinner buffet at McNary Restaurant.
govikings1970@gmail.com, https://
sites.google.com/site/1970north
salemvikings/; www.facebook.com/
northsalem45 threunion.
Salem High School class of 1942:
Luncheon at Rudys at Salem Golf Club,
2025 Golf Course Road S. 11:30 a.m. to 2
p.m. third Monday of each month. Contact: (503) 362-8078.
Salem High School class of 1944:
Monthly luncheons at 11:30 a.m., third
Tuesday of each month at The Sizzler
Restaurant on Lancaster Drive NE. All
classmates are invited, guys included.
Contact: (503) 363-1814.

Salem High School class of 1952:


Monthly no-host luncheon, 11:30 a.m.
third Thursday of each month, Schroeders Guest House Restaurant, 4850
Portland Road NE. Contact: Jim Kinkaid,
(503) 581-8679.
Salem High School class of 1954:
Monthly class luncheons, third Wednesday of each month at Keizer Elks, 4250
Cherry Ave. NE. Contact: (503) 551-6556.
South Salem High School class of
1956: Monthly class luncheons, noon
second Thursday of each month, Keizer
Elks, 4250 Cherry Ave. NE. Contact: Sue or
Jean, sshs56@comcast.net.
South Salem High School class of
1965: 50-year class reunion, Aug. 14-16.
Join Facebook page, South Salem High
School Class of 1965; the Facebook event
titled, Our 50th Reunion; email to our
reunion address: southsalem65@gmail.com or write to: South
Salem Class of 1965, PO Box 21341, Keizer,
OR 97307.
South Salem High School class of
1975: 40-year class reunion, July 18 at
Illahe Country Club. E-mail
1975SSHS@gmail.com or https://
www.facebook.com/southsalemhigh40threunion.

PUBLIC NOTICES
POLICY
Tyler Zachary Gray, 30, Jefferson, and
Amanda Kay Anderson, 28, Jefferson.
Tyler Douglas Chase, 30, Salem, and Chelsea Rose Davis, 30, Ephrata, Washington.

Aaron Allen Johnson, 40, Salem, and


Joelynn Aren Sinclear, 40, Orland, California.
Neil Patrick Messer, 46, Keizer, and Ling Li
Babcock, 30, Woodstock, Connecticut.

Marion County applications


Kenny Wonne, 25, Keizer, and Donnia
Captel, 18, Keizer.

Donald Gene Johnson, 63, Stayton, and


Sandra Celia Windsor, 63, Stayton.

Ryan James Bradley Evans, 34, Salem, and


Shannon Marie Luis, 35, Salem.

Travis Glenn Godeaux, 35, Dallas, and


Katrina Sue Brooks, 35, Salem.

Terrance Alvin Langston, 53, Silverton,


and Renee Shannon Robinson, 51,
Silverton.

Javier Mota Cervantes, 48, Salem, and


Rosalia Sanchez Cruz, 45, Salem.

Miguel Angel Chavez Nunez, Jr., 38,


Keizer, and Matha Herrera, 43, Keizer.
Juan Antonio Orozco Cruz, 23, Salem, and
Evelin Romero-Nova, 27, Salem.
James Dean Sturgis, 22, Salem, and Kayla
Marie Jones, 21, Salem.
Christopher Richard Muhs, 44, Salem, and
Sirikanda Jeenwong, 34, Salem.

Louis was born April 3,


1932 to Alfred and Minnie
Essie Maude Lucas. He
passed away peacefully in
his sleep on March 31, 2015.
He married his wife Corrine
on January 13, 1954. They
were married 52 years. He
was preceded in death by
his loving wife Corrine and
oldest daughter Louise.
He is survived by his sons,
Louis G of Salem, Terry of
Newberg, Leon of Salem,
Loren of Salem, and his
daughters Leona of Salem
and Lori of Newberg, 29
grandchildren and 31
great-grandchildren.
Louis joined the USMC
in 1950 where he served in
the Korean War including
the
Chosin
Reservoir
and the Vietnam War. He
received numerous medals
and the Presidential Unit
Citation. He retired after
22 years of service. He then
went to work as a guard
for the Oregon Dept. of
Corrections, retiring in
1994.
There will be a viewing
on Wednesday, April 8,
2015 from 9:00am to 5:00
pm at Weddle Funeral
Chapel in Stayton. The
service will be in April 15th
at 11:00am also at Weddle
Funeral Chapel followed
by interment with Military
Honors at Willamette
National Cemetery in
Portland. In lieu of flowers,
we ask that you donate
to the Oregon Patriot
Guard in honor of Louis.
Arrangements entrusted
to Weddle Funeral Services.
Online condolences at
Weddle-Funeral.com.

USS IWO JIMA Shipmates Organization reunion: For all ships company and
embarked Navy and Marine Corps. personnel who were on board the LPH2 or
LHD7, Sept. 13-16 in Baton Rouge, LA.
(757) 723-0317, yujack46709@gmail.com,
http://ussiwojimashipmates.cfns.net

Uriah Michael Dean McKinley, 23, Pendleton, and Danielle Marie Potter, 23,
Silverton.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

April 3, 1932 March 31, 2015

MILITARY

MARRIAGES
The following are marriage license applications received between March 27 and April
3. For more, go to StatesmanJournal.com/
Records.

9D

Gabriel Steven Alvarez, 22, Salem, and


Talisha Christine Parker, 20, Salem.
Blaine Retford Kirk, 24, Salem, and Shylo
Marie Armstrong, 24, Salem.
Aron Paul Reyes, 42, Salem, and Michelle
Darlene Wolfe, 40, Salem.
Michael Emanuel Carroll, 58, Salem, and
Heather Lue Lopez, 43, Salem.

Christopher Dean Lynde, 36, Salem, and


Bonita Karen Rushing, 48, Salem.

John Allen Lampman, 49, Salem, and Roni


Dianne Paswalk, 47, Salem.
Wyatt Hardy Ward, 36, Silverton, and
Valerie Jean Duncan, 34, Silverton.
Gary Warren Bathke, 56, Salem, and
Katherine Marie Bathke, 58, Salem.
Aaron Thomas Stiegeler, 38, Eugene, and
Sarah Alisha Brozovich, 34, Eugene.

Public Notices are available online at www.StatesmanJournal.com.


The Statesman Journal Legal Clerk is available Monday - Friday from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. You can reach them by phone at 503-399-6789. In order
to receive a quote for a public notice you must E-mail your copy to
SJLegals@StatesmanJournal.com, and our Legal Clerk will return an
ad proof with cost, publication date(s), and a preview of the ad.
LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICE DEADLINES
All Legals Deadline @ 1:00 p.m. on all days listed below:
***All Deadlines are subject to change when there is a Holiday.
Monday publication deadlines the Thursday prior
Tuesday publication deadlines the Friday prior
Wednesday publication deadlines the Monday prior
Thursday publication deadlines the Tuesday prior
Friday publication deadlines the Wednesday prior
Saturday publication deadlines the Thursday prior
Sunday publication deadlines the Thursday prior

LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICE RATES

Statesman Journal:
Weekday - $65.67/per inch/per day
(25% discount would apply to subsequent full pages (ie. pages 2
through xxx) that appear in the same ad in the same publication on
the same publication day.)
Weekend/Holiday - $76.87/per inch/per day
Online Fee - $21.00 per time
Affidavit Fee - $10.00 per Affidavit requested
OR-0000360917

10D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Inmates train dogs in Ore. prison


Pooches being readied for adoption
the gaps.
The program kicked off
about a month ago. If all goes to
plan, the dogs will be ready for
adoption eight to 10 weeks from
when they arrived at the prison.
Zoey spends the bulk of her
days with her primary trainer,
inmate Justin Schiller-Munnemann. He picks her up at the recently constructed prison kennels each morning and takes her
back each evening.
She goes wherever I go,
Schiller-Munnemann said.
When he needs a break or has
a conflict, either secondary
trainer Philip Florek or sitter
Geoff Hendrickson takes over.
At first, Zoey was timid. She
startled when prison doors
clanked open and shut. She refused to climb the metal staircase leading to his second-floor
cell. Schiller-Munnemann sat
down on the stairs and coaxed
her up one step at a time.
During training sessions,
Zoey learns basic obedience
and manners. Each week, her
trainers take her through a dif-

By Kathy Aney
East Oregonian

PENDLETON If Zoey could


talk, she would likely tell a sorrowful tale.
Police confiscated the border collie cross several weeks
ago during a drug raid on a
Umatilla County house. They
took the dog to the Pet Rescue
animal shelter, where she shied
away from strangers.
A month later, Zoey is a
changed pooch. She greets people with her tail wagging and
her brown eyes free from fear.
The transformation took
place in what might seem the
unlikeliest of places a prison.
Inside the Two Rivers Correctional Institution, 18 inmates
train rescue dogs for adoption.
Richland dog trainer Tracy Hill
runs weekly sessions in the
prisons visiting room. Six dogs
each have a team of three inmates at its bark and call. One
inmate serves as primary trainer and the other two (a secondary trainer and a sitter) fill in

ferent scenario. One week, the


visiting room became a farmers market. This week, SchillerMunnemann and Zoey visited a
pretend veterinarians office
where Hill examined the dog by
running her hands over her soft
brindle, black and white fur. Afterwards, Schiller-Munnemann
stopped by a makeshift receptionists desk and pretended to
write a $250 check. Zoey sat patiently.
Schiller-Munnemann
slipped her a kibble from his
pocket.
By the end of the training,
the six dogs should be able to
pass the American Kennel Club
Good Citizens test. The canines
must sit politely for petting, react calmly to the approach of a
friendly stranger, walk on a
loose lead, come when called
and behave politely around other dogs. They must react to unexpected distractions without
panicking, barking or running
away.
Hill distracted the dogs during this weeks session by doing
jumping jacks and having inmate trainers and assistant instructors whistle, clap and yell.
Hill said all the dogs have

come far, but none have come


out of their shell more than
Zoey.
When she came in, she
wanted nothing to do with anybody, Hill said. She cowered.
Hill, who runs 4 Paws DogWorks in Richland, said the inmate trainers benefit as much
as the dogs, or more.
Ive watched the relationships between dogs and inmates
grow to the point where Im
amazed, she said.
The men each had to apply
for their positions, like any job
in the real world. Some were invited for interviews. Fewer received invites for a round of
second interviews.
The inmates say having dogs
among the prison population is
healing. David Keever, a sitter,
said he witnessed a tattooed lifer get down on his knees and bury his face in a dogs fur.
A lot of us havent seen a dog
for a long time, Keever said.
They do a lot for your soul.
They mend a lot of holes.
Schiller-Munnemann takes
Zoey when he visits a friend in
the prison hospice program.
Everyone in the infirmary

lights up when Zoey comes in,


he said. One guy with tears in
his eyes said he hadnt petted a
dog for 20 years.
Members of the public will
have a chance to interact with
the six dogs during a meet and
greet April 16 at 1:30 p.m., on the
lawn near the TRCI administrative offices. Those who want to
adopt one of the dogs may fill
out adoption papers. If more
than one person requests the
same dog, a name will be picked
from a hat. The owners will
have the opportunity to go inside the prison and watch their
dog interacting with its trainer.
Owners will receive training
logs kept by the trainers. The
adoption fee is $150.
The trainers are keeping
their mission in mind. Zoeys
secondary trainer, Philip Florek, came up with a creative slogan for the program: From no
house to the big house to your
house.
After the current batch of
dogs leaves, another group will
arrive. Roles among each dog
team member will switch.
Schiller-Munnemann said he
will miss Zoey when she leaves.

OREGON BRIEFS

Japanese Steakhouse
& Sushi Bar

Sheriff: 1-year-old Woodland


girl dies in home drowning

Warm Springs fires official


who alleged financial fraud

WOODLAND, Wash. The Clark


County sheriffs office says a 1year-old Woodland, Washington,
girl died Friday evening in an apparent drowning at a home.
The Columbian reports the sheriffs office says the child was found
unconscious and unresponsive.
CPR was begun and the child was
taken to a hospital but she could not
be revived.
The girl was not identified. No
additional details were provided
about what happened.

BEND The Confederated


Tribes of Warm Springs has fired an
official whose concerns led to a federal investigation.
The tribes director of human resources told The Bend Bulletin on
Friday that secretary-treasurer
Jake Suppah was let go.
Suppah was hired by the tribes in
2013 for the job that is comparable
to a city manager.
The Warm Springs native told
The Bulletin last month that he uncovered troubling financial patterns within the tribes, including

theft of time, mismanagement of


federal grants and missing funds.

Ore. woman fears missing


goat will wind up as dinner
WOODBURN A woman who
lives in a rural area of Oregon is
worried that her missing pet goat
could wind up as a dinner entree. In
a public plea, Deidra MacKimmie is
offering a $250 reward for Petes
safe return. Thats more than shes
seen goats sell for recently.
The Oregonian reports that the
Woodburn woman says the 7-yearold goat vanished late Tuesday or
early Wednesday from her yard.

Seder
Continued from Page 1D

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O
F
F

raela Tubman, who performed the


service, a lamb shank bone also
could be found.
The word Seder means order,
because each item of food on the
plate is introduced in a specific order. The process symbolizes the
journey from slavery to freedom
for Jews, thus community members
did not just eat on Saturday evening; they interacted with the foods
throughout the service.
The greens represented spring.
The eggs symbolized sacrifice.
Horseradish reminded participants
of the bitterness of slavery. And the
apples and nuts symbolized mortar,
which recalled the bricks made by
their ancestors as slaves in ancient
Egypt.
The whole thing is done through
symbolism, Vanderbeek said.
Then we eat a wonderful meal.
The rabbi had a more comfortable, if less sweeping, view of the
evening.
Its really just a big family dinner, Tubman said.
Although the Seder is primarily
for those who practice Judaism,
other religions are welcome.
The coolest thing about Seder
dinner, I think, is that people who
arent Jewish come, as well, Kathi
Shuriman said. Its a different way
to connect with different religions,
because this is everyones day. It is a
universal story.
aarmstrong@statesmanjournal.com;
(503) 399-6745 or follow on Twitter at
@AlexaArletta

PHOTOS BY DANIELLE PETERSON / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Rabbi Yisraela Tubman explains the items on a Seder plate during a Community
Passover Seder on Saturday at Temple Beth Sholom in South Salem.

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Tables are set for a Community Passover Seder on Saturday at Temple Beth Sholom in South Salem. The seder plate traditionally
holds five or six items, each of which symbolizes a part of the Passover story.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Homegrown
INSIDE

ONLINE
Mad Men is returning tonight, but how much do you
remember? Take this interactive quiz at Statesman
Journal.com/Life.

BEER

NAVIGATOR

EASTER GAME

Oregon wild ales abound. See


how our tasting panel ranked
some of them. Page 4E

Plan out your week from Scottish


Heritage Festival to Boys II Men
with symphony. Page 5E

Clip and play board


game will keep kids busy
this Easter. Page 6E

ERIC SWANSON / SPEICAL TO THE


STATESMAN JOURNAL

Upcycle artist Nancy Morris-Judd


models her Faux Fur Coat, which
is made from cassette tape woven
onto the fabric of a second-hand
coat.

Upcycle
event
takes trash
to fashion
runway
By Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

Have you ever looked at bin


of aluminum cans, a shelf of
unused cassette tapes or any
pile of junk and seen potential?
Or art? Or even a dress? If
youre thinking, Thats nuts
or Thats cool then you
might consider attending Upcycle Oregon at the State Capitol on Friday and Saturday,
April 10-11.
Upcycle Oregon is an art
and fashion festival that aims
to raise awareness about waste
reduction and reuse by highlighting Oregon artists and
innovators, providing waste
reduction education and encouraging the reuse of materials in new and creative forms.
In other words, the capitol will
be full of junk and models
wearing trash.
But this is not your everyday landfill trash. This is art.
In fact, the festivals emcee,
Nancy Morris-Judd, who has a
20-year career in recycling and
waste reduction, has a piece in
the Smithsonian Institutions
permanent collection. Her
Obamanos Coat is a cocktail
dress made from discarded
yard signs from the 2008 presidential campaign.
Working with waste materials frees up my creative
juices, Morris-Judd said.
Theres also the feel-good
aspect that goes with upcycling art and making the conscious choice to not use new
materials.
Upcycle Oregon is a collaboration led by DIY Studio with
Capitol History Gateway Project, Willamette University
and Marion County. It seeks to
create positive environmental,
social and economic benefits in
Oregon.
We are looking forward to
highlighting the creativity and
ingenuity of people from
across Oregon, said event
co-organizer Carlee Wright,
who also is a reporter at the
See UPCYCLE, Page 2E

IF YOU GO
What: Upcycle Oregon
When: Noon to 4 p.m. Saturday
Fashion show: 1 p.m. Saturday
Artists reception : 4 p.m. Friday
Business and policy panel discussion on creative reuse: Noon
to 1:30 p.m. Friday
Where: Oregon State Capitol Building, 900 Court St. NE
Cost: Free
Information: upcycleoregon.org

COURTESY OF MICHAEL BRUSASCO

Willamette University graduate Michael Brusasco (left) performs in Utah Shakespeare Festivals production of The Tempest.

BIOS

To be or not to be ...

SUCCESSFUL
Alumni of Willamette Universitys top-rated
theater program discuss their education
and how they are making it as professionals
By Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

In February, OnStage, a popular theater blog, ranked the top college theater
programs in the nation. Willamette Universitys Department of Theatre placed
first among programs offering bachelors
degrees. As I interviewed Willamette
faculty members about the honor, I was
curious about the success of their graduates.
Jonathan Cole, associate professor at
Willamette, said the facultys responsibility is to make sure graduates know how
to succeed professionally.
We cultivate a culture of lifelong
learning and curiosity, and that leads to
lifelong passion for exploration and the
art, Cole said.
Professor Chris Harris said Willamettes old school apprenticeship approach involves students working side by
side with faculty. He said students who
go on to succeed develop a hunger for the
collaborative and creative process.
When a no comes, they dont give up
or get discouraged or throw in the towel.
Its tenacity. They say, Next time, and
they keep going, Harris said.
Here is what six Willamette graduates
Shana Cooper, Sarah Juliet Quigley,
Zach Fischer, Tess Falcone, Joellen Sweeney and Michael Brusasco said about
their education and how they built successful careers in the performing arts.

Do you feel as if youve made it?


Fischer: Its funny because most actors dont ever feel like theyve made it.
Theres such a humbling uncertainty in
the business, so its in our nature to be
distrustful of success.
Falcone: Making it in this industry
is so subjective ... it could be argued that
I made it as soon as I started doing my
job and didnt need to supplement my
income by working outside of my industry. But for me, I wont have made it
until I have my designs utilized in the
biggest tours out there. So, let me know if
Justin Timberlake calls anytime soon.
Brusasco: Whats most difficult to
learn for me is there is no made it. Its
about continually moving forward in
exploring what I love to do, which is telling a good story to a group of people.

What was the most difficult thing


you had to do to succeed?
Cooper: The challenge in making a
living in this art form is that youre only
ever as good as your last job, so theres a
constant challenge to succeed with each
production. You never really lose the

REACH US: Heather Rayhorn, (503) 399-6720, hrayhorn@StatesmanJournal.com

feeling that each job may be your last


job, which is a harrowing feeling to live
with. A lot of being successful in this
industry is learning to live with uncertainty. That is the biggest challenge.
Quigley: It always comes back to
money. New York is not the easiest city to
live in, but the opportunities available
here are unparalleled, so I have to make
it work. I have a good job actually, I
have three jobs and I dont feel like Im
a starving artist in the way one might
think. Its when making money compromises my time spent on theater, thats
when I feel like a starving artist.

What was the most important thing


you learned at Willamette?
Falcone: There are no sick days. In
this industry, the show really must go on,
no matter what happens.
Sweeney: The value of commitment
to your choices onstage, to your work
offstage, to being part of a company.
When you arrive in the theater department as a freshman, your name goes up
on the wall of the theater building, and
you become part of the company. Its a
big commitment, but if you invest, the
rewards are huge.
Brusasco: I will always be learning.
The learning never stops.

What do you know now that you


wish you had known at graduation
from college?
Cooper: I wish Id have known that
its as important to invest in the people in
your life as it is to invest in your work,
and that long term, theres a deeper kind
of happiness that comes from your relationships than youll ever find in your
work no matter how important that part
of your life is.
Fischer: College theater is a cocoon
where the opportunity to work on great
material is always available, and your job
is to just be an artist. Then you get out
into the industry and youre suddenly
faced with being a professional, and you
really have no idea ... You have to crash
learn the politics of casting offices, the
science of auditioning, how to conduct
yourself in agent meetings and on and on.
But on the other hand, Im glad I had to
just live it and figure it out as I went.

What advice do you have for young


people who dream of a career in
theater?
Cooper: I recommend making work
and making as much of it as you can. You
See THEATER, Page 5E

Michael Brusasco
Stayton native Brusasco is
currently acting in The Three
Musketeers at Quintessence
Theatre Group in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.He graduated
from Willamette with a theater degree in 1999
and has a masters degree from the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He built a career
as an actor, director and teacher who has
worked extensively in regional, off-Broadway
and off-off-Broadway productions. For information, go to michaelbrusasco.com.

Shana Cooper
Shana Cooper, Willamette
class of 1999, is a freelance
director originally from Ashland. She is currently directing
at the Woolly Mammoth
Theatre Company in Washington, D.C. She has a masters degree from Yale
School of Drama. She is considering a transition
into artistic director positions and hopes to
continue directing. For information, go to
shanacooper.com.

Tess Falcone
Reno native Falcone is a freelance entertainment lighting
designer based in Denver,
Colorado. While very involved
in theater at Willamette,
Falcone majored in biology.
After graduation in 2010, she interned and built
a career designing lights for concerts.

Zach Fischer
San Diego native actor Fischer
can be seen in some upcoming
television shows, including
FXs The Americans, NBCs
American Odyssey and The
Jim Gaffigan Show on TV
Land and Comedy Central. At Willamette, he
double majored in theater and political science,
graduating in 1998. He has an M.F.A. from Florida State University. He lives in New York CIty.
This fall, he will return to Willamette as a visiting assistant professor to teach acting and
voice.

Sarah Juliet Quigley


Quigley grew up in Seattle
and is a 2012 graduate of
Willamette University with a
B.A. in theater and a Spanish
minor. While at Willamette,
she completed a summer apprenticeship at the
Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey that helped
her establish an acting career in regional and
New York City theater. Her survival job is
office manager for NeroDoro, a Brooklyn restaurant. For information, go to
sarahjulietquigley.com.

Joellen Sweeney
Portland native Sweeney
graduated from Cleveland
High School. She graduated
from Willamette in 2014 with
degrees in Spanish and theater. She acts and teaches in Portland at Young
Musicians & Artists, Northwest Childrens Theater and School and Third Rail Repertory Theatre.
Shes completing an apprenticeship program at
Third Rail and will perform June 18-28 in the
companys Final Showcase Performance. For
information, go to
facebook.com/thirdrailmentorshipcompany.

2E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Heritage Oregon

ONLINE
Go to StatesmanJournal.com/Heritage for more on area history.

Salem similar but not same city Roosevelt visited


By Kylie Pine
Special to the Statesman Journal

At 9 a.m. on May 21, 1903, President


Theodore Roosevelt stepped off a train
onto the platform at Salems old railroad depot and into a crowd of thousands eager to catch a glimpse of him.
His few hours
in Salem were
spent touring the
city, giving
speeches, receiving gifts and accolades with lots of
hand shaking and
small talk. Most of
the sights that he
saw on his whirlwind trip would be
unrecognizable to modern residents,
just a century later.
The train depot at which the president disembarked did not resemble
todays brick structure, which would be
constructed 15 years after the presidential visit. Although it stood on the
same property, Salems train depot in
1903 was a wooden affair, with dainty,
spindly decorations. A portion of the
station that Teddy Roosevelt would
have visited still stands today as the
baggage depot, now a stand-alone building that was salvaged from the remains
of the older depot.
As the president drove off in the
horse-drawn carriage that would carry
him around the city, he was followed by
15 other carriages and surrounded by a
battalion of Oregon National Guardsmen on foot. As they drove through the
city on their way to the first ceremonial
stop, the only currently standing buildings the president would have seen
were the Thomas Kay Woolen Mill,

Upcycle
Continued from Page 1E

Statesman Journal.
Upcycling is the process
of converting and elevating
waste materials into items of
greater environmental benefit, economic value or aesthetic beauty. Morris-Judd explained that its different from
recycling in which items are
broken down into smaller
parts and remade through a
manufacturing process.
Upcycling is about creativity, she said. Creativity
is about how we solve problems ... and find local solutions.

WILLAMETTE HERITAGE CENTER, 1998.010.0055.

Teddy Roosevelt leaves the Oregon State Capitol in 1903.

Willamette Universitys Waller Hall and


Gatke Hall (although Gatke was the
brand new post office and located much
farther west on State Street), the First
Methodist Church and large swaths of
buildings along State and Commercial
streets including the current homes of
the Brick, Wild Pear and Cookes Stationery, parts of U.S. Bank, Ma Valise,
Earles Antiques, Gallagher Fitness, the
Night Deposit and Greenbaums Quilted Forest.
Visitors past and present would recognize the entourages destination,
Marion Square Park, but maybe not the
large stage that had been constructed
there or the thousands of schoolchil-

Upcycle Oregon will feature


a number of family-friendly
events. There will be a two-day
art exhibit in the capitol. Saturdays headline feature is an
interactive fashion show of
clothing made from reused
materials.
Salem gallery owner Mary
Lou Zeek and Oscar Lopez, a
local fashion designer who
showed at Portland Fashion
Week, will judge and award
winners. Guests will be able to
meet the fashion designers.
The fashion show is a really popular part of recycled art
events, Morris-Judd said.
Often times, its a way of engaging teenagers in looking at
environmental issues that they
might not otherwise become

Trashion, which
is fashion made
from trash, will
be featured on
the runway at
Upcycle Oregon
on Saturday,
April 11, at the
Oregon State
Capitol.

DIY Studio accepts donations of


materials for creative reuse. Learn
more at diystudio.net.

engaged in. Teenagers love


fashion.
Other Saturday events include electronics recycling by
Garten Services and childrens
activities by Gilbert House
Childrens Museum. On Friday,
Willamette Universitys Sustainability Institute will host a
panel discussion on advancing
Oregons environmental and
economic well-being through
creative reuse and waste reduction.
We hope people who attend

Aries (March 21-April 19).


Knowing a little about a
problem is worse than
knowing nothing. So once
you have a glimpse of the
issue, go deeper.

COURTESY OF DIY
STUDIO

Upcycle Oregon will see new


value, inspiration and get their
own ideas for upcycling,
Wright said.

Gemini (May 21-June 21).


Oscar Wilde said, Always
forgive your enemies
nothing annoys them so
much. Your acknowledgment will make a difference.
Cancer (June 22-July 22).
You usually take full responsibility when things dont go
as planned. Enjoy the unexpected turn of events.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). You
will risk by not risking, but
what exactly? Life, goodness,
happiness its all on the
table.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). As
you strengthen and grow
your best qualities, less
desirable ones disappear.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You
know what its like to be
lonely in a crowd. Thats why
you reach out to those who
seem like they need extra
care.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
Helping others helps you. Go
where the needy people are.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). Putting your judgments
aside and check your expectations at the door.

CROSSWORD PUZZLE SOLUTION


7
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Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).


To relax in the company of
new people is not easy. The
awkward moments are that
much more real.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Youre clear about what
youre passionate about. Its
this passion that will move
an obstacle out of your path.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20).
Separate what is truly happening to you from the
emotions attached to it.
Todays Birthday (April 5).
Theres no such thing as
normal over the next
three months because youre
so willing to do life in new
ways. Your lucky numbers
are 13, 29, 44, 26 and 11.
Write the astrologer, Holiday
Mathis, at Creators Syndicate at
www.creators.com.

TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal
.com, (503) 983-6030,
facebook.com/RastrelliSJ and on
Twitter @RastrelliSJ

Husband doesnt go with


wife to emergency room

Taurus (April 20-May 20). Its


time to speak out loud what
youve been rehearsing in
your head.

Sudoku is a numberplacing puzzle based on


a 9x9 grid with several
given numbers. The
object is to place the
numbers 1 to 9 in the
empty squares so that
each row, each column
and each 3x3 box contains the same number
only once. The difficulty
level of the Conceptis
Sudoku increases from
Monday to Sunday.

Kylie Pine is the curator at the Willamette


Heritage Center, a 5-acre historical park
and museum in dedicated to preserving and
sharing the history of the Mid-Willamette
Valley. She can be reached at
kyliep@willametteheritage.org.

HOW TO DONATE

HOROSCOPES

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

dren lined up to greet the president


with song. The park itself, though, looks
very much like it did over 100 years
ago, less one gazebo and plus one skate
park.
The final stop of the tour was the
state capitol. Even this looked quite
different in Teddys day, with a round
copper dome and ornate faade rising
between a neighborhood of grand Victorian mansions to the north (now the
capitol mall) and the university to the
south. Completed in 1872, this capitol
building faced west, its entry looking
out to what is now Willson Park. It was
on the steps here at the front of the
capitol that a huge platform 15 feet

above the ground was constructed in


preparation for the presidential visit.
As an article in the Oregonian describes: The platform is about twothirds the way up the steps and is large
enough to hold about 150 persons. From
tests made today, it was determined
that the President can be heard distinctly at any place on the Capitol
grounds west of the building, so that it
is certain that all who attend the exercises will be able to hear.
Photographs of the visit show the
platform festooned with patriotic
stripes and stars standing far above the
heads of the anywhere from 10,000 to
40,000 people who were estimated to
have gathered to view the scene.
After the requisite speech making
and ceremonies, the president was
returned to the train depot to catch a
train northwards, leaving Salem at
noon, just three hours after he had
arrived.
President Roosevelt, or at least a
reincarnation of him, will be returning
to Salem on April 27. Joe Wiegand, the
premier Theodore Roosevelt re-creator,
will give a presentation and answer
questions at the Willamette Heritage
Center as part of his Oregon Roadshow
presented by the Oregon Historical
Society and Wells Fargo. Tickets ($20 if
bought by April 20) are available at the
Willamette Heritage Center. Call (503)
585-7012 or go to
willametteheritage.org.

Mitchell
and Sugar
A N N I E ' S M A I L B OX

Dear Annie: My husband has the emotional


IQ of a 10-year-old. I
recently spent six hours
in the emergency room
for some tests to rule out
a potentially life-threatening problem. I asked
my husband to please
drive me to the ER because the doctors did not
advise that I drive myself home afterward. His
response was that he
needed to stay home and
take care of our dog.
This is the second

time he has done this.


Years ago, I had some
outpatient surgery. When
the nurse went to look for
him, he was nowhere to
be found. He had driven
45 minutes back to our
house to take care of our
dog and hadnt returned.
After the six hours in
the ER, I drove myself
home. I was extremely
tired, hungry and
stressed out. Due to nearby construction, I had to
walk several blocks in
the cold and the dark to
get to my car.
When I got home, my
husband didnt even
bother to ask how I was. I
had hoped (silly me) that
he would buy me flowers
or take me out to dinner.
What I got instead were
stupid jokes and snarky
comments. I blew my

top.
He still doesnt get that
he let me down when I
needed him. I told him he
couldnt have caused me
any greater hurt than if
he had hit me. Talking to
a counselor is out of the
question. Im a very private person and would
not be comfortable talking to someone about this.
How do I make him understand?
Devastated in Dixie
Dear Dixie: We suspect your husband is
highly uncomfortable
dealing with hospitals and
sick people, so he avoids
you during these times.
The dog provides a good
excuse, but he shouldnt
be let off the hook. You
need to be very blunt on
these occasions: Honey, I
need you to stay with me
at the hospital because I
get scared all by myself.
Can you watch TV in my
room? If you know youll
be there all day, make
arrangements for the
dog. If these efforts still
dont work, find a friend
to accompany you so your
husbands emotional inadequacy doesnt leave you
stranded and upset.
Annies Mailbox is written by Kathy
Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime
editors of the Ann Landers column.
Please email your questions to
anniesmailbox@comcast.net.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

3E

F L AV O R S
Treat your palate to a taste of Oregon
Text and photos by Victor Panichkul
Statesman Journal

Try these sauces


in marinades for
meat. Drunken
Garlic Black Bean
Sauce ($6.25) and
Drunken Jerk
Jamaican
Marinade ($6.49),
available at
Natural Grocers.

A selection of cereals from Peace Cereal in Eugene, including Mango Peach, Goji Berry and Chia, and
Blueberry Pomegranate (all $4.49 each), available at Natural Grocers.

A trio of hot sauces from Fire on the Mountain in Portland,


including Buffalo Lime Cilantro, Buffalo Wing Sauce and
Bourbon Chipotle ($5.25 each), available at Natural Grocers.

Two nut-based flours and coconut flour from Bobs Red Mill in Milwaukie. The Hazelnut meal/flour ($9.99)
and the almond meal/flour ($8.45) would be great in cookies. The coconut flour ($5.69) is great for
gluten-free baking. All are available at Natural Grocers.

A selection of salsas from Charlies Salsa in Beaverton and


Grandma Chongas in Dundee, including Tomatillo Wasabi ($4.39),
Chunky Salsa ($5.49) and Tropical Salsa ($5.49), available at Natural
Grocers.

A selection of Thai curries and sauces for use in stir-fry from Thai and True and its Thai creator Susie Kasem,
made in Lake Oswego. The selection at Natural Grocers at 4250 Commercial St. SE includes red, green, panang,
prik-king curries ($5.89 each), hot chili oil ($5.89), peanut sauce ($7.35) and hot sauce ($6.59).

CALIFORNIA, HERE I COME

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

48

49

50

85

86

BY ALAN ARBESFELD / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ


20

ACROSS

1 Small drums
7 Leaves of grass
13 Folded like a fan
20 East Coast national
park
21 Early stone tool
22 Go wild
23 Ancient Peruvian
using Netflix?
25 Washington post?
26 Newbie: Var.
27 Senator Mike from
Wyoming
28 1965 hitmakers Dino,
____ & Billy
30 Start to lose it
31 Exactly 72, maybe
33 No fishing here!?
38 Be up
39 Ending with Vietnam
40 Vietnam ____
41 Like the headline
ELVIS
FATHERED MY
ALIEN BABY
42 Sheer
44 Lines from Homer
and Erasmus
47 Some art projections
51 Dog whose rocket
went off course?
55 Make the podium
56 Some black-tie events
57 Refrain syllable
58 Network, for one
59 Never
Online subscriptions:
Todays puzzle and more
than 4,000 past puzzles,
nytimes.com/crosswords
($39.95 a year).

62 Is that so?
64 A minimus is a little
one
65 Comment to an
annoying blackjack
dealer?
71 TV ET
72 Pub fixture
73 Ta-da!
74 Up-to-the-minute
77 Letters after Sen.
Kirsten Gillibrands
name
78 Less deserving of a
laugh, say
81 Sealer, maybe
82 Part of a jumbo trail
mix?
87 Sorry sort
89 Lit
90 Marie Antoinette, par
exemple
91 First name on the
Americas Got
Talent panel
93 State on the Miss.
94 Bouncers
concern
96 AAA offering: Abbr.
97 Agent for Bogarts
partner?
102 Wild
104 Declare
105 Filmmaker
Riefenstahl
106 Hold it!
108 When I was ____

109 President John


Tylers wife
111 12-Point Type:
A History?
116 Tied up

117 They might grab


some food before a
flight
118 Hard and unyielding
119 Bar order thats not
drunk
120 Me as well!
121 Isnt completely
truthful
DOWN

1 It may be on the tip of


your tongue
2 Put in play
3 It holds a lock in place
4 Classic theater
5 Marshy place, perhaps
6 Identical to
7 Auto pioneer Karl
8 When dealing with
people, let us
remember we are
not dealing with
creatures of ____:
Dale Carnegie
9 Will Smith
biopic
10 When repeated, a
childs meal
11 Yadda, yadda, yadda
12 Tangerine or peach
13 Force divided by
area, in physics
14 ____ brothers,
inventors of the
motion picture
(1895)
15 Having five sharps
16 Cause of a great
loss?
17 Option for a quick
exit
18 Quaint letter opener

19 Classic British
Jaguar
24 Concerning
29 Sharp turn
32 Projected image
34 High-tech
surveillance
acronym
35 Major account
36 Site of a 1776 George
Washington victory
in the Revolutionary
War
37 ____ Rudolph, U.S.
sprinter who won
three golds in the
1960 Olympics
43 British racetrack
site
44 ____ Hardware
45 Its in the 60s
46 Rock singer?
48 Photoshop user, e.g.
49 Egyptian king
overthrown in a 1952
revolution
50 Wintry mixes
52 Barely touch, as a
meal
53 Visibly stunned
54 Grp. with a launch
party?
58 Criticism
59 Spiral-horned
antelopes
60 Cest magnifique!
61 Like some titmice
62 Fist bump, in slang
63 It might say Happy
Birthday!
66 Ancient Assyrian foe
67 Old lab burners
68 Ambushed

21

23

22

24

26

25

27

31

32

38

39

42

28
33

35

44
52

60

45

46

53

47
54

61

58

62
66

71

67

63

75

69

77

78

82

87

98

109

84
90

93

94

100

104

101

105
110

80

89
92

99

79

83

88
91

106
111

112

113

95
103

107

108

114

115

117

118

119

120

121

70 Mess (around)
75 Catholic rite
76 Delphine author
Madame de ____

78 Waxing and waning,


e.g.

79 U.K. honour
80 Free

82 Thomas Jefferson
and Calvin Coolidge,
e.g.
83 Quiet period
84 Menial
85 Showstopper?
86 When schools open
88 More slapstick
92 Novelist McEwan
94 ____-bodied
95 Boards opposite

96

102

116

69 One calling foul?

70

73

76

81

64

68

72

74

55

57

65

97

37
41

56
59

30

36

40

43

51

34

29

97 Marylands largest
city, informally
98 ____ Fisher Hall,
longtime venue at
Lincoln Center
99 Whale constellation

103 Tasty
107 In that case
110 Chinas Lao-____
112 Suffered from
113 Jeff Lynnes band,

100 Capone henchman

for short

101 Something you


might get a charge
out of

114 Patch of land


115 ____ season

4E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Taste of Oregon
Oregon brewers get wild with wild ales
From the first sip of a Belgian Lambic Kriek years ago when I lived in
Baltimore and my first bite of seafood
cooked in Belgian ale at a gastropub
called Brewers Art, I have been nurturing a wild
fascination with
Belgian wild ales.
Unlike most of
the beers were
used to in Oregon,
IPAs and such,
which are ferVictor
mented with carePanichkul
fully selected
strains of yeasts,
TA S T E
OF OREGON
traditional Belgian ales are
brewed by spontaneous fermentation
using wild yeasts, which gives the beer
its distinctive dry, fruity and sour
flavor.
Belgian wild ales or farmhouse ales
usually are lower in alcohol than their
stout cousins, and the citrus flavors of
the beers make them perfect for
spring and summer sipping while
youre enjoying the great outdoors and
the great weather here.
The lawn and yard work seem less
tedious when a cold Belgian-style ale is
waiting for the after-chore chill on the
back deck.
Browsing Capital Market in Salem,
I discovered a small selection of Oregon Belgian ales earlier this year to
try. When I heard that there was an
actual wild ale and farmhouse ale festival in Portland, there was nothing that
was going to keep me from venturing
to the land of bearded, tattooed,
pierced and gauged hipsters to attend
along with my fellow hop heads (I
mean beer panel members). It was a
wonderful experience marred only by
the shocking image of three men in
kilts with scrawny legs and bulbous
knees unlike the hunky Jamie Fraser of Outlander.
Saraveza Bottle Shop and Pasty
Tavern, The Bad Habit Room and a
small stretch of North Michigan Avenue that connected the two became
wild ale central last weekend.
On March 28-29, several hundred
beer lovers packed the space for the
third annual Portland Farmhouse and
Wild Ale Festival, tasting wild-brewed
wonders from Portland, Eugene, the
coast, Washington, California, Colorado, Texas and as far away as New
York. I was amazed that there were so
many Oregon brewers making wild
and farmhouse ales.
Among the brewers represented
were Logsdon Farmhouse Ales from
Hood River, de Garde Brewing in Tillamook, Double Mountain Brewery in

SAEROMS
PICKS
Saerom Yoo, health
reporter
Saerom Yoo

Age: 28

Favorite craft
brews: Double Mountain Lulu, Fort
George 3-Way IPA, Pfriem Blonde IPA
Favorite mass-market brews: Dos
Equis, Modelo, Tecate
Beer turn-off: Overly malty or sweet
Favorite beer food: Tacos or a nice
medium-rare burger with fries

DAVID DAVIS / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Sampling Belgian style wild ales at Saraveza


Bottle Shop in Portland during the Portland
Farmhouse and Wild Ale Festival.

Hood River, The Commons Brewery in


Portland, Humble Brewing in Portland, Agrarian Ales in Eugene, Oakshire Brewing in Eugene, Solera Brewery in Parkdale, Block 15 Brewing Co.
in Corvallis, Pelican Brewing Company in Pacific City and Pfreim Family
Brewers in Hood River.
It was a rare treat to get to taste so
many Belgian-style wild ales, and
there were no two that were alike. The
brews ranged from lip-pucker sour on
one extreme to citrus and fruity and
hoppy on the other extreme. It seems
like many brewers took the idea of
wild ales and gave it their own twist
with their unique interpretations, producing results that ranged from tasty
to crazy.
The most unusual entry at the festival was the Colorado Wild Sage beer
from Crooked Stave Artisan Beer Project in Colorado. I like the flavor of
sage, but this beer had me drowning in
it and looking around for a place to spit
it out. My favorite of the event was the
Raspberry Bu from tiny de Garde
Brewing in Tillamook. It was the perfect dry, fruity Belgian-style wild ale
with notes of rich and tart raspberry.
Check out our beer panels favorites
from the event.
Victor Panichkul is food, wine and beer
columnist from the Statesman Journal.
Reach him at (503) 399-6704,
Vpanichkul@StatesmanJournal.com,
follow at Facebook.com/WillametteValley
FoodWine and on Twitter @TasteofOregon.

29(5:(,*+7"

Akane by Agrarian Ales (Eugene):


Good play between the wheat and
apple flavors. Avoids tasting like a cider.
Admiral Raspberry of the SS Coolship by Oakshire Brewing (Eugene):
Another light saison that integrates
well with berry flavor. The minor role of
hops helps let all flavors have presence.
Saison Gris by Elysian Brewing
(Seattle): I really wanted to like this, but
the wine flavor gets washed out by the
heavy wheat influence.

ERICHS PICKS
Erich England of
Portland

Strawberry Fields by Block 15


Brewing Company (Corvallis): Nice
balance of sour, oaky and a hint of
strawberry at the end. Yum!
Hibernal Dichotomous (Batch #2)
by Jester King Brewery (Austin, Texas): Refreshing, herbal, slightly sour with
a slight bitter note. Nice brew for a hot
day outside.
Akane by Agrarian Ales (Eugene):
Aroma of apple, sweet and smooth.
Admiral Raspberry of the SS Coolship by Oakshire Brewing (Eugene):
Sour and fizzy with a slight raspberry
aftertaste. Super nice!
Raspberry Bu by de Garde Brewing (Tillamook): Refreshing, crisp and
tart with raspberry flavors. What youd
expect from a sour.

DAVIDS
PICKS
David Davis, digital
producer
Age: 31
David Davis

Favorite craft
brews: Deschutes
Chainbreaker White IPA and Ninkasi
Spring Reign
Favorite mass-market brews: Rainier,
Olympia
Beer turn-off: Overwhelming bitter
flavors or long-lasting aftertastes
Favorite beer food: Soft pretzels
Saison Troisieme by de Garde
Brewing (Tillamook): Dry hoped sour
saison that hits with a great sour flavor
that melts into mild hops and oak flavor.
French Tickler by Solera Brewery
(Mt. Hood): Effervescent and crisp citrus
front flavors, light body. Great session

Age: 29
Favorite craft
brews: Double
Mountain Kolsch,
Sierra Nevada Torpedo Extra IPA, 10
Barrel Swill

Erich England

Favorite mass-market brew: Olympia


Its the water
Beer turn-off: Anything too sweet or
too bitter
Favorite beer food: Chicken wings
and tots
Admiral Raspberry of the SS Coolship by Oakshire Brewing (Eugene):
Crisp, refreshing and sour. The raspberry
flavor shines through. I found it to be
quite a great surprise!
Myrtle by The Commons Brewery
(Portland): A nice floral nose. The flavor
is sour with a hint of bitter that complements and reins in the sour flavor. It is a
delight!
Little Saison by Pfriem Family
Brewers (Hood River): This is a light
floral beer with a low ABV. In my mind,
this is a perfect beer for enjoying a
warm spring day. I could drink this all
day.
Strawberry Fields by Block 15
Brewing Company (Corvallis): A wonderfully light, sour beer with a nice
sweet nose. The strawberry does not
overwhelm by any stretch. I would love
to have this paired with a rich dessert.
Zephyros by Propolis Brewing
(Port Townsend, Washington): A really
solid Saison. It is a touch of tart, a dash
of herbal and some floral thrown in. It
is a beer to sit with and mull over the
flavors throughout.

WINE AND
BEER BRIEFS
crease in visits to our winery. Awards
such as these inspire us to continue to
refine the quality and depth of our
wines and enhance the experience for
visitors.
Maryhill is at 9774 Highway 14 in
Goldendale, Washington. For information, call (877) 627-9445 or go to
Maryhillwinery.com.

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Celebrate Red Lips and Tulips


at St. Josefs Vineyards

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Maryhill co-owners Craig and Vicki Leuthold


and winemaker Richard Batchelor have been
honored by Wine Press Northwest with the
Pacific NW Winery of the Year award.

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Maryhill Winery named


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Maryhill Winery in the eastern Columbia River Gorge has been named
Pacific NW Winery of the Year by Wine
Press Northwest.
Founded in 1999, Maryhill Winery is
known for delivering excellent wines
from acclaimed Washington vineyards
at affordable prices. Maryhill has
claimed more than 3,000 awards, including the 2014 Winery of the Year
award at the San Francisco International Wine Competition, one of the
most prestigious international competitions in the United States. Also in 2014,
the World Association of Wine Writers
and Journalists named Maryhill Winery
among the Worlds Top 10 Wineries.
Were incredibly thrilled by the
award, said Craig Leuthold, co-owner
of Maryhill Winery. To be a part of the
Washington wine industry and being
here in the Pacific Northwest is such a
wonderful thing. What a great time it is
to be in the Pacific Northwest and the
attention the region is getting for the
quality of the wine thats being produced, Leuthold said. Since receiving
the Winery of the Year Award at the
2014 San Francisco International Wine
Competition, weve expanded our distribution and seen a significant in-

Red Lips and Tulips will celebrate


the founding of St. Josefs winery and
the beginning of the season as spring
begins in the vineyard.
The owners, who emigrated from
Europe, wanted to pass on a little bit of
the European wine-growing spirit.
Red Lips and Tulips will feature
lively music from Portland Gypsy Jazz
Project and homemade Hungarian
Goulash, along with other Europeanstyle foods. New releases of estategrown wines including the highly rated
pinot rose and Kitara Reserve syrah
and pinot noir will be available.
St. Josefs grows and makes wine
from its five estate vineyards including
pinot noir, pinot gris, chardonnay, syrah
and gewurztraminer. The winery is just
down the road from the Wooden Shoe
Tulip Farms, which will be in full
bloom.
Festival hours are noon to 6 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday with music from 1
to 5 p.m. Admission is $5 for ages older
than 21 and includes souvenir wine
glass, tasting and tours.
St Josefs is at 28836 S Barlow Road
in Canby.
Contact (503) 651-3190 or
stjosefswinery.com for more information.

Enjoy live music at Coria Estates


Visitors can enjoy free wine tastings
and live music at the Coria Estates
tasting room in South Salem the last
two weekends in April.
Leanne McClellan will perform Saturday, and there will be food by Chef
De Cuisine (Michael Sullivan). Jerry
Meier will perform April 18, and Ben
Thede will perform April 25.
Coria Estates is at 8252 Redstone
Ave. SE. Tasting room hours are noon
to 6 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays,
noon to 7 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays
and noon to 6 p.m. Sundays. For information, call (503) 363-0525.
Victor Panichkul
To publicize wine and beer news, email
Vpanichkul@StatesmanJournal.com.

NWNavigator

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

5E

DONT MISS
UPCOMING
EVENTS

Hit the road for entertainment


in the Northwest.
WEEK OF APRIL 5-11, 2015

PORTLAND
APRIL 12-16
Garth Brooks with Tricia
Yearwood: Country, 4 and
8 p.m. April 12; 7:30 p.m.
April 13, 15 and 16, Moda
Center, One Center Court,
Portland. $74.89. Ticket
master.com.

N
Seattle

SEATTLE
APRIL 14
Ariana Grande: Pop, 7:30
p.m., KeyArena, 305 Harrison St. $25.50 to $65.50.
Ticketmaster.com.

9
Hillsboro

7
Farm Fest
and Plowing
Competition
April 11

McMinnville
Mc
M
cM
Miinn
nnv
viille
lle
ll

PAC
AC I F I C O C E A N

5
Monmouth
Monm
Mo
mo
ou
uth
th
Newport

Newberg

COLUMBIA RIVER

LINCOLN CITY
APRIL 17 AND 19
Travis Tritt: Country, 8
p.m., Chinook Winds Casino
Resort, 1777 NW 14th St.
$23.50 to $38.50. (888)
624-6228, Chinookwind
scasino.com.
APRIL 17-19
Great Oregon Coast
Garage Sale: Visitors from
all over and local residents
alike participate in this
annual event. The sales are
listed in a guide indicating
dates, times, locations and
brief driving directions to
each sale, throughout
Lincoln City. (541) 994-3070,
Oregoncoast.org.

Portland
P
tl d

Silverton
on

Salem
S
alem

Scio
o
Albany
A
Al
Alba
lb
ba
any
y

Local Roots
Music Festival
April 11

10
Florence

Boyz
II Men
April 7

EUGENE
APRIL 18
An Evening with Bill
Maher: Stand-up comedy,
8 p.m., Hult Center for
Performing Arts, Silva Concert Hall, 1 Eugene Center.
$49.75 to $69.75. Hult
center.org.
MAY 28
The Eagles: History of the
Eagles tour, 8 p.m., Matthew Knight Arena, Matthew Knight Arena, 1776 E
13th St. $49 to $179.
Matthewknightarena.com.

Eugene
Bend
Oregon
Scottish
Heritage
Festival
April 11

11

12

ONLINE NOW
Go to StatesmanJournal.com/
NWNavigator for an interactive map
showing the top things to do in the
Northwest. Youll also nd a link to a
calendar of events for activities in the
Mid-Valley.

Jefferson
Starship
April 10-11

HOME BASE

Today
WCWC Live Event: Alexander Hammerstone, Matt
Striker, Joey Ryan, Eric Right,
Jeremy Blanchard, The Grappler and his Wrecking Crew
and more, 5 to 7:30 p.m.,
Houck Middle School, 1155
Connecticut St. SE. $5 to $15.
(971) 600-8215, Wc-wc.com.

Saturday
Local Roots Music Festival
and KMUZ Fundraiser:
Performances from 21 acts
appearing on the Local
Roots Vol II Compilation CD,
includes different genres
from folk to pop to rock to
Texas Swing, all day, Willamette Heritage Center at The
Mill, 1313 Mill St. SE. $10.
(503) 585-7012, Kmuz.org.

fourth and final concert of its


30th anniversary season, with
songs composed and arranged by Ashia & the Bison
Rouge Ginastera, 3 p.m.
Sunday, with preconcert talk
with conductor and artistic
director Nikolas Caoile and
guest artists, 2 p.m. Sunday,
plus Sound Bites Luncheon
and open dress rehearsal, 10
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturday,
Willamette University, Hudson Hall, 900 State St. $20 to
$45; $10 to $23 students; $10
lunch or $5 open dress rehearsal. (503) 480-1128,
Salemchamberorchestra.org.

MIL
MI
M
IIL
LES
ES
0

Jose James and The American Metropole Orchestra:


7:30 to 9:30 p.m., Western
Oregon University, Rice Auditorium, 345 Monmouth Ave.
N. $25 advance; $28 at door.
(503) 838-8333, Wou.edu/sfa.

Friday through April


26
A Bench in the Sun: A
comedy by Ron Clark about
two elderly friends that
spend their days bickering
and reminiscing on the garden bench at their retirement
home, 7 p.m. Fridays and
Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays, Brush Creek Playhouse,
11535 Silverton Road NE. $10
or $8 ages 60 and older,
students and children younger than 12. (503) 508-3682,
Brushcreekplayhouse.com.

Saturday-Sunday

3 MONMOUTH

Masterworks IV: This Noble Company: Join Salem


Chamber Orchestra for the

16.8 MILES

Saturday

Continued from Page 1E

are going to learn something


new on each project that you
do. Not waiting for someone
else to give you a job but to
create the opportunity for
yourself.
Fischer: Your natural talent
is predetermined. You have no
control over how much or little
youve been given, so dont
waste time worrying about it.
Falcone: Just because
youve been told that youre
good at what you do does not
mean that you can get away
with not working hard.

What is your favorite


Willamette memory?
Fischer: On performance
nights, as I walked to the playhouse, I had a tradition of taking a detour to the star trees on
the north side of campus ... I
would spend a few minutes
each night beneath the star
trees, just being still, listening
to the swaying branches, think-

10 2
10
20
0

40
40

blacksmith, horseshoeing
demos, log skidding, pioneer
kids area, museum and
Hutchcroft schoolhouse
open, old timey music, food
and more, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Yamhill Valley Heritage Center, 11275 SW Durham Lane.
$5; free ages younger than
12. (503) 434-0490,
Yamhillcountyhistory.org.

27.1 MILES

Saturday

4 SCIO
24.7 MILES

Saturday
Meet the Lambies Day:
Meet the new spring lambs,
along with chickens, border
collies, flock-guardian dogs
and barn cats, 10 a.m. to 4
p.m., Wolston Farm, 39562
Highway 226. (503) 394-2021.

5 MCMINNVILLE
26.1 MILES

Saturday
Farm Fest and Plowing
Competition: More than 20
teams of draft horses and
mules in competition, photography contest, sawmill,

60
60

80
80

10
10
100
00
0

traditional art and demonstrations that will highlight


the cultures of Asia and the
Pacific-Rim, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Chehalem Cultural Center,
415 E. Sheridan St. Free. (503)
487-6883, Newbergcame
lliafestival.com.

8 PORTLAND
46.7 MILES

Tuesday

6 ALBANY

2 SILVERTON

Theater

MAY 9
Remember when Rock
was Young": Elton John
Tribute featuring Craig A.
Meyer, 7:30 p.m., Historic
Elsinore Theatre, 170 High
St. SE. $20 to $50. Tickets
west.com.

Ashland

1 SALEM

SALEM

Oregon Scottish Heritage


Festival: Pipe bands, dances
and Celtic music, plus a special focus of sharing stories of
Scottish heritage and educational and interactive booths
that tell the stories of clans
and information on the
achievements and contributions of Scottish people to
science, education and the
formation of our own countrys constitution, 9 a.m. to 5
p.m., Linn County Fair and
Expo Center, 3700 Knox Butte
Road. $10; $8 students and
seniors; free ages 12 and
younger. (541) 979-0801,
Oregonscottishsociety.com.

7 NEWBERG
29.4 MILES

Saturday
Newberg Camellia Festival: Blooms, entertainment,

Boyz II Men: R&B group


performs with the Oregon
Symphony, 7:30 p.m., Arlene
Schnitzer Concert Hall, 1037
SW Broadway Ave. $55 to
$120. Orsymphony.org.

84.1 MILES

Saturday
Marine Science Day: Hatfield Marine Science Center
will open its doors for a peek
at research, education and
outreach in marine sciences
that makes this marine laboratory unique, 10 a.m. to 4
p.m., 2030 SE Marine Science
Drive. Free. (541) 961-8113,
Hmsc.oregonstate.edu/
marinescienceday.

11 FLORENCE
127.7 MILES

Friday

Friday and Saturday

Chris Tomlin: Contemporary


Christian music artist, 7 p.m.,
Moda Center, One Center
Court. $25 and $35.
Ticketmaster.com.

Jefferson Starship: Psychedelic rock, 8 p.m. Friday and 7


p.m. Saturday, Three Rivers
Casino, 5647 Highway 126.
$19.99 to $24.99.
Threeriverscasino.com.

9 HILLSBORO

12 BEND

51.2 MILES

131.4 MILES

Friday-Sunday
Hillsboro Gem Faire: Fine
jewelry, precious and semiprecious gemstones, millions
of beads, crystals, gold and
silver, minerals and more,
noon to 6 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Saturday and 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Washington County Fairgrounds,
873 NE 34th Ave. $7 weekend
pass. (503) 252-8300,
Gemfaire.com.

UPCOMING THEATER
AT WILLAMETTE
UNIVERSITY

Friday-Sunday
Northwest Crossing Bend
Spring Festival: Live music,
fine artists promenade, street
chalk art competition, conscious living showcase, activities, 5 to 11 p.m. Friday, 11
a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday and
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Mt.
Washington Drive at Northwest Crossing Drive. Free.
C3events.com.

in the theater department, is


like choosing your favorite
parent ... I am so grateful to
them for their continued support ... My theater professors
taught me how to fight for the
theater industry and to look for
work that is challenging and
dangerous.
Falcone: Associate professor Rachel Kinsman Steck
(current academic co-chair)
taught me loads about lighting
and set construction and gave
me such an appreciation for
the behind-the-scenes aspect
of theater. She inspired me to
follow the career path I have
chosen.

What: The Country Wife directed


by Jonathan Cole
Where: Willamette University, M.
Lee Pelton Theatre, 289 12th St. SE
When: April 1--May 2
Tickets and information: (503)
370-6221

ONLINE
For full interviews and more
photos, find this story
at StatesmanJournal.com/life.
TOM FALCONE / SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL

ing about the play. And then


the adrenaline would come.
When Im waiting in a little
trailer on a film set, I still think
about the excitement and focus
that I could find beneath those
trees.
Sweeney: In my senior
year, my dear friend Becca
Wirta, who is also a Willamette
Theatre graduate, and I directed and produced an outdoor
production of A Midsummer

10 NEWPORT

Willamette University graduate Tess Falcone adjusts lighting equipment.


She is a freelance entertainment lighting designer based in Denver.

Nights Dream. The show had


the actors running all over
campus with the audience
following the story from place
to place. It was a total labor of
love ... It really felt like we had
built a community around the
show, which, for me, is the

more rewarding part of making theater.

Who was your favorite


professor?
Quigley: Choosing my
favorite professor, especially

Is there anything I didnt


ask about that you think
readers need to know?
Quigley: Support Willamette Theatre; they do incredibly high-quality, relevant and
honest work.
TRastrelli@Statesman
Journal.com, (503) 983-6030,
facebook.com/RastrelliSJ and on
Twitter @RastrelliSJ

6E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Chocolate
Bunny Forest

Easter Egg Orchard


Be careful. Dont break the eggs. Wait one
turn here in the orchard, but dont say a
word! Be absolutely silent and you start at
square 11, otherwise start at square 1.

R ou

tim

Tell everyone and


move one space
forward.

Help the Easter Bunny deliver


all of his goodies! Make your way
around the game board.

start

How many Chocolate Bunnies


are made each year?
A. 28,000 B. 90 million
C. 5 million D. 850,000

finish

Move one more space forward


for a right answer

Ro

Sta u nd
n
cir d
cl

28

rner

Stan nd t
d
h
circ up,
le 3

e c pi n i s
e
s

29 Trivia

Egg drop

Whats your
favorite candy?

e c o in a
th spin es
,
up 8 tim
e

er
or n n a

The Chocolate Bunnies are hopping


with glee because Easter is here. You
should hop too. If you can hop the
entire time that the other players take
their turns, you can hop to square 27

HOW TO PLAY

88%!

Percentage of U.S.
parents that will
decorate and hide
Easter baskets for
their kids.

1. Use your favorite Easter egg as


your game piece.
2. Each player rolls the jelly beans.
You will need one black, red, yellow,
green and blue or purple jelly bean.
Place the jelly beans in a cup and
shake them. Each player closes his
or her eyes and reaches into the
cup and pulls out one jelly bean.

Blue jelly bean = move 1 square


forward
Red jelly bean = move 2 squares
forward
Black jelly bean = move 3 squares
forward
Yellow jelly bean = move 0 squares
Green jelly bean = move 1 square
back

3. The object is to move around the


board. The first player to reach the
end wins.
TRIVIA ANSWERS
Hold this up to a mirror to find the
answers to the trivia questions on
the page.
B :92 A:22 C :41 euS retsiS :9 ymmoT :4

4 Trivia

RULES
1. Start with the youngest player
2. If you land on a space that
already has an Easter egg you can
move that players Easter egg one
square back.
But first you must hop like a bunny.
3. Have fun!

27

Oh, No!

You lost your eggs


in the flood.
Go back to the
Easter Egg Orchard.

Chocolate River

In the song, Here


Comes Peter
Cottontail, hes got
jelly beans for who?
Move one more space
forward for a right
answer

Each player who passes must make believe paddleas the other players take their turns.

COLOR YOUR OWN BUNNY!

26
The Chocolate
River is flooding.
Wait 1 turn.

5
Do your best
impression of
the Easter
Bunny!

25

The chicks
still need
help!

Visit the
Marshmallow
Chick Hatchery.

You broke
an egg!

24

Take a trip to the


Easter Egg Orchard
to get more.

Bonnet Time!
Take a page from the
newspaper and
make yourself an
Easter Bonnet.

7
Chocolate
eggs were first
made for Easter
in Europe in the
1800s in
Germany.

23
1878!
The first year of
the White House
Easter Egg Roll.

8
The chicks
need help!

22Trivia

Visit the
Marshmallow
Chick Hatchery.

Who makes
Cream Eggs?
A. Cadbury
B. Cabbury
C. Creamery

Move one more space


forward for a right
answer

21

Hold your egg in a


teaspoon and walk
around the board
three times in 10
seconds. If you break
your egg, go to the
Easter Egg Orchard.

101861!

a
o
e c pi n i n s

R ou

Stan nd t
d
h
circ up,
le 6

s me
ti

17

rn e

er
ornin a
c
e n

i
sp mes
ti

Move one more space forward


for a right answer

a
o
e c n in
i
sp mes
ti

14

15

R ou

Trivia

How many Peeps do


Americans buy during Easter?
A. 2000 B. 3 billion
C. 700 million

Take five chocolate


bars and build a
house. If it stands for
1 minute, visit the
Chocolate Bunny
Forest.

Stan nd t
d
h
circ up,
le 5

13

Marshmallow
Chick
Hatchery

19 Oh, No!
You lost your eggs in
the swamp. Go back to
the Easter Egg Orchard

EASTER WORD SEARCH

16
Bunny house!

12

Hold your egg in a


teaspoon and walk
around the board
three times in 10
seconds. If you break
your egg, go to the
Easter Egg Orchard.

Youre stuck in the


swamp, wait 1 turn

Each player who


passes must tiptoe
once around the
other players.

Can you find


these words?
EGG
DYE
LILY
CHICK
BUNNY
GRASS
CANDY
SPRING
BASKET
BONNET
FLOWER
CARROTS
GUMDROP
JELLYBEAN
CHOCOLATE
COTTONTAIL

ner

r
rn e

Oh, No!
You lost your eggs in
the swamp. Go back
to the Easter Egg
Orchard

You must lose a turn to care for the


chicks squawk, flap your arms and
build a nest from your pillow. Go to
square 14 when you rejoin.

Marshmallow
Swamp

18

R ou

11

20

Like all chicks, marshmallow


chicks need care and tending.

Stan d t
h
circ d up
le 7 ,

William Schrafft,
creates the first jelly
beans in Boston. He
urges people to send
them to loved ones in
the Civil War.

or a
e c n in
i
sp mes
ti

Trivia

In the song, Here


Comes Peter
Cottontail, hes got
colored eggs for
who?
Move one more space
forward for a right
answer

*THE WORDS ARE IN THE SEARCH AT LEAST 3 TIMES


SO MULTIPLE CHILDREN CAN SOLVE THE PUZZLE

F S C B U N N Y A A G UMD R O P
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K D L T A D Y E G A A S G UMD R
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T O L I I BONNE T CHO C O L
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Stan nd t
d
h
circ up,
le 4

R ou

A.D. The Bible Continues goes beyond the resurrection


By Paul Schemm
Associated Press

The people are restive, the


priesthood is scheming and a
fanatic band of insurgents
known as the zealots are plotting assassinations and now
to make matters worse, the
body of a condemned cultleader known as Jesus has
disappeared from the tomb.
Politics in Jerusalem 33
A.D. was just as complex and
dangerous as it is today and

NBCs new series, A.D. The


Bible Continues fuses the
biblical epic with the current
rage for taut political dramas
House of Cards in sandals.
The first of the 10 episodes
airs at 9 p.m. EDT Easter, picking up where its predecessor,
the wildly popular The Bible
series from the History Channel left off and going on to tell
the story of what happened to
Christs disciples after the
crucifixion.
It is choosing this time peri-

od that makes A.D. such a


departure from past Bible
stories, most of which end with
the resurrection.
Here, it is just a beginning,
with an anguished Mother
Mary (played by Greta Scacchi) watching her son die on
the cross while the terrified
apostles fear the rage of the
crowd and try to distance
themselves.
The decade following the
crucifixion, from the perspective of the Apostles, it was the

best of times, it was the worst


of times, creator Mark Burnett, whose credits include
The Bible and Shark Tank,
told The Associated Press
from his home in Malibu. Every day, they thought they
could be killed.
He and his co-producer and
wife, Roma Downey, actress
and former star of CBS
Touched By an Angel,
touched a chord with the original Bible series that debuted in
2013 to 13 million viewers,

prompting NBC to pick up


their plans to craft a sequel for
network television.
This new series, however,
goes for a more gritty and
human approach that tries to
understand the characters as
humans caught up in the politics of the day.
This is not Sunday school,
said Downey. This is Sunday
night drama.
Entertainment writer David Bauder contributed to this report from Malibu, Calif.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

7E

Faith
Local pastors reflect on meaning of Easter
Today is Easter. For the Christian
faithful, it is the most significant event
in the biblical record of their savior and
king, Jesus Christ, who rose from the
dead nearly 2,000 years ago.
Sunrise services are a staple of this
holy day, as the Bible records a group
of women finding the tomb empty just
after sunrise on that first Easter morning.
As 19th-century
hymn writer Robert Lowry put it in
the refrain of
Christ Arose,
which is sung
often today: Up
from the grave he
Hank Arends arose; with a
M I D - VA L L E Y
mighty triumph
RELIGION
oer his foes.
With the resurrection event, Christian believers accept that Christ completed his earthly
journey and became the victor for all
who accept him, taking on the penalty
of their sin and even defeating death
with the promise of a new, heavenly
life.
The Rev. Bret Truax of Calvary Baptist Church in Salem described his collection of expensive plates received as
wedding gifts 33 years ago, which only
come out for special meals on Easter,
Christmas and Thanksgiving.
Thats what Easter is all about
God presenting humanity the best he
had to offer through his son, the pastor
wrote in the church newsletter.
As a result of the resurrection and
Jesus victory over sin and death, each
of us has the opportunity to experience
Gods forgiveness, his grace, the assurance of eternal life and the presence of
the Holy Spirit.
So this Easter, as youre enjoying a
delicious meal after church on your
nice dinnerware, pause for just a mo-

RELIGION
CALENDAR
TODAY
Easter sunrise service: Led by K.P.
and the Kings from Falls City, 6:30
a.m., Spring Valley Church at Zena,
Brush College and Zena roads NW.
(503) 364-8567.
Easter Sunday worship: Sunrise
services at 7 a.m. with traditional
alleluia services at 8 and 9:30 a.m.,
contemporary worship at 11 a.m.

ment to thank God that he chose not to


save the best for later, but instead sent
his son at just the right moment for all
of humanity, Truax continued.
A trip to the Holy Land provided an
Easter reflection for the Rev. Steve
Knox of the Silverton First Christian
Church. He was sitting outside of the
Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem while waiting for his group.
The location has been called the
most sacred site on earth for Christians as the location of Christs death
and resurrection. Knox watched as
visitors to the location climbed the hill
the church is built on and gazed at a
nearby empty tomb.
He was intrigued by the reverence
of the kisses and tears of the visitors at
the Stone of the Anointing, where tradition says Jesus body was prepared for
burial.
It struck me as sweetly odd, and I
worried that this was some Christianized form of idolatry. As I kept watching the faces of the people who knelt
there, with such profound love and
tenderness, I found myself deeply
moved.
More than the rock, their faces
caused me to remember Jesus and his
sacrificial love and my eternal debt of
gratitude, the pastor concluded.
The impact of Christs time on earth
was considered by the Rev. Paul Materu, priest at St. Boniface Catholic
Church in Sublimity.
The life and death of Christ have
not only benefited the human beings
life on earth; it has impinged on the
conscience of humankind and has
changed the very purpose of human
existence, he wrote on the parish website.
It has changed the course of history. It has changed our relationship with
God and opened for us the gate of heaven, Materu added.

The Rev. John Neal of John Knox


Presbyterian Church in Keizer declared, Easter is a time of celebration.
Christ is risen. Death is conquered.
Writing in the congregations online
newsletter, he added, Let all the people
worship the Lord.
He described how the solemn and
somber activities of Lent and Holy
Week give way to the festive activities
of Easter.
It seems that almost every year I
am asked if it bothers me that some
people only come to church at Christmas and Easter. And I have to honestly
answer that just the opposite is true!
If a person only comes at Christmas
and/or Easter, at least they are sensing
that these are important and wonderful
times that draw them.
How will you celebrate Easter this
year? Reluctantly? Faithfully? Searching for answers? Thankful for what
God still does, especially through the
people of God? In the midst of the holy
celebration of Easter, God has a gift for
you, the pastor said.
The Rev. Leah Stolte-Doerfler of
Immanuel Lutheran Church in Silverton considered a truck accident when
thinking about Easter.
She wrote in the church newsletter
about the truck driver going too fast for
a corner and ending up in a ditch. He
tried to fix the situation by rocking the
big truck back and forth. When that
didnt work, he tried backing up as far
as he could so he could go forward to
jump out of the ditch.
Smashing into a culvert, he blew out
a tire, mangled the side of the truck,
likely cracked the axel and then finally
called for help.
The pastor wrote, Seems another
telling story about people. Left to our
own devices, one sin will lead to another and another and another.
Down, down, down we will sink,

until at last we realize that we really


cannot save ourselves. And then, finally
maybe we are willing to listen and
accept the salvation that has been
awaiting us.
Easter morning we will find an
empty tomb because our God has been
willing to go to battle with sin, death
and the devil for us. Life abundant is all
prepared and waiting. The question is
how long will we keep banging around
in our ditches? she asked.

Talk to address How America


Became a Christian Nation
An upcoming book by a Salem professor will be the background for the
next Big Questions Over Lunch gathering at Willamette University at 11:45
a.m. Tuesday, April 7.
Steve Green, professor of law and
director of the Center for Religion, Law
and Democracy, will speak on How
America Became a Christian Nation
From Myth to National Creed.
The hour-long event will be in the
Alumni Lounge of Putnam University
Center. Participants are invited to bring
their lunch or arrive early to purchase
it in the Cat Cavern Caf.
The program will draw from his
research for Inventing a Christian
America: The Myth of the Religious
Founding, which is to be published
soon.
This is the final installment of the
academic year for the discussion series
sponsored by the universitys chaplains office. Chaplains may be reached
at (503) 370-6213 or at
willamette.edu/dept/chaplain.
Hank Arends is a retired
religion/community events writer for the
Statesman Journal who writes a weekly
column on religion. He may be reached at
hankarends@msn.com or (503) 930-9653.

1661 Boone Road SE. Free. (503)


364-7088.

and Easter breakfast served from


7:30 to 11 a.m., Our Saviors Lutheran
Church, 1770 Baxter Road SE. (503)
399-8601.

music performance at 11 a.m., Fellowship Missionary Baptist church,


4520 Fellowship Way NE. Free. (541)
270-9801, fellowshipsalem.org.

Easters presentation: True stories


of how Jesus is still bringing victory
in peoples lives today, 8:30 a.m. to 1
p.m., Peoples Church, 4500 Lancaster
Drive NE. Free. (503) 304-4000,
peopleschurch.com.

RISE Easter celebration: Egg hunt,


bouncy castle, puppet shows, live
music and more for ages 3 to 11, plus
message and baptisms, 8:30 a.m.,
10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m., Fellowship
Church, 4059 Market St. NE. Free.
(503) 383-1090, fellowshipsalem.com.

Outdoor praise service: Outdoor


praise service in the amphitheater
followed by a family-style breakfast,
9 a.m., and Easter worship service,
10:45 a.m., The Salvation Army Ray
& Joan Kroc Corps Community
Center amphitheater, 1865 Bill Frey
Drive NE. (503) 566-5762, kroc.
salvationarmysalem.org.

Easter breakfast: 9 to 10:30 a.m.,


South Salem Church of the Nazarene,

Easter Sunday worship: Easter


worship service with Holy Commu-

Free Easter breakfast: Breakfast,


8:30 a.m. to 9:45 a.m., kids choir at 10
a.m., kids crafts at 10:15 a.m. and kids

nion, 9:15 to 10:30 a.m., Peace Lutheran Church, 1525 Glen Creek
Road NW. (503) 362-8500.
Downtown Easter service: Music
and a message for all ages followed
by a giant balloon egg hunt for ages
10 and younger, 10 to 11:30 a.m.,
Connection Life Church, 210 Liberty
St. SE. (971) 239-5541, CLCSalem.org.
Easter celebration: 10:45 a.m. to
noon, South Salem Church of the
Nazarene, 1661 Boone Road SE.
(503) 364-7088.

SUNDAY EVENING APRIL 5, 2015

7:00

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Monopoly Millionaires Club

KGW News at 10 How I Met Your


on Portland
Mother
The Listener Amuse Bouch A cooking
show contestant is poisoned.
Battle Creek Cereal Killer An assassination attempt. (N)

The Listener Man in the Mirror Toby


faces a mentally unstable suspect.
60 Minutes Jeh Johnson; Gerry Adams;
Jimmy Wales. (N)

Two and a Half


Two and a Half
Men
Men
The Listener White Whale A mayoral
candidate is questioned.
Madam Secretary Spartan Figures
Henry considers a job offer. (N)

Two and a Half


Two and a Half
Men
Men
The Listener The Fugitive The team
must nd a treasure. (DVS)
The Good Wife Loser Edit Leaked
emails result in questions. (N)

Dateline NBC Hope & Heartbreak A


investigation into private adoption. (N)

Dateline NBC Bible Stories: The New


Blockbuster Mark Burnett and Roma
Downey. (N)

A.D. The Bible Continues The Tomb Is American Odyssey Gone Elvis (Series KGW News at
Open (Series Premiere) Calaphas and Premiere) Files point to funding of terror- 11 (N)
Pilate crucify Jesus. (N)
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CCTV2 6

12:00

How I Met Your Friends Ex-ance


Mother
woos Rachel.
The Listener Family Secrets The
murder of a billionaire. (DVS)
KOIN 6 News at 11 (:35) Game On!
(N)
with Stan Brock
(:35) Sports
Sunday

Friends
The Listener Zero
Recall
(12:05) Raw Travel
Travelers make a
difference by shopping.
(12:05) Paid
Program

Alaskan Bush People The Browns set Alaskan Bush People Birdy Get Your Alaskan Bush People: Revisited Episode 3 (N)
Gun The family searches for food.
Salem City Council

Alaskan Bush People: Revisited Episode 3

CCTV - Entertainment and Education

Reel Film Snobs

_ up their home site.

CCTV 5

11:30

(:42) KATU News at 11 (N)

Antiques Roadshow Birmingham


Call the Midwife Barbara treats a rst- (:05) Masterpiece Classic Mr.
Wolf Hall on Masterpiece (Series Pre- (:07) Secrets of Henry VIIIs Palace
(12:08) Globe TrekHand-colored Andy Warhol lithographs. time mother. (N)
Selfridge, Season 3: Episode 2 Harry miere) Thomas Cromwells rise. (N) Royal pleasure palace of Hampton Court. ker (DVS)
(Part 1 of 3)
attends a fateful auction. (N)

The Simpsons
Bobs Burgers
The Simpsons
Family Guy Meg The Last Man on Earth Sweet Melissa; 10 OClock News (N)
Oregon Sports
Everybody Loves Raising Hope
The Musk Who Fell Gene goes to base- Homer is hypnotized is asked to be a
Dunk the Skunk (DVS)
Final
Raymond Talk to Credit Where
to Earth
ball camp.
at the circus.
model.
Your Daughter
Credit Is Due
The Big Bang
The Big Bang
Glee Born This Way Glee club learns The Good Wife Bitcoin for Dummies A The Good Wife Another Ham SandOregon Sports
In Depth With
The Tim McCarver
Graham Bensinger Show
Theory The Bene- Theory
about self-acceptance.
lawyer conceals a clients identity. wich Wendy Scott-Carr tries to put Will Final
factor Factor
away.

The Passion of the Christ (04, Drama) Jim Caviezel, Monica Bellucci, Claudia Gerini. Jesus Changed Lives: Miracles of the Pas- The Final Inquiry (07, Drama) Daniele Liotti, Dolph Lundgren, Mnica Cruz. A
endures the agony of his nal 12 hours.
sion The Passion of the Christ.
Roman warrior has a forbidden romance in Jerusalem.
Mr. Motos Last Warning (39, Mystery) Peter Lorre, Ricardo Cortez,
The Big Trees (52, Western) Kirk Douglas, Eve Miller, Patrice Wymore.
Garage Band
Garage Band
Cold Case Files
Virginia Field. Conspirators plot to blow up the Suez Canal.
Homesteaders protect their timber from a greedy land baron.
Music Videos.
Music Videos.

CABLE

DISC

11:00

Secrets of Eternal Pent OClock


News
Ethics

CCTV - Entertainment and Education

CCTV, Ent. and


Education

New Start Christian Center


To God Be the Glory
Mercy Meeting
Community Bulletin Board
The Habitable
The Habitable
Public Access
TBD
CTV ;
Planet
Planet
PGA Tour Golf Shell Houston Open, Final Round. Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia, Matt Kuchar, Rickie Fowler, and Keegan LPGA Tour Golf ANA Inspiration, Final Round. Expected competitors include: Lydia Ko, Stacy Lewis,
GOLF A Bradley are expected to compete.
Inbee Park, Lexi Thompson, Michelle Wie, and Shanshan Feng.
World Poker Tour bestbet Bounty
World Poker Tour bestbet Bounty
Heartland Poker Tour
West Coast Customs (N)
Boxing Golden Boy Live: Rocky Juarez vs. Robinson CastelROOT B Scramble - Part 1.
Scramble - Part 2. (Taped)
lanos. From San Antonio.
Womens College Basketball: NCAA SportsCenter (N) (Live)
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
ESPN C Tournament -- Huskies vs. Terrapins
(5:00) MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals The Grantland Basketball Hour
ESPN FC Highlights, news, reactions
NBA Basketball Houston Rockets at Oklahoma City Thunder. From Chesapeake SportsCenter
ESPN2 D at Chicago Cubs. (N) (Live)
and opinions from the day in soccer.
Energy Arena in Oklahoma City. (N Same-day Tape)
(N)
(6:30) Talkin Ball
Red Bull Signature Series From Aspen, Blazers Pregame NBA Basketball New Orleans Pelicans at Portland Trail Blazers. From Moda Center in Portland.
Blazers Postgame
CSN E
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(Subject to Blackout)
Who Do You Think You Are? Singer Long Island Medium Surprising fans Long Island Me- Long Island Me- Who Do You Think You Are? Actor
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with readings in Texas.
dium (N)
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(6:00) Despicable Me (10)
Hop (11, Comedy) Voices of James Marsden, Russell Brand. Live action/ Matilda (96, Comedy) Mara Wilson, Danny DeVito, Rhea Perlman. A child Joel Osteen
FAM G Voices of Steve Carell, Jason Segel.
animated. The Easter Bunnys reluctant heir hides out in Los Angeles.
uses her amazing abilities against uncaring adults.
Harvey Beaks (N) Sanjay and Craig Full House Work- Full House Ol
Full House Full House A Fish The Fresh Prince The Fresh Prince Friends
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Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally Good Luck Charlie
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(DVS)
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Clarence ClarClarence Lost in The Oblongs King of the Hill
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The Wonder List With Bill Weir Rising Finding Jesus: Faith, Fact, Forgery Finding Jesus: Faith, Fact, Forgery The Wonder List With Bill Weir Rising CNN International
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CNN L sea levels threaten Venice. (N)
The cross Jesus died on.
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sea levels threaten Venice.
(5:00) Killing Jesus (15) Haaz Slei- Killing Jesus (15, Historical Drama) Haaz Sleiman, Kelsey Grammer, Stephen Moyer. The life and death of Jesus Christ. FOX News Sunday With Chris Wallace MediaBuzz
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Intervention Rocky A crack-addicted Intervention Mike; Lauren A onceIntervention Samantha C. Trying to 8 Minutes Welcome to Houston The (:01) The First 48
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happy mans downward spiral.
save a former soccer prodigy. (N)
team looks for victims in Houston.
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John Carter (12, Science Fiction) Taylor Kitsch, Lynn Collins, Willem Dafoe.
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kis. Three pals must nd a missing groom after a wild bash.
(5:30) Days of Thunder (90) Tom The Bucket List (07, Comedy-Drama) Jack Nicholson, Morgan Freeman, Sean Hayes. Dying
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CMTV Cruise, Robert Duvall.
men make a list of things to do before they expire.

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(:40) Friends Rachel leaves drunken
(:20) Friends The Friends
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TRAV Confronted by the police in Egypt.
visits Australia. (N)
co-exist.
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visits Australia.
No Reservations
Guys Grocery Games Savory starters Guys Grocery Games Hot sandwich; All-Star Academy Cooks use canned Cutthroat Kitchen Egg salad; lamb din- Cutthroat Kitchen Meal prepared from All-Star Academy
TVF paired with chocolate.
international dish. (N)
meats; mentors judge. (N)
ner; carrot cake. (N)
a high chair.
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LIFE Bullock. Premiere.
miere. Brothers are unaware of the nature of their parents bond.
plans to restart her life.
Lizzie plans to restart her life.
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E!
begins dating.
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Retreat Rob is in crisis. (N)
Liam does his rst PR tour. (N)
Retreat Rob is in crisis.
(6:46) Mad Men The Runaways Don (7:50) Mad Men The Strategy Peggy (8:55) Mad Men Waterloo Don is
Mad Men Severance Don attempts to (:05) Mad Men Severance Don at(12:10) Mad Men
AMC receives a visitor from his past.
collects research for a pitch.
troubled by a letter.
track down a friend. (N)
tempts to track down a friend.
Severance

CCTV3 7 Life (Persian).

CCTV - Community Voices

CCTV - Public
Affairs
NASA

(PA) = Parental Advisory

N = New programming

= Closed Caption

! = Broadcast Channels

! = TCI Cable Channels

Story of Samaritan
woman shows
Gods covering
I am almost positive everyone has, at one time or
another, heard a lesson or a sermon about the Samaritan women at the well that Yahshua stopped and
talked to. I have heard this story over and over again
since I was a child. But when I
looked at it recently, I began to
see some things I hadnt seen
before, and it really made me dig
deeper to see what was really
being discussed there.
First of all, most often this
women is called a prostitute.
Rick Chesher Now at this point, we really need
CORNERSTONE
to stop and think! Yahshua said
BA P T I S T C H U RC H
that she had been married five
times, and the one she was living
with now wasnt her husband. But prostitutes dont
get married, and they really dont live with the men.
Now I understand she doesnt have a good track record, but this really doesnt describe a prostitute.
You see, in her day, it was pretty hard to get by
without a man, so it is likely that she had been married to these men as a covering for her and these men
had found some kind of problem with her and divorced her. Maybe she couldnt have children.
Now lets look at this in another way. Yahshua asks
her for a drink, and she is astonished that a Jew would
talk to a Samaritan women.
Yahshua says something profound. He says if you
knew the gift of God and who was asking you, you
would ask him and he would give you living water.
The Greek word for gift is dorea and means gift, but
dorea comes from the root word doron, which means
sacrifice. So really, what Yahshua was offering her
was a sacrifice that would give her living water and
provide the covering for her that she had been trying
to do for herself all of this time.
This is exactly what took place over 2000 years ago
just about this time of year. Yahshua was crucified on
the execution stake, or cross as you my know better.
The Lamb of Yahweh, or the Passover Lamb that
would not only deliver us from our enemy and wash
us clean from our sins but would also provide the
covering that we so desperately need, would also
cause living waters to flow from within us.
For me, this changes the story because we can see
this happening from the beginning when Adam and
Eve fall. Once they committed the sin, they were
naked or uncovered, and it was Yahweh who provided
the covering for them. This women was trying to do
for herself what could only be done through Yahshua.
Remember, Adam and Eve tried fig leaves; she was
trying men and marriage. This message is really
about all of us because we all try and cover or meet
our needs ourselves, when in reality we cannot provide the covering we need, but Yahshua is right there
and is offering us himself as the sacrifice that is the
real covering.
The Rev. Dr. Rick Chesher is pastor of Cornerstone Baptist
Church. Reach him at pastor@cornerstonebaptist.net.

8E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Arts
Salem Chamber Orchestra
closes season with cellist
By Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

Salem Chamber Orchestra,


under the direction of Nikolas
Caoile, will welcome Ashia &
the Bison Rouge, a five-piece
chamber ensemble led by singer, songwriter and cellist Ashia, for the final concert of its
30th season at 3 p.m.April 12 at
Rodgers Music Center in Hudson Hall at Willamette University, 900 State St.
The concert features songs
that Ashia composed and arranged for Salem Chamber
Orchestra. The program will
also feature one of Brazilian
composer Ginasteras most
revered works, Variaciones
Concertantes.
Late Night with SCO, the
orchestras new mini-concert
series that brings chamber
music into local restaurants,
will feature Ashia & the Bison

Rouge at 6 and 8 p.m. Saturday,


April 11, at Christos Pizzeria,
Restaurant & Lounge, 1108
Broadway St. NE. Late Night
features a cabaretlike setting
in which patrons eat, drink and
engage in quiet conversation
while watching the performance. Those wishing to order
dinner should arrive 30 minutes early.
Ashia was born in Poland
and raised in the United States.
Her music reflects the combination of her Slavic roots and
the pop, rock, classical and
indie-folk American genres.
She said the themes of ancestry
and love pervade her music.
Throughout the set, the
listener will be exploring their
own ancestry, learning to love
and finding home in lush orchestral sounds, Ashia said.
As usual, the orchestra will
host a series of additional concert-related events in Hudson

Hall. The open dress rehearsal


will be at 10 a.m. Saturday,
April 11. Guests will sit on
stage with the musicians to
learn how an orchestra prepares and have permission to
take photos and ask questions.
Willamette Valley Music Co.
will present an instrumental
petting zoo at 9:30 a.m. where
attendees will learn to play
different instruments. Tickets
are available at the door, $5 for
adults and free for children,
students with ID and Oregon
Trail Card holders.
The Sound Bites luncheon
will follow at 12:30 p.m. This
casual backstage lunch includes a discussion with conductor Nikolas Caoile. Tickets
are $10, which includes admission to the dress rehearsal and
must be purchased by noon
Thursday, April 9.
Niks Notes, an informal,
pre-concert talk with the con-

COURTESY OF SALEM CHAMBER ORCHESTRA AND CEZAR MART PHOTOGRAPHY

Ashia & the Bison Rouge is a five-piece chamber ensemble led by singer,
songwriter and cellist Ashia. They will perform with Salem Chamber
Orchestra April 11-12.

ductor, begins at 2 p.m.April


12. Admission is free with a
concert ticket.
Admission is $20 to $45 for
adults and $10 to $23 for students. A limited number of $5
tickets are available for Oregon Trail Card holders as part
of salemforall.org. Tickets are
available at Travel Salem, 181

High St. NE, by calling (503)


581-4325, or at
salemchamberorchestra.org.
For information, call (503)
480-1128.
TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal.
com, (503) 983-6030, facebook.
com/RastrelliSJ and on Twitter
@RastrelliSJ

THIS WEEK
IN THE ARTS
SE. Free. (503) 302-4645,
facebook.com/theartstudio
satmissionmill.

GENE PERSEY JR. / SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL

Shannon Copeland (from left), Norman Gouveia and


Candace Pressnall star in Brush Creek Playhouses
comedy A Bench in the Sun, opening April 10.

Hot Pick: Brush Creek comedy takes


look at pair in retirement home
Brush Creek Playhouse
will open A Bench in the
Sun, a comedy by Ron
Clark, on Friday at 11535
Silverton Road, Silverton.
The play centers on two
lifelong and elderly
friends who spend their
days bickering and reminiscing. One wears pajamas all day so as not to
interrupt his frequent
naps. The other is an
eternal optimist, despite
his three failed marriages,
five failed businesses and
failed relationships with
his children. Their lives
are rocked when they
both fall for a famous
movie star who moves
into the retirement
home.
Director Sonja Persey, a
veteran of Aumsville
Community Theatre, is
excited to be involved in

TUESDAY
Middle School Band and
Orchestra Festival: Festival
for regional middle school
performing groups, with each
group performing on stage
and receiving feedback from
guest adjudicators, all day,
Corban University, Psalm
Performing Arts Center, 5000
Deer Park Drive SE. (503)
375-7019.
Art Conservation Demonstration: Museum visitors
have a rare opportunity to
observe and talk with art
conservator Tom Fuller as he
works with objects from the
Native American collection,
10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Hallie Ford
Museum of Art, Maribeth
Collins Lobby, 700 State St.
Free. (503) 370-6855, willametted.edu.

her first Brush Creek production.


Its very cool to see two
little community theaters
coming together to work
and share resources,
Persey said. I never felt
that community theater
stands on its own but
should rather share resources, ideas and, yes,
actors and wisdom.
Performances will be at 7
p.m. Friday-Saturday and
April 17-18 and 24-25, plus
2 p.m. April 12, 19 and 26.
Tickets are $10 or $8 children, seniors and students
with ID. They can be purchased in advance in Salem
at Runaway Art & Craft
Studio, 311 Commercial St.
NE, and in Silverton at
Books-N-Time, 210 N Water St. For information, call
(503) 508-3682 or go to
brushcreekplayhouse.com.

Curators talk: Ross Sutherland, Bush House Museum


director and permanent
collection curator, will give a
brief talk about the current
show, Faces of Art: Realism
to Abstraction, on display in
the Focus Gallery, 11 a.m. to
noon, Bush Barn Art Center,
600 Mission St. SE. Free. (503)
581-2228, salemart.org.
Tuesday gallery talk: Join
docent Sandy Resis at the
Hallie Ford Museum of Art
for a guided tour that explores ancient Greek and
Roman art, 12:30 p.m., Hallie
Ford Museum of Art, 700
State St. Free. (503) 370-6855,
willamette.edu.
The Drunken Paintbrush
Sip and Paint: Instructors
will walk you through a
painting step-by-step, 6:30 to

OREGON SYMPHONY
ASSOCIATION IN SALEM

Renowned pianist
Jean-Philippe Collard
will perform April 10.

Hot Pick:
Oregon
Symphony
welcomes
renowned
French pianist
The Oregon Symphony, under the direction
of Carlos Kalmar, will
welcome renowned
pianist Jean-Philippe
Collard for a performance of Bartks
Piano Concerto No.
3 at 8 p.m., Friday at
Smith Auditorium,
Willamette University,
270 Winter St. SE.
The concert also will
feature Sibelius Tapiola and a rare
complete performance
of Dvoks Slavonic
Dances, the highspirited compositions
that launched his
career.
For prices and to purchase tickets, go to
orsymphonysalem.org
or call (503) 364-0149.

9 p.m., Union Barrel, 136 High


St. SE. $30. (503) 551-3558,
thedrunkenpaintbrush.com.

THURSDAY
Art After Dark: Compass
Gallery will host a reception
for its April exhibition, Celebrating Nature: Oil Paintings
by Molly Reeves, and Salems newest gallery, the
Willamette Trading Company, will host a reception for
Leather and Dust: Western
Photography by Doug Landreth, plus activities also will
include an art demonstration
with Dayna Collins and leather bookbinding with Max
Marbles, 5 to 7 p.m., Willamette Heritage Center, Wool
Warehouse, 1313 Mill Street

Mind the Gap: Landscape


Works by Eric Loftin: Eric
Loftin is a mixed-media,
cross-disciplinary artist focused on breaking down the
border between drawing and
painting, April 9-30 by appointment, and reception 5
to 7 p.m. April 9, Mameres B
and B, ACAC Gallery, 212
Knox St N, Monmouth. Free.
(503) 838-1811, Ext. 204,
ashcreekarts.org.
The Drunken Paintbrush
Sip and Paint Class: Instructors will walk you
through a painting step-bystep, 6 to 8:30 p.m., The
Drunken Cook, 1555 12th St.
SE. $35. (503) 551-3558,
thedrunkenpaintbrush.com.

FRIDAY
Jazz Band Concert: Celebrate the tradition of the jazz
suite featuring a variety of
pieces by notable composers
with guest artist Emily Stanek
performing Claude Bollings
Suite for Jazz Flute, 7:30
p.m., Corban University, 5000
Deer Park Drive SE. Free.
(503) 375-7019, corban.edu.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY


Upcycle Oregon: Upcycled
artwork by Oregon artists
highlighting re-use, reduction
and upcycling efforts statewide, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday
and noon to 4 p.m. Saturday,
plus artist reception 4 to 5
p.m. Friday and an Upcycled
Fashion show Saturday,
Oregon State Capitol, Galleria, 900 Court St. NE. Free.
(971) 208-5869,
upcycleoregon.org.

stration: Museum visitors


have a rare opportunity to
observe and talk with art
conservator Tom Fuller as he
works with objects from the
Native American collection,
10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Hallie Ford
Museum of Art, Maribeth
Collins Lobby, 700 State St.
$6; $4 ages 55 and older; $3
students ages 18 and older;
free ages 17 and younger.
(503) 370-6855,
willamette.edu.
Ice cream social: Current
and prospective volunteers
are encouraged to celebrate
each other and their efforts, 1
to 3 p.m., Bush Barn Art
Center, 600 Mission St. SE.
Free. (503) 581-2228,
salemart.org.
Organ recital: Organist and
composer Christopher Wicks
will present an hour-long
cycle of twelve praeludia,
which he has composed, on
the Bond pipe organ, 3 to 4
p.m., Presbyterian Church
First, 950 N Boones Ferry
Road, Woodburn. Free.
Donations accepted. (503)
873-3461.
The Drunken Paintbrush
Sip and Paint Class: Instructors will walk you
through a painting step-bystep, 4 to 6:30 p.m., The
Drunken Cook, The Drunken
Cook, 1555 12th St. SE. $35.
(503) 551-3558,
thedrunkenpaintbrush.com.
Jose James and The American Metropole Orchestra:
7:30 to 9:30 p.m., Western
Oregon University, Rice Auditorium, 345 Monmouth Ave.
N, Monmouth. $25 advance;
$28 at door. (503) 838-8333,
wou.edu/sfa.

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

Oregon Scottish Heritage


Festival: Pipe bands, dances
and Celtic music, plus a special focus of sharing stories of
Scottish heritage, with educational and interactive booths
that tell the stories of clans,
accounts of immigration to
America, information on the
achievements and contributions of Scottish people to
science, education, and the
formation of our own countrys constitution, 9 a.m. to 5
p.m., Linn County Fair and
Expo Center, 3700 Knox Butte
Road, Albany. $10; $8 students and seniors; free ages
12 and younger. (541) 9790801,
oregonscottishsociety.com.

Willamette Valley Jazz

Society: Live Dixieland and


traditional jazz, 12:30 to 5
p.m., Salem Eagles, 2771
Pence Loop SE. $8 guest, $6
society member and free first
time; memberships may be
bought at the door. (503)
363-5780.
Organ recital: Christopher
Wicks, organist and composer, plays an hour-long cycle of
twelve praeludia, which he
has composed, one on each
tone of the chromatic scale, 3
to 4 p.m., Trinity Lutheran
Church, 500 N Second St.,
Silverton. Free-will offering.
(503) 873-3461.
Junior recital: Haley
Wangberg, on piano, will
perform works by Bach,
Mozart, Brahms, Debussy and
Dohnanyi, 7:30 p.m., Corban
University, Psalm Performing
Arts Center, 5000 Deer Park
Drive SE. Free. (503) 3757019, corban.edu.

ART EXHIBITS
Bush Barn Art Center:
Young Artists Showcase,
through April 25; Faces of
Art: Realism to Abstraction,
through April 25; Featured
Artist: Rebekah Rigsby,
through April 25; and new
items that are available at
many price points through
Aug. 31, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesdays-Fridays and noon to
5 p.m. Saturdays-Sundays,
600 Mission St. SE. Free. (503)
581-2228, Ext. 302,
salemart.org.
Capitol Galleria: Combined Visions: Collaborative
Works by Oregon Artists &
Poets, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. April
13-17, plus reception, 4 to 6
p.m. April 13, Oregon State
Capitol, 900 Court St. NE.
(503) 859-3045.

CELEBRATIONS
RECOGNIZING THE SPECIAL
OCCASIONS OF YOUR LIFE

To include your celebration,


call 503-399-6789 or visit:
www.STATESMANJOURNAL.com
/MILESTONES

Art Conservation Demon-

Claud and Margie


Mattox
Claud and Margie were married
on April 3, 1955 in Vancouver,
Washington at the home of friends.
They made their first home together in
Fort Worth, Texas where Claud was
stationed in the U.S. Air Force. After
his discharge, the couple lived in Florida
and Washington before making their
home in Oregon.
They have two children, three
grandchildren, and two greatgrandchildren. A family dinner was
held in their honor to commemorate
their 60th wedding anniversary.

290 Commercial St NE, Salem


503-589-9794
www.footwearexpress.com
OR-0000361047

Anniversary

3.26
- 71st Anniversary Marlin & Arlene Hammond
celebrated 71 years of marriage
and Arlenes 91st birthday on
March 26, 2015. They were
married at the courthouse before
Marlin entered the Navy in 1944.
Arlene says Marlin is her most
durable birthday present! Their
children are Ronda (Mike)
Divers-Moody, JoAnne (Chuck)
Krause, Karen (Paul) Kirsch, and
Dean (Sue) Hammond. They
have 15 grandchildren and 14
great-grandchildren with 2 more
on the way! Thanks, Mom &
Dad, for being such a great
example to all of us. Happy
Anniversary & Happy Birthday!

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

InsideBusiness

ONLINE
StatesmanJournal.com/insidebiz

STATESMAN JOURNAL
MEDIA CLASSIFIEDS

INSIDE

STARTING ON XX

Comings and goings in


commercial real estate
Report lists 14
Salem changes
By Laura Fosmire
Statesman Journal

Thanks to the ongoing economic


recovery, industrial and retail activity in the Salem area was on the rise in
2014.
Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisors, a Salem company that provides commercial real estate brokerage, produces an annual publication
called The Advisor, which details various industrial, retail and commercial
transactions that have occurred in the
market.
The report also includes forecasts
from the team for what 2015 may
bring, providing a comprehensive
overview of the comings-and-goings
among business and industry in the
Salem area.

Downtown Salem is buzzing


Jennifer Martin, who works on retail and investment properties for
Sperry Van Ness, credits the recent
renovation of the McGilchrist & Roth
Buildings with creating a catalytic
buzz in downtown one that has been
needed for a long time.
The apartments at Pringle Square
South and the additional 250 people it
will bring who are residing on the
fringe will definitely alter the face of
downtown, she added in the report.

Grocery store changes in


South Salem
The site of the former Safeway in
South Salem, located at 3285 Commercial St. SE, has officially been sold.
The buyer, Martin confirms, is Wilco.
We all hope that Wilco will begin
their remodel of that property soon to
add to the renewed vibrancy of the
Vista area of Commercial Street SE,
she said in the report.

Vacancies linger on Lancaster


Drive
Proximity to the Lancaster Mall
and affordable leasing rates dont
seem to be doing much for the vacant
spots at Academy Square, located
near the intersection of D Street and
Lancaster Drive NE.
According to Martin, the location

ANNA REED / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Jemima Onio boxes bags of chips at Kettle Foods in Salem. Diamond Foods Inc., the company that owns Kettle Brand chips, is leasing
warehouse space in the former Seneca Cannery building at 1745 Oxford St. SE.

should be generating more activity


than it has been for the past three
years.

Demand on the rise for


farmland
With ongoing drought in California, farmland in the Willamette Valley
is experiencing an increase in demand. But locals may not be so keen to
give it up to outsiders.
The one limiting factor ... is the
lack of available farm land coming to
the market, said George Grabenhorst, a Sperry Van Ness adviser specializing in agricultural and land
property. The farm community is a
very close knit group and many farms
never come to the market, but are sold

THOMAS PATTERSON / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Renovations were completed in the fall of 2014 on the McGilchrist and Roth Buildings on
State and Liberty Streets in downtown Salem.

See REAL ESTATE, Page 3F

Follow these tips to stay ahead of your competitor


dictable.
6. A learning company is a growing
company. Every year work with every
employee on their personal learning
plan. What books should they read?
What seminars should they attend?
What organizations should they belong
to?
7. Spend some time every day in
isolation for the purpose of thinking.
This means you have to stop doing,
stop rescuing employees and stop
calling customers. Just think.
8. Stop telling and start asking. You
are paying people to think, so let them
use their brains allowing them to solve
problems. If they fail, you can help
them pick up the pieces.
9. The single most important success factor in life is who you hang

your own trade association Chamber of


Commerce. (Marcias
contribution: Here at
Chemeketa, we also
have Opportunity
Knocks, a peer adMarcia
visory board proBagnall
gram.)
4. Your database
CCC SMALL
BU S I N E S S
is a hard asset and
CENTER
should include every
customers name,
address, phone number, email address, web address and buying history.
5. Stay connected with customers
by combining direct mail, telephone,
email and social media to keep the
connections fascinating and unpre-

MID-VALLEY CITIES HOUSING REPORT

35.8%
$150k

$200k

Sublimity

$200k

35.2%

$150k

$100k

19.6%
$50k

SOURCES: Willamette Valley Multiple Listing Service, Zillow, RealtyTrac, Bank Rate Monitor, Freddie Mac

ONLINE To read news about local and regional businesses,


go to StatesmanJournal.com/market.
REACH US: Don Currie, Business Editor, (503) 399-6677; dcurrie@StatesmanJournal.com

19%

12.6%

37.1%
28.6%

United States average

3.93%

39.7%

Highland

$50k

6.8%

Average mortgage rates


The following are all rates
based on a xed 30-year
mortgage.

Turner

Dallas
Woodburn
19.2%

$100k

Marcia Bagnall is Director of the


Chemeketa Small Business Development
Center and instructor of Small Business
Management Program. The Small-Business
Adviser column is produced by the center and
appears each Sunday. Questions can be
submitted to SBDC@chemeketa.edu. Visit the
SBDC at 626 High St. NE in downtown Salem
or call (503) 399-5088.

Regional West average

16.8%

3.70%
Oregon average

Southeast
Mill Creek

Stayton

Grant

Silverton

around with. To grow your business,


hang around business owners who
have grown a business bigger than
yours is today.
10. Say no to work that does not
fit your goals or talents. Use your gifts
whenever possible, and focus on
where you and your business are going (and not where someone else
needs you to go).

Movers and shakers by neighborhood


Average sales prices for the
Salem neighborhoods with
largest annual
30.9%
percentage change.

$250k

Northeast Salem

$250k

Movers and shakers by city


Median sales price for cities with
largest annual percentage change.

Southeast
Salem

as of February, 2015

Morningside

Valuable advice stands the test of


time. Here are some great tips from a
PBS Program called Small Business
School by Hattie Bryant. With her
permission, I will share it with you in
its entirety:
1. Stop trying so hard to sell and
start trying harder to serve. If you do
not have happy customers who come
back for more and refer you to new
business, your business is on the way
to the grave.
2. Fall in love with technology. If
you dont, the competitor who does
will eat your lunch.
3. Peer-to-peer learning is the most
powerful. Meet regularly with business owners like yourself to learn how
they solve problems. This can be in a
master mind type group, through

3.93%
Salem average

3.69%
LAURA FOSMIRE / STATESMAN JOURNAL

INSIDE BUSINESS is a weekly feature of the Statesman Journal,


with essays by local business leaders as well as other business news.

2F

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Changing home equity into better retirement


Imagine you are in your
60s, looking over your shoulder for signs that your job
will soon disappear. Imagine
you dont have a pension.
Imagine you dont have much
money in your 401(k) plan.
Indeed, you may have next to
nothing. What you have is
your home, one you have
lived in for a long time long
enough to have paid off the
mortgage.
For millions of people, this
situation requires no imagination. It is almost exactly what
they are facing. Is there a
way to turn an ugly situation
into something better and
more secure?
I believe there is. It involves re-imagining shelter. It
means using what you have to
transform your basic circumstances. Consider Bill and
Ann, a couple in this situation.
They own a home valued at
$208,000, the recent median
sales price for existing
homes. They own it free and
clear.
But theyre both 65 and
have just lost their jobs.
Worse, a previous period of
unemployment forced them

to draw
down most
of the money in their
401(k)
plans. Now,
their largScott Burns est reP E R S O NA L
source is
F I NA N C E
their Social
Security
checks. As average workers,
thats $1,215 a month for each,
a total of $2,430 a month.
Now involuntarily retired,
the house they love has become a major cost burden.
Taxes, insurance, repairs,
services and utilities cost
them about $8,400 a year or
$700 a month. That leaves
them with $1,730 a month to
cover the cost of everything
else, including Medicare premiums.
What can they do?
Heres the transformation.
They can sell their house and
move to a resident-owned
manufactured home community. Doing so will provide
them a two bedroom, two bath
home with about 1,000 to 1,200
square feet. Its not a palace,
but palaces arent good de-

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WK
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6.40
140.66
54.96
7.29
272.02
55.04
7.01
15.01
4.55
28.86
7.95
25.25
51.10
66.44
13.63
18.68
.56
31.70

-0.8
+29.0
-16.8
+12.4
+4.1
+42.3
+30.5
-8.2
+2.6
-7.8
+16.7
+140.8
+19.9
+45.9
-8.3
-1.9
+3.2
+9.6
-2.1
+23.2
+12.1
-4.5
-45.9
+4.6
+13.5
-10.6
+14.7
+28.5
+9.8
+19.1
+5.5
+57.3
+3.0
+34.7
+13.5
-3.0
+91.6
-0.4
+3.1
+24.3
-13.4
+7.2
-8.5
+0.8
-19.7
+21.5
+33.2
-17.7
-3.0
-17.4
-2.5
+0.7
+4.9
-4.7
+4.8
-2.5
+40.1
-13.4
+20.3

WK
NAME
CLS
Catamaran u59.26
Celgene s 114.31
Celladon
17.73
CelldexTh 26.43
CentAl
14.03
Cerner
72.77
CharterCm u189.58
Cisco
27.13
CitrixSys
62.18
CleanEngy 5.45
CognizTch 62.57
Comcast
57.94
Comc spcl 57.60
CommScpe 28.95
ConatusPh 6.13
Conns
30.84
Costco
151.63
Cree Inc
34.13
Ctrip.com
59.25
CyberArk n 53.81
CypSemi
13.86
CyrusOne 31.61
CytoriTher
1.16

WK
CHG
+10.94
-4.37
-3.36
-.74
-.13
-.51
+9.58
+.21
-1.43
+.18
-.43
+2.25
+2.19
-.04
-1.62
+1.05
+1.16
-.90
+.04
+1.58
-.50
-.03
-.03

52-WEEK
YTD
HIGH LOW %CHG
60.24 36.98 +14.5
129.06 66.85 +2.2
28.25
7.82
-9.2
32.82 10.76 +44.8
31.75 12.63 -42.5
74.83 48.39 +12.5
199.00 116.78 +13.8
30.31 22.30
-1.8
72.89 53.86
-2.5
11.79
3.99 +9.1
64.69 41.51 +18.8
60.70 47.74
-0.1
60.19 47.21 +0.1
32.00 19.68 +26.8
11.74
5.06 -12.4
51.99 14.02 +65.0
156.85 110.36 +7.0
58.98 27.25 +5.9
69.74 40.74 +30.2
70.48 22.12 +35.7
16.25
8.04
-2.9
32.86 19.52 +14.7
2.88
.36 +137.2

D-E-F
DirecTV
DiscCmA s
DiscCmC s
DishNetw h
DollarTree
DonlleyRR
DryShips
DyaxCp
E-Trade
eBay
ElectArts
Endo Intl
EndurIntl
EngyXXI
Ericsson
Esperion
Exelixis
Expedia
ExpScripts
Facebook
FairchldS
FairwayGp
Fastenal
FifthStFin
FifthThird
FinLine
FireEye
FstNiagara
FstSolar
FT DWF5
FiveBelow
Flextrn
Fortinet
FrontierCm
FuelCellE

86.37
32.15
30.65
70.96
81.12
19.32
.75
u27.05
u28.47
56.91
u57.65
90.42
19.71
3.95
12.56
99.79
2.66
u97.98
84.58
81.56
18.53
6.83
41.05
7.11
18.98
24.73
38.66
8.85
61.19
23.89
35.91
u12.52
34.39
7.32
1.27

+1.05 89.46
+.88 44.99
+.88 44.00
+.33 80.75
-.60 84.22
+.66 19.91
-.08
3.55
+10.51 26.11
+.62 28.67
-.72 60.93
-.59 60.21
+.38 93.03
+1.46 20.45
+.32 24.30
-.13 13.61
+9.14 118.95
+.12
4.55
+4.30 96.45
+2.20 88.83
-1.75 86.07
-.06 19.23
+.86
8.40
-.12 52.21
-.11 10.20
+.07 23.41
+1.11 31.90
-1.15 65.65
+.06
9.61
+1.58 74.18
-.14 24.86
+.67 47.89
+.14 12.78
-.19 35.69
...
8.46
+.03
2.84

73.54
28.72
27.66
55.45
49.69
14.32
.72
6.05
18.20
46.34
26.64
53.62
11.67
2.30
11.20
12.75
1.26
66.93
64.64
54.66
12.01
2.12
39.46
6.80
17.14
22.40
24.81
7.00
39.18
17.39
28.51
8.46
20.04
5.41
1.05

-0.4
-6.7
-9.1
-2.6
+15.3
+15.0
-29.2
+92.4
+17.4
+1.4
+22.6
+25.4
+6.9
+21.2
+3.8
+146.8
+84.7
+14.8
-0.1
+4.5
+9.8
+116.8
-13.7
-11.2
-6.8
+1.7
+22.4
+4.9
+37.2
+8.4
-12.0
+12.0
+12.2
+9.7
-17.5

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE


NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

A-B-C
AES Corp 12.84
AK Steel
4.45
AT&T Inc
33.13
AbbottLab 46.13
AbbVie
57.01
Actavis
298.37
AlcatelLuc
3.82
Alcoa
13.14
Alibaba n
82.28
AllyFin n
20.57
AlphaNRs
1.01
AlpAlerMLP 16.61
Altria
51.19
Ambev
6.04
AMovilL
21.40
AEagleOut u17.02
AmExp
79.70
AmIntlGrp 55.14
Anadarko
84.55
AnglogldA
9.42
Annaly
10.45
ArcelorMit
9.48
ArchDan
47.35
Autoliv
u119.05
Avon
7.97
Axalta n
27.93
BB&T Cp
38.96
BP PLC
39.65
BakrHu
63.76
BcoBrad s 9.87
BcoSantSA 7.64
BkofAm
15.54
BkNYMel
40.55
BarcGSOil 10.51
Barclay
15.20
B iPVixST d25.06
BarrickG
11.88
Baxter
68.00
BerkHa A 216500
BerkH B
143.56
BestBuy
38.22
Blackstone 38.77
BostonSci 17.72
BrMySq
63.23
C&J Engy 11.37
CBS B
61.16
CMS Eng
35.29
CNO Fincl 17.79
CSX
33.32
CVS Health 102.71
CabotO&G 30.76
CalifRes n
8.18
Calpine
22.75
CarMax
u74.73

+.36
-.04
+.38
-.65
-.64
-5.19
+.12
+.44
-2.30
+.01
+.03
+.13
+.85
+.38
+.90
+.33
+1.99
+1.11
+2.36
-.44
-.08
-.17
+.89
+3.60
+.10
+.58
+.47
+.04
+.97
+1.01
+.17
+.23
+.80
+.26
+.47
-.68
+.59
-.55
-500
-.33
-.26
+.76
-.11
-1.66
-.55
-.05
+1.01
+.85
+.12
+.21
+2.10
+.63
+.96
+8.04

15.65 11.53
-6.8
11.37
3.62 -25.1
37.48 32.07
-1.4
47.88 36.65 +2.5
70.76 45.50 -12.9
317.72 184.71 +15.9
4.20
2.28 +7.6
17.75 12.34 -16.8
120.00 80.03 -20.8
25.30 18.63 -12.9
5.08
.78 -39.5
19.35 16.01
-5.2
56.70 37.13 +3.9
8.67
5.51
-2.1
26.95 19.08
-3.5
17.41 10.12 +22.6
96.24 77.12 -14.3
56.79 48.56
-1.6
113.51 71.00 +2.5
18.79
7.45 +8.3
11.95 10.29
-3.3
16.80
9.21 -14.1
53.91 41.63
-8.9
119.96 87.15 +12.2
15.80
7.10 -15.1
29.64 20.11 +7.3
40.95 34.50 +0.2
53.48 34.88 +4.0
75.64 47.51 +13.7
15.56
8.43 -11.4
10.75
6.61
-8.3
18.21 14.37 -13.1
41.79 32.66
25.96
9.24 -16.2
17.90 13.27 +1.3
46.35 24.50 -20.5
19.49 10.04 +10.5
77.31 65.95
-7.2
229374 181785
-4.2
152.94 121.10
-4.4
42.00 23.87
-1.9
39.62 26.56 +14.6
18.17 11.10 +33.7
69.20 46.30 +7.1
34.93
9.10 -13.9
65.24 48.83 +10.5
38.66 27.90 +1.6
19.00 14.89 +3.3
37.99 27.14
-8.0
105.46 72.37 +6.6
39.46 26.01 +3.9
9.71
3.75 +48.5
24.37 19.60 +2.8
69.60 42.54 +12.2

NAME

WK
CLS

Carnival
u47.97
Caterpillar 80.24
Cemex
9.73
Cemig pf
4.47
CenovusE 17.46
CenterPnt 20.72
CntryLink
35.43
ChesEng
14.59
Chevron 105.28
Chimera
3.14
Citigroup
51.86
CitizFin n
24.62
CliffsNRs
4.59
CobaltIEn
9.78
CocaCola 40.68
ConAgra u37.82
ConocoPhil 63.18
ContlRes s 46.04
Corning
22.32
CSVInvNG
7.11
CSVLgNGs d2.43
CSVLgCrde 2.45

+.85 48.08
+.57 111.46
+.26 13.81
+.50
9.02
+1.04 32.64
+.10 25.75
+1.33 45.67
+.56 31.49
+1.00 135.10
-.02
3.41
+.86 56.95
+.14 25.84
-.14 21.25
+.39 19.77
+.60 45.00
+1.06 37.46
+.25 87.09
+3.28 80.91
-.42 25.16
-.53
9.15
+.14 31.08
+.14 43.99

33.11 +5.8
78.19 -12.3
8.72
-4.5
3.51 -10.1
16.11 -15.3
20.23 -11.6
32.45 -10.5
13.38 -25.4
98.88
-6.2
3.02
-1.3
45.18
-4.2
21.35
-1.0
4.12 -35.7
7.40 +10.0
38.04
-3.6
28.60 +4.2
60.57
-8.5
30.06 +20.0
17.03
-2.7
2.50 -11.6
2.12 -38.9
1.79 -49.9

+.38
+1.58
-2.63
+.32
+.15
+3.40
+.02
+.17
-.42
-.54
-.82
+3.23
+1.63
+.52
+.57
+.97
+.48
-.26
+1.97
+3.00
+.48
+2.15
-.01
-2.34
-1.00
+.54
+.60
+.18
+.95
+.72
-.30

16.22
19.29
30.12
6.04
25.11
51.76
13.16
8.17
9.81
6.51
11.07
53.50
54.02
76.31
53.00
25.46
41.45
63.70
68.81
24.58
24.92
81.07
4.29
57.35
54.95
10.53
19.78
1.29
30.66
82.68
34.85

D-E-F
DDR Corp 18.85
DR Horton u29.01
DeltaAir
42.25
DenburyR
7.84
DBXEafeEq 30.28
DevonE
62.55
DrGMnBll rs 19.04
DxGldBull 10.55
DrxSCBear 10.03
DirGMBear 10.44
DirDGldBr 16.63
DrxSCBull 90.28
Discover
58.20
Disney
106.00
DollarGen 75.56
DEmmett u30.32
DowChm
48.24
DuPont
71.39
DukeEngy 76.97
Dynegy
31.29
EMC Cp
25.53
EOG Rescs 92.71
EldorGld g
4.85
EliLilly
71.24
EmersonEl 55.54
EnCana g 11.47
ENSCO
21.88
ExcoRes
1.94
Exelon
33.38
ExxonMbl 84.30
FMC Tech 37.15

20.41
28.77
51.06
18.59
31.36
80.63
360.00
53.22
19.59
41.83
51.50
93.37
66.75
108.94
76.28
30.53
54.97
80.65
89.97
36.57
30.92
118.89
8.60
77.46
69.94
24.83
55.89
6.60
38.93
104.76
63.92

+2.7
+14.7
-14.1
-3.6
+12.1
+2.2
-21.8
-5.5
-16.4
-33.5
-32.6
+11.6
-11.1
+12.5
+6.9
+6.8
+5.8
-3.4
-7.9
+3.1
-14.2
+0.7
-20.2
+3.3
-10.0
-17.3
-26.9
-10.6
-10.0
-8.8
-20.7

NORTHWEST STOCKS
NAME
AlaskaAir s
AllegTch
Amazon
AsburyA
Avista
Banner Cp
BarrettB
Boeing
CascdeBcp
ColBnkg
ColSprtw s
Con-Way
Costco
CraftBrew
Data IO

WK
CLS
63.07
30.57
372.25
u83.79
34.01
u45.72
41.98
149.28
4.88
29.08
u60.33
41.62
151.63
13.60
3.57

WK
CHG
-2.52
+.55
+1.69
+2.25
+.74
+.83
-.18
+.43
+.05
+.59
-.59
-2.04
+1.16
-.05
-.13

52-WEEK
YTD
HIGH LOW %CHG
71.40 40.69 +5.5
46.32 27.12 -12.1
389.37 284.00 +19.9
83.62 52.88 +10.4
38.34 29.91
-3.8
46.26 37.03 +6.3
63.45 18.25 +53.2
158.83 116.32 +14.8
5.73
4.11
-6.0
29.48 23.59 +5.3
62.19 34.25 +35.5
53.54 39.12 -15.4
156.85 110.36 +7.0
17.89 10.07 +1.9
3.83
2.18 +5.6

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
-.06 10.03
5.96 -21.4
+2.81 106.91 72.74 -13.4
-.16 37.42 28.32
-4.1
+1.09 37.29 25.53 +17.1
+1.91 78.32 42.29 +9.6
-.09 41.10 31.03 -21.8
+1.89 70.48 51.70
-4.6
-1.19 37.90 25.62 -15.1
-.10 11.68
9.09 +2.7
+.09 14.70 11.50
-2.3
+.80 77.74 43.33 +20.1
-.30
9.19
5.87
-8.7
+2.96 100.25 63.05 +14.9
-.14 17.76 12.46
-1.6
+.55 25.43 18.25 +11.0

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

d46.49
18.00
49.21
3.73
98.43
5.07
4.58
26.82
541.31
535.53
41.96
u7.85
7.06
47.22
u31.51
15.55
14.69
1.96
u63.45
.49
6.14
u32.95
30.44
u25.97
10.49
11.04

-1.18 62.05 46.62 -12.0


-.10 19.06 13.17
-0.4
+1.65 52.29 31.93 +34.4
-.12
4.49
1.69 +14.8
-2.57 116.83 63.50 +4.4
+.17
7.60
3.27 +30.0
... 16.32
3.57 +1.1
+.53 28.98 18.87
-6.1
-16.24 608.91 490.91 +2.0
-12.81 604.83 487.56 +1.7
-.74 98.47 28.65 -33.6
+1.50
8.70
2.42 +187.5
-.55
8.43
5.18 -14.5
+2.57 75.74 35.00 +13.1
+1.28 31.42 22.18 +6.8
+.23 23.69 15.10 -26.4
+.76 16.55
6.88 +52.2
-.17
3.13
.92 +78.2
+2.42 63.95 48.01 +15.4
+.02
5.05
.34 -51.2
-.46 12.19
5.70 -23.8
+.46 33.34 20.24 +23.2
-.43 39.37 25.13 +2.2
+4.16 26.46
7.85 +101.5
+.18 10.77
8.53 +3.7
+.21 11.30
8.80 +4.9

have some actual savings and


more spending power. It will
make their retirement much
more secure.
The basic structure for this
is simple. You transform your
retirement with the proceeds
from selling your conventional home. The proceeds need to
be about three times the cost
of your new manufactured
home and co-op shares. (Yes,
you can do the same with a
more conventional downsizing.)
This takes shelter out of
the spending equation. It
leaves Social Security and
income from other savings
free. You can spend that money on everything else.
Funding our shelter is a big
deal. Keeping a roof over our
heads is expensive for everyone. Shelter accounts for 40.2
percent of the consumer
price index for urban consumers (CPI-U). But it is even
more important for the elderly. The cost of shelter is 44.5
percent in the experimental
consumer price index for the
elderly (CPI-E). It dwarfs the
12.8 percent spent on food, the
11.3 percent spent on medical

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

HyperTher
iSh ACWI
iShNsdqBio
IconixBr
ImunoGn
Infinera
Insmed
IntgDv
Intuit
InvBncp s
Isis

u45.89
60.56
339.70
d33.18
9.40
u18.90
20.84
19.75
98.50
11.75
61.63

+3.15 46.96 20.23 +91.2


+.44 61.37 54.55 +3.5
-7.76 374.97 207.48 +12.0
-2.56 44.81 32.70
-1.8
+1.16 15.59
5.34 +54.2
-.69 20.23
7.89 +28.4
+.34 22.59 11.25 +34.7
-.04 21.73 10.86 +0.8
+1.44 100.88 72.44 +6.8
+.11 11.98
9.80 +4.7
-1.74 77.80 22.25
-0.2

J-K-L
JD.com n
JDS Uniph
JetBlue
JunoTher n
KLA Tnc
KeurigGM
KitePhm n
Kofax Ltd
KraftFGp
LKQ Corp
LPL Fincl
LamResrch
LexiPhrm
LibtyGlobA
LibtyGlobC

29.49 -.59 33.10


12.98
... 14.54
18.91 -.37 19.60
u57.04 +.44 64.55
58.09 -.91 73.12
114.13 +.93 158.87
53.95 -5.83 89.21
10.93 +.01 11.02
u88.95 -.15 90.75
25.58 +.81 29.84
43.97 -.82 54.07
70.75 -1.29 85.70
.96 +.01
1.86
52.08 +.57 55.86
50.07 +.50 53.66

19.94
10.29
7.61
34.71
49.39
90.08
21.00
5.65
53.33
22.90
38.34
50.54
.80
37.98
36.98

+27.4
-5.4
+19.2
+9.2
-17.4
-13.8
-6.5
+55.5
+42.0
-9.0
-1.3
-10.8
+5.4
+3.7
+3.6

NAME
LibtyIntA
LinearTch
LinnEngy
LinnCo
lululemn gs

WK
CLS
29.37
46.12
11.51
10.23
63.35

care, and the 14.4 percent


spent on transportation.
So here is another perspective.
Changing your home equity into a manufactured home
and a lifetime expense fund
covers 44.5 percent of your
cost of living. That leaves 55.5
percent to come from other
sources.
Social Security will provide a lot of that money. A
worker with typical earnings
can expect Social Security
benefits to replace 39.5 percent of gross earnings. Add
shelter and Social Security
and you have replaced 84
percent of income.
And dont forget the money
you never see. Things like the
employment tax and possible
federal income tax payments.
Toss in a bit of savings while
working and, presto, retirement doesnt look like walking off a cliff.
It looks like a change of
address.
Scott Burns is a syndicated
columnist and a principal of the
investment firm AssetBuilder Inc.
Email questions to
scott@scottburns.com.

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
+.42
-.56
-.06
+.39
-.98

29.77
51.77
32.74
31.57
68.99

22.37
-0.2
37.56 +1.1
9.05 +13.6
8.58
-1.4
36.26 +13.5

M-N-0
MSG
u83.92
MannKd
5.34
MarIntA
80.15
MarvellT
14.77
Mattel
d22.65
MaximIntg 34.82
Medivation 130.21
MelcoCrwn 23.10
MemRsD n 17.54
MerrimkP
12.07
Michaels n 27.11
Microchp
48.18
Mondelez 36.63
Mylan NV 58.10
NXP Semi 99.27
Navient n
20.36
NektarTh
11.00
NetApp
35.63
Netflix
414.08
NewsCpA 16.18
NorwCruis u54.46
Novavax
7.94
NuVasive
42.37
NuanceCm 14.16
Nvidia
21.06
OfficeDpt
9.19
OnSmcnd 11.70
Orexigen
7.77
OvaScience 35.06

+3.19 87.27 48.16 +11.5


+.10 11.48
3.80 +2.4
-.67 85.00 55.00 +2.7
-.47 16.78 11.65 +1.9
+.04 40.79 22.44 -26.8
+.18 36.37 25.28 +9.3
-1.79 141.58 54.37 +30.7
+1.40 41.90 20.40
-9.1
+.42 30.32 15.30
-2.7
+.46 12.50
4.13 +6.8
+.17 30.00 14.51 +9.6
-1.03 52.44 36.92 +6.8
+1.08 39.54 31.83 +0.8
-3.54 65.63 44.74 +3.1
-.65 108.50 53.81 +29.9
+.20 22.71 15.00
-5.8
-.09 17.53 10.10 -29.0
+.53 43.75 33.34 -14.1
-.69 489.29 299.50 +21.2
+.03 18.41 14.28 +3.1
+.64 55.35 29.08 +16.5
-.28
9.95
3.34 +33.9
-2.23 51.23 31.35 -10.2
+.12 19.61 13.20
-0.8
-.32 23.61 16.77 +5.0
-.05
9.77
3.84 +7.2
-.10 13.31
6.76 +15.5
+.23
9.37
3.11 +28.2
-8.41 55.69
5.51 -20.7

P-Q-R

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NEWS

SPORTS

LIFE

MONEY

TECH

TRAVEL

OPINION

WEATHER

Smarter. Faster. More Colorful.

FiatChry n
FirstEngy
FordM
FrptMcM

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

16.69
35.34
16.03
19.00

+.27
+.70
+.05
+.20

17.08
41.68
18.12
39.32

GenElec
24.94
GenGrPrp 30.04
GenMills u56.55
GenMotors 36.50
GenesWyo 97.34
Genworth
7.76
Gerdau
3.22
GlaxoSKln 46.71
GoDaddy nud26.50
GoldFLtd
4.23
Goldcrp g 18.85
GoodrPet
3.56
HCP Inc
43.99
HalconRes 1.59
Hallibrtn
43.96
Hanesbds s 34.14
HartfdFn
42.13
HeclaM
3.18
Hertz
21.22
Hilton
u29.36
HollyFront 37.85
HomeDp 114.54
HostHotls
20.49
IAMGld g
1.98
ICICI Bk s 10.69
iShBrazil
33.24
iShEMU
39.39
iShGerm
30.33
iShJapan
12.69
iSTaiwn
16.07
iShSilver
16.02
iShChinaLC u45.66
iSCorSP500 207.76
iShEMkts
41.24
iShiBoxIG 121.53
iSh20 yrT 130.73
iS Eafe
65.19
iShiBxHYB 90.46
iShR2K
124.65
iShREst
79.84
iShHmCnst u28.61
iShUSEngy 43.82
IBM
160.45
IntlGame
17.77
iSh UK
18.22
iShCorEM 49.65
ItauUnibH 11.77

8.54 +44.1
29.98
-9.4
13.26 +3.4
16.43 -18.7

+.08
+.49
+1.56
-.81
+.70
+.47
+.16
-.31
...
-.14
+.42
+.28
+1.84
-.06
+.70
+.28
+.18
+.09
+.39
-.39
-1.69
+.68
+.45
-.04
+.52
+2.95
+.38
+.23
-.04
+.43
-.20
+2.56
+.66
+1.78
+.25
-.33
+.05
-.01
+1.55
+.83
+.82
+.76
+.05
-.01
-.12
+1.98
+1.32

27.53
31.70
57.25
38.99
106.02
18.74
6.65
56.48
26.84
6.01
29.65
30.52
49.61
7.50
74.33
34.80
43.42
3.54
31.61
30.06
53.42
117.99
24.50
4.27
13.24
54.56
44.19
32.38
12.91
16.59
20.64
45.25
213.74
45.85
123.90
138.50
70.79
95.43
126.32
83.54
28.57
57.86
199.21
18.00
22.11
54.89
18.49

23.41
21.67
48.32
28.82
80.61
6.75
2.99
41.25
25.49
3.09
17.01
2.35
37.90
1.06
37.21
18.03
33.26
2.00
18.50
20.72
30.15
74.61
19.90
1.42
8.31
28.82
34.41
25.00
10.73
14.36
14.63
34.27
182.41
37.23
116.08
107.17
58.29
86.12
103.54
67.09
21.22
40.71
149.52
12.14
17.11
44.91
10.12

-1.3
+6.8
+6.0
+4.6
+8.3
-8.7
-9.3
+9.3
+1.3
-6.6
+1.8
-19.8
-0.1
-10.7
+11.8
+22.3
+1.1
+14.0
-14.9
+12.5
+1.0
+9.1
-13.8
-26.7
-7.4
-9.1
+8.4
+10.7
+12.9
+6.4
+6.4
+9.7
+0.4
+5.0
+1.8
+3.8
+7.1
+1.0
+4.2
+3.9
+10.5
-2.2

60.52 +1.37 63.49


99.64 -.70 109.49
22.58 +.29 26.88

52.97
95.10
18.41

-2.7
-4.7
+1.2

G-H-I

+3.0
+1.1
+5.6
-9.5

J-K-L
JPMorgCh
JohnJn
JnprNtwk

NAME
WK
NAME
CLS
ElectSci
6.10
FEI Co
78.26
FLIR Sys
30.97
Gannett
u37.39
GreenbCos 58.89
HewlettP
31.40
Idacorp
63.16
Intel
30.81
JewettCam 10.40
KeyTech
12.89
Kroger
77.13
Lattice
6.29
LithiaMot u99.63
LaPac
16.29
MentorGr
24.34

WK
CLS

G-H-I
Garmin
Gentex s
Gentherm
GeronCp
GileadSci
GluMobile
GoldenOcn
Goodyear
Google A
Google C n
GoPro n
Gordmans
Groupon
GulfportE
HD Supply
HMS Hldgs
Halozyme
HanwhaQ
Hasbro
HercOffs h
HimaxTch
Hologic
HomeAway
HorizPhm
HudsCity
HuntBncsh

NAME

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

signs for aging-in-place, anyway. Homeowner association


dues cover outdoor work
such as lawn mowing. And
they will have neighbors
watching out for them as they
get older.
They will net about
$185,000 after the costs of
selling their house and moving. Next, they buy a manufactured home for about
$65,000 to $70,000. Thats a
common price level for manufactured home resales in resident-owned communities. The
cash left over will be an
$115,000 retirement fund.
They will be able to withdraw
enough from that fund to
cover every dime of their new
shelter expenses, a bit over
$4,000 a year.
With the operating costs of
shelter no longer coming out
of their Social Security income, they will have the full
$2,430 a month to spend on
everything else. Thats a $700
a month difference, a 40 percent increase from the $1,730
a month they had left before
their move. The difference
wont put them in Fat City or
Hog Heaven. But they will

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

MicronT
26.73 +.05 36.59 21.02 -23.7
Microsoft
40.29 -.68 50.05 38.51 -13.3
Nautilus
15.64 +.55 16.20
7.94 +3.0
NikeB
99.66 -.22 103.79 70.60 +3.7
Nordstrm
79.96 +.23 83.16 59.97
+.7
NwstNG
48.97 +1.41 52.57 41.81
-1.9
NwstPipe
22.84 -.30 41.43 20.50 -24.2
OraSure
6.56 +.37 10.93
5.78 -35.3
Paccar
61.20 -.97 71.15 55.34 -10.0
Pixelwrks
5.04
...
9.83
3.86 +10.5
PlanarSy
6.33 +.07
9.17
1.93 -24.4
PlumCrk
43.41 -.01 45.45 38.70 +1.4
PopeRes
62.50 +.16 71.00 59.00
-1.8
PortGE
37.18 +.88 41.04 31.41
-1.7
PrecCastpt 210.80 -1.38 275.09 186.17 -12.5
RadiSys
2.20 +.02
3.82
1.79
-6.0
Rntrak
53.62 -1.80 87.40 43.62 -26.4

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

KB Home
15.87 +.59 18.98
Kellogg
66.38 +2.54 69.89
Keycorp
14.25 +.25 14.74
KindMorg
41.72 +.45 43.18
Kinross g
2.32 -.04
4.47
KrispKrm
20.01 -.10 22.32
LaredoPet 14.30 +1.55 31.23
LVSands
56.17 +1.42 84.24
LennarA u53.19 +2.76 52.17
Lorillard
u69.25 +1.06 69.61
Lowes
74.84 +1.17 76.25
LumberLiq 33.20 +2.64 96.75
LyonBas A 87.98 +1.42 115.40

11.76
58.83
11.55
32.04
2.00
14.82
7.00
49.82
35.74
51.84
44.13
27.15
70.06

-4.1
+1.4
+2.5
-1.4
-17.7
+1.4
+38.2
-3.4
+18.7
+10.0
+8.8
-49.9
+10.8

M-N-0
MGIC Inv
MGM Rsts
Macerich
Macys
MagHRes
MarathnO
MVJrGold
MktVGold
MV OilSvc
MV Semi
MktVRus
Masco
MasterCrd
McDrmInt
McDnlds
Medtrnic
Merck
MetLife
MKors
Molycorp
Monsanto
MorgStan
Mosaic
NRG Egy
Nabors
NBGreece
NOilVarco
NwGold g
NewfldExp
NewmtM
NobleCorp
NobleEngy
NokiaCp
NorthropG
NStarRlt
OasisPet
OcciPet
Oi SA s
OmegaHlt
Oracle
Organovo

9.73
21.34
80.66
u67.85
2.80
27.07
23.70
18.99
34.29
54.91
18.40
26.62
87.03
4.18
95.83
76.87
57.10
51.10
d63.39
.40
116.30
36.06
45.87
23.99
14.07
1.23
51.01
3.65
36.28
22.34
14.76
49.92
7.65
161.63
18.22
14.94
74.55
d1.94
41.48
42.62
d3.72

+.30
+.04
-5.49
+4.20
+.31
+1.17
+.12
+.15
+.71
-.48
+1.78
+.41
-.22
+.55
-1.13
-.51
-.65
+.83
-3.58
+.08
+3.57
+.23
-.18
-.21
+.77
-.04
+1.76
+.05
+2.00
+.11
+.44
+1.92
-.05
+1.15
+.13
+.88
+1.83
+.14
+1.27
+.13
+.06

9.96
7.16 +4.4
27.64 17.25
-0.2
95.93 61.41
-3.3
68.30 54.82 +3.2
9.10
1.60 -10.8
41.92 24.28
-4.3
46.50 20.68
-1.0
27.78 16.45 +3.3
58.01 31.51
-4.5
58.47 43.69 +0.5
27.46 12.50 +25.8
27.40 19.50 +5.6
93.00 68.68 +1.0
8.43
2.10 +43.6
103.78 87.62 +2.3
79.50 55.85 +6.5
63.62 52.49 +0.5
57.57 46.10
-5.5
98.96 63.31 -15.6
5.15
.28 -54.3
128.79 105.76
-2.7
39.19 28.31
-7.1
53.83 40.32 +0.5
38.09 22.78 -11.0
30.24
9.91 +8.4
5.79
.98 -31.3
86.55 46.08 -22.2
6.78
3.22 -15.1
45.43 22.31 +33.8
27.40 17.60 +18.2
30.27 13.15 -10.9
79.63 41.01 +5.2
8.73
7.00
-2.7
172.30 116.11 +9.7
19.74 14.06 +3.6
58.09 10.64
-9.7
105.64 71.70
-7.5
14.90
1.54 -39.2
45.46 33.11 +6.2
46.71 35.82
-5.2
9.25
3.29 -48.7

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

SareptaTh 14.25 +.68 40.00 11.33


-1.5
Schmitt
2.70 +.01
3.55
2.53
-8.5
Schnitzer
16.33 +1.06 30.04 15.20 -27.6
StancrpFn 68.92 +1.65 71.80 57.77
-1.3
Starbucks 94.39 -.68 99.20 67.93 +15.0
Supvalu
u11.68 +.31 11.75
6.55 +20.4
Umpqua
17.37 +.49 19.36 14.70 +2.1
US Bancrp 43.71 +.85 46.10 38.10
-2.8
VBI Vac rs
2.75 +.15
7.45
1.90 -17.4
Valmont
121.98 +1.33 163.23 116.71
-4.0
WashFed
21.82 +.37 23.56 19.52
-1.5
Weyerhsr
32.64 -.41 37.04 27.48
-9.1
WillmValV
6.15 +.07
6.59
5.14 +6.0

PDL Bio
7.01 -.03 10.26
PacBiosci
5.78 +.19
8.78
PanASlv
8.97 -.16 15.97
PattUTI
19.37 +.42 38.43
Paychex
49.25 -.30 51.72
PnnNGm
15.67 +.14 17.06
PeopUtdF 15.18 +.09 15.50
PilgrimsP
24.44 +.73 32.62
PwShs QQQ105.12 -.40 109.42
PriceTR
81.96 +.75 88.64
PrUltPQQQ 101.42 -1.17 114.39
PShtQQQ 27.11 +.24 63.16
ProspctCap 8.42 -.02 11.05
QIAGEN
25.18 -.23 25.91
Qorvo n
77.79 -1.49 85.63
Qualcom
67.97 +.95 81.97
RaptorPhm 10.48 -1.49 12.20
Receptos u169.31 +21.88 203.25
RexEnergy 3.85 -.01 22.00
RigelPh
3.64 +.30
4.20
RiverbedT 20.92 +.02 21.00
RosettaR
18.14 +1.51 55.45
Rovi Corp 17.70 -.78 26.44

NAME

WK
CLS

6.52
3.87
8.49
13.30
39.79
10.07
13.61
16.49
83.28
71.78
52.18
24.41
8.02
19.46
63.02
62.26
7.12
24.54
2.47
1.56
16.71
15.92
17.52

-9.1
-26.3
-2.5
+16.8
+6.7
+14.1
-11.7
+1.8
-4.5
+4.1
-9.1
+1.9
+7.3
+10.5
-8.6
-0.4
+38.2
-24.5
+60.4
+2.5
-18.7
-21.6

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

P-Q-R
PG&E Cp 53.59 +1.58 60.21
PPL Corp
33.85 +.70 38.14
Pandora
16.22 -.10 33.70
PeabdyE
d4.87 -.26 19.63
PennVa
7.30 +.26 18.20
Penney
9.13 +1.50 11.30
PepsiCo
95.69 -.26 100.76
PetrbrsA
6.80 +1.02 22.14
Petrobras
6.76 +1.06 20.94
Pfizer
34.38 -.15 35.45
PhilipMor d77.26 +.47 91.63
Phillips66
78.17 +.56 87.98
Pier 1
13.11 -1.03 19.39
Potash
32.70 +.67 38.58
PS SrLoan 24.18 +.14 24.94
PrecDrill
6.57 +.36 14.65
ProUltSP 129.21 +.73 136.10
PUltVixST 14.41 -.83 71.72
PrUltCrude 7.35 +.28 40.17
ProctGam 82.43 +.12 93.89
ProgsvCp 26.84 -.19 27.90
ProUShSP 21.34 -.15 30.07
PUShtSPX 36.05 -.35 61.22
PSEG
41.34 +.01 44.45
PulteGrp
22.70 +.68 23.36
QEP Res
21.70 +.63 35.91
RegionsFn
9.58 +.46 11.28
ReynAmer 73.39 +2.79 76.23
RioTinto
41.20 -.68 59.33
RiteAid
u8.79 +.22
8.86
Ryder
94.39
... 99.32

41.89
31.31
14.50
4.71
4.32
5.90
81.99
5.00
4.90
27.51
75.27
57.33
11.38
31.39
23.47
4.53
98.84
14.00
5.89
77.29
23.20
20.43
33.76
34.05
16.56
18.15
8.59
53.04
40.70
4.42
77.14

+0.7
-6.8
-9.0
-37.1
+9.3
+40.9
+1.2
-10.3
-7.4
+10.4
-5.1
+9.0
-14.9
-7.4
+0.6
+8.4
+0.7
-42.7
-29.1
-9.5
-0.6
-3.2
-5.2
-0.2
+5.8
+7.3
-9.3
+14.2
-10.6
+16.9
+1.7

S-T-U
SpdrDJIA 177.33
SpdrGold 115.28
S&P500ETF206.44
SpdrHome u36.99
SpdrLehHY 39.15
SpdrOGEx 50.81
SABESP
5.76
Salesforce 66.68
SandRdge
1.82
Schlmbrg
84.39
Schwab
30.01
SeadrillLtd
9.66
SiderurNac 1.74
SilvWhtn g 19.19
SouFun s
6.18
SouthnCo 44.64
SwstAirl
42.86
SwstnEngy 24.04
SpectraEn 36.06
SpiritRltC
12.30
Sprint
4.85
SP Matls
48.97
SP HlthC
71.99
SP CnSt
49.13

+.52
+.22
+.70
+.79
+.01
+2.19
+.60
+.13
+.04
+1.08
-.22
+.02
+.06
-.43
+.22
+.63
-1.38
+1.72
+.02
+.46
+.13
+.36
-1.05
+.42

182.68 158.27
-0.3
129.21 109.67 +1.5
212.97 181.31 +0.4
37.31 27.66 +8.4
41.82 37.26 +1.4
84.04 41.63 +6.2
10.99
4.77
-8.4
71.00 48.18 +12.4
7.43
1.13
118.76 75.60
-1.2
31.73 23.35
-0.6
40.44
8.58 -19.1
5.33
1.50 -16.3
27.66 16.57
-5.6
15.67
5.25 -16.4
53.16 41.87
-9.1
47.17 22.35 +1.3
49.16 21.46 -11.9
43.12 32.43
-0.7
13.00 10.23 +3.4
9.76
3.79 +16.9
52.22 44.09 +0.8
76.01 55.39 +5.3
50.22 42.70 +1.3

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

9.44
u24.13
d64.57
.68
11.05
52.45
41.28
3.93
4.79
31.56
3.92
96.51
52.31
d7.93
59.23
35.80
16.23
20.43
d52.89
31.47
23.55
4.45
d1.98
25.00
u38.98
191.00
56.72
10.89
24.68
82.51
15.71
34.04
33.24
9.65
17.37
3.80
43.97

+.47
+.25
-.02
+.01
+1.06
-.31
-1.12
+.03
-.05
+.45
+.07
-2.32
+2.14
-.07
-1.17
+2.65
+.12
+.94
-1.83
-.21
+.20
+.14
-.32
-.26
+3.08
+6.00
-.04
+.42
+.43
-1.29
-2.07
+.34
+.51
-2.86
+.49
+.14
-1.50

S-T-U
SLM Cp
SabreCp n
SanDisk
Sanofi rt
SciGames
SeagateT
SearsHldgs
Sequenom
SilvStd g
Sinclair
SiriusXM
SkywksSol
SolarCity
Sonus rs
Splunk
Sprouts
Staples
StlDynam
Stratasys
SunPower
Symantec
SynrgyPh
SyntaPhm
TakeTwo
TerraFm n
TeslaMot
TexInst
TiVo Inc
TrimbleN
TripAdvis
TrueCar n
21stCFoxA
21stCFoxB
UTiWrldwd
Umpqua
Unilife
UrbanOut

10.47
8.19
-7.4
24.55 14.86 +19.0
108.77 63.00 -34.1
1.06
.29 -14.2
15.66
6.97 -13.2
69.40 48.49 -21.1
48.25 24.10 +25.2
4.19
2.35 +6.2
11.17
3.92
-4.3
36.14 23.88 +15.3
4.04
2.98 +11.9
102.77 34.30 +32.7
79.40 45.79
-2.2
21.25
7.56 -60.1
76.26 39.35 +0.5
38.45 25.73 +5.4
19.40 10.70 -10.4
25.51 16.51 +3.5
130.83 51.50 -36.4
42.07 22.75 +21.8
27.32 19.57
-8.2
5.52
2.45 +45.9
4.97
1.85 -25.3
30.80 18.45 -10.8
38.91 21.58 +26.2
291.42 177.22 -14.1
59.99 41.47 +6.1
14.29 10.27
-8.0
40.14 23.68
-7.0
111.24 66.04 +10.5
25.00
9.05 -31.4
39.27 31.01 -11.4
37.83 30.11
-9.9
14.75
9.00 -20.0
19.36 14.70 +2.1
4.90
2.00 +13.4
47.25 27.89 +25.2

V-W-X-Y-Z
VanTIntBd
VertxPh
ViacomB
VimpelCm
Vivus
Vodafone
WalgBoots
Wendys Co
WDigital
WholeFood
Windstrm
WisdomTr
Wynn
XOMA
Xilinx
Yahoo
Yandex
ZillowGp
ZionsBcp
Zogenix
Zulily
Zynga

53.95 +.07 54.19 50.37


117.23 -3.11 136.33 59.79
67.59 -.26 89.76 63.11
5.37 +.16
9.73
3.09
d2.43 -.14
6.28
2.28
32.89 -.57 38.54 28.63
85.97 +.68 88.81 57.75
10.93 +.05 11.50
7.61
93.00 +.77 114.69 80.78
52.18 +.25 57.57 36.08
d7.92 +.48 13.30
7.23
21.73 +.34 22.60
9.11
129.40 +3.15 231.00 121.53
3.54 -.10
5.95
3.22
42.06 -.26 55.22 36.24
44.15 -.95 52.62 32.15
16.24 +.79 35.90 13.90
100.87 +.26 164.90 84.64
27.11 +.69 31.87 23.72
1.47 +.13
3.10
1.07
13.81 +.88 56.81 12.34
2.78 +.01
4.66
2.20

NAME

WK
CLS

SP Consum 75.69
SP Engy
77.72
SPDR Fncl 24.21
SP Inds
55.43
SP Tech
41.37
SP Util
44.55
Suncor g
30.77
SunEdison u25.15
Sysco
37.64
TaiwSemi
23.69
TalismE g
7.70
Target
u82.67
TeckRes g 13.67
TevaPhrm u63.80
TherapMD
6.38
TW Cable 154.81
TimeWarn 85.00
Transocn
14.99
TriContl
21.65
Twitter
50.42
TwoHrbInv 10.67
Tyson
38.63
UnionPac s 107.13
UtdContl
61.88
UPS B
96.47
US Bancrp 43.71
US NGas d13.60
US OilFd
17.56
USSteel
24.66
UtdTech
117.13
UtdhlthGp u117.36

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
+.78
+1.32
+.28
-.12
...
+.67
+1.66
+.79
-.52
+.75
+.04
+1.11
-.19
+1.82
+.38
+8.28
-.11
+.50
+.06
+.41
+.10
+.47
-1.31
-5.87
-.12
+.85
+.27
+.42
-.12
+.23
-.65

77.13 61.68 +4.9


101.52 71.70
-1.8
25.14 21.19
-2.1
58.23 48.83
-2.0
43.46 35.13
49.78 40.07
-5.7
43.49 26.56
-3.2
25.19 13.09 +28.9
41.45 35.31
-5.2
25.32 19.39 +5.9
11.22
3.46
-1.7
82.81 55.25 +8.9
25.03 10.45 +0.2
64.08 47.36 +10.9
6.75
3.42 +43.4
159.94 128.78 +1.8
88.25 62.44
-0.5
46.12 13.28 -18.2
22.20 19.12 +1.1
55.99 29.51 +40.6
11.00
9.60 +6.5
44.24 34.90
-3.6
124.52 90.36 -10.1
74.52 36.65
-7.5
114.40 94.05 -13.2
46.10 38.10
-2.8
26.88 12.98
-7.9
39.44 15.61 -13.8
46.55 20.13
-7.8
124.45 97.30 +1.9
123.76 73.61 +16.1

V-W-X-Y-Z
VaalcoE
Vale SA
Vale SA pf
ValeroE
VangTSM
VangREIT
VangEmg
VangEur
VangFTSE
VerizonCm
Vipshop s
Visa s
VoyaFincl
WPX Engy
WalMart
WeathfIntl
WellsFargo
WstnUnion
WhitingPet
WmsCos
WT EurHdg
WTJpHedg
WT India
Xerox
Yamana g
Zoetis

d2.47
d5.76
d4.94
59.80
107.39
84.83
42.06
55.25
40.41
49.47
u29.11
65.29
43.97
11.74
80.73
12.91
54.37
u20.91
32.81
50.30
66.75
55.39
23.26
12.77
3.74
46.50

-.75
9.67
+.09 15.59
+.01 13.99
-2.07 64.49
+.52 110.09
+.97 89.27
+1.98 46.49
+.25 61.89
+.04 43.48
+.91 53.66
+.49 29.98
-.25 69.66
+.66 44.97
+1.04 26.79
-.62 90.97
+.56 24.88
+.25 56.29
+1.21 20.87
+2.31 92.92
+1.02 59.77
+.83 67.27
-.10 57.68
+.98 24.37
+.18 14.36
-.09
9.04
+.28 47.92

2.12
5.51
4.73
42.53
93.58
69.79
37.30
49.81
36.32
45.09
12.30
48.71
32.60
10.01
72.61
9.40
46.44
14.60
24.13
39.31
51.67
44.75
18.72
11.01
3.33
28.14

-45.8
-29.6
-32.0
+20.8
+1.3
+4.7
+5.1
+5.4
+6.7
+5.8
+49.0
-0.4
+3.8
+0.9
-6.0
+12.8
-0.8
+16.8
-0.6
+11.9
+20.0
+12.5
+5.5
-7.9
-7.0
+8.1

INDEXES
52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW
18,288.63 15,855.12
9,310.22 7,346.24
657.17
519.56
11,142.56 9,886.08
5,042.14 3,946.03
2,119.59 1,814.36
1,542.16 1,269.45
22,388.10 19,160.13
1,268.16 1,040.47

NAME
LAST
Dow Jones Industrials
17,763.24
Dow Jones Transportation 8,605.31
Dow Jones Utilities
589.87
NYSE Composite
10,953.17
Nasdaq Composite
4,886.94
S&P 500
2,066.96
S&P MidCap
1,523.94
Wilshire 5000
21,946.62
Russell 2000
1,255.66

FRI
CHG
+65.06
-66.82
+1.86
+61.56
+6.71
+7.27
+5.17
+77.56
+3.95

WEEK
CHG
+50.58
-95.03
+9.36
+78.02
-4.28
+5.94
+15.43
+99.83
+15.25

WEEK YTD
%CHG %CHG
+.29
-.34
-1.09
-5.85
+1.61
-4.56
+.72 +1.05
-.09 +3.19
+.29
+.39
+1.02 +4.92
+.46 +1.28
+1.23 +4.23

Stocks in bold changed 10% or more from the previous weekly close. Footnotes: d - New 52-week low.
g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year.
The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. rs - Stock has
undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within
the last year. u - New 52-week high. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. Source: The Associated Press.

Shopping for a home? Get


your mortgage first!

503-588-3511
503
588 3511
Apply or make an appointment at
www.MortgageSalem.com NMLS 40558

+1.6
-1.3
-10.2
+28.6
-15.6
-3.7
+12.8
+21.0
-16.0
+3.5
-3.9
+38.6
-13.0
-1.4
-2.9
-12.6
-9.6
-4.7
-4.9
+7.3
-41.0
+4.5

StatesmanJournal.com/subscribe

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

3F

How to create an excellent small business prototype


Do you have an idea for a
new gizmo that will take the
world by storm? Are you
about to create a whatchamacallit that will finally enable
you to launch your own small
business?
Hold on. Before you invest
your life savings or launch a
crowdfunding campaign on
Kickstarter, you need to create a prototype.
A prototype is a pre-production model or sample of a
potential product that helps
you work out the kinks before
you start producing large
quantities for sale. A prototype demonstrates to potential customers, suppliers and
investors what you envision
your product to be. Most important, it helps you figure
out ways to save money and
make your product more appealing to customers.
Lets say youve got an idea
for a new specialty food item
a new gluten-free peanut
sauce. Youve been playing
around with recipes for
months and are sure you now

have a
killer
sauce.
Before
you buy
hundreds
of bottles
Rhonda Abrams and line
GA N N E T T
up a commercial
kitchen
and a bottling plant, take time
to test your complete product:
not just the sauce, but the
bottle, label and other packaging.
In prototyping your product, examine how well it will
do when made in quantity.
How long will your sauce stay
fresh and attractive in
the bottles you chose? Do the
bottles have to be refrigerated or are they shelf-stable?
Seth Goldman, the founder
of Honest Tea, (HonestTea.com), told me how surprised he was at the amount
of sediment found in the companys tea when made in large
quantities and how cloudy the
tea was. The company had to

change its production process


to deal with that.
Developing a prototype
helps you figure all costs, not
just for ingredients but for
every part of the process,
including sales and shipping.
For example, when choosing
bottles for your peanut sauce,
consider not only the cost of
the bottles, but how many will
fit in a case and how much
theyll weigh when shipped.
Choosing labels? Find out the
sizes that standard label-affixing machines can handle. And
consider how the shape and
size of the bottles fit on retailers shelves.
As you develop your prototype, focus on these issues:
Will the product work?
Does the product actually
function as youve envisioned? If youre building a
mechanical, electrical or electronic product, it must be
perfectly functional from an
engineering standpoint.
Can it be produced in
sufficient quantities? If you
will be manufacturing the

Pinterest celebrates 5
years by looking ahead
The social site blends
shopping. searching
By BARBARA ORTUTAY
Associated Press

NEW YORK In its five short years of

life, Pinterest has become the place


where brides-to-be create wish boards
of wedding china photos and do-it-yourself home renovators bookmark shiny
turquoise tiles for bathrooms. Its
where people share ideas and ingenuity
and get creatively inspired. And its
fueled a new way of searching for items
thats even stolen traffic from tech giant Google.
The San Francisco-based venture
capital darling was recently valued at
$11 billion. While its core audience has
always been female, Pinterest says its
popularity is growing faster than ever
among men. It is winning in the all-important social-mobile space the vast
majority of pinners connect from mobile devices and is enjoying a healthy
expansion overseas.
As Pinterest celebrates its fifth
birthday this week hopefully with
perfect bacon cupcakes topped with a
single, artisanal beeswax candle here
are five things to know about the site
and where its headed.

Who uses Pinterest?


Pinterest had 79.3 million unique visitors in February (the latest data available), up 47 percent from a year earlier,
according to Internet research firm
comScore. The vast majority were
women, but male visitors grew at a
much faster clip: 62 percent for men
versus 42 percent for women.
Enid Hwang is the companys community manager and the fourth employee ever hired at Pinterest. She wouldnt
disclose what percentage of users are
male but says Pinterests male user base
in the U.S. has doubled in the past year.
She doesnt think Pinterest is for women
any more than it is for men.
At its most fundamental, we believe
that Pinterest is a tool for unlocking
peoples creativity, she says.
Pinterest often gets lumped in with
popular social networks like Facebook,
Twitter and Instagram, but there are
plenty of ways that it stands apart.
Hwang sees it as more intimate and personal. While Facebook is about sharing
what you did, read or saw recently with
400 of your closest friends, Pinterest
users pin stuff for their own inspiration
and benefit. While others can see it, she
says Pinterest people are saving stuff
that means a lot to them personally.

These pinners found creative ways of


solving what they might do if there is a
zombie apocalypse, she adds, or a more
mundane natural disaster. There are
Pinterest boards of basement fallout
shelters, disaster preparation and the
contents of survival backpacks.
After Pinterest introduced Place
Pins in late 2013, the vast trove of pinners travel-inspired boards became
easier for people to find. Users pin photos, links and videos inspired by past
trips or travel aspirations. Place Pins
are designed to work sort of like an online travel magazine combined with an
interactive map.

By the numbers
There are now more than 50 billion
pins on Pinterest. One billion boards
have been created.
Headquartered in San Francisco,
Pinterest has six international offices:
in Britain, France, Germany, Japan and
Brazil. More than 40 percent of Pinterest users are outside the U.S., up from
28 percent in 2013.
About two-thirds of the content on
its site was created by brands. If we
were in the magazine business, (that)
would be 50 billion pages being ripped
out and referenced, says Joanne Bradford, head of partnerships at Pinterest.
Earlier this year, Pinterest raised
$367 million that valued the company at
$11 billion. It says it may raise as much
as $211 million more, and plans to use
the more than half a billion dollars for
international expansion and other corporate purposes.

Expect more industrial space


construction

Continued from Page 1F

With Salems available industrial


space getting scooped up, developers
are seeing a prime opportunity to create
more of it. A development company, Vista Property Investments, LLC, has announced plans to build another industrial
park in southeast Salem sometime this
year.
Theres certainly room for it. According to an Economic Opportunities Analysis conducted by the city of Salem and
presented to council in March, Salem has
a surplus in land zoned for industrial use.
The city has approximately 900 acres
of more land than needed for anticipated
employment growth.

Diamond Foods improvements


underway
Last year, Diamond Foods leased
about 242,000 square feet of industrial
space at 1745 Oxford St. SE for Kettle
Chips.
Improvements on the building, which
is the former Seneca Cannery, will bring
it up to appropriate standards to become
Kettle Chips new logistics and distribution warehouse.
The improvements are scheduled to
be completed in the fall of 2015.

2015-17 Kickoff: Justice


Reinvestment Summit:
conference highlighting
outstanding and innovative
public safety programs that
effectively reduce prison
populations and avert future
growth, reduce recidivism
through evidence-based
practices and data-driven
research, increase public safety
and increase offender accountability, 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Salem Convention Center, 200
Commercial St. SE. Free. (503)
378-4078, www.regonline.com
.
High Noon Toastmasters:
Speaking and leadership
training in a friendly setting,
noon to 1 p.m., Revenue
Building, Fishbowl Meeting
Room, first floor, 955 Center
St. NE. (503) 399-9915,
www.highnoontoastmas
ters.org.
Bootstrappers Toastmasters: Meets to improve individual speaking, listening,
evaluation and meeting management skills for adults ages
18 and older. Guests and new
members welcome, 6:15 p.m.,

Diversity

Real estate
within that community.

MONDAY

Pinterests penchant for exposing


people to something new has turned its
site into a learning and shopping hub
that can be more useful than Google and
other search engines for certain topics.
Many people now go to Pinterest first
when they are looking for ideas on planning a wedding, preparing an exotic dinner, planning a kids birthday party or
finding the perfect pair of shoes for a
new outfit.
Pinterest co-founder Evan Sharp likens this phenomenon to search without
typing, making it particularly well
suited for smartphones.

Popular man trends, as Pinterest


put it recently, range from do-it-yourself home projects such as making a
wooden couch sleeve for your drinks, to
different ways to tie knots, to the
worlds best hiking trails. And then
theres the more unusual.
Last year, we noticed a trend of survivalists using Pinterest, Hwang says.

Man trends

lfosmire@StatesmanJournal.com, (503)
399-6709 or follow on Twitter at @fosmirel

funding sites such as Kickstarter (kickstarter.com),


IndieGoGo (IndieGoGo.com)
or Fundable (fundable.com).
Some of these sites require
you to have a prototype, but
for all, having attractive visuals and a video of a working
prototype helps you be far
more effective in getting attention and raising money.
Dont worry, though
developing a prototype
doesnt mean you cant change
or refine your product later.
But the process should help
move you to market faster by
forcing you to get your idea
off the drawing table and into
reality.
So start building a working
prototype of the gizmo of your
dreams. As you do, remember
Googles product-development motto: Experiment,
expedite, iterate.
Among Rhonda Abrams recent
books is the 6th edition of Successful
Business Plan: Secrets & Strategies.
Register for her free newsletter at
PlanningShop.com. Twitter:
@RhondaAbrams.

AGENDA

A new way to search and shop

The heat is on tech companies for


lacking gender and racial diversity
among their employee base, especially
in the highest ranks. Pinterest is no exception. At the same time, the company
seems to be doing better on this front
than some of its Silicon Valley counterparts. According to statistics released
last July, 40 percent of the companys
employees are women. This compares
with 20 percent at Apple Inc. and 30 percent at Twitter Inc. and Google Inc.
Among Pinterest executives though, its
a different story. Nineteen percent are
women, compared with 21 percent at
Google.
Were not close to where we want to
be, but were working on it, wrote Tracy Chou, a software engineer and tech
lead at Pinterest, in a blog post last July.

product in bulk, judge whether you can ensure consistent


quality of both components
and the final product when
made in large quantities.
Can you make a profit?
Can it be made efficiently and
cost-effectively? Can you use
standard, easily available
ingredients or components
that will reduce costs? Can
you command a price that
results in a profit?
Will you need to manufacture the product on your
own? Will you need to build
your own costly facility or can
you use contract manufacturers, lowering your costs and
increasing the speed with
which you can get to market?
Having a prototype especially of an appealing product also helps you raise
money. Its far easier for potential investors to understand and appreciate what
youre trying to achieve when
they can see, touch or taste it.
Moreover, a lot of small
businesses are raising money
for new products on crowd-

25

University of Phoenix, Room


106, 670 Hawthorne Ave. SE.
(503) 510-9695.

TUESDAY
Active Business Promoters:
Business and professional
networking group dedicated
to the success of our members
through referrals, exchanging
business ideas and networking, 6:50 to 8 a.m., Broadway
Commons, 1300 Broadway St.
NE. (503) 991-6892.
Business Networking International - Salem Partners
for Success: BNI is the largest
business networking organization, offering members the
opportunity to share ideas,
contacts and most importantly,
business referrals, 7 to 8:30
a.m., Chemeketa Center for
Business and Industry, 626
High St. NE. (503) 375-2707,
www.bnioregon.com.
LeTip of Salem Professionals Networking: 7 to 8:30
a.m., Broadway Commons,
Keizer Room, 1300 Broadway
St. NE. (866) 818-8381,
www.philwebb.
us/letip/home.html.

WEDNESDAY
Mid-Willamette Jobs Council Meeting: 2 to 3 p.m., Incite
Inc., 626 High St NE Suite 305.
(503) 581-1002,
www.inciteworks.org.

THURSDAY
PRO Salem: Your source of
referrals, 7:30 to 9 a.m., Broadway Commons, China Room,
1300 Broadway St. NE. (503)
485-9888.
My Referral Club of Salem:
A resource for your clients and
yourself. It is a group of individuals that enjoys referring
business to each other, 9 to
10:15 a.m., Willamette Heritage Center at the Mill, Card
Room, 1313 Mill St. SE. (503)
399-7881,
www.salemor.myreferralclub.
com.
Keizer Communicators
Toastmasters: Learn to overcome your fear of public
speaking, improve your communication skills, increase your
self-confidence level, and learn
how to host meetings, 7 to 8
p.m., Avamere Court at Keizer,
Building 3, 5210 River Road N,
Keizer. (209) 380-3872.

4F

Jobs

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Find a job:

ONLINE
CareerBuilder.com

Place an employment ad:

BY EMAIL

Place an employment ad:

StatesmanJournal.com

BY PHONE

1-888-692-7340

sjjobs@gannett.com

ADULT OUTPATIENT
TEAM MENTAL HEALTH
SPECIALIST II
Hiring for an experienced mental
health therapist to work with adults
who experience a range of symptoms
including PTSD, depression, and
anxiety. Candidate should be skilled
in assessment, individual and group
therapy, case management and
consultation. As well as have familiarity
with Evidence Based Practices.
Minimum requirements: Masters
degree and licensure in mental health
eld. Salary Range: MHS II (licensure)
$3888 - $4964.

Send Resumes to:

25

Tanya Thompson, LCSW, Linn County


Mental Health Services; P.O. Box 100,
Albany, Oregon 97321. tthompson@
co.linn.or.us

EOE.
Closing date: April 1st, 2015
or until lled.

All classied ads are subject to the applicable rate card, copies of which are available from our Advertising Dept. All ads are subject to approval before publication. The
Statesman Journal reserves the right to edit, refuse, reject, classify or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported in the rst day of publication at 503-399-6789.
The Statesman Journal shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from an error in or omission of an advertisement. No refunds for early cancellation of order.

StatesmanJournal.com

General

515

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

515

General

$800 to $1200+
Per Week
Weekly Paycheck
Full & Part Time
Were expanding our
sales territory & looking
for competitive people
who would enjoy working with an awardwinning sales team. If
you enjoy working with
people & are selfmotivated
Call: (503) 610-8428
We Need: People to market our
in-store & Special Event Promotions
for the:

This solicitation is for services within the Sales Division of Circulation Promotions Unlimited Inc.
Qualified applicants will serve as independent
contractors, not employees.

Business Opportunity
The Statesman Journal Newspaper
is seeking applicants for

Newspaper Delivery

521 Healthcare 521 Healthcare 523

Professional

ASSISTANT HEALTH SERVICES


ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGER
(LCDHS Classification 031)
Full-time, 37.5 hours/week Accounting/Payroll
position with Linn County Department of Health
Services
ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS:
Ability to perform moderately complex financial
accounting functions.
Ability to maintain and monitor financial records.
Assist in management of accounts payable,
payroll, ledgers, revenues/expenditures and
reporting for department.
Ability to work with confidential personnel related
documents and processes including, new hire
processing, voluntary and involuntary
terminations, FMLA/OFLA paperwork and other
personnel related information.
Experience with Microsoft applications,
specifically Word/Excel/Outlook.
Ability to use collaborative problem solving and
communication skills in a team setting.
GENERAL QUALIFICATIONS:
Four years of experience of a responsible nature
in accounting.
Graduation from high school or equivalent GED
certificate supplemented by business school or
college training in bookkeeping, accounting or
related field OR satisfactory equivalent
combination of experience and training.
Computer skills in Microsoft Word, Excel,
Outlook, etc.
Possession of valid Oregon driver license and
good driving record.
Ability to pass a criminal history check.

SALARY RANGE:

$3272 - $4116
CLOSING DATE:
April 10,
2015
HOW TO APPLY:
Submit Linn County
Employment Application, Resume, and Cover
Letter
Brandi Aston, MBA, Administrative Manager
baston@co.linn.or.us
Linn County Department of Health Service, PO
Box 100, Albany, OR 97321
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE
ACTION EMPLOYER
A copy of the Job Classification for this position
as well as the Employment application may be
obtained from the Linn County Board of
Commissioners Office, Room 201, Linn County
Courthouse, PO Box 100, Albany, OR 97321; at
the Oregon Employment Division Office in
Albany, or online at http://www.co.linn.or.us.

as independent contractors
in all areas.
Independent contractors should
have:
1. A reliable vehicle that is insured.
2. A valid drivers license.
3. Available to deliver newspapers
to residential areas in the early
morning hours, 7 days per week.
Our routes are designed to provide
part-time supplemental income to
qualified individuals looking for a
business opportunity.
Our routes have the potential to
profit up to $1000 per month,
depending on delivery area
and route size.

RN Educator
Senior Living Community that
serves the Willamette Valley
is looking for an RN
Educator.
* Must have 1-2 years
experience in long term care

Professional

Case Manager 1
For persons selected at TL 20.0 - Two-years
experience in supervisory capacity.
For persons selected at TL 19.0 Must have some
knowledge of supervisory practices.
For persons selected at TL 19.0 or TL 20.0:
- A Bachelors Degree in social work or an
equivalent degree in sociology, psychology,
counseling or law.
- One-year of full time experience working in
Indian Child Welfare or two-years of full time
experience including assessment or case
management experience in another public child
welfare system or child welfare agency working
in both child protective services and
permanency.
Location: Siletz, OR
Salary: $21.22/hr - $23.31/hr DOE
Open Until Filled; Job Posting #: 201507

For an application and job


description visit us at
www.ctsi.nsn.us or call
800-922-1399.
Job Coach
Job Coach 2: Supported
Employment Specialist serving
clients with serious mental illness.
Considerable understanding of
Supported Employment techniques,
job development and retention
strategies, and integrating mental
health treatment. Coordination with
employers, liaison with community
agencies and treatment team.
Albany as primary work site.
Bachelors degree in behavioral
sciences field with satisfactory
combination of work/education; or
four years of progressive experience
serving individuals with serious
mental illness, physical disabilities
and vocational rehabilitation.
Criminal history check, valid Oregon
drivers license and acceptable
driving record required. Salary $3197
- $4085 per month; excellent
benefits. Open until April 10 or until
filled. Submit signed application and
resume to: MaryDale Salston, Ph.D.,
LMFT, Linn County Mental Health
Services, PO Box 100, Albany, OR
97321. msalston@co.linn.or.us EOE

525 Restaurant 525 Restaurant


& Food

*Excellent Benefit and


compensation package
* Fun and exciting
environment to work in

523

& Food

NOW HIRING!!!
McMenamins Wilsonville Pub
Line Cooks, Servers, Hosts and Dishwashers!

Please contact our hotline at

503-399-6827

or apply online at
http://online.statesmanjournal.com/
services/subscriber/carriers.cfm

Please email resumes to:


living_senior@yahoo.com

523

Professional

Come Join Our Growing


Team !
Forest River RV wants you.
Immediate Openings for
Fiberglass Repair & Painting and
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Energetic, positive, and team
focused applicants are desired.
Competitive wage & benefit package
to be discussed at interview.
Pre-employment Drug Screen
required.
Please apply in person at
1429 SE Uglow Ave.
Dallas, Oregon.

Begin The Journey at Forest


River RV !

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Classieds

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503-399-6789

General

515

Busy Salem Corporate office seeks


experienced A/P Specialist for a growing food
service chain with experience in all phases of
A/P for multiple entities.
Good project management, communication
and people skills essential in this fast-paced
deadline oriented environment. Detail
oriented and proficiency in MS Excel and
Word required. Experience using Great
Plains Dynamics and Access software a plus.

Please apply online 24/7 at mcmenamins.com


or pick up an app at any McMenamins
location.
Mail your complete app to:
McMenamins
Attn: Human Resources
430 N. Killingsworth St. Portland, OR 97217
or
fax to: (503) 221-8749.

Please no phone calls or emails to


individual locations!!!
Equal Opportunity Employer

Send Resume via E-Fax 1-866-700-6637

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503-399-6789

515

General

515

General

Part-time, on call to provide


court security in the Yamhill
County courthouse. Position
requires knowledge of or training
in the use of fingerprinting,
photographing, and video
monitoring equipment, first aid
(including CPR), and experience
with the use of restraints and
firearms. Applicants must be
U.S. Citizens and 21 years of
age. Closes 04/15/15. For salary
info and details about
Job #SO15-019 and other
current openings, visit
www.co.yamhill.or.us/hr.
EOE.

Closing date: 4/13/15.


OSU is an AA/EOE.
25

General

515

General

Youre
MOBILE.
So are we.

Youre social?
So are we.

Court Security Deputy


Reserve - Yamhill
County Sheriffs Office

To review complete posting


and apply, go to
http://oregonstate.edu/jobs
posting #0014102.

515

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Salary DOE with benefit package

Full-time (1.0 FTE),


12-month,
xed-term position.

General

Professional

Accounts Payable Specialist

Instructor
(Seed Certication Specialist)
position at Department
of Crop & Soil Science,
Oregon State University.

515

523

Qual. apps will have prev related exp, open &


flex sched incl days/eve/wknd/holiday avail
and a positive and professional demeanor.
We are also willing to train those with relevant
experience. Applicants must enjoy working
in a busy customer-service oriented
environment!

515

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Nationwide Federal Government


Contractor seeks highly experienced
and qualified

515

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515

General

pinterest.com/SJPinner

HVAC Mechanics and


General Maintenance Workers
for facility maintenance positions in
Corvallis and Newport, OR.
Qualified HVAC candidates must
possess at least 8 years proven
HVAC industrial experience.
Qualified GMW candidates must possess
at least 5 years experience in general
maintenance duties to include but
not limited to, changing light bulbs,
carpentry, painting, plumbing, and
changing filters on HVAC equipment.
These are highly compensated
Union positions with superior
benefit packages including
fully paid family health care.
The ability to obtain and maintain a
Federal Government security clearance
and pass a pre-employment drug and
alcohol screenings is mandatory.
Drug Free Work Place EOE M/F/D/ V
Please submit your resume in
confidence to us at:
corvallisnewport@yahoo.com
OR-0000360668

instagram.com/Salem_Statesman

Join the conversation.

5F

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12F

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

CLASSIFIEDS

503-399-6789

Rentalnder

StatesmanJournal.com/rentals

SALEM - NORTH EAST

SALEM - NORTHEAST

SALEM - NORTH EAST

SALEM - SOUTH

Brook Hollow Apartments


BEAUTIFUL COMMUNITY
1&2 BR Apts. Gated Community
Washer/Dryer Hook-ups 24 Hr
Fitness Center Beautiful Grounds
Seasonal Pool Carport On Site
Management Playground
4154 Sunnyview Rd NE
503 585-5505

Foxhollow Apartments

SALEM - SOUTH EAST

Falcon View Apartments


Ask About Our Specials!
Near Chemeketa Comm College
Easy I-5 Access
Water, Sewer, Garbage Paid
Dishwasher / Garbage Disposal
Washer/Dryer Hookups
Covered Parking, On-Site Manager
Please come visit us at 3800 Ward Dr
(503) 393-8385 or (503) 581-2485
2005grs@mail.com

Autumn Chase Apartments


Ask about Manger Special
2 & 3 bedroom units starting at
$730.00
Pets welcome. W/d hook-ups
3211 Autumn Chase Way
503-589-9245
Norris & Stevens Management

1 BR starting at $675.00
2 BR starting at $725.00
W/D Hook-ups Energy Efficient
Fitness Center Heated Seasonal
Pool On-Site Laundry Additional
Storage Unit Dog Friendly
w/Deposit
4892 Liberty Rd S. 503-375-3462
Norris & Stevens Management

Saddle Club Apartments


Best of the Mid Willamette Valley
Silver Winner
1, 2, 3 BR Apts starting at $650
Washer/Dryer Hook-ups Seasonal
Heated Pool & Sauna(s) Fitness
4665 Campbell Drive SE
503 371-6242
Norris & Stevens Management

Norris & Stevens Management

To get your listings on StatesmanJournal.com/rentals


Call Terri McArthur at 503-399-6630 or email tmcarthur@statesmanjournal.com

To place an ad in the Statesman Journal


Call Terri McArthur at 503-399-6630 or email tmcarthur@statesmanjournal.com

SALEM - SOUTH

SALEM - NORTH EAST

IVANHOE SOUTH APARTMENTS

Chancellor Apartments

Choose from innovatively designed


2br/1ba, 1000sf, priv patio, dishwasher,
walk-in closet, Quiet apartment homes,
where cats are allowed. Surrounded by
luxurious spaces, sunlight, and wonderful
views, youll find unlimited possibilities to
reflect your lifestyle. $625 503-362-3217

Cozy Small Complex!


Washer/Dryer Hookups
Water, Sewer, Garbage Paid
Diswasher/Disposal/Microwave
Near W.U. Campus and Capital
821 Cottage St. NE
(503) 581-2485

FAIR HOUSING LAWS


"The Federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in
the sale, rental, leasing and financing of housing, as well
as discriminatory advertising, on the basis of RACE,
SEX, COLOR, RELIGION, NATIONAL ORIGIN, MENTAL or PHYSICAL HANDICAP, or FAMILIAL STATUS.
In addition to these categories, the State of Oregon also
prohibits discrimination based on MARITAL STATUS.
(Our local jurisdictions also have specific applicable regulations)"
"These laws cover any potential or actual sale, lease,
rental, eviction, price, terms, privileges or any service in
relation to the sale of or us of housing. The not only prohibit advertisements which clearly restrict access to
housing based on the protected categories, but also prohibit advertisements which indicate a preference for or
against a person based on a protected category. In particular circumstances, use of colloquialisms, symbols or
directions to real estate for sale or rent may indicate a
discriminatory preference."
"It is the intent and goal of this newspaper to have each
advertiser who wishes to place a covered advertisement
in the newspaper comply with the Fair Housing laws.
Any advertisement which is perceived to contain language contrary to these laws will be rejected or changed
to remove the offending reference. There may be situations where it is not clear whether particular language is
objectionable. Such advertisements should be referred
to a supervisor for consideration and determination. Under certain circumstances, advertisers may claim that because of the nature of the housing being advertised,
they are not subject to the Fair Housing laws. Such
claims are irrelevant for purposes of considering advertisements for publication in this newspaper. Every housing advertisement published in this newspaper is subject
to the Fair Housing laws"

712 Firewood 733 Bazaars &


& Fuel

Flea Markets

Cherry wood, u-haul.


$100/cord, less for pickup or small trailer load.
$150 del. 503-606-2773

POLK FLEA MARKET


Polk County Fairgrounds
Sun, April 5, 2015, 9-3
Admission $1.00

Lawn &
Garden Equipment

718

ROTOTILLER, rear tine,


Tecumseh engine. $375.
503-390-5618

721

Misc.
Wanted

CASH FOR DIABETIC


TEST STRIPS
Help those in need.
Paying up to $30/box.
Free pick-up.
Call Sharon 503-679-3605.

DOWNLOAD
OUR FREE
APPS NOW

233

Homes
For Sale

2 HOUSES W/
BIG GARAGE $199,000
2 houses 3bdr 1850sf
2brd @ 1200sf in Keizer
Call: Tom 503-320-9540

StatesmanJournal.com

StatesmanJournal.com
/NewApps

The Mid-Valleys
Number
One
News and
Information
Website.

811 Pet Food

& Supplies

ATTENTION
PET OWNERS:
WARNING!
Sometimes pets
are sold for
research without
your knowledge.
When offering your
animal for sale (or
free to a good
home), you may
want to verify the
name and address
of the person
answering your ad.

BE SEEN
with color!
503-399-6789

Classieds

Source: SiteCatalyst, 2010

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

'0%77-*-)(7

13F

  

   
 


24/7 Shop when you want, contact dealers by e-mail, and visit Cars.com anytime for cars in the Mid-Valley.

-90+(@

:(;<9+(@

:<5+(@

Get auto advice and check


out the latest trends.

Test drive a new car or nd


out the latest from Click & Clack.

Check out the new car section,


car gadgets and whats hot.

 
         

LOCAL RIDES

MID-VALLEY CAR CLUBS


Open

Statesman Journal

to any pre-1916 through 1927 auto enthusiasts.


at 7:30 p.m. on the fourth Thursday of each month at
Marion County Fire Station No.1 on Cordon Road NE in Salem.
Meets

To submit or update club information, email


pbruce@statesmanjournal.com.

Salem Area Auto Council


Salem

Bent 8 Street Rod Club


Salem
Contact: (503)

362-3799, www.bent8.org
at 6 p.m. on the first Sunday of each month at Walerys
Pizza on Edgewater Drive NW in Salem.
Meets

Contact: Jeff Foster, (503) 884-1906 or (503) 588-1932,


president@wvsr.org,
Meets the last Monday of each month at Capitol Chevrolet.

Silver T Horseless Club


Silverton

Capitol Area Mustang Club

Contact: Larry

Salem
Contact: Jim

Ramsden, (503) 585-7311,


www.capitolareamustangclub.org
Meets at 7 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month at Walerys
Pizza on Edgewater Drive NW in Salem.

Capital City Corvettes


Salem
Contact: Glen Campbell, (503) 970-5990,
batf169@msn.com, www.capitalcitycorvettes.com
Meets at 6 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at Flight Deck
Restaurant in Salem.

Cherry City Bombers


Salem
Contact: Brian Taylor, (503) 510-3995,
cherrycitybombers@gmail.com,
www.cherrycitybombers.com
Meets at 7 p.m. on the first Thursday of each month at the Eola Inn
Rock-N-Rogers, 4250 Salem-Dallas Highway NW, Salem.

Chevelle and El Camino Club of Oregon


Stayton
Contact: Marina Anderson, (503) 263-4001,
ceccopresident@gmail.com, www.chevelles.net/oregon
Meets on the last Sunday of each month.Visit the website or call for
time and location.

Early Ford V-8 Club of America,


Mid-Willamette Regional Group

Meets

Brown, (503) 873-2738,


at 7 p.m. on the first Monday of each month at Silverton

Realty.

Silverton Flywheels
Silverton
Contact: Wes Oster, (503) 873-2573,
www.silvertonflywheels.org
Open to all car enthusiasts.

Willamette MG Club
Salem
Contact: Terry Harris, (503) 393-3836,
chancellor@willamettemgclub.org,
www.willamettemgclub.org
Meets at 7 p.m. on the third Tuesday of each month at McNary
Estates Golf Club Restaurant, 155 McNary Estates Dt. N. Keizer.

Willamette Motor Club


Salem

and Keizer
Davie, (503) 873-4952, web@wmclub.org,
www.wmclub.org
Meets at 7:30 p.m. the third Thursday of each month at Round
Table Pizza at Keizer Station.
Contact: Chris

Willamette Valley Corvette Club


Salem
Contact: Tom Paddock, (503) 409-6115, President@willamettevalleycorvettes.com, www.willamettevalleycorvettes.com
Members must attend two meetings and two club events.
Meets the first Thursday of each month at Capitol Chevrolet.

Salem
Contact: Bruce

Reynolds, (503) 364-7675


at 7 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month at 990
Cordon Road NE in Salem.
Meets

Mid-Valley Cruzers Club


Salem,Albany

and Jefferson
Contact: Ray Lancaster, (503) 362-7589
Meets for dinner and club business starting at 6 p.m. the first Thursday
of each month at the American Legion Post #10

Mopar Club and Pentastar Pride Club


Salem
Contact: Lee

Morgan, (503) 364-3569, geetex@aol.com,


www.pentastarpride.com
Meets at 7 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at Elmers
Restaurant on Lancaster Drive NE in Salem.

Northwest Vintage Car and Motorcycle Museum


Salem
Contact: Doug

Nelson, (503) 399-0647, buickdoug@yahoo.com,


nwcarandcycle.org
Meets at 6:30 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month at vintage
Texaco service station at Antique Powerland, 3995 Brooklake Road
NE, Brooks.

Willamette Valley Model A


Ford Club of America
Salem
Contact: Beauford Averette, (503) 856-9675,
beauforda@comcast.net, www.willamettevalleymodel-a.org,
info@willamettevalleymodel-a.org
Meets the first Thursday of each month at the Mission Mill in
the Card Room.

Willamette Valley Model T Ford Club


Salem
Contact: Louise Cookie Feskens, (503) 362-7157, cfeskens@
comcast.net
Meets at 7:30 p.m. on the first Wednesday of each month at
Marion County Fire Station No.1 on Cordon Road NE in Salem.

Willamette Valley Miata Club


Salem
Contact: Chris

McCarty, (503) 851-1549, www.oregonmx5.com


informally at 9 a.m. every Saturday at Subway,
5765 Commercial St. SE, Salem.
Meets

Willamette Valley PT Cruiser Club


Salem

area

Contact: (503)

Obscure Imports
Not

available
Contact: Zach Steffen, (503) 302-9581, Obscure-1@live.com; or
Alex Thomas, (503) 798-3366
Membership is free. Call or e-mail for meeting information.

999-7400, community-2.webtv.net/suziep/
WillametteValley
Meets at 7 p.m. first Friday of each month (except January)
at Almost Home Restaurant on Market Street in Salem. Social
hour at 6 p.m.

Willamette Valley Street Rods

Obsolete Fleet Classics

Salem

Salem
Contact: Jim

Billings, (503) 930-7151,


jimz28427@comcast.net, www.obsoletefleetclassics.org

Oregon Pioneer Regional Group of Horseless


Carriage Club of America

Contact: Dave

LeCompte, (503) 393-6330,WVSRHQ@gmail.com,


wvsr.org, www.wvsr.org
Meets the first Tuesday of each month at Pietros Pizza on
Hawthorne Avenue NE in Salem.

Salem
Contact: (503)

363-2619, woodspokes@aol.com

Outlet

Donofrios

Ford

WANTED:
19ft Nice Arima boat Sea Ranger or Sea Chaser.
4 stroke main, 115hp or above, with soft
complete top. 503-474-8212

WE BUY USED
CARS & TRUCKS

WE CONSIGN RVS, CARS, AND TRUCKS


1999 FORD EXPLORER
EDDIE BAUER

OUR PRICE

STK# 147569A

ALLOY WHEELS, HEATED


SEATS, LEATHER, OUTSIDE
TEMPERATURE GAUGE

4,995

2007 FORD TAURUS SE


4DR SEDAN

OUR PRICE

VIN##5259Q
004740
STK

OUR PRICE

STK# 147795A

V-6, AUTOMATIC,
AIR, FULL POWER

6,995

2004 HONDA CIVIC


2DR COUPE

4 CYL, 5 SPD,
VALUE PACKAGE

6,995

OUR PRICE

STK# 158042A

5,995

2006 HYUNDAI
ELANTRA GT
HATCHBACK 4 DR
AUTOMATIC, LEATHER,
VERY NICE CAR!

OUR PRICE

STK #148028A

6,995

2010 FORD RANGER XLT


SUPERCAB 4X4
16,774 ACTUAL MILES!
4.0L V-6, LOADED, 5SPD
MANUAL TRANSMISSION

OUR PRICE

STK# 5237P

Cadillac

25

93 Ford E150 conversion van/V8/tow pkg./cruise 1998 Cadillac


Eldorado
control/power everything!
(Independence,OR) $2800 OBO (503)838-1024 $4,950 OBO
97351 pra1947@yahoo.com
Loaded, low miles
@ 120K. Excellent
care & maintenance.
New tires . Very clean. Runs great!
Acura
503-365-2886

Chevrolet

503-399-0771

Mitsubishi
2006 Mitsubishi Lancer
ES $5,950
5Speed, Stereo, Custom
Wheels, CD

21,995

503-339-7 356

UNDER $5000

1991 Honda Accord EX


$2,950
Alloys, sun roof $300
down x $150
x 24mo. 18% APR
Call 4 Approval
VIN#152557
Toy Co

Vin #004343

1940 MISSION STREET SE | Salem, OR

Toy Co 503-399-0771

Plymouth
1996 Plymouth Neon
$1,950
4 Dr Auto Aero kit
Alloys $300 down x
$100 x 24mo. 18%
APR Call 4 Approval
VIN#603970
Toy Co

503-399-0771

Saab
2007 Saab 9.3
Convertable $6,950
Leather Heated Power
Seats, Alloys, Extra
Sharp.
VIN#007443

Toy Co

503-399-0771

$$$$
Lulays will pay top dollar

CALL BJ OR JIM
503-588-5000

Travel Tlrs & 5th Wheels


Honda

WWW.SKYLINEFORDDIRECT.COM

ACURA OF SALEM
503-588-5000 or
WE NEED
1-800-336-4148
GOOD CLEAN USED CARS
FREE APPRAISAL
TOP DOLLAR

1-800-307-4447
www.hillyers.com

2002 FORD FOCUS


ZX3 HATCHBACK
AUTOMATIC, AIR,
ALLOY WHEELS

Toyota

for your clean, carfax


certified vehicle!

The Mid-Valleys
Number One News
and Information Website.

StatesmanJournal.com
Source: SiteCatalyst, 2010

503-363-3426
lulayscarconnection.net

Boats & Equipment

1994 Toyota Corolla DX


$1,950
4 Dr, Auto, PW, PL, CD
$300 down x $100 x
24mo. 18% APR. On
Approved Credit
VIN#127648
Toy Co

503-399-0771

2016 Wolf Pup


$13,985
Front Queen Bed,
rear bunk beds,
kitchen & more!
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

2009 Rock Climber


$15,900
Very clean,light
weight, with small
pop-out.
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

2000 Artic Fox


$8,985
1 Slide-out, wet
bath, front bed, AC,
luggage rack.
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

2012 Rockwood A128


$10,985
Hard Side Pop-Up,
kitchen, refer,
furnace.
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

2005 Fleetwood
$6,890
Very clean and light
weight, many
extras, sleeps 6.
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

Get

Inside
Business

Every Sunday in the


Statesman Journal

14F

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

WWW.POWEROREGON.COM

HASSLE FREE BUYING

14,200

1 AT
-$1,250 IF FINANCED WITH KMF*

30

HWY
MPG

$3,185

OFF MSRP!

12,950

SALE PRICE

NEW 2015 CHEVROLET CRUZE DIESEL

MSRP $16,135. Sale price after $1,935 Power Discount & *$1,250 KMF Bonus Cash. *Must finance with KMF to receive.
Tier 1-7. 620+ Beacon. On approved credit. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 790978. Model B1511. Expires 5/4/15.

2015 KIA RIO


UP TO

EPA
ESTIMATED

37

AUTOM
AUTOMATIC

$3,280

OFF MSRP!

12,950

1 AT

HWY
MPG

MSRP $16,230. Sale price after $2,780 Power Discount & $500 Kia Customer

Cash Rebate. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 528054. Model
34122. Expires 5/4/15.

2015 KIA FORTE

15,700
$
SALE PRICE 13,950
1 AT
-$1,750 IF FINANCED WITH KMF*

37
HWY

AUTOMATIC

UP TO

EPA
ESTIMATED
MPG

$4,810

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8,000 OFF
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. Sale price after $3,060 Power Discount & *$1,750 KMF Bonus Cash. *Must finance with KMF to receive.
Tier 1-7.
1 7 620+
62 Beacon. On approved credit. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 374135. Model C3422. Expires 5/4/15.

2015 KIA OPTIMA

18,950
$
SALE PRICE 16,950

1 AT
-$2,000 IF FINANCED WITH KMF*

37

BLUETOOTH &
TRACTION CONTROL

UP TO

EPA
ESTIMATED
HWY
MPG

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VIN#135561. MSRP $15,670, Dealer Discount $2,675. One


at this price + lic title and doc fee

MSRP $22,580. Sale price after $3,630 Power Discount & *$2,000 KMF Bonus Cash. *Must finance with KMF to receive.
Tier 1-7. 620+ Beacon. On approved credit. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 441634. Model 53222. Expires 5/4/15.

2015 KIA OPTIMA HYBRID


NOT YOUR
AVERAGE HYBRID

UP TO

$6,570

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EPA
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40

23,450

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HWY
MPG

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MS
RP $27,520. Sale price after $4,070 SALE PRICE

20,950

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register
regi
stereded aann apapplic
registered
appliplicab
cabable competitive model or own a Kia with a current registration. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 081353. Model Z5222. Expires 5/4/15.

2016 KIA SORENTO

EPA
ESTIMATED

UP TO

$5,275

OFF MSRP!

1 AT

29
HWY

THE PERFECT
GETAWAY VEHICLE

23,450

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MPG

SALE PRICE

MSRP $27,225
M

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NEW 2015 CHEVROLET EQUINOX


VIN#124920. MSRP $25,395, Dealer Discount $5,400.
One at this price + lic title and doc fee

powerkia.com
866-981-1264
TEXT US AT 503-847-9374

3705 MARKET ST NE SALEM

Art for illustration only. Prices do not include Title, License, Doc Fees. Prices expire Mon. following publication.

19,995

NEW 2015 CHEVROLET TRAVERSE


VIN#124268. MSRP $32,270, Dealer Discount $6,275.
One at this price + lic title and doc fee

. Sale price after $3,775 Power Discount, *$500 KMF Bonus Cash & **$1,000 Loyalty or Comp Bonus. *Must
finance
fin with KMF to receive. Tier 1-7. 620+ Beacon. On approved credit. **Must currently own and have registered an applicable competitive
model
mo or own a Kia with a current registration. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 002096. Model 73222. Expires 5/4/15.

10-year/100,000-miles limited powertrain warranty


5-year/60,000-miles limited basic warranty
5-year/100,000-miles limited anti-perforation warranty
5-year/60,000-miles 24-hour roadside assistance*

12,995

25,995

503-769-7691
www.powerchevrolet.com

500 SW Sublimity Blvd, Sublimity


Just minutes east of Salem on Hwy 22 in Sublimity
Prices expire Monday following publication. Art for illustration only.
Prices do not include Lic, Title, Doc Fees. Prices expire Mon following publication.

POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM

L ET
V RO
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Chevrolet

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NEW 2015
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2011 ALTIMA HYBRID SEDAN $
STOCK #P13307, VIN #C185578

2013 NISSAN ROGUE AWD


STOCK #N2953A, Vin #606989

2013 NISSAN QUEST


STOCK #P12263, VIN #064933 SV

2013 NISSAN JUKE SL AWD

APR
FOR

1.9% 60 MONTHS
$31668 A MONTH
Model #11715, 1 @ this price, Vin #368276, Stock #N2889, MSRP $17,530, + DMV
Docs. Must nance with NMAC, Tier levels 1-3, on approved credit. Expiration 4/5/15.

STOCK #N3167A, VIN #T214150

2014 NISSAN MURANO


STOCK #P13238, VIN #510681

2013 NISSAN FRONTIER


STOCK #P12742C, VIN #714206

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17,888
$
21,872
$
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$
24,451
$
24,988

877-351-5689 | 503-581-3849 | www.powernissansalem.com


2755 Mission St SE | SALEM

When nanced with Oregon Community


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2014 GMC

38,977

2015 GMC

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2500 4WD

STK#G1808 / VIN#350616, MSRP $27,170, GM


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2015 BUICK

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STK#G1984 / VIN#174363, MSRP $38,230, GM


STK#G1973 / VIN#181129, MSRP $34,560, GM
CUSTOMER CASH $1,000, POWER DISCOUNT $3,453. CUSTOMER CASH $1,250, POWER DISCOUNT $2,583.
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2015 BUICK

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30,727

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2015 GMC

ACADIA
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STK#G2065 / VIN#147206, MSRP $52,085, GM
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$
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Prices expire Monday following publication. Art is for illustrations


purposes only. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Tax, license, title
and registration processing fees extra.

powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS powermazda.com

Art for illustration


Prices60
do not
include Title,
License, Doc Fees.FLAG
Prices expire Mon. following publication.
LOOK
FORonly.
THE
FOOT
AMERICAN

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Model # 13115, 2 @ This price, Vin # 101312 & 100921. Vin # 101312, MSRP
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2015 Mazda3

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2015 Mazda6

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2015 Mazda CX-5

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Sale Price $27,652 after $953 Power discount. MSRP $28,605, payment based on
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USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL

APRIL 5, 2015 SECTION U

When rain
wont go
away, take
it in stride,
3U

SUNDAY
CALENDAR
Plan your week in entertainment with these highlights
and pop-culture milestones.

MONDAY
Buy: Season 5 of HBOs
Game of Thrones
premieres next Sunday,
but fans can pick up the
newest GOT beer, ThreeEyed Raven, today. The
dark saison ale is part of the
collection crafted by Brewery
Ommegang.

TUESDAY
Listen: American
jam band Blues
Traveler releases
its newest studio
album, Blow Up
The Moon, today via Loud &
Proud Records. The album will
feature an array of familiar
artists, including Hanson,
Jewel and Bowling for Soup.

Disney for VIPs: Its a


luxe world after all, 4U
KENT PHILLIPS, DISNEY

MUSIC

ITS FESTIVAL SEASON


BUT WHERE HAVE ALL THE

WOMEN
GONE?

WEDNESDAY
Watch: Lifetime Movie Networks newest original series,
I Love You ... But I Lied,
will portray true stories of family
secrets and personal deception
in a documentary-like style.
The show premieres tonight
at 10 ET.

THURSDAY

RICK KERN, GETTY IMAGES, FOR SAMSUNG

Billy Crystal joins Josh Gad


at SXSW last month in Austin.

Watch: FX is set for a big night


of comedy on TV as its new
series The Comedians,
starring Billy Crystal, premieres
tonight at 10 ET, followed by
the Season 5 premiere of
Emmy-Award winning comedy
Louie at 10:30.

FRIDAY
See: A new Nicholas Sparks
adaptation hits theaters today:
In The Longest Ride, Scott
Eastwood is a rodeo guy, and
Britt Robertson is a student
heading to New York. Is it love?
Compiled by Kristin Musulin

USA SNAPSHOTS

Full of beans
More than 16 billion jelly beans
are made for Easter.
Most popular flavors:

24%

Cherry
Strawberry

19%
15%

Licorice

13%

Lemon

8% Grape
Some 22% prefer other avor; exceeds
100% because of rounding
Source National Confectioners
Association survey of 1,335 U.S. adults

CHRISTOPHER POLK, GETTY IMAGES, FOR COACHELLA

Of nearly
160 acts
at this
years
Coachella
festival,
only 26
are
femalefronted
about
16%.
Other
festivals
numbers
are
similar.

Patrick Ryan
USA TODAY

f you want to headline a music festival, it helps to have


a Y chromosome.
Paul McCartney,
AC/DC,
Kendrick
Lamar and Sam Smith are
among the dozens of male music acts with top billing at this
summers major fests, which
kick off Friday with the mammoth Coachella in Indio, Calif.,
and continue through August
across the country.
But only a handful of women
are headlining this years events,
including Florence and the Machine, Alabama Shakes, Lana
Del Rey and Sleater-Kinney.
Tally up all the female artists
names, and the gender imbalance is even more startling.
Out of nearly 160 artists, only
26 at Coachella are femalefronted acts about 16%. Similarly, fewer than 20 of the 100
artists appearing at Bonnaroo
(June 11-14 in Manchester,
Tenn.) are female. Roughly 30 of
the 135 bands playing Lollapalooza (July 31-Aug. 2 in Chicago)
are women-led. Smaller fests
such as Hangout (May 15-17 in
Gulf Shores, Ala.) and Sweetlife
(May 30-31 in Columbia, Md.)

MERRICK ALES, FILMMAGIC

Theres no nice
green room
where you can
take a nap and
someones going
to blow a fan
at you.
Sarah Barthel, Phantogram

fare slightly better, with


about 25% and 35%
female
artists,
respectively.
The gap is not new, either. Despite women
such as Lorde, Haim and
Ellie Goulding playing
multiple fests on the circuit last year, Coachella still
had only 28 female-fronted
acts in 2014, according to Slate.
And in 2013, Buzzfeed ran
through Coachellas lineups
since its inception in 1999 and
reported that only two women
have had the festivals highest
billing: Bjrk in 2002 and 2007,
and Portishead in 2008. The
event has never had more than a
25% female lineup.
Coachella producer Goldenvoice declined interviews for
this article, and an e-mail to
Bonnaroo co-producer Supery
Presents was not returned.
But other festival promoters
say the shortage of women is not
for a lack of trying.
A lot of it is just timing:
Whos got a record cycle? Whos
going out? Are they playing other stuff thats in the radius?
says Hangout director Sean
OConnell. Its unfortunate, but
its going to happen. Theres
denitely offers going out.

Ellie
Goulding
was one
of the few
female
artists performing at
Coachella
last year.

Fests
for all
tastes
Listings 2U

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2U

ANNE R. CAREY AND A. GONZALEZ, USA TODAY

TELEVISION

Mad Men set the bar low, then shattered it


Bill Keveney
USA TODAY

As many things as
they did right with Mad Men, creator Matthew Weiner and star
Jon Hamm were not the best
handicappers of the AMC dramas prospects before it premiered in 2007.
Weiner says he didnt expect
big success, and Hamm, who
brought brilliant, troubled ad
man Don Draper to life, was
even less delusional. From the beLOS ANGELES

MICHAEL YARISH, AMC

Jon Hamm plays the complex,


conicted Don Draper.
ginning, he was saying the pilot
would be the end of it but that we

had a great time.


The writer and actor were off
by seven seasons, not to mention
four consecutive Emmys for best
drama. Weiners critically acclaimed story of 1960s New York
advertising men became a cultural phenomenon and helped usher
in an era of quality drama on basic-cable networks. Men returns
for its nal seven episodes tonight at 10 ET/PT.
Mens inuence is apparent in
current museum exhibits, such as
one at New Yorks Museum of the
Moving Image that features Dons

office and the Draper kitchen. It


remains an incredibly evocative
thing, Hamm says.
After career, romantic and
family ups and downs, Don spent
last years episodes ghting to
get his job back, ghting to repair
his relationship with (colleague)
Peggy, ghting to get his self-respect back even as colleagues
and family members focus on
their own lives, Weiner says.
He believes viewers have been
drawn to the real-life nature of
the drama. Someone is not saying, You killed my father.

Theyre saying, You lied to me.


What people in the audience have
responded to, and what weve
tried to do, is say, That is the drama in our life, Weiner says.
Don has been behaving in a universe that we occupy.
Hamm cant pick a favorite episode or moment. Its been a singular experience in many ways. ...
a eld of points of excitement. At
the end of it, you step back and
you realize all those points have
created this picture. Im thrilled
to have been part of it and of the
impact it has made with people.

2U

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

CELEBRITY SUPERLATIVES
Electric Forest Rothbury, Mich.,
June 25-28
Just three hours outside Detroit, this
wooded escape comes alive with
eccentrically dressed patrons, psychedelic art installations and dozens of
EDM, folk and bluegrass artists. Headliners: The String Cheese Incident,
Bassnectar, Skrillex, Flume, Kaskade.
electricforestfestival.com

GET YOUR SUMMER


MUSIC FEST ON
With dozens of music festivals scheduled between now and Labor Day, there
are plenty of choices for every taste.
USA TODAYs Patrick Ryan rounds up
this seasons top tuneful escapes:
Coachella Indio, Calif., April 10-12, 17-19
The colossal desert fest, in its 16th year,
is back for two weekends. Headliners:
Jack White, Drake, AC/DC, Florence and
the Machine, The Weeknd.
coachella.com
Stagecoach Indio, Calif., April 24-26
Less than a week after Coachella
shutters here, the biggest names in
country music ride into town. Headliners: Tim McGraw, Miranda Lambert,
Blake Shelton, Dierks Bentley, The Band
Perry. stagecoachfestival.com
New Orleans Jazz and Heritage
New Orleans, April 24-May 3
The longstanding fest is a cultural
mecca for food, crafts and genrespanning performances. Headliners:
Elton John, The Who, Keith Urban,
Jimmy Buffett, Tony Bennett and Lady
Gaga. nojazzfest.com
Welcome to Rockville
Jacksonville, April 25-26
Goth-rock icons and heavy-metal
upstarts converge on Metropolitan Park.
Headliners: Korn, Marilyn Manson,
Slayer, Halestorm, Ministry.
welcometorockvillefestival.com
SunFest West Palm Beach,
Fla.,
April 29-May 3
More than 175,000 visitors
annually flock to Floridas
largest waterfront arts
and music festival. Headliners: Fall Out Boy, Pixies,
Lenny Kravitz, Paramore,
Hozier. sunfest.com

CHRIS WEEKS, GETTY IMAGES FOR REEBOK

Kendrick Lamar headlines multiple festivals, including Bonnaroo.


Rocklahoma Pryor, Okla., May 22-24
A part of Worlds Loudest Month series,
this hard-rock fest welcomes veteran and
up-and-coming bands to its campgrounds outside of Tulsa. Headliners:
Linkin Park, Tesla, Godsmack, Slayer,
Volbeat. rocklahoma.com
Boston Calling Boston, May 22-24
Now in its third year, the twice-a-year
fest kicks off at Bostons City Hall Plaza.
Headliners: Beck, My Morning Jacket,
Pixies, Tame Impala, Ben Harper and the
Innocent Criminals. bostoncalling.com
Sasquatch! George, Wash., May 22-25
Attendees have been trekking to this
Northwest fest, held at the renowned
Gorge Amphitheater, since 2002. Headliners: Kendrick Lamar, Modest Mouse,
Sleater-Kinney, Lana Del Rey, Of Monsters and Men.
sasquatchfestival.com
Sweetlife Columbia, Md.,
May 30-31
The D.C.-area fest expands
to two days in its sixth year.
Headliners: Calvin Harris,
Kendrick Lamar, The
Weeknd, Charli XCX, Bleachers. sweetlifefestival.com

Stopover Seaside Heights, N.J.,


June 5-6
GETTY IMAGES
iHeartRadio Country Festival
This intimate New Jersey event is
Sam Smith is the first of four U.S. festivals
Austin, May 2
Before iHeartRadio Music
set for sever- Mumford and Sons has curated
Festival invades Sin City in the
al festivals.
for the summer, with stops in
fall, it throws this one-day
Iowa, Washington and Colorado
country jamboree. Headliners: Tim
to follow. Headliners: Mumford and Sons,
McGraw, Brad Paisley, Dierks Bentley,
The Flaming Lips, Alabama Shakes,
Rascal Flatts, Darius Rucker.
Jenny Lewis, Dawes.
news.iheart.com/features/
gentlemenoftheroad.com/stopovers
iheartradio-country-festival-25
Governors Ball, New York, June 5-7
Big Guava Tampa, May 8-9
City slickers make the hike to Randalls
Alt-rock and EDM acts take over four
Island by subway, bus, car and ferry for
stages at the Florida State Fairgrounds
this three-day event. Headliners: Drake,
and MidFlorida Credit Union Amphithe- The Black Keys, Deadmau5, Lana Del Rey,
ater. Headliners: The Strokes, Pretty
Florence and the Machine.
Lights, Passion Pit, TV on the Radio,
governorsballmusicfestival.com
Awolnation. bigguavafest.com
Free Press Summer Houston, June 6-7
Shaky Knees Atlanta, May 8-10
Paint slides and music workshops are a
The Peach State-fest hosts indie rock,
couple of the additional attractions at
pop and folk acts for a third year.
this two-day event, organized by local
Headliners: The Strokes, Pixies, Mastarts newspaper Free Press Houston.
odon, Brand New, James Blake.
Headliners: Skrillex, R. Kelly, Charli XCX,
shakykneesfestival.com
Weezer, Major Lazer. fpsf.com
Rock in Rio USA Las Vegas,
Bonnaroo Manchester, Tenn., June 11-14
May 8-9, May 15-16
Despite broiling temperatures, music
The North American edition of the
fans nationwide continue swarming to
popular global fest kicks off its inauguthis sprawling, eclectic fest. Headliners:
ral run. Headliners: (week 1) No Doubt,
Billy Joel, Mumford and Sons, Kendrick
Metallica; (week 2) Taylor Swift, Bruno
Lamar, Florence and the Machine, My
Mars, Ed Sheeran. rockinrio.com/usa
Morning Jacket. bonnaroo.com
Hangout Gulf Shores, Ala., May 15-17
CMA Music Festival Nashville, June 11-14
More than 40,000 festivalgoers flock to
Along with the nightly ticketed entertainthe beach for three days of songs, sand ment, there are seven stages of free
and sunshine. Headliners: Foo Fighters,
concerts in downtown Nashville. HeadlinSam Smith, Zac Brown Band, Beck,
ers: Brad Paisley, Eric Church, Brett
Skrillex. hangoutmusicfest.com
Eldredge, Lady Antebellum, Cole Swindell. cmaworld.com/cma-music-festival
Rock on the Range Columbus, Ohio,
May 15-17
Spring Awakening Chicago, June 12-14
Started in 2007, this fest has regularly
Popular DJs and EDM newcomers light
drawn more than 100,000 heavy-metal
up Chicagos Soldier Field stadium for a
fans to Mapfre Stadium (formerly Crew
fourth year. Headliners: Zedd, Hardwell,
Stadium). Headliners: Slipknot, Judas
Diplo, Tisto, Afrojack.
Priest, Linkin Park, Godsmack, Marilyn
springawakeningfestival.com
Manson. rockontherange.com
Firefly Dover, Del., June 18-21
Lightning in a Bottle Bradley, Calif.,
A diverse mix of hip hop, pop and classic
May 21-25
rock artists, set against the forest backMeditate, practice yoga and chill out to
drop of the Woodlands. Headliners:
electronic music at this desert oasis
Paul McCartney, Kings of Leon,
gathering. Headliners: Flume, SBTRKT,
The Killers, Morrissey, Snoop Dogg.
Odesza, Tycho, Panda Bear.
fireflyfestival.com
lightninginabottle.org
Summerfest Milwaukee,
CounterPoint Kingston Downs, Ga.,
June 24-28, June 30-July 5
May 22-24
Touted as the worlds largest musical
Enjoy food, art installations and EDM at
festival, it welcomes more than 800 acts
this three-day event an hour outside
over 11 days and draws 900,000 music
Atlanta. Headliners: Widespread Panic,
fans. Headliners: Florida Georgia Line,
Zedd, The Roots, Kygo, Dillon Francis.
Keith Urban, Kendrick Lamar, Ed Sheecounterpointfestival.com
ran, Kings of Leon. summerfest.com

Essence New Orleans, July 2-5


The popular fest celebrates the best in
African-American talent and culture,
with a diverse group of artists and
speakers on its annual slate. Headliners: Usher, Mary J. Blige, Kendrick
Lamar, Missy Elliott, Common.
essence.com/festival
Bunbury, Cincinnati, July 5-7
The banks of the Ohio River are flooded
with craft beer, indie rock and six stages
during this three-day event (named for
an imaginary friend in an Oscar Wilde
play, whom a character invents as an
excuse to escape from relatives).Headliners: The Black Keys, The Avett Brothers, Snoop Dogg, Tame Impala, The
Decemberists. bunburyfestival.com

(Hangout offered four potential


headlining slots to female artists,
none of which panned out due to
scheduling, OConnell adds.)
When taste-making music publication Pitchfork organizes its
annual Chicago fest, diversity is
something you denitely keep in
mind; you want to make sure the
festival is representative of all
genders and races, says Pitchfork
president Chris Kaskie. Given
that most artists playing this
years event (such as Sleater-Kinney and Chvrches) have already
been covered extensively by the
site, the good news is that we
dont obsess over the consideration, because its already a pretty
natural thing anyway.
Pitchforks priority is to accurately represent the current musical landscape a philosophy that
promoter Huston Powell of C3
Presents adopts while organizing
Lollapaloozas yearly rosters.
Its not like Im counting, out
of 130 bands, How many are
fronted by women? Powell says.
I feel like in a given year, if we
take care of the musical diversity,
the rest will kind of play out.
Instead, it could come down to
the continued scarcity of women
in rock, hip-hop and electronic
dance music all heavily featured at summer music festivals,
unlike pop. Also, most promoters
dont pursue top-40 staples for
top slots, although there have
been exceptions, such as Lady Gaga (who headlined Lollapalooza in
2010) and Beyonc (who closed
U.K.s Glastonbury fest in 2011.)
Every festival thrives on exceptions. Taylor Swift or Lady Gaga could kill it at Coachella, and
theyd be the exception there,
says Billboard editor in chief Joe
Levy. That said, the question is
whether or not festivals in general
can afford the kind of wildly en-

USA TODAYs Cindy Clark digs through the latest celebrity news for highlights ... and lowlights. Think high
school yearbook superlatives if Angelina Jolie and
Beyonc were classmates.

Pitchfork Chicago, July 17-19


The taste-making music publication
offers up its 10th festival in Chicagos
Union Park, hosting indie royalty and
virtual unknowns for more than 50,000
attendees. Headliners: Wilco, Chance
the Rapper, Sleater-Kinney, Future
Islands, Chvrches.
pitchforkmusicfestival.com
Forecastle Louisville, July 17-19
Founded in 2002, the homegrown
festival draws thousands to Louisvilles
85-acre Waterfront Park. Headliners:
Sam Smith, My Morning Jacket, Widespread Panic, Modest Mouse, Cage the
Elephant. forecastlefest.com
Newport (R.I.) Folk Festival July 24-26
Since its 1959 inception, the festival has
helped introduce the likes of Joan Baez
and Bob Dylan to the masses. Headliners: The Lone Bellow, Brandi Carlile, First
Aid Kit, Courtney Barnett, Shakey
Graves. newportfolk.org
Lollapalooza Chicago, July 31-Aug. 2
The all-embracing Grant Park festival
sold out in just 45 minutes when tickets
went on sale last month. Headliners:
Paul McCartney, Metallica, Florence and
the Machine, Sam Smith, Alt-J.
lollapalooza.com
Newport (R.I.) Jazz Fest July 31-Aug. 2
The famed event has hosted icons such
as Miles Davis, Duke Ellington and Billie
Holiday; it celebrated its 60th anniversary last year. Headliners: Chris Botti,
Jamie Cullum, Cassandra Wilson, Arturo
Sandoval, Dr. John.
newsportjazzfest.org
Telluride (Colo.) Jazz July 31-Aug. 2
Nestled in a narrow canyon, the annual
celebration has welcomed jazz, soul
and brass bands for nearly 40 years.
Headliners: Ernie Watts, The M&Ms,
Maceo Parker, Bill Frisell Trio, Joey
DeFrancesco. telluridejazz.org
Outside Lands San Francisco, Aug. 7-9
Along with the smorgasbord of headliners, festivalgoers can sample a wide
selection of gourmet cuisine. Headliners: Elton John, Mumford and Sons, The
Black Keys, Kendrick Lamar, DAngelo
and the Vanguard. sfoutsidelands.com

BEST GIRL GROUP REUNION: DESTINYS CHILD

Surprise! Former Destinys Child trio Beyonc, Kelly Rowland and


Michelle Williams reunited on stage at the Stellar Gospel Music
Awards, where they performed Say Yes. Its actually a song from
Williams fourth studio album, Journey to Freedom, which features
her former girl group members and was nominated for several
awards. The performance was the rst time the ladies have sung
together since Beyoncs 2013 Super Bowl halftime show.
CUTEST WE WON! FACES:
ANGELINA JOLIES KIDS

It doesnt get much cuter than this!


Angelina Jolie and two of her children, Zahara and Shiloh, celebrated
March 28 after the actress was
named best villain for her role in
Malecent during Nickelodeons 28th
Annual Kids Choice Awards.
SWEETEST BABY PHOTO
REVEAL: CARRIE
UNDERWOOD

The singer nally shared a


photo of her newborn son
on Instagram, and she did it
in an adorable way. Underwoods hubby, Mike
Fisher, plays hockey for the
Nashville Predators, so it
would only seem natural
that little Isaiah would
inherit a love for the game,
right? In the photo, Isaiah
clutches a mini hockey stick
and Underwood jokes
that the napping newborn
is prepared to step in!

KEVIN WINTER, GETTY IMAGES FOR IHEARTMEDIA

Brian Kelley, left, and Tyler Hubbard of Florida Georgia Line.


Texas Thunder
Gardendale, Texas, Aug. 21-23
This laid-back, farmland fest, now in its
third year, is revving up another A-list
set of country headliners. Headliners:
Florida Georgia Line, Brad Paisley, Big
and Rich, Thomas Rhett, Clare Dunn.
texasthunderfest.com

Fans notice the disparity


v CONTINUED FROM 1U

Best, brightest
and the bomb

you see on tour and the girls you


meet, because theyre usually
just as dirty as you and you kind
of have to think like a guy.
Theres no nice green room
where you can take a nap and
someones going to blow a fan at
you.
Most artists at festivals are the
hungrier bands that tour their
(butts) off and spend as much
time as they can on the road,
she adds. You dont see many
women in that world because its
pretty hard to do in that aspect.
Its not very glamorous.

BEST ROYAL PHOTOBOMB:


A PICTURE OF GEORGE

Prince Charles recorded a


video for Earth Hour, but we
have no idea what he said; we
were too distracted by the
adorable photo of his grandson, Prince George, in the
background. Its a pic of
Prince Charles holding the
future heir to the throne,
who couldnt be cuter!
MOST PLAYFUL AWARD TEASE:
JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE

Its no surprise that when Taylor


Swift wins an award, she gets
really, really excited and
makes lots of faces to show it. So
when her name was announced
for winning best lyrics for her
song Blank Space at the iHeart
Radio Music Awards, Justin Timberlake followed suit, jumping up
and making excited faces of his own!

THE DEMAND IS THERE


TAYLOR HILL, WIREIMAGE

Carrie Brownstein and Sleater-Kinney will perform at


Pitchfork Music Festival July
17-19 in Chicago.
tertaining spectacles the biggest
women in touring put on.
Acts of that caliber can go on a
stadium tour and make more than
they would at a festival show,
says Alex Young, founder of music/lm site Consequence of
Sound. After all, the likes of
Beyonc, Katy Perry and Cher all
scored some of the top-grossing
tours of 2014, Billboard says. Upcoming jaunts from Madonna and
Taylor Swift are guaranteed to be
hot tickets, as well.
MORE INCLUSIVENESS

That doesnt change the fact that


there are still so few midsized and
up-and-coming female acts on
festival rosters. Sarah Barthel, one
half of electronic-rock duo Phantogram (with Josh Carter), has
played nearly every major event
on the circuit in recent years, and
soon heads to Hangout, Sweetlife
and Electric Forest (June 25-28 in
Rothbury, Mich.).
A lot of times wed go to a festival and Id be the only person
wearing high heels, Barthel says.
You always respect the women

But fans still want to see more


female faces. Brittnay Johnston,
23, of Los Angeles is going to
Coachella, whose lineup features
St. Vincent, FKA Twigs and
Sylvan Esso. Johnston didnt notice how few women were playing until she saw buzz on social
media, with Photoshopped lineups that eliminated male artists
to make a point about womens
festival numbers.
It denitely does make me
more inclined, when Im guring
out the smaller bands I want to
see, just to pick one who maybe
features a woman or just a solo
female act, Johnston says.
Alison Gary, 40, of Greenbelt,
Md., says she has noticed fewer
women on lineups as festivals
become more homogeneous.
But with so many ways to discover new artists online, she
says, its fans responsibility to
spearhead the change they want
to see.
I think music festivals used
to be about the people and now
theyve started to become about
the ad revenue and sales, Gary
says. Festivals are successful
based upon their attendance, so
we should use social media and
let our voices be heard, and get
what we want at these events.

DESTINYS CHILD BY MATTHEW EMMONS, USA TODAY SPORTS; JOLIE BY KEVIN WINTER, GETTY IMAGES;
UNDERWOOD BY CARRIE UNDERWOOD VIA INSTAGRAM; PRINCE CHARLES BY THE WORLD WILDLIFE FUND;
TIMBERLAKE BY KEVIN WINTER, GETTY IMAGES, FOR IHEARTMEDIA

Corrections & Clarifications

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

Larry Kramer

USA TODAY is committed


to accuracy. To reach us,
contact Standards Editor
Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com.
Please indicate whether
youre responding to
content online or in the
newspaper.

EDITOR IN CHIEF

David Callaway
PRESIDENT, ADVERTISING SALES

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PUZZLE ANSWERS

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

3U

FASHION

Heres the gear;


just add water
April showers bring May owers ...
and a whole host of fashion issues!
USA TODAYs Alison Maxwell rounds up
ways to stay dry and look cute doing it.

Pieni Unikko
umbrella, $69 at
Marimekko.com

BUY A RELIABLE
UMBRELLA
Oversized fuchsia blooms on
this unique umbrella serve
as a reminder of whats
to come in May.

INVEST IN
A RAINCOAT
Who says you have to
sacrice style to be
protected from the
elements? Marimekko
combines high fashion and
practicality in this slicker.

A sure way to rain on


your parade?
Losing your
umbrella!
Daveks got
you covered
with the Alert
umbrella, which
contains a bluetooth chip
that connects with an app on
your smartphone. If the
distance between the
umbrella chip and your
smartphone exceeds 30 feet,
you receive a warning.

Theres something to be
said for simplicity when
Mother Nature wreaks
havoc on your fashion
plans. A classic trench
coat goes with just
about anything and
will take you all the
way through April.

Sadellen
raincoat,
$325 at
Marimekko.com

Bootsi Tootsi
Moto rain
boots, $43.97
at Kohls.com

SWAP
STILETTOS
FOR RAIN
BOOTS

$125 at Davekny.com.
Available in late
summer/early fall.
Preorder on Daveks
Kickstarter page
through April 11 and
receive 20% off.

Coat, $49 at
JoeFresh.com
Martha Stewart
Pets T-shirt,
$8.99 on sale at
Petsmart.com

PROTECT
YOUR POOCH
Lets face it: Fido
isnt a fan of getting
sopping wet, either.
Keep him covered
and stylish with a
slicker.

Kamik
Poppies
oral rain
boots,
$59.99 at
Kohls.com

Prove that your pup


is the sweetest in the
neighborhood with a
cute Rain or shine
you are a friend of
mine shirt.

Prance through
puddles in
poppy-festooned boots!
Or, if youre looking for something a
little less sweet and girly, try these
edgy ankle boots. From a distance,
well bet nobody can even tell
theyre rain gear.

Martha Stewart
Pets ower raincoat,
$14.99 on sale at
Petsmart.com

HEALTH

Anti-wrinkle creams promise a lot, but . . .


Overblown claims
get products into
trouble with FDA

HOW TO PROTECT
YOUR SKIN
The American Academy
of Dermatology has this
advice on preventing and
fighting wrinkles:
uWear sunscreen
every day.
uDont try to tan, whether
outside or in a salon.
uMoisturize to improve
skins appearance.
uDont smoke it
contributes to wrinkling.
uIf you try a wrinkle
cream, give it some time
to work, but expect modest
results. Stop using any
product that stings or burns,
unless you are using it under
medical supervision.

Kim Painter
Special for USA TODAY

Wrinkles happen. And when


they do, many women, and some
men, start searching store aisles
or the Internet for a cure.
Although there is no such
thing, stores and websites are
happy to sell consumers wrinkle
creams and other anti-aging
products that, typically, promise
to reduce the appearance of ne
lines and wrinkles.
Lately, some are promising a
lot more and getting into trouble with the Food and Drug
Administration.
The number and type of
claims that we are seeing has
been increasing over the past ve
to 10 years, with the growth in the
market of anti-aging products,
Linda Katz, director of FDAs ofce of cosmetics and colors, said
in an email.
In a recent update for
consumers, the agency reminded
the public that products sold as
cosmetics a category that includes makeup and all non-prescription wrinkle creams are
not reviewed for effectiveness by
the FDA and so cannot make the
kind of claims allowed for approved drugs.
NO FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH

Claims that a product can


change the skins structure or function (by
stimulating the production of skin-rming collagen, for
example) are illegal,
the FDA says.
In recent years,
the agency has
sent
warning
letters to several
skin-care com-

LUISCAR/ISTOCKPHOTO
VIA GETTY IMAGES

THINKSTOCK/GETTY IMAGES

Boomers are
all fried, because
we grew up in an
era when there
wasnt any
sunscreen use.
Hopefully, the
Millennials will
do better.
Dermatology professor Richard Glogau

panies for making such claims.


Recipients have included Avon
and Lancme.
The most recent warning went
to StriVectin, a company that
makes pricey anti-aging potions
sold online and at stores such as
Bloomingdales and Nordstrom.
FDA called out the company
for, among other things, claiming
its Potent Wrinkle Reducing
Treatment ($99 for 1.7 oz.) was
clinically proven to change the
anatomy of a wrinkle and that its
Advanced
Tightening
Neck
Cream ($95 for 1.7 oz.) could
restore the elastin ber architecture improving resistance to
gravity.
In a statement, StriVectin said: We
stand by the efcacy of our
products and
are doing everything in our power to ensure that
our communication to the public
complies with the law.
The agency cant comment
on ongoing cases, Katz says.
Dermatologists say consumers
should know that theres no fountain of youth in a bottle and

that even drugs and procedures


offered by doctors cant undo a
lifetime of aging and sun damage.
There is nothing that is going
to take skin that looks 50 and
make it look 20, says Fayne Frey,
a dermatologist in West Nyack,
N.Y.
A CHEAPER SOLUTION

Frey, whose website FryFace


seeks to debunk skin care myths,
says non-prescription wrinkle
remedies can have a modest
effect, but so can any good moisturizer, including brands sold in
drugstores for less than $20 a
bottle.
You get a temporary increase
in water in skin, she says, and
that can help mask ne lines and
wrinkles.
The heavily marketed extra ingredients in anti-aging formulas
are mostly vitamins or watereddown retinoids, the active ingredient in drugs such as Retin-A,
Frey says. If they add anything to
the moisturizing effects, she says,
its minimal. They can also add
side effects, such as skin irritation, she says.
At her site, Frey recommends
some products from drugstore
brands such as Olay, Neutrogena
and Aveeno, but she says she has
no nancial ties with any of the

companies.
Over-the-counter products, including some with retinoids, can
improve the appearance of aging
skin when used every day for a
long time, says Jenny Kim, a dermatologist and researcher at the
University of California-Los
Angeles.
Theres no reason to think the
most expensive versions have any
advantages, she says unless the
high price makes users more likely to stick to their skin care regimens and stay out of the sun.
For patients who are willing to
spend even more and endure
more discomfort and risk there
are options available from doctors, including higher-dose prescription
retinoid
creams
approved by the FDA.
Some people nd those creams
too irritating at rst, so they may
want to start with lower-dose
options, says Richard Glogau, a
clinical professor of dermatology
at the University of CaliforniaSan Francisco.
Other options include Botox
injections, ller procedures and
laser resurfacing, all of which cost
at least several hundred dollars
per session and must be repeated
every few months or years, Kim
and Glogau say. Both have a nancial relationship with Botox
maker Allergan; Glogau also has
relationships with companies
that make llers.
But Frey, Kim and Glogau all
say the rst product they recommend for anyone concerned
about wrinkles is a broad-spectrum sunscreen with a sun protection factor of at least 30.
The FDA does allow cosmetics
containing proven sunscreens
(which are considered drugs) to
claim that they reduce the risk of
early skin aging caused by the
sun.
Sun exposure including the
light we get through car windows
and on cloudy days is the most
important cause of wrinkling, and
keeps causing damage as we age,
the doctors say.
The Boomers are all fried, because we grew up in an era when
there wasnt any sunscreen use,
Glogau says. Hopefully, the
Millennials will do better.

4U

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

TRAVEL
DISPATCHES

STEVEN FREEDMAN, PISGAH INN

Pisgah Inn on the Blue Ridge Parkway is No. 1 in readers hearts.

National park
lodges to love
The winners of the 10Best
Readers Choice award for Best
National Park Lodge are in.
Nominees in the contest, sponsored by USA TODAY and
10Best.com, were chosen by a
panel of experts and then voted
on by the public.
1. Pisgah Inn
Blue Ridge Parkway
2. Many Glacier Hotel
Glacier National Park
3. Jackson Lake Lodge
Grand Teton National Park
4. El Tovar
Grand Canyon National Park
5. Lake Crescent Lodge
Olympic National Park
6. Crater Lake Lodge
Crater Lake National Park
7. Old Faithful Inn
Yellowstone National Park
8. Paradise Inn
Mount Rainier National Park
9. Ahwahnee
Yosemite National Park
10. Chisos Mountains Lodge
Big Bend National Park
CHIME IN
A new Readers' Choice category
launched this week. Vote for
Best Family Travel Essential at
10best.com/awards/travel/.

JAZZMINE BEAULIEU

Premium seats on Megabus will


have special features.

Megabus adds
reserved seating
Taking a cue from the airline
industry, Megabus, an express
bus company, has started charging travelers for the most popular
seats.
For an extra fee of $1 to $7, customers can choose from 10 premium seats. The reserved seats,
which allow groups or families to
sit together, have solid blue coloring and large numbers embroidered onto the seat fabric.
Our customers have always
found certain seats on the bus to
be highly desirable, Megabus
.com CEO Dale Moser says.
Reserved seating, now available
on all of our double-decker
routes, allows our customers to
book their favorite seats in advance without the hassle of arriving over an hour early to secure
them.
The double-decker buses have
81 seats. The premium seats have
unique features such as a view or
tables, Moser says. Megabus operates in 130 cities around North
America. Popular routes include
Boston to New York and New
York to Washington, D.C.
Nancy Trejos

MATT STROSHANE, DISNEY

A private deck and plunge pool at the Bora Bora Bungalows allow a perfect view of the nightly reworks.

OVER-THE-TOP DISNEY
SPLURGE ON LUXURY, CONVENIENCE
From
yachts to
spas, the
House of
Mouse
offers
amenities
that will
cost you
quite a bit
of cheese

As soon
as I enter
the lobby,
I feel as
though
Im no
longer in
Walt
Disney
World,
but on a
luxurious
resort
getaway.
Disney expert
Lou Mongello

Sarah Sekula
Special for USA TODAY
ORLANDO A gentle breeze billows
off the water as seagulls squawk
and nearby spring breakers assume lounge position. On the
deck of a beach bungalow, I swing
in a hanging wicker chair in cadence with the waves rolling in. It
has the relaxing vibe of the dreamy South Pacic. Just one major
difference: the views of Space
Mountain.
Dotting the shoreline of Disneys Polynesian Village Resort,
the 20 Bora Bora Bungalows are
the rst of their kind on any Disney property. Each comes with a
private plunge pool (a prime spot
to view the nightly reworks).
And dont worry, you wont miss
out on the music: The soundtrack
is piped in through an individual
sound system.
The bungalows sleep as many
as eight guests in a cozy, two-bedroom setting. Starting at $2,137 a
night (or the equivalent amount
of DVC member points), its the
newest way to live out your
champagne wishes and caviar
dreams. Of course, beyond this
there are plenty of ways to add
sparkle on your next visit to The
Mouse. In other words, dishing
out the extra moolah, in these
cases, can be worth it.

SKIP THE LINES

Continue the diva-style vacation by signing up for a Private


Premium VIP Tour (starting at
$360 an hour with a minimum of
six hours). Heres how it works:
Your personal guide picks you up
at your Orlando-area hotel and
whisks you away to the parks of
your choice. Want hints on
where to nd hidden Mickeys? No problem. How
about sitting in the
front row for the Fantasmic! show?
It is expensive,
indeed, but you
can bring as many
as nine guests,
and you will
squeeze a heck of
a lot into your day.
Your guide will
breeze you through
the lines and score
special viewing areas
for
reworks
and
parades.
Be warned, though: After
this type of treatment, youre
spoiled for visiting the parks any
other way, especially during popular vacation seasons, such as
summer and the Christmas holidays, says Robert Niles, editor of
ThemeParkInsider.com.
INDULGENT EATS

When hunger kicks in, go beyond


the typical turkey legs and burgers, and book the chefs table at
Victoria & Alberts, a AAA FiveDiamond winner.
It remains one of my most
memorable dining experiences
anywhere in the world, says Lou

KENT PHILLIPS, DISNEY

Guests can unwind with a day of wellness and pampering, including


couples massages, at Senses Spa at Disneys Grand Floridian Resort.
SLEEP AT THE FANCIEST HOTEL

If the bungalows are booked, the Grand Floridian (starting at $517 a night) is
another swanky option.
For many guests looking for a high-end experience, it is their rst choice, says
Lou Mongello, Disney expert and host of the WDW Radio podcast. There is something wonderful and special about feeling as though you are indulging yourself a
bit, yet nothing about the resort is pompous or stuffy.
Here, parents can bump up the pampering with a couples massage ($275) at
Senses spa, while kids hit the Wonderland Tea Party or the Pirate Cruise.
What I love about it is the sense of escapism and elegance, Mongello says. As
soon as I enter the lobby, I feel as though Im no longer in Walt Disney World, but
instead on a luxurious resort getaway.
Plus, if you can afford it, staying on Disney property can bump up your experience, big-time.
Says Niles, It allows you to book reservations for the parks attractions 30 days
before anyone staying off-site and gets you access to the extended Extra Magic
Hours before or after the parks close to off-site guests.

GENE DUNCAN, DISNEY

In the Walt
Disney
Resorts eet
is the 52-foot
Sea Ray
yacht, which
can include
a gourmet
ve-course
meal and
private
butler.

Mongello, host of the WDW


Radio podcast. From the
staff to the presentation
of your meal, the overall experience is
remarkable.
Only one party
per evening is
seated for the
four-hour,
10course dining extravaganza.
Prices start at
$250 per person
with wine pairings
available for an addition $105 per guest.
From Italian truffles to
Japanese beef to an extensive wine list, its a popular choice for foodies.
If wine is your thing, California
Grill has 250 selections on its list,
and Trattoria al Forno has more
than 30 wines by the glass and
more than 60 by the bottle. Not
only can you sip the nest of
wines, but theres a good chance
youll be served by an expert. The
Walt Disney World Resort now
has more than 400 sommeliers.
CRUISE IN STYLE

When it comes to bragging rights,


what could be better than boarding a 52-foot yacht (starting at
$699)? Oh, and bringing up to 17

friends. Certainly this is how


Jay-Z and Beyonc must roll. You
can arrange for a gourmet, vecourse menu; be sure to request
the tuxedo strawberries. And
splurge for the private butler.
Being on a boat on the Seven
Seas Lagoon offers you a lovely
view of the reworks, but perhaps
more importantly, it allows you to
see them without being stuck in
the crush of visitors massed to
watch them on Main Street USA,
Niles says. And it gives you a
huge head start on getting back to
your hotel or the parking lot after
the show.
ONE-ON-ONE WITH HIPPOS

The Wild Africa Trek (starting at


$189 per person) at Animal Kingdom is something special. Guests
don safari vests for a private,
312-hour tour of the popular Kilimanjaro Safari attraction. They
feed hippos, cross a suspensionbridge (above dozens of crocs)
and dine on the deck of a savannah hut where animal sightings
are a guarantee. (Dont worry: A
professional photographer is with
you to capture it all.)
We were all surprised by how
isolated we managed to feel, says
Carina Graham, who took her son
for his 10th birthday. Like we
were not even at a Disney park.

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

5U

BOOKS

New &
noteworthy
USA TODAYs Jocelyn
McClurg scopes out
the hottest books on sale
each week.

Michelle Obama
by Peter Slevin (Knopf, non-ction,
on sale Tuesday)
WHAT ITS ABOUT: A

portrait of the rst lady,


tracing her journey
from reluctant candidates wife to activist for
military families and
childhood nutrition.
Peter
Slevin THE BUZZ: Informative ...
thoroughly researched,
Publishers Weekly says.

So That Happened

by Jon Cryer (New American Library, non-ction, on sale Tuesday)

A Fine Romance

WHAT ITS ABOUT: Cryers just-Duckie memoir covers


everything from his rst Hollywood romance (with
Demi Moore) to his years on the hit sitcom Two
and a Half Men.
THE BUZZ: The Hollywood Reporter recently excerpted
the juicy stuff about Charlie Sheen.

by Candice Bergen (Simon


& Schuster, non-ction,
on sale Tuesday)
WHAT ITS
ABOUT: Thirty

years after she


wrote Knock
Wood, the
actress, 68,
returns with a
new memoir
looking at her
years on Murphy Candice Bergen attends a
Brown and marball with her
riage to the late
rst husband,
lmmaker
lm director
Louis Malle.
Louis Malle.
THE BUZZ: Youve got to
love a former model
who proudly declares,
I am fat and I live to
eat in her new book.

WHAT ITS ABOUT: The author of Still

Alice tackles Huntingtons


disease in this novel about a
stricken Boston cop
and his family.
THE BUZZ: Its an
Indie Next pick
of independent
bookstores.
This is Genova
at her best and a
Lisa
story that will
Genova
provoke many
discussions, says Linda
Bond of Aunties Bookstore in Spokane, Wash.

BOOK BUZZ
NEW ON THE LIST
AND IN PUBLISHING

Digi-dating: BookCon is
turning into a Parks and Recreation reunion special. Aziz Ansari,
who played Tom Haverford on
the just-wrapped NBC sitcom, is
the latest TV star with a new
book signed up for the New York
event. Hell appear May 30 to
promote Modern Romance, which
explores dating in the digital age
(Penguin Press, on sale June 16).
Nick Offerman, also late of Parks
and Rec, has an event that day to
talk up his book, Gumption (Dutton, on sale May 26). Last year,
Parks and Rec star Amy Poehler
appeared at the inaugural BookCon to hype Yes Please. It became
a best seller, peaking at No. 5.
BookCon is open to the ticketbuying public.
Jocelyn McClurg

A Curious Mind: The


Secret to a Bigger Life

by Brian Grazer and Charles Fishman


(Simon & Schuster, non-ction, on sale
Tuesday)
WHAT ITS ABOUT: Producer

Grazers curiosity conversations with the likes


of Andy Warhol,
Princess Diana, Michael
Jackson and Barack
Obama have helped inspire his movies and TV
Brian
shows, from Apollo 13 to
Grazer Arrested Development.
THE BUZZ: Features a jacket blurb by
best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell: A captivating account of how
the simple act of asking questions
can change your life.
WHAT
AMERICAS
READING

BOOKLIST.USATODAY.COM
n Rank this week

THE TOP 10

Its a Girl: Publisher Knopf


has released the title and jacket
for a new book in the Millennium
series created by
the late Stieg
Larsson. The
Girl in the Spiders Web, by
Swedish author
David Lagercrantz, continues the Girl
theme of the
rst three blockbusters: The Girl
With the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl
Who Played With Fire and The
Girl Who Kicked the Hornets
Nest. Dragon Tattoo and Hornets
Nest both were No. 1 USA TODAY
best sellers. The authorized sequel, due Sept. 1, brings back
hacker Lisbeth Salander and
journalist Mikael Blomkvist.

Julianne
Moore won
an Oscar in
the title role
of Still
Alice.

Inside the OBriens

by Lisa Genova (Gallery Books, ction,


on sale Tuesday)

BERGEN AND MALLE BY SIMON AND


SCHUSTER; MOORE BY LINDA KALLERUS,
SONY PICTURES CLASSICS; GENOVA
BY GREG MENTZER; CRYER AND SHEEN
BY GREG GAYNE, WARNER BROS.;
SLEVIN BY ANDREW JOHNSTON;
GRAZER BY JEFF LIPSKY

Coben express: Harlan


Coben is no stranger to USA
TODAYs Best-Selling Books list.
His new thriller, The Stranger,
lands at No. 1. Coben derails The
Girl on the Train, which drops to
No. 2 after ve straight weeks at
No. 1. Paula Hawkins debut psychological thriller has been the
breakout hit of 2015, selling more
than 1 million copies. The Stranger, about a vigilante who exposes
secret online activities, is the
second Coben thriller to land at
No. 1. Six Years did so in 2013.

Jon Cryer
had a wild
ride with
Charlie
Sheen on
Two and a
Half Men.

n Rank last week (F) Fiction (NF) Non-ction (P) Paperback (H)Hardcover (E) E-book

Publisher in italics

The Stranger
Harlan Coben

A wife disappears after her husband


learns a devastating secret about her from
a stranger (F) (E) Dutton

Dead Wake
Erik Larson

Subtitle: The Last Crossing of the


Lusitania (NF) (H) Crown

The Girl on the Train


Paula Hawkins

Psychological thriller about the disappearance of a young married woman (F) (E)
Riverhead

American Sniper
Chris Kyle, Scott
McEwen, Jim DeFelice

Subtitle: The Autobiography of the


Most Lethal Sniper in U.S. Military History
(NF) (P) William Morrow Paperbacks

The Longest Ride


Nicholas Sparks

An injured old man remembers love with


his wife, and a new relationship (F) (E)
Grand Central Publishing

Paper Towns
John Green

Youth: Young man goes in search of his


missing crush (F) (E) Speak

Becoming Steve Jobs Subtitle: The Evolution of a Reckless


Brent Schlender
Upstart into a Visionary Leader (NF) (E)
and Rick Tetzeli
Crown Business

All the Light We


Cannot See
Anthony Doerr

The lives of a blind girl in France and a


member of the Hitler Youth converge
during World War II (F) (E) Scribner

NYPD Red 3
James Patterson,
Marshall Karp

10 8

Insurgent
Veronica Roth

Youth: War looms as conict grows between the factions; second in series (F) (E)
Katherine Tegen Books

Detectives Jordan and MacDonald investigate the disappearance of a billionaire businessman (F) (E) Little, Brown

The book list appears


every Thursday.
For each title, the format
and publisher listed are
for the best-selling
version of that title this
week. Reporting outlets
include Amazon.com,
Amazon Kindle, Barnes &
Noble.com, Barnes &
Noble Inc., Barnes &
Noble e-books,
BooksAMillion.com,
Books-A-Million, Costco,
Hudson Booksellers,
Joseph-Beth Booksellers
(Lexington, Ky.; Cincinnati,
Charlotte, Cleveland,
Pittsburgh), Kobo, Inc.,
Powell's Books (Portland,
Ore.), Powells.com, R.J.
Julia Booksellers
(Madison, Conn.), Schuler
Books & Music (Grand
Rapids, Okemos,
Eastwood, Alpine, Mich.),
Sony Reader Store,
Target, Tattered Cover
Book Store (Denver).

THE REST

11 15 The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up


Marie Kondo
12 11 The Nightingale/Kristin Hannah
13 29 Unbroken/Laura Hillenbrand
14 25 Allegiant/Veronica Roth
15 20 To Kill a Mockingbird/Harper Lee
16 26 The Husbands Secret/Liane Moriarty
17 96
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27

12
27
23

17
22
49
18
24
9

28
29
30
31

28
19
21
30

32
33
34 37
35
36
37
38
39

39

40
41
42
43

45

33

44 98
45 41
46 38
47 74
48
49 35
50 36

Subtitle: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing (NF) (H) Ten Speed Press

Historical ction about the choices two sisters must make in Nazi-occupied France (F) (E) St. Martins Press
Subtitle: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption (NF) (P) Random House Trade Paperbacks
Youth: Tris must battle to comprehend the complexities of human nature; nal in series (F) (E) Katherine Tegen Books
1960 coming-of-age classic about racism; Pulitzer winner; 1962 movie (F) (P) Grand Central Publishing
While her husband is away, Cecilia Fitzpatrick stumbles upon a letter meant to be opened upon his death (F) (P)
Berkley
The Escape/David Baldacci
Military investigator John Puller is called in when his own brother, convicted of treason, escapes from a high-security
prison (F) (P) Grand Central Publishing
Gone Girl/Gillian Flynn
When Nick Dunnes wife Amy disappears on their fth anniversary, he is considered a suspect (F) (E) Crown
Divergent/Veronica Roth
Youth: Tris harbors a secret that may help save those she loves (F) (E) Katherine Tegen Books
The Boys in the Boat/Daniel James Brown
Subtitle: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics (NF) (E) Penguin
Shopping for a Billionaire: The Collection/Julia Kent Contains the rst ve books of the series (F) (E) Julia Kent
A Spool of Blue Thread/Anne Tyler
A look at three generations of a family, as Abby and Red Whitshank grow older (F) (E) Knopf
Wild/Cheryl Strayed
The author recounts her life-changing journey hiking the Pacic Crest Trail (NF) (E) Knopf
The 20/20 Diet/Phil McGraw
Subtitle: Turn Your Weight Loss Vision Into Reality (NF) (H) Bird Street Books
Fifty Shades Darker/E.L. James
The erotic romance continues between Christian and Ana; second in trilogy (F) (E) Vintage
Still Alice: A Novel/Lisa Genova
The story of a 50-year-old womans sudden descent into early onset Alzheimers (F) (E) Pocket
Get Whats Yours/Laurence J. Kotlikoff, Philip
Subtitle: The Secrets to Maxing Out Your Social Security (NF) (H) Simon & Schuster
Moeller and Paul Solman
Last One Home/Debbie Macomber
Prodigal daughter Cassie Carter returns to her hometown hoping to start over (F) (E) Ballantine
Fifty Shades of Grey/E.L. James
A literature student and a young entrepreneur enter into an erotic relationship (F) (E) Vintage
Fifty Shades Freed/E.L. James
Christian and Ana navigate their differences to make their relationship work; nal in trilogy (F) (E) Vintage
Government hit men Will Robie and Jessica Reel have a new assignment from the president (F) (P) Grand Central
The Target/David Baldacci
Publishing
Ive Got You Under My Skin/Mary Higgins Clark
A little boy witnesses the murder of his father, a Manhattan doctor, at a city playground (F) (P)
Think Like a Freak/Steven D. Levitt, Stephen J.
Subtitle: The Authors of Freakonomics Offer to Retrain Your Brain (NF) (E) William Morrow
Dubner
Dark Places/Gillian Flynn
Libby Day testied her brother killed their family, but years later, facts emerge that lead her to question her belief
(F) (E) Broadway Books
Ready Player One/Ernest Cline
Wade Watts escapes his grim life by searching for a lottery ticket in a virtual world (F) (E) Crown
Outlander/Diana Gabaldon
Claire Randall is hurled back in time; rst in series; basis for Starz series (F) (E) Dell
Cuba Straits/Randy Wayne White
Doc Ford investigates the disappearance of an old friend; 22nd in series (F) (E) G.P. Putnams Sons
The Six Wives of Henry VIII/Alison Weir
The story of the English monarch and the six women he married (NF) (E) Grove/Atlantic
Manwhore/Katy Evans
Journalist Rachel Livingston is assigned to write an expose on Malcolm Kyle, Chicagos premier playboy; rst in series
(F) (E) Gallery Books
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul/Jeff Kinney
Youth: Greg Heffleys family road trip takes an unexpected turn (F) (H) Amulet Books
Deep Storm/Lincoln Child
The discovery of Atlantis might be a cover for something far more sinister (F) (E) Anchor
Prodigal Son/Danielle Steel
Peter returns home and reuniteswith his twin, Michael, who is not all he appears to be (F) (H) Delacorte
The Silent Girls/Eric Rickstad
Frank Rath retires from the force to raise his daughter only to be pulled back in to help the police when a local girl
goes missing (F) (E) Witness Impulse
Happy Easter, Mouse!/Laura Joffe Numeroff,
Children: The mouse from If You Give a Mouse a Cookie tries to gure out whos leaving Easter eggs all over his
Felicia Bond
house (F) (H) HarperFestival
Orphan Train/Christina Baker Kline
The story of two women separated by generations but united with a common past (F) (E) William Morrow Paperbacks
The Assassin/Clive Cussler and Justin Scott
Private detective Isaac Bell hunts down an assassin targeting opponents of Standard Oil (F) (E) G.P. Putnams Sons
Detective Harry Bosch and his rookie partner, Detective Lucia Soto, investigate a cold case (F) (H) Grand Central
The Burning Room/Michael Connelly
Publishing
Consolation /Corinne Michaels
Widow Natalie nds solace with her late husbands best friend; rst in series (F) (E) BAAE Publishing
One Wish/Robyn Carr
Grace moves to Thunder Point to escape her old life, and nds more than just a friend in Troy (F) (P) Harlequin MIRA
StrengthsFinder 2.0/Tom Rath
Lifetime strategies for using your talents (NF) (H) Gallup

6U

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

SCREEN CHECK
WEB TO WATCH

Compiled by Daniel Hurwitz


and Lorena Blas

OUR TOP PICKS

Weird Loners
Channel: Hulu
A new Fox comedy about four relationship-challenged mid-thirtysomethings.
hulu.com/weird-loners

ACORN TV

Sarah Adams (Marta Dusseldorp) returns home


to nd Australia has changed since she left.

SARAH IS SEARCHING FOR HER PLACE

Season 2 of A Place to Call Home, the Australian family drama set in the 1950s, makes
its debut Monday on Acorn TV. Season 1 is
available on the streaming service for those
who need to catch up with the story about a
woman who returns home after decades
overseas. Marta Dusseldorp is Sarah, who
hopes for a new life in Australia. Season 2s
10 episodes will be released Mondays
throughout April.
acorn.tv

PaleyLive panel: The cast of Veep


Channel: Yahoo Screen
The cast of the HBO comedy talk about
the show in a live-streaming presentation.
screen.yahoo.com

DHX MEDIA/NETFLIX

GO, GO CATCH UP WITH INSPECTOR GADGET

ALL ONLINE TV
WEBTOWATCH.USATODAY.COM

Check out webisodes, Internet TV


and online programming.

Go-go Gadget has arrived at Netix. The animated reboot of Inspector Gadget,
the beloved 1980s cartoon about the bumbling bionic private eye, is available
on the streaming platform. Look for every episode of the CGI animated show.

The Brothers Grimm


Channel: Amazon
Heath Ledger and Matt Damon star in the 2005
feature lm about the famous siblings.
amazon.com

netix.com

TONIGHT ON TV
CRITICS
CORNER
Robert Bianco
@BiancoRobert
USA TODAY

A.D. THE BIBLE CONTINUES


NBC, 9 ET/PT

THE TEN COMMANDMENTS


ABC, 7 ET/PT

The producers of The Bible return with this sequel, which will
(eventually) more fully explore
the early years of the new Christian church. First, however, A.D.
revisits territory covered in the
earlier miniseries, starting with
this opening episode on the
death and resurrection of Christ.
The success of The Bible, however, seems to have blessed this
second effort with a larger budget and a stronger, more diverse
cast all in service of a straightforward and sincere retelling of
the Crucixion, brought lovingly
to life with a few expansions but
without any signicant revisions.
If you loved The Bible, youre
probably going to love A.D. If
you found The Bible hokey, A.D.
probably will at least strike you
as an improvement.

The production is lavish, the special effects


still dazzle, and the performances are, well,
unusual which makes this beloved ABC
Easter tradition one of those lms people
enjoy on different levels for different
reasons. On this holiday, lets allow
everyone to enjoy it in peace.

CHARLTON HESTON AND YUL BRYNNER BY PARAMOUNT

PUZZLES

ON THE VERGE KELSEA BALLERINI


SPOTLIGHT ON BREAKTHROUGH ARTISTS

One eye on the road,


another on stardom
Brian Mansfield
USA TODAY
GOOD WAY TO HAVE A WRECK:

The rst time Kelsea Ballerini


heard her single Love Me Like
You Mean It on the radio, she had
her steering wheel in one hand
and her GPS in the other, trying
to merge onto the interstate. I
turned it up, and it was awesome, the 21-year-old country
singer says. Also awesome: having
Taylor Swift tweet about driving
around with Ballerinis EP on repeat. Now, Love Me Like You
Mean It is No. 22 on USA TODAYs Country airplay chart and
has sold 126,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Album
The First Time is due May 19.
CANT TRUST A COW: Ballerini
grew up near Knoxville, Tenn., on
a small farm with three cows and
a goat. She liked to play with the
animals, though sometimes they
didnt play nice. I always thought
it was a goat that kicked me over
the fence, she says. My mama
told me the other day it was a
cow. Now Im scared of both.
A GIFT THAT KEEPS ON GIVING:

A professed procrastinator, Ballerini wrote her rst song for her


mother because she hadnt
bought a Mothers Day present.
I called it Oh Mama, and she
loved it she cried, Ballerini
says. For a while, I would write
her another verse every Mothers
Day.
Though she
already had begun writing songs,
Ballerini was drawn into country
music by Keith Urbans 2006 single Stupid Boy. One can easily
imagine Love Me Like You Mean
It being sung to Urbans stupid
boy. After Urbans record, she
says, her songs started coming
URBAN INFLUENCE:

JEREMY RYAN

from a place of condence,


whereas what I was writing before came from heartbreak.
FALLING SLOWLY, THEN ALL AT
ONCE: She took 10 years of dance

Ballerini
has earned
Taylor
Swifts
stamp of
approval.

lessons as a child, so naturally


other kids called her Ballerini
the Ballerina. In college, though,
her nickname became The
Fainting Kitten. Theres a YouTube video of these two kittens
that just fall over
and pass out, she
says. My blood
Dont be a
sugars crazy, so I
voice thats
would pass out
sometimes, like
already
a voice
the
fainting
nd what
kittens.
A SWIFT LESSON:

you want to say

As a 14-year-old,
and how you
Ballerini went to
want to say it.
Nashville to meet
with record laOn the best lesson she has learned
bels. At her rst
appointment, she
pulled her guitar out of its sparkly
pink case and played a song, only
to have an executive tell her,
Dont you know theres already a
Taylor Swift? I thought it was
the meanest thing anybody could
ever say to me, and I canceled my
second meeting and went home,
she says. It ended up being the
most valuable lesson I could have
learned that early: not to be a
voice thats already a voice to
nd what you want to say and
how you want to say it.

VIRGINIA SHERWOOD, NBC

Odelle (Anna Friel) is drawn


into a sinister conspiracy.

AMERICAN ODYSSEY
NBC, 10 ET/PT

Three far-ung Americans


separately stumble upon a
secret military-industrialcomplex plot to nance
terrorists. Eventually fate
will bring them together,
assuming viewers and
NBC have enough patience
to get them there.

Answers placed on Life page 2


Play more puzzles at puzzles.usatoday.com
Puzzle problems? Contact us at feedback@usatoday.com

CROSSWORD
EDitED Timothy Parker
By Kenneth Holt

10,000 POUNDS
ACROSS
1 Type of alcoholic
beverage
4 Deprive, in a way
9 Blend
14 Bagel store offering
15 Grand piece of
furniture
16 Visibly shocked
17 It may block a
compromise
18 Where florists
vacation in
Indiana?
20 Vertical face of a
stair
22 Big-time rocket
launchers
23 Line up the
crosshairs
26 Some abridged
books
31 Bring out
33 Embark, as on a
journey
34 Aviv lead-in
36 Table, in meetings
38 Brown in a pan
39 Word from a
pastor
41 Hall in New Jersey?
43 Place below decks
44 Like a decorated
Christmas tree
46 Line on a letter
48 Time pieces (Abbr.)
49 Fabrics or textiles
51 Capital city named
for Queen Victoria
53 Having feelings
55 Cocktail contents,
sometimes
58 Pro ___ (in
proportion)
60 Say without really
saying
61 Adam didnt
have one
67 You can get one
from a bottle or a
booth
68 Bermuda or pearl

Universal Uclick

69
70
71
72

Accomplishing
Lennons bride
Privately for two
Theyre crossed
in Olympic
competition
73 Homer Simpsons
next-door neighbor
DOWN
1 Danger notice
2 Sayings of Jesus
3 Insects hard outer
covering
4 Chew out
5 Soccer zero
6 Longtime Chinese
chairman
7 Auth. unknown
8 Wandering one
9 Runs, as a business
10 Coddled thing
11 Mouses cousin
12 Feds document
producer

4/5

13 Cant ending?
19 Egyptian fertility
deity
21 Anago, really
24 Chills, as a beverage
25 Marathoners
measures
27 Pilots announcements,
briefly
28 Titanics departure
point
29 Teach one-on-one
30 Beef entrees
32 Snuffy Smiths kid
34 Afterbath powders
35 Boxer Griffith
37 Yesteryears
40 Cashews, e.g.
42 Near, poetically
45 Passage to the
stomach and lungs
47 Harsh dismissals
50 Knife thrust
52 Bus or rod
attachment

Answrs: Call 1-900-988-8300, 99 cents a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-320-4280.

54 Practice piece for one


instrument
56 Speedy transport
57 Assembly of church
delegates
59 At the summit of
61 Flamboyant wrap
62 Place to burn a
candle?
63 Be less than honest
64 Strongman
Ferrigno
65 Overtime
justification
66 Smallest dining
party

CROSSWORDS
ON yOUR PhONe
mobilegames.usatoday.com

 
  



   

LOCAL FIRST
SPORTS

CAUSES

TRIPLE CROWN

A PLACE TO PLAY

TODAY'S WEATHER
90 HIGH

Volunteers will help construct the Keizer Big Toy, a


15,000-square-foot play structure organizers hope
will draw families from all over the area. Page 3D

American Pharoah has completed one of the most


difficult feats in sports an accomplishment that
hasn't been seen in 37 years. Pa ge 1C

58 LOW
Full report, 8C

Statesman Journal
Sunday

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

FOREIGN INVESTORS GIVE U.S. CITIES A BOOST, CREATE JOBS PAGE 1B

PHOTO COURTESY OF IMBA

The popularity of mountain


biking has grow in leaps and
bounds in Oregon over the
past few decades.

Oregon culture evolves from hunting to hiking


By Zach Urness |

Statesman Journal

Once upon a time in Oregon and the United


States, if you identified yourself as an outdoorsman, there was a good chance you were talking
about hunting and fishing.
The ethos of Ernest Hemingways hunting and
fishing stories and the philosophical nature of
Norman Macleans A River Runs Through It
permeated a culture in which men traveled to the
forest with a rifle or fishing rod in hand.
In the 1970s, one in four Oregonians went fishing and one in seven went hunting, according to
the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.
That was the culture that I grew up with. In my
family, you didnt go hiking without a gun or boating without a way to catch fish.
But as the decades have passed, the concept of

ZACH COLLIER / NORTHWEST RAFTING COMPANY

Stand-up paddle-boarding has become increasingly


popular for those exploring rivers in the Pacific
Northwest.

outdoor recreation has undergone a slow but


steady transformation. The outdoor experience is
no longer dominated by fishing and hunting but
has broadened with the expansion of traditional
activities such as hiking and new activities such as
stand-up paddle-boarding.
Despite a statewide population that has almost
doubled, there are fewer fishers and hunters in
Oregon today than in the 1970s.
The rate of participation has declined by half,
Fish and Wildlife says, with one in eight Oregonians fishing and one in 17 hunting since 2010.
So what happened?
Well, a number of things.
The decline of fisheries and game is one major
factor.
See OUTDOORS, Page 6A

Hunters, anglers fear proposed license fee raise


By Henry Miller | Statesman Journal

Many anglers and hunters who have shouldered the bulk of the financial load for the Oregon Department of Fish Wildlife say proposed
license and tag increases will be the straw that
breaks their backs.
Even the department estimates that the incremental license and fee increases in the 201517 budget proposal working through the Oregon
Legislature would lead to 10,000 dropping out.
If we lost 10,000 customers, the last thing
Bridge.............................................2E
Business ..........................................1F
Causes ............................3D, 4D, 5D
Comics .....................................Insert

that we would do is raise our prices, said


Brooks Eilertson, of Sherwood, who works at
Fishermans Marine & Outdoor in Portland.
Some said they were already feeling the
pinch.
I cannot afford these fee increases any
longer, said Don Voeks, of Gresham, who
testified at the Capitol during a hearing on the
budget. My wife has stopped fishing from an
annual license and has gone to individual days.
My son and daughter-in-law are very serious about maybe we wont go fishing from

Editorials ......................................8D
Horoscope ....................................2E
Lottery ..........................................1D
Mid-Valley.....................................1D

Nation/World ...............................1B
Obituaries .........................10D, 11D
Puzzles ....................................2E, 3E
Sports .............................................1C

annual licenses anymore. These fees are too


much.
Voeks is not a casual angler. He is a member
of the Sandy River Chapter of the Association of
Northwest Steelheaders and a volunteer anglereducation instructor for the department.

Examples of fee hikes


Under the proposal, a resident hunting license
See FEES, Page 5A

Subscriber services:
(800) 452-2511 or
StatesmanJournal.com/subscribe.
Classified ads: (503) 399-6789

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LES SCHWAB REVOLVING CREDIT PLAN


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OVER $2,500.00 ........................................................................... 1/3 OF BALANCE

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2A

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

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NEWS QUIZ

New quiz: A thunder crack, a


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1. A Lincoln joined the field for the 2016 presidential race and he is not a
Republican. Name him.
A. Independent Todd Lincoln of Illinois
B. Independent Harold Hot Rod Lincoln of Nebraska

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C. Democrat Lincoln Chaffee of Rhode Island


D. Green Party candidate Lincoln Logge of Vermont
2. What is the title of Bill OReilly and Martin Dugards next nonfiction book
about the death of a historical figure?
A. Killing Time: The Life-and-Death Saga of the Cuckoo
Clocks Inventor
B. Killing Reagan: The Violent Assault That Changed a
Presidency
C. Killing Kennedy: Part II
D. Killing Me Softly: The Roberta Flack Story
3. According to a story by reporting intern Natalie
Pate in Wednesdays edition, plainclothes Salem police officers will be cracking down on what this summer?
A. Panhandlers
B. Pedestrian crosswalk enforcement
C. Drivers who unlawfully park in handicap spaces
D. Loiterers
4. From Sunday to Monday morning, thunderstorms produced 25 lightning strikes in the Salem area. How many were
registered throughout the state?
A. 520
B. 1,270
C. 1, 271
D. 2,700
5. In Wednesdays Oregon Life, food, beer and wine
columnist Victor Panichkul calls this in-season vegetable one that people either love or hate.
A. Asparagus
B. Brussels sprouts
C. Kale
D. Pearl onions
6. According to USA Today, which television series generated the most tweets
on Twitter in the just-ended TV season?
A. ABCs The Bachelor
B. HBOs Game of Thrones
C. AMCs The Walking
Dead
D. USAs WWE Monday
Night Raw
7. A Corvallis-based company has started a Kickstarter campaign for a tabletop game with a simple premise: kill or be killed. Whats the name of the
game?
A. Vampira
B. Werewolves of London
C. BANE
D. Steven Kings Bloody Red Sock
8. According to the Wall Street Journal, PepsiCo will be rolling out a line of
exotic flavored sodas, including agave vanilla cream and black cherry
with tarragon. Name the new line.
A. Stubborn Soda
B. Artisanal Quenchers
C. Tonsil Lubricators
D. Better Thank You Think Drinks
9. Last week, a federal advisory panel recommended approval of flibanserin, the first drug to treat what?
A. Underarm bat wings
B. Unsightly ear and nose hair
C. Lack of sexual desire in women
D. Manic Mondays.
10. Why is Salems Ciera Eastin, a stay-at-home mother of two, in Cambodia?
A. She is competing in next seasons The Amazing Race
B. She is getting a second chance at the $1 million prize on Survivor
C. She invented a new slip-on shoe being manufactured there
D. She is gathering recipes for a Cambodian food truck

Scoring guide: 10 for 10: Lighting strike; 7-9 correct: thunder crack; 4-6 correct:
fog horn; 2-3 correct: awkward silence; 0-1 correct: a stack of dishes crashing.
Answers: 1. (C); 2. (B); 3. (B); 4. (D); 5. (A); 6. (C); 7. (C); 8. (A); 9. (C); 10. (B)

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Detroit Free Fishing event

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The Silverton Reservoir offered free fishing to visitors on Saturday in collaboration with the Free Fishing Weekend organized by
the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Change of venue lead to kids having a blast at fishing hole


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DETROIT For about the first 45


minutes, volunteers outnumbered
participants by about a dozen to,
well, none at the annual Free Fishing Weekend event Saturday, June
6, at Detroit Lake.
Because of low water, the event
sponsored by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, the U.S.
Forest Service and the Oregon Paralyzed Veterans of America had
been moved from the traditional
site at Hoover Campground on the
east side of the lake to Detroit Flats
Recreation Site just east of town.
But gradually beginning about 10
a.m. parents, grandparents and
youngsters showed up at the special
kids fishing hole, a collapsible orange plastic-lined square pool generously stocked with rainbow trout
in sizes ranging from about 10 inches to a pair of 2-plus-foot bruisers.
Sydney Kaufman, 12, of Portland, caught her first-ever fish at
the pond.
It was cool, she said.
Want that on your wall? her
dad, Steven, asked.
Sydney made a face and said emphatically, No, I dont
Wheres the fish? asked Gabriel Sniffen, 3, of Keizer, looking over
the lip of the pool just as one of the
monsters swam right in front of
him. EWWW, big fish, he said excitedly.
Despite catching a smaller fish
than Gabriel, his sister Kalia, 13,
who goes to Houck Middle School,
pronounced the experience awesome.
It was great, she said about
each child getting a fishing rod, a
reel, a goodie bag of tackle and a Tshirt. I didnt know that they let
you keep the pole.
There also were free hot dogs
and beverages for all who attended.
When asked if all the work for
the small turnout, a couple dozen
kids and adults, was worth it, Darrin
Neff, the fish biologist for the Forest Services Detroit Ranger District said absolutely.
He said he was a little nervous
about the initial lack of participants, what with the very-low lake
and the forecast of hot weather.
But its always worth it because
of the few kids who caught their
first fish.
All of the Free Fishing Weekend
events, fishing clinics, derbies and
other activities took place Saturday,. But you still dont need a license or tags to fish or go crabbing
or clamming on Sunday, June 7.

Above:
Emily Nemnich, 4,
of Vancouver,
Wash., gets an
assist from Alexis
Toney, a fisheries
technician at
Marion Forks Fish
Hatchery during
the Free Fishing
Weekend event
at Detroit Flats
Recreation Site
on Saturday.
Left: Gabriel
Sniffen, 3, of
Keizer didnt
have to to be
asked twice if he
wanted to touch
the first fish that
he ever caught
during the Free
Fishing Weekend
event.
HENRY
MILLER/STATESMAN
JOURNAL

hemiller@StatesmanJournal.com,
(503) 399-6725 or follow at
twitter.com/henrymillersj and friend or
facebook.com/hmillersj

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

5A

Fee increases and other concerns


Statesman Journal

The Legislature is considering a plan


to incrementally increase fees for
hunting and fishing licenses over six
years. Opponents have raised
questions. Curt Melcher, director of
the Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife, and Roger Fuhrman, the
administrator for the departments
Information and Education Section,
answers some of them.
Question: What is the new $10 ocean
endorsement?
Melcher: Basically a new surcharge
associated with ocean fishing. Bottom
fish such as sea bass, lingcod and other
species were basically unmanaged until
the last decade or so to now being aggressively managed. Money collected
from the endorsement will be dedicated
to the increased costs to the department
to pay for that management.
Question: Will the fee increases be
the last for the six-year span?
Melcher: Certainly as our plan proposed and the governor proposed, its a
six-year time frame, just like in the last
process we expect ... the fee structure to

last for a six-year horizon. And that is


our intent with this one. Weve done the
last two; theyve both been six years,
and we made it through.
Question: There is a repeated theme
from many of the people at the meetings
and hearings who oppose the fee hikes
that they are paying more, getting
less.
Melcher: Our budget proposal right
now maintains all of our hatchery production. It maintains our fundamental
district staff structure. It maintains all
of the fishery-related programs be they
marine or Columbia River. So saying
that theyre getting less, we dont agree.
You might say its less opportunity
when actually the fishing over the last
couple of years has been actually quite
good, an exceptional opportunity. So we
dont agree theres less program, nor do
we agree that theyre getting less opportunity.
Question: How about the argument
heard frequently that you should lower
the fees and get a resulting increase in
anglers and hunters?
Fuhrman: I had our economist look
at that, and it doesnt pencil out. Reducing the price doesnt bring in enough ad-

ditional sales to cover what you would


lose in revenue.
To avoid having to do a fee increase
wed have to be selling licenses back
at the levels that we were in the 1980s,
license levels that weve never hit before. You cant raise enough by reducing the price.
Question: What about the charter operators heartburn about losing tourists
because of the increased costs of daily
fishing licenses and three-day shellfish
licenses for out-of-staters?
Melcher: We heard it in the testimony, and were looking at that for ways
that we can help minimize that effect,
the effect of losing nonresident customers.
Question: What about the argument
that the fee increases will be a barrier to
families starting or staying in hunting
and fishing?
Melcher: When you go back and
look at some of our customer-preference surveys that weve done, when you
look at the cost of participation as a barrier, its usually very, very far down the
list. ... It wasnt because they didnt want
to pay $3 more for a fishing license. Its
because of other factors in their life that

Fees
Continued from Page 1A

that now costs $29.50 would rise to


$33.50 in 2016, $34 in 2018 and $34.50 in
2020. A resident fishing license that
costs $33 would rise to $38 in 2016, $41 in
2018 and $44 in 2020.
And for saltwater anglers, there
would be an add-on ocean endorsement required for fishing outside of estuaries, which would cost a fixed $10 annually during the six-year period.
There also would be incremental increases in the costs of hunting tags; one-,
two- and three-day fishing and shellfish
licenses; and the all-in-one fishing/hunting Sports Paclicense.
And for the first time, a fee would be
charged for pioneer licenses. The program now offers free hunting and fishing licenses for 50-year Oregon residents 65 or older.
It might make economic sense because the $6 annual pioneer fee would leverage $20 from federal programs that
reimburse states based on fishing and
hunting licenses sold. To get the federal
money, $6 is the smallest amount the
state could charge.
But it has caused ill will among some
hunters and anglers who hold the licenses or whose parents and grandparents hunt and fish with them.
To retain anglers and hunters, another proposal is to sell three- and five-year
fishing and hunting licenses for the first
time. And as an incentive for youth
recruitment, the prices of youth licenses
and tags, including the juvenile Sports
Pac, would be unchanged or decreased
in future years.
Were looking at it six years from
now, my husband and I, spending $300 to
fish and crab, said Liz Hamilton, the executive director of the Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association, which advocates for industry stakeholders such
asmanufacturers, wholesalers, retailers
and fishing guides.

Pricing out tourists


Tourist-dependent
fishing-charter
operators said the proposed bump in
fees for nonresidents already were scaring customers away and pricing Oregon
out of competition with California and
Washington.
At present, a one-day fishing license
is $16.75, and a nonresident shellfish license is $11.50, said Loren Goddard,
owner of Dockside Charters in Depoe
Bay. Thats scheduled to increase by
2020 to a total of $45, including the endorsement.
Ive already heard a lot of comments
from my clients who are from out of
state that say that these fee increases
will put family recreation out of reach in
the state of Oregon.
Chris Olson, who owns Newport Marina Store & Charters, was more blunt.
In the last week during spring break,

ASHLEY SMITH / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Brian Daggett, a hatchery truck driver with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, stocks
rainbow trout in Lake Detroit on Friday, April 24, 2015, in Salem.

we had families from five different bordering states and out to Montana come
out and fish through our office, he said.
And your licenses are $150 for a fishing
trip for four, five, six hours out there?
Its just, I see it as a nail in the coffin for
the charter fleet and recreational fishing.

Changing attitudes
Six years ago, when the departments
proposal for the most recent round of license and fee increases went to the Legislature, groups such as the Oregon
Hunters Association and the Association
of Northwest Steelheaders backed the
plan even in the depths of the economic
downturn.
Neither supports the current proposal.
During hearings on Senate Bill 247
there was a very real sense of fatigue
and frustration, and several commented
that the department is mismanaged or
tone-deaf to anglers and hunters.
There were comments about imposition of barbless hooks and a recreational
closure on the Columbia River from anglers.
Hunters complained about lack of
hunting opportunities and animals.
And both complained about lack of
management of predators cougars
and now wolves on the hunting side;
salmon- and steelhead-killing sea lions,
Caspian terns and double-crested cormorants on the fishing side.
Were just certainly exhausted that
the bulk of the burdens of the fish and
wildlife management programs are
placed squarely on the backs of hunters
and fishers, said Bob Rees, the executive director of Northwest Steelheaders.
So the theme is: Stop the bleeding.
Every six years, we were asked to
raise our fee increases to support them
just to maintain the status quo. You know

status quo is losing anglers, so its not


working. We dont want to see fee increases, especially as significant as the
ones were facing right now, to maintain
the status quo.
There are some groups, including the
League of Women Voters, WaterWatch
and the Oregon Foundation for North
American Wild Sheep, that support the
increases.
Several of those groups representatives said that fee increases were necessary and that nobody could say they
didnt know they were coming.
We have supported the fee increase
from the outset. We think its a prudent
approach, said Jim Myron, of the Native Fish Society. ODFW is only doing
what they said they were going to do six
years ago when they got their last fee increase.
They said, Were going to make this
last six years and then well be back
again. So theyve upheld their end of the
bargain, and we feel like we need to uphold ours as well.

How we got here


The proposed fee increases and a separate request for increases in generalfund dollars are designed to maintain
current programs and stave off a $32
million shortfall during the 2015-17 biennium.
There are multiple causes for the predicted shortfall. There are increased
costs on everything from fish food for
the hatcheries to salaries and benefits
and increasing payments to the Public
Employees Retirement System. There is
also the issue of mission creep biologists and other staff members spending
a substantial amount of time for non-fish
and wildlife burdens such as preparing
reports and analysis for permitting
processes for other agencies along with
anemic contributions from general fund

have changed. ...


Our current approach with these incremental increases over time as opposed to one large increase is designed
to minimize that negative effect.
Question: A lot of anglers and hunters who oppose the increases say that it
looks to them like a never-ending cycle
of increased fees with no increased benefit.
Melcher: Theyve got a couple of
things in the works. House Bill 2402,
which creates a legislative task force to
take a broad look at the departments
funding and the needs for alternative
funding.
We obviously believe that our programs provide great public benefit to
all Oregonians, not just ones that fish,
hunt, camp or backpack, but all Oregonians. Therefore, the general fund is a
reasonable funding source for all of
those activities.
(HB) 3315 would have us track the
precise amount of time and the costs associated with the costs of us participating in other agencies permit processes,
and then in subsequent biennia give us
the authority to invoice those other
agencies for the costs of the services.

and Oregon Lottery.


And thats along with long-term declines in angler and hunter numbers.
During the 1970s, one in seven Oregonians, or 340,000, were hunters and one
in four, or 560,000, went fishing, according to figures cited in a secretary of
states audit. As of 2010, those figures
were one in 17, or 240,000, for hunters
and one in eight, or 490,000, for anglers.
A hunting license cost $7 in 1976, compared with $29.50 in 2013. A fishing license cost $9 in 1976, compared with $33.
There were 5,000 hunting licenses
and 130,000 fishing licenses sold to nonresidents in 1976. In 2013, it was 15,000
hunting licenses and 120,000 fishing licenses.
So the trajectory is unsustainable,
with rising outflow mostly on the backs
of diminished numbers of what are
known as consumptive users, hunters
and anglers. And the bleeding already
has begun.
Fish and Wildlife is in the process of
cutting about 50 positions. about one
in 20 at headquarters and one in 50 in the
field. The department also has reorganized the state into just two regions and
is implementing efficiencies such as
consolidating functions with other agencies.

The what if question


The department has outlined a grim
strategy for dealing with the worst-case
scenario if fee increases are not approved, a $9.15 million loss just in the
2015-17 budget.
The plan calls for a loss of 42 positions
seven at Salem headquarters and 35 in
the field along with the elimination of
the Bandon and Alsea River fish hatcheries, the Oregon Hatchery Research
Center, the North Santiam River summer steelhead program at Leaburg
Hatchery on the McKenzie River, 13
field positions in the Wildlife Division,
and money to pay for five Fish and Wildlife Division troopers with the Oregon
State Police.
It also would eliminate $400,000 that
the department budgeted to pay for the
purchase of rainbow trout from private
hatcheries that raise the fish for the
statewide stocking program.
Thats on top of the current cuts to positions.
We know where we spend license
dollars. We spend license dollars in fish
hatcheries, district field offices and on
state police enforcement, said Curt
Melcher, the department director. So
insofar as we know where we spend the
big bulk of our license dollars, we know
that any shortfall in that revenue, either
because license sales fall off or we dont
have a fee increase, will impact those
programs.
We know one thing: Were going to
balance our budget. We have to.
hemiller@StatesmanJournal.com, (503)
399-6725 or follow on Twitter @henrymillersj
and facebook.com/hmillersj

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6A

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Outdoors
Continued from Page 1A

Dominic Aiello, president of the Oregon Outdoor Council, pointed out that
the success rate for bagging mule deer
in Oregon dropped to 28 percent in 2010
from 57 percent in 1970. For bucks, it
dropped to 17 percent in 2011 from 28
percent in 1971.
And the days when you could walk
across Oregons rivers on the backs of
salmon and steelhead, as the old-timers
like to say, have long passed into history.
The lack of game is probably the
largest influencing factor, Aiello said.
If you go four years without filling
your freezer with meat, youre probably
going to try hunting somewhere else or
quit altogether.
But the biggest reason for the shift
probably has less to do with hunting and
fishing themselves than with the way
people consume the outdoors in general.
The rise of hiking, mountain biking,
kayaking, rock climbing, wildlifewatching, photography and any number
of similar subsets, such as adventure
racing and stand-up paddle-boarding,
have spread out the ways people enjoy
rivers, lakes and forest.
These not-consumptive outdoor
sports, ones that do not involve physically consuming the natural resource,
are often viewed as easier and cheaper
than hunting and fishing, and they are
particularly popular among younger
generations.
According to the 2015 Outdoor Participation Report, produced each year
by the Outdoor Foundation in Washington, D.C., the most popular outdoor activities among people ages 6 to 24 are:
1. Running, jogging and trail running.
2. Bicycling (road, mountain and
BMX bikes).
3. Camping (car, backyard and RV).
4. Fishing (freshwater, saltwater and
fly).
5. Hiking.
The fastest-growing outdoor sports,
according to the same report, include
adventure racing, kayaking, backpacking and biking.
The shift can be seen everywhere
and felt in the culture, particularly in
Oregon, Washington and California.
Instead of Hemingway, perhaps the
best-known scribe of outdoor literature
today is Portlands Cheryl Strayed,
whose book Wild is about backpacking the Pacific Crest Trail.
Travel Oregon, the states tourism
commission, has broadcast a vision that
is heavy on postcard beauty and fitnessfocused activities, such as hiking, biking and camping, and light on fishing
and hunting.
On the wild section of Southern Oregons Rogue River, a stream famous for
salmon and steelhead for a century, outfitter-supported hiking trips have surpassed fishing trips.
The implications of the shift are easy
to spot. Oregons Department of Fish
and Wildlife, which relies on fees from

ZACH URNESS / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Going into the wild to backpack instead of hunting has been a trend growing for decades. Seen here is Ice Lake in the Eagle Cap Wilderness.

PHOTO COURTESY OF IMBA

The Sandy Ridge Trail system is one of the first systems to feature mountain- bike-specific trails
in Oregon.

hunting and fishing licenses, is facing a


$32 million budget shortfall.
Meanwhile, the Oregon Parks and
Recreation Department, which specializes in non-consumptive outdoor experiences at its state parks, has seen attendance jump from 28 million in 1975 to

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None of this is to say that fishing and
hunting are going anywhere.

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Zach Urness grew up hunting grouse, ducks


and deer in Minnesota and spent more time
trying to catch steelhead on the Rogue River
with a fly rod than anything else. Hes been
an outdoors writer, photographer and
videographer in Oregon for seven years.

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Hunting has seen some growth nationwide, though not in Oregon, and remains a big part of the culture in Oregons rural areas. It remains an economic powerhouse, as well, with no better
evidence than the opening of Cabelas
sporting goods stores in Springfield and
Tualatin in the past few years.
Fishing, meanwhile, remains one of
Oregons most popular outdoor activities and economic drivers, and that
seems unlikely to change soon. Even
though it has declined over the years,
there are still 490,000 resident anglers
with an additional 120,000 coming
from out of state which ranks fishing
as one of Oregons best-loved activities.
But times have changed, and I should
know.
Today, when I go to the forest, Im
more likely to shoot with a camera than
a shotgun. When I head to the river, Im
just as likely to hold a whitewater kayaking paddle as a fishing rod.
I still fish and occasionally hunt
and love both but Oregon is blessed
with a landscape that fits so many outdoor adventures it doesnt make sense
to limit yourself to just two.

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Our Oregon
g

LIVING TOM
MCCALL'S LEGACY

State issues first local advisories

CALENDAR
TODAY
Mother Earth News Fair: Sustainable living event that features 200
hands-on workshops and demonstrations from experts on real food,
organic gardening, homesteading,
renewable energy, green building
and remodeling, DIY projects,
small-scale livestock, green transportation, natural health, and
related topics, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Linn
County Fair and Expo Center, 3700
Knox Butte Road, Albany. $20
weekend passes advance; $30 at the
gate; free ages 17 and younger.
(800) 234-3368, www.motherearth
newsfair.com.

By Kristian Foden-Vencil
OPB

In the event of a distant tsunami coming to the Oregon


Coast, you might not expect
boat owners to head out to sea.
But thats what many commercial and sports fishers do
to protect their vessels from the
groundings, capsizes and collisions in harbors when tsunami
waves near the shore. In deep
water, a passing tsunami is such
an elongated hump that sailors
might not even notice.
The state has released the
first in a series of local advisories showing coastal boat operators where to go and what to do
in the event of a distant tsunami.
Back in 2011, when boat owners heard a tsunami was on its
way to the West Coast from Japan, many headed out to sea.
The passing tsunami wasnt a
problem for them.
But in Crescent City, California, for example, the fleet
couldnt return because of harbor damage.
Jonathan Allan, with the Oregon Department of Geology and
Mineral Industries, says to
make matters worse, a storm
was approaching.
It presented some challenges because people were
evacuating quickly and werent
necessarily adequately prepared, both in terms of having
support staff on their vessels,
you know fuel, etc., to be out
there for extended periods of
time, or food etc., he said. And
so they were having to come up
with alternative options for
where to safely move to. Those
who didnt have enough fuel returned to Crescent City, but had
to anchor in some unusual spots.
Others had to sail to Humboldt Bay or Brookings Harbor,
in Oregon, ports that some captains had never negotiated before.
The new DOGAMI advisorys focus on a distant tsunami is
important.
When a Cascadia Subduction
Zone earthquake hits right off
the Oregon Coast, the resulting
tsunami is expected to reach
land in about 10 minutes. So

7A

SATURDAY
Little Sprouts: Carnivorous
Plants: Young gardeners are learning all about carnivorous plants,
what they eat and how to care for
them. Each child will take home a
carnivorous plant of their own, 11
a.m., Garland Nursery, 5470 NE
Highway 20, Corvallis. $7 per child.
Registration required. (541) 7536601, www.garlandnursery.com.

JUNE 16

The state has released the first in a series of local advisories showing coastal boat operators where to go and what
to do in the event of a distant tsunami.

ABOUT EARTHFIX
EarthFix is a partnership of seven
public media stations in the Pacific
Northwest. Look for environmental
coverage at earthfix.opb.org. For
information, email EarthFix at
earthfix@opb.org.

there wont be time for boaters


to head out to deep water.
But if the earthquake happens in Alaska, boat operators
will have about four hours; if it
occurs in Japan, they have
about nine hours.
In 2011, after the Japan
earthquake, what boat owners
did in the end was keep close
contact and help each other out.
Allan says the states new ad-

visories focus on Newport and


Toledo, but other locations will
follow.
The regionally released
map is the first of its kind on the
Oregon coast for a specific port
community, he said Its providing information to recreation and commercial boat operators as to the types of responses they can take in the event of a
distance tsunami taking place.
Terry Thompson is a commercial fisherman and a Commissioner for Lincoln County,
and he thinks the advisory will
help boat owners make good decisions.
A lot of people think theyre
just going to go a short distance
off shore, he said. They dont
realize that in a major tsunami,
theyve go to get outside of 100
fathoms. In a distant tsunami
that would be one like in Alaska
or Japan theyre going to
have to get a shorter distance.
In Newport and Toledo, that

shorter distance could still


take a couple of hours to reach.
Boat operators would have to
reach an area where the water
was 30 fathoms.
Thompson says when the
next tsunami hits, boat owners
need to take account of more
than just the new map they
need to ask themselves questions like: Whats the weather
forecast? and How much time
do I have?
Can you get to port and get
up the hill before the tsunami
hits, is the question, he said.
In a distant tsunami, Id have a
chance. In a near shore tsunami
and Im off shore, I may just
gamble for going to the deep,
but I may be out there for a
while.
Walter Chucks small fishing
boat was out of the water in 2011,
so he didnt have to make any
difficult decisions. But he
served on the committee that
put the new advisories together.

Salem Chapter, Association of


Northwest Steelheaders: The
fishing-, conservation-, and education-oriented non-profit organization is open to anglers of all ages,
interests and ability levels, 7 to 9
p.m., Keizer Heritage Community
Center, 980 Chemawa Road NE,
Keizer. Free for visitors. www.sa
lemnwsteelheaders.org.

JUNE 17
Marion SWCD Board Meeting: 7
to 9 p.m., Marion SWCD , 338 Hawthorne Ave. NE. (503) 391-9927.

JUNE 18
Amateur Naturalist Series: Energy Trust: Energy Trust speaks of
how to make our homes more
energy efficient, 7 to 8:30 p.m.,
Straub Environmental Learning
Center, 1320 A St. NE. $5. (503)
391-4145, www.straubenvironmen
talcenter.org.

JULY 18
Willamette River Float and Clean
Up Event: Activities include invasive
plant removal, litter cleanup, native
planting, maintenance and monitoring, and erosion control, Willamette
Park, end of SE Goodnight Ave.,
Corvallis. Free. Donations accepted.
(541) 286-5031, www.oceanbluepro
ject.org.

Your business could be hanging


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Well introduce you to some fresh faces.
The way people get their information is evolving. Fast. But one thing remains the same our ability to
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We Know Marketing.

Periscope

8A

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

The importance of bonding


over a good weather story
When temperatures hit 100
degrees in May or a foot of
snow falls on the Willamette
Valley floor overnight, weather is a priority in the newsroom.
Weather is always a priority
story in the newsroom. Any
newsroom.
Often these stories dont tell
readers anything they dont
already know at least generally. They also can be filled
with common-sense material
that could easily be acquired
by glancing at a smartphone.
Still, they play an important
role in the news medias relationship with the public.
So why do we do them?
Because they confirm our
readers common experience,
and that helps bring us together.
Did you hear the thunder?
Did it rain hard where you live,
too?
Yes, and Yes.
Statesman Journal Executive Editor Michael Davis
said he loves a good weather
story.
Weather is a common denominator regardless of what
you do in life, he said.
Whether youre working full
time, are retired, are a student, or a teacher the weather is a factor in your life, even
if youre not aware of it.
Davis described several
ways in which weather plays a
role in daily life.
For a lot of people, the
weather provides documentation of their lives, he said.
People are really interested in
the details. I dont know how
many people (I know) that

alisha

ROEMELING

ALISHA ROEMELING covers the police


beat and court proceedings. Contact
herat aroemeling@Salem.gannett.
com or 503-399-6884.

THOMAS PATTERSON / STATESMAN JOURNAL

keep a weather log.


The importance of a weather story can also be illustrated
in the sheer amount of people
it can resonate with.
Marty Kaiser, a former
editor at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, said weather is
relatable.
It affects everybodys
lives, Kaiser said. Stories we
do in newsrooms often dont
have as big an effect on people
as a weather story does because almost everybody cares
about it.
Davis agreed.
Weather unites us in a

Surviving
cancer
Matters to me

Anyone can get cancer, at any age, for


any reason. If you have a suspicion at
all, insist on getting checked.
Kris P., cancer survivor

This is the face of someone surviving lung


cancerthe leading cause of death, next to
heart disease. Surprised?
Kris is a non-smoker who was diagnosed with stage
four lung cancer in November 2013. Read her story at
welcometothefamilycancer.com.

Surviving cancer represents a journey for many people.


Celebrate National Cancer Survivors Day with us on
Monday, June 8 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Salem Hospital,
Building C. For information, call 503-562-4321.

25

COPS & COURTS

Salem Police officers Brian Shaw and Josh Edmiston shut down the Marion Street bridge due to hazardous
conditions as snow and high winds blow across the state Feb. 7, 2014.

way, Davis said. It provides


conversational pocket change.
If you dont know what to say
to a person, you can always
talk about the weather, and it
provides a jumping-off point
for a conversation.
While the weather seems to
be a daily topic of discussion
across the globe, it also seems
to be a way of remembering
things.
Think of the best memory
you have with your mom, dad,
girlfriend, husband or sibling.
Do you remember what it was
like outside? The same thing
applies for your worst memo-

Join us every Thursday in June from


10 to 11:30 a.m. for our Cancer Survivorship
Education Series.
To register call: 503-814-2432

TODAYS DEEP DIVE:

ries its easy to recall what


time of the year you crashed
your car or lost a loved one
because you know how cold
and rainy or sunny and hot it
felt that day.
Davis recalls the day his
daughter got married. It was a
105-degree day in Baltimore,
and his daughter was worried
about whether theyd be able
to take a photo outside at all.
The best photo from that
day was taken in the late-night
hours, maybe the early morning, he said. Everyones ties
were loosened standing on the
rooftop, and that midnight

temperature dropped enough


for people to head outside.
I remember thinking and
telling my daughter that theyd
find that photo, Davis said.
But the topic of the weather
was talked about for days leading up to the wedding.
Its assumed that for those
huge events like college graduation, your wedding or any
outdoor gathering, weather
will inevitably be a part of the
conversation. But its more
important than that.
When was the last time you
looked at the weather forecast? Was it this morning when
you were getting dressed for
work? Maybe it was just before lunch when you were
deciding how many layers to
wear when you walked outside.
My weekend plans revolve
around weather conditions. If
its going to be hot, Im going
swimming and exercising
early in the morning. If its
raining, Im probably reading
or hiking, and when its a good
72-degree, sunny, beautiful
day, Im going on a bike ride.
Come to think of it, I dont
know the last time the weather
didnt play a role in my day.
Its seemingly mundane,
Davis said. But its never
mundane. It gives us journalists a chance to use our imagination and be creative. To not
only put together something
that people will read and enjoy,
but that people come away
with it with a takeaway.
aroemeling@statesmanjournal
.com, (503) 399-6884 or follow on
Twitter @alisharoemeling

June 4: Move for good health


June 11: Sexual health and renewal
June 18: Eating well after cancer
June 25: Regaining emotional wellness

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

9A

New Crooked House Playground celebrated


By Alisha Roemeling
Statesman Journal

The Crooked House Playground at


Bushs Pasture Park isnt known for its
traditional structure, but it sure is loved.
About 40 people gathered Saturday
for the official ribbon cutting to celebrate the brand-new digs at the north end
of the park.
Brightly colored playground equipment, swings and slides captured the attention of many children, and laughter
filled the air as parents watched their
kids climb on the dark blue spinner bowl
and twirl on a stand-up revolving toy
called a Spica.
John Kleeman with the city of Salem
Parks Operations Division said the playground equipment was chosen through
extensive public outreach and requests.
The equipment is designed to be safe
and accessible, Kleeman said. The
playground was created so people wont
easily hurt themselves but can learn and
challenge themselves.
The former equipment was ripped out
in 2014, as the city of Salem Parks Operations Division had determined the structure was rotting and needed replacing in
2012.
The new playground reflects the 1968
original theme, with the most prominent
structure being the crooked house. The
grounds also met the approval of the
Americans with Disabilities Act. One of
the three swing set seats accommodates
a child with limited abilities.
The project total is $162,000, and that
includes play equipment and installation, tile surfacing, site preparation, and
design and project management, said
Toni Whitler, with parks operations.
The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department approved a $75,000 local government grant through its small-grant
program for matching funds for the
playground. Whitler noted that the city
identified funds from a reserve account
to combine with additional donations for
the project.
Eldo Murphy and his wife, Janet, at-

ASHLEY SMITH / STATESMAN JOURNAL

A celebration and ribbon cutting was held Saturday for the new Crooked House Playground at Bush's Pasture Park.
Mia
Schultze, 3,
left, plays
with her
twin sister,
Bryndle, and
their cousin
Samson
Siegrist, 3, at
the new
Crooked
House
Playground
in Bush's
Pasture Park
on Saturday.

tended the short ceremony. The couple,


who donated the original Crooked House
Playground to the the park in 1968, were
happy to see so much joy as a result of
the structure.
Its a nice that it gets used so much,
Eldo Murphy said. It looks like it will be
popular.
City Councilor Tom Andersen, representing Salems Ward 2, described
Bushs Pasture Park as the crown jewel
of the city.
Every time I come here, rain or
shine, this place is packed with families, Andersen said. Its a lovely addition to the central park of Salem.

ASHLEY SMITH /

aroemeling@statesmanjournal.com, (503)
399-6884, or follow on Twitter
@alisharoemeling

STATESMAN
JOURNAL

EVERY SUNDAY

Wildfire season kicks


off early in Oregon

Local
BUSINESS
News
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AP

In this Sept. 14, 2014, a plume of smoke churns out of the Onion Mountain fire in the Rogue
River-Siskiyou National Forest 15 miles west of Grants Pass.

Drought conditions increase wildfire danger


By Tracy Loew
Statesman Journal

Oregons fire season is


kicking off about three
weeks earlier than normal.
Its the second consecutive year for an early
start to the season, which
began Saturday in the
Oregon Department of
Forestrys Central Oregon District.
We have not received
enough precipitation to
significantly change the
ongoing drought conditions, and the larger fuels
remain dry with fuel
moistures that are below
average, said George
Ponte, Central Oregon
District forester. The
smaller fuels will dry out
very quickly with the return of hot and dry conditions, and this will result
in the rapid increase of
fire danger levels.
Fire season is a legal
designation that imposes
restrictions on the public,
forestland owners, and
people working in state
and private forests.
It prohibits outdoor
burning without a permit
issued by the Department
of Forestry or a local fire

department; the use of


fireworks, exploding targets, or any bullet with a
pyrotechnic charge; and it
requires forest operators
to
have
firefighting
equipment on site.
Most people in Central Oregon are aware of
the predictions for a very
severe fire season, and I
hope those conditions do
not come true, but we will
be ready in any case,
Ponte said.
Ultimately the severity of this season will be
determined by three factors: how much lightning
we get, how much rain
comes with those storms,
and, most importantly,
how much help we get
from folks in preventing
human-caused fires, he
said.
The Department of
Forestrys Central Oregon District includes 2.2
million acres of public
and private forestland in
Crook, Deschutes, Gilliam, Grant, Harney,
Hood River, Jefferson,
Morrow,
Wasco
and
Wheeler counties.
So far this year, ODF
has reported eight lightning-caused fires burning
7 acres and 111 human-

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Klamath Falls vet recalls Longest Day


Boehm remembers the ocean was red with blood on D-Day
Herald and News

It was wet and cold on the beaches of Normandy,


France, on June 6, 1944, Army veteran and Klamath
Falls resident John Boehm recalls.
And the ocean was red with blood from all the
boys, Boehm told the Herald and News in a recent interview.
A big bunch of ships sunk in the harbor there,
Boehm said, and dead boys floating in the water just
like that, side-to-side, just everywhere you looked.
Boehm, 93, served as a tank driver and tech sergeant
in the Third Army under Gen. George S. Patton when

the Allies invaded France on June 6, 1944, to take the


continent back from Germanys Third Reich.
Its known as D-Day or The Longest Day, as recalled by the classic book by Cornelius Ryan
Boehm was driving his divisions tank over the
beach when the 60-ton vehicle blew up. He had entered
the beach in the tank at about two or three in the afternoon, dropped off by a landing craft before a German
artillery shell hit.
Just a big explosion, Boehm said.Three of the
boys got killed, and two of us, we got pretty badly hurt.
I just got knocked all over that tank, you know, he
added.

What did it sound like?


Good god, you couldnt hear yourself think, Boehm
said.All the guns going off, little ones, big ones, and the
sky was black with airplanes, and the loud roaring from
the airplanes it was really, really loud.
It stays with you, he added.
From there, Boehm recalls being flown to a tent hospital in Africa to recuperate in a body cast.
Thats where the darned ants almost ate me up,
Boehm said...Ants crawled inside his cast, biting him so
much someone had to remove the cast.
I was fighting them ants, and getting them out of my
bed, Boehm added.
Marks on his back to this day are a stark reminder of
what he survived.
Was it luck that he survived, or something else?
I think the good Lord was with me, Boehm said.
The Army issued a little Bible to carry in your pocket,
and I carried that with me all the time.

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His service took him to Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco


and Italy.
Boehm spent three days of 140-plus degree Fahrenheit weather in Africa, and more than 70 days of rain in
Italy.
He ran out of food and had to scrounge for whatever
he could find off of cadavers.
He also remembers being face-to-face with Gen.
Patton.
I hauled him one time in the Jeep, Boehm said,
matter-of-factly.
He had a straight face on him, Boehm said, of Patton, who he also described as big,tall, imposing.
He was a very rough talking guy and he didnt care
what you said. He mostly talked about his men, you
know, he added. He didnt believe in any sissies; he
believed in good men, you know. It was business, strictly business.
Boehm remembers the light-hearted moments, too.
He pulled letters from a box while sitting on his
couch in Klamath Falls. He remembers it could take
three to four months to receive the mail, but once received, each letter or package was treasured.
One time, he even received a cake.
When I got the cake, it was old and rotten and moldy
and probably about three to four months old, Boehm
said. There was a pint of whiskey baked in this cake. So
we took the bottle out, washed it out ... then we drank the
whiskey, he said with a laugh.
The medallions and photographs from the war laid
out on a box in his home tell the story for themselves.
Holding a photograph of himself in the service,
Boehm questioned whether he was 24 or 25 years old at
the time the photograph was captured.

REMY DE LA MAUVINIERE/AP

A young visitor carrying the U.S. flag walks among graves at


the Colleville American military cemetery in Colleville sur Mer,
western France, on Saturday, the 71th anniversary of the
D-Day landing. D-Day marked the start of a Europe invasion.

I had to be around 25, Boehm said.


But thats about the only thing that the man wasnt
certain about of his service.
Boehm thinks he could be the only surviving member of his division that he knows of, and his aim is to tell
their stories.
How many come home? he asked. There was Id
say half of the old boys (came home). We had a lot of new
boys coming all the time, getting killed.
Boehm pulled a handful of medallions and honorary
awards from a briefcase; pulling out medals, including
his Purple Heart, among other awards that help tell the
story of his service.
We were all scared, Boehm said. You dont know if
youre going to live one minute to the next. Youve got
all that in your mind.
I got to the point where I wasnt scared of anything,
Boehm said. Mostly toward the end of war, wed been
through all kinds of hell. I was wanting to get back
home.
And he did come home.
Thousands of Allied forces were killed or wounded
in the invasion, according to the U.S. Army, including
some of Boehms friends.
What hurts you more than anything else is your
buddies that get killed, he said.
His three brothers, who served in other parts of the
theater, returned home.
Boehm has kept his medals and patches from the
war and recently received praise for his service during
a visit to Washington, D.C., with Honor Flight. The
flight brings veterans to the nations capital to see the
World War II memorial.
Hed go back in a minute, his companion, Shirley
Golly, said.
I tell ya, wherever we go, people just congratulate
him, she added.

A TASTE OF OREGON AT BROOKS WINERY

Taste
A

OF

OREGON
VICTOR PANICHKUL

WI NE PAI R I NG
DINNER
Saturday, June 13, 6 p.m.
Brooks Winery, 21101 SE Cherry Blossom Lane, Amity, OR 97101
Join us for an evening featuring a four-course dinner created by Victor Panichkul that highlights
Brooks wines. Each course has been especially selected to pair with one of Brooks wines.
Price is $80 per person.
Purchase your tickets online at http://www.brookswine.com/events/A-Taste-of-Oregon-at-Brooks-Winery
Or by calling Heather Kirk at

503.435.1278
VICTOR PANICHKUL

is a longtime food and wine journalist,


recipe developer and chef. Hes currently the wine,
food and beer columnist for the Statesman Journal. His
food blog, TheTasteofOregon.com was recognized
as one of the countrys top regional cuisine
blogs by Saveur Magazine.

VICTOR PANICHKUL

OR-0000363246

StatesmanJournal.com

S NOW

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

GET THE LATEST


NEWS, UPDATED
THROUGHOUT THE
DAY, AT YOUR
FINGERTIPS

Oregon Connections Academy celebrates


The Oregon Connections Academy held its annual
spring celebration to commemorate the end of the
school year at Salems Riverfront Park.
Oregon Connections Academy is the states largest
online K-12 public charter school. It is authorized
under law by the Scio School District and operated by
a nonprofit. It is governed by a board of directors.
The spring celebration is meant to bring students
and families together to connect with teachers and
peers in a fun atmosphere. They could choose to participate in activities at a variety of booths, including
face painting, crafts, a scavenger hunt and a bean bag
toss.
Between 50 and 75 teachers and staff members
worked the booths Friday.
Oregon Connections Academy also held a ceremony for eighth grade students moving on to high
school next year.
Next week, the school will hold a high school graduation for 330 graduates at the Oregon Convention
Center. Kaeli Baxter has attended the academy since
seventh grade and is set to graduate high school next
week.

Website: StatesmanJournal.com Mobile: Go


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Its focused. It teaches a lot of other skills than


normal school, Baxter said.

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Salem police corporal promoted to sergeant


Cpl. Donald Vidrio was promoted to sergeant in the
Salem Police Department.
Salem Police Chief Jerry Moore presided over his
promotional ceremony, in front of Vidrios family and
colleagues, June 1, according to a press release.
Vidrio began working with Salem police in 2008
after having served eight years as a reserve officer
and full-time officer with the Dallas Police Department. While working in Salem, Vidrio served as a
field training officer, field sobriety training instructor and a member of the Field Training Officer Steering Committee.
He was recognized as the DUII Officer of the Year
in 2010 by the Oregon DUII Task Force, a statewide,
interagency effort, said Lt. Dave Okada.
Vidrio will remain in the Patrol Division as a patrol
supervisor.
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REUNIONS
SCHOOLS
Albany Union High School Class of 1965: 50-year class reunion,
June 27 at Wheelhouse Event Center. For more information on other
weekend activities, contact Sharon Sease, (541) 979-0790, sease1169@comcast.net.
Cascade High School Class of 1965: 50-year class reunion, June
11-13. June 11 events include Scramble Golf Tournament at Santiam
Golf Club and no-host gathering 6 p.m. at the Wooden Nickel in
Sublimity; June 12 gathering at Willamette Valley Vineyards; and
June 13 is a pig roast with all the fixings. All events require RSVP
except the gathering at Wooden Nickel. Alumni of other Cascade
classes are welcome. Sharon Hanson, (503) 851-8957, sharonh@wbcable.net.
Central High School Class of 1968: Annual gathering, Aug. 15 at
Redgate Vineyard in Independence. Food and beverages available
for purchase. Contact: Charlotte Iliff, (503) 362-3416,
char.iliff@gmail.com.
Central High School Classes 70s and 80s Multi-class Reunion:
Aug. 8 and 9. Aug. 8 at Riverview Park Amphitheater. Food, fun,
adult beverages and live music. $15 per person or $25 per family if
paid by May 1. Aug. 9 9-hole person best ball golf tournament with
prizes. Like us on Facebook and register ASAP. Fundraiser and food
drive for the local Ella Curran food bank so please bring two cans of
food per person. Contact Sherry Lindley-Lowells, (503) 931-3201,
sherrylowells@comcast.net.
Gervais High School Classes of 1962 to 1968: Seven classes of
Gervais alumni are invited for a fun night of no host bar, dinner and
music, Aug. 1 at Bob Zielinskis Scenic Valley Vineyards and new Farm
Museum. Barbara Neliton, (503) 393-6439, barbara.neliton@gmail.com.
Gervais High School All-Class reunion: All alumni are invited to
join the class of 1955, 5 to 10 p.m. Sept. 26 at Silverton Elks. RSVP to
Pat Hupp, (503) 873-2608, or Larry Jebousek, (503) 871-8262.
Gervais Union High School Class of 1962: Monthly class luncheons, 11:30 a.m., second Thursday of each month at Izzys on
Lancaster Drive NE. kb7scc@wildblue.net.
Gervais High School Class of 1970: 45-year class reunion, Aug. 15
at McNary Restaurant & Lounge. RSVP to Rita Rasmussen at (503)
580-0612 or Frank or Karen Slyter at (503) 538-1942.
Corvallis High School Class of 1965: 50-year class reunion, Aug. 7
and 8. Friday informal meeting at 7 p.m. at Old School at the Childrens Farm Home. Picnic at 10 a.m. Saturday at Avery Park. Buffet at
5:30 p.m. at the CH2M Hill Alumni Center. Contact: corvallishsreunion65@gmail.com, www.chs65.info.

North Salem High School Class of 1957: No-host luncheon meetings fourth Thursday of each month at Keizer Elks, 4250 Cherry Ave.
NE, Keizer. Contact: Donna Kelley-Dayton, (503) 881-2123.
North Salem High School Class of 1958: Class luncheon, noon
second Friday of each month at Keizer Elks Lodge. Contact: Judie
Mapes, (503) 390-0960.
North Salem High School Class of 1960: Gathering of classmates,
11:30 a.m. third Wednesday of each month at Keizer Elks Lodge.
Contact: Becky, (503) 390-1225.
North Salem High School Class of 1965: 50-year class reunion, July
31 at Northwest Wine Studies Center. (425) 644-1044, info@ReunionsWithClass.com. Register at www.ReunionsWithClass.com
North Salem High School Class of 1970: 45-year class reunion,
Aug. 14 and 15. Friday informal gathering place at the Lucey Barn.
Saturday golf scramble; dinner buffet at McNary Restaurant. govikings1970@gmail.com,
https://sites.google.com/site/1970northsalemvikings/;
www.facebook.com/northsalem45threunion.
Sacred Heart/Serra Catholic High Schools: Reunion, 7 to 10 p.m.
July 24 at Blanchet School; 5 p.m. July 25 at Keizer Elks Lodge. Contact: Clem Unrein, (503) 845-6742 or Norma (Rupp) Bernardy, (503)
390-1915.
Salem High School Class of 1942: Luncheon at Rudys at Salem
Golf Club, 2025 Golf Course Road S. 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. third Monday of each month. Contact: (503) 362-8078.
Salem High School Class of 1944: Monthly luncheons at 11:30 a.m.,
third Tuesday of each month at The Sizzler Restaurant on Lancaster
Drive NE. All classmates are invited, guys included. Contact: (503)
363-1814.

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Salem High School Class of 1950: Ladies no-host lunch, noon June
15 at Sizzler restaurant. Contact: Marilyn Lee, (503) 364-3743.

All Atlas Gloves


in stock

Salem High School Class of 1952: Monthly no-host luncheon, 11:30


a.m. third Thursday of each month, Schroeders Guest House Restaurant, 4850 Portland Road NE. Contact: Jim Kinkaid, (503) 581-8679.
Salem High School Class of 1954: Monthly class luncheons, third
Wednesday of each month at Keizer Elks, 4250 Cherry Ave. NE.
Contact: (503) 551-6556.
Scio High School Alumni Reunion: 10 a.m. June 28 at Scio Centennial School. Potluck at 1 p.m. Contact: Alfreda Bales, (503) 363-6360.

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Hopewell Grade School All-Class Reunion: All classes invited to a


potluck, 2 to 6 p.m. Aug. 8 at Hauer of the Dauen Winery in Dayton.
Canned food drive for Hopewell Community Church Food Bank.
Bring your favorite dish to share. Contact Debbie Buck (Hackworth),
(503) 551-7236.
Independence High All School Reunion: 11 a.m. Aug. 22, Henry
Hill Library, 750 S Fifth St. Catered Luncheon. $15. To register, send
check to IHS Reunion, PO Box 291, Independence OR 97351. Questions: Al Oppliger, (503) 838-1353, jcoppliger@aol.com
Independence High School Class of 1950: 65-year class reunion,
Aug. 21 at Rock-n-Rogers at Farrols Restaurant in Rickreall. Al Oppliger, (503) 838-1353, jcoppliger@aol.com.
John F Kennedy Mount Angel High School Class of 1975: 40year class reunion, Aug. 1 at Evergreen Golf Course. Contact John
Gooley at johnegooley@yahoo.com.
Lebanon High School Class of 1959: 56th class reunion, Aug. 8 at
Santiam Place. Festivities begin at 5 p.m. with registration and happy
hour, then dinner at 6:30 p.m. Judy Peters, (503) 910-9018 or (503)
838-6216, judejj03@hotmail.com.
McNary High School Class of 1970: 45-year class reunion, July 17
and 18. Friday no-host bar at Walerys West Salem. Saturday social at
6 p.m. and buffet at 6 p.m. at Keizer Elks Lodge. Deadline for registration and payment is June 27. Email mcnary1970@gmail.com.
McNary High School Class of 1975: 40-year class reunion, Aug. 7
and 8. mcnaryhighschool1975@gmail.com or McNary 1975 Reunion
c/o 1156 Manzanita Way NE Keizer, OR 97303-3545.
North Salem High School Class of 1956: Class luncheon, 11:30 a.m.
first Friday of each month. Contact: Diane, (503) 364-1104 or judy,
(503) 393-7070.

CRIME LOG
POLICE
POLICE
Reported in the 24 hours ending at 4 p.m. Saturday (addresses refer
to block number):

SALEM
Residential and business burglaries: 1000 Fir St. S, 1300 Plaza St. NW,
1000 Fairview Ave. SE.
Traffic crashes: Friday: 10:55 a.m., 3200 Arbon St. NE; 3:06 p.m.,
Commercial and Hoyt streets SE; 4:03 p.m., 12th and Marion Streets
NE; 4:23 p.m., Lancaster Drive and Glendale Avenue NE; 5:02 p.m.,
1200 Cross St. SE; 9:53 p.m., 2200 Sunnyview Road NE; 10:02 p.m.,
Garth and Turner roads SE; Saturday: 5:08 a.m., 3100 Hammel St. NE;
1:06 p.m., 4120 Commercial St. SE; 1:17 p.m., 300 Senate St. NW.

INDEPENDENCE
Stolen vehicles: 900 Walnut St.
Traffic crashes: Friday: 6:27 p.m., 1500 Monmouth St.; Saturday: 1:39
a.m., 100 C St.

MARION COUNTY
Residential and business burglaries: 8300 Enchanted Way SE, 4300
Lancaster Drive NE.
Traffic crashes: Friday: 5:08 p.m., 9600 Marion Road SE; Saturday:
2:21 a.m., 3700 Silverton Road NE; 12:36 p.m., 29000 North Fork Road
SE.

POLK COUNTY
Stolen vehicles: 10000 Rickreall Road.

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Traffic crashes: Saturday: 1:45 a.m., Highway 99W, milepost 61.

25

12A

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Fake orca nearly


drowns prior to
scaring sea lions
By Terrence Petty
Associated Press

BRENT DRINKUT/STATESMAN JOURNAL

Trevor Spear puts on his gown as he arrives for the 17th annual commencement at Blanchet Catholic School on Saturday.

Embarking on new path

PORTLAND When a 32-foot replica killer whale


buzzed through the water to scare off hundreds of
sea lions piled on Oregon docks, onlookers cheered.
And then the dummy orca went belly-up.
The motorized fiberglass orca was brought
Thursday to the seaside town of Astoria as a sort of
maritime Clint Eastwood called upon to deal with
neer-do-wells, in this case sea lions crowding onto
docks and making it difficult for locals to access
their boats.
But the orcas first day on the job was a flop.
About 1,000 people cheered as the dummy whale
with its human operator inside took to the water
Thursday night. Jim Knight, executive director of
the Port of Astoria, said sea lions that were crowded
onto the docks became deathly silent.
But as a cargo ship passed by, the phony orca
started to list from the vessels wake. And then the
bogus orca capsized.
Our crew from the port had to go rescue the operator so he didnt drown, Knight said.
So what did the sea lions think about this spectacle?
They probably think its dead now that its belly
up, Knight said. You cant make this stuff up.
Sea lion numbers along the West Coast have
grown sharply since they were protected under a
1972 federal law. As water temperatures increase
off the coast of California because of climate
change, the animals have sought cooler waters to the
north in Oregon. The sea lions who have been taking
over docks at the Port of Astoria are also attracted
by bountiful runs of salmon and smelt in the nearby
Columbia River, biologists say.
While the thousands of tourists who visit Astoria
each year might find the sea lions amusing, many locals see them as a nuisance. Officials say the sea lions break the docks, poop, smell, block access to
boats, and eat the fish on which the ports fishing industry and the towns economy depend.
The Port of Astoria has tried just about everything to keep the sea lions away including beach
balls, colorful tape, chicken wire and electrified
mats.
The fake orca was outfitted with recordings of
real killer whale calls.
The orca capsized before the recording could be
tried out.

BRENT DRINKUT/STATESMAN JOURNAL

Graduating senior Shania Cessnun walks through the floral


arches during graduation inside Gallaspy Stadium at Dallas
High School on Saturday.

Its high school graduation season, and the


Statesman Journal will be there chronicling the
ceremonies of schools throughout Marion and
Polk counties. On June 14, look for a special
graduation section in print and online with photographs of the ceremonies and lists of graduates from local schools. Go to Statesman
Journal.com/grad for photo galleries of local
ceremonies.

Kennedy High School graduated its class of 2015 at the


Festhalle in Mt. Angel on Saturday.

JOSHUA BESSEX, DAILY ASTORIAN/AP

John Wifler, the pilot of a fake fiberglass orca, is pulled


from the capsized vessel Thursday in the Columbia River.

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USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL

SECTION B

E2

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Sonys latest
prot strategy

Story behind the making


of Jurassic World movie

06.07.15
KAZUHIRO NOGI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

A MAN OF CHARACTER

WHATS HAPPENING

$500K
for a
green
card,
new life

ONLINE
TODAYS
MUST-READS

Foreign investors
give U.S. cities
boost, create jobs

TONY AWARDS

uThe Tonys: Photos


and stories from
Broadways big night

Sara Roth
KGW.com

uCavs and Warriors


battle in Game 2 of
the NBA nals

PORTLAND, ORE .

uStories, analysis as
world leaders gather
for G-7 summit
uWere there as for
the French Open nal
KEVIN LAMARQUE, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

TODAY ON TV

President Obama hugs Vice President Biden during the funeral Saturday for Bidens son Beau.

uABC This Week:


Gov. Scott Walker, R-Wis.
uNBC Meet the Press:
Pre-empted by coverage
of the French Open.
uCBS Face the Nation:
Gov. Chris Christie, R-N.J.;
Republican presidential
candidate Rick Perry;
uCNN State of the
Union: Republican
presidential candidates
Rick Perry and Lindsey
Graham; Democratic
presidential candidate
Lincoln Chafee
To nd these items, go to
onlinetoday.usatoday.com

This is an edition of USA TODAY


provided for Statesman Journal. An
expanded version of USA TODAY is
available at newsstands or by
subscription, and at usatoday.com.

Find USA TODAY Sports in todays local


sports section.

USA SNAPSHOTS

States cash in
on lotteries

$19.9

24

billion

12

Obama eulogizes
Beau Biden
David Jackson
USA TODAY

President Obama lauded Beau


Biden on Saturday as a man of
character who honored his family and nation and as a military
veteran and public servant who
met lifes challenge of making a
difference.
The world noticed, Obama
told the Biden family during a eulogy at a Catholic church in Wilmington, Del. They felt it his
presence. Beau lives on in the
lives of others. ... What a good
man. What an original.
Beau Biden, 46, a former Delaware attorney general who had
planned to run for governor, died
a week ago after a long bout with
brain cancer.

Source North American Association of


State and Provincial Lotteries
TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Vice presidents
son died after
battle with
brain cancer
Beau lives on
in the lives of
others. ... What
a good man.
What an
original.
President Obama

Because he was a Biden, the


titles that come with family
husband, father, son, brother, uncle those were the ones Beau
valued above any other, he said.
The president, his voice nearly
cracking, spent part of the eulogy
delivering heartfelt tributes to his
vice president, noting that four
decades ago he survived the death
of his wife and their infant
daughter.
Joe, you are my brother, the
president said.
Obama, rst lady Michelle
Obama and their daughter Sasha
weve become part of the Biden clan, were honorary members now, the president said
joined a host of political dignitaries attending the Saturday
morning funeral at St. Anthony of
Padua Roman Catholic Church.

Kai Lu and his


wife, Helen Shu, were raising their
young daughter in China when an
ultra-modern Marriott Courtyard
hotel was built just minutes from
their home in Suzhou, a congested
suburb of Shanghai.
The couple went to check out
the new hotel and noticed a yer
in the lobby advertising a similar
hotel in Portland, Oregon. The
yer was seeking investors who, in
exchange for half a million dollars,
could receive green cards for their
immediate family.

SARA ROTH, KGW.COM

The EB-5 program funded a Marriott hotel in Portlands Pearl District.

We were planning to move to


the U.S. or Canada, said Lu. We
got a very good impression of the
hotel group, so we were very condent in that investment.
Lu combined the familys savings along with some money from
the couples parents to come up
with the $500,000 investment.
Three years later, they moved to
Sammamish, a suburb of Seattle.
Lu is one of thousands of people who help fund major commercial real estate projects every year
in exchange for U.S. residency
through the federal program
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Texas may soon see campus carry


Bill allows concealed weapons at universities
Rick Jervis

The lump sum that state


lotteries transferred to their
coffers in 2014 a mere
1.78% boost over 2013.

UNIVERSAL PICTURES

USA TODAY
AUSTIN College students across
Texas could soon be carrying
handguns into dorms and classrooms.
Texas lawmakers a week ago
passed a bill allowing for rearms
to be carried on public university
campuses. The bill came on the

heels of another approved bill


making it legal to openly carry a
holstered gun in public in Texas.
Both bills await the signature of
Gov. Greg Abbott, who has said he
supports expanding gun rights.
If signed, the campus carry
bill will allow only concealed
handguns on campuses by those
21 years or older and who hold a
handgun license. The rule will go
into effect Aug. 1, 2016.

The campus gun bill was


passed despite written protests
from University of Texas System
Chancellor William McRaven, a
former Navy admiral who directed the Special Forces attack on
Osama bin Laden.
Overall, horrible idea, said
Jonathan Panzer, executive director of Texas Gun Sense, an Austin-based advocacy group that
opposed the measure. The presidents dont want it. The faculties
doesnt want it. The students

dont want it. Its incredibly dangerous to add rearms to an already volatile situation on
campus.
Texas joins a growing number
of states that have changed the
rules to allow guns on campuses
since the 2007 Virginia Tech
shooting, where a student shot
and killed 32 people and wounded 17 before turning the gun on
himself. Gun rights proponents
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Royal babies Charlotte, George star in new family photos


Maria Puente and
Jayme Deerwester
USA TODAY

Hello, Princess Charlotte, dont


you look cute in your new baby
pictures.
Prince William and Duchess
Kate of Cambridge released their
rst family photos Saturday, four
pictures featuring new baby
Princess Charlotte, just 2 months
old, and big brother Prince
George, who turns 2 years old
next month.
To stress the point that these
are family photos, Kensington

Palace said the pictures were taken by Duchess Kate herself in


mid-May at Anmer Hall, the familys country retreat in Norfolk on
the royal Sandringham estate.
The pictures are expected to be
a sensation around the world, but
especially in Britain, where the
Cambridge-loving public and
media are ever eager to feast on
rare official photos of the royal
babies.
It may be another four weeks
before Charlotte is seen in public
again, when shes christened
Charlotte Elizabeth Diana on
July 5 at St. Mary Magdalene
Church near Anmer Hall, where
Wills late mother, Princess

The
photos
of the
children
were
sent out
via
Twitter
rst.
DUCHESS OF CAMBRIDGE, PRESS ASSOCIATION

Prince George and Princess Charlotte are


shown in a photo taken by their mother.

Diana, was herself christened.


Although that ceremony will
be private, as royal christenings
usually are, official photos will be
taken, the palace said.
To stress the new royal savvy
about social media, the family
photos released Saturday were
sent out to the world via Twitter
rst, as a thank you, the palace
said, to all the new followers of its
Twitter feed.
The palace publicly signaled
the pictures were coming in a
tweet early Saturday, followed by
more tweets with pictures of the
piles of presents baby Charlotte
has received from fans since her
birth.

2B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E2

WORLD

Mexico votes amid strife, corruption


Many jaded over its
form of democracy;
theyre all thieves
David Agren
Special for USA TODAY
MEXICO CITY Sandra Ramirez,
46, has voted all her adult life, but
like many in this corruptionplagued nation, Ramirez says she
has become disenchanted by
Mexican democracy. Politicians
and political parties have taken
over the system and dont act in
the peoples interests, she says.
Theyre all thieves. Theyre all
corrupt. None of them cares
about solving problems. They all
look out for personal interests,
getting rich and doing business,
Ramirez says. Theres disappointment in giant letters.
Many Mexicans are expressing
similar disappointments as the
country prepared to hold midterm elections Sunday for the

PEDRO PARDO, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Members of the Popular Movement of Guerrero State confront


police in Mexicos Guerrero state on Friday.
500-seat Congress as well as a
number of governorships and
mayorships.
Spare some cities, I have the
impression that were not going
enthusiastically into a civic festi-

val, rather a funeral, says Sergio


Aguayo, political science professor at the Colegio de Mxico.
The process is proving tense in
some areas, especially in southern states such as Oaxaca, Chia-

pas and Guerrero. Teachers there


have attacked offices belonging to
electoral officials, burned ballots
and even prevented the provision
of gasoline to service stations in
Oaxaca city.
Its an attempt at sabotaging
the elections part of the pressure theyre applying to have the
government roll back an education reform, which would subject
them to evaluations and curb
union control of teacher hiring
and ring. The government has
temporarily canceled the evaluations for unexplained reasons.
National Electoral Institute
President Lorenzo Cordoba told
Televisa on Friday that 5,042
polling stations in Oaxaca 3%
of the total would not be installed due to security.
President Enrique Pea Nieto
assumed office in December 2012
and immediately pursued reforms in areas such energy, telecommunications and taxation.
He achieved a multiparty pact to
accomplish his agenda, starting

with an overhaul of the school


system something Gonzlez
says has been reversed with the
government suspension of teacher examinations.
Its the latest setback for Pea
Nieto, who has been sidetracked
by a steady stream of scandals.
Investigative reporters revealed
last year that his wife, actress Angelica Rivera, had bought a $7
million mansion from a prominent government contractor
which also provided credit. TheWall Street Journal later reported
that the president and his nance
minister, Luis Videgaray, also
purchased properties from contractors with Videgaray receiving a preferential interest rate.
The president, rst lady and Videgaray deny any wrongdoing.
Mexicos 10 registered political
parties collect roughly $350 million annually in public money.
IMCO released a report in May
that showed 91% of Mexicans
consider political parties corrupt,
worse than any other institution.

NATION

A slice of the American dream


v CONTINUED FROM 1B

called EB-5. The program has


backed projects in cities including
New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle.
Critics of the program say its
too secretive, putting national security at risk and making investors
vulnerable to fraud. Three Republican senators called for a federal
audit of the program, which began
in December 2014. But that hasnt
stopped EB-5 from gaining popularity in Portland as developers
hope these foreign investors can
help the city boom.
You will see more [EB-5] activity in Portland and beyond,
said Marvin Kau, vice president of
project development at American
United, a regional center that
manages EB-5 investments in
Oregon.
HOW EB-5 WORKS

The EB-5 program allows people


to invest $500,000 into a building
project in a high-unemployment
area (150% higher than the national average), or $1 million in a
location with normal employment
rates although almost no one
chooses the $1 million option. The
investment must create at least 10
full-time, permanent jobs.
In exchange, the investor receives a green card for themselves,
their spouse and any children under the age of 21. The process is
quicker and easier than the traditional green card application process, and most people can move to
the U.S. a couple years after the investment is made.
The EB-5 program started in
1990 as a temporary way to get
people from out of the country to
move to the U.S. and create new
companies. Instead, its become a
fast-track solution for building hotels and office towers.
The original design of the program was for foreigners to move
to the U.S. and hire people, said
Kau. Its evolved to be primarily a
real-estate funding source over
time. You can put EB-5 money
into any business that creates
jobs.
Hotels are the easiest to nance, Kau says, because its easy
to explain a hotel to investors.
Right now, there are 10,000
green cards available through the
program each year and around
85% of the investments come
from China, where families of
three are the norm. That means
that just over 3,000 investments,
on average, are pumped into the

FAMILY PHOTO

Kai Lu and his wife, Helen


Shu, and their daughter, Qingyan, visit Santa Cruz, Calif.

I think they do it,


in part, to get the
citizenship and
also of course
to benet their
children.
John Mangan, spokesman for Portlands
Williams and Dame Development

you have to build your project.


SARA ROTH, KGW.COM

Portlands Hyatt House development site.


economy allotting for around
$1.5 billion nationally.
The investors work with regional centers, such as American
United, to connect with developers in the U.S. in exchange for a
cut of the investment return. Although the green card process and
the general program are managed
by the Department of Homeland
Security, the regional centers are
private and a DHS spokesman
said even the government doesnt
know how much money has been
brought in through EB-5.
The program is not only extremely popular with investors
The New York Times reported

that all 10,000 investments allotted for 2015 were snapped up by


May but also with developers,
especially during tough economic
times. Cobbled together, EB-5 investments can fund multimilliondollar projects even when banks
might be white-knuckling their
purse strings.
In order to build a hotel or ofce tower from scratch, you need
a lot of investment, said John
Mangan, spokesman for Portlands Williams and Dame Development, the group behind
Portlands rst two EB-5 investment properties. The more investors you have, the better chance

WHO EB-5 INVESTORS ARE

Half a million dollars may seem


like a huge investment to some,
but most EB-5 investors are not
extremely wealthy. Instead, most
look like Lus family a couple
who is hoping to send their child
to U.S. schools and perhaps seeking a new adventure, borrowing
money from family in order to
make their dreams happen.
I think they do it, in part, to get
the citizenship and also of course
to benet their children, Mangan
said.
That was the driving factor for
Lu and Shu, whose daughter, Qingyan, is now 4 years old. She will
start preschool in the fall, then go
to public schools.

Allowing rearms on campus just a bad idea


v CONTINUED FROM 1B

claim armed students could stop


such spree shooters in their
tracks, while opponents say guns
on campus are unnecessary and
present a liability.
Texas would became the eighth
state to allow concealed weapons
on public post-secondary campuses, according to the National
Conference of State Legislatures,
or NCSL. The others are Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Mississippi,
Oregon, Utah and Wisconsin.
In 2014, 14 states introduced
bills to allow guns on campuses,
said Suzanne Hultin, a policy specialist at NCSL. This year, that

climbed to 16 states. Most of


those measures fail or are
shelved, due mostly to opposition
from university leaders, she said.
But each year, new ones pop up.
Theres denitely a strong lobby to get guns on campus, Hultin
said.
Similar proposals failed in Texas for years. But this year a compromise allowing university
officials to determine gun-free
zones where weapons are not allowed helped pass the bill.
A University of Texas/Texas
Tribune poll in February showed
Texans are nearly split even on
allowing concealed handguns on
college campuses, with 47% sup-

porting the idea and 45%


opposing.
Besides making campuses safer, allowing faculty and students
to carry weapons at colleges and
universities extends their Second
Amendment rights, said Mike
Newbern, a spokesman with Students for Concealed Carry, a
Michigan-based non-prot group
that advocates for gun rights on
campuses.
The argument that guns in the
hands of students will lead to
more gun violence is baseless, he
said. In Colorado, for example,
crime around campuses that allow guns has gone down, Newbern said. This whole idea that

law-abiding citizens in possession


of rearms is going to result in
some apocalyptic terror is just
not true, and lawmakers are
starting to realize that, he said.
But allowing rearms into an
arena that already sees alcohol
and drug abuse, depression and
domestic violence could lead to
increased gun violence, Panzer
said.
Also, colleges and universities
that allow guns on campus will
likely see a rise in their insurance
premiums to cover potential liabilities, which could translate to
higher tuition costs, he said.
Guns on campus are just a bad
idea, Panzer said.

Through their $500,000 investment, the couple is able to live the


American dream. They even have
a single-family home with a yard.
Its something they could never
have in Suzhou.
The signs of development in
Portland are inescapable. Take a
walk downtown and the decibels
spike as you pass massive projects
that take up city blocks. Drive over
the Fremont Bridge and you see
cranes rising high out of the Pearl
district and South Waterfront past
that, rapidly building condos and
hotels.
Two of these big projects the
Marriott Residence Inn in the
Pearl District and the Hyatt
House in the South Waterfront
are funded by EB-5 investments.
Both are projects of the development group run by Homer Williams and Dyke Dame, the men
behind the revitalization of the
Pearl
District
and
South
Waterfront.
The program is so popular that
the federal government is considering raising or lifting the cap on
investments, so Portland could see
an even bigger inux of EB-5 investors in the future.
For investors such as Lu and
Shu, the economic benet to the
country and any investment return is just an added bonus. While
they expect to get their money
back in a couple of years, they
have already started putting down
roots in Washington, settling into
their cozy neighborhood and relishing mundane tasks many
Americans take for granted.
We have to take care of our
yard its totally different, Lu
said. Its tough work but a lot of
fun. We have such a big yard and
beautiful owers, grass and trees.
We can see sparrows and rabbits
in our yard. Thats pretty
amazing.
The only thing the family
misses about China so far?
Shu chuckled.
Dim Sum, she said.

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USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E2

3B

NATION/WORLD
ON POLITICS
Cooper Allen

Spending bills on collision course


All measures
passed in House
face veto threats

@coopallen
USA TODAY

Congress debated, and


ultimately settled, the dispute
over expired Patriot Act
provisions. And, of course, more
candidates jumped into the
2016 presidential race. Other
news from the world of politics:
CRUZ TELLS BIDEN JOKE,
THEN APOLOGIZES
Texas Sen. Ted
Cruz quickly
apologized
last week
after making a crack
hed used
in the past
at Vice President Bidens
expense durBLOOMBERG
ing a speech to
Texas Sen. Ted
Cruz, a Repuba GOP group in
lican candidate
Michigan. You
for president,
know the nice
took to Facething? You
book to admit
his mistake.
dont need a
punchline, he
joked after mentioning the name
of Biden, whose son died May
30.
Cruz, a GOP presidential candidate, quickly took to Facebook
to say he was sorry after realizing how ill-timed the quip was
coming so soon after Beau Bidens death. It was a mistake to
use an old joke about Joe Biden
during his time of grief, and I
sincerely apologize, he wrote.
GEORGE W. BUSH
GAINING FAVOR
The 43rd president left office in
January 2009 with a favorability
rating in the mid-30s. Nearly 6
years later, Bush has recovered a
bit in the publics eyes. A CNN/
ORC poll out last week showed
that 52% of Americans have a
positive view of the former president, the rst time Bushs favorable rating has eclipsed his
unfavorable rating since early in
his second term.
Bushs uptick is consistent with
a historical pattern of former
presidents gaining in esteem as
the years pass from their days in
the White House. So perhaps
Barack Obama has something to
look forward to: His positive
rating had dipped to 49% in the
poll, a far cry from the stratospheric number (78% in January
2009) he enjoyed shortly before
taking office.

RONALD MARTINEZ, GETTY IMAGES

No. 43 sees post-presidential bump.

CLINTON UNVEILS
DETAILS OF KICKOFF EVENT
We already knew she was in
she announced in April but
Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton announced
this week the site of her official
campaign kickoff: Roosevelt
Island in New York City.
The former secretary of States
speech on June 13 will lay out
her view of the challenges facing
this country and her vision and
ideas for moving the country
forward, according to her
campaign. So far, Clintons
campaigning has focused on
small events and roundtable
discussions with voters in
early-voting states, but the
Roosevelt Island event will mark
a new phase in her 2016 bid.
MILLENNIALS GET POLITICAL
NEWS FROM FACEBOOK
A Pew Research Center poll last
week showed what many likely
suspected: The younger generation relies more on social media,
especially Facebook, than local
news for political coverage.
Sixty-one percent of Millennials dened as those born from
1981 to 1996 report getting
political news on Facebook in a
given week, a much larger percentage than turn to any other
news source, Pew reports.
Contributing: David Jackson

Susan Davis
USA TODAY

Congress is on a
collision course with the White
House this year over federal
spending priorities, and it could
force another government shutdown battle later this year.
The Senate is going to stonewall all of the appropriations bills.
So the question becomes: When
do we reach an agreement? said
Rep. Charlie Dent, R-Pa., a member of the House Appropriations
Committee.
The House panel is plowing
WASHINGTON

through the 12 annual spending


measures that determine the federal governments priorities. For
the 2016 scal year, Congress is
authorized to spend $1.016 trillion, with $523 billion for defense
programs and $493 billion for
non-defense programs.
All the bills are in line with the
GOP budget resolution but clash
with the Obama administrations
spending priorities. Negotiating
bills that both a GOP-controlled
Congress and President Obama
can support will be a formidable
challenge. The scal year ends
Sept. 30. Without an agreement
in place by then, or at least a stopgap measure, another shutdown
scenario looms.
So far, each of the Housepassed spending bills has received a veto threat because they
maintain austere spending levels

The Senate is going


to stonewall all of the
appropriations bills.
So the question
becomes: When do
we reach an
agreement?
Rep. Charlie Dent, R-Pa.

the result of a 2011 deal that


forces a decade of across-theboard cuts for discretionary
spending.
A two-year deal to ease the
cuts, known as sequestration, was
reached in 2013 by Sen. Patty
Murray, D-Wash., and Rep. Paul
Ryan, R-Wis., but that deal is expiring, and lawmakers, mostly
Democrats, want a new one.
I think what were all agreed
upon is that we do need a sequel

to Ryan-Murray, Sen. Barbara


Mikulski, D-Md., the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, said late last
month. And we need it sooner,
rather than later, so we can write
realistic bills that keep America
safe and invest in our future.
There is broad, bipartisan
agreement that sequestration is
bad policy, but equally strong disagreement on how to turn it off.
Republicans want other spending cuts, particularly from mandatory spending on entitlement
programs like Medicare, while
Democrats insist that any deal include some new taxes. Republicans have found ways to ease
defense cuts by increasing funding to an off-budget war account,
but Democrats are frustrated by
spending levels they say are choking critical domestic priorities.

PHOTOS BY ALAN GOMEZ, USA TODAY

PUBLIC HOUSING:
HOPE, PITFALLS
Some fear they wont return to rebuilt Miami complex
Alan Gomez
USA TODAY
MIAMI When the demolition
crews start tearing down the
nearly
80-year-old
Liberty
Square public housing project, it
will be welcome news to residents such as Lucille Rackley, 81,
a retired janitor who has lived
here for 25 years.
Rackley has watched the rows
of one- and two-story buildings
known as the Pork n Beans slowly fall apart, lived through riots in
1980 and witnessed a recent resurgence of violence that left her
scared to sit outside.
Yet she worries she wont have
a home to come back to. Political
and legal ghts delayed the rebuilding of her daughters complex nearby more than a decade,
and Rackley fears she and her
neighbors may suffer the same
fate. Sometimes they just dont
bring you back, Rackley said.
Miami-Dade Countys plan to
replace Liberty Squares 700
units with a complex where subsidized recipients live with higher-income residents mirrors
similar efforts around the country to move from federal public
housing projects to mixed-use
private developments.
The result has been fewer government-run public housing
units, from a peak of 1.4 million in
1991 to fewer than 1.1 million in
2013, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Replacing public housing com-

plexes like Liberty Square, one of


the nations oldest, often results
in disorganized relocations that
leave residents scattered, confused and lacking a support network, housing experts say.
It happened in Chicago, where
11 high-rise public housing buildings were destroyed in the 2000s,
and fewer than 20% of the original residents returned to the new
buildings, according to an Urban
Institute report in 2013. And it
happened in Miami, where most
of the original 850 residents of
the Scott Carver homes never
made it back once the new buildings were built a decade later.
Pretty much all the research
shows that even where replacement housing was built that was
affordable, very few of the original tenants moved back, said
Barbara Sard of the Center on
Budget and Policy Priorities in
Washington.
The Urban Institutes report
concluded that such widespread
relocation isnt necessarily bad.
Chicago residents were able to
use housing vouchers to rent private units or live in other public
housing, getting them out of dangerous environments.
Others say displacing families
can hurt. Robert Damewood, an
attorney with Regional Housing
Legal Services who represented
residents of a demolished complex in Pittsburgh, said people in
housing projects help each other
in ways that are difficult to replicate.Relocation often destroys
the social networks that low-income families depend upon for

Lucille Rackley, 81, says her


Liberty Square apartment
must be torn down and rebuilt, but she worries whether
shell be able to come back.

Earline Anderson, 47, says


rebuilding Liberty Square
wont do anything to stop the
violence that has raged
through the neighborhood.

Buford Redding, 57, says security has gotten so bad around


Liberty Square that criminals
have been killing people like
ies out here.

A nearly $300 million plan


would replace Great Depression-era homes in Miami with
mixed-income buildings.
survival, he said.
Edith Deris depends on such a
network in Liberty Square. Deris,
70, cant drive anymore so her
neighbors bring her groceries,
take her to doctor appointments
and drive her to church. We look
out for each other, she said.
Thats why I love it here.
Some residents of Liberty
Square say the government
should spend the money improving safety rather than rebuilding
the project. The complex was in
the middle of riots in 1980
sparked by the acquittal of four
Miami-Dade
police
officers
charged with killing an unarmed
black man. More recently, residents say, the complex has been
overrun by out-of-town gang
members and drug dealers who
contributed to 43 shooting deaths
over six months in 2014.
Ive taught my baby to drop
on the oor since he was old
enough to play outside, Ericka
James, 28, an out-of-work security guard, said of her son, 8.
Michael Liu, head of the county housing authority, said the
agency has devised a way to slow
the crime wave and ensure that
residents can return. It will use
nearby county land to build temporary housing until residents
can move into their new homes.
Liu, a former assistant HUD
secretary, said a combination of
county, state, federal and private
funds will cover the $285 million
cost. He said $500,000 is being
spent to add security cameras
and police officers to patrol the
area. That combination should nally turn the maligned Liberty
Square into a safer, more prosperous place, he told residents
during a recent meeting. Its
been great to see ... maybe not total agreement, but a groundswell
of support that something has to
be done, Liu said. It will be a
great community initiative.

IN BRIEF
THOUSANDS PROTEST G-7
SUMMIT IN GERMANY

Several thousand protesters


crammed into Garmisch-Partenkirchen, a small town in the Bavarian mountains in Germany
Saturday as rallies across the
southern part of the country
gathered steam ahead of the start
of two days of economic and security talks between world
leaders.
Around 20,000 police and security officers, some in full riot
gear, stood by in 90-degree heat
as demonstrators marched from
their camp on the outskirts of the

town a popular resort destination a few hours south of Munich


to its central train station and
then on toward the Schloss Elmau hotel. Garmish-Partenkirchen sits directly in the shadow of
Zugspitze, Germany's highest
mountain.
President Obama, German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, British Prime Minister David Cameron and others will convene at the
castle-turned-hotel Sunday and
Monday for the 41st Group of
Seven, or G-7, summit.
For the second year running,
Russia is excluded because of its

continuing military and apparent


territorial ambitions in Ukraine,
accusations it continues to deny.
The protesters from all
across Germany and Europe
carried slogans and banners voicing concerns about a range of
geopolitical and economic issues
from climate change to poverty to
crises in the Middle East to what
they consider predatory banks.
Kim Hjelmgaard
HURRICANE BLANCA GROWS
TO CATEGORY 4 STORM

Hurricane Blanca intensied into


a Category 4 storm off the Mexi-

can coast Saturday, but was forecast to weaken before it nears


land late Sunday.
The system is now packing
130-mph winds, and tropical
storm warnings and hurricane
watches have been issued along
the Pacic coast of Mexico, including for Cabo San Lucas, Santa
Fe and La Paz.
The storm was expected to
dump 6 to 10 inches of rain, with
isolated amounts of 15 inches
over much of the Baja California
Sur, according to the National
Hurricane Center.
Katherine Lackey

4B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E2

WORLD
Love locks prove a scourge to bridges
Romantic
symbols,
spurred
by an
Italian
novel, are
removed
in Paris

If they
take
down the
locks they
need
to be
displayed
somewhere.
Fiona Bliss, a
visitor to Paris

Elena Berton
Special for USA TODAY
PARIS Lovers may no longer be
able to place locks on a Paris
bridge to symbolize their love,
but what started as a teen novel
set in Rome remains the scourge
of bridges across Europe, and as
far away as China and Australia.
Called love locks, these symbols of romance have taken over
bridges, building gates and other
landmarks to the point that frustrated Paris authorities last week
began removing the nearly 1 million padlocks that encrust the
Pont des Arts and threaten the
pedestrian bridges structure.
On Friday, Parisian authorities
replaced the Pont des Arts metal
grilles with temporary paintings
by street artists before lock-proof
plexiglass panels are installed later this year.
Cities around the world have
struggled to deter tourists from
attaching locks to their historical
landmarks, which attract scores
of illegal lock sellers as well as
loving couples.
The practice has become so
widespread that some enterprising rms now sell personalized
locks online, shipping them to
lovers worldwide. Sebastian Hensel, owner of Berlin-based
mylovepadlock.com, said he was
surprised to spot padlocks supplied by his company during a
visit to Brooklyn.
Still, the news of their removal
in Paris has caused heartbreak
among lovers who have left behind symbols of their affection on
the Pont des Arts.

STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

We have a trip planned in


September back to Paris we intended to go back and see how
our love had weathered on our
anniversary, however we can no
longer do that, said Lily Tillett, a
teacher from England. What a
shame that an icon has gone
along with so many peoples
memories.
The Italian who unwittingly
spurred the phenomenon, Romebased novelist and lmmaker
Federico Moccia, is still bemused
that a plot device in one of his
best-selling novels has gone global. The two teenage protagonists
of Ho Voglia di Te (I Want You),
published in 2006 and followed

by a movie adaptation a year later, attach a lock to Romes Milvio


Bridge and throw the key into the
Tiber River as a sign of eternal
love.
The night before its publication, Moccia placed a lock on the
third lamppost of the bridge as a
surprise to any curious readers
who wanted to check whether the
love-lock tradition in the novel
was real. I thought only someone particularly engrossed by the
story would have wanted to
check, Moccia said. I went there
a week later and there were already 300 locks.
Padlocks made their appearance on the Pont des Arts as early

A worker
removes
love locks
attached to
the Pont des
Arts last
week in Paris.
The love
locks tradition has
spread to
bridges
worldwide.

as 2008, when visitors found its


metal grilles were the ideal place
to affix their romantic tokens.
As the locks spread to the entire structure of the bridge, the
city of Paris periodically replaced
whole sections, only to see them
covered again with padlocks in a
matter of days.
Two American-born Parisians,
Lisa Anselmo and Lisa TaylorHuff, so despise the practice that
they launched an Internet campaign, nolovelocks.com, to demand the removal of the locks in
Paris.
The problem here is enormous, and it doesnt show any
signs of ending, Anselmo said.
There are locks over 11 bridges
and landmarks including the Eiffel Tower, so one bridge does not
victory make, but its a great start
for Paris.
Fiona Bliss, a British beauty
therapist, said the locks on Pont
des Arts were one of the reasons
she visited Paris with her partner.
I think if they take down the
locks, they need to be displayed
somewhere like a museum or as
wall art somewhere as its part of
the romance of Paris.
Moccia, whose blockbuster
novels have been translated into
several languages but not yet into
English, is working on a follow-up
to I Want You. He admits he
would like to come up with another plot device that could nd
its way into real life.
But I need to think about
something that wouldnt create
problems like these, he said.
Something that could take the
test of time and not threaten any
bridges.

Seizing a golden opportunity in Iran


Oren Dorell
USA TODAY

Visiting business delegations


are streaming into Iran with an
eye on lucrative new deals before
a June 30 deadline for a sanctions-lifting nuclear agreement
with six world powers.
Tehran saw an explosion of
foreign business delegations in
the weeks after the framework
for a nuclear accord was announced in March. Everyone is
now waiting for the end of Round
2 in June, said Heinz-Joachim
Heise, a Switzerland-based management recruiter who opened an
office in Tehran last summer.
Multinational
corporations,
mostly from Europe and Asia,
that did business in Iran before
U.S. and international sanctions
forced them out are making plans
to return. They include many
well-known brands, such as German auto manufacturer Mercedes-Benz, French oil giant
Total and U.S. electronics manufacturer Hewlett-Packard, according to news accounts.
Companies that havent done
business in Iran are not knocking on my door wanting to open
business here, Heise said.
U.S. sanctions date to the Iranian revolution in 1979, but international sanctions were added or
tightened in recent years as Iran
expanded its nuclear program,
which the West suspects has military aims but Iran says is for
peaceful purposes.
Iran represents enormous potential to investors. It boasts an
educated population of 81 million, comparable to Germanys,
that is hungry for Western products. Its natural gas reserves rank
second in the world, and its oil reserves rank fourth. Yet production in the energy sector, mining
and manufacturing is far from
fully developed.
Even so, most foreign rms are
holding off on new operations,
say several investment advisers to
Western companies in Tehran.
Their caution is fueled by uncertainty that a deal to curb Irans
nuclear program in exchange for
an end to most economic sanctions will actually materialize.
Even if a deal is made, there are
concerns the United States would
still prohibit most American
companies from doing business
with Iran if it continues to violate
human rights, develop ballistic
missiles and support terrorists.
Theres also apprehension
about Irans outsize role in the
economy through networks of
pension funds and semi-state
groups with shares in many rms.
Corruption, red tape and legal
ambiguity about ownership of

Foreign delegations hope to score big if a nuclear deal allows


them to return, but uncertainty has others thinking twice

BEHROUZ MEHRI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Iranians wait at a bus station in Tehran, which has seen an


explosion of foreign investors since March testing waters.

Multinational corporations,
mostly from Europe and Asia,
that did business in Iran before
U.S. and international sanctions
forced them out have started
making plans to return.

EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Visitors tour the Iran Oil, Gas and Petrochemical International Exhibition in Tehran, Iran, last month.
companies will remain, said Bijan Khajehpour of Atieh International, a consulting rm in
Vienna that focuses on Iran.
Even if all sanctions are lifted,
there will still be blacklists of Iranian companies that Western
companies should avoid, he said.
Assets in the economy controlled by the semi-state organizations are gradually approaching
the size of government.
The Iranian government has a

huge presence in the market,


said Amir-Ali Amiri, founding
partner of the Tehran-based investment rm ACL. Quasi-government entities could cause
legal tangles for a lot of (Western)
companies because the United
States will continue to ban goods
that could be used for military
purposes. That would impact sellers of trucks, copiers and computer printers all sectors
Amiris companies represent

and even steel producers, whose


railroad tracks might be used to
deliver goods to a military facility.
Another problem: Western
companies left Iran without delivering spare parts for machinery
they sold before tighter sanctions
were imposed in 2012, Heise said.
Iranian businesses will demand
damage payments for machines
that broke because they had no
spare parts, and Irans courts will
probably back such claims.
Andreas Schweitzer, managing
partner at Swiss-Iranian investment rm Arjan Capital, has seen
a lot of French, Spanish, German
and Italian companies sending
lawyers and accountants to learn
how to remain in compliance
with European and American legal requirements once doing
business in Iran is permitted.
The ramp-up period is not trivial, said Schweitzer, who started

out in Iran in 2009 by developing


wind farms and helps foreign investors do business there. His clients are a handful of midsize
companies, including one that
sold a $15 million waste-to-energy plant to Iran, and companies
selling digital gas meters.
Schweitzer offers advice on Iranian negotiating culture.
A signed contract for me is an
expression of goodwill, but this is
not the end of the negotiations,
he said. The Iranians love postcontract negotiations.
There are also political risks.
Khajehpours company was based
in Tehran until he was arrested
during Irans crackdown on a prodemocracy movement in 2009.
Khajehpour said he faced charges
similar to those leveled against
Jason Rezaian, The Washington
Posts Tehran bureau chief
charged with spying.

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E2

5B

MONEY
MONEYLINE

Beth Belton
@bethbelton
USA TODAY

H. DARR BEISER, USA TODAY

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen.

ON THE FRONT BURNER


EGGS HARDER TO COME BY
Believe it or not, egg rationing
has started in the USA, according
to a Washington Post report.
H-E-B, a nationwide supermarket
operator, late Thursday, told
customers in Texas that they
were limited to buying three
cartons of eggs per customer,
the Post report said. The culprit:
avian u. Some 46.7 million
birds, including poultry, have
been affected nationwide.
Guess well be eating oatmeal
for breakfast.

LARRY W. SMITH, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

No free lunch with Warren Buffett.

WHOS ONLINE
TALK ABOUT A POWER LUNCH
Late Friday night, an unidentied
bidder committed to spending
just under $2.4 million in the 16th
annual eBay power lunch with
iconic investor Warren Buffett.
The auction benets GLIDE, a
San Francisco group that provides food, health care and social services to the needy. The
annual winning bidder gets to
lunch with seven friends and
Buffett at the Smith & Wollensky
steakhouse in midtown Manhattan and pick his brains. Have fun!
USA SNAPSHOTS

A matter of trust

62%
would trust an industry
expert the most
as a company
representative.

Source Edelman 2015 Trust Barometer


survey of 1,000 adults
JAE YANG AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY

Kirk Spitzer

Kazuo Hirai,
CEO of Sony
Corp.

USA TODAY
TOKYO Since late last year, tens of
millions of consumers worldwide
have purchased small, high-tech
and highly protable cameras
made by Sony Corp. probably
without even knowing it.
The cameras, sophisticated image sensors, are tucked inside every new Apple iPhone 6 and 6
Plus, and in some models made
by Samsung.
The sensors have boosted sales
and prots in Sonys important
Devices unit and are a centerpiece of a new strategy that the
long-suffering electronics giant
hopes will return it to nancial
health.
Sony was once known for creating iconic products such as Trinitron TVs and Walkman
portable audio players that dominated their market category.
Now, it no longer insists on
stamping its name on every product, ghting for market share or
maintaining popular but moneylosing products. The priority now
is protability.
This represents a major cultural shift at Sony, according to a
senior executive who agreed to
discuss company strategy on the
condition that his name be withheld. He and other company executives declined to talk about
the company on the record.
In the past, when faced with
heavy competition, Sony would
lower prices to maintain market
share, even at the expense of
prot margins. Now its chief focus is to boost the bottom line,
even if that means retrenching in
some markets, the executive said.
Toward that end, Sony sold off
its Vaio personal computer business last year and split off its TV
division into a wholly owned subsidiary. It laid off more than a
third of the staff at corporate
headquarters in Tokyo and
trimmed its worldwide sales staff
by 20%.
The moves followed years of
losses in Sonys core electronics
businesses
that
prompted
Moodys to downgrade the companys credit rating to junk status
in January 2014.
So far, investors approve of the
new direction. Sony shares on the
New York Stock Exchange have
nearly doubled the past year and
jumped 10% since officials announced a three-year restructuring plan in February.
Investors in Japan are even
more bullish. Shares on the Tokyo Stock Exchange have more
than doubled from a year earlier
and are 20% higher than before
the re-structuring announcement.
Some analysts caution that it is
too early to declare victory. Sony

KIMIMASA MAYAMA, EPA

BUSINESS SURVEILLANCE
YELLEN BALKS AT SUBPOENA
uIn a nutshell: Federal Reserve
Chair Janet Yellen is ignoring a
subpoena from a key House
lawmaker in his probe of a
possible leak of market-sensitive
information, the Associated
Press reported late Friday.
uThe issue: Yellen says turning
over the requested info would
jeopardize a Justice Department
investigation into an alleged
leak in 2012 of interest-rate
information to a Medley Advisors
nancial newsletter, the AP
reported. The Feds own probe of
the incident found no
wrongdoing.
uThe lawmaker: Rep. Jeb
Hensarling, R-Texas, is a vocal
critic of the Fed and itll be
interesting to see what his next
move is. The Fed once again is
acting in a manner that can only
be characterized as resistant to
accountability, transparency and
oversight, Jeff Emerson, an aide
to Hensarling, said in a
statement.

BOTTOM
LINE IS
NOW TOP
PRIORITY
STRUGGLING ELECTRONICS
GIANT SHIFTS STRATEGY
IN EFFORT TO STEM LOSSES
SONYS FINANCIAL STRUGGLES

Sonys results for scal years ending March 31:


SALES REVENUE (in billions)

NET INCOME LOSS (in billions)

$90

$2

$60

$30

63.9

$68.5

1.06

-$2
-1.05
-$4

0
2005

2014

Source Sony Corp. consolidated


nancial results

-$6
2005

2014

VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Sony did not have a good


strategy in the past and may
not even now.
Sea-Jin Chang, a business professor at the National University of Singapore
and author of Sony vs. Samsung

did not have a good strategy in


the past and may not even now.
Its nancial performance improved recently due to the weak
yen, but not due to restructuring, said Sea-Jin Chang, a business professor at the National
University of Singapore and author of Sony vs. Samsung.
In the scal year that ended in
March 2015, Sonys overall sales
grew by 5.8% to $68.5 billion.
Nonetheless, the company lost
$1.05 billion for the year.
Sony, in my view, is on a multi-year turnaround, said Atul
Goyal, an analyst at Jefferies in
Singapore.
This is not Sonys rst attempt
to stop the bleeding. A three-year
restructuring plan announced in
2012 missed all three of its primary sales and nancial targets
a failure that Sony CEO Kazuo
Hirai blamed on insufficient understanding of the competitive
landscape.
Our previous business plan
was one that was overly reliant on
solving our problems through increased scale in each of our business segments, Hirai said in
introducing the new three-year
plan in February.
Although Sony made its reputation on groundbreaking consumer electronic products like
the Walkman and PlayStation
video game consoles, the company in recent years has relied on
its entertainment and lesserknown nancial services division
for much of its prots.
For example, Sonys insurance
and banking division yes, it has
one produced $1.61 billion in
operating prots last year. Its
music and motion picture divisions earned a combined $979
million, even counting $41 million that Sony had to spend dealing with a cyberattack in
November 2014.
A group claiming responsibility
for the attack had demanded cancellation of the Sony-produced
lm The Interview, a comedy
about a plot to assassinate North
Koreas leader Kim Jong-un.
The new plan puts much of Sonys hopes for overall sales and
prot growth in its imaging sensors business.
And in a major break from the
past, those sensors are no longer
limited
to
Sony-branded
products.
The new strategy doesnt mean
that Sony is giving up altogether
on its past reputation for developing unique, outside-the-box
consumer products. At Sonys
showroom in the tony Ginza district of Tokyo, a display showcases an LED light bulb that
doubles as a high-end audio
speaker.
The light bulb is stamped with
the Sony logo. For now.

REVENUE DECLINES

A sour taste for food, beverage companies


Consumers, dollars
value pose challenges
Matt Krantz
USA TODAY

Think selling ice to Eskimos is


tough? Try selling cereal, large
canisters of coffee or cans of soup
to consumers.
The disappointing quarterly
results from J.M. Smucker on
Thursday underscore the tough
time many packaged food and
beverage companies are enduring.
Twelve of the 52 companies in
the packaged foods and meats
and beverage industries, including Nabisco owner Mondelez,
General Mills and Coca-Cola,
posted lower revenue in the past
12 months than they did in 2013,
according to a USA TODAY
analysis of data from S&P Capital
IQ. The universe is limited to

DANIEL ACKER, BLOOMBERG

General Mills, maker of Fiber One, is seeing lower revenue.


stocks in the Russell 3000 index.
The weakness many packaged
foods companies are encountering shows how changing tastes of
consumers are challenging even
the most established food brands.
It also underscores how the
strength of the U.S. dollar is a major headwind for many of these
companies.

The biggest revenue decline


was posted by Mondelez, where
revenue the past 12 months is
down 5.5% from the level in 2013.
The company formerly
known as Kraft Foods makes
everything from Oreo cookies to
Trident gum. Many of the product categories that company has
relied on in the past arent grow-

ing now. The company in the rst


quarter blamed the 10.2% decline
in rst-quarter revenue on
currency.
Both the big cereal makers,
Kellogg and General Mills, are
having trouble staying in the
breakfast bowls of consumers as
cereal is being replaced with alternatives.
These companies revenue
over the past 12 months is down
more than 2.5% from 2013 levels.
Even Coca-Cola has seen revenue the past 12 months drop 1.5%
from 2013 levels despite rolling
out all sorts of new beverages
with different sugar levels. The
company is trying to get growth
zzing again and sees 2015 as
a transition year, according to
CEO Muhtar Kent in the rstquarter earnings release.
Many packaged food companies cant do much about the dollars value. But consumers will
want to see what theyre doing to
whet consumers appetites again.

6B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E2

RETIREMENT

Know where your


ride will take you
I

ts hard to believe. Has it really been 2


years since I started writing this retirement
column?
Ive talked to hundreds of retirement planners,
financial advisers and authors from just about
every part of the country. I made sure I got the
view from the heartland in an effort not to
focus on the so-called high-net-worth clients.
Its been a wonderful ride. And Im sorry to
say, the ride is coming to an end. (More on that
later.) But first, Im going to give you some of the
best retirement tips Ive heard and written about
the past 2 years.
Do a budget, hire a
2
nancial planner and
get a retirement plan.

@perfiguy
USA TODAY

be afraid
5Dont
of the stock market.

benets by about 30%.

Rodney Brooks

Wait for Social


Security (if you can).

Only one topic generated more


email than my columns on Social
Security, and that was my columns on taxes. The big question:
When should you take benets?
Theres no easy answer, but heres
my best shot: If you can afford to,
wait until youre 70.
Im not naive. I realize most
people take benets early because
they have to. According to Voya
Financial, 75% of workers take Social Security before 70, and more
than half start benets between
60 and 64. But if you can, you
should wait. For every year you
wait after age 62, your benets increase by about 8%. Even if you
wait only till 67, you increase

Wow, thats a mouthful. But they


are all interrelated. Find a nancial adviser you can trust. They
will help you determine what your
needs will be in retirement, and
hopefully keep you from running
out of money.
The rst thing any nancial
planner will tell you is you have to
do a budget. If you dont know
how much youre spending, theres
no way to gure out what you
need in retirement.
But the planner will get you and
your spouse to sit down together
and make sure you both have the
same vision for retirement. A good
planner will help you gure out if
you want to stay in your house,
how much it will take to travel (if
thats your goal) and when is the
best time to take Social Security.
But they also might tell you that
you cant afford to retire because
you havent saved enough. In any

Im not saying that everything


is going to be ne. People who
havent saved must adjust their
way of thinking about what retirement is. They will most likely have
to work longer, if they can. Even a
part-time job will help. And they
will likely have to reduce their
standard of living in retirement.
But they must start saving now,
especially if they have a companysponsored 401(k) with a company
match. The power of compounding will make a big difference even
over 10 years.

GETTY IMAGES

Some must adjust their way of thinking about what retirement


is because they will most likely have to work longer, if they can.
event, youll know where you
stand.

not retire
3Do
without a plan.

As Ive written many times, its


not your fathers retirement. You
cant retire without knowing what
you will be doing for the rest of
your life. Think about it. If you retire at 60, you could live another
30 years.
And do you really think you can
sit in that easy chair and watch
movies for 30 years? Even those
who thought they would love to
play golf every day for the rest of
their lives are in for a rude awakening. Most get bored within six
months.
I talked with one 90-year-old

college lecturer and author recently who retired from his teaching jobs, but he still continues to
work on his other ventures. He
has no intention of retiring. And
every day his friends tell him they
retired too early.

never too late


4Its
to start saving.

I did a radio show not too long


ago. A woman called in for some
retirement advice. She was very
proud to have put her daughter
though an Ivy League college. But
she was 60 years old and had
saved nothing for retirement.
Sure, it sounds grim. But I talk
to people every day who are in
their 50s and 60s who have not
saved a dime.

When you have watched the daily


travails of the market, its not hard
to see why so many people are
afraid of stocks. And the big market crash of 2008 is still fresh on
our minds. But any any nancial
planner will tell you that one of
their biggest gripes is people being
too conservative with investments. That can be huge over a
lifetime of retirement saving.
Consider this: $10,000 invested
in stocks 20 years ago would have
been worth $65,484 at the end
2014. The same amount invested
in government bonds would have
brought you $31,058. And Treasury bills would have returned a
measly $16,900. Enough said.
And that brings me to my last
column. Though I have been a columnist for the last two years, I
have worked at USA TODAY for
30 years. They have been some of
the best years of my life. My company has offered a buyout package
for us veteran editors and reporters. I accepted.
Ive made some great friends
and worked with some of the best
journalists in the world. And most
of all I want to thank our readers,
especially the ones who have taken the time to call or email me to
either compliment me or complain. I appreciated the engagement either way.
And I am taking my own advice:
I am not really retiring. I will be
writing a retirement column for
The Washington Post, among
other things. You may nd me
elsewhere on the Web. And
you can email me at rbrooks
@srbcommunications.com.
Thank you. It has been an honor and a privilege.

    


  

 




   




 



 



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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

SundaySports
y p
BALLPARKS NEED MORE NETTING FOR FAN SAFETY PAGE 6C

BELMONT STAKES

NBA FINALS

American Warriors goal stays the same


Pharoah With Irving out, short-handed Cavaliers in trouble in series
runs into
history
By Brian Mahoney
Associated Press

OAKLAND, Calif. The NBA


Finals hyped as LeBron
James vs. Stephen Curry now
seems like James against the
Golden State Warriors.

The Cavaliers are down another important player, with


Kyrie Irving having surgery
Saturday back in Cleveland to
repair his fractured left kneecap.
And with what was an already short-handed Cavs

team down 1-0 heading into


Game 2 on Sunday night, a series that just started has the
feel of one that could end
quickly.
(I) understand that we
were the underdog coming
into the series and with Kyrie

being out people are writing


us off, James said. So, I
mean, thats fine. Thats fine.
Im motivated to get our guys
ready to go tomorrow and we
will be ready.

See NBA FINALS, Page 5C

By Beth Harris
Associated Press

NEW YORK Finally, a Triple


Crown winner, and after 37 years of
waiting, this one was never in doubt.
American Pharoah led all the way
to win the Belmont Stakes by 5
lengths on Saturday, becoming the
first horse since 1978 to sweep the
Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes one of the sporting
worlds rarest feats.
Wow! Wow! jockey Victor Espinoza said moments after crossing the
finish line. I can only tell you it just
an amazing thing.
The bay colt with the unusually
short tail easily defeated seven rivals
in the grueling 1 1/2-mile race, covering the distance in 2:26.65 sixthfastest in Belmont history to end
the longest stretch without a Triple
Crown champion in history.
That little horse, he deserved it,
trainer Bob Baffert said. Hes the
one that did it. We were basically just
passengers.
American Pharoah is the 12th
horse and first since Affirmed in 1978
to win three races on different tracks
at varying distances over a five-week
span. He won the Derby by one length
on May 2 and then romped to a sevenlength victory in the rainy Preakness
two weeks later before demolishing
his rivals Saturday.
I still cant believe it happened,
said Baffert, at 62 the second-oldest
trainer of a Triple Crown winner.
Baffert and Espinoza ended their
own frustrating histories in the Triple
Crown. Baffert finally won on his record fourth Triple try, having lost in
1997, 1998 (by a nose) and in 2002. Espinoza got it done with his record
third shot after failing to win in 2002
and last year on California Chrome.
I was prepared for somebody
coming because Ive been through
this so many times, Baffert said.
Nobody did.
Espinoza hustled American Pharoah to the lead leaving the No. 5 post
and quickly got him over to the rail.
Materiality was on his outside in second, but never applied any serious
pressure traveling on the backstretch
before falling away on the second
turn.
American Pharoah started kicking
away heading into the stretch turn.
He opened up on the field as he pow-

OREGON SOFTBALL

BRENT DRINKUT/STATESMAN JOURNAL

Oregon shortstop Nikki Udria tosses the ball to teammate Danica Mercado (2) after an out against Louisiana-Lafayette at Howe Field on
April 25 in Eugene.

LOOKING FOR

ANSWERS
Oregon coaches and players are
wondering what went wrong at
Womens College World Series

See BELMONT, Page 5C

By Pete Martini | Statesman Journal


EUGENE Mike White admits he
doesnt have the answer.
Oregons softball coach, who has
taken the program to new heights in
his six seasons, cant explain why the
Ducks struggle in the Womens College
World Series after such dominance in
the regular season, regionals and super regionals.
Were doing a lot of finger-pointing
this way, said White, pointing to himself. What can we do better as a coaching staff? And then as a team, what
changes do we need to make to be able
to make sure were able to bring home
that national championship one day?
Oregon, which was ranked No. 1 in

See DUCKS, Page 5C

OREGON STATE MENS BASKETBALL

Junior Robbins dismissed from the team


Statesman Journal

FRANK FRANKLIN II/AP

2015

American Pharoah rounds the final turn on


his way to winning the Belmont Stakes.

CORVALLIS

Oregon
States Victor Robbins is no
longer a member of the
mens basketball team, coach
Wayne Tinkle said Saturday.
Robbins, a 6-foot-7, 197pound junior forward from
Compton, California, aver-

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Victor is no longer with


the team, Tinkle said. We
are trying to help him, we
want him to finish school as
strong as he can this quarter.
We hope to help him find his
next place to go to school and
get his degree, and finish his
basketball career.
Without Robbins, OSU had
a lack of depth, especially in

the front court. The Beavers


(17-14, 8-10 Pac-12) lost seven
of their last eight games.
OSU returns its entire
starting lineup for the 201516 season, including firstteam all-Pac-12 guard Gary
Payton II.
ghorowitz@Statesman
Journal.com, (503) 399-6726 or
Twitter.com/ghorowitz

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aged 10.3 points and 3.5 rebounds last season and appeared in 15 games.
Robbins was eight games
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February. He did not play the
remainder of the season.

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REACH US: sports@StatesmanJournal.com, (503) 399-6611

2015

By Gary Horowitz

2C

Sports

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

StatesmanJournal.com

MLB DRAFT

AREA
HIGHLIGHTS
HIGH SCHOOLS

Saturdays result
Tualatin 10, Westview 0
CLASS 5A
Saturdays result
Putnam 3, Pendleton 2
CLASS 4A
Saturdays result
McLoughlin 4, Banks 0

BASEBALL
STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS
All games at Volcanoes Stadium
CLASS 6A
Saturdays result
Sheldon 2, West Linn 1
CLASS 5A
Saturdays result
Hood River Valley 2, Liberty 0
CLASS 4A
Saturdays result
Scappoose 11, Henley 6
SOFTBALL
STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS
All games at OSU Softball Complex
CLASS 6A

COLLEGES
MENS ROWING
Oregon State: The Beavers saw 10 from the
mens rowing team named to the Pac-12 AllAcademic team.
Aidan Daly-Jensen earned his third consecutive first-team award, with Bobby Vernazza
earning his second first-team award. Michael

Jagielski earned his first first-team award.


Clark Fisher, Martin Forde, Taylor Heen, Max
Cantrell and Nathan Smith all were named to
second-team. It is the third time being All-Academic team for Fisher, Forde, and Heen.
Honorable Mention selctions went to Tyler
MacDonald and Grant Van Kampen.

AROUND OREGON
ADULT SOFTBALL
Coed Int.
Slow Motion 14, Sante 4 (Forfeit)
Annettes 12, Team Chaos 2
Betty Lous 17, Freeloader 15
Slow Motion 17, Freeloader 14
Team Chaos 8, Sante 6 (Forfeit)
Annettes 22, Betty Lous

Coed Rec.
Rubinos Gems 15, SWAT 11
Low Five 18, Norpac 5
SWAT 14, Low Five 6
Rubinos Gems 11, Norpac 2
Mega Foods 12, Dirt Bags 2
Coffee in Motion23, SpitVallers 1
Coffee in Motion 16, Dirt Bags 3
Mega Foods 22, SpitBallers 4
Mens
Remix 18, Blackwater Tactical 7
Standard Utilities 18, Diamond Jaxx 12
Renegades 19, Davidsons Masonry 12
Blackwater Tactical 19, Davidsons Masonry 9
Remix 19, Diamond Jaxx 15
Standard Utilities 17, Renegades 7

Statesman Journal
MARK HUMPHREY/AP FILE

Vanderbilt starting pitcher Walker Buehler is among the


top prospects entering next weeks MLB draft.

SCOREBOARD
NBA
Daily Playoff Glance
All times PDT/MST
FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Thursday, June 4
Golden State 108, Cleveland 100, Golden
State leads series 1-0
Sunday, June 7
Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m.
Tuesday, June 9
Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m.
Thursday, June 11
Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m.
Sunday, June 14
x-Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m.
Tuesday, June 16
x-Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m.
Friday, June 19
x-Cleveland at Golden State, 6 p.m.

NHL
All times PDT/MST
Daily Playoff Glance
FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Wednesday, June 3
Chicago 2, Tampa Bay 1
Saturday, June 6
Tampa Bay 4, Chicago 3, series tied 1-1
Lightning 4, Blackhawks 3
0
2 1
Chicago
Tampa Bay
1
2 1

Monday, June 8
Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, June 10
Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m.
Saturday, June 13
Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.
Monday, June 15
x-Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, June 17
x-Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.

MLS
All times PDT/MST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W

8
5
6
4
4
4
4
4
4
2

4
3
5
5
4
6
9
4
7
7

T Pts GF GA

4
6
1
5
5
4
3
2
2
5

28
21
19
17
17
16
15
14
14
11

20
20
19
19
17
20
18
13
17
12

15
18
16
19
17
21
25
15
20
18

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Seattle
Sporting KC
Vancouver
FC Dallas
Los Angeles
Houston
Portland
San Jose
Real Salt Lake
Colorado

8
6
7
6
5
5
5
5
4
2

4
2
6
4
4
5
5
5
5
4

T Pts GF GA

2
6
2
3
6
5
4
3
5
7

26
24
23
21
21
20
19
18
17
13

20
22
17
18
15
21
13
14
13
11

11
15
15
19
17
19
14
15
18
12

Wednesdays Games
D.C. United 3, Chicago 1
Philadelphia 3, Columbus 0
Montreal 2, Vancouver 1
Fridays Game
Houston 4, New York 2
Saturdays Games
Toronto FC 2, D.C. United 1
NY City FC 2, Philadelphia 1
Montreal 2, Columbus 1
Sporting KC 1, Seattle 0
Orlando City 3, Chicago 2
Vancouver at Los Angeles, late
New England at Portland, late
Sundays Games
Colorado at Real Salt Lake, 2 p.m.
FC Dallas at San Jose, 4 p.m.
Saturday, June 13
Montreal at NY City FC, 4 p.m.
Los Angeles at Columbus, 4:30 p.m.
Chicago at New England, 4:30 p.m.
FC Dallas at Seattle, 7 p.m.
Sunday, June 14
D.C. United at Orlando City, 4 p.m.

COLLEGE BASEBALL
NCAA Division I Super Regionals
All times PDT/MST
Best-of-3; x-if necessary
Host school is Game 1 home team; visiting
school is Game 2 home team; coin flip determines Game 3 home team
At Davenport Field
Charlottesville, Va.
Friday, June 5: Virginia 5, Maryland 3
Saturday, June 6: Virginia 5, Maryland 4, Virginia advances
At Alfred A. McKethan Stadium
Gainesville, Fla.
Friday, June 5: Florida 13, Florida State 3
Florida 11, Florida State 4, Florida advances
At A-Rod Park at Mark Light Field
Coral Gables, Fla.
Friday, June 5: Miami 3, VCU 2
Saturday, June 6: Miami 10, VCU 3, Miami
advances
At Jim Patterson Stadium
Louisville, Ky.
Saturday, June 6: Cal State Fullerton 3,
Louisville 2, 10 innings
Sunday, June 7: Louisville (46-17) vs. Cal
State Fullerton (38-22), 9 a.m.
x-Monday, June 8: Louisville vs. Cal State
Fullerton, TBA
At Illinois Field
Champaign, Ill.
Saturday, June 6: Vanderbilt 13, Illinois 0
Sunday, June 7: Illinois (50-9-1) vs. Vanderbilt (46-19), 6 p.m.
x-Monday, June 8: Illinois vs. Vanderbilt,
TBA
At Alex Box Stadium
Baton Rouge, La.
Saturday, June 6: LSU 4, Louisiana-Lafayette
3
Sunday, June 7: LSU (52-10) vs. LouisianaLafayette (42-22), 4 p.m.
x-Monday, June 8: LSU vs. Louisiana-Lafayette, TBA
At Baum Stadium
Fayetteville, Ark.
Friday, June 5: Arkansas 18, Missouri State 4
Saturday, June 6: Missouri State 3, Arkansas
1
Sunday, June 7: Arkansas (39-23) vs. Missouri State (49-11), Noon
At Lupton Stadium
Fort Worth, Texas
Saturday, June 6: TCU 13, Texas A&M 4
Sunday, June 7: TCU (50-12) vs. Texas A&M
(49-13), 11:15 a.m.
x-Monday, June 8: TCU vs. Texas A&M, TBA

TENNIS
French Open Results
Saturday
At Stade Roland Garros
Paris
Purse: $30.86 million (Grand Slam)

HORSE RACING
Belmont Stakes Winners
2015American Pharoah
2014Tonalist
2013Palace Malice
2012Union Rags
2011Ruler On Ice
2010Drosselmeyer
2009Summer Bird
2008Da Tara
2007Rags to Riches
2006Jazil

AUTO RACING
3
4

First Period1, Tampa Bay, Paquette 2


(Callahan, Hedman), 12:56.
Second Period2, Chicago, Shaw 5 (Kruger, Desjardins), 3:04. 3, Chicago, Teravainen 4
(Hossa, Sharp), 5:20 (pp). 4, Tampa Bay, Kucherov 10 (Garrison, Coburn), 6:52. 5, Tampa
Bay, Johnson 13 (Kucherov), 13:58.
Third Period6, Chicago, Seabrook 7
(Toews, Oduya), 3:38. 7, Tampa Bay, Garrison
2 (Hedman, Callahan), 8:49 (pp).
Shots on GoalChicago 11-8-1029. Tampa Bay 12-10-224.
GoaliesChicago, Crawford. Tampa Bay,
Bishop, Vasilevskiy, Bishop, Vasilevskiy.
A19,204 (19,204). T2:34.

D.C. United
New England
Toronto FC
Orlando City
New York
Columbus
Philadelphia
Montreal
Chicago
NY City FC

Surface: Clay-Outdoor
Singles
Men
Semifinals
Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Andy Murray
(3), Britain, 6-3, 6-3, 5-7, 5-7, 6-1.
Women
Championship
Serena Williams (1), United States, def. Lucie
Safarova (13), Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-7 (2),
6-2.
Doubles
Men
Championship
Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Marcelo Melo (3),
Brazil, def. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United
States, 6-7 (5), 7-6 (5), 7-5.

NASCAR Sprint Cup-Axalta We Paint


Winners 400 Lineup
After Friday qualifying; race Sunday
At Pocono Raceway
Long Pond, Pa.
Lap length: 2.5 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 177.599.
2. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 177.55.
3. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 177.522.
4. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 177.211.
5. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 177.2.
6. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 176.526.
7. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 175.967.
8. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 177.676.
9. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 177.385.
10. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 177.193.
11. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 176.8.
12. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 176.07.
13. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 176.036.
14. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 176.005.
15. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 175.943.
16. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 175.895.
17. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 175.699.
18. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 175.671.
19. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 175.531.
20. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,
175.466.
21. (55) David Ragan, Toyota, 175.418.
22. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 174.832.
23. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 174.236.
24. (9) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 173.819.
25. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 174.791.
26. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet,
174.771.
27. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 174.683.
28. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 174.652.
29. (33) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 174.317.
30. (51) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 174.031.
31. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet,173.873.
32. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 173.772.
33. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 173.695.
34. (7) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 173.41.
35. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 172.467.
36. (34) Brett Moffitt, Ford, 172.437.
37. (23) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, Owner Points.
38. (98) Josh Wise, Ford, Owner Points.
39. (35) Cole Whitt, Ford, Owner Points.
40. (26) Jeb Burton, Toyota, Owner Points.
41. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, Owner
Points.
42. (32) Travis Kvapil, Ford, Owner Points.
43. (62) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, Owner Points.

GOLF
The Memorial Tournament Par Scores
Saturday
At Muirfield Village Golf Club
Dublin, Ohio
Purse: $6.2 million
Yardage: 7,392; Par 72
Third Round
Justin Rose
68-67-66- 201 -15
Francesco Molinari
68-67-69- 204 -12
David Lingmerth
67-65-72- 204 -12
Jim Furyk
69-66-70- 205 -11
Kevin Streelman
71-70-65- 206 -10
Brendon Todd
67-68-71- 206 -10
Hideki Matsuyama
64-71-71- 206 -10
Andy Sullivan
70-64-72- 206 -10
Keegan Bradley
68-74-65- 207 -9
Thomas Aiken
69-68-70- 207 -9
Kevin Kisner
67-71-69- 207 -9
Marc Leishman
69-67-71- 207 -9
Jason Dufner
66-67-74- 207 -9
Dustin Johnson
72-71-65- 208 -8
Kevin Na
71-71-66- 208 -8
Patrick Reed
72-68-68- 208 -8
Steven Bowditch
69-71-68- 208 -8
Erik Compton
68-69-71- 208 -8
Jeff Overton
71-71-67- 209 -7
Matt Kuchar
70-69-70- 209 -7
Billy Horschel
70-68-71- 209 -7
Vijay Singh
71-67-71- 209 -7
Ryan Moore
67-67-75- 209 -7
George McNeill
72-71-67- 210 -6
Jim Herman
70-72-68- 210 -6
Brooks Koepka
71-70-69- 210 -6
William McGirt
70-70-70- 210 -6
Jonathan Byrd
68-71-71- 210 -6
Rory Sabbatini
72-67-71- 210 -6
Harris English
67-71-72- 210 -6
Jordan Spieth
68-70-72- 210 -6
Chris Stroud
70-68-72- 210 -6
Graham DeLaet
69-69-72- 210 -6
Tony Finau
71-66-73- 210 -6
Charles Howell III
75-66-70- 211 -5
Adam Hadwin
72-68-71- 211 -5
Robert Streb
73-67-71- 211 -5
Carl Pettersson
72-67-72- 211 -5
Troy Merritt
70-69-72- 211 -5
John Huh
72-66-73- 211 -5
Brendan Steele
71-67-73- 211 -5
Greg Chalmers
69-73-70- 212 -4
Bill Haas
70-71-71- 212 -4
Retief Goosen
70-71-71- 212 -4
Andrew Putnam
72-66-74- 212 -4
Zac Blair
75-68-70- 213 -3
Shawn Stefani
70-72-71- 213 -3
Camilo Villegas
73-68-72- 213 -3
Russell Knox
66-74-73- 213 -3
Chesson Hadley
74-66-73- 213 -3
Matt Jones
71-68-74- 213 -3
Pat Perez
68-70-75- 213 -3
Patrick Rodgers
69-66-78- 213 -3
Kevin Chappell
71-72-71- 214 -2
Stewart Cink
72-71-71- 214 -2
James Hahn
71-70-73- 214 -2
Bo Van Pelt
64-72-78- 214 -2
John Senden
71-71-74- 216 E
Jason Bohn
75-67-74- 216 E
Chris Kirk
69-71-76- 216 E
Brian Stuard
68-75-74- 217 +1
Andrew Svoboda
70-70-77- 217 +1
Steve Stricker
69-73-76- 218 +2
Phil Mickelson
72-68-78- 218 +2
Sangmoon Bae
74-66-78- 218 +2
Ken Duke
67-75-77- 219 +3
Scott Langley
70-72-77- 219 +3
Nick Watney
71-72-77- 220 +4
Hudson Swafford
71-70-79- 220 +4
Lucas Glover
68-72-82- 222 +6
Tiger Woods
73-70-85- 228 +12
LPGA-Manulife LPGA Classic Par Scores
Saturday
At Whistle Bear Golf Club
Cambridge, Ontario
Purse: $1.5 million
Yardage: 6,613; Par: 72
Third Round
Suzann Pettersen
66-65-66- 197 -19
Mariajo Uribe
65-66-67- 198 -18
Cristie Kerr
63-69-67- 199 -17
Pernilla Lindberg
66-67-68- 201 -15
Katie Burnett
67-68-67- 202 -14
Brittany Lang
65-68-69- 202 -14
Yani Tseng
68-65-69- 202 -14
So Yeon Ryu
68-69-66- 203 -13
Kelly Tan
70-67-66- 203 -13

Jacqui Concolino
Julieta Granada
Laetitia Beck
Ilhee Lee
Victoria Elizabeth
Sei Young Kim
Thidapa Suwannapura
Alena Sharp
Alison Walshe
Sophia Popov
Minjee Lee
Hyo Joo Kim
Sarah Jane Smith
Karin Sjodin
Mi Hyang Lee
Pornanong Phatlum
Karlin Beck
Na Yeon Choi
Charley Hull
Catriona Matthew
Haru Nomura
Shanshan Feng
Candie Kung
Lydia Ko
Anna Nordqvist
Caroline Masson
Perrine Delacour
Alison Lee
Inbee Park
Lizette Salas
Jenny Shin
Sandra Gal
Kim Kaufman
Jessica Korda
Jaye Marie Green
Mo Martin
Chella Choi
Caroline Hedwall
Danielle Kang
Jane Park
P.K. Kongkraphan
Natalie Gleadall
Wei-Ling Hsu
Brittany Lincicome
Sarah Kemp
Cheyenne Woods
Tiffany Joh
Sara-Maude Juneau
Joanna Klatten
Mika Miyazato
Jackie Stoelting
Kris Tamulis
Sue Kim
Karine Icher
Belen Mozo
Kelly W Shon
Amy Anderson
Kendall Dye
Sydnee Michaels
Maria Hernandez
Ayako Uehara

71-64-68- 203 -13


65-69-69- 203 -13
64-69-70- 203 -13
66-72-66- 204 -12
67-66-71- 204 -12
65-73-67- 205 -11
68-70-67- 205 -11
67-70-68- 205 -11
71-66-68- 205 -11
66-70-69- 205 -11
69-66-70- 205 -11
66-67-72- 205 -11
70-70-66- 206 -10
66-73-67- 206 -10
71-67-68- 206 -10
71-67-68- 206 -10
68-69-69- 206 -10
66-71-69- 206 -10
68-68-70- 206 -10
69-66-71- 206 -10
69-66-71- 206 -10
67-67-72- 206 -10
70-70-67- 207 -9
71-68-68- 207 -9
65-74-68- 207 -9
72-66-69- 207 -9
69-68-70- 207 -9
69-68-70- 207 -9
69-68-70- 207 -9
68-69-70- 207 -9
67-70-70- 207 -9
64-71-72- 207 -9
67-66-74- 207 -9
70-70-68- 208 -8
71-68-69- 208 -8
66-71-71- 208 -8
67-69-72- 208 -8
67-73-69- 209 -7
68-71-70- 209 -7
69-70-70- 209 -7
63-75-71- 209 -7
68-72-70- 210 -6
70-70-70- 210 -6
67-72-71- 210 -6
67-71-72- 210 -6
63-73-74- 210 -6
67-72-72- 211 -5
71-68-72- 211 -5
68-70-73- 211 -5
67-71-73- 211 -5
69-69-73- 211 -5
69-69-73- 211 -5
69-71-72- 212 -4
69-70-73- 212 -4
69-71-73- 213 -3
70-70-73- 213 -3
72-68-74- 214 -2
69-71-74- 214 -2
70-70-75- 215 -1
69-69-77- 215 -1
70-70-76- 216 E

PGA Champions-Principal Charity


Classic Par Scores
Saturday
At Wakonda Club
Des Moines, Iowa
Purse: $1.75 million
Yardage: 6,831; Par: 72
Second Round
Mark Calcavecchia
67-68- 135 -9
Joe Durant
68-68- 136 -8
Paul Goydos
67-70- 137 -7
Brian Henninger
67-70- 137 -7
Michael Allen
67-70- 137 -7
Bart Bryant
71-67- 138 -6
Kirk Triplett
71-67- 138 -6
Jeff Maggert
71-67- 138 -6
Peter Senior
70-68- 138 -6
Rod Spittle
68-70- 138 -6
David Frost
71-68- 139 -5
Davis Love III
70-69- 139 -5
John Cook
69-70- 139 -5
Jerry Smith
69-70- 139 -5
Jose Coceres
66-73- 139 -5
Jeff Coston
67-72- 139 -5
John Huston
73-67- 140 -4
Jeff Freeman
71-69- 140 -4
Rocco Mediate
70-70- 140 -4
Mike Goodes
69-71- 140 -4
Jesper Parnevik
68-72- 140 -4
Jeff Sluman
68-72- 140 -4
Grant Waite
67-73- 140 -4
Loren Roberts
73-68- 141 -3
Duffy Waldorf
71-70- 141 -3
Tommy Armour III
71-70- 141 -3
Mark Brooks
71-70- 141 -3
Javier Sanchez
70-71- 141 -3
Jim Carter
69-72- 141 -3
Jay Don Blake
69-72- 141 -3
Tom Pernice Jr.
67-74- 141 -3
Jay Haas
74-68- 142 -2
P.H. Horgan III
73-69- 142 -2
Steve Lowery
73-69- 142 -2
John Riegger
70-72- 142 -2
Chien Soon Lu
70-72- 142 -2
Dan Forsman
69-73- 142 -2
Guy Boros
69-73- 142 -2
Jeff Hart
69-73- 142 -2
Bernhard Langer
68-74- 142 -2
Billy Andrade
66-76- 142 -2
Doug Rohrbaugh
73-70- 143 -1
Larry Nelson
73-70- 143 -1
Gil Morgan
72-71- 143 -1
Russ Cochran
72-71- 143 -1
Tom Byrum
71-72- 143 -1
Gene Sauers
71-72- 143 -1
Frank Esposito
69-74- 143 -1
Cesar Monasterio
69-74- 143 -1
Gary Hallberg
69-74- 143 -1
Joel Edwards
74-70- 144
E
Scott Hoch
73-71- 144
E
Jim Gallagher Jr.
71-73- 144
E
Sandy Lyle
69-75- 144
E
Roger Chapman
68-76- 144
E
Olin Browne
75-70- 145 +1
Wayne Levi
75-70- 145 +1
Willie Wood
73-72- 145 +1
Marco Dawson
72-73- 145 +1
Joey Sindelar
72-73- 145 +1
Bobby Wadkins
72-73- 145 +1
Bob Gilder
73-73- 146 +2
Mark McNulty
72-74- 146 +2
Jim Rutledge
75-72- 147 +3
Trevor Dodds
74-73- 147 +3
Fuzzy Zoeller
73-74- 147 +3
Hal Sutton
73-74- 147 +3
Carlos Franco
73-74- 147 +3
Wes Short Jr.
73-74- 147 +3
Fran Quinn
71-76- 147 +3
Woody Austin
75-73- 148 +4
Mark Wiebe
74-74- 148 +4
Bob Friend
72-76- 148 +4
Dick Mast
76-73- 149 +5
Fred Funk
72-77- 149 +5
Bob Tway
77-73- 150 +6
Esteban Toledo
75-75- 150 +6
Steve Pate
76-75- 151 +7
John Jacobs
80-72- 152 +8
Nolan Henke
76-77- 153 +9
Tom Purtzer
77-80- 157 +13

GLANTZ-CULVER LINE
Major League Baseball
National League
Favorite

Line

Underdog

at Cincinnati -165 San Diego


Pittsburgh
-140 at Atlanta
San Francisco -125 at Philadelphia
at Washington -140
Chicago
at Colorado
-115
Miami
New York
-115 at Arizona
at Los Angeles -155
St. Louis
American League
Favorite

at New York
at Toronto
at Cleveland
at Boston
at Chicago
at Kansas City
Tampa Bay

Line

Underdog

-125 Los Angeles


-130 Houston
-155 Baltimore
-160 Oakland
-135
Detroit
-135
Texas
-130 at Seattle
Interleague

Line

+115
+120
+145
+150
+125
+125
+120

Favorite

Line

Milwaukee

-110 at Minnesota
NBA Finals

+100

Line Underdog

Line

Favorite

at Golden State

Underdog

Line

+155
+130
+115
+130
+105
+105
+145

(20012)

Line

Cleveland

TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
LOS ANGELES ANGELS Recalled 1B C.J.
Cron from Salt Lake (PCL). Optioned LHP Edgar Ibarra to Salt Lake.
National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS Activated
3B Jake Lamb from the 15-day DL. Designated

C Jordan Pacheco for assignment.


LOS ANGELES DODGERS Reinstated OF
Yasiel Puig from the 15-day DL. Optioned OF
Scott Schebler to Oklahoma City (PCL).
WASHINGTON NATIONALS Selected the
contract of RHP Joe Ross from Syracuse (IL).
Optioned RHP A.J. Cole to Syracuse. Transferred RHP Craig Stammen to the 60-day DL.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
CLEVELAND BROWNS Acquired P Andy
Lee from San Francisco for an undisclosed
2017 draft pick. Waived P Spencer Lanning.

TODAY IN SPORTS
June 7
1930 Gallant Fox, ridden by Earle Sande,
wins the Belmont Stakes by three lengths
over Whichone, becoming the second horse
to capture the Triple Crown.
1941 Whirlaway, ridden by Eddie Arcaro,
becomes the fifth horse to win the Triple
Crown by capturing the Belmont Stakes by
212 lengths over Robert Morris.
1952 One Count, ridden by Eddie Arcaro,
wins the Belmont Stakes by 212 lengths over
heavily favored Blue Man.
1969 Arts and Letters, ridden by Braulio
Baeza, ends Majestic Princes bid for the Triple Crown with a 512-length victory in the Belmont Stakes.
1980 Temperance Hill, a 53-1 long shot
ridden by Eddie Maple, wins the Belmont
Stakes by two lengths over Genuine Risk.
1986 Danzig Connection, ridden by Chris
McCarron, wins the Belmont Stakes by 114
lengths over Johns Treasure to give trainer
Woody Stephens his fifth straight Belmont
win.
1998 Utah breaks the record for fewest
points in an NBA game since the inception of
the shot clock, losing 96-54 to Chicago in
Game 3 of the NBA Finals. Its the highest
margin of victory in NBA Finals history. Utahs
54 points break the NBA-record of 55 set earlier in the season by Indiana.
2003 Justine Henin-Hardenne beats Kim
Clijsters 6-0, 6-4 at the French Open, in the
first all-Belgian Grand Slam final. HeninHardenne becomes her nations first Grand
Slam winner.
2004 Ruslan Fedotenko scores twice, including the critical first goal, and the resilient
Tampa Bay Lightning hold off the Calgary
Flames 2-1in Game 7 to win their first Stanley
Cup.
2006 New Jersey becomes the first state
to institute a statewide steroid-testing policy
for high school athletes.
2008 Ana Ivanovic wins her first Grand
Slam title by beating Dinara Safina 6-4, 6-3 in
the French Open.
2008 Da Tara spoils Big Browns bid for a
Triple Crown by winning the Belmont Stakes.
Da Tara, a 38-1 longshot ridden by Alan Garcia, goes wire-to-wire winning by 5 1/4
lengths over Denis of Cork and covers the distance in 2:29.65. Big Brown, the 1-4 favorite,
is eased up in the homestretch by jockey Kent
Desormeaux finishing so far behind at the
end that his margin of defeat isnt even
charted.
2009 Roger Federer completes a career
Grand Slam, winning his first French Open title. Federer wins his 14th major title to tie Pete
Sampras record by sweeping surprise finalist
Robin Soderling 6-1, 7-6 (1), 6-4.
2014 Maria Sharapova wins her second
French Open title in three years, overcoming
some shaky serving to beat fourth-seeded Simona Halep 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-4 in the final.
2014 California Chrome fails in his bid to
win the first Triple Crown in 36 years, losing
the Belmont Stakes to long shot Tonalist and
leaving his owner to complain others took
the cowards way out by skipping the first
two legs of the Triple Crown. The Kentucky
Derby and Preakness winner finishes in a
dead-heat for fourth with Wicked Strong.
2014 Miguel Cotto becomes the first
Puerto Rican fighter to win world championships in four weight divisions, stopping Sergio
Martinez in their WBC world middleweight
title fight. Martinez doesnt get off the stool
when the bell rings for the 10th round.

Vanderbilt trio
among coveted
prospects
By David Brandt
Associated Press

If youre seeking top prospects for the upcoming


MLB draft, look no further than Vanderbilt a college with a smart-kid reputation and growing status
as a destination for big-league hopefuls.
Three players from the Southeastern Conference
school shortstop Dansby Swanson and pitchers
Walker Buehler and Carson Fulmer are expected
to be first-round selections.
Other prospects in the draft that starts Monday
include big college arms whove excelled as starters
and closers, prep stars and talented players trying to
prove themselves after injuries.
The three Commodores are trying to join an expanding list of Vanderbilt alumni in the big leagues,
including pitchers David Price, Sonny Gray and
Mike Minor, along with infielders Pedro Alvarez and
Ryan Flaherty.
Swanson who could realistically be selected
No. 1 overall by the Arizona Diamondbacks said
Vanderbilt was an ideal place to prepare for the
draft.
(Vanderbilt) does a really good job of mixing the
physical part of baseball with the academic and social aspects of life, Swanson said. After youve
been here a few years, you become pretty good at
managing things.
The 6-foot-1, 190-pound junior has sent expectations soaring about his baseball future after an outstanding spring. Hes batting .348 with 22 doubles, 14
homers and 15 stolen bases as the Commodores try to
repeat as NCAA national champions.
Vanderbilt coach Tim Corbin said Swansons
physical ability combined with his intelligence and
intangibles make him a nearly flawless prospect.
Its a powerful mind matched with a powerful
body, Corbin said. Hes very intuitive on the field.
Buehler, a 6-foot-2 right-hander, dealt with some
elbow soreness early in the season, but bounced
back to have a solid junior season, including a 4-2
record, 2.97 ERA and 81 strikeouts in 7823 innings.
Fulmer, a 6-foot-0, 195-pound right-hander, might
be the most divisive among scouts. Hes been one of
the best starters in college baseball this spring with
a 12-2 record, a 1.92 ERA and 147 strikeouts, but his
violent delivery lead some to believe his future
might be in the bullpen.
With three major prospects on the roster, scouts
have flocked to Vanderbilts games this season.
Swanson said the constant pressure to perform can
sometimes be taxing, but when he needs encouragement, he knows Buehler and Fulmer can relate.
Its always nice having a few people around who
know exactly what youre going through, Swanson
said.

BOXING
Fight Schedule
June 12
At UIC Pavilion, Chicago (Spike), Erislandy Lara vs. Delvin Rodriguez, 12, for Lara's WBA
World junior middleweight title; Artur Beterbiev vs. Doudou Ngumbu, 10, light heavyweights; Ivan Redkach vs. Dejan Zlaticanin,
12, lightweights; Eleider Alvarez vs. Anatoliy
Dudchenko, 10 light heavyweights.<
June 13
At Whitchurch Sports Centre, Bristol, England, Lee Haskins vs. Ryosuke Iwasa, 12, for
the interim IBF bantamweight title.
At Madison Square Garden Theater, New
York (HBO), Nicholas Walters vs. Miguel Maariaga, 12, for Walters' WBA Super World
featherweight title; Felix Verdejo vs. Ivan Najera, 10, lightweights.
At Bartow Arena, Birmingham, Ala. (SHO),
Deontay Wilder vs. Eric Molina, 12, for Wilder's WBC heavyweight title; Jose Pedraza vs.
Andrey Klimov, 12, for the vacant IBF junior
lightweight title; Ivan Redkach vs. Dejan Zlaticanin,12, WBC lightweight eliminator; Julian
Williams vs. Armen Ovsepyan, 10, super welterweights; Ahmed Elbiali vs. Donta Woods,
10, light heavyweights.
June 20
At Bell Centre, Montreal, Hassan N'Dam vs.
David Lemieux,12, for the vacant IBF middleweight title; Dierry Jean vs. Jerry Belmontes,
12, lightweights.
At Oracle Arena, Oakland, Calif. (BET), Andre
Ward vs. Paul Smith, 12, light heavyweights.
At MGM Grand, Las Vegas (NBC/NBCSN),
Shawn Porter vs. Adrien Broner, 12, welterweights; Errol Spence Jr. vs. Roberto Garcia,
10, welterweights.
June 21
At MGM Grand, Las Vegas (CBS), Rances Barthelemy vs. Antonio DeMarco,10, super lightweights; Sammy Vasquez vs. Wale Omotoso,
10, welterweights.
June 26
At Seneca Niagara Casino & Hotel, Niagara
Falls, N.Y. (CBSSN), Dennis Hogan vs. Kenny
Abril, 10, super welterweights.
At State Farm Arena, Hidalgo, Texas (truTV),
Gilberto Ramirez vs. Derek Edwards,10, super
middleweights.
At Little Creek Casino Resort, Shelton, Wash.
(SHO), Dominic Wade vs. Sam Soliman, 10,
middleweights.
At Salinas (Calif.) Storm House (FS1), Alan
Sanchez vs. Steve Claggett, 10, welterweights; Paul Mendez vs. David Lopez, 10,
middleweights.
June 27
At Bangkok, Thailand, Amnat Ruenroeng vs.
John Riel Casimero, 12, for Ruenroeng's IBF
flyweight title.
At StubHub Center, Carson, Calif. (HBO),
Timothy Bradley Jr. vs. Jessie Vargas, 12, welterweights; Humberto Soto vs. Raymundo
Beltran, 12, super welterweights.
July 4
At Mazatlan, Mexico, Pedro Guevara vs. Ganigan Lopez,12, for Guevara's WBC World light
flyweight title.
July 11
At Magdeburg, Germany, Ruslan Chagaev vs.
Francesco Pianeta, 12, for Chagaev's WBA
World heavyweight title.
At Tampa, Fla. (ESPN2), Keith Thurman vs.
Luis Collazo, 12, for Thurman's WBA World
welterweight title; Tony Harrison vs. Willie
Nelson, 10, middleweights.
At Memorial Sports Arena, Los Angeles,
Mauricio Herrera vs. Hank Lundy, 10, for the
vacant NABF super lightweight title; Michael
Perez vs. Sharif Bogere, 10, lightweights.

TODAY
ON THE AIR
COLLEGE BASEBALL SUPER REGIONALS
Teams TBA..................................................................9 a.m., CH411 ESPNU
Louisville vs. CSU Fullerton ......................................9 a.m., CH36 ESPN2
Texas A&M vs. TCU......................................................11 a.m., CH35 ESPN
Teams TBA .....................................................................Noon, CH36 ESPN2
Arkansas vs. Missouri State.....................................Noon, CH411 ESPNU
LSU vs. La.-Lafayette ...............................................3 p.m., CH411 ESPNU
Teams TBA....................................................................3 p.m., CH36 ESPN2
Illinois vs. Vanderbilt ...............................................6 p.m., CH411 ESPNU

EXTREME SPORTS
X Games Austin.............................................................9 a.m., CH35 ESPN
X Games Austin.............................................................11 a.m., CH2 KATU

GOLF
European, Nordea Masters .......................................4 a.m., CH33 GOLF
PGA, Memorial .............................................................9 a.m., CH33 GOLF
LPGA, Manulife LPGA Classic ..................................11 a.m., CH33 GOLF
PGA, Memorial.........................................................11:30 a.m., CH6 KOIN
Champions, Principal Charity Classic ......................2 p.m., CH33 GOLF

MLB
Angels at Yankees or As at Red Sox .....................10 a.m., CH419 MLB
Rays at Mariners ..........................................................1 p.m., CH34 ROOT
Cardinals at Dodgers ...................................................5 p.m., CH35 ESPN

MOTOR SPORTS
Sprint, Axalta 400.........................................................10 a.m., CH408 FS1
F1, Canadian Grand Prix ..............................................11 a.m., CH8 KGW

NBA FINALS
Cavaliers at Warriors .....................5 p.m., CH2 KATU; Radio 1080 AM

SOCCER - WOMENS WORLD CUP


Norway vs. Thailand...................................................10 a.m., CH12 KPTV
Germany vs. Ivory Coast..............................................1 p.m., CH12 KPTV

SOCCER
MLS, Colorado at Real Salt Lake....................2 p.m., CH402 ESPNEWS
MLS, FC Dallas at San Jose...........................................4 p.m., CH408 FS1

TENNIS
French Open, mens final..............................................6 a.m., CH8 KGW
Events are accurate and up-to-date as of press time

Sports

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

3C

STANLEY CUP FINAL: LIGHTNING 4, BLACKHAWKS 3

Tampa Bay evens up Final with win


By Greg Beacham
Associated Press

TAMPA, Fla. Andrei Vasilevskiy had no warning before Ben


Bishop skated over to the Tampa Bay bench and went up the
tunnel. Just like that, a 20-yearold Russian rookie was playing
goalie for the Lightning in the
third period of a tied Stanley
Cup Final game.
Vasilevskiy barely had time
to feel any nerves before the
Lightning scored. Bishop returned and then left again,
apparently struggling with an
undisclosed injury.
But with his Tampa Bay
teammates playing ferociously
in front of him, Vasilevskiy had
nothing to fear as the Lightning
tied the series.
Jason Garrison scored the
tiebreaking power-play goal
with 11:11 to play, Vasilevskiy
made five saves in a strange
9:13 of relief work, and the
Lightning beat the Chicago
Blackhawks 4-3 in Game 2 on
Saturday night to even the series.
Nervous? Just maybe a lit-

tle bit, Vasilevskiy said. But


after the first couple shots, I
feel myself better. Every game
Im ready, and I keep my head
ready for the game, and thats it.
First time, maybe more nervous. But second time, just play
and thats it.
Tyler Johnson and Cedric Paquette also scored, but the
Lightnings revived offensive
effort was somewhat overshadowed by three goalie changes in
the third period.
Vasilevskiy earned his first
career playoff victory, and the
Lightning refused to say exactly what happened to Bishop or
give any indication of his prognosis.
No one really knew what
was going on, Tampa Bay captain Steven Stamkos said. We
were kind of listening to the announcements for who was in net
for our team a couple of times.
But depth has been a part for
our success all season, and it
showed in the net tonight, as
well.
While a promising prospect,
Vasilevskiy is greener than the
Chicago River on St. Patricks

REINHOLD MATAY/USA TODAY SPORTS

Lightning center Steven Stamkos (91) controls the puck against Blackhawks
goalie Corey Crawford (50) and defenseman Johnny Oduya (27).

Day: He has 16 regular-season


games of NHL experience, and
he had played in just two games
since March 31. But the Russian
came in for 92 seconds before
Garrison scored the go-ahead
goal, and he returned to finish
the game with 7:41 to play.
With his jarring No. 88 jersey

and 45 previous minutes of NHL


playoff experience, Vasilevskiy
handled his surprise assignment splendidly. Although he
didnt have to touch the puck on
his first time in net, he made an
outstanding pad save with less
than five minutes to play as
Tampa Bay killed a penalty, and

COLLEGE BASEBALL ROUNDUP

he stayed strong while Tampa


Bay prevented Chicago from
mounting another third-period
comeback.
We just told him to have
fun, Tampa Bay defenseman
Anton Stralman said about Vasilevskiy. I have no idea what
went through his head, but hes
a calm kid. Even if he knows
that hes not going to play, he always prepares for every game
and does everything he can to
be ready.
Nikita Kucherov had a goal
and an assist for the Lightning,
who played with all the aggression they lacked in the third period of Game 1 when Chicago
rallied late to win.
The Lightning didnt say why
Bishop left the game, came
back and left again. He complained of interference on
Brent Seabrooks tying goal
early in the third period, but
played on for several minutes.
Game 3 is Monday night in
Chicago.
Andrew Shaw and Teuvo Teravainen scored 2:16 apart early
in the second period for the
Blackhawks.

GOLF ROUNDUP

Virginia rallies in 9th for CWS berth Rose


CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. Ernie
Clement lined a two-run single to
left to cap a three-run ninth inning
for Virginia and the Cavaliers beat
Maryland 5-4 to earn a return trip to
the College World Series.
Clements hit came after reliever
Robert Galligan, brilliant for 71/3 innings for the Terps, allowed two
walks and a single in the ninth, loading the bases with none out. Maryland coach John Szefc then turned
to closer Keunvin Mooney, who
walked Kevin Doherty to force in
one run before Clements line drive
hit.
Virginia (39-22) will return to
Omaha, where it played in the final
series last year before losing to Vanderbilt in three games. The Terrapins
(42-24) saw their winningest season
come to a crushing end.
On Friday, they led until Virginia
scored five times in the eighth inning for a 5-3 victory, with Mooney,
the programs career saves leader,
again failing to deliver in the clutch.
Alec Bettinger (5-5) earned the
victory with a perfect ninth in relief
of Brandon Waddell, who went the
first eight innings, allowing 10 hits
and four runs while striking out seven and walking two.
Florida 11, Florida State 4: JJ
Schwarz homered twice, breaking a
school record for freshmen and continuing his torrid postseason, and
Florida advanced to the College
World Series over rival Florida State.
The Gators, the No. 4 national
seed, swept the Seminoles and
earned their fourth trip to Omaha,
Nebraska, in the last six years. Florida will open CWS play next Saturday
against another familiar foe, Miami.
Miami 10, VCU 3: Sam Abrams
pitched a career-best four shutout
innings of relief, Miami blew a close
game open with five runs in the seventh and the Hurricanes beat Virginia Commonwealth to earn their
first trip to the College World Series
since 2008.
Willie Abreu homered and drove
in two runs and David Thompson
added two RBIs for the Hurricanes
(49-15), who swept the super regional 2-0. All nine Miami starters in the
order scored, and seven had an RBI.
Cal State Fullerton 3, Louisville 2 (10
innings): Timmy Richards was hit by a
pitch with the bases loaded and one
out in the top of the 10th inning to
lift Cal State Fullerton.
Louisville reliever Zack Burdi hit
Richards with his first pitch.
Dalton Blaser twice had two-out

surges to
lead at
Memorial
Associated Press

DUBLIN, Ohio Justin Rose


made an early surge Saturday
at the Memorial, when it
seemed as though everyone except Tiger Woods was making a
move. Rose kept right on going
until he posted a 6-under 66 and
emerged with a three-shot lead.
Five years after he first had
that handshake with Jack Nicklaus after winning his tournament, Rose put himself in great
position by missing only one
green just barely on the
back nine and creating a little
comfort going into the final
round.
He was at 15-under 201, three
clear of Francesco Molinari and
David Lingmerth.
Woods was in a peculiar position after the worst score of his
pro career.
When he tapped in for quadruple-bogey 8 on the final hole
at Muirfield Village, he had an
85 and was in last place.
STEVE HELBER/AP

Virginia pitcher Brandon Waddell (20) delivers during Saturdays super regional in Charlottesville, Va.

RBI singles for the Titans (38-22),


who took a 1-0 lead in the best-ofthree series against the Cardinals
(46-17), the No. 3 overall seed in the
NCAA Tournament.
Vanderbilt 13, Illinois 0: Jeren Kendall drove in three runs and Carson
Fulmer pitched six nearly flawless innings as defending national champions Vanderbilt steamrolled Illinois in
the opening game of their best-ofthree super regional.
Fulmer (13-2) allowed four hits in 6
1-3 innings, striking out five and
walking five.
Left-hander Kevin Duchene (11-2)
took the loss for the Illini (50-9).
LSU 4, La.-Lafayette 3: Chris Sciambras towering home run off reliever
Will Bacon in the bottom of the
ninth inning lift LSU over LouisianaLafayette in the opener of their bestof-three super regional.

Sciambras heroics came a half-inning after pinch-hitter Brenn Conrad led off the top of ninth with a tying home run off of LSU freshman
ace Alex Lange.
Lange struck out 11 through eight
innings, but was driven from the
game after Conrads blast. Reliever
Parker Bugg (1-2), who got the win,
retired the next three batters.
Missouri State 3, Arkansas 1: Matt
Hall threw a one-hitter and Missouri
State beat Arkansas to even the
NCAA super regional series.
The Bears (49-11) rebounded from
an 18-4 loss in the opener to set up a
third game with the Razorbacks (3923) today for a spot in the College
World Series.
Hall (12-2), the national leader in
strikeouts, faced the minimum of 18
batters through the first six innings
allowing only a first-inning hit

that was quickly negated with a


double play. The left-hander finished with eight strikeouts, raising
his total for the season to 171 in 125
innings.
TCU 13, Texas A&M 4: Cody Jones,
Evan Skoug, Derek Odell and Nolan
Brown drove in runs in TCUs five-run
sixth inning and the Horned Frogs
beat Texas A&M in Game 1 of their
best-of-theee series.
TCU (48-12) is a victory away from
advancing to its second straight College World Series and third overall.
Jeremie Fagnan had two doubles
and two RBIs for TCU.
Trey Teakell (2-1) was the winner,
allowing one hit in four scoreless innings of relief.
Texas A&M dropped to 49-13.
Wire services

FRENCH OPEN

Williams beats Safarova for 20th Slam title


By Howard Fendrich
Associated Press

PARIS What started out as


a stroll became quite a struggle
for Serena Williams.
After going up by a set and
two breaks in the French Open
final Saturday, she doublefaulted away that lead. Then,
suddenly, she trailed in the
third set.
As the tension thickened,
Williams was warned by the
chair umpire for cursing loudly. She even felt the need to hit
one shot left-handed.
Ah, but when Williams plays
her best, no one is better. Putting aside a lingering illness, a
mid-match lull and a feisty opponent, Williams won her third
title at Roland Garros and 20th
Grand Slam singles trophy by
beating 13th-seeded Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic
6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-2.
I got so frustrated. I was
just so angry at myself. I pretty

DAVID VINCENT/AP

Serena Williams hits a return against Lucie Safarova in Saturdays final of


the French Open. Williams won in three sets, 6-3, 6-7, 6-2.

much gave the match away,


the No. 1-seeded Williams said,
her voice scratchy and her
nose stuffy. I just had to, like,
try to pull it together.
That she did, taking the last

six games and adding to her


2002 and 2013 championships
on the French Opens red clay.
Those go alongside six each
from the U.S. Open and Australian Open, and five from

Wimbledon.
When I was a little girl, in
California, my father and my
mother wanted me to play tennis, the 33-year-old American
told the crown in French earlier. And now Im here, with 20
Grand Slam titles.
Only two players in the century-plus history of Grand
Slam tennis have more: Margaret Smith Court with 24, and
Steffi Graf with 22.
Williams also stretched her
winning streak at the majors to
21 matches, following titles at
the U.S. Open last September
and Australian Open in January. She is the first woman
since Jennifer Capriati in 2001
to win the Australian Open and
French Open back-to-back and
heads to Wimbledons grass
with a chance to extend a bid to
accomplish just about the only
thing she hasnt: win a calendar-year Grand Slam.
Why not? said her coach,
Patrick Mouratoglou.

LPGA Tour: Suzann Pettersen took a


one-stroke lead in the Manulife LPGA
Classic, making an eagle and four
birdies on the first 11 holes and closing with seven pars for a 6-under 66.
Pettersen had a 19-under 197 total
at Whistle Bear Golf Club. Bothered
by a shoulder injury this season, the
34-year-old Norwegian player won
the last of her 14 LPGA Tour titles in
2013.
Colombias Mariajo Uribe was second after a 67. Cristie Kerr was third
at 17 under, also after a 67. She won
the Kia Classic in California in March
for her 17th LPGA Tour title.
Second-ranked Inbee Park, the
winner last year at Grey Silo in Waterloo, had a 70 to reach 9 under. Topranked Lydia Ko also was tied for
32nd at 9 under after a 68.
Champions Tour: Mark Calcavecchia
made a 15-foot birdie putt on the final hole Saturday for a 4-under 68
and a one-stroke in the Champions
Tours Principal Charity Classic.
Calcavecchia had a 9-under 135 total at Wakonda Club. The 54-year-old
Calcavecchia has two victories on the
50-and-over tour after winning 13
times on the PGA Tour, including the
1989 British Open.
On Thanksgiving, Calcavecchia
stumbled at his brother-in-laws
house and his right hand went
through two panes of glass, slashing
a tendon and leaving a finger dangling. He had surgery in early December and couldnt swing a club for
three months.
Joe Durant was second after a 68.
Paul Goydos, Brian Henninger and
Michael Allen were tied for third at 7
under, all shooting 70.
European Tour: Swedens Alex Noren shot a 5-under 67 to take a twoshot lead in the Nordea Masters, and
local favorite Henrik Stenson had a
68 to pull within five strokes.
Noren, the 2011 winner at Bro Hof
Slott, had an 11-under 205 total on
PGA Sweden Nationals Lakes Course.
Germanys Maximilian Kieffer was
second after a 70.
The fourth-rankled Stenson was
tied for sixth. Local amateur Marcus
Kinhult, tied for the second-round
lead, had a 77 to drop into a tie for
14th at 4 under.
Wire services

4C

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

BASEBALL
STANDINGS

RESULTS

AMERICAN LEAGUE

SATURDAYS GAMES

East
New York
Tampa Bay
Toronto
Boston
Baltimore

W
31
30
27
26
25

L
25
26
30
31
30

Pct.
.554
.536
.474
.456
.455

GB

1
41/2
51/2
51/2

Strk.
W-5
W-4
W-4
W-2
L-1

Central
Minnesota
Kansas City
Detroit
Cleveland
Chicago

W
32
30
29
27
25

L
23
23
28
28
29

Pct. GB Strk.
.582
L-2
.566 1
L-3
.509 4 W-1
.491 5 W-1
.463 61/2 L-1

West
Houston
Texas
Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland

W
34
30
28
24
23

L
23
26
28
31
35

Pct.
.596
.536
.500
.436
.397

GB

31/2
51/2
9
111/2

Strk.
L-3
W-3
L-4
L-7
L-2

Last
10
7-3
6-4
6-4
5-5
4-6
Last
10
5-5
2-8
2-8
7-3
5-5
Last
10
4-6
7-3
5-5
2-8
6-4

Home
14-10
14-16
16-12
14-14
15-12

Away
17-15
16-10
11-18
12-17
10-18

Home
19-9
18-11
14-15
11-15
13-11

Away
13-14
12-12
15-13
16-13
12-18

Home
19-13
11-15
16-13
12-18
9-17

Away
15-10
19-11
12-15
12-13
14-18

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East
New York
Washington
Atlanta
Miami
Philadelphia

W
30
30
27
23
21

L
26
26
28
33
36

Pct. GB Strk.
.536
L-1
.536
L-1
.491 21/2 W-1
.411 7
L-1
.368 91/2 L-3

Central
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Chicago
Cincinnati
Milwaukee

W
37
30
29
23
20

L
18
25
25
31
36

Pct.
.673
.545
.537
.426
.357

West
Los Angeles
San Francisco
San Diego
Arizona
Colorado

W
31
32
29
26
25

L
24
25
28
28
29

Pct. GB Strk.
.564
L-3
.561 W-2
.509 3 W-4
.481 41/2 W-1
.463 51/2 W-1

GB

7
71/2
131/2
171/2

Strk.
W-4
L-1
W-1
L-2
W-2

Last
10
5-5
3-7
5-5
5-5
2-8
Last
10
8-2
7-3
5-5
5-5
4-6
Last
10
3-7
5-5
7-3
5-5
7-3

Home
21-8
16-11
13-11
12-16
14-16

Away
9-18
14-15
14-17
11-17
7-20

Home
22-7
15-9
15-11
13-13
9-20

Away
15-11
15-16
14-14
10-18
11-16

Home
21-9
16-14
15-15
14-15
11-16

Away
10-15
16-11
14-13
12-13
14-13

AL LEADERS

NL LEADERS

Through Friday
HOME RUNS
NCruz, Seattle

18

Through Friday
HOME RUNS
Harper, Washington

18

Teixeira, New York

17

Stanton, Miami

18

Donaldson, Toronto

15

Pederson, Los Angeles 17

Pujols, Los Angeles

14

Frazier, Cincinnati

Trout, Los Angeles

14

Goldschmidt, Arizona 16

CDavis, Baltimore

12

Arenado, Colorado

Encarnacion, Toronto

12

Braun, Milwaukee

12

Gattis, Houston

12

Upton, San Diego

12

HRamirez, Boston

12

Valbuena, Houston

12

16
13

HOME team in caps

Cubs 4, Nationals 2

Rangers 4, Royals 2

Giants 7, Phillies 5

Indians 2, Orioles 1

CHC........... 000 120 001 4


WSH.......... 010 000 001 2

TEX ............ 220 000 000 4


KC .............. 000 001 001 2

SF ............... 204 000 100 7


PHI............. 000 400 010 5

BAL ............ 001 000 000 1


CLE............. 001 001 00x 2

Chicago
ab r h bi bb so avg
Fowler cf
4 2 2 1 0 1 .245
Rizzo 1b
4 0 2 1 0 1 .328
Bryant 3b
4 0 1 1 0 0 .271
Montero c
2 1 0 0 2 0 .240
Lake rf
4 0 0 0 0 2 .240
Coghlan lf
4 0 0 0 0 0 .218
Szczur lf
0 0 0 0 0 0 .167
Herrera 2b
4 1 2 1 0 0 .231
Hammel p
4 0 0 0 0 3 .233
Russell ss
3 0 0 0 0 1 .241
Totals
33 4 7 4 2 8
Batting - 2B: Rizzo (17). RBI: Fowler (15);
Rizzo (35); Bryant (34); Herrera (6). GIDP:
Lake. Team LOB: 4. Fielding - DP: 1.
Washington
ab r h bi bb so avg
Span cf
3 0 0 0 1 1 .292
Zimmerman 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .213
Harper rf
4 1 2 1 0 0 .333
Rendon 3b
3 0 0 0 1 1 .273
Ramos c
4 1 1 1 0 1 .269
Robinson lf
4 0 1 0 0 2 .233
Desmond ss
4 0 0 0 0 2 .242
2 0 1 0 1 0 .257
Espinosa 2b
Ross p
1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Moore ph
1 0 0 0 0 0 .190
Uggla ph
1 0 0 0 0 1 .206
Hill p
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals
31 2 5 2 3 9
Batting - 2B: Espinosa (9). HR: Harper
(19); Ramos (4). RBI: Harper (46); Ramos
(24). GIDP: Zimmerman. Team LOB:
5. Fielding - DP: 1.

Texas
ab r h bi bb so avg
DeShields Jr. lf
4 0 0 0 0 2 .280
Choo rf
5 1 2 2 0 2 .246
Fielder dh
3 1 2 0 2 0 .356
Smolinski pr-dh 0 0 0 0 0 0 .140
Moreland 1b
4 0 2 1 1 1 .301
Gallo 3b
5 0 1 0 0 2 .286
Andrus ss
2 0 0 1 1 0 .237
Martin cf
4 0 0 0 0 0 .237
Corporan c
3 1 1 0 0 2 .190
Alberto 2b
4 1 3 0 0 0 .344
Totals
34 4 11 4 4 9
Batting - 2B: Choo (11); Alberto (1). S:
DeShields Jr.. SF: Andrus. RBI: Choo 2 (29);
Moreland (21); Andrus (20). GIDP: Moreland. Team LOB: 10. Baserunning - SB:
Gallo (1). Fielding - E: Andrus (12); Corporan (3); Alberto (2). DP: 1.
Kansas City
ab r h bi bb so avg
Escobar ss
5 0 0 0 0 2 .262
Moustakas 3b
4 0 1 1 0 0 .314
Cain cf
4 0 0 0 0 1 .283
Hosmer 1b
4 0 2 0 0 0 .305
4 0 0 0 0 1 .294
K. Morales dh
Gordon lf
4 0 1 0 0 1 .256
Perez c
4 1 2 1 0 0 .277
Colon 2b
4 0 0 0 0 0 .269
Dyson rf
4 1 3 0 0 0 .250
Totals
37 2 9 2 0 5
Batting - 2B: Gordon (12); Dyson (2). HR:
Perez (7). RBI: Moustakas (18); Perez (26).
GIDP: Colon. Team LOB: 8. Baserunning - SB: Dyson (6). Fielding - E: Ventura. DP: 1.
Pitching
ip h r er bb so era

San Francisco ab r h bi bb so avg


Aoki lf
3 1 3 2 1 0 .324
Panik 2b
5 1 1 0 0 0 .308
Pagan cf
5 0 1 1 0 1 .292
Posey c
5 1 1 0 0 2 .287
Belt 1b
3 0 0 1 1 2 .295
Crawford ss
4 1 1 0 0 1 .292
Duffy 3b
5 2 2 1 0 1 .281
Blanco rf
4 1 1 0 1 1 .283
Bumgarner p
4 0 2 1 0 2 .185
Maxwell ph
1 0 0 0 0 0 .238
Casilla p
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals
39 7 12 6 3 10
Batting - 2B: Duffy (7). SF: Belt. RBI: Aoki
2 (17); Pagan (12); Belt (25); Duffy (24);
Bumgarner (2). Team LOB: 11.Fielding DP: 1.
Philadelphia
ab r h bi bb so avg
Revere cf
4 1 1 0 0 2 .270
Hernandez 2b
3 1 0 0 0 2 .217
Papelbon p
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Franco 3b
4 1 1 0 0 0 .241
Ruf 1b
3 0 1 0 0 2 .226
Utley ph
0 0 0 0 1 0 .202
Francoeur rf
4 1 2 4 0 1 .252
Asche lf
4 0 0 0 0 3 .235
Galvis ss
3 0 0 0 0 1 .265
Ruiz c
3 0 0 0 0 0 .237
Gonzalez p
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
McGowan p
2 0 0 0 0 2 .000
Araujo p
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
De Fratus p
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Blanco ph-2b
1 1 1 1 0 0 .282
Totals
31 5 6 5 1 13
Batting - HR: Francoeur (4); Blanco (1).
RBI: Francoeur 4 (18); Blanco (3). GIDP:
Galvis. Team LOB: 1 Fielding - E: Hernandez (4).
Pitching
ip h r er bb so era

Baltimore
Machado 3b
Young rf
Jones cf
Davis 1b
Wieters dh
Pearce lf
Hardy ss
Flaherty 2b
Joseph c
Totals

Pitching
Chicago
Hammel W,5-2
Rondon
Strop S,2
Washington
Ross L,0-1
Rivero
Hill

ip h r er bb so era
8 5 2 2
0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
5 6 3 3
3 0 0 0
1 1 1 1

2 7 2.76
1 0 3.09
0 2 3.46
0 4 5.40
1 2 1.69
1 2 3.18

J.Hammel pitched to 1 batter in the 9th.


H.Rondon pitched to 1 batter in the 9th.
WP: Strop. Batters faced; pitchesstrikes: Hammel 28; 100-68; Rondon 0;
9-5; Strop 3; 14-11; Ross 21; 91-58; Rivero 8;
42-27; Hill 4; 26-15. Umpires - HP: West;
1B:
Danley;
2B:
Morales;
3B:
Drake. Game data - T: 2:52. Att: 38,214.

Blue Jays 7, Astros 2


HOU.......... 001 000 010 2
TOR............ 130 010 02x 7
Houston
ab r h bi bb so avg
Springer rf
4 0 0 0 0 0 .228
Altuve 2b
4 0 3 1 0 0 .303
Tucker lf
4 0 0 0 0 1 .262
Gattis dh
4 0 2 0 0 2 .235
Rasmus cf
2 0 0 0 1 0 .236
Marisnick ph
1 0 0 0 0 0 .257
Valbuena 3b
2 0 0 0 0 0 .188
Carter ph-1b
2 0 0 0 0 2 .200
Castro c
2 0 0 0 0 2 .221
Conger ph-c
1 0 0 0 0 0 .200
Gonzalez 1b-3b 3 1 1 0 0 2 .227
Villar ss
3 1 2 1 0 1 .273
Totals
32 2 8 2 1 10
Batting - HR: Villar (1). RBI: Altuve (27);
Villar (7). GIDP: Springer; Valbuena. Team
LOB: 4. Baserunning - CS: Altuve (6).
Fielding - E: Gonzalez (4).
Toronto
ab r h bi bb so avg
Reyes ss
4 1 2 1 1 0 .291
Donaldson 3b
3 0 0 1 0 1 .306
Bautista rf
3 2 1 0 2 1 .250
Encarnacion dh
3 0 1 1 1 1 .219
Smoak ph-dh
1 0 1 2 0 0 .263
5 1 1 0 0 2 .359
Colabello 1b
Valencia lf
3 1 1 0 0 0 .321
Carrera lf
0 0 0 0 0 0 .303
Navarro c
3 1 1 0 1 0 .270
Pillar cf
4 1 2 2 0 1 .244
Goins 2b
3 0 0 0 0 1 .229
Totals
32 7 10 7 5 7
Batting - 2B: Smoak (4); Colabello (9);
Valencia (9); Pillar (12). S: Valencia; Goins.
SF: Donaldson. RBI: Reyes (15); Donaldson
(40); Encarnacion (33); Smoak 2 (15); Pillar
2 (24). Team LOB: 10. Baserunning - SB:
Reyes 3 (7); Donaldson (3); Bautista (2).
Fielding - PB: Navarro (1). DP: 2.
Pitching
ip
Houston
Oberholtzer L,0-1 3Z
Buchanan
2Z
Thatcher
Z
Fields
1
Toronto
Hutchison W,5-1 6z
Loup
Z
Delabar
Z
Osuna H,7
z
Cecil
1

h r er bb so era
6
2
0
2

4
1
0
2

2
1
0
2

3
1
0
1

2
2
1
2

3.75
2.00
2.38
2.40

6
0
2
0
0

1
0
1
0
0

1
0
1
0
0

1
0
0
0
0

5
1
1
1
2

4.91
4.87
1.93
1.67
2.65

WP: Buchanan. HBP: Donaldson (by Buchanan). Batters faced; pitches-strikes:


Oberholtzer 16; 88-55; Buchanan 9; 43-30;
Thatcher 2; 11-9; Fields 5; 27-16; Hutchison
22; 91-56; Loup 2; 14-8; Delabar 4; 15-9;
Osuna 1; 4-3; Cecil 3; 11-8. Umpires - HP:
B. Welke; 1B: Holbrook; 2B: Hoye; 3B:
Hirschbeck. Game data - T: 3:16. Att:
31,809.

Texas
Rodriguez W,3-2
Scheppers H,5
Freeman H,4
Tolleson S,7
Kansas City
Ventura L,3-5
Blanton
F. Morales
Herrera
Frasor

7
Z
z
1

6
1
0
2

1
0
0
1

1
0
0
1

0
0
0
0

4
0
0
1

3.25
5.52
5.40
2.73

3
3z
Z
1
1

6
3
1
0
1

4
0
0
0
0

4
0
0
0
0

2
0
0
0
2

3
4
1
1
0

4.62
2.19
3.09
1.71
0.52

IBB: Fielder (by Frasor); Fielder (by Ventura). HBP: Corporan (by Ventura). Batters
faced; pitches-strikes: Rodriguez 27; 9765; Scheppers 4; 17-10; Freeman 1; 2-2;
Tolleson 5; 19-14; Ventura 13; 78-45; Blanton 13; 51-34; F. Morales 2; 11-7; Herrera 3;
11-6; Frasor 3; 19-7. Umpires - HP: Culbreth; 1B: Reynolds; 2B: Gonzalez; 3B:
Schrieber. Game data - T: 2:50. Att:
37,924.

San Francisco
Bumgarner
W,7-2
Casilla S,17
Philadelphia
Gonzalez L,2-2
McGowan
Araujo
De Fratus
Papelbon

8 6 5 5

0 11 3.38

1 0 0 0

1 2 2.59

2Z
3z
1
1
1

7
2
2
0
1

6
0
1
0
0

6
0
0
0
0

1
2
0
0
0

5
3
1
0
1

8.69
4.67
1.86
3.71
1.17

HBP: Hernandez (by Bumgarner); Aoki (by


Gonzalez); Crawford (by Gonzalez).
Balks: Gonzalez. Batters faced; pitchesstrikes: Bumgarner 28; 98-78; Casilla 3;
20-12; Gonzalez 14; 83-49; McGowan 12;
49-30; Araujo 6; 18-14; De Fratus 3; 11-6;
Papelbon 4; 6-6. Umpires - HP: Winters;
1B: Wegner; 2B: Foster; 3B: Barber.Game
data - T: 2:53. Att: 29,102.

Brewers 4, Twins 2
MIL ............ 100 000 201 4
MIN ........... 000 001 010 2
Milwaukee
C. Gomez cf
Lucroy c
Braun rf
Lind 1b
Ramirez 3b
Perez 3b
Parra lf
Segura ss
Peterson dh
Rogers ph-dh
Sardinas 2b
Totals

ab
4
5
4
4
4
0
4
4
1
1
2
33

r h
0 4
0 1
1 2
0 1
0 0
0 0
0 0
1 2
0 0
1 0
1 0
4 10

bi bb so avg
3 1 0 .285
0 0 1 .206
1 0 1 .263
0 0 1 .289
0 0 1 .203
0 0 0 .000
0 0 0 .273
0 0 1 .290
0 1 1 .222
0 1 1 .258
0 1 0 .227
4 4 7

Batting - 2B: C. Gomez (12). HR: Braun


(13). S: Sardinas. RBI: C. Gomez 3 (24);
Braun (39). GIDP: Ramirez. Team LOB:
7. Baserunning - SB: C. Gomez (6). CS:
Peterson (1). Fielding - E: Garza. DP: 2.
Minnesota
Dozier 2b
Robinson lf
Mauer 1b
Plouffe 3b
Hunter dh
Rosario rf
Herrmann c
Suzuki ph
Hicks cf
Santana ss
Totals

ab
4
3
4
4
3
4
2
1
3
3
31

r
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2

h
2
0
2
0
1
2
0
0
0
0
7

bi bb so avg
1 0 0 .266
0 0 1 .241
1 0 0 .273
0 0 1 .250
0 1 0 .281
0 0 0 .289
0 0 1 .174
0 0 0 .245
0 0 1 .244
0 0 1 .217
2 1 5

Batting - 2B: Dozier (18); Rosario (2). HR:


Dozier (11). S: Robinson; Herrmann. RBI:
Dozier (28); Mauer (34). GIDP: Suzuki; Santana. Team LOB: 5. Fielding - E: Plouffe
(5). DP: 2.
Pitching
Milwaukee
Garza W,4-7
Broxton H,8
Rodriguez S,10
Minnesota
Graham
Pressly L,3-2
Thompson
Boyer
Stauffer

ip h r er bb so era
7 6 1 1
1 1 1 1
1 0 0 0
4
2
z
1Z
1

6
2
0
1
1

1
1
1
0
1

1
1
1
0
0

0 3 5.09
0 2 6.75
1 0 1.35
0
3
1
0
0

3
1
0
1
2

2.96
2.95
3.96
2.17
6.60

R.Pressly pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. WP:


Garza; Stauffer. Batters faced; pitchesstrikes: Garza 25; 106-81; Broxton 4; 1911; Rodriguez 2; 13-7; Graham 16; 63-45;
Pressly 6; 33-15; Thompson 0; 9-3; Boyer 6;
22-16; Stauffer 5; 22-16. Umpires - HP:
Basner; 1B: Knight; 2B: Carapazza; 3B:
Kulpa. Game data - T: 3:22. Att: 38,707.

Red Sox 4, Athletics 2


OAK .......... 001 000 100 2
BOS ........... 202 000 00x 4
Oakland
ab r h bi bb so avg
Burns cf
4 0 1 1 0 0 .318
Zobrist lf
3 0 0 0 1 0 .207
Vogt c
4 0 0 0 0 3 .299
Butler dh
4 0 0 0 0 1 .254
Reddick rf
2 0 1 0 1 1 .296
Lawrie ph
0 0 0 0 1 0 .291
Fuld pr-rf
0 0 0 0 0 0 .185
Semien ss
3 0 1 0 1 2 .279
Muncy 3b
4 0 0 0 0 3 .211
Canha 1b
4 1 1 1 0 0 .231
Sogard 2b
4 1 1 0 0 0 .250
Totals
32 2 5 2 4 10
Batting - 2B: Reddick (8). 3B: Burns (3).
HR: Canha (7). RBI: Burns (8); Canha (22).
Team LOB: 7. Fielding - DP: 1.
Boston
ab r h bi bb so avg
Pedroia 2b
3 0 1 0 2 1 .311
Holt 3b
3 1 1 0 2 0 .288
Ramirez lf
5 2 3 2 0 0 .272
Castillo rf
0 0 0 0 0 0 .222
Ortiz dh
4 1 1 1 0 3 .221
Napoli 1b
3 0 2 1 1 1 .217
Bogaerts ss
4 0 1 0 0 2 .297
Betts cf
3 0 0 0 1 0 .240
4 0 1 0 0 0 .218
De Aza rf-lf
Swihart c
4 0 1 0 0 1 .209
Totals
33 4 11 4 6 8
Batting - 2B: Ortiz (12); Napoli (7); Swihart (4). HR: Ramirez (13). RBI: Ramirez 2
(31); Ortiz (20); Napoli (24). GIDP: Swihart.
Team LOB: 11. Baserunning - SB: Betts
(9). CS: Ramirez (3).
Pitching
Oakland
Chavez L,2-6
Pomeranz
Scribner
OFlaherty
Rodriguez
Boston
Kelly W,2-4
Ogando H,6
Layne H,3
Barnes H,1
Uehara S,13

ip h r er bb so era
5
1z
Z
Z
z

10
0
1
0
0

4
0
0
0
0

4
0
0
0
0

1
3
0
2
0

5
2
1
0
0

2.51
4.17
2.01
9.35
5.40

6
1
Z
z
1

4
1
0
0
0

1
1
0
0
0

1
1
0
0
0

2
1
1
0
0

6
0
2
1
1

5.40
4.37
2.65
1.93
2.37

A.Ogando pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.


WP: Pomeranz. IBB: Pedroia (by Pomeranz). Batters faced; pitches-strikes:
Chavez 23; 98-66; Pomeranz 4; 29-14;
Scribner 3; 14-13; OFlaherty 2; 15-6; Rodriguez 1; 6-3; Kelly 22; 100-60; Ogando 4;
23-12; Layne 2; 15-9; Barnes 1; 4-3; Uehara
3; 11-7. Umpires - HP: Wendelstedt; 1B:
Davidson; 2B: Rackley; 3B: Fagan. Game
data - T: 3:10. Att: 36,713.

ab
4
4
4
3
4
3
3
2
2
29

r
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1

h
2
1
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
6

bi bb so avg
1 0 0 .263
0 0 0 .297
0 0 2 .309
0 1 3 .217
0 0 1 .429
0 0 1 .197
0 0 3 .187
0 1 1 .257
0 0 1 .239
1 2 12

Batting - 2B: Jones (9). HR: Machado (9).


S: Joseph. RBI: Machado (24). GIDP:
Jones; Pearce. Team LOB: 4.
Fielding - DP: 3.
ab
1
3
4
2
3
4
4
2
3
1
27

r
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2

h
1
1
1
0
2
0
2
0
0
0
7

bi bb so avg
0 3 0 .332
1 1 0 .235
0 0 2 .302
0 2 0 .244
1 1 1 .220
0 0 3 .208
0 0 0 .200
0 1 2 .250
0 0 1 .180
0 0 0 .270
2 8 9

Batting - 2B: Santana (9); Gomes (2). S:


Bourn. RBI: Santana (28); Swisher (8).
GIDP: Santana; Aviles. Team LOB: 10.
Baserunning - SB: Kipnis (8).
Fielding - DP: 3.
Pitching
Baltimore
Jimenez
Brach L,3-2
Cabral
Cleveland
Salazar W,6-1
Shaw H,8
Allen S,13

ip h r er bb so era
5 6 1 1
2z 1 1 1
Z 0 0 0

6 5 3.02
1 4 4.23
1 0 0.00

7 6 1 1
1 0 0 0
1 0 0 0

1 10 3.50
0 0 2.41
1 2 4.81

D.Salazar pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.


Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Jimenez
18; 107-58; Brach 8; 42-30; Cabral 1; 9-3;
Salazar 25; 109-72; Shaw 2; 10-7; Allen 2;
13-7.
Umpires - HP: Fairchild; 1B: May; 2B:
Hudson; 3B: Gibson.
Game data - T: 2:44. Att: 24,939.

Padres 9, Reds 7
SD .............. 000 120 420 9
CIN ............ 301 201 000 7
San Diego
ab r h bi bb so avg
Venable cf
5 0 0 0 0 2 .261
Norris c
3 3 1 0 2 1 .280
J. Upton lf
2 2 1 0 3 1 .301
Kemp rf
4 2 3 5 1 0 .256
Alonso 1b
5 1 3 4 0 0 .363
Middlebrooks
3 0 1 0 2 2 .244
3b-ss-3b
Solarte 2b-3b
5 0 0 0 0 0 .249
Barmes ss
0 0 0 0 0 0 .262
Amarista ss
3 0 0 0 0 1 .191
Almonte ph
1 1 1 0 0 0 .190
Spangenberg
1 0 0 0 0 0 .240
ph
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Kimbrel p
Cashner p
2 0 0 0 0 1 .136
Gyorko 2b
2 0 0 0 0 2 .212
Totals
36 9 10 9 8 10
Batting - 2B: Kemp (11); Almonte (2).
HR: Kemp (2); Alonso (2). RBI: Kemp 5 (31);
Alonso 4 (16). Team LOB: 8.
Cincinnati
Phillips 2b
Votto 1b
Frazier 3b
Bruce rf
Pena c
Cozart ss
Schumaker lf
Lorenzen p
Negron ph
Hamilton cf
Totals

ab
4
2
5
5
5
5
2
3
1
2
34

r h
1 1
3 1
1 3
0 1
0 2
1 1
0 0
1 2
0 0
0 0
7 11

bi bb so avg
0 0 1 .310
1 3 0 .291
3 0 1 .273
1 0 0 .217
1 0 0 .289
1 0 1 .256
0 2 1 .221
0 0 1 .231
0 0 1 .121
0 1 0 .220
7 6 6

Batting - 2B: Frazier 2 (14); Pena (7). 3B:


Votto (2). HR: Cozart (7). S: Phillips; Hamilton. RBI: Votto (31); Frazier 3 (35); Bruce
(24); Pena (7); Cozart (23). Team LOB:
8. Baserunning - CS: Schumaker (1).
Fielding - E: Schumaker (1). DP: 1.
Pitching
ip h r er bb so era
San Diego
Cashner
Quackenbush
Maurer W,2-0
Benoit H,9
Kimbrel S,13
Cincinnati
Lorenzen
Mattheus
Cingrani BS,2
Diaz L,2-1
Badenhop

All times Pacific

TODAYS PROBABLE PITCHERS

Cubs 4,
Dexter Fowler had two hits, scored
NATIONALS 2 twice and Jason Hammel (5-2) improved to 9-0 with a 3.01 ERA in 11 starts
against the Nationals.
BLUE JAYS 7, Jose Reyes stole three bases and got
two hits as the Blue Jays won their seaAstros 2
son-high fourth in a row.
Rangers 4,
Wandy Rodriguez pitched seven
strong innings and the Rangers defeatROYALS 2
ed the Royals for their seventh win in
eight games.
Brewers 4,
Carlos Gomez went 4 for 4 with a walk,
TWINS 2
tormenting his former team with three
RBIs over the last three innings. Gomez
hit a two-run tiebreaking single in the
seventh and an RBI double in the ninth.
Madison Bumgarner struck out 11
Giants 7,
PHILLIES 5
and overcome a grand slam by Jeff
Francoeur. Bumgarner also gave up a
solo homer by Andres Blanco.
INDIANS 2,
Danny Salazar pitched impressively
Orioles 1
into the eighth inning to reach a career
high in wins and Carlos Santana had a
tiebreaking double.
RED SOX 4,
Joe Kelly pitched six solid innings to
earn his rst win since his initial start of
Athletics 2
the season and Hanley Ramirez hit a
two-run homer.
Padres 9,
Yonder Alonsos second career grand
REDS 7
slam pulled the Padres even in the
seventh inning, and Matt Kemp singled
with the bases loaded in the eighth,
completing San Diegos biggest comeback of the season.
ROCKIES 10, Wilin Rosario homered twice and
Marlins 5
Carlos Gonzalez hit a three-run shot to
back the solid pitching of Chris Rusin,
and the Rockies shrugged off another
rain delay at Coors Field.
BRAVES 5,
Christian Bethancourt lined Vance
Pirates 4
Worleys rst pitch in the ninth inning
over the right-eld wall for his rst
career homer, lifting the Braves to a win
over the Pirates.
Tigers 7
David Price struck out 11 in a ve-hitter,
WHITE SOX 1 Miguel Cabrera homered the Tigers
ended an eight-game losing streak.
YANKEES 8, Brian McCann hit a two-run homer that
Angels 2
helped chase Garrett Richards in a
six-run rst inning, and the Yankees
stretched their winning streak to ve.
Mets at
New York won the opener of this desert
D-BACKS
series 6-2 on Thursday, but dropped a
(late)
7-2 decision Friday night. Jon Niese
was handed the loss for allowing three
runs in six innings.
St. Louis handed the Dodgers a 7-1
Cardinals
at DODGERS defeat on Thursday, then squeezed out
(late)
a 2-1 verdict Friday night thanks to a
two-run eighth inning.
Rays at
Tampa Bay's Logan Forsythe launched
MARINERS
what proved to be the game-winning
home run in the top of the ninth, leading
(late)
to a 1-0 victory for the visitors on Friday.

Cleveland
Kipnis 2b
Santana 1b
Brantley lf
Moss rf
Swisher dh
Chisenhall 3b
Gomes c
Bourn cf
Ramirez ss
Aviles ph-ss
Totals

LOOK AHEAD

5Z
z
1
1
1

8
2
0
0
1

7
0
0
0
0

7
0
0
0
0

5
0
0
0
1

2
0
0
2
2

4.05
3.50
1.93
2.25
4.29

6
Z
z
1
1

6
1
1
2
0

3
3
1
2
0

3
3
1
2
0

3
2
1
2
0

5
2
0
2
1

3.29
5.00
3.27
6.65
7.11

IBB: Schumaker (by Cashner). Batters


faced; pitches-strikes: Cashner 22; 9460; Quackenbush 2; 7-5; Maurer 3; 10-7;
Benoit 3; 17-10; Kimbrel 4; 21-11; Lorenzen
23; 93-54; Mattheus 3; 24-13; Cingrani 2;
17-9; Diaz 5; 28-15; Badenhop 3; 11-6.
Umpires - HP: Hickox; 1B: Estabrook;
2B: DeMuth; 3B: Nauert. Game data - T:
3:12. Att: 40,946.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Pitchers

GS

2015 Statistics
Pct. WHIP ERA

W-L

IP

BA

L.A. Angels at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m.


LAA: Wilson (L)
NYY: Sabathia (L)

11
11

3-4
2-7

(Line: NYY -125)


1.18 3.55 71.0 .229
1.47 5.45 66.0 .312

.429
.222

Houston at Toronto, 10:07 a.m.


HOU: McHugh (R)
TOR: Dickey (R)

11
11

(Line: TOR -130)


.750 1.23 4.33
.250 1.34 5.53

6-2
2-6

Baltimore at Cleveland, 10:10 a.m.


BAL: Norris (R)
CLE: Carrasco (R)

6
11

1-4
7-4

.200
.636

70.2
70.0

.275
.263

(Line: CLE -155)


1.87 9.88 27.1
1.17 3.92 64.1

.328
.246

Oakland at Boston, 10:35 a.m.


OAK: Graveman (R)
BOS: Buchholz (R)

7
11

(Line: BOS -160)


.600 1.68 5.56
.333 1.21 3.82

3-2
3-6

Detroit at Ch White Sox, 11:10 a.m.


DET: Simon (R)
CWS: Samardzija (R)

10
11

5-3
4-3

.625
.571

34.0
68.1

.302
.249

(Line: CWS -135)


1.23 2.97 63.2
1.34 4.68 73.0

.241
.286

Texas at Kansas City, 11:10 a.m.


TEX: Lewis (R)
KC: Guthrie (R)

11
10

(Line: KC -135)
.625 1.24 4.48
.571 1.54 6.17

5-3
4-3

66.1
54.0

.265
.306

76.0
6.0

.193
.182

(Line: CIN -165)


1.26 4.56 49.1
.95
2.90 71.1

.259
.215

(Line: PIT -140)


.800 1.08 1.90 71.0
.667 1.42 3.19 62.0

.235
.295

Tampa Bay at Seattle, 1:10 p.m.


TB: Archer (R)
SEA: Montgomery (L)

12
1

(Line: TB -130)
.600
.96
2.01
.000 1.00 1.50

6-4
0-0

NATIONAL LEAGUE
San Diego at Cincinnati, 10:10 a.m.
SD: Despaigne (R)
CIN: Cueto (R)

7
10

3-3
3-4

.500
.429

Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 10:35 a.m.


PIT: Cole (R)
ATL: Wood (L)

11
10

8-2
4-2

San Francisco at Philadelphia, 10:35 a.m.


SF: Vogelsong (R)
PHI: O Sullivan (R)

9
7

4-3
1-4

.571
.200

(Line: SF -125)
4.26 57.0 .245
5.03 39.1 .290

1.33
1.37

Chicago Cubs at Washington, 1:05 p.m.


CHC: Hendricks (R)
WAS: Zimmermann (R)

10
11

1-2
5-2

.333
.714

N.Y. Mets at Arizona, 1:10 p.m.


NYM: deGrom (R)
ARI: Collmenter (R)

11
11

6-4
3-5

Miami at Colorado, 1:10 p.m.


MIA: Urena (R)
COL: Kendrick (R)

2
11

0-2
2-7

11
11

4-4
5-1

(Line: WSH -140)


3.99 58.2 .252
2.88 68.2 .263

(Line: NYM -115)


.600
.99
2.41 71.0
.375 1.36 5.03 62.2

.221
.305

(Line: COL -115)


.000 1.61 7.24
.222 1.47 6.55

13.2
66.0

.316
.285

(Line: LAD -155)


1.29 3.03 68.1
.95
1.97 73.0

.252
.205

St. Louis at L.A. Dodgers, 5:08 p.m.


STL: Lynn (R)
LAD: Greinke (R)

1.18
1.22

.500
.833

INTERLEAGUE
Milwaukee at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m.
MIL: Fiers (R)
MIN: Pelfrey (R)

11
10

2-5
4-2

.286
.667

(Line: MIL -110)


1.49 4.06 57.2 .286
1.24 2.59 59.0 .251

FRIDAY
NYY 8, LAA 7
TOR 6, HOU 2
BAL 5, CLE 2
BOS 4, OAK 2
CWS 4, DET 3, 11 innings
TEX 4, KC 0
TB 1, SEA 0
WAS 7, CHC 5
SF 5, PHI 4
SD 6, CIN 2
PIT 10, ATL 8
MIL 10, MIN 5
MIA 6, COL 2

TODAY
All times Pacic
LAA at NYY, 10:05 a.m.
HOU at TOR, 10:07 a.m.
BAL at CLE, 10:10 a.m.
SD at CIN, 10:10 a.m.
PIT at ATL, 10:35 a.m.
SF at PHI, 10:35 a.m.
OAK at BOS, 10:35 a.m.
DET at CWS, 11:10 a.m.
MIL at MIN, 11:10 a.m.
TEX at KC, 11:10 a.m.
CHC at WAS, 1:05 p.m.
TB at SEA, 1:10 p.m.
MIA at COL, 1:10 p.m.
NYM at ARI, 1:10 p.m.
STL at LAD, 5:05 p.m.

MONDAY
MIL at PIT, 4:05 p.m.
MIA at TOR, 4:07 p.m.
PHI at CIN, 4:10 p.m.
SD at ATL, 4:10 p.m.
HOU at CWS, 5:10 p.m.
KC at MIN, 5:10 p.m.
STL at COL, 5:40 p.m.
ARI at LAD, 7:10 p.m.

TUESDAY
BOS at BAL, 4:05 p.m.
MIL at PIT, 4:05 p.m.
WSH at NYY, 4:05 p.m.
MIA at TOR, 4:07 p.m.
CHC at DET, 4:08 p.m.
LAA at TB, 4:10 p.m.
PHI at CIN, 4:10 p.m.
SD at ATL, 4:10 p.m.
SF at NYM, 4:10 p.m.
SEA at CLE, 4:10 p.m.
HOU at CWS, 5:10 p.m.
KC at MIN, 5:10 p.m.
STL at COL, 5:40 p.m.
TEX at OAK, 7:05 p.m.
ARI at LAD, 7:10 p.m.

AARON VINCENT
ELKAIM-AP

Toronto
shortstop
Jose Reyes
prepares to
tag Houston's
Jose Altuve as
he's picked off
stealing second base on
Saturday.

LATE FRIDAY

Rockies 10, Marlins 5

Tigers 7, White Sox 1

MIA ........... 010 100 003 5


COL ......... 401 500 00x 10

Detroit...... 000 050 110 7


Chicago ... 001 000 000 1

Miami
Gordon 2b
Prado 3b
Stanton rf
Baker 1b
Ozuna cf
Yelich lf
Mathis c
Hechavarria ss
Phelps p
Rienzo p
Solano ph
Suzuki ph
Totals

Detroit
Davis cf
Kinsler 2b
Cabrera 1b
Cespedes lf
J. Martinez rf
Castellanos dh
McCann c
Wilson 3b
Iglesias ss
Totals

ab
5
4
5
5
5
4
4
4
1
1
1
1
40

r h
1 2
0 1
1 1
0 2
1 3
1 1
0 1
1 2
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
5 13

bi bb so avg
0 0 2 .365
0 1 0 .284
0 0 4 .234
2 0 1 .282
0 0 0 .286
0 1 0 .221
1 0 0 .111
1 0 0 .309
0 0 1 .063
0 0 0 .000
0 0 0 .195
1 0 0 .281
5 2 8

Batting - 2B: Gordon (12); Stanton (8);


Ozuna (12). 3B: Prado (1); Hechavarria (2).
RBI: Baker 2 (6); Mathis (1); Hechavarria
(24); Suzuki (9). Team LOB: 10. Fielding E: Mathis (1). DP: 1.
Colorado
ab r h bi bb so avg
Blackmon cf
4 2 3 0 1 0 .270
LeMahieu 2b
5 2 3 1 0 0 .339
Arenado 3b
4 1 1 2 0 1 .280
Paulsen ph
1 0 0 0 0 0 .321
4 1 2 3 1 1 .239
Gonzalez rf
Rosario 1b
5 3 3 3 0 1 .311
McKenry c
5 0 2 1 0 2 .288
Descalso ss
4 0 1 0 0 0 .244
Barnes lf
4 0 0 0 0 0 .333
Rusin p
3 1 1 0 0 0 .143
Ynoa ph-3b
1 0 1 0 0 0 .274
Totals
40 10 17 10 2 5
Batting - 2B: LeMahieu (5). 3B: Arenado
(2); McKenry (1). HR: Gonzalez (5); Rosario
2 (4). RBI: LeMahieu (27); Arenado 2 (42);
Gonzalez 3 (16); Rosario 3 (12); McKenry
(10). GIDP: LeMahieu. Team LOB: 8.
Fielding - E: Descalso (5).
Pitching
ip h r er bb so era
Miami
Phelps L,2-3
3Z 11 9 9 0 3 4.68
1z 2 1 1 1 1 3.38
Rienzo
Morris
Z 1 0 0 0 1 3.95
Flores
2z 3 0 0 1 0 0.00
Colorado
Rusin W,2-0
7 7 2 2 2 8 1.45
Kahnle
1 1 0 0 0 0 0.00
Betancourt
1 5 3 3 0 0 6.30
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Phelps
22; 70-49; Rienzo 6; 25-14; Morris 3; 13-7;
Flores 9; 35-21; Rusin 28; 99-67; Kahnle 4;
14-9; Betancourt 8; 26-22. Umpires - HP:
Randazzo; 1B: DiMuro; 2B: Little; 3B: Cuzzi. Game data - T: 2:59. Att: 30,373.

Braves 5, Pirates 4
PIT.............. 000 200 020 4
ATL............. 011 100 101 5
Pittsburgh
Polanco rf
Marte lf
McCutchen cf
Walker 2b
Harrison 3b
Alvarez 1b
Cervelli c
Mercer ss
Locke p
Kang ph
Rodriguez 3b
Totals

ab
4
4
4
4
4
3
3
3
2
1
0
32

r
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
4

h
3
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
6

bi bb so avg
2 0 0 .266
0 0 1 .255
2 0 0 .294
0 0 1 .260
0 0 2 .255
0 0 1 .240
0 0 0 .331
0 0 0 .212
0 0 1 .105
0 0 0 .275
0 0 0 .270
4 0 6

Batting - HR: McCutchen (8). RBI: Polanco 2 (15); McCutchen 2 (37). Team LOB:
1. Baserunning - CS: Polanco (4).
Atlanta
ab r h bi bb so avg
Maybin cf
4 1 2 1 0 0 .286
Simmons ss
4 0 0 0 0 0 .263
Freeman 1b
2 0 1 1 1 0 .305
Markakis rf
4 0 0 0 0 0 .301
C. Johnson 3b
3 1 1 1 0 2 .267
Ciriaco 2b
1 0 0 0 0 0 .206
Uribe 2b-3b
4 0 1 0 0 0 .259
Gomes lf
3 1 1 0 1 2 .204
4 2 3 2 0 0 .205
Bethancourt c
Teheran p
2 0 0 0 0 1 .100
Totals
31 5 9 5 2 5
Batting - HR: C. Johnson (1); Bethancourt
(1). S: Teheran. SF: Freeman. RBI: Maybin
(26); Freeman (34); C. Johnson (7); Bethancourt 2 (9). Team LOB: 6. Baserunning SB: Maybin (9); Gomes (1).
Pitching
Pittsburgh
Locke
Bastardo
Hughes
Worley L,2-4
Atlanta
Teheran
J. Johnson BS,3
Grilli W,1-2

ip h r er bb so era
6z
Z
1
0

7
0
1
1

4
0
0
1

4
0
0
1

7z 5 4 4
Z 1 0 0
1 0 0 0

2
0
0
0

4
0
1
0

5.37
4.50
3.28
3.83

0 5 4.87
0 0 3.20
0 1 3.93

V.Worley pitched to 1 batter in the 9th.


Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Locke 24;
95-61; Bastardo 2; 13-7; Hughes 4; 11-7;
Worley 1; 1-1; Teheran 26; 103-69; J. Johnson 3; 8-6; Grilli 3; 6-5. Umpires - HP: Hamari; 1B: Carlson; 2B: Gorman; 3B:
Gibson III. Game data - T: 2:44. Att:
33,268.

ab
6
5
4
4
5
5
5
5
5
44

r h
0 1
1 2
1 1
2 2
0 1
1 1
1 3
1 4
0 3
7 18

bi bb so avg
0 0 0 .261
0 0 0 .268
2 1 0 .325
0 1 1 .292
1 0 1 .254
0 0 1 .234
1 0 0 .285
1 0 1 .556
2 0 0 .338
7 2 4

Batting - 2B: J. Martinez (12); McCann


(8); Iglesias (6). HR: Cabrera (12). RBI: Cabrera 2 (38); J. Martinez (23); McCann (13);
Wilson (3); Iglesias 2 (9). GIDP: Iglesias.
Team LOB: 12.
Baserunning - SB: Davis (13).
Fielding - E: Cespedes (4). DP: 3.
Chicago
Eaton cf
Ramirez ss
Abreu dh
Garcia rf
LaRoche 1b
Beckham 3b
Soto c
Sanchez 2b
Bonifacio lf
Totals

ab
4
4
4
4
3
3
2
2
3
29

r
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1

h
0
2
0
0
2
0
0
0
1
5

bi bb so avg
0 0 1 .233
1 0 1 .236
0 0 1 .274
0 0 3 .293
0 0 0 .244
0 0 0 .263
0 1 2 .205
0 1 1 .155
0 0 2 .200
1 2 11

Batting - 2B: Ramirez (12); Bonifacio (1).


RBI: Ramirez (22). GIDP: Abreu; Beckham.
Team LOB: 3.
Fielding - DP: 1.
Pitching
Detroit
Price W,5-2
Chicago
Danks L,3-5
Webb
Noesi

ip h r er bb so era
9 5 1 1

2 11 2.70

4Z 11 5 5
1z 1 0 0
3 6 2 2

2 3 5.17
0 1 0.00
0 0 6.67

Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Price 29;


110-79; Danks 25; 91-64; Webb 5; 16-13;
Noesi 14; 45-32.
Umpires - HP: Blaser; 1B: Guccione; 2B:
Nelson; 3B: Diaz.
Game data - T: 2:54. Att: 28,368.

Yankees 8, Angels 2

Rays 1, Mariners 0
TB............... 000 000 001 1
SEA ............ 000 000 000 0
Tampa Bay
Guyer lf
Butler dh
Longoria 3b
Forsythe 2b
Souza Jr. rf
Elmore 1b
Cabrera ss
Kiermaier cf
Wilson c
DeJesus ph
Rivera c
Totals

ab
4
3
3
4
4
4
4
3
2
1
0
32

r
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1

h
1
1
2
1
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
7

bi bb so avg
0 0 0 .289
0 0 0 .337
0 1 0 .273
1 0 1 .282
0 0 1 .225
0 0 0 .277
0 0 1 .205
0 0 2 .232
0 0 1 .154
0 0 0 .320
0 0 0 .160
1 1 6

Batting - 2B: Butler (7); Elmore (4). HR:


Forsythe (7). RBI: Forsythe (25). Team LOB:
6. Baserunning - CS: Guyer (2); Longoria
(1). Fielding - DP: 1.
Seattle
ab r h bi bb so avg
Morrison 1b
3 0 1 0 1 0 .246
Cano 2b
4 0 0 0 0 0 .243
Cruz rf
4 0 2 0 0 1 .322
Seager 3b
4 0 1 0 0 0 .278
Trumbo dh
4 0 0 0 0 2 .250
S. Smith lf
2 0 0 0 1 1 .255
1 0 1 0 0 0 .270
Jackson pr-cf
Miller ss
4 0 1 0 0 2 .228
Zunino c
4 0 0 0 0 1 .172
Ackley cf-lf
3 0 1 0 1 1 .197
Totals
33 0 7 0 3 8
Batting - 3B: Jackson (1). GIDP: Trumbo.
Team LOB: 9.
Pitching
ip h r er bb so era
Tampa Bay
Odorizzi
Cedeno
Bellatti W,2-0
Jepsen S,3
Seattle
Happ
C. Smith
Rodney L,2-3

4z
Z
3
1

4
0
2
1

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

7 6 0 0
1 0 0 0
1 1 1 1

1
0
2
0

4
0
3
1

2.47
1.54
1.80
1.88

1 6 3.31
0 0 1.13
0 0 6.94

WP: Happ. IBB: Longoria (by Happ). HBP:


Butler (by C. Smith). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Odorizzi 17; 75-50; Cedeno 2;
6-4; Bellatti 10; 46-30; Jepsen 4; 19-14;
Happ 25; 100-64; C. Smith 3; 15-8; Rodney
4; 18-10. Umpires - HP: Johnson; 1B:
Tumpane; 2B: Eddings; 3B: Wolf. Game
data - T: 2:55. Att: 20,695.

LAA ........... 000 011 000 2


NYY ........... 610 000 01x 8
Los Angeles
Aybar ss
Trout cf
Pujols 1b
Calhoun rf
Freese 3b
Joyce lf
Iannetta ph
Cron dh
Perez c
Giavotella 2b
Totals

ab
4
4
3
3
4
3
1
3
4
1
30

r
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
2

h
1
1
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
5

bi bb so avg
0 0 0 .266
1 0 2 .284
0 1 0 .254
0 1 1 .271
0 0 0 .238
0 0 0 .190
0 0 1 .174
0 0 0 .198
0 0 1 .283
1 1 0 .282
2 3 5

Batting - 2B: Freese (12); Joyce (10). HR:


Trout (15). SF: Giavotella. RBI: Trout (32);
Giavotella (21). GIDP: Freese. Team LOB:
0.
New York
ab r h bi bb so avg
Gardner cf
4 1 2 2 1 0 .279
Headley 3b
5 1 1 0 0 1 .252
Rodriguez dh
1 1 0 0 3 0 .283
Teixeira 1b
3 1 1 2 1 1 .242
McCann c
5 1 2 2 0 1 .255
Beltran rf
4 1 2 1 0 0 .247
Young rf
1 0 0 0 0 0 .220
4 1 2 0 0 2 .236
Gregorius ss
Drew 2b
4 0 0 0 0 0 .169
Flores lf
4 1 1 0 0 1 .182
Totals
35 8 11 7 5 6
Batting - 2B: Gregorius (6); Flores (1).
HR: McCann (9). SF: Teixeira. RBI: Gardner
2 (23); Teixeira 2 (45); McCann 2 (35); Beltran (22). Team LOB: 0.
Baserunning - SB: Gardner (14).
Fielding - DP: 1.
Pitching
ip h r er bb so era
Los Angeles
Richards L,5-4
Ramos
Santiago
Alvarez
Bedrosian
New York
Warren W,4-4
Wilson
Capuano

Z
Z
3Z
2
1

5
2
2
0
2

6
1
0
0
1

6
1
0
0
1

6Z 4 2 2
1z 1 0 0
1 0 0 0

2
0
0
1
2

1
0
3
1
1

4.14
3.00
2.55
3.28
3.38

3 2 3.64
0 1 4.26
0 2 5.79

WP: Richards. HBP: Rodriguez (by Santiago); Cron (by Warren). Batters faced;
pitches-strikes: Richards 7; 37-18; Ramos
4; 20-12; Santiago 13; 45-33; Alvarez 6; 2416; Bedrosian 5; 40-23; Warren 22; 105-61;
Wilson 5; 14-9; Capuano 3; 20-14.
Umpires - HP: Marquez; 1B: Bellino; 2B:
Hallion; 3B: Dreckman.
Game data - T: 3:05. Att: 40,096.

Marlins 6, Rockies 2
MIA............ 021 012 000 6
COL ........... 000 001 010 2
Miami
Gordon 2b
Prado 3b
Stanton rf
Bour 1b
Ozuna cf
Yelich lf
Realmuto c
Hechavarria ss
Koehler p
Suzuki ph
Totals

ab
5
5
5
4
4
4
4
3
1
1
36

r h
0 1
1 1
1 2
0 1
1 1
1 1
1 4
1 1
0 0
0 0
6 12

bi bb so avg
1 0 1 .364
0 0 1 .285
1 0 3 .235
0 1 0 .329
1 0 0 .278
0 0 0 .221
1 0 0 .230
1 1 1 .305
1 0 0 .053
0 0 0 .283
6 2 6

Batting - 2B: Gordon (11). 3B: Realmuto


(4). HR: Stanton (18). S: Koehler 2. RBI:
Gordon (16); Stanton (47); Ozuna (19);
Realmuto (12); Hechavarria (23); Koehler
(1). GIDP: Yelich. Team LOB: 7. Fielding E: Prado (4). DP: 2.
Colorado
ab r h bi bb so avg
Blackmon cf
5 1 1 0 0 0 .260
LeMahieu 2b
4 0 0 0 1 0 .331
Tulowitzki ss
4 1 3 1 0 0 .303
Gonzalez rf
4 0 2 0 0 2 .233
Arenado 3b
3 0 0 1 0 1 .281
Paulsen 1b
4 0 1 0 0 0 .327
Hundley c
4 0 2 0 0 1 .304
Barnes lf
4 0 2 0 0 0 .360
Butler p
1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Descalso ph
1 0 0 0 0 1 .243
Bergman p
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Rosario ph
1 0 1 0 0 0 .294
McKenry ph
1 0 0 0 0 1 .278
Totals
36 2 12 2 1 7
Batting - SF: Arenado. RBI: Tulowitzki
(29); Arenado (40). GIDP: Tulowitzki;
Barnes. Team LOB: 9. Baserunning - SB:
Blackmon (12). Fielding - DP: 1.
Pitching
Miami
Koehler W,4-3
Mazzaro
Ramos S,6
Colorado
Butler L,3-6
Kahnle
Bergman
Brown
Friedrich

ip h r er bb so era
7 8 1 1
1 4 1 0
1 0 0 0
5z
Z
1
1
1

11
0
0
1
0

6
0
0
0
0

6
0
0
0
0

1 6 3.72
0 0 1.35
0 1 0.99
2
0
0
0
0

3
1
0
0
2

4.80
0.00
4.45
4.12
4.81

V.Mazzaro pitched to 2 batters in the 9th.


Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Koehler
27; 105-71; Mazzaro 6; 23-17; Ramos 3;
8-6; Butler 24; 85-54; Kahnle 2; 9-5; Bergman 3; 11-6; Brown 4; 16-9; Friedrich 3;
11-8. Umpires - HP: Cuzzi; 1B: Randazzo; 2B: DiMuro; 3B: Little. Game data - T:
2:43. Att: 32,091.

Sports

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

5C

WOMENS WORLD CUP

Leroux is primed for the World Cup


By Anne M. Peterson
Associated Press

WINNIPEG, Manitoba U.S.


forward Sydney Leroux, a native of British Columbia, has no
idea what the reception will be
when she steps onto the field for
the World Cup in Canada.
Any Canadian fans who think
Leroux betrayed her roots, be
warned.
I feel like the worst you can
do is boo me and try to make me
feel bad, she said with a wry
grin. Because that just makes
me hungrier.
Leroux and her U.S. teammates open soccers premier
tournament on Monday with a
group-stage match against Australia in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
The World Cup is being played

across six Canadian cities over


the course of the next month,
concluding with the final on
July 5 in Vancouver.
The United States, ranked
second in the world, is among a
tough group that includes the
Matildas, as the 10th-ranked
Australians are known, Sweden
and former U.S. coach Pia Sundhage, and perennial African
champion Nigeria.
Leroux is part of a dangerous
pool of forwards on the U.S.
team. Led by Alex Morgan and
Abby Wambach, the group also
includes Christen Press and
Amy Rodriguez.
Its probably the deepest
team in the world, Leroux said.
Theres going to be games
where youre not going to start,
its all going to be up to what the

game asks for. Were all ready


for that, and we all know what
we need to do.
At 15, and holding dual citizenship, Leroux decided to
move to Arizona alone in
hopes of grabbing the attention
of U.S. Soccer. It worked. The
UCLA alum was a promising
U20 player for the U.S. before
joining the senior team in 2011.
She had a breakout the next
year, scoring 14 goals as a sub.
Known for her speed, Leroux
is lethal on the fast break, as evidenced by her two goals the
first coming at a seemingly impossible angle in an exhibition last month against Mexico
in Carson, California.
But earlier this year, Leroux
struggled with a right foot injury that happened in training.

RICH SCHULTZ/AP

U.S. forward Sydney Leroux (2) is a native of British Columbia. At 15, she
decided to move south in hopes of grabbing the attention of U.S. Soccer.

CHAMPIONS LEAGUE FINAL

WOMENS WORLD CUP

Barca cruises past Juventus

Sinclair gives Canada win


over China in the opener

By Rob Harris
Associated Press

BERLIN

Barcelonas
mighty attacking trio of Lionel
Messi, Luis Suarez and Neymar
won the Champions League on
Saturday with a 3-1victory over
Juventus that showed the beauty of fluent and attacking football after days of scandal that
have tarnished the sport.
The Spanish champion dominated the game, but the Italian
team played its part by fighting
back from a goal down and
seeking to match the complex
spells woven by Barcelonas
talented players. But Juventus
could not hang in there when
Barca accelerated into an unmatchable rhythm.
Watched by more than
70,000 people in Berlins Olympic Stadium, Juventus striker
Alvaro Morata canceled out
Ivan Rakitics early opener,
Messi set up the vital second
for Suarez, and Neymar secured Barcelonas fifth European Cup deep into stoppage
time with the last kick of the

Belmont
Continued from Page 1C

ered down the stretch, displaying his fluid, springloaded


stride in which he appears to
float over the ground.
Its just an amazing feeling
that you have when youre 20
yards from the wire, Espinoza
said. And then at the wire I
was like, I cannot believe I did
it.
American Pharoah ran the
final quarter-mile a stretch
that has dashed numerous Triple Crown dreams in 24.32
seconds, faster than Secretariats time of 25 seconds in winning the 1973 Belmont.
After making his way back,
Espinoza took American Pharoah nearly the length of the
sprawling grandstand so the
fans could pay their respects to
the champion.
As the horses were heading
to the starting gate, owner Ahmed Zayat was overflowing
with confidence and turned to
his wife.
I told her, Get ready to be
the owner of the 12th Triple
Crown winner, he said.
Sent off as the overwhelming 3-5 favorite, American Pha-

game.
The Messi-Suarez-Neymar
axis complete the season with a
combined 122 goals and now
European winners medals to
join their league and cup ones.
Three years after Pep Guardiola left Barcelona and after
last season ended without a trophy, Luis Enrique matched
Guardiolas 2008-09 feat of winning a treble in his first season
in charge, suggesting the Catalan giants could be ready for a
new period of European dominance.
A magnificent, spectacular
day, Enrique said.
With a first Champions
League triumph since 2011,
Barca has won European soccers top trophy four times in
the last decade.
Andres Iniesta has featured
in each final and the midfielder
is also celebrating his second
treble. Iniesta played a deep defensive midfield role in Berlin
as the strikers caused havoc in
the panicky Juventus defense.
We wont see this happen
again very often, Iniesta said.

roah paid $3.50, $2.80 and $2.50.


Frosted returned $3.50 and
$2.90, while Keen Ice was another two lengths back in third
and paid $4.60 to show.
Mubtaahij was fourth, followed by Frammento, Madefromlucky, Tale of Verve and
Materiality.
American Pharoah delivered a victory for the Egyptianborn Zayat, who bred the colt
and put him up for sale before
buying him back for $300,000.
His name came courtesy of the
familys online contest, in
which a woman from Missouri
submitted the winning moniker, but the misspelling it
should be pharaoh wasnt noticed until the name was already official.
I cant believe it happened, said Justin Zayat, racing manager for his fathers
stable. Its amazing. Oh my
God.
American Pharoah joined
the exclusive club of Triple
Crown winners Sir Barton
(1919), Gallant Fox (1930), Omaha (1935), War Admiral (1937),
Whirlaway (1941), Count Fleet
(1943), Assault (1946), Citation
(1948), Secretariat (1973), Seattle Slew (1977) and Affirmed.

Six years later we did (the treble) again. All my words fall
short. Let the people enjoy this
Barca.
Few will be enjoying the victory more than Suarez.
The Uruguay striker began
the season in shame, signed
from Liverpool for $110 million
despite being handed a fourmonth ban by FIFA for biting
an opponent at the World Cup.
He powered in Barcelonas second goal in the 68th minute after Messis shot was palmed
away by goalkeeper Gianluigi
Buffon.
When you come to a team
like Barca, you know that you
have come to win, Suarez said.
Suarez is rarely far from controversy, however. Twice he
writhed around in agony, winning free-kicks and feigning serious injury. Juventus fans
yelled derision when he recovered miraculously after wasting minutes.
Just like Suarez, Neymar
has collected the top prize in
club soccer for the first time after two years at Barcelona.

Ducks
Continued from Page 1C

the nation for much of the year,


had a stellar regular season, going 46-6, then was a perfect 5-0
in the regional and super regional to advance to the WCWS
for the third time in four seasons.
But once in Oklahoma City,
the Ducks didnt look the same.
In a 7-1 loss to UCLA to open
the WCWS, pitcher Cheridan
Hawkins wasnt sharp, allowing eight hits and seven earned
runs, including two homers. Offensively, there were base-running mistakes and missed opportunities, as Oregon left
eight runners on base.
In the season-ending 2-1 loss
against Alabama, a two-out
bloop single was the difference
in the ballgame, as the Ducks
bats, once again, were quiet
with just three hits.
Oregons potent offense hit
.364 coming into the WCWS, but
hit just .191 in Oklahoma City.
So what is it about the biggest stage that prevents the
Ducks from playing their best?
Im still trying to figure out
what the deal is, White said. I
dont know whether its nerves,

NBA Finals
Continued from Page 1C

James seemed more downcast as he spoke then a day earlier, before the Cavaliers had
revealed the severity of Irvings injury following an MRI
exam. Irving had been hurt previously in the postseason and
Cleveland had won without him,
but this time was different.
Obviously, weve been in
this situation, but we always
knew at some point hell come
back, James said. Knowing
that hes out for the rest of the
finals and out for a period of a
long time, first of all, it sucks
for him personally. Its a huge
blow for our team, especially at
this stage.
The Warriors were already
the favorites to win the championship after leading the NBA
with 67 victories during the regular season. Now, with Irving
joining Kevin Love on the sideline, the Warriors were trying
to brush away the suggestions
that not only should they win,
but do it easily.
No series is unlosable, center Andrew Bogut said.
Stranger things have happened and theyre still a great

BEN MARGOT/AP

LeBron James must know that he and his Cavaliers teammates suddenly
have their work cut out for them against the Golden State Warriors.

team with arguably the best


player in the world. Obviously
theyre going to have other guys
that have to step up to help him
get wins, but we cant take this

team lightly.
Curry said the mood in the
Warriors locker room was no
different than it was going into
the series.

By Anne M. Peterson
Associated Press

EDMONTON, Alberta With


the sellout crowd roaring,
Christine Sinclair sprinted
across the field and into the
outstretched arms of coach
John Herdman.
Sinclair had just converted
a penalty kick in the second
minute of second-half stoppage time, giving host Canada
a 1-0 win over China on Saturday in the opening match of the
Womens World Cup.
After the celebratory hug,
Herdman turned to the crowd
and leapt into the air, pumping
his fist.
Canadas star striker and
team captain had made her
country proud.
The first thing that went
through my head was Im taking this. Ive been practicing
my whole life for that moment, said Sinclair, who turns
32 next week. The next thing
through my head was Man,

whether were trying too hard.


But well find a solution to it.
No. 1 national seed Florida
repeated as national champion,
beating Michigan in the championship series, while No. 2
seed Oregon was eliminated by
Alabama for the second season
in a row.
We havent performed as
well as we do all year long, in
the big games, and you know
what, its hard to pinpoint, but I
think thats what a lot of us are
trying to figure out, said junior catcher Janelle Lindvall,
who hit .333 this season with
seven home runs and 51 RBIs.
Its definitely tough, but I
think that as long as we take
this season and learn from it,
and hopefully apply it to next
year, go even farther next
year.
The Ducks finished 51-8 in
their final season at Howe
Field.
Next season will begin a new
era for Oregon softball when
the team opens Jane Sanders
Stadium.
Very excited to see it finally happen and know that people
out there care enough about our
program, Lindvall said. I
think its going to bring in a lot
more recruits. Well be able to
hit inside when its raining.

There is no pressure or added pressure, I dont think, because our goal stays the same,
Curry said. Were not really
listening to any outside noise or
predictions, or who is favored
to do what, because we control
what we control. When we go
out there and play, weve got to
play better than we did in Game
1, and that is really our only focus.
Both teams noted how closely the Cavs were to winning
Game 1, and in fact the series
nearly had a decidedly different feel.
James and Iman Shumpert
both missed jumpers on the final possession of regulation.
Had either gone in, the Cavs
would be the team with the 1-0
lead and wouldve avoided the
overtime period that featured
Irvings injury, which coach David Blatt said came when the
All-Star point guard was kneed
in his knee.
Blatt acknowledged the difficulty of losses like Game 1,
saying they cost you some
hours of sleep. But he said the
Cavs had moved forward from
it.
Youd love to see us at full
strength, obviously, for the finals, he said. The situation as
it is, is what it is, and we are go-

the fans are very loud right


now.
Canada was awarded the
penalty by Ukrainian referee
Natalia Rachynska after Adriana Leon was fouled by Rong
Zhao. The sellout crowd of
53,058 at Commonwealth Stadium, the largest for a national
team sporting ever in Canada,
was on its feet when Sinclairs
shot sailed just inside the post
and past goalkeeper Wang Fei.
It was the first match of the
month-long
tournament
played across six Canadian cities. The United States opens
Monday against Australia, and
the final is set for July 5.
The World Cup began with
FIFA, soccers international
governing body, plagued by
scandal. FIFA President Sepp
Blatter announced his resignation earlier this week after the
U.S. Department of Justice indicted 14 people on corruption
charges related to soccer. No
FIFA officials participated in
the opening ceremony.

Well get to get more reps in.


The Ducks should be loaded
again next season, as they return every position starter except senior outfielder Janie Takeda. Among the returners is
junior first baseman Hailey
Decker, from McNary High
School.
Oregon will lose its No. 2
starting pitcher, senior Karissa
Hovinga, but ace Hawkins will
return for her senior season.
I think every year, you just
get more experience. Just try
to learn and get better the next
year, Lindvall said. You can
always learn from experience.
While Oregons performance at the WCWS was disappointing, White said its important to understand what the
team accomplished this season,
including a third consecutive
Pac-12 championship.
The good news is, we look
back on it, successful season,
great season, White said.
Three-time Pac-12 champions,
which was great. And now we
need to take that next step and
whats it going to take, and so
thats what were looking at
right now.
pmartini@StatesmanJournal.com
or (503) 399-6730 or
Twitter.com/PeteMartiniSJ

ing to come out and play and


play to win. Request no quarter
and no sympathy. Weve got to
come out and play, and play to
win. Thats it.
Matthew Dellavedova was
likely to replace Irving for the
Cavs, who arent nearly as deep
as the Warriors. James said he
could maybe play 40 to 42 minutes in a finals game, but its
hard to imagine even he could
do much more than the 44 points
he scored in Game 1.
Still, Warriors coach Steve
Kerr said he would remind his
players that the Cavaliers were
still a great team.
They won two games
against Atlanta without Kyrie,
he added. Theyre still loaded
with talent. Theyre going to be
loose. Now all the spotlight is
going to be on this injury and all
that stuff. It cant affect us. We
just go out and play and weve
got to do our thing.
The Warriors recalled having games during the regular
season where they had a letdown because an opponent was
without one of its top players
and said they wouldnt let that
happen now.
Were not going to lay down
for it just because their great
player is out, reserve Andre
Iguodala said.

6C

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

QUOTE OF THE DAY


WHATEVER
ATTENTION
COMES WITH IT IS
FINE, BUT WERE
HERE TO WIN
GAMES.
As ambidextrous pitcher Pat
Venditte, after his big-league debut.

GREGORY FISHER, USA TODAY SPORTS

SPORTSLINE

AT LAST, HORSE RACING


CROWNS A SUPERSTAR

GILBERT BY DAVID RICHARD, USA TODAY SPORTS

Christine Brennan
FIRST WORD
LIKE EVERYBODY ELSE
WHOS FROM CLEVELAND OR ROOTING FOR
CLEVELAND, I STILL BELIEVE IN
THESE GUYS. I DONT THINK
ITS GOING TO MAKE THIS
SERIES NOT A COMPETITIVE
SERIES.
Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert, on
the impact of losing point guard
Kyrie Irving (broken kneecap) for
the rest of the NBA Finals vs. the
Warriors.

DJOKOVIC BY SUSAN MULLANE, USA TODAY SPORTS

MAGIC NUMBER

17-3

Novak Djokovics career record


against Stan Wawrinka, the
world No. 1s opponent today in
the mens French Open final.
TODAYS NAMES TO KNOW
ANDY LEE, NADINE ANGERER,
MATTHEW DELLAVEDOVA,
BRITTNEY GRINER

SUAREZ BY OLIVIER MORIN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

TWEET OF THE DAY


@MenInBlazers
Suarez scores. What is the
antonym for Couldnt have
happened to a nicer guy?
Roger Bennett and Michael Davies of NBC Sports, on Barcelonas Luis Suarez scoring the decisive goal in Saturdays Champions League final vs. Juventus.
ALMOST LAST WORD
I DIDNT KNOW MUCH
ABOUT SOCCER BEFORE WE
MET. NOW IM PRETTY WELL
INTO IT, AND IM BEHIND HER
IN EVERYTHING SHE DOES.
NBA player Jrue Holiday of the
Pelicans, on his wife, U.S. womens
soccer player Lauren Holiday.
LAST WORD
I PRETTY MUCH GAVE THE
MATCH AWAY. I JUST HAD TO,
LIKE, TRY TO PULL IT TOGETHER.
Serena Williams, on losing the
second set during her 6-3, 6-7
(2-7), 6-2 victory against Lucie
Safarova for her third French
Open title and 20th career major.
Edited by Lou Cortina

USA SNAPSHOTS

Golfers seek
U.S. Open shot

9,882
Entries accepted
by the U.S. Golf
Association for
the U.S. Open
Championship at
Chambers Bay in
University Place,
Wash.

Note Its 245 fewer entries than the


record set for last years U.S. Open
Source USGA
ROXANNA SCOTT AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

cbrennan@usatoday.com
USA TODAY Sports

NEW YORK Trainer Bob Baffert


had waited 37 years, just like everyone else, for the moment that
was unfolding before his and our
eyes down the stretch of the Belmont Stakes on Saturday.
Turning for home, I was preparing for somebody coming because Ive been through this so
many times, he said later. I was
just hoping for once, and I could
tell at the eighth pole that it was
going to happen.
American Pharoah, the horse
he trains, winner of the Kentucky
Derby by one length and the
Preakness by seven, was comfortably ahead of the eld as he approached not only the nish line
but also his sports 12th Triple
Crown, and the rst since Afrmed in 1978.
All I did was just take in the
crowd, said Baffert, who had won
the rst two legs of the Triple
Crown with three other horses
before nally sealing the deal.
The crowd was just thundering
and I was just enjoying the crowd
and the noise and everything
happening. Thirty-seven years
weve waited for this, but, you
know what, this little horse, he
deserves it.
If youre going to have to wait
37 years for a piece of sports history, this is exactly the way it
should happen: with a majestic
and unforgettable performance
that even a nervous trainer could
allow himself to sit back and
enjoy.
American Pharoah won the
Triple Crown in stunning style,
leading wire-to-wire over the
long, 112-mile Belmont track,
kicking into high gear in the far
turn, just as he did at the Preakness, to win by 512 lengths over
Frosted. It was the third-largest
winning Belmont margin for a
Triple Crown winner, behind
Secretariats 31 lengths in 1973
and Count Fleets 25 in 1943.

WINSLOW TOWNSON, TODAY SPORTS

Victor Espinoza guides American Pharoah to victory in the Belmont to clinch the Triple Crown.
While I was here in town,
Baffert said of being in New York,
I was listening to every news station and people were saying, Oh,
it never happens and everybody
gets up for it. But theres something about this horse that he just
brought it every time. Hes just a
joy to be around.
When I saddled him in the
paddock, I could tell, and I told
Victor (Espinoza, the jockey) in
the paddock that he was ready. I
told him to go ahead and ride him
with condence, and he did. He
rode him with extreme condence. I said to put him on the
lead and go for it and if he doesnt
make it dont worry about it, but
he just kept on rocking and rolling. What a feeling.
Could there be a better way to
make history?
He was ready today, said Espinoza, who had two near-misses
himself before striking gold this
year with American Pharoah. As
soon as I sat in the saddle, there
was so much power and so much
energy this horse had. Warming

up, he was just class, all class.


Then the gates opened, and
they were off on the most important ride of their lives.
Im telling you, in the rst
turn, it was the best feeling Ive
ever had, Espinoza said. Turning for home, I was like, This has
not happened yet. I wanted to
ride to the wire. I just dropped

Triple Crown
winners
Year Horse
1919 Sir Barton
1930 Gallant Fox
1935 Omaha
1937 War Admiral
1941 Whirlaway
1943 Count Fleet
1946 Assault
1948 Citation
1973 Secretariat
1977 Seattle Slew
1978 Affirmed
2015 American Pharoah

my hands and he just took off. Its


just an amazing feeling that you
have when youre 20 yards from
the wire. And then at the wire, I
was like, I cannot believe I did
it.
Baffert talked afterward about
watching Secretariat win the Belmont at a VFW lodge with his father when he was just 20. And
now here he was at 62, training a
horse that followed in Secretariats massive footsteps.
This horse, hes a dream come
true, Baffert said. I think just
watching him run today, everybody came to see something
great. I really think American
Pharoah, the name American
Pharoah,
will
always
be
remembered.
It was about him because hes
the one that did it. I mean, we
were just basically passengers.
But what a ride.

Ballparks need expanded netting


Bob Nightengale
bnighten@usatoday.com
USA TODAY Sports

I couldnt believe how close Seattle Mariners box seats were to


the playing eld at Safeco Field.
Section 25, Row A, Seat 3.
They were right behind the
Mariners on-deck circle, so close
that you could feel the breeze of a
players practice swing.
So, the couple asked, are you
afraid of the ball?
I laughed, sat back and suddenly realized what they meant.
There was no protection. No netting. Just a sign in front that read:
Please Stay Alert to Bats and
Balls Leaving the Field.
The only obstruction between
the batter and my face was the
hitter in the on-deck circle.
My mind started racing. If a
foul ball whizzed back, and I was
lucky, I could duck in time, only
for it to hit someone else in my
section. If I felt like being a hero,
I could try to catch it and probably break a few bones in my hand.
No foul balls came near me at
the Mariners-Boston Red Sox
game three weeks ago. Though
they might have been the best
seats I had ever had, it was the
most uncomfortable Id ever felt.
Those thoughts came rushing
back when news broke that a fan,

JIM ROGASH, GETTY IMAGES

Fan Tonya Carpenter is rushed off the eld after getting hit by
a bat during the Red Sox-As game at Fenway Park on Friday.
identied Saturday as Tonya Carpenter, sitting in the second row
at Fenway Park with her young
son was hit in the face by a broken maple bat Friday.
She was put on a gurney and
rushed by ambulance to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center,
where her condition was called
life threatening. She was upgraded to serious Saturday.
Its time we never see another
fan injured like this from a bat or
ball ying into the stands.
Major League Baseball implemented mandatory metal detectors at every park for the rst
time this season. Now is the time
to make it mandatory that safety

netting extends past every dugout


at every major league ballpark.
They do it at the parks in Japan. Its past time they do it here.
It happens every game, somebody gets hit, Atlanta Braves inelder Chris Johnson said last
year after an 8-year-old boy was
hit in the head by a foul ball at
Turner Field. Whether its a bad
one or not, somebody gets hit in
the stands every single game.
There are 1,750 spectators who
are injured every year by batted
balls at major league games, according to an analysis by Bloomberg News. There are 53,000 foul
balls that enter the seats every
year, according to Edwin Comber,

creator of foulballz.com.
The Major League Baseball
Players Association, realizing that
no one feels worse than the player whose foul ball or bat hits a
fan, has brought up extending the
netting. Neither party can afford
to wait until the collective bargaining agreement expires in
2016 to agree on this.
We have the utmost concern
for the victim of this terribly unfortunate incident, MLB said in
a statement to USA TODAY
Sports. Fan safety is our foremost goal for all those who
choose to support our game.
At the owners meetings in August in Chicago, its imperative
that new Commissioner Rob
Manfred tells them that their
ballparks have to change before
the 2016 season.
Sure, there will be resistance.
Most fans hate the idea of paying
$400 for a box seat with a view
through a net. Too bad.
The extra netting wont prevent every bruise and busted lip
from foul balls or stop people
from dropping their kids to catch
a foul ball, but it would greatly diminish the serious injuries.
Maybe even save a life or two.
Shouldnt that be worth looking through a net at your next
ballgame?
FOLLOW MLB COLUMNIST
BOB NIGHTENGALE

@BNightengale for breaking


news, analysis and commentary.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

7C

TENNIS

SERENA EXUDES GREATNESS


I felt really
bad. I really
didnt feel like I
was going to be
able to walk,
let alone
compete.

Nick McCarvel
Special for USA TODAY Sports
PARIS When you win 20 Grand
Slam touranments, as Serena
Williams has, it can become hard
to recount all the details among
them.
There was the rst, as a 17year-old in New York in the late
1990s. There was the eighth, won
as the world No. 81 Down Under,
big hoop earrings bouncing with
every bounding shot. And then
the 14th, a rst since a pulmonary
embolism had her rushed to the
hospital.
But the 20th, won Saturday at
the French Open, might be the
most special.
I probably topped for my
most difficult time to win, Williams told reporters.
The victory marches Williams
within two majors of Steffi Grafs
Open-era record of 22. It also
puts her halfway to a calendar
year Grand Slam, not done since
Graf completed the win-win-winwin scenario in 1988.
Can Williams, 33 and the clearcut best womens tennis player on
the planet, achieve it?
For her to have done the rst
two, I think shes done the hardest bit, former player Annabel
Croft, a commentator for Eurosport, said in an interview with
USA TODAY Sports. The French
Open has traditionally been her
hardest Slam. I think shes going
to be pretty unstoppable at Wimbledon. The condence is there.
With the grass and that serve, I
think she would be very tough to
beat.
This Grand Slam, even with 19
to compare it to before, has been
like no other.
Williams won in three sets on
ve occasions, the most of any of
those majors. She also, midway
through the tournament, contracted the u, spending the day
and night before the nal in bed,

Serena Williams, on battling u


symptoms before the title match

SUSAN MULLANE, USA TODAY SPORTS

Serena Williams enjoys her 20th career Grand Slam win two shy of the Open era record.
worrying about having to withdraw from the nal.
I was miserable. I was literally
in my bed shaking, Williams told
reporters. I felt really bad. I really didnt feel like I was going to be
able to walk, let alone compete.
What Williams has done this
year is compete, winning Grand
Slam matches over the likes of

Victoria Azarenka, Maria Sharapova, Sloane Stephens and Madison Keys.


Her
opponent
Saturday, Lucie Safarova, dared to
challenge the woman who has
loomed large over this sport for
much of a decade.
In the past, Serena has often
only been asked to bring her talent, but this tournament shes

GOLF

Paired with Tiger, Blair


fullls boyhood dream
Steve DiMeglio
@Steve_DiMeglio
USA TODAY Sports
DUBLIN, OHIO At the 2000 PGA
Championship at Valhalla Golf
Club in the backwoods of Kentucky, Zac Blair was a 9-year-old
in a gigantic candy store. As his
father played in the tournament,
Blair bounced around the course
piling up autographs while taking
in the action.
In the clubhouse, Blair got a
signature from his favorite player
Tiger Woods. On the golf
course, he watched Woods at the
height of his powers as he won his
third
consecutive
major
championship.
He was on cloud nine when he
left Valhalla.
Fast-forward 15 years to the
prairies of Ohio, where at Muireld Village Golf Club on Saturday, Blair saw his idol at the
lowest depth of his powers. Meeting and playing with Woods for
the rst time, Blair shot 70 in the
third round of the Memorial
Tournament while the former
No. 1 signed for an 85, his worst
score in nearly 1,150 rounds as a
pro.
Blair, however, again was on
cloud nine despite his heros
nightmarish round.
Ive always wanted to play
with him, said Blair, 24, a 5-5
rookie on the Tour who came up
big on Jack Nicklaus turf. As a
little kid that was kind of my
dream growing up. But it was unfortunate to see him not play
great.
It was obviously still great to
play with him. Hes one of the
best players to ever play. It was
nice to meet him. I enjoyed playing well. It would have been nice
to see him play a little bit better,
but hes working through some
things. Hell get back playing
good.
As he spoke after the round,
Blair contained his excitement.
But when he found out Friday
that he was paired with Woods
It was like the coolest thing
ever, he said he bubbled with
excitement and phoned home.
His childhood dream was going to

BRIAN SPURLOCK, USA TODAY SPORTS

As a little kid that (playing with Tiger Woods) was kind of my


dream growing up, PGA Tour rookie Zac Blair said.
come true. It was like shooting
hoops with Michael Jordan or
snapping photos with Annie Leibovitz. Or skating with Wayne
Gretzky or painting with Banksy.
He was teeing it up with
Woods, he told his dad, and knew
he wasnt going to wake up Saturday and realize it was a dream.
Its kind of what you dreamed
of your whole life, playing in front
of a lot of people. I wish he would
have played better, but it was still
fun, Blair said. He was great the
whole round. He obviously had a
tough day. But he was super nice,
super friendly, was always willing
to talk. And I thought we got
along great. It was fun.
He just told me a heck of a
round and was really courteous
and everything like that. I just
told him I hoped to play with him
soon.
Walking every step of the way
in the gallery was James Blair,
who, after taking the call from his
son, got himself a red-eye ight
out of Las Vegas. The director of
golf operations at Sun River
St. George in Utah made 21 starts
on the PGA Tour, including 13 in
1984. He still tries to qualify for
events on the Champions Tour.
Eighteen years ago at Q School,
James Blair bumped into Woods,

who was watching a friend play.


He got Woods to autograph a Titleist hat. Best wishes, Tiger
Woods. Zac Blair still has the hat.
Zac loves Tiger. Tiger is his favorite athlete, said James Blair,
who drove 100 miles to Las Vegas,
boarded the red-eye, landed in
Cincinnati at 5:30 a.m., drove two
hours and made it to the rst tee
with 25 minutes to spare.
James Blair was walking on
Nicklaus turf, watching one of
his two children play with Tiger
Woods.
It was a dream come true for
him. And its nice as parents to
see your kids have their dreams
come true, he said.
Zac Blair, as did his father,
played at Brigham Young. He
then headed to the PGA Tour
Latin America circuit and gained
entry to the PGA Tour through
the Web.com Tour. His best nish
is a tie for sixth this year in the
Sony Open in Hawaii.
Alongside Woods, he made
four birdies and had one hiccup
he shanked a chip shot on the
16th and made double bogey. As
he was beaming 30 minutes after
the round, he looked out toward
the 18th hole and just smiled.
I hope to get to do that again,
he said. That was great.

been asked to go where she hasnt


been before, digging deep, said
Leif Shiras, a Tennis Channel
commentator. Those expectations of winning and the nerves of
not being as prepared as you
want, thats not easy.
Safarova, her bright blue eyes
pained from the loss, said she
thought a calendar Slam was

within Williams reach. Its one of


the few accomplishments in this
sport the American doesnt have
to her name
Shes a great player. She has
obviously the experience, the
Czech player said. She won those
all Grand Slams already, (so) I
think she can do it. If shes on her
best and (in) great shape, shes
playing the best tennis.
Williams ignores the numbers.
She is chasing wins, not greatness, she said. When asked about
comparing herself to other historically standout athletes, she
hesitated.
I think everyone looks at Michael Jordan and Muhammad Ali
as the greatest ever, Williams
said. I wouldnt even feel comfortable even being compared to
Muhammad Ali.
And can she win the calendar
Slam in 2015?
I dont think about it, Williams said, coughing a bit as she
answered. I just come to the
tournament and think that I want
to win. I want to do well. I want to
be the champion.
A champion 20 times over,
however, and perhaps at all four
Slams this year?
Thats well, historic.
This is really special watching
what this player is doing, said
Croft, the commentator. If she
does end up being the best ever, it
really is a privilege to watch in
this period of time.

Woods stumbles to 85,


worst round of pro career
Steve DiMeglio
@Steve_DiMeglio
USA TODAY Sports
DUBLIN, OHIO Tiger Woods was
the last player hitting balls on the
range Friday night, working up a
blister on the index nger of his
left hand as he sent seven bags of
golf balls into the horizon.
The long session, however, was
a cakewalk compared with what
happened Saturday in the third
round of the Memorial Tournament at Muireld Village Golf
Club.
Woods, a ve-time Memorial
winner, shot the worst score of
his professional career, carding a
13-over-par 85, and is in last
place.
Woods certainly didnt expect
an 85 after he nished his practice session as he continues to
work on his new swing with consultant Chris Como. But under
gray skies in the third round,
Woods battled every aspect of his
game.
His driving was poor, his iron
play was poor and his short game
especially his putting was
poor.
He hit seven of 14 fairways in
regulation, nine of 18 greens and
needed 32 putts.
Woods declined to speak to re-

porters after the round.


It was the third round in the
80s for Woods in nearly 1,150
rounds as a pro.
His previous worst round, an
82, was shot this year in the second round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open. His other
round in the 80s came when he
shot 81 in the third round of the
2002 British Open.
Woods made one birdie and
had six bogeys, two double-bogeys and a quadruple-bogey on
his last hole.
After making pars on his rst
three holes, his game went astray
after he missed a 3-foot putt for
par on the par-3 fourth hole. After that, he hit shots into four water hazards on the ninth, 11th,
17th and 18th holes.
He nished his round by
chunking two chip shots on the
18th hole, nally nishing his
round by making a 5-foot putt.
Because an odd number of
players made the cut 71
Woods will be the rst player off
for the nal round and will play
alone.
Woods is playing in his fth
tournament of the year. He has
fallen to No. 172 in the world golf
rankings. Woods will next play in
the U.S. Open at Chambers Bay
outside of Tacoma, Wash., starting June 18.

BRIAN SPURLOCK, USA TODAY SPORTS

Tiger Woods had plenty of reason to grimace Saturday.

8C

Weather & Sports

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

THE MID-WILLAMETTE VALLEY


Very warm today with
plenty of sunshine.
Winds north 6-12
mph. Clear to partly
cloudy tonight. Winds
north-northwest 4-8
mph.

TODAY

High

Monday

LOCAL WEATHER

Tuesday

Wednesday Thursday

59 79 87

58

Local Forecast
Portland
89/60

Mostly sunny and Sunny and revery warm


maining warm

Low

REGIONAL WEATHER

Friday

6 a.m Noon 6 p.m

90

StatesmanJournal.com

91/56

88/51

Times of clouds Mostly sunny and Warm with areas


and sun
very warm
of low clouds

81/51

82/53

81/53

Beaverton
88/57
Oregon City
89/57
McMinnville
89/55
Woodburn
SALEM
89/57
90/58
Corvallis
91/57

Shown is todays weather. Temperatures are todays highs and tonights lows.

Pendleton
94/62

The Dalles
97/63

Newberg
88/56

La Grande
88/54

SALEM
Prineville
90/54

Lebanon
91/55

Newport
62/51

Springeld
89/54
Coos Bay
67/55

Ontario
93/60

Bend
88/54

Burns
88/50

Medford
98/64

Klamath Falls
89/53

LOCAL ALMANAC

RIVER LEVELS

Temperatures
High/low ......................................... 91/56
Normal high/low ............................. 72/48
Record high/low ...... 96 (2003)/32 (1899)

Precipitation
24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ........... 0.00
Record .................................... 1.63 (1985)
Month to date (normal) ........... 0.67 (0.42)
Season to date (normal) ..... 32.81 (36.35)

Todays Pollen Index


Trees
Grass
Weeds
Molds
Source: National Allergy Bureau

Todays UV Index and RealFeel Temp

86

89

90

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index


number, the greater the need for eye and skin
protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High;
8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. The patented
AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is
an exclusive index of effective temperature based
on eight weather factors.

Air Quality Index

Yesterdays reading

SKY WATCH

As of 7 a.m. Saturday

Salem through 6 p.m. yesterday

8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon

Lakeview
86/49

Todays Forecast

0-50 Good; 51-100 Moderate; 101-150 Unhealthy


for sensitive groups; 151-200 Unhealthy; 201-300
Very Unhealthy; 301-500 Hazardous
OR Department of Environmental Protection

Willamette River
Flow(cfs) Stage(ft.) Change(ft.)
Eugene
1940
9.60
+3.03
Harrisburg
4300
1.90
-0.04
Corvallis
4800 10.20
-0.10
Albany
5500
3.00
-0.08
Salem
8000
5.50
-0.10
North Santlam River
Mehama
1320
3.24
-0.01
Santlam River
Jefferson
2100
2.41
-0.09
Columbia River
Vancouver
N.A.
4.71
+0.09
Nestucca River
Near Beaver
100
4.11
-0.05
Siletz River
Siletz
260
2.82
-0.03
Alsea River
Near Tidewater
230
1.96
-0.05

TIDES

Yaquina Bay and River at Newport


High
Ht.
Low
3:45 a.m.
7.4
10:40 a.m.
5:32 p.m.
7.0
11:06 p.m.
Depoe Bay
High
Ht.
Low
3:28 a.m.
7.7
10:25 a.m.
5:15 p.m.
7.3
10:51 p.m.
Netarts Bay at Netarts
High
Ht.
Low
4:18 a.m.
6.3
11:36 a.m.
6:05 p.m.
5.9
--Tillamook Bay at Bay City
High
Ht.
Low
4:34 a.m.
6.5
11:58 a.m.
6:21 p.m.
6.1
--Tillamook Bay at Tillamook
High
Ht.
Low
4:53 a.m.
6.0
12:34 a.m.
6:40 p.m.
5.6
1:13 p.m.
Willamette River at Portland
High
Ht.
Low
9:57 a.m.
0.0
6:53 a.m.
11:34 p.m.
0.0
7:24 p.m.

Ht.
-0.9
2.6
Ht.
-0.9
2.6
Ht.
-0.7
-Ht.
-0.7
-Ht.
1.5
-0.5
Ht.
0.0
0.0

Sun and Moon

Monday

First
Jun 24

Full
Jul 1

Sunrise today ........................ 5:26 a.m.


Sunset tonight ..................... 8:55 p.m.
Moonrise today ................... 12:09 a.m.
Moonset today .................... 10:55 a.m.

Solunar Tables
Major periods last up to two hours after the
time listed. Minor periods are much shorter.
A.M.
MINOR MAJOR

P.M.
MINOR MAJOR

5:10a 11:50p 5:37p


6:05a
---- 6:31p
6:56a 1:09p 7:22p
7:45a 1:58p 8:11p
8:32a 2:45p 8:59p
9:19a 3:33p 9:46p

Monday

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

92/59/s
68/54/c
88/54/s
90/63/t
88/50/pc
89/55/s
62/53/pc
66/52/c
89/64/s
89/53/pc
86/49/pc
88/54/s
85/56/s
62/51/c

95/61/s
67/52/pc
92/54/s
95/66/s
92/55/s
90/54/s
61/55/pc
67/51/pc
91/63/s
93/56/s
90/53/s
92/55/s
85/54/s
61/50/pc

North Bend
Olympia
Ontario
Pendleton
Portland
Redding
Redmond
Seattle
Spokane
Tacoma
Tri-Cities
Vancouver
Walla Walla
Yakima

67/55/c
85/51/s
93/60/pc
94/62/s
89/60/s
105/71/pc
91/52/s
83/58/s
90/63/s
83/54/s
98/60/s
73/55/s
95/68/s
100/63/s

67/54/pc
85/49/s
97/63/s
98/61/s
88/57/s
105/73/s
95/54/s
82/56/s
91/61/s
83/52/s
102/60/s
73/54/s
99/67/s
100/62/s

Today

Monday

Today

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Athens
Baghdad
Beijing
Berlin
Buenos Aires
Cairo
Dublin
Hong Kong
Jerusalem

75/64/pc
106/81/s
85/60/pc
74/51/pc
68/50/s
94/75/s
59/42/pc
90/84/sh
87/63/pc

76/64/t
108/84/s
89/66/s
70/46/s
64/54/s
101/73/s
56/41/pc
91/84/sh
96/67/s

London
Madrid
Manila
Mexico City
Montreal
Moscow
Paris
Rio de Janeiro
Rome

67/49/s
92/63/pc
93/81/t
78/53/pc
74/58/pc
77/56/pc
72/50/s
83/69/s
84/64/t

65/47/pc
92/66/s
93/80/t
79/52/pc
74/62/r
69/51/s
70/51/s
83/68/s
82/63/pc

Today

Monday

NATIONAL WEATHER

New
Jun 16

Today 11:23a
Mon. 12:18p
Tue. 12:43a
Wed. 1:32a
Thu. 2:19a
Fri.
3:06a

Today

Hi/Lo/W

Ashland
Astoria
Bend
Boise
Burns
Eugene
Eureka
Florence
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls
Lakeview
La Grande
Longview
Newport

Today

Last
Jun 9

Plenty of sunshine today. Clear tonight.


Mostly sunny tomorrow. Tuesday:
mostly sunny. Wednesday: intervals of
clouds and sunshine.

City

WORLD CITIES

Ashland
92/59

78

Baker
87/49

Roseburg
94/62

Brookings
71/56

67

John Day
87/54

Intervals of clouds and sun today.


Increasingly windy; not as warm in the
south. Partly cloudy in the north tonight;
clear elsewhere. Areas of low clouds,
then sun tomorrow.

REGIONAL CITIES
Today

Tillamook
68/52

Coastal Forecast

Mountain Forecast

Albany
90/55
Eugene
89/55

Astoria
68/54

Very warm today with plenty of sun.


Clear and mild tonight. Mostly sunny
and very warm tomorrow and Tuesday.
Wednesday: partly sunny; pleasant
across the north.

Monday

Today

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Singapore
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto

85/79/t
69/53/s
74/67/pc
70/63/pc

88/79/t
71/54/s
76/70/c
77/58/c

Today

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Baltimore
Boston
Chicago
Charlotte
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu

87/63/pc
61/47/pc
90/71/t
78/61/s
65/49/s
80/63/t
86/67/t
86/68/pc
84/68/pc
93/69/s
71/51/t
84/64/pc
81/67/t
86/72/pc

85/62/pc
58/47/pc
86/71/t
85/69/t
71/62/t
80/61/c
88/69/pc
77/62/t
78/61/t
93/70/s
77/55/t
87/65/pc
80/61/pc
85/73/pc

Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Miami
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
Missoula
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Omaha

93/70/s
86/69/c
86/66/pc
93/72/s
80/63/pc
87/76/t
77/62/t
79/62/t
87/54/s
91/70/s
91/75/t
73/59/s
91/67/s
83/63/pc

91/72/pc
78/62/t
84/64/t
99/74/s
85/65/pc
87/75/pc
79/58/t
82/62/pc
89/54/pc
86/67/t
90/75/t
78/67/t
87/67/t
87/65/s

Orlando
Palm Springs
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Reno
Sacramento
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Diego
San Francisco
Tampa
Tucson
Washington, DC

89/71/t
101/74/s
78/59/s
99/76/s
85/68/pc
88/61/pc
94/63/s
91/73/pc
77/58/pc
73/63/pc
72/56/pc
90/74/t
99/73/s
80/66/s

91/71/t
106/77/s
84/70/t
104/79/pc
78/62/t
92/63/s
99/67/s
86/70/t
83/62/s
76/65/pc
77/58/s
90/75/t
96/74/pc
87/73/pc

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow urries, sn-snow, i-ice.

-10s

In the Sky

After sunset, the bright star low in the NW


is Capella of Auriga.

Showers

-0s

T-storms

0s
10s

Rain

Source: Jim Todd OMSI

Flurries

ROAD CONDITIONS

20s
30s
40s

Go to Statesman
Journal.com/Roadcams
to nd updated information
on road conditions

Snow

Ice

WEATHER HISTORY

A violent nighttime tornado destroyed


much of Barneveld, Wis., on June 7, 1984.
The twister also killed nine people and
injured 200 others.

Cold
Front
Warm
Front

50s
60s
70s
80s
90s
100s

Forecasts and graphics provided by


AccuWeather, Inc. 2015

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

Stationary
Front

110s

AUTO ROUNDUP

Dixon dominates crash-free IndyCar Series race


Associated Press

FORT WORTH, Texas Scott


Dixon had a dominating run at
Texas, winning by 7.8 seconds
over teammate Tony Kanaan on
Saturday night in the fastest IndyCar Series race ever at the
track.
Dixon led 97 of the 248 laps in
a race that had only two cautions. His second win of the season came with an average speed
of 191.940 mph
After anxiety about how the
cars would handle on the highspeed, high-banked Texas track
with the new aero kits, especially after three Chevrolets went
airborne during practice for the
Indianapolis 500, there were no
accidents.
Driving the No. 9 Chevrolet
for Chip Ganassi Racing, Dixon
got his 37th career win. The
New Zealander also won in 2008
at Texas, which has now hosted
27 IndyCar races.
Team Penske drivers Helio
Castroneves and Juan Pablo

25

Montoya finished third and


fourth, respectively. Fifthplace Marco Andretti was the
highest-finishing Honda.
After the start of the race
was waved off because the field
was not properly aligned, the
first lap was counted as a caution before taking the green
flag the next time at the line.
The only other caution came
on lap 84 for debris on the frontstretch. After the airborne cars
at Indianapolis, IndyCar this
week mandated the use of closure panels on the rear wheel
guards. Those are designed to
eliminate lift when an Indy car
is traveling backward at a high
rate of speed during an accident, and will also be required at
California and Pocono.
Formula One: Lewis Hamilton has earned the pole for the
Canadian Grand Prix.
Its the fourth time that the
reigning Formula One champion will start at the pole on the
Circuit Gilles Villeneuve.
Hamilton posted the fastest
qualifying lap of 1 minute,

14.393 seconds over the 2.71mile course on Montreals Ile


Notre-Dame. Mercedes teammate Nico Rosberg was second
in qualifying, about one-third of
a second behind.
Ferraris Kimi Raikkonen
was third. Valtteri Bottas of Williams was fourth, with Romain
Grosjean of Lotus fifth.
Its the 44th pole of Hamiltons career. He leads the championship standings by 10 points
over Rosberg.
NHRA: Antron Brown raced
to his third consecutive No. 1
qualifying position in Top Fuel
in the Toyota NHRA Summernationals at Old Bridge Township Raceway Park.
Brown, from nearby Chesterfield, pushed his dragster to
the No. 1 spot with a 3.725-second run at 317.57 mph. The 2012
series champion has two victories this season.
Were very excited, especially being back here at the
Toyota NHRA Summernationals here in Englishtown,
Brown said.

LARRY PAPKE/AP

Scott Dixon (9), of New Zealand, leads Tony Kanaan (10), of Brazil, out of
Turn 4 late in the Firestone 600 at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth,
Texas, on Saturday.

1D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Mid-Valley
y
Century of
Sacrifice
memorial
grows

2015 MOTHER EARTH NEWS FAIR

BRENT DRINKUT/STATESMAN JOURNAL

A faverolles cock at the Oregon Invitational Spring Show during the Mother Earth News Fair at the County Expo Center on Saturday in Albany.

A FA I R F O R F R I E N D S O F

MOTHER EARTH
Hundreds take
in over 200
workshops

Jeff Frank,
left, of
Franklin
Electric,
speaks with
Steven
Vincent, of
Oakland,
about a solar
pumping
station
during the
Mother Earth
News Fair at
the County
Expo Center
on Saturday
in Albany.

By Alisha Roemeling
Statesman Journal

A hands-on, interactive version of


Mother Earth News magazine came
to Albany on Saturday for the oneday subscription price of $15 to $25.
Hundreds took advantage of the
offer, lining up long before the 9 a.m.
opening at the Linn County Expo
Center for the Mother Earth News
Fair.
They were there to take in some
or all of the 200 workshops and demonstrations promoting sustainable,
environmentally friendly lifestyles
that have been the focus of the magazine for more than 40 years.
I saw somewhere that this was
going on, and there was no way I was
going to miss it, said Cathi Block, a
62-year-old Newport resident. This
is so awesome.
Mother Earth News touts itself as
the largest, longest-running magazine of its kind.
The Albany fair continues Sunday.
Block began reading Mother
Earth News when she was a young
hippie. She said Saturday that she
had kept copies dating back decades.
I have a list of demonstrations I
want to attend, she said. But I just
keep getting distracted by all these
neat things.
Eleven indoor and outdoor stages
offered hourlong demonstrations
from organic gardening and green
transportation to small-scale livestock, natural health and homesteading. At least 100 booths offered information about greenhouses, solar
panels, worm composting, bee farming, yurts, fencing and more.
This years fair is taking place in
only five locations across the United
States, from April to October. Asheville, North Carolina; West Bend,
Wisconsin; Seven Springs, Pennsylvania; and Topeka, Kansas, are the
others.
Saturdays weather in Albany
provided the perfect backdrop for

Matt Borg
draws a
crowd when
speaking
about
"Gophers,
Moles and
Voles" at the
Modern
Homesteading
Stage during
the Mother
Earth News
Fair at the
County Expo
Center on
Saturday in
Albany.

Babette Rose,
of Smith
River,
California,
looks inside
the Solexx
greenhouse
during the
Mother Earth
News Fair at
the County
Expo Center.

We are proud of our Century of


Sacrifice memorial.
To commemorate Memorial
Day, we compiled a list of military
personnel
from Marion
and Polk counties who died
serving our
country the
past 100 years.
It was a proCapi Lynn
ject that grew
from a vision
F O RWA R D T H I S
of colleague
Dann Miller,
consumer
INSIDE
experience
The grand opening
director for
of the B-17 Alliance
the Statesman
Restoration & MuJournal.
seum is Saturday.
Many of our
Page 6D
readers called
or wrote
emails thanking us for honoring
and remembering the sacrifice of
469 service members in such a
bold way, with one star on the front
page of the paper for every name
and a complete list on a two-page
spread inside.
Many thanks to you and the
Statesman Journal for your excellent ongoing coverage of veterans, one reader wrote. I greatly
appreciate Sundays detailed Century of Sacrifice memorial, which
must have taken many careful
staff hours to compile.
It did, but it was worth it. Still, I
agonized over the list, because I
knew there would be omissions.
Searching military records is a
frustrating endeavor, especially
when the goal is to identify the
home of record for an airman,
Marine, sailor or soldier. Some
records note their birthplace.
Some note their hometown. Others
note where they enlisted. And still
others are flat-out incorrect because of typos, illegible handwriting or any number of other reasons.
We have added 13 names to our
Century of Sacrifice database,
bringing the total to 482. You can
search it by conflict, first or last
name at StatesmanJournal.com.
For World War I, we added Ora
E. Cavitt, Stephen A. Manning and
Edward A. Zollner.
For World War II, we added
James E. Apple, Raymond L. Deneke, James B. Fennimore, Clifford T. Francis, Earl L. Kirsch,
Lawrence A. Kirsch, Russell K.
Satter and Leonard D. Waters.
And for Vietnam, we added
Floyd J. Craigmyle and William H.
Murphy III.
At least three of those names
were missed because they are listed as being from Linn County, even
though they graduated from a high
school in Marion County. We believe they deserve to be on our list.
But we found that we cant satisfy everyone with this project. One
caller, for example, is unhappy that
we did not include service members from Yamhill County. We had
to draw the line somewhere.
Another left a voice mail scolding me to do better research. He
provided a name of an ancestor he
thought should be included, saying
only that the service member is
buried in The Dalles. I have yet to
be able to find any connection to
Marion or Polk counties, and the
phone number I have for the caller
has gone unanswered.
Thankfully, the grumbles have
been drowned out by the thankyous. We thank you for helping us
make this a more complete list.
Speaking of veterans and lists, I
am happy to report that two more
names have been checked off the

See EARTH, Page 6D


See MEMORIAL, Page 6D

SJ NOW
To report a correction
or clarification, call
the newsroom at
(503) 399-6773.

MOBILE SITE
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Statesman Journal's website
designed for mobile devices.
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mobile device to access the
mobile website.

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25

CORRECTIONS

KIDS HAVE A
BLAST
FISHING
Free Fishing Weekend events Saturday
included fishing
clinics, derbies and
other activities for
children. Page 4A

Connecting the Dots

2D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Commencement address:
Graduates, you will fail
No one has asked me to give
a commencement speech.
Not that Im complaining.
Few graduation addresses are
memorable.
One of the best Ive heard
was by Philip Zimbardo, an
emeritus professor at Stanford
University, who encouraged
graduates at the University of
Puget Sound to become superheroes who take action instead
of being passive bystanders.
(Zimbardo may be best known
for 1971s infamous Stanford
prison experiment.)
Zimbardos talk was so compelling that my daughter and
her colleagues, who were receiving their masters degrees
in educational counseling,
were taking notes.
By the way, if you dont
know why society needs superheroes, read up on the bystander effect and Kitty Genoveses very public murder in
1964 in New York City.
A few years ago, NBC anchor Brian Williams gave an
entertaining address for graduates at George Washington
University, when our son received his masters in international affairs. The majestic
setting helped: Commencement was on the National Mall
in Washington, D.C.
Williams recounted the
colleges hed dropped out of,
including GW. Initially, his tale
reinforced my belief that a
college degree is not necessary
to become a success. More
recently, it has become apparent that Williams would have
benefited from college coursework in journalistic ethics.

If I gave a talk ...


Lately Ive been thinking
about the concept that when
God or fate, if you prefer
closes one window, He opens
another. And what seems like
failure at the time can lead to
success.
Were I to give a commencement address, here is what I
might say:
Dear Graduates,
I am here to tell you that

News columnist DICK HUGHES


knows which questions to ask
and how to make sense of the
answers. Contact him at dhughes@
StatesmanJournal.com or 503-399-6727.

Students
celebrate at
Stayton High
Schools
graduation
ceremony on
Friday in the
Salem
Armory.
GARY KERTZ /
SPECIAL TO THE
STATESMAN
JOURNAL

The runner
The first is about J Vaun
McArthur. He is an ecology
professor at the University of
Georgia. But this story is from
his days as my high school
classmate in Twin Falls, Idaho.
J Vaun was a speedy guy
on the cross-country team.
Until he was in a severe
snowmobile crash.
He defied the odds and
doctors predictions. He lived.
He regained the ability to
walk. He learned to run again.
And he led our school
cross-country team to the state
championship.
Not because he was fast.
Heck, no. He no longer was a
top runner.
He led by example. By his
work ethic.
The teams beloved coach
led hard workouts. It was not
uncommon for the runners to
begin a workout in the Snake
River Canyon, running up the
steep grades and back to high
school.
Each day after practice, J
Vauns teammates would see
the blood oozing from his stillhealing legs. But he never
complained. So how could anyone else?

The trombonist
Story No. 2 is about a trombonist from Reynolds High
School, whose jazz band I saw
at a regional competition.
The trombonist was to be
featured as a soloist.
As she moved to the front
of the band, the oopsies struck.
She knocked the microphone

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HUGHES

you will fail.


Everyone else is saying
youll be a success.
You will be. But your success will be determined by how
well you rise from your failures. From your mistakes.
From your lost opportunities.
From your heartbreaks.
As a failure myself, and as
a someone who has had a terrific career as a result, Id like
to share three brief stories
with you today.

BARK & SOIL


ATLAS BARK & SOIL

dick

askew. She bumped the music


stand, sending her music flying. As she bent to retrieve her
music, the slide came off her
trombone and slid under the
risers.
Her bandmates had kept
playing, moving into the softer,
background harmonies that
indicated her solo should have
started.
She scrambled to get the
music back on her stand, the
microphone back in place and
the slide back on her trombone.
Then she swung the horn to
her lips ... and joined the band
at the exact right space in her
music.
Amid the personal commotion, her mind had never lost
track of the music. The ensuing ovation was thunderous.
The last I heard several
years ago, she was attending a
prestigious music conservatory.
She still inspires me. If I
were an employer, Id hire her
in an instant, simply because
of her ability to recover from
mistakes.

The interview without


zip

The final story is about me.


In my career, I never coveted anything more than a
journalism fellowship at Stanford.
I made the finals of the
selection process and went for
an interview. We sat in comfortable chairs, facing each
other. It was going well, but
partway through I sensed a
change in the interviewers
demeanor.
Walking to the car afterward, I looked down and saw
the zipper on my brand-new
J.C. Penney suitpants had broken during the interview.
I didnt get the fellowship.
I was crushed.
Later, the Statesman Journal editor decided to throw me
a bone: I could volunteer as a
journalism instructor at Oregon State University. I taught
wordcraft a fancy term for
grammar, punctuation and
word usage.
It turned out that I was a
decent instructor. During my
three years at OSU, even my
advanced grammar class became popular.
That eventually led to my
conducting journalism seminars throughout the United
States, from the University of

California, Berkeley, to the


University of Delaware, from
Hollywood to Little Rock.
When Willamette University came calling 16 years ago,
seeking someone to teach journalism part time, that same
editor suggested me.
Ive been teaching at Willamette ever since. I love my
students. They have invited me
to their graduation parties and
to their weddings. One couple
asked me to marry them,
which is how I became a wedding officiant as well as a parttime professor and a full-time
working journalist.
I remain forever grateful
that I lost out on the Stanford
fellowship.
And when I performed my
son and daughter-in-laws wedding two years ago, I made
sure nothing would break on
my brand-new suit.
Dick Hughes, who realized in high
school that the success of my life
is due to all my failures, is
editorial page editor and the
storytelling coach for the
Statesman Journal. Contact him
at
dhughes@StatesmanJournal.com;
P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309;
or (503) 399-6727.

Our advice to high school graduates


In honor of commencement season, we posed these questions last
week to our Rapid Responders:
If you were the commencement
speaker at a local high school, what
would you tell the graduates? Given
the pain and suffering that accompanied the Great Recession, what
career and financial planning advice would you give?

What they said


Regardless of the career path
you choose, get politically aware
and involved. Our selfish generation has left you an environmental
and economic mess. You have the
opportunity to set things right and
build on consensus and science,
rather than ideology and ignorance.
Paul Krissel, Salem
Education is important but more
important are: hard work, determination, adaptability, uncommon
sense and positive moral character.
Be aware of the worlds problem but
focus your attention on the corner
of the world you can influence.
Believe in something greater
than yourself. Love and have fun
but not at the expense of others.
Save 10 percent of everything you
earn.
Richard Pine, Salem

RAPID RESPONSE

No matter what field you choose


and choose one that you will enjoy for decades remember that
success grows out of building good
relationships with others.
Jim Sellers, Salem

Interested in joining our corps of Rapid Responders?


Email Executive Editor Michael Davis at mdavis4@
StatesmanJournal.com with your full legal name,
address, telephone number and email address.
All applications are vetted for authenticity. Each
Thursday afternoon we submit a question to the
members of the Rapid Response team. They have
until noon Friday to submit a response. All of
the responses are published Saturday afternoon
at StatesmanJournal.com. Some responses are
published in the Sunday paper.

Keep, or find, a sense of humor.


David Haber, Salem
Do as much as you can on your
own. What you do for yourself will
enable you to progress in gaining independence and secure a solid future.
Jim Jaqua, Keizer
Go beyond what is expected of
you, make a difference, get out of
your comfort zone, laugh at yourself, dont be afraid to fail.
Put as much as you can into a retirement plan starting with your
first job. Dont live on credit. You
dont have to keep up with your
friends/neighbors.
Emily Duerfeldt , McMinnville
To get their attention Id warn
them up front that I would be giving
them some tough advice: Cut up
those credit cards, start a checking
account, learn how to balance it, and
start a savings account. Its important early on that students understand the concept of spending no
more than they have on hand. If not,

theyll soon be in trouble. Not bluesky stuff. Harsh, but real.


Woody Tiernan, Dallas
I would tell graduates to remain
flexible. Their life will most likely
turn out differently than they expected. Get education and be ready
to grab opportunities, perfect or
not. Doing something, rather then
waiting will give them experience
and more information. Travel outside the country for a wider world
view.
Anita Blanchard, Salem
If you go to college, see it as a
valuable opportunity to prepare for
a career. If you go directly to the
work force, seek jobs with advancement opportunities. If you vote,
study the issues of measures and
candidates. Think like the adults
you are now.
Wally Gutzler, Woodburn

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StatesmanJournal.com

Causes

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

LOCAL FIRST

3D

Working to bring fun to Keizer playground


GET INVOLVED WITH THE
KEIZER BIG TOY

By Kaellen Hessel
Statesman Journal

When three semi-trucks showed up at


Keizer Rapids Park recently full of materials for the new playground, Mark
Caillier turned to one of his volunteers
and said, I think theres some assembly
required for this toy.
From Wednesday to Sunday, hundreds of volunteers will help construct
the Keizer Big Toy, a 15,000-square-foot
play structure that organizers hope will
draw families from all over the region.
The playground features a Smith
Rock climbing wall, volcano, castle, Wallace House log cabin and fire truck mister, as well as staples like slides, bridges
and monkey bars.
The play equipment has 45,000
screws alone, but putting it all together
should be easier than assembling Ikea
furniture.
Every step of construction has been
broken down into smaller steps. The assembly line-like process means that one
individual will do the same simple task,
like cutting materials, for a whole shift.
This process of a community-build is
a whole lot different than a bunch of guys
going out and building something, said
Caillier, who is the project manager.
Caillier said his crew spent 10 hours
color-coding 45,000 screws by spray
painting them according to size so
theyre easier to grab during the build.
Its a once-in-a-generation opportunity for our community to come together
thats not only (good) for Keizer, but for
the whole community, he said.
The project is a collaboration of more
than 20 government entities, nonprofits
and organizations. The idea for the facility goes back to 2003 when community
leaders started dreaming of a new park
that would connect Keizer residents
with the Willamette River, said Marion
County Commissioner Janet Carlson.
A task force sent out more than 10,000
surveys to Keizer residents. Of the 1,567
returned surveys, 91 percent said a playground was important for the new park
to have, after trails and picnic sites.
After park basics had been installed,
the leaders went about creating a playground, Carlson said.
Leathers and Associates was hired to
design a custom-built playground and
consult the task force throughout the
project. Leathers previously oversaw

VOLUNTEERS
There are 2,250 volunteer slots available
during the builds five days. There are three
shifts a day that could each use 150 volunteers.
Volunteers are needed most for construction
June 10 to 12, said Mark Caillier, project manager. The build lasts until the 14th.
Both skilled and unskilled volunteers are
needed for the project. Skilled means that a
volunteer is comfortable running a circular
saw, Caillier said.

BRENT DRINKUT/STATESMAN JOURNAL

Top: Pre-work begins on the Keizer Big Toy community build at Keizer Rapids Park, on Thursday
in Keizer. Above: Mark Caillier, the community build coordinator, stands where a playground
will be built at Keizer Rapids Park as pre-work begins on Thursday.

the community build at Gilbert House


Museum in the 90s.
Since it was to be a destination for
children, leaders wanted to know what
kids actually wanted in a playground.
Marlene Quinn, task force chairwoman, said Leathers consultants spent half a
day at Keizers elementary schools asking students to draw the features theyd
like to see in a playground. They took
3,500 drawings into their hotel room and
came up with the grand plan six hours
later, she said.
Its going to be a challenge to do some
of the components and have them look
like what theyre supposed to look like,
Caillier said.
They stuck to the childrens vision as
much as possible. Caillier said there
were suggestions later on to just have a
log cabin instead of a castle and a log cabin. But having a castle was important to
many young girls, so they did both, Carlson said.
The build was originally supposed to
take place in September but the amount
of work needed to be done in a short
amount of time was overwhelming, said
Quinn, who also sits on the Keizer City
Council. After a new piece of property
was added to the park, then-Mayor Lore
Christopher suggested the parks master
plan be updated and that the Big Toy be

built on the new property.


In November, it was decided the Big
Toy would be built on a filbert orchard.
The total budgeted cost for the project is $319,000. Organizers have raised
88 percent of those funds but said they
arent concerned about the remaining
$37,463.
Not all of the funds raised have been
spent yet, so if the project comes in under budget, they may have already met
their goal, Carlson said. Donations have
rolled in faster as the start date for the
project approached, she said.
If they fall short of the money they
need before the build, Carlson said the
city of Keizer has contingency funds
available to cover their costs.
Physical work started on the grounds
in March 2015 when volunteers began
clearing away two acres of filbert trees.
This past week, workers have been organizing build components, measured
out spacing for fence posts and drilled
holes in the ground, Caillier said.
Organizers expect several hundred
volunteers will fill the 2,250 slots available during the build. The slots run from
8 a.m. to noon, 12:30 p.m. to 5 and 5:30
p.m. to 9 p.m. Meals will be served between the slots.
Everything from construction to food
service to daycare to painting is needed.

journaling. There will be special projects, door


prizes and make and takes. Raising money for the
American Cancer Societys Relay For Life. 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., Runaway Art & Craft Studio, 311 Commercial St. NE. $35 per day; $60 for the weekend.
503-881-6270, runawayart.com.

PETtalks: Ideas for Caring: Guest speaker will


discuss caring for pets. Light refreshments provided. 6 to 8 p.m., Willamette Humane Society, Education Hall, 4246 Turner Road SE. $5 suggested
donation. 503-585-5900, whs4pets.org.

Adults 18 and over can use power tools, but


teens 16 and older can work on the site.
Younger teens can help run the daycare,
consult items for the time capsule and pass
out food and drinks.
Daycare, offered by certified caregivers, will
be offered to volunteers.
Volunteers can sign up at KeizerBigToy.org or
show up to the build site at Keizer Rapids
Park, 1900 Chemawa Rd N.

DONATIONS
Organizers still need to raise $37,463 to meet
their budgeted goal. Individuals and businesses can sponsor different elements of the
equipment. Sponsorships are still available for
as little as $35 for a fence post up to $6,000
for the riverboat or a merry-go-round-like
spinner. Go to KeizerBigToy.org to donate.

Anyone can do it, Caillier said.


Volunteering doesnt necessarily
mean you have to wear a hard hat and
drill and saw, Carlson said.
The playground will have a soft opening at 5 p.m. Sunday when volunteers
children can test out their newest toy.
Workers will keep track of the things
they find that need to be tweaked and
then put the finishing touches on the
structures Monday, Caillier said.
Even though the Keizer Big Toy
should be open for fun starting Monday,
the project wont be over. Next year, organizers plan to apply for a grant to put a
rubberized surface on the ground to
cushion kids falls.
khessel@statesmanjournal
.com, 503-399-6743 or follow on Twitter
@KaellenHessel

CAUSES CALENDAR
TODAY
Flap Jack Family Breakfastn Bowl: 8 a.m. to 2
p.m., Town & Country Lanes, 3500 River Road N,
Keizer. $16 for breakfast/bowling; $9 for breakfast.
503-390-2221, bowlcrazy.com.
Stamp Out Cancer Crafting Marathon: Crafters
can spend the weekend at Runaway Art & Craft
Studio stamping, painting, scrap-booking and art

CONNECT
WITH
THE
TEAM

SATURDAY
THURSDAY

Alliance Group restoration and museum site.


Museum tours, vintage aircraft, cruise-in, military
vehicles, WWII living history, food, music and
more. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., B-17 Alliance Restoration &
Museum Site, B-17 Alliance Group Tarmax and
the McNary Airfield, 3278 25th St. SE. $10; $25 per
family of 4 to 8. 503-654 6491, ext. 103,
b17alliancegroup.com.

Warbirds Over the West: Grand opening for B-17

Reporter

Forward This

Out and About

Calendar

Editorial Assistant

Editor

KAELLEN HESSEL

CAPI LYNN

LEANN MOORE

LEE CLARKSON

DAN BENDER

Phone: (503) 399-6743


Email: khessel@
StatesmanJournal.com
Twitter: @KaellenHessel

Phone: (503) 399-6710


Email: clynn
@StatesmanJournal.com

MARY LOUISE
VANNATTA

Phone: (503) 399-6785


Email: calendar@StatesmanJournal.com
Upload your events at
www.statesmanjournal.com/calendar

Phone: (503) 399-6833


Email: lclarkson@
StatesmanJournal.com

Phone: (503) 399-6731


Email: dbender@
StatesmanJournal.com
Twitter: @DanBender_SJ

Email: outandaboutsj
@live.com

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Causes

Cash or stuff: What is best to give to a nonprofit?


It seems many people wonder
whether it is better to give cash or a
physical item a nonprofit might need.
Said another way: What is the best gift
you can give to a nonprofit you care
about?
If you are one of those who are wondering, you are likely to find there is no
one answer to your question. Here are a
few factors to consider:
Do you already have the item you
wish to donate, or would you have to go
out and purchase it?
If you would have to purchase the
item, have you checked to see if your
nonprofit makes bulk purchases and
could secure the items at a better
price?
Have you checked to make sure
that your nonprofit doesnt already
have enough of the item in its inventory?
What gift feels most meaningful to
you?
That last item on the list is signifi-

Phil McCorkle
SMART GIVING

cant. The interaction between a


nonprofit and a
donor can best be
described as a
relationship. The
complexity and
rewards of a relationship are the
main reasons
there isnt a simple answer to the

best-gift question.
For example, if you went to your
charity and asked what they would
rather have, they might choose cash
because it provides flexibility to meet
whatever needs arise. Cash is always
good. If contributing a physical item
better connects you to knowing you
have made a difference for your nonprofit, it may be your best gift.
Similar to a person-to-person relationship, the better you know an organization, the more you will understand its

needs and be able to identify the best


gift for your circumstances.
I am reminded of a specific example
from when I worked at Marion-Polk
Food Share. Tom was a donor who began volunteering during his retirement.
Soon he found a niche as a muchneeded trainer who helped unemployed
individuals learn to operate a forklift.
Once a person had mastered that skill,
it resulted in the ability to find work
that could support and feed a family. It
was a great way to fight hunger.
Tom built a relationship with the
organization and understood its needs.
When he passed away, his wife knew of
the 50-plus gardens the food bank operated. The gardens provided food directly to families in need and also taught
them how to grow their own food.
At home, Tom had grown a garden of
his own and owned a tractor that he had
maintained in immaculate condition.
His wife donated that tractor to the
food bank in Toms memory.

Jared Hibbard-Swanson, farm and


garden program manager at the food
share, said that prior to Toms tractor,
tilling at the youth farm was done using
hand tools. That limited the amount of
produce that could be planted.
Since the donation, produce grown
has quadrupled, Hibbard-Swanson
said.
He notes that the tractor gets a lot of
use, helping at several other food bank
gardens. And, it will go on fighting
hunger for many years to come.
Toms tractor has another job: It is
used to teach unemployed individuals
how to drive farm equipment so they
can find agricultural jobs and be able to
feed themselves and their families.
Phil McCorkle is president of the Center for
Community Innovation, a Salem-based
nonprofit whose mission is to strengthen
and support area nonprofits. He can be
reached at

pmccorkle@ccioregon.org.

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MARY LOUISE VANNATTA / SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL

Sandy Torgrimson, Adrienne Christian and Emma LeDuc help show off auction items at the Chefs for Liberty House dinner and
auction on May 31.

Hundreds of guests joined together May 31 at


Chefs for Liberty House, a fundraiser to support
Liberty House in its efforts to help children referred
to them with concerns of abuse
or neglect. For 13 years, the
group has been gathering our
communitys best chefs to prepare a dinner to support its
cause.
This was the first time the
event was held at the Salem
Out & About
Convention Center. Tory Knaus
M A RY L O U I S E
of the convention center welVA N NAT TA
comed fellow chefs to his kitchen: Massimo Brofferio from the
Drunken Cook, Daryl Gossack from Loustic, and
Jessica Ritter and Cecilia Ritter-James from Wild
Pear.
The social hour featured a silent auction and hosted wine and gourmet appetizers. Pam Woodcock,
Meggie and Shane Saunders, and Toni and Reno
Silbernagel stopped for a quick photo. Liberty
House CEO Alison Kelley talked with Shari and
Gordon Kelly. Tammi and Jim Burns, as well as Andrea and Tyson Pruett, were also in attendance.
The dinner was highly anticipated, as each course
was prepared by a different chef. Chef Knaus prepared the filet mignon entre with rosemary fingerlings, spring asparagus and shallots. Chef Gossack
served broiled salmon with champagne cream sauce.
Chef Brofferio presented risotto with porcini mushrooms as the vegetarian option.
Columbia Banks LeAnn Keim acted as mistress
of ceremonies. She assisted in featuring the many
auction items, including spending an afternoon
learning about birds of prey with Jim Dawson.
Sandy Torgrimson, Adrienne Christian and Emma
LeDuc also showed items off to the crowd.
Liberty House is a child abuse assessment center
serving Marion and Polk counties, the only place
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Shari and Gordon Kelly and Alison Kelley at the Chefs for
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Barb and
James
Young at the
Chefs for
Liberty
House
dinner and
auction on
May 31.
MARY LOUISE
VANNATTA /
SPECIAL TO THE
STATESMAN
JOURNAL

comfortable and child-friendly environment. To


schedule a tour, or for information about the luncheon, visit LibertyHouseCenter.org or call 503-5400288.
Those who have confidential questions can call
Liberty House directly or the Child Abuse hotline at
503-378-6704.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

5D

Causes
GET INVOLVED
City of Salem Public Works Day: Seeking
six volunteers to paint faces in the covered
face painting booth at Public Works Day
June 11, from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Supplies
provided. Tibby Larson, talarson@cityof
salem.net or 503-589-2197.
Friends of the Jefferson Public Library:
In need of corporate sponsors and volunteers. The library has been determined to be
severely structurally deficient and is collapsing, literally and figuratively, under increased demand for services. 541-327-2423,
library2010@q.com.
Friends of Oregon School for the Deaf:
Seeks a volunteer to take minutes at monthly board meetings. Occasionally design
publicity materials, assist with mailings and
help with fundraising activities. cou
oh_@hotmail.com.
Friends of Silver Falls State Park: Seeking
volunteers to work in the Nature Store. Meet
people from all over the world, answer
questions and help park visitors get as much
enjoyment as possible. 503-873-8735, admin@friendsofsilverfalls.net,
friendsofsilverfalls.net.
Gentiva Hospice: Volunteers visit with
patients for companionship, support and
respite. They also help patients at meal
times. Volunteers must be at least 18 years
old and be able to visit the patients wherever they live. 503-574-2900, Ext. 213, 866977-2752, bbennett@odyshealth.com.
Historic Deepwood Estate: Seeking history buffs to lead tours of the house. Will train.
503-363-1825, info@historicdeepwood
estate.org.
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Advisory Committee: The
twelve-member committee will meet monthly to provide oversight of the Marion County
Community Developmental Disabilities
Program as the disability issues advisory
committee. Members are appointed by the
Board of Commissioners to serve four-year
terms and must be at least 18 years old. The
county is looking for individuals or family
members from the developmental disabilities community, service providers and
advocates to serve on the committee. 503588-7990, ccrocker@co.marion.or.us, or co.
marion.or.us/BS/VOL/.
Joys of Living Assistance Dogs: Seeking
volunteer puppy raisers to care for, train and
socialize puppies. Raisers attend weekly
training classes with puppies so both can
learn together. New batch of puppies ready
for volunteer homes soon. 503-551-4572,
facebook.com/JLADjoydogs.
Just Walk Salem: Seeking new walk leaders. Just Walk Salem is a network of weekly
neighborhood walking groups led by volunteers. The idea is to give people an opportunity to be active and meet their neighbors at
the same time. Looking to expand citywide
to motivate and enable even more people to
participate. You choose the day, time and
route. If youre already out walking regular-

ly, its as simple as inviting others to join you.


If youd like to start a walking group or link
up your group, email justwalksa
lem@gmail.com or call 503-373-3760,
justwalksalem.com.
Keizer Heritage Center: Seeking volunteers in event hosting, museum hostess
and/or office help and special tasks. 503-3939660, keizerheritage.org.
Lighthouse Farm Sanctuary: Volunteer
each Saturday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and
each Wednesday from 10 a.m. to noon to
help care for the animals that call the sanctuary their home. 503-394-4486,
lighthousefarmsanctuary.org.
The Lord & Schryver Conservancy: Seeking volunteers to help maintain the historic
Lord & Schryver gardens at the Deepwood
Museum and Gardens, the classic Salem
design firm's only residential gardens presently in the public domain. They meet Thursday mornings from 9 a.m. to noon, with a
convivial and educational coffee break, from
February to October. Volunteers bring their
own hand tools. 503-365-7102.
Marion County Citizen Review Board:
Recruiting volunteer board members. The
board consists of a diverse group of volunteers who review cases of children in foster
care and bring a community perspective to
the foster care system. 503-986-5888, rakeem.a.washington@ojd.state.or.us.
Marion County District Attorneys Office, Victim Assistance Division: Seeking
volunteers to provide victims with emotional
and informational support through the
criminal justice process, in addition to accompanying them to court and appropriate
resource referrals. Training provided. Spanish
speakers also needed. 503-588-3571,
co.marion.or.us\DA\victimassistance.
Marion County Historical Society WHC
Library Archives: Seeking volunteers to
help with research on local historical topics
and data entry. 503-585-7012 or amyv@wil
lametteheritage.org.
Marion County Retired and Senior Volunteer Program: Program designed for
community members ages 55 and older. Six
RSVP volunteer placement stations in Silverton/Mount Angel. 503-982-5388, marta.trini
dad@ci.woodburn.or.us.
Marion-Polk Food Share: Seeking volunteers to sort and repack food donations;
collect and deliver food as a driver or drivers
assistant; serve as a food drive volunteer;
work in a community garden; serve on a
harvest team; work as a program or office
assistant; or join various efforts to increase
public awareness of hunger and its effects
on the community. 503-581-3855, Ext. 311,
marionpolkfoodshare.org.
Marion Soil and Water Conservation
District: Seeking volunteers to fill position
vacancies on both its board and its budget
committee. For persons interested in the
environment, working to provide solutions
to natural resource concerns and having a

voice in decisions made by the district.


503-391-9927, marionswcd.net.
The Office of the Long-Term Care Ombudsman: Seeking volunteers for Marion,
Polk and Clackamas counties. Certified
Ombudsmen are resident advocates for
those who are living in long term care
facilities and are trained to educate, investigate, and advocate for the rights of the
resident and learn to be a problem solver.
800-522-2602, visit oregon.gov/LTCO or
e-mail at LTCO.contact@ltco.state.or.us.
Orchard Heights Senior Care Facility:
Seeking volunteers to assist with activities
throughout the day, including small group
projects, large social gatherings and one-onone interactions. Also, one to two people
are needed to assist in outings. 503-566-9052
or 951-566-7313.
Oregon Attorney General's Consumer
Advocate Program: Recruiting volunteers
to answer the Attorney Generals Consumer
Hotline. The program is part of the Financial
Fraud/Consumer Protection Section of the
Oregon Department of Justice. CAP volunteers screen calls for violations of the law,
send out complaint forms when appropriate,
answer questions on consumer topics, send
pamphlets and brochures about various
consumer subjects, refer callers to appropriate agencies and generally act as the first
contact that consumers may have with the
Department of Justice. 503-373-0371.
Oregon College Mentors: Seeking college
students to serve as positive role models and
mentors for Salem-Keizer students. 503-8777021, oregoncollegementors.com.
Oregon State Capitol: Seeking volunteers
to assist at the Capitol. Positions include gift
store cashier, information kiosk attendant,
Capitol tour guide, legislative doorkeeper
and assisting with special events. Support
and training are provided. Active volunteers
receive a 10 percent discount in the Capitol
gift store. For more information please
contact Lora Howden, volunteer coordinator, lora.howden@state.or.us, 503-9861388.
Oregon State Hospital Museum of Mental Health: Seeking volunteers to help staff
the facility on Tuesdays, Fridays and Saturdays from noon to 4 p.m. Basic duties
include cashiering and interacting with the
public. oshmuseum.org.
Polk County CASA: A trained advocate
works directly with all the parties to make
sure that the best interests of the child are
always front and center. 503-623-9268, Ext.
1301 or casa.volunteer@co.polk.or.us.
Polk County Courthouse: Seeking volunteers to serve as greeters to help citizens
unfamiliar with the courthouse locate their
desired department. 503-623-8173.
Project ABLE: Seeking volunteers to assist
and mentor individuals who are recovering
from mental health and/or co-occurring
issues. (503-363-3260.

NONPROFIT PROFILE
Agency: Marion-Polk Food Share
1660 Salem Industrial Drive NE
Salem, OR 97301
Key staff members to know:
Rick Gaupo, CEO & President
Board members:
Mike Garrison, Chair; Alex Beamer, Vice Chair
Hours of Operation: Monday - Friday, 8 am to 5 pm
Phone: (503) 581-3855
Fax: (503) 581-3862
Email: mpfs@marionpolkfoodshare.org
Website: www.MarionPolkFoodShare.org
Year started in the Mid-Valley: 1987
What we do: Our mission is to lead the fight to END
Hunger in Marion and Polk counties... because no one
should be hungry. Marion-Polk Food Shares network of
100 member agencies distributed more than 9 million
pounds of food last year, which provided 112,542
emergency food boxes and 621,324 community meals
to children, families and individuals in need of food. We
also deliver food directly to older adults and people with
disabilities through Meals on Wheels.
Who we serve: Anyone in the Mid-Valley who is hungry.
In an average month, 9,380 families are experiencing a
hunger emergency and need food boxes. An average of
more than 15,000 local children are among those who
eat from an emergency food box.
What we are proud of: We have low administrative and
fundraising costs, so 92 percent of all donations go
towards food and programs that reduce the need for
emergency food.
Something interesting you might not know about us:
We are not a government agency. We grow food on 236
acres of land and support 53 community gardens. We are
producing high-protein vegetarian burgers for emergency
distribution.
Why we believe in the Mid-Willamette Valley:
Local area residents and businesses are generous in
supporting worthwhile causes. Marion-Polk Food Share
receives 65 percent of our food and 90 percent of our
operating budget from local donations.
How the community can get involved:
The community can support us by donating funds that can
purchase food and fuel our trucks that collect daily food
donations and deliver food to our network of charities. To
help: Give online or by mail or at www.sustainercircle.org.
OR-0000363738

25

6D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

B-17 restoration museum opens


By Capi Lynn
Statesman Journal

IMPERIAL
GARDENS
HANGING BASKETS
$

4.00 OFF

EXAMPLE: 12 INCH EURO BASKETS


REG. $22.00 , NOW $18.00

For the first time since a Boeing


B-17 Flying Fortress was moved in
December to a hangar at Salem
Municipal Airport, the public is invited to see the progress of its restoration.
The grand opening of the B-17 Alliance Restoration & Museum is Saturday, June 13.
The all-day, family-friendly celebration will include Warbirds Over
the West, a fly-in and cruise-in
event. Historic aircraft, classic cars
and military vehicles will be on display, along with a World War II-style
encampment featuring living history re-enactors.
But the real star of the show will
be the B-17, nicknamed the Lacey
Lady after Art Lacey, the man who
purchased the aircraft that for nearly 64 years served as a canopy over
the pumps at a gas station in Milwaukie.
Its an opportunity for people to

CAPI LYNN / STATESMAN JOURNAL

A sign points toward the entrance of


the B-17 Alliance Restoration & Museum.

get up close and personal with the


aircraft, talk to the restoration team
and ask them questions, said Sean
OBrien, board member of the B-17
Alliance and co-operations manager
for the nonprofit group.
OBrien said people are coming to
the event from out of state, including
Harland Avezzie, who has a shop in
Massachusetts that specializes in
gun turret restorations.
Frank Farr, a World War II veter-

an from New Mexico, will participate in the celebration as a guest


speaker at a VIP event Friday and as
an unofficial tour guide Saturday.
Farr was a B-17 navigator.
He is going to hang out by the restored nose of the airplane, which
was his duty station when he was flying missions, OBrien said.
Admission for the 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
event is $10 per person. Admission
for a family of four or more is $25.
Car show registration is $10, which
includes the drivers admission fee.
Proceeds from the event will go toward the restoration of the B-17.
Flights on the B-25 bomber
Grumpy also will be offered for
$495 per person. Reservations are
encouraged. Call 425-348-3200.
For more information about the
event or the restoration project, go
www.B17AllianceGroup.org.
clynn@StatesmanJournal.com, (503)
399-6710, or follow on Twitter
@CapiLynn and Facebook
@CapiLynnSJ.

www.imperialgardensnursery.com
11650 Goudy Garden Ln. Woodburn, OR 97071
OR-0000362352

503.981.1690

Expires 6/15/15

Memorial
Continued from Page 1D

Local Strawberries & Cherries


NW Asparagus
Now Serving Fresh
Strawberry Lemonade
Milkshakes, Shortcakes, Sundaes

list for another project we took


on. We are helping the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial Fund put a
face to every name engraved on
the Vietnam Memorial wall and
track down missing photos from
Marion and Polk counties.
Army Spc. Fidencio Flores Jr.
and Army Pfc. David Orfield,
both of Silverton, have been
added to the Wall of Faces,
which eventually will be dis-

Earth
Continued from Page 1D

25

Hours: Mon-Fri 9-7 Sat/Sun 9-5


10325 River Rd N - 4 miles N of Keizer
503-393-9451|JonesFarmProduce.com
Find us on Facebook for weekly discounts

one of the most popular


themes at the fair: solar
power. Solar panels accounted for most of those

played in an education center


planned for Washington, D.C. Of
the 33 originally on the list of
photos needed for Marion and
Polk counties, when I first reported on this in February, were
down to three.
Organizers now have photographs of 53 of the 56 servicemen from Marion County killed
during the Vietnam War and all
seven from Polk County.
Of the remaining three on the
list Marine Pfc. Robert J.
Morris of Scotts Mills, Army
Spc. Darel L. Sills of Salem, and
Navy Engineman 2nd Class Mi-

demonstrations, but a few


off-beat inventions stood
out.
Eben Fodor of SunWorks Technologies LLC
came to promote his solar
food dryer, an invention
he completed in 2004.
The 10-square-foot box

chael D. Stevens of Aumsville


I have leads on all but Sills.
Stevens brother has promised me photos, and Im told
organizers of the War Memorial
Plaza in Silverton, who helped us
get one of Flores, may have one
of Morris.
Forward This appears Wednesdays
and Sundays and highlights the people,
places and organizations of the
Mid-Willamette Valley. Contact Capi
Lynn at clynn@StatesmanJournal.com
or (503) 399-6710, or follow her the rest
of the week on Twitter @CapiLynn and
Facebook @CapiLynnSJ.

can hold up to six pounds


of food and dry the juiciest of fruits and vegetables in one or two sunny
days, Fordor said. The
dryer works about as fast
as an electric food dryer,
with the airflow coming
from the bottom of the

PA I D A DV E RTI SE M E N T

With one Oregonian and a long enough


lever, we can move the world.

cabinet, which is made of


cedar, aluminum and
polypropylene screens
and plywood. The drying
units cost $334 and can be
ordered on Amazon.
Its designed to capture the suns heat and
control airflow, Fodor
said. Its generally oriented toward a home gardener because the solar
food drying season corresponds with the garden
and harvest season.
Fodor, 59, said hes
been drying food from his
Eugene garden for years.
We just got tired of
how annoying the electric
food dryer became, Fodor
said. It was always heating up the house and using
so much electricity, so we
came up with something
new.
Greenhouses
also
were popular. Most were
made of white, twin-wall,
high-density polyethylene panels that provided
diffused light and work to
maximize growth and
eliminate burning and
shadows.
Laurie Stribling, who
works for Salem-based
Solexx, explained the
companys houses were
great for protecting
plants even in the harshest conditions.
The twin walls diffuse light so theres no hot
spots in your greenhouse, Stribling said.
The plants get heat and
light from every direction this way.
One
particularly
crowded talk was at the
Modern Homesteading
Stage, where Matt Borg
gave tips on how to deal
with gophers, moles and
voles.
Marilyn Ciszkowski,
60, said she planned to attend both days of the fair
with her daughter and her
family, to absorb as much
information as possible.
Im here to learn, she
said. Were concerned
about the planet, but we
also just want to know
how to produce our own
food and not eat chemicals, she said.
Ciszkowski, who traveled from Vancouver,
Washington, said she was
most excited to learn
about beekeeping.
I really want some
bees at some point, she
said.
aroemeling@statesmanjour
nal.com, (503) 399-6884 or
follow on Twitter
@alisharoemeling

SUNDAYS EVENTS

SIGN OUR PETITION

Google: moveon hb3470


25

Paid for by Hair on Fire Oregon

The fair continues Sunday at


the Linn County Expo Center
in Albany. Tickets are $25 per
person at the gate. Admission
is free for children 17 and
younger.
Address: 3700 Knox Butte
Road E
Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

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7D

8D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Opinion

Opinion pages constitute a modern town square, where readers should find a variety of
viewpoints ones that will challenge their own as well as complement their own.

OUR
VIEWPOINT

Free college might not be the best


O

regon must take bold steps if it is


to meet its goal of having a highly educated citizenry.
One such idea is offering an almostfree community college education to
Oregonians who earn a high school
diploma or GED. Tennessee is embarking on a similar plan. But before Oregon follows suit, four key issues must
be resolved.

1. The right goal


The goal must be to successfully
educate more students, not just to
enroll them. So far, Oregon is not doing
too well.
A state audit found that only 24
percent of community college students
completed an associate degree or certificate within seven years. That audit
report also noted that Oregon ranked
32nd in a 36-state study of community
college completion rates.
Community college leaders contend
they dont have the educational or

LETTERS

physical infrastructure to handle an


influx of free students. They are
partially right.
The space issues might be addressed through additional weekend,
night and online classes. However,
more instructors would be needed.
Students already cite the difficulty of
getting into classes they need.
Equally important, community colleges must invest far more in support
staff who will work with students
sometimes on a daily basis to understand, encourage and guide their
progress. As high schools and universities have discovered, those learning coaches can be as essential to longterm student success as the teachers.
Services such as financial aid can
be daunting and time-consuming for
students as well. Maybe the whole
college record-keeping system needs
to be revolutionized to make it customer-friendly.
Who will make these improvements
happen? Who will pay for them? Al-

ready, tuition pays only a fraction of


college expenses.

2. The right price


Free sounds nice, but common
sense suggests that students will work
harder if they make some investment.
The Oregon Legislatures Senate Bill
81 would require a $50 co-pay per
term. Is that the right amount?
Or what about a different approach?
Instead of offering free tuition, make
it a loan that will be forgiven but only
if the student completes an associate
degree or technical certificate within a
specified time.
Left unaddressed is another substantial cost: the unreasonably high
cost of textbooks.

3. The honest price


Free tuition would not be free to
Americas taxpayers. Students would
have to fill out the FAFSA, a dreadful
form required to obtain federal fi-

Kicker frightens and concerns


newcomer
I have only lived in Oregon for eight
years, so I am probably considered an
outsider.
I was born and grew up in New York,
but lived most of my adult life in California (the evil empire). While living in
California, I participated in local government, so I have some idea of how
those things work. I also operated my
own business for 25 years.
I heard about the kicker when I first
moved here, but didnt think too much
about it. Now that it is a possibility, I
have to speak out.
The kicker is just about the stupidest
thing that I have ever heard of! Our
schools are under-funded. The infrastructure is crumbling. Public safety is
at risk. Yet we want to take money away
from government?
Many citizens complain that government should be run like a business.
No successful business would return
extra revenue to its customers. It would
invest the money in improving its products or services.
I have met many nice people during
my brief residency here, but I have
never encountered a citizenry so unwilling to tax themselves to provide
public services. It is frightening.
Bill Pyper
Salem

Recognize pets as sentient


beings for their protection
Carol Curries May 30 article, Lost
cat found, then lost again in wrangling,
pointed out a lack of any protection for
pets in our community.

4. The buy-in
It is understandable that community college leaders are wary of free
tuition. But it also is discouraging.
The Legislature must earn their
support for this program or any
educational mandate to work.

VISUAL VIEWPOINT
Benefits abound with fast-track
trade legislation

Fears about increasing


the minimum wage are
unsubstantiated
I have been watching the debate
about increasing the minimum wage.
In my many years of being in business, each time this comes up I hear of
the disaster it would be for small businesses if their labor costs were increased. Each time the increase has
passed, no great wave of business closures or mass layoffs has occurred.
Why is it that a certain percentage of
the population does not remember what
has happened in the recent past? Is it a
strange kind of amnesia or what has
been termed confirmation bias?
I also remember when OSHA and
ADA and EPA and Medicare were supposed to be the death knell for small
businesses. I even remember when
Rush Limbaugh was seriously concerned about the effect of low-flow
toilets on the American economy.
Perhaps we all need to take a deep
breath and approach the minimum
wage issue with some clear thinking.
Gary Henrichsen
Waldport

nancial aid and collect as much in federal grants as possible.


Thus, Oregon community colleges
would be using federal dollars to underwrite their free tuition. Advocates
talk about all the federal money that
would be raked in. But such a philosophy encourages our deepening national debt.
Some students would not qualify for
federal aid, so the state would spend an
estimated $20 million during the next
two years to subsidize their tuition.
Yet the state for years has been
unwilling to adequately fund either
community colleges or Oregons public
universities.

Marion County has no animal abuse


investigator. There is no one to turn to if
someone suspects or witnesses animal
abuse or neglect. The Willamette Humane Society used to provide this service but stopped years ago.
So if your neighbor abuses/neglects
their pet, whom can you call? Policing
agencies do not have any personnel
trained in identifying animal abuse/
neglect. If residents want someone to
call, then they should call their county
commissioners to arrange for the county to provide this much-needed service.
However, because animals are property (like stereo equipment or a car),
legally, owners have priority regardless
of the condition of the animal. If animals were categorized as sentient beings (capable of thinking/feeling), then
the law would protect the animal and
owners would no longer have priority.
Over 2,000 scientific studies have
shown animals to be sentient beings.
Maybe its time for the people of
Oregon to recognize pets as sentient
beings or more than inanimate property so that they can be protected from
neglect and abuse.
Lora Meisner, president, Coalition
Advocating for Animals
Salem

Oregons business friendliness


steadily worsening
According to the website
chiefexecutive.net, the annual survey
ranking states for business friendliness
puts Oregon in 42nd place, a drop of
four positions from last year.
The ratings are done by leading
CEOs. Our states rating puts us just
ahead of California, New York and Illinois to name a few.
For years our Legislature has persistently worked on legislation and policies
that drive businesses out of the state.
This isnt anything new.
One measure of Oregons lack of

competitiveness is the fact that Oregon,


once home to 15 Fortune 500 companies,
now has three.
The PERS underfunding is a classic.
The Legislature gave retirees grossly
unsupportable retirement packages in
order to buy votes and pacify the teachers and public employees unions.
Another act of genius was turning
measures 66 and 67 over to the voters.
The measures resulted in less revenue
because many of the so-called millionaires left the state.
So, is 42nd place the best we can do?
Since well never achieve a top rating
with this cast of characters, lets shoot
for 50th place. Although the competition is fierce, surely the Legislature can
raise business taxes, increase regulation and decrease availability of a
trained workforce as we make a determined race to the bottom.
Doug Lusk
Keizer

Nation faces bigger concerns


than climate change
In response to the May 24 letter by
Dorian Atkins (Greatest threat to national security is not climate change),
yes! It is so rare to see it all in one sentence.
I cant believe President Obama was
voted in a second time after seeing and
feeling the impact of his policies. And
now climate change is the most important issue we face? I would say, with the
world on fire, we have far more immediate issues to be concerned about that
he seems to ignore.
Now the same people want to elect
someone who helped to put us in the
situation we are in.
Please, everyone, dont vote party or
gender.
Vote for someone who wants to get
this country on track and think of the
safety of the USA.
Barbara Benson
Salem

In a polarized Washington, D.C., one


of the few things that Democrats and
Republicans can come together on is
trade.
Both President Obama and congressional Republicans recognize that trade
contributes to a prosperous U.S. economy. With 95 percent of the worlds population living outside our borders, trading with other countries is essential for
Oregon businesses.
Passing Trade Promotion Authority
(TPA) should be a top priority for Oregons congressional delegation, as more
than 484,000 jobs in Oregon currently
depend upon international trade. Oregon already exports $27 billion worth of
goods a year, and we are looking at a
historic opportunity to expand that
amount.
Furthermore, trade is essential to
economic growth here in Grants Pass.
Our young people need the new jobs
and opportunities that come from international trade. More opportunities will
lead to increased ambition and even
more economic growth as they start to
believe in themselves once again.
Without TPA, it is unlikely that Oregon will see the benefits of these trade
agreements. Only one such agreement
in the last 40 years has passed without
TPA. It is vital that our congressional
delegation stands up for Oregon jobs
and businesses, and votes to pass TPA.
Ken Hannum
Grants Pass

Rising CO2 levels will force


acceptance; changes
The Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii is a modest place. Small, simple
structures lie low to the earth, surrounded by endless miles of lava colored umber, black and gray.
Set more than two miles above sea
level, few people ever see it. Yet here,
carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere
have been measured since 1958.
The instruments are sensitive. Carbon dioxide is measured in parts per
million. Seasonal variations are recorded as well. Year, after year, after year.
The effort has yielded fruit. The rise
of carbon dioxide is not only measurable, but the highest found in Earths
climate record for the past half a million years.
When charted, the data show the
famous hockey stick pattern of CO2 rise
now known around the world as Keelings Curve.
Its a powerful insight into atmospheric chemistry and a prognosticator
of coming climate change.
With time, even the most intransigent of climate change deniers will be
forced to acknowledge the data and the
serious changes we face.
Oregon may be blessed by its location, letting it fare better than other
places, but changes will continue to
come as carbon dioxide levels rise.
Glen Kaye
Salem

Letters to the editor, blogs, guest opinions, columns, cartoons, photos and articles submitted to the Statesman Journal and/or StatesmanJournal.com may be published or distributed in print, electronic, audio or other forms.

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Opinion.

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President and Publisher
MICHAEL DAVIS, Executive Editor
DICK HUGHES, Editorial Page Editor

Columns, letters, guest opinions, blogs, Facebook posts and cartoons represent the views of their authors. Editorials ... Our Viewpoint ...
represent the composite view of the StatesmanJournal Editorial Board and are the institutional voice of the newspaper.
EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR: Dick Hughes, (503) 399-6727; dhughes@StatesmanJournal.com; twitter.com/DickHughes

Contact the Editorial Board:


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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

9D

Op-ed

Warning: Bear on the loose


Do you suffer from arkoudaphobia,
the fear of bears?
Do you have a 9.2 ounce spray can
of Frontiersman bear attack deterrent
(with holster)
within reach in
your garage?
Do you root for
Green Bay when
they trade licks
with Chicago?
If you anMichael
swered yes to
these questions,
Davis
you and I have
C O M M E N TA RY
something important in common:
an irrational fear of ursine beasts from
the forest and frozen tundra, be they
grizzly, polar, Eurasian brown, Asiatic
black, whatever.
It was during a past life regression
at Esalen or was it when I traveled
with the Beatles to meet the Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi that it all became clear.
In a previous existence, I was
chased across the steppes by Cossacks
and bears, sometimes in tandem.
Since then, in all subsequent lives, I
have scrupulously avoided both.
As you might imagine, it has been a
difficult stretch for me recently.
News that a bear was lumbering and
plundering through Salem neighborhoods sent me into a state of high alert.
WIFE: Whats wrong now?
ME (searching for a baseball bat):
Theres a bear on the loose and its
heading this way.
WIFE (holding a grainy newspaper
photo of the bear): Awww. Hes just a
baby. Probably separated from momma bear.
ME: Do you hear that rumbling?
WIFE (straining): I hear nothing.
ME: Id know that sound anywhere.
Its the hoof beat of Cossacks.
WIFE: Its the kids next door riding
their bikes.
ME: Maybe its Cossacks on bikes!
I had to pull myself together the
next day at work, because nobody likes
a ninny.
Say, hows this story coming along
on the free-range bear? I asked our
top editors. Has the governor declared a state of emergency?
Suddenly, all of their eyes rolled at
once, like the Blue Angels fanning in
formation.
Im giving myself credit for not
getting in the way of the developing
story on the bear, which at midweek
crossed the Willamette and turned
toward greater Keizer.
I had an impulse call my friend
Lyndon Zaitz, publisher of the Keizertimes, just to warn him of impending
danger.
But I went to lunch instead.
Hey, it was Wednesday and the
downtown Salem Farmers Market had
chicken tamales.
Speaking of chicken, there was a

AMY READ / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Executive Editor Michael Davis, in his office, displays his can of bear repellant.

AMY READ / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Frontiersman bear spray.

legendary newspaper editor in Florida


who was absolutely terrified of snakes.
Even pictures of reptiles could trigger
an emotional breakdown.
On the first day on the job, new
staff members were warned never to
write about snakes, photograph snakes
or sneak a wire story about snakes into
the paper, just to see what might transpire. Violators would be immediately
terminated.
Let the record show I fired no one
last week, and I have completely
calmed down and rediscovered my
bliss.
Why, its almost like being back with
John, George, Paul, Ringo and the Maharishi.
Michael Davis is executive editor of the
Statesman Journal. Contact him at
mdavis4@statesmanjournal.com; P.O. Box
13009, Salem, OR 97309; or (503) 399-6712.

ODFW

A young black bear seen roaming in West Salem has not been seen since Monday.

SUSPENDING THE KICKER: PRO AND CON

Money should go for


schools, the next rainy day

Balance the budget with


fairness, return the kicker

We have good news and bad news.


The bad news is that we are facing an
education crisis. The good news is that
we have an answer, and thats why were
supporting House
Bill 3555. The bill
would suspend the
kicker, sending
half of the money
to Oregons education system and
putting the other
Beatriz Gutierrez half in the Rainy
Day Fund.
P RO
Years of severely underfunding our education
system has led to
one of the most
poorly funded
systems in the
country. In higher
education, this
Tobias Read
means hefty tuP RO
ition hikes, increasing student
debt, decreasing services for students
and lower freshman participation rates.
In our K-12 schools, it means larger class
sizes, fewer teachers and one of the
lowest high school graduation rates in
the country. In fact, with our current
funding levels in mind, it should come as
no surprise that Oregon has the thirdlargest class sizes in the nation.
We can break this vicious cycle of
underfunded schools if we look seriously
at things like Oregons kicker policy.
House Bill 3555 gives us the opportunity
to do just that. Not only would the bill
help fill the current funding gaps in both
higher education and K-12, but it would
also allow us to set some money aside for
the future. Making sure we have reserve
funds available during tough economic
times will allow us to keep some of the
teachers weve recently hired and maintain funding for desperately needed
social services.
By suspending the $473 million kicker
tax rebate, House Bill 3555 will allow us

The only actual constitutional


requirement of the Legislature each
session is to balance the budget.
But what if you are an elected
official forced to
play political
games, all the
while impossibly
fighting for
funding everything everybody
wants from their
Vic Gilliam
government?
CON
Thats when Oregons unique tax
rebate or kicker can be difficult to resist.
Despite that the kicker is in our
constitution by popular vote, it can,
in some years, be a very big pile of
dough and quite expensive just to
mail back to deserving taxpayers.
In the past years when our economy was robust enough to trigger the
kicker, the postage bill alone could
run hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Thats why the Legislature voted to
change the method for refunding
kickers from thousands of individual
checks (plus postage) to simply a tax
credit on your next Oregon return.
While it presented a plausible
change, I opposed the bill because I
believe it began a path of undermining the will of the people.
A well-intended kicker-related bill
just appeared on our docket because
so many folks are currently vying
for their share of the budget. Constituents, senior legislators, crafty lobbyists and most important, vulnerable Oregonians in need, are all
clamoring for more funding. So its
awfully tempting to exercise the
extreme option of overruling a kicker by a two-thirds majority of the
Legislature.
And right now, given the most
recent economic forecasting (which
is how the kicker is charted), the
amount sitting ready to make dreams

to create stability and imagine a better


economic future for Oregon. Over half of
Oregonians will see less than a $150 kicker tax rebate, with those most in need
getting as little as an $11 kicker rebate.
At the same time, the highest income
earners will see a kicker rebate of over
$5,000. When our education systems are
so severely underfunded and our children are falling deeper into debt, we
should be investing in Oregons future.
Oregon is currently experiencing a
shortage of well-trained workers, right
when we need them most. An educated
and proficient workforce is essential to
ensuring that Oregonians are competitive in todays economy. Restoring funding to workforce training programs will
provide students with the critical thinking and job-training skills they need to
successfully enter the modern workforce. Our businesses, our economy and
our future all depend on it.
High-quality, affordable education in
Oregon benefits us all. Earlier this legislative session, we heard legislators from
both sides of the aisle say that they
wished they could do more for our kids,
and we agree. Ensuring that our public
education system is effective and successful is the best way to ensure a good
economic future for Oregon.
During the last big recession, cuts to
our schools and our social services would
have been greatly softened by having
some money set aside in our reserve
funds. We can set Oregon on a brighter
path by saving for the future and by
finally restoring much needed funding to
education. Please join us in supporting
HB 3555. Our future depends on it.
Rep. Tobias Read, D-Beaverton, can be
reached at Rep.TobiasRead@state.or.us or
(503) 986-1427.
Beatriz Gutierrez of Trail, Oregon, is the
2014-15 chair of the Oregon Student
Association Board of Directors and the
University of Oregon student body
president. She can be reached at
Bgutier2@uoregon.edu.

come true is nearly half a billion


dollars.
Did I mention the kicker is in the
Oregon Constitution by a vote of the
people?
The time to initiate a discussion on
negating, changing or otherwise
abolishing the kicker is not in the
middle of a legislative session. How
can you maintain an unbiased perspective with budget fights in full
bloom?
It would be far better to examine
this issue when a large sum of hardearned money is not in the immediate balance thus avoiding the appearance of greedy legislators eager
to spend money promised to taxpayers.
No matter the goodness in your
heart to help others, representatives
and senators are elected to serve and
to balance the budget with fairness.
Many of those same voters said
something loud and clear several
years ago. Namely, that Oregons
kicker law gives rebates to individual taxpayers when state revenue
exceeds its previously projected
total by more than 2 percent. Simply
put, the money is theirs and we are
under oath to return it to them.
Now.
If times have changed, attitudes
have shifted and new scenarios are
ripe for solutions, then we must pick
an appropriate time to debate, poll,
educate and campaign. Then, those
who oppose the kicker will be more
able to more openly present a kicker
re-boot. But not in mid-session when
that steaming heap of millions appears and you struggle to resist putting it back in the state spending pot.
Now is not the time, even if its
for the kids.
Rep. Vic Gilliam, R-Silverton, can be
reached at Rep.VicGilliam@state.or.us or
(503) 986-1418.

10D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Joyce Anne (Thurlwell) Seamster

Cook, Eleanor Julia: 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., Virgil T.


Golden Funeral Service, 605 Commercial St. SE,
Salem.
Zepp, Thomas M.: 11 a.m., Virgil T. Golden Funeral
Service, 605 Commercial St. SE.

Obituaries and Guest Book available online at


www.StatesmanJournal.com
The Statesman Journal Obituary Office is open
Monday - Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Obituaries must be submitted by 1 p.m.
You can reach us by phone at 503-399-6794 ,
email at obituary@statesmanjournal.com, or by going to our
website, www.StatesmanJournal.com/Obituaries

Donald Francis
MacLean
May 28, 2015 - May 30, 2015

William Tracy
Bledsoe

Viewing 6/9, 4-7pm, Fisher


Funeral Home. Service 6/10,
10am, Jefferson Baptist Church.
Graveside service to follow at
Willamette Memorial Park.

ANTONIO TONY
MARENO
June 26, 1922 - May 28, 2015
Private family services will be
held at a later date. Arrangements
by Keizer Funeral Chapel, Keizer,
Oregon.

Lois Elaine (Williams)


Wallace
September 17, 1932 - June 1, 2015
Memorial service arrangements
are pending for this coming July.
Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service is
assisting the family.

Gary Moss

December 1, 1941 - June 4, 2015

A celebration of Garys life will


be 11:AM Saturday, June 13, 2015
at the Grandview Baptist Church
in Oregon City, OR. Assisting is
Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service.

Steven
Joseph Strauch
June 4, 1947 - December 12, 2013
Celebration of Life to be held
June 14, 2015, from 2:00-5:00.
3580 Hillview Dr. SE, Salem.
Please bring a food and story to
share!

Frank
Schweinfurth
September 30, 1926 - June 2, 2015
Services are pending. Frank
is cared for by Howell-EdwardsDoerksen Funeral Home.

Seola Norris

October 23, 1921 - June 4, 2015

No services will be held at her


request. Assisting the family is
Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service.

Robert
D. Bob Christ
February 26, 1934 - June 2, 2015
Services are pending. Assisting
the family is Virgil T. Golden
Funeral Service.

Raymond
Peterson
June 4, 1944 - June 3, 2015
Crown Memorial Center, Salem
is assisting with arrangements.

Sept. 25, 1959 - May 21, 2015

William Tracy Bledsoe


died peacefully in his
sleep at his home on
Thursday, May 21, 2015.
He was born in Portland,
Oregon and spent most of
his life in Salem, Oregon.
He attended South Salem
High School, received
his associates Degree in
Automotive Technology
from
Chemeketa
Community College and
worked at Capitol Toyota
for many years.
Tracy married Teri Ikel
on October 15, 1983 and
they raised two children,
Tyler and Aleesha. Tracy
loved doing activities
with his family such as
boating, camping, and
watching Tyler skateboard
and Aleesha dance or play
soccer.
Tracy is survived by
his wife, Teri; son, Tyler;
daughter, Aleesha; mother,
Fran Bledose; sister, Kim
Koebel (Ken); brother,
Scott Bledsoe; and many
nieces and nephews. He
was preceded in death by
his father, William Bledsoe.
A Celebration of Life will
be held on Friday, June 12,
2015, 4:00 - 7:00 p.m., at
Pringle Hall Community
Center, 606 Church Street
SE. Arrangements are by
City View Funeral Home.

Rosemary Bannan

September 29, 1933 - May 30, 2015

Arrangements
Funeral Chapel.

by

Keizer

185 Memorials & Markers


Belcrest Cemetery
burial plot with liner & vault
in Block 37 close to road. $2900.
Robert (503)538-1736.
Capital Monument Co.
140 Hoyt St. S
503-363-6887

Ernest P Greenwood,MD
December31, 1917 - May 21, 2015

Ernest Pershing Greenwood


was born in Dallas, Oregon,
December 31, 1917 to Wayne
E. and Frances M. Harrington
Greenwood. The family moved to
Salem when he was 4 years old.
Ernie graduated from Salem High
School in 1935 and Willamette
University in 1941. He attended
the University of Oregon Medical
School in Portland, Oregon,
graduating in 1944. Following
an internship at Emanuel Hospital in Portland, Oregon,
he was activated as a First Lieutenant in the U.S. Army
Medical Corps in 1945. Ernie sailed on the Gloucester
Victory to Japan near the end of WWII and was discharged
as a Captain in April, 1947.
Dr. Greenwood was in general practice in Sandy,
Oregon, until returning to Salem in 1951 where he
continued his practice until retiring in June, 1986.
He was a member of the Medical Staff of the Salem
General Hospital and the Salem Memorial Hospital. Dr.
Greenwood was president of the Salem Hospital staff in
1961. He was a member of the American Academy of
General Practice which became the American Academy
of Family Practice and was president of the Oregon
Chapter from 1962 through 1964.
Ernie was a licensed private pilot and president of
the Salem Flying Club in the early 1960s. He loved to
fish and to drive any road as not yet traveled by him.
The family traveled many roads in Oregon searching out
every Post Office to collect their individual postmarks.
He married Florentine R. Mickel of Mt. Angel, Oregon
in 1942. She died in 1988. He married Shirley Price
in 1990. In addition to his wife, he is survived by his
children: Barbara White of Los Gatos, California; Gilbert
(Paula) of Portland, Oregon; Anne Greenwood (Robert
Freund) of Salem; and Charles of Long Beach, California;
eleven grandchildren and 18 great grandchildren. He
was preceded in death by his son, Wayne; his sisters,
Dorothea Greenwood Fravel and Marjorie Greenwood
Tomseth.
A Remembrance of Life will be held on Saturday,
June 20 at 2pm in the Auditorium of Capital Manor, 1955
Dallas Hwy NW, Salem, Oregon. Private inurnment will be
City View Cemetery in Salem.
In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts can be given in
his name to the OHSU School of Medicine White Coat
Fund (WHITECOAT) which helps celebrate, with solemn
recognition, the trust vested by the public in those who
wear the white coat. Contact the OHSU Foundation at
503-228-1730 or mail to 1121 SW Salmon St., Portland,
OR 97205. Or, memorial gifts can be given in his name
to Willamette University for an endowed student
scholarship fund in honor of Olive Dahl. Contact Gift
Planning at 503-370-6546 or mail toWillamette University
attention Lori Hoby 900 State St, Salem OR 97301.

Joyce Seamster, lovingly


known as Sabu, was born in
Elgin, Illinois to Harvey and
Anne (Peterson) Thurlwell. She
was married to Barrett Bick from
1958 to 1961 and then to Hubert
Seamster from 1961 to 1975. She
moved from Illinois to Salem and
also lived in Kent, WA;l Orange
County, CA; Atlanta, GA; Hurst, TX;
Virginia Beach, VA; and Bellevue,
NB, ending up back in Salem in
1975. During her lifetime, she visited Yokosuka, Japan;
Green Bay, WI; San Diego, CA; Carmel, CA;, Beckley,
WV; Washington, DC; Fort Riley, KS; Gaithersburg, MD:
and Cooperstown, NW. Her favorite pastimes included
painting, crossword puzzles, reading, watching any
sporting event there is(!!!), MOVIES, MOVIES & pizza.
Sabus various occupations were cannery nurse; owner
of Breezys Restaurant in Salem; manager/owner of
Winchells Donut Shop, Hurst, TX; stage manager at the
Pentacle Theater in Salem; and home health care, also in
Salem.
Sabu is survived by children Robert Bick III, TamiJoe (Bick) & Mitch Stringer, Preston & Michelle Seamster,
Dana Ruth (Seamster) & Kevin Silbernagel, and Scott
Seamster; 11 grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren
with one due in August.
Services will be held June 12 at the Latter-day Saint
Church, 4550 Lone Oak Rd SE at noon.

Eleanor Agnes Ellie Lembert


October 23, 1914 - May 25, 2015

Eleanor Agnes Ellie Lembert


died peacefully in Sublimity,
Oregon on May 25, 2015. Born
October 23, 1914 in Ontonagon,
Michigan, Eleanor was one of
seven children in the family of
the late Charles and Elizabeth
(Ross) Peltier. She graduated
from Ontonagon High School
and attended Ontonagon County
Normal School. On September 20,
1944, she was united in marriage
to Dr. Glenn Lembert by the Monsignor at Marquette
Universitys Church of the Gesu in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
They enjoyed fifty years of marriage. The Lemberts
relocated to Vancouver, Washington in 1948 where Dr.
Lembert established a pediatric practice and Eleanor was
an artful homemaker and devoted mother. She was an
accomplished seamstress, toile painter and weaver who
also loved to cook and entertain friends and family. She
was a member of St. Josephs Catholic Church for many
years and was active in St. Patricks Womens Auxiliary.
Eleanor and her husband retired to Cascade Head Ranch
on the Oregon coast. She was preceded in death by her
husband, Dr. Glenn Lembert (1994), and by her son-inlaw, Gary Mayes (2006). Also preceding her were her six
siblings, Louise Labyak, Audrey Kerseg, Leo Peltier, Jim
Peltier, Dorothy Slough and Betty Keane. She is survived
by daughter, Lynn Mayes of Salem, and her sons, Michael
Mayes, Gregory (Kathryn) Mayes, and Ryan (Kathy) Mayes;
son, Lon (Gay) Lembert of Salem and their daughters,
Mollie (Jon) Carey, Becky (Wael) Chamseddine, and
Jennifer Millemann; daughter, Christie Lembert of West
Linn, and her daughters, Gretchen Alexander, and Krista
(Werner) Letsch; daughter, Susan (Ralph) Zenier of
Portland, and their children Denise (Brad) Kreuz, and Scott
Zenier; daughter, Elizabeth (Thomas) Manson of Salem,
and their children Michelle (Jedd) Chang, Tyler (Sophia)
Manson, and Lon Manson; 13 great grandchildren and
many nieces and nephews. A private family Celebration
of Life will be held on the Oregon coast. Remembrances
may be made to a charity of your choice. The family
wishes to thank the staff at McKillop Assisted Living in
Sublimity, Senior Helpers and Hospice of the Northwest
for their wonderful care. Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service
is assisting the family.

May 18, 1942 - May 22, 2015

Gary was born to Kathryn and


Floyd McNall on May 18, 1942 in
Salem, OR. He passed into heaven
on May 22, 2015 at the age of 73.
While growing up, Gary
attended Garfield Elementary
School, Keizer Grade School,
Parrish Junior High School
and North Salem High School,
graduating in 1960. He enjoyed
playing C-League baseball and
building soap box racers, among
other things.
For college Gary enrolled in the California School of
Arts and Crafts in Oakland, CA, graduating with a degree
in Graphic Design in 1964. After college he returned to
Salem to start his career as a draftsman for Ernie Fish
Builders. He later operated his own architectural design
business, Central Plan and Design.
In June of 1965, Gary met his future wife, Michele
Mary Manolis. They were married on December 18, 1965.
Their first child, Andrew, was born 10 months later in
October 1966, followed by Mark in June 1968 and their
youngest son, James, in August 1971.
Garys life was filled with many community service
projects and recreational activities. Starting in 1965,
Gary helped boys build soap box derby cars at Capitol
Chevrolet. In the mid 60s and 70s he was a dependable
member of the Miller Brothers Bowling Team. He was a
member of the Salem Homebuilders Association during
this time and joined the Salem Noon Optimist Club in the
70s. He is a past president and life member of the Noon
Optimists.
As his sons were growing up, Garys focus shifted
to activities in which his sons and their friends were
involved. These activities included Little League Baseball,
Cub Scouts, Y-Indian Guides and Boys Club Football.
Soap Box Derby became a renewed interest for Gary
in the late 70s, as he built racers with his sons and their
friends and he served on the Salem Soap Box Derby
Association Board. His friendly and spirited personality
was at its best when he was in the garage designing and
building soap box racers and talking derby.
On February 18, 1986 Gary was born-again and he
was baptized later that year. He was active in Bible Study
Fellowship for 17 years, 14 of which he was a discussion
leader. In 1992 he started a ministry through Prison
Fellowship at Oregon State Penitentiary, remaining
active with the ministry until 2014.
Gary has been an active member of the West Hills
Community Church since 2002. He will be missed there
as a friendly greeter and an asset to the church family.
Gary was a friend to all, often making the first gesture
of friendship with a spirited hello. He always had time to
visit with or assist others. He loved the Lord with all his
heart, and he loved his family, football, camping, fishing
and RVing.
Gary is survived by his wife of 49.5 years, Michele,
his siblings Ric McNall (Ginny) and Tanya Parker, his sons
Andrew (Julie), Mark (Kami Jo) and James (partner Joel)
and his four grandchildren.
A memorial service for Gary will be held on June 12
at 2:00 p.m. at the West Hills Community Church. Gifts in
memory of Gary can be directed to either the West Hills
Community Church Endowment Fund or the Building
Fund at 1650 Brush College Rd NW, Salem, OR 97304.
Assisting the family is Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service.

City View

Visit our totally


redesigned website.
All the practical information
at your fingertips
www.city viewfh.com

Arnold Noel Slack

21 October, 1937 - May 25, 2015

On the morning of May


25, 2015 at approximately 8:13
AM Arnie passed away at home
peacefully in his sleep. 7 weeks
prior he underwent open heart
surgery. Arnie was 77.
Arnold Slack was born in
Ashland, Oregon on October 21,
1937. He was the second child of
six of Edwin and Essie Slack.
Arnold was an honorable man
of strong character. He believed
in family, an honest days work, and being an Oregonian.
His early days with his wife Modeen, who passed in 2002,
and children were spent camping, fishing, hunting and
traveling the great state of Oregon. Although living the
majority of his life in the Willamette Valley he had a great
love of the John Day Valley and Aldrich Mountain on the
east side. For many years he and his family would spend
a week there on their coveted Hunting Trip.
In 1987 Arnold and Modeen purchased his last
residence, the Slack Playce, his own little piece of heaven.
Many, many family gatherings have been spent on this
beautiful piece of Oregon. Modeens celebration of Life
took place in 2002, And now at the very same site in May
2015 we celebrated the life of Arnold.
Arnold loved fishing, hunting, pinochle, cribbage,
football (big 49ers fan), crossword puzzles, Jeopardy
and Nascar. He also loved working on the Playce with
his family. There were always Kids, Grandkids and Great
Grandkids there mowing, cutting, planting, and loving
the land.
During his working years Arnie was a Surveyor for
the Oregon State Parks and Highway Division. This is
where he truly grew to love this great state of Oregon
and a wonderful respect for its beauty. At the ripe old
age of 18 he picked up his first Transit and found his true
calling. After 34 years he put down his Theodolite and
was proud of his accomplishment. Arnie had an extreme
work ethic, he gave his all to his job, his crew and his
commitment to perfection. He settled for nothing less
in himself, and we all respected him significantly for that.
His ethics carried on into all facets of his life and that of
his children. Honesty, integrity and compassion were his
greatest gifts to his family.
Arnold raised 3 military men and 2 loving daughters.
Survived by his sons Jack Martin, Gerald Slack, Jeffery
Slack, and daughters Jill Magness, and Jan Sykes. He
has also left upon this earth the light of his life Sunny
Anderson, who gave him such great happiness and
harmony in the later years. Most important we cannot
forget his true joy; the 12 Grandchildren and 21 Great
Grandchildren who could always make Papa smile.

Funeral Home
Cemetery
& Crematorium

Family owned & operated since 1893

503-363-8652
390 Hoyt St S Salem

Above Historic Pioneer Cemetery

OR-0000362426

Salem
412 Lancaster Drive NE
Salem, OR 97301
(503) 581-6265

Low Cost
Cremation & Burial
Funerals & Memorials
Simple Direct Cremation $495
Simple Direct Burial $550
Traditional Funeral $1975
Discount Priced Caskets, Urns
And Other Memorial Items

Privately owned cremation facility


A Family Owned Oregon Business

www.ANewTradition.com
25

We listen.
We care.
We have a variety of urns
for scattering, placement
in a cemetery or a home.
Locally owned since 1949, we provide
cremations from direct cremation to
memorial and celebration of life services.

25

Funerals Today

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Gary Keith McNall

September 30, 1937 April 27, 2015

akleaf
O
Crematory

VIRGIL T. GOLDEN FUNERAL SERVICE

605 Commercial St SE, Salem

vtgolden.com

503-364-2257

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

11D

MARRIAGES
The following are marriage
license applications received
between May 29 and June 5. For
more, go to StatesmanJournal.com/Records.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

Marion County
applications
Eleazar Perez Espino, 25,
Salem, and Norma Cruz Vega,
20, Salem.
Michael Howard Hale, 39,
Salem, and Olivia Irene Baker,

29, Salem.

Redmond, Washington.

Belimar Jnjie Wonne, 21,


Keizer, and Sultana Senight,
20, Keizer.

Aleksandr Inzhirov, 21, Woodburn, and Esfir V Petrashishena, 21, Woodburn.

Hilario Castellanos Martinez,


42, Vancouver, Washington, and
Isabel Martinez Leyva, 38,

Jared Lee Barnett, 39, Salem,


and Aileen Faith Adams, 39,
Salem.

Keith Tyler Kreutzer, 26,


Silverton, and Bethany Paige
Ross, 22, Silverton.
Anthony Joseph Whisman,
56, Turner, and Kelli Ann Perkins, 56, Turner.
Jarek Adam Johnson, 22,
Provo, Utah, and Brittney Ann
Hewson, 23, Salem.
Marc James Boitz, 35, Salem,
and Tiffany Suzanne Kennedy, 27, Salem.

Allen Al Floyd Reed

John McDaniel

January 23, 1919 - May 27, 2015

May 17, 1928 - June 3, 2015

Ennis, MT - AllenAlReed was


born in Houston, TX to Arthur and
Odelia Reed. He was the 5th child
of 8. Al joined the Army 2/8/44
serving as Private 1st Class until
12/20/1945. He served during
WWII running a fuel supply truck.
His service included fighting in
the Battle of the Bulge. Al met the
love of his life Ethel Abbott Reed
in Lake Charles, La. They were
married on July 13, 1946 and only
her passing on 5/25/2005 separated them. They moved
to Salem in 1947 where Al built a house to raise his family
in. They raised four children: Floyd, Nancy, Ike, and Rick.
Al was a mechanic and retired from Cascade Motors. He
had a love of the outdoors which included hunting and
fishing. He was preceded in death by his parents, wife
Ethel, & daughter Nancy. He is survived by sons Floyd
(Karen), Ike (Libby), Rick (Gina), son-in-law Tom LeMieux;
grandchildren Kelly, Amy (Kevin Martin ), Matt, Juli (Frank
Stephenson), Jake (Summer), Matt (Amy), & Kathleen
(Chris); great-grandchildren Kathryn, Shane, Kelly, Sarah,
TJ, Emily (Garrett), & Blu; great-great-grandchildren
Gabriel, Katelyn, Kaleb, Shawn, Jordan, & Isaac; greatgreat-great child Zack. Services will be held at Willamette
National Cemetery Monday, June 8 @ 10:00 am.

SALEMJohn McDaniel Jr., 87, passed on from


friends and family June 3, from natural causes. Join
family and friends as they say their final goodbyes on
Friday, June 12, 2015 at 1 p.m. at City View Funeral Home
& Cemetery, 390 Hoyt St. S., Salem. A reception will
followplace and time to be announced. Friends and
family can also share a special viewing of John on June
11th from 1 to 7 p.m., also at City View. Call 503-363-8652
for details.

Julia Norell McLaran Much


December 1, 1923 May 19, 2015

Julia Norell McLaran Much was born December 1,


1923 in Dallas, Texas, to Shelby Noble McLaran and Myrtle
Sawyer McLaran. After graduating from San Jacinto High
School in Houston, Texas, in 1941, she attended Business
College and worked for several law firms in Houston.
She married Roy D. Much in Bellaire, Texas, in 1945. They
had no children. Roys jobs took them to various cities in
Texas, Oregon and finally Tucson, Arizona, where Julia
worked in the Pima County Court as a Court Clerk until
her retirement. Julia and Roy divorced in 1970. Julia then
moved to Salem, Oregon, in 1989, returning to Tucson in
2004.
Julia will be remembered for her volunteerism at
her churches and other community organizations. She
had a gifted talent in needlepoint and was still active in
her guild until her death. She was also a member of the
Daughters of the Nile where she served as Past Queen.
In 2012 Julia suffered a stroke and moved back to
Oregon to be closer to her brother. She died peacefully
on May 19, 2015 after suffering another debilitating
stroke May 3.
Julia was preceded in death by her younger sister,
Tena McLaran Wahrmund, and is survived by her
brother Chuck McLaran, many nieces and nephews and
numerous great nieces and nephews. Her family and
friends will miss her dearly.
Julia left her body for science at OHSU, Portland,
OR. A celebration is planned at the United Presbyterian
Church, 330 5th Avenue SW, Albany, OR on Saturday,
June 27th at 3:00 pm. In lieu of flowers, please donate to
the charity of your choice in Julias name.

Raymond Dale Oelschlager


November 27, 1946 May 18, 2015

Raymond Dale Oelschlager


was lifted by the angels to his
Lord on May 15, 2015 from cancer.
At his constant vigil was his loving
and devoted wife Joan.
Raymond was born in Acme,
Wyoming. He served in the U.S.
Air Force from 1966 to 1969 with
an honorable discharge and was
a Viet Nam veteran with the 92nd
SAC. He excelled in sports during
his high school years; loved
hunting and fishing; and was an avid lover of nature and
wildlife. He worked for Pumilite Bldg Supplies as a truck
driver for 44 years. He was known as the gentle giant
to all who worked with him and to those he delivered
supplies in his PB 109. He always had a smile and his
favorite saying was and stuff like that there. Raymond
was a loving, kind and joyful person and will be missed
by all who loved him. Raymond married Joan on October
1, 1972 in Salem and their love on earth lasted 42 years
but our love will remain forever until we meet again. (To
the love of my life, close together or far apart you will be
forever in my heart my love until time is no more, your
loving wife Joan).
He is survived by his wife, Joan, his sister in Sheridan,
Wyo (Karen and Leroy Shell and other relatives including
a nephew in Washington) and his sister-in-law in Hungry
Horse, Montana (K.J. and Rick Vansickle). A celebration
of life will be held Saturday, June 13, 2015 at 2:00 pm at
Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service. Contributions may be
made to the Disabled Veterans or a contribution of your
choice.

Jan Miller

October 22, 1941 - February 17, 2015

Please join us for a


Celebration of Life honoring Jan
Miller at 2pm on Tuesday June
23rd, 2015 at the Lincoln City
Cultural Center located at 540 NE
Hwy 101 Linoln City OR.
We look forward to sharing
stories, pictures and memories
of a special woman loved by her
family and friends.

George William Hauswirth


November 21, 1942 - May 27, 2015

George W. Hauswirth, often


referred to as a Renaissance
Man because of his many
and varied talents, was born
to George W. Hauswirth II and
Annis B. Hauswirth in Coronado,
CA November 21, 1942. George
passed away May 27, 2015 at the
Edward F. Tokarski Hospice Home
in West Salem.
George was an artist working
in a variety of media including
sculpture, jewelry, paint and mixed media. He and his
wife Brenda owned BreGe Designs for 32 years and
operated the Silver Creek Gallery in downtown Silverton
for seven years. They were awarded the Silverton
Business of the Year in 2003 and were instrumental in
developing a number of art-related events, including the
annual Silverton Fine Arts Festival, which began in 2001.
George was diagnosed with Parkinsons Disease
eight years ago, but continued working in his art studio
until just weeks before his death. He loved food and was
well known for the desserts he served at dinners and
open houses for family, friends and clients. Motorcycling
was also a passion. He and Brenda would take rides to
clear their minds from the rigors of running a business,
and they also took longer road trips.
George proudly served in the United States Air Force
in Alaska and Turkey during the 1960s.
George is survived by his beloved wife Brenda of 32
years, sons Keith and Jacob Hauswirth, brother Dennis
Hauswirth, and many friends and family whom he loved,
and who loved him.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in Georges
memory to the Edward F. Tokarski Home. A celebration
of Georges life is being planned for this summer and will
be announced on a website for BreGe in the near future.

John Leroy Sanford

January 8, 2015 - May 23, 2015

John was born and raised in


Kalispell, Montana. The family
moved to Spokane, Washington
where he graduated from John
Rogers High School. The family
moved to Salem in 1949.
He served in the US Marine
Corp for a short time ranking
Corporal upon discharge. In 1951
he joined the US Army serving in
the Korean War, receiving several
medals for his service.
After his discharge, he entered a trade school for
auto body repair. Once completed, he moved back to
Salem to join the family-owned business, Sandys Garage,
volunteering at Keizer Fire Department as Deputy Chief,
Arson Investigator and EMT. He worked for Allstate
Insurance Company as a property Field Adjuster from
1964 until his retirement in 1987.
John was one of five charter members of the
Keizer Elks Lodge. They got the Lodge up and running
successfully.
Some of his hobbies were gardening, travel, square
dancing, yet he truly enjoyed restoring old cars, home
repair, and his yearly elk hunting adventures with his
sons and friends.
John was preceded in death by his brother, Duane,
and his oldest son, James Robert Sanford (Bob) from
Texas. He is survived by his wife Norma, brother Glenn,
sister Laura, and his children John E. (Jack) Sanford of
Salem, Jean Brooks of Salem and Jane Fitzgerald of
Rutland, Massachusetts, and their mother Jo Ann, 9
grandchildren, and 12 great grandchildren.
Clarice E. Woods
A Celebration of his life will be held at Keizer Elks
Cricket
February 25, 1940 - June 2, 2015
Lodge on June 11, 2015, at 3:00 pm.
Cricket went to dance with the angels on June 2nd
In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the
with her husband of 42 years by her side. She was born Alzheimers Association.
in Oroville, Ca in 1940 to her father Walter Leon Bradish
Arrangements by Keizer Funeral Chapel
and mother Aileen Bradish. She was raised by her
beloved Grandmother Louisa E. Kinney and Uncle Clyde
W. Kinney, all of whom preceded her in death as well as
her Brother Raymond and Sister Jean. She is survived
by her loving husband Frank D Woods, her 11 children,
27 grandchildren,18 great-grandchildren (+1 on the
way) as well as her 4 siblings. She was also, in a way a
surrogatemother and grandmother to grown friends of
her children and grandchildren providing love, direction,
and at times a home that they needed. Everyone who
knew Cricket called her Sis, Mom, or Gramma.
She will be sorely missed.
Memorial Service will be held at Virgil T. Golden
Funeral Service on June 13th at 11am open to all who
wish to attend.
Special thanks to the caring staff at OHSU Knight
Institute for their valiant effort to rescue her from the
cancer that consumed her. In lieu of flowers or attendance
memorial GIFT may be made to OHSU Cancer Research
at www.OHSU.edu

Brandon Edward Miller, 26,


Salem, and Irene Rebecca
Perez, 28, Salem.
Peter Thomas Chamberlain,
23, Cambridge, Massachussetts,
and Shannon Marie Hagan,
23, Cambridge, Massachussetts.
Brian Jonathan Cartier, 33,
Salem, and Sandra Christine
Parpart, 33, Salem.
Patrick Mitchell Bullard, 25,
Salem, and Tracey Michelle
Adarr, 44, Salem.
Jesse Juarez, 22, Woodburn,
and Yesenia Marie Sanchez,
23, Woodburn.
Nathan Jeremy Mote, 26,
Salem, and Christina Marie
Miller, 23, Salem.
Chad Jon Montgomery, 34,
Salem, and Jennifer Renee
Bobb, 39, Salem.
Amdrew Vincent Nicholas, 29,
Salem, and Asheley Lynae
Petty, 26, Salem.
Cameron John Forrette, 36,
Salem, and Valery Barbara
Reeder, 43, Albany.
Andrew Don Goad, 29, Salem,
and Melody Grayce Martin,
30, Salem.
Timothy Eric Weltz, 44, Keizer,
and Cheri Gail Hawkins, 48,
Keizer.
Jesse Donato Galindo, 24,
Salem, and Aide OrdinolaCastro, 22, Salem.
Matthew James Kaufman, 32,
Salem, and Gina Margaret
Stadeli, 24, Silverton.
Cort Wesley Peetz, 19, Salem,
and Megan Alexandra Pem-

ble, 19, Gervais.


Tyler James Church, 22, Salem,
and Jennifer Leann Straw, 27,
Scio.
Jacob Michael Tylor Lambert,
18, Silver Lake, and Suzlinda
Latoya DelaCruz, 19, Salem.
Salena Ann Linn, 40, Monmouth, Mendie Christine
Teibel, 41, Monmouth.
Joshua Jacob Humphreys, 20,
Salem, and Isabella Ann Rayhorn, 20, Salem.
Stanley Wayne Darrow
Young, 25, Aumsville, and
Ashley Rose Sterrett, 21,
Aumsville.
Michael Anthony Angon, 28,
Salem, and Stacie Lynn Johnson, 30, Salem.
Julio Cesar Molina Velazquez,
26, Salem, and Melissa Marie
Garcia, 32, Salem.
Seth Xavier West, 22, Monmouth, and Jessie Noel Rasmussen, 20, Salem.
Aaron Matthew Bishop, 40,
Salem, and Sophia EscuderoLopez, 30, Salem.
Raymond Scott White, 30,
Salem, and Meagan Lorine
Sweeten, 33, Salem.
Daniel Reed Mosgrove, 33,
Fayetteville, North Carolina, and
Lori Allison Burns, 29, Fayetteville, North Carolina.
Elizabeth Ahe Breyman, 24,
Salem, and Samantha Kate
Garcia, 25, Salem.
Travis Weston Williams, 28,
Salem, and Ashley Elizabeth
Navarro, 27, Salem.
Mihail K Shadrin, 23, Salem,
and Ashley Danielle Burton,
23, Salem.
Nicholas Allan Schneider, 27,
Salem, and Giselle Pauline
Mirabent, 23, Salem.
Reagan William Knopp, 19,
Bend, and Caitlynn Sue Dahlquist, 21, Salem.
Rogelio Rodriguez Jr., 25,
Hubbard, and Elizabeth Marie
Egli, 26, Hubbard.

DIVORCES
The following are divorces
received between May 29 and
June 4. For more, go to States
manJournal.com/Records.

MARION COUNTY
CIRCUIT COURT
Divorce cases filed
Anne Williamson and Ricky
Williamson; Manuel Vazquez
and Starlene Vazquez; Gary
James Roshak and Julie Ann
Roshak; Marillyn Lulay and John
Lulay; Katherine Alice Pike and
Jeremy Charles Pike; Margaret
Mueller and Michael Mueller;
Aurora Gaspar Gaspar and Felix
Arango Lazaro; Elesa Rene Doll
and Eugene Thomas Doll; Mazie
Marie Silvius and Aaron Lloyd
Silvius; Alicia Flores Arias and
Raul Vallejo Daniel; Terry Ray
Kilifian and Jackie V. Kilfian;
Bryan O. Fletcher and Wendy M.
Fletcher; Steven Benjamin Erb
and Lisa Annette Erb; Kirsten
Lee Collins and Richard Duncan
Collins; Maria F. Agustin-Vallejo

and Marin Morales Gergorio;


Suzanne M. Deschamps and
Michael C. Fry; Dawn Marie
Gamble and Joshua Dave Gamble; Carlos E. Gonzalez and Sara
E. Gonzalez; Juan Mendoza
Mendoza de la Rosa and Kristina
B. Mendoza de la Rosa; Maria
Ann Carrasco and Josafat G.
Carrasco; Leah Mitchell and Kris
Mitchell; Josue Vargas and
Emma Vargas; LaRae Joy Alcaraz
and Sylvester Enrique Alcaraz;
Tamara Lynn Owen and Edward
Allen Allen Owen; Carol Jeanne
Stoner and Jerry Ellis Stoner, Jr.;
Ashley E. Mountain and Ryan D.
Mountain; Rhonda Elizabeth
Hutchinson and Jonathan Ray
Hutchinson; Jill Mindora Sorensen and Robert Arnold Sorenson
II; Pegi Sue Heinz and Jeffery
Dean Heinz; Benito Rojas Gasca
and Marisol Rojas Gasca; Keith E.
Goede and Giselle R. Goede;
Sara Desmarais-McBurnett and
Julian O. Desmarais-McBurnett;
William Delos Peckenpaugh and
Trevor Dwight Dean-Peckenpaugh.

BIRTHS
The following are birth announcements received May
30-June 5. For more, go to
StatesmanJournal.com/
Records.

Sauseda, Ryan Anthony: To


Elizabeth Aldis and Santano
Sauseda, Salem, 6 pounds 12
ounces, June 2.

SALEM HOSPITAL

Smith, Hallee Edna: To Kaitlyn


and Josh Smith, Stayton, 8
pounds 3 ounces, May 29.

Butler, Easton Scott: To Melissa and Scott Butler, Sublimity, 7


pounds 3 ounces, June 2.

Turnipseed, Riley James: To


Heather and Michael Turnipseed, Salem, 7 pounds, May 30.

Fech, Zaedyn Bodhi: To Christian and Anthony Fech, Keizer, 8


pounds, June 1.

White, Maverick John: To


Margaret and Cody White,
Salem, 7 pounds 8 ounces, June
2.

Gallaher, Carter Liam: To


Monique and Spenser Gallaher,
Keizer, 9 pounds 4 ounces, May
31.
Howell, Conor Howard Victor: To Arika and Michael Howell, Salem, 8 pounds 4 ounces,
May 27.
Komp, River Adriel: To Rebekah McNemee-Komp and Andrew Komp, Salem, 6 pounds 7
ounces, June 2.
Leon, Ethan Fox: To Mindy
Gaines and Jordan Leon, Albany,
7 pounds 8 ounces, May 31.
Lopez, Calliah Liyahna: To
Andrea and Jose Lopez, Salem, 6
pounds 12 ounces, June 3.
Lovaas, Elly Dawn: To Krista
and Harley Lovaas, Salem, 7
pounds 12 ounces, May 29.
Maldonado Hernandez, Ian
Rafael: To Nadia and Michelle
Maldonado Hernandez, Salem, 6
pounds 6 ounces, May 26.
Maldonado Hernandez, Ivan
Andrew: To Nadia and Michelle
Maldonado Hernandez, Salem, 7
pounds 1 ounce, May 26.
Mikkelsen, Ivy Mae: To Melissa
and Justin Mikkelsen, Salem, 8
pounds 4 ounces, May 31.
Rachelur, Anisia Mariana: To
Lina Ponun and William Rachelur, Salem, 6 pounds 6 ounces,
June 1.
Rooke, Sofia Jaycee-Lynn: To
Cassandra and James Rooke,
Monmouth, 7 pounds 2 ounces,
May 28.

Woolery, Maggie Grace: To


Jennifer and Jason Woolery,
Salem, 7 pounds 9 ounces, June
1.

SILVERTON HOSPITAL
Barrera Pia, Kaylee Rubi: To
Maria and Antonio Barrera,
Salem, 9 pounds, May 19.
Bickle, Rowan Alexia: To
McKenzie and Nathan Bickle,
Salem, 5 pounds 10 ounces, May
15.
Curtis, Karter James: To Dahlia
and Joshua Curtis, Aumsville, 7
pounds 9 ounces, May 14.
Durham, Dahlia Moon: To
Brandi McMahan and Robert
Durham, Salem, 7 pounds 6
ounces, May 21.
Garcia Prez, Denisse: To
Maria Prez and Antonio Garcia,
Salem, 5 pounds 15 ounces, May
27.
Henry, Malachi Alan: To Katie
and Noel Henry, Salem, 8
pounds 1 ounce, May 27.
Hodges, Eva Juliet: To Rebecca
and Matthew Hodges, Salem, 8
pounds 7 ounces, May 17.
Zach, Josephina Frances
Mariel: To Catherine and Weston Zach, Silverton, 6 pounds 13
ounces, May 16.
Ortiz Cardoza, Griselda: To
Griselda Cardoza and Yony
Ortiz, Salem, 8 pounds 0 ounces,
May 15.

12D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

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DUII CONVICTIONS
The following are DUII convictions received June 1. For more,
go to StatesmanJournal.com/
Records.

Marion.

April 27, Marion.

Briggs, Donald Lee: 49, 1999


Jansen Way, Woodburn, April
28, Beaverton.

Johnson, Shannon David: 52,


4802 Skyline Road S, Salem,
April 29, Marion.

UNDER THE
INFLUENCE

Brumley, Kevin Lynn: 51, 141 S


17th St., Independence, April 29,
Polk.

Longshore, Kenneth Minor:


35, 233 Gwinn St. W, Salem, May
5, Polk.

The following residents of


Marion and Polk counties have
been convicted of driving under
the influence of intoxicants,
according to records provided by
the state Driver and Motor
Vehicle Services Division. Included are the defendants
name, age, address, date of
conviction and the court.

Damewood, Jenny Marie: 25,


2397 Coral Ave. NE, Salem, April
29, Marion.

Moreno, Marcos Nasario: 42,


553 SE 6th Ave., Mill City, April
22, Marion.

Garcia Ascencio, Joshua: 31,


300 S Evergreen Road, Woodburn, April 24, Marion.

Morris Jr., Robert Lee: 43, 4124


Indigo Ct. NE, Salem, April 24,
Lincoln.

Garcia, Omar: 36, 1274 5th St.,


Woodburn, April 24, Marion.

Odaniel, Katherine Lynette:


56, 4882 Lancaster Drive NE,
Salem, May 1, Marion.

Ibarra Ramos, Arturo: 43,


10122 Liberty Road S, Salem,

Baker, Gene Warner: 68, 4823


Herrin Road NE, Salem, April 28,

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
A public meeting of the Labish Village Sewage & Drainage District will be held on June 15, 2015 at 2:00 P.M. in the Silverton
Conference Rm, Marion County Courthouse Square, 555 Court Street NE, Salem, Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss
the budget for the scal year beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the Labish Village Sewage & Drainage District Budget Committee.
A summary of the budget is presented below. A copy of the budget may be inspected or obtained at Marion County Public Works,
5155 Silverton Road NE, Salem, Oregon between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or prepared on a basis of accounting that is
the same as used the preceding year.
Contact: Alan Haley

Telephone: 503-588-5084

Approved Budget
Next Year 2015-16
50,835
6,900
185
57,920

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION


2,393
0

12,383
50,835

2,905
55,015

53,833
56,226

0
63,218

0
57,920

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES (FTE) BY


ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM
Name of Organizational Unit or Program
FTE for that unit or program
Total Requirements
0
0
Total FTE
0
0

0
0

Saldana, David: 18, 1245 Park

Silveira, John Joseph: 28, 1890


Rees Hill Road SE, Salem, April
28, Springfield.
Solis Morales, Daniel Alejandro: 24, 4627 Adobe St. SE,
Salem, April 30, Marion.
Sunderman, Adam Glen: 34,
461 High St. N, Monmouth, April
23, Dallas.
Swanson, Michael Ray: 67,
4730 Auburn Ave. NE, Salem,
April 24, Marion.
Torrez, Zachariah James: 24,
1514 Wedgewood Place, Stayton, April 28, Marion.
Walker, Everett Lavan: 33,
15790 Ellendale Road, Dallas,
April 27, Multnomah.
Yarnell, Andrea Michelle: 32,
792 Mimosa St. S, Salem, April
24, Marion.

COURT RECORDS
The following are new complaints and foreclosures received
between May 29 and June 4. For
more, go to StatesmanJour
nal.com/Records.

MARION COUNTY
CIRCUIT COURT
Meadowbrook, LLC vs. Oregon
Cascade Plumbing and Heating,
Inc., Hollabaugh Bros & Associates, Inc., Zoeller Pump Company, LLC.
First Financial Investment Fund
V, LLC vs. Christine Thomas.
First Financial Investment Fund
V, LLC vs. Yolanda Ocegueda.

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
A public meeting of the Brooks Community Service District will be held on June 15, 2015 at 2:00 P.M. in the Silverton Conference Rm,
Marion County Courthouse Square, 555 Court Street NE, Salem, Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for
the scal year beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the Brooks Community Service District Budget Committee. A summary of the
budget is presented below. A COPY OF THE BUDGET MAY BE INSPECTED OR OBTAINED AT Marion County Public Works, 5155
Silverton Road NE, Salem, Oregon between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or prepared on a basis of accounting that is the
same as used the preceding year.
Telephone: 503-588-5084

Rydholm, Michael Andrew:


43, 8800 Clow Corner Road,
Independence, April 9, Polk.

New complaints

STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN ACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING


The Labish Village Service District has no Property Tax Levies and no Indebteness.
Statesman Journal June 7, 2015
OR-0000363509

Contact: Alan Haley

Plata, Sergio Romero: 23, 3292


Felina Ave. NE, Salem, April 24,
Marion.

Sepulveda, Marcos Antonio:


28, 4078 Liberty Road S, Salem,
April 9, Marion.

Email: ahaley@co.marion.or.us

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES


TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS
Actual Amount
Adopted Budget
2013-14
This Year 2014-15
Beginning Fund Balance/Net Working Capital
48,702
53,380
Fees, Licenses, Permits, Fines, Assessments
& Other Service Charges
7,237
9,558
Investment Earnings
287
280
Total Resources
56,226
63,218

Materials and Services


Contingencies
Unappropriated Ending Balance and Reserved
for Future Expenditure
Total Requirements

Perez Martinez, Laurentino


Raul: 56, 1054 Comstock Way,
Woodburn, April 24, Marion.

Ave., Woodburn, April 30,


Marion.

Email: ahaley@co.marion.or.us

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES


Actual Amount
Adopted Budget
2013-14
This Year 2014-15
Beginning Fund Balance/Net Working Capital
287,934
285,842
Fees, Licenses, Permits, Fines, Assessments &
Other Service Charges
263,523
266,245
Investment Earnings
1,216
1,100
All Other Resources Except Current Year Property Taxes
10
0
Total Resources
552,684
553,187
TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION


Materials and Services
267,530
250,275
Capital Outlay
0
50,164
Contingencies
0
99,748
Unappropriated Ending Balance and Reserved
for Future Expenditure
285,154
153,000
Total Requirements
552,684
553,187

Approved Budget
Next Year 2015-16
270,000
263,300
1,100
0
534,400
274,280
50,000
48,120
162,000
534,400

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES (FTE) BY


ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM
Name of Organizational Unit or Program
FTE for that unit or program
Total Requirements
0
0
Total FTE
0
0

0
0

STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN ACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING


The Brooks Community Service District has no Property Tax Levies and no Indebteness.
Statesman Journal June 7, 2015
OR-0000363500

NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING


A public meeting of the East Salem Service District will be held on June 15, 2015 at 2:00 P.M. in the Silverton Conference Rm,
Marion County Courthouse Square, 555 Court Street NE, Salem, Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for
the scal year beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the East Salem Service District Budget Committee. A summary of the budget
is presented below. A COPY OF THE BUDGET MAY BE INSPECTED OR OBTAINED AT Marion County Public Works, 5155 Silverton
Road NE, Salem, Oregon between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or prepared on a basis of accounting that is the same as
used the preceding year.
Contact: Alan Haley
Telephone: 503-588-5084
Email: ahaley@co.marion.or.us

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION


Materials and Services
343,735
606,213
Capital Outlay
0
420,000
Contingencies
0
200,000
Fund transfers
0
0
Unappropriated Ending Balance and Reserved
for Future Expenditure
1,175,766
516,138
Total Requirements
1,519,501
1,742,351

Approved Budget
Next Year 2015-16
1,116,000
960,550
4,000
0
2,080,550
887,095
150,000
130,000
78,000
835,455
2,080,550

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES (FTE) BY


ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM
Name of Organizational Unit or Program
FTE for that unit or program
Total Requirements
0
0
Total FTE
0
0

0
0

STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN ACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING


The East Salem Service District has no Property Tax Levies and no Indebteness.
Statesman Journal June 7, 2015
25

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
A public meeting of the Fargo Interchange Service District will be held on June 15, 2015 at 2:00 P.M. in the Silverton Conference Rm,
Marion County Courthouse Square, 555 Court Street NE, Salem, Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for
the scal year beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the Fargo Interchange Service District Budget Committee. A summary of the
budget is presented below. A copy of the budget may be inspected or obtained at Marion County Public Works, 5155 Silverton Road
NE, Salem, Oregon between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or prepared on a basis of accounting that is the same as used the
preceding year.
Contact: Alan Haley
Telephone: 503-588-5084
Email: ahaley@co.marion.or.us
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES
Actual Amount
Adopted Budget
2013-14
This Year 2014-15
Beginning Fund Ballance/Net Working Capital
1,070,449
1,118,078
Fees, Licenses, Permits, Fines, Assessments &
Other Service Charges
444,823
620,673
Investment Earnings
4,229
3,600
All Other Resources Except Current Year Property Taxes
0
0
Total Resources
1,519,501
1,742,351
TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION


Materials and Services
343,735
606,213
Capital Outlay
0
420,000
Contingencies
0
200,000
Fund transfers
0
0
Unappropriated Ending Balance and
Reserved for Future Expenditure
1,175,766
516,138
Total Requirements
1,519,501
1,742,351

First Financial Investment Fund


V, LLC vs. Randy Ross.
Midland Funding LLC vs. Ignacio
Pavon.
Autovest, LLC vs. Edgar Gallegos-Funes.
Capital One Bank (USA), N.A. vs.
Ben Protasio.
Capital One Bank (USA), N.A. vs.
Stacy R. Nelson.
Capital One Bank (USA), N.A. vs.
Tanya Lochridge.
Carina Arechiga vs. Lee Mendenhall.

Approved Budget
Next Year 2015-16
1,116,000
960,550
4,000
0
2,080,550
887,095
150,000
130,000
78,000
835,455
2,080,550

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES (FTE) BY


ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM
Name of Organizational Unit or Program
FTE for that unit or program
Total Requirements
0
0
Total FTE
0
0

Columbia Collection Service Inc.


vs. Cindy A. Conklin, Kelly Conklin.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs.
Steven Hinkle.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs.
Travis L. Berry.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs. Cody
Chrisman.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs.
Dean Yeager.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs.
Robin Talbert.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs. John
Sharp.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs. Rene
Reyes.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs. Lisa
N. Quintanilla.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs.
William Petersen.
Metro Area Collection Service vs.
Jacob L. Pierce.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs.
Miguel A. Mendez.
Metro Area Collection Service vs.
Jacob C. Lee.
Metro Area Collection Service vs.
Kimberly C. Rosales.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs.
Debra K. McClaughry.

Anita L. Cusimano vs. Brian


Rybloom, Lisa Rybloom, Jeffrey
A. Trautman, LJ Empire LLC.

Metro Area Collection Service vs.


Crystal Cassandra Sanchez, Also
Known As Crystal Cassandra
Hernandez.

Somerset Apts. vs. Montrez


Bellfield, et al.

Metro Area Collection Service vs.


Theresa M. Mikel.

Lee Street Properties vs. Dillon


Page, Tara Faye Corey, et al.

Valley Credit Service Inc. vs. Jodi


K. Long, Also Known As Jodi K.
Plocher.

Somerset Apts. vs. Annie Bell, et


al.
Elaine D. Smith-Koop vs. Fernando E. Gapasin.
Elaine D. Smith-Koop vs. Lacey
Anne Sowers.

PUBLIC NOTICE

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES


TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS
Actual Amount
Adopted Budget
2013-14
This Year 2014-15
Beginning Fund Balance/Net Working Capital
1,070,449
1,118,078
Fees, Licenses, Permits, Fines, Assessments &
Other Service Charges
444,823
620,673
Investment Earnings
4,229
3,600
All Other Resources Except Current Year Property Taxes
0
0
Total Resources
1,519,501
1,742,351

First Financial Investment Fund


V, LLC vs. Laurie Vasquez.

vs. Miladi Edelmira Aviles.

Elaine D. Smith-Koop vs. Deeda


Marie Church.
Columbia Collection Service Inc.
vs. Connie Y. Westrick.
Columbia Collection Service Inc.
vs. Alisha Marie Leonard.
Columbia Collection Service Inc.
vs. Kristina R. McGinnis.
Columbia Collection Service Inc.
vs. Spencer Howell Rutkowski,
Nadia Rutkowski.
Columbia Collection Service Inc.
vs. Michelle Suzanne Evans,
Michael Stephen Evans.
Columbia Collection Service Inc.
vs. Joel A. Albrecht, Siria Albrecht.
Columbia Collection Service Inc.
vs. Robert Thomas Hegeman,
Brenda Michelle Hegeman.

Metro Area Collection Service vs.


Miguel L. Reyes.
Valley Credit Service Inc. vs.
Puaolena Kaaihue-Evangelista.
Metro Area Collection Service vs.
Tracy L. Orlandi.
Metro Area Collection Service vs.
Melody D. Valdez.
Metro Area Collection Service vs.
Ryan C. Parnell.
Metro Area Collection Service vs.
Monica C. Wade.
Metro Area Collection Service vs.
Jesus Paz-Lopez.
Metro Area Collection Service vs.
Emiterio Y. Molina Carranza,
Also Known As Emiterio Molina.
Xochitl Sierra Cuesta vs. Farmers
Insurance Company of Oregon.
Wilbur-Ellis Company vs. Roy L.
Lingenfelter.
Ernest Robert Hernandez vs. J.
Premo.
Arrow Property Management vs.
Nichole Michelle Barger, et al.

Columbia Collection Service Inc.


vs. Sarah Jean Keeney.

Leslie Derksen, Nicholas Derksen


vs. Olivia Mowell, Adam Mowell.

Columbia Collection Service Inc.


vs. Maria Leon.

Frances M. Loucks vs. Kyle Lewyn


Frank Cutten.

Columbia Collection Service Inc.


vs. Luz Elena Garibay.

Garry Whalen vs. Clint Newby, et


al.

Columbia Collection Service Inc.


vs. Meagan Nicole Jackson.

Diane Dezee vs. Timothy Charles


Massey, et al.

Columbia Collection Service Inc.


vs. Gabriel Perez Garcia.

Kerley Properties LLC, Doing


Business As Catalina Apartments
vs. Erno Eram, Judy Eram.

Columbia Collection Service Inc.

PUBLIC NOTICES
POLICY
Public Notices are available online at www.StatesmanJournal.com.
The Statesman Journal Legal Clerk is available Monday - Friday from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. You can reach them by phone at 503-399-6789. In order
to receive a quote for a public notice you must E-mail your copy to
SJLegals@StatesmanJournal.com, and our Legal Clerk will return an
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LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICE DEADLINES
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Monday publication deadlines the Thursday prior
Tuesday publication deadlines the Friday prior
Wednesday publication deadlines the Monday prior
Thursday publication deadlines the Tuesday prior
Friday publication deadlines the Wednesday prior
Saturday publication deadlines the Thursday prior
Sunday publication deadlines the Thursday prior

LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICE RATES

0
0

STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN ACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING


The East Salem Service District has no Property Tax Levies and no Indebteness.
Statesman Journal June 7, 2015
OR-0000363471

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(25% discount would apply to subsequent full pages (ie. pages 2
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25

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Homegrown
INSIDE

ONLINE
Catch a movie today. Read reviews for movies now
showing in the Salem area at StatesmanJournal.com/
Movies.

HERITAGE OREGON

WINE COLUMN

FLAVORS

Help identify mysterious photos


from 1950s. Page 2E

Couple are realizing a dream of winery


in Eola-Amity hills. Page 3E

Gags, gear, gifts for Dads who love


beer, wine or booze. Page 7E

LESLIE ZEMENEK / SPECIAL TO THE


STATESMAN JOURNAL

Portland jeweler Leslie Zemenek is


one of the emerging artists who
will be featured at the 2015 Salem
Art Fair and Festival in July.

From paint
allergies to
giardia: a
jewelers
journey
By Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

For as long as she can remember, Leslie Zemenek, one


of the 2015 Salem Art Fair and
Festivals emerging artists,
wanted to draw. She started
painting in fourth grade. In
2009, she was in a place where
she could paint full time. Her
30-year painting career was
finally taking off. Then she
became ill with bizarre symptoms including finger pain.
Her worst nightmare came
true.
She was allergic to paint.
The heavy metals used in
pigments had settled in her
bloodstream. To recover, she
had to give up painting.
I got really depressed,
Zemenek said. My dream had
always been to be a full-time
painter from childhood ... You
lose who you are when you lose
your creative outlet.
As difficult as it was, Zemenek was no stranger to starting
over. On her way to becoming
a full-time painter, shed had
many day jobs. After attending
the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City, she
had a 10-year career in New
Yorks Garment District. In
1983, she went to culinary
school in San Francisco and
started a 10-year career in food
until she injured her back. She
started over again, returning
to school to study web design
in 1993.
I was studying web design
when the Internet had a gray
background, Zemenek said.
You could only put up one
image, and you couldnt wrap

LOVE, MUSIC AND

SACRIFICE
At 13, Juan Valdez chose to study music at West Salem
when his parents were forced to return to Mexico
By Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

have no way. And youre going


to say to yourself, I hate my
parents. I hate you. She didnt
want that, especially for her
only child.
Valdezs passion was the
tuba, an instrument that he said
costs $10,000 to $50,000. The
Salem-Keizer School District
has Oregons top music
program. Here, he could continue to study using a school
instrument.
He chose to stay.
Music is my life, Valdez
said. Music has been a part of
me since I was in fifth grade,
and if I went back to Mexico, I
wouldnt be playing music today.
Today, Valdez is a 2015 graduate of West Salem High
School. He won the state championship in tuba by a margin of
60 points, scoring 924 out of 990
points. The University of Oregon awarded him a $12,000
music scholarship, which he
said is the largest sum awarded
to an Oregon tuba player. He

also received a $2,500 grant


from the Oregon Music Hall of
Fame and a $500 Jared Burchette Scholarship.
To excel in West Salems
award-winning music program
is not easy. Valdez rehearses
two to six hours per day depending upon the schools rehearsal schedule that varies in
marching band, jazz band and
state championship seasons. In
Wests ensembles, he plays
tuba, sousaphone and bass
trombone. Todd Zimbelman
directs West Salems band program and has been one of Valdezs surrogate parents.
This kid is the real deal,
Zimbelman said. Hes been
talented for a long time. Hes
very confident about that, yet
hes pretty humble ... He knows
how real life can smack you
across the face at any time ... I
couldnt imagine being in high
school and not being able to
live with your parents.

ABOUT THE SERIES

When he was 13, Juan Valdez


had to decide whether to stay in
Salem, which was his home, or
move with his immigrant parents to Mexico.
His father, also named Juan
Valdez, had suffered a horrendous injury at work and was on
disability. His mother, Alma
Valdez, was unable to get a
working visa. In order to sustain a living, they had to leave,
but young Valdez saw his future and his passion for music
in Salem.
It was probably the toughest decision Ive ever made,
Valdez said. Mom had cancer
when she was pregnant with
me, and Im her only kid. She
always wants whats best for
me, no matter what, even if its
a sacrifice she has to make.
And so she told me, If I
brought you to Mexico and you
were like 18 or 19 and wanted to
go back to America, you would

Beginning today, the Statesman


Journal is featuring a series of weekly profiles in the Sunday Homegrown section of artists who will
attend the Salem Art Fair.

2015 West Salem graduate Juan Valdez won the tuba state championship. Valdez chose to remain in Oregon to
pursue music when his parents had to move back to Mexico four years ago. When he plays, he pictures different
images in his head to feed the emotion he channels into the music. ANNA REED / STATESMAN JOURNAL

See JEWELER, Page 8E

LESLIE ZEMENEK,
EMERGING ARTIST
Medium: Jewelry
Examples: To find her work, go to
lesliezemenek.com, zleslie.etsy.com
or Riversea Gallery in Astoria.

25

REACH US: Heather Rayhorn, (503) 399-6720, hrayhorn@StatesmanJournal.com

See VALDEZ, Page 6E

2E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Heritage Oregon

ONLINE
Go to StatesmanJournal.com/Heritage for more
on area history.

Help identify mysterious photos from 50s


Willamette
Heritage Center
putting together
restaurant exhibit
By Kylie Pine
Special to the Statesman Journal

Its New Years Eve 1957.


The McEwan Photo Shop is
commissioned to take photos
of a party. The images show
couples
sitting
around
wagonwheel
topped
tables,
wearing
leis, dancing in a
corral and generally having a
good time. The photo shop
notes that prints from the
evening should be sent to
three local restaurant owners
Joe Randall of Randalls
Chuck Wagon, Mr. Kuhn of
Shattucks Chateau and Walt
Cline of the Stagecoach
Lounge.
Fast forward to today. Staff
of the Willamette Heritage
Center are looking for images
to put into an exhibit this summer featuring restaurant history in Salem.
Going through the McEwan
Commercial Photograph collection, they find an envelope
of negatives with a cryptic
inscription: With three local
restaurants involved, two
having the potential for western-themed dcor, what exactly are we looking at? Were
the staffs of the restaurants
having a combined party?
Where were the interior shots
taken? Who are all the people
attending?
We know that Joe H. Randall started Randalls Chuck
Wagon in 1956. Located at 3170
Commercial St. SE (where the
Fussy Duck is today), it was
ideally situated on what was
Highway 99E a main arterial through town. Although it
switched owners several
times, Randalls Chuck Wagon
continued to operate at the
same location until 1977. The
site was then taken over by

WHC 2006.002.1933

Mysterious photos show a 1957 New Years Eve party at a Salem restaurant. Do you recognize where or who is featured? Staff of the Willamette Heritage
Center are looking for information for an exhibit this summer featuring restaurant history in Salem.

HISTORY OF DINING
OUT
Do you have stories about
Salem restaurants? Please share
them with us. Contact Kylie
Pine, (503) 585-7012 or
kyliep@willametteheritage.org.

Chuck Wagon. We would love


some confirmation of this. Do
you remember Randalls
Chuck Wagon? Do these interiors or individuals look familiar? Contact Kylie Pine, kyliep
@willametteheritage.org, (503)
585-7012.
WILLAMETTE HERITAGE CENTER, 2006.002.1930.2. MCEWAN PHOTO STUDIOS, 1958

Randalls Chuck Wagon restaurant, which was on Commercial Street S where the Fussy Duck now is, was in
operation from 1956 to 1977.

the Tom Tom Restaurant in


1978.
There is one exterior shot in

the party photos collection.


After much searching, we
were able to locate a sign and

IN THE STARS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Aries (March 21-April 19).


Simple acts of renewal and
care demonstrate optimism
and can be felt at a soul
level.
Taurus (April 20-May 20). A
wide horizon inspires wide
thinking. Go where the
views are expansive.
Gemini (May 21-June 21). At
this point, you just want to
finish what you started.
Knowing that you can do it
on your own is huge right
now.
Cancer (June 22-July 22).
Count your possessions. Even
the most tenacious will get
tired after number 200 or so.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). A
healthy approach to problem solving will include
taking the pressure off of
yourself.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
There are few endeavors
more destined for disappointment than the quest
for perfection.

Sudoku is a numberplacing puzzle based on


a 9x9 grid with several
given numbers. The
object is to place the
numbers 1 to 9 in the
empty squares so that
each row, each column
and each 3x3 box contains the same number
only once. The difficulty
level of the Conceptis
Sudoku increases from
Monday to Sunday.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).


Failures are teachers. Successes are also teachers.
Youll learn faster from the
teacher of failure.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
Fresh, unprejudiced eyes are
an invaluable asset.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). On every level, you have
the power to heal yourself.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Could it be that you are the
keeper of another persons
dream? If so, youll do your
best to make it come true.

CROSSWORD PUZZLE SOLUTION


M
T A C O
A L B U
I T S N
T
T A M
C I R C
A M O K
S E M I
T R A N
L
A N D E
T O R Y
O V O
M A P L
D E
N O V
P A W E
A S N E
P A M
A L E
S S N
U

T
M
W
O W O
R E S
E R
L E
G
A N N
S F A
I L T
S
H O
D E C
E L E
F E A
N N
D A T
R
R
A L E
W I N
S E C
H

B
E
A
N
S
P
R
O
U
T
K
A
R
A
T
E
E
X
I
T

S
A C H
N D A
D E R
K
R O F
A B I
T O N
A L
C
S E A
E L V
R S E
I E D
F S
S
R
L A
S E N
L I C
A
H
T
E
S
R

P
I
L
R O
I T
D
S
T O
O L
W O
I N
N S
S
O
P
S
I
K
E

I
N
O
N

O
L
D
F
A
I
T
H
F
U
L

L S
I A
T Y
S
R O
R
E
U
W E
M
O O
O
R S
R
D
S
Q
N O U
V A N I
M A R T P
O M Y
U P
S T
E I
T W
R O U E
B E R N A
E B Y
K
L A X
T

K
N
E
E
L
S
U
N
S
H
I
N
E
S
T
A
T
E

R
A
D
I
O
A
N
T
E
N
N
A
H
O
M
I
E

R
E
O
R
G
S

F
L
U
T
E

R
O
A
D

Y
I
P
S

E
N
A
C
T

D
E
C
K

I O N
S H I
O M B

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).


Youre so curious that youll
never get bored or be boring.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20).
However serious you are
about your mission, you still
approach it with a light
heart.
Todays Birthday (June 7).
Ecstatic experiences will
color your world this year.
July shows you trading up.
Youll enjoy being silly with
someone in August adventures will ensue. A commitment in September leads
to financial improvements
and greater freedom in the
future. Aquarius and Scorpio
people adore you. Lucky
numbers: 10, 4, 48, 39 and 11.
Holiday Mathis, creators.com.

street number, 3170, suggesting that at least some of the


photos were taken at Randalls

Kylie Pine is with the Willamette


Heritage Center, a nonprofit,
5-acre museum in Salem that
preserves and interprets the
history of the Mid-Willamette
Valley. For more information, call
(503) 585-7012 or go to
willametteheritage.org.

Woman hurt by lack of sympathy


Mitchell
and Sugar
A N N I E ' S M A I L B OX

Dear Annie: I am so
hurt about the way I was
treated during one of the
most difficult times in
my life. Last week, I lost
my dear brother of 59
years to a sudden heart
attack.
My fiance and I have
lived together for the
past four years. We have
not yet married due to
financial reasons, but his
family, friends and children all know that we
consider ourselves life
partners. I thought I had
a good relationship with
these people, including
his young adult daughters. I have them over for
dinner several times a

week and help pay for


their college tuitions and
cars.
All of these people are
friends with me on Facebook and see everything
that is posted about our
lives. When my brother
died, I posted his obituary along with details
about the funeral and
visitation. My partner
also told these people
about what happened.
Annie, not a single
person called, texted,
sent a card or came to
the visitation. They didnt
even post sorry for your
loss on my Facebook
page. These are professional, well-educated
people who know how to
behave in social situations.
I am crushed by the
total lack of acknowledgment from any of
them, particularly my
fiances daughters. I feel
Ive been an idiot to consider them friends or

family. Im not even


worth a text message to
them. I told my fiance
that I want nothing more
to do with these phony
people now that I know
how they really feel
about me. How should I
deal with my anger and
resentment?
At a Loss in Ohio
Dear Ohio: Our condolences on your loss. We
agree that these people
should have acknowledged your brothers
passing. However, they
may not have known him
well (or at all) and so felt
little connection to your
loss. Many people, even
well-educated ones,
arent sure how to react
to the death of someone
with whom they have
only a remote third-person association. And
when unsure, they do
nothing.
Please tell your fiances daughters and closest friends how hurt you
were that they did not
offer condolences, and
express your hope that
this did not mean they
dont care. We think they
will apologize, and for
the sake of your relationship, we hope you can
find a way to forgive
them. We can assure you
that it serves no purpose
to hold a grudge.
Annies Mailbox is written by Kathy
Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime
editors of the Ann Landers column.
Please email your questions to
anniesmailbox@creators.com, or
write to: Annies Mailbox, c/o
Creators Syndicate, 737 Third St.,
Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

StatesmanJournal.com

3E

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Taste of Oregon
Bjornsons realizing dream of winery in Eola-Amity hills
Like many who came before them,
Mark and Pattie Bjornson moved to
Oregon to chase a dream of planting a
vineyard and starting a winery.
The couple met
in Minneapolis in
1985 while attending the University
of Minnesota.
After they got
married, they
couldnt take a
Victor
honeymoon but
Panichkul
later took a leave
from their jobs,
TA S T E
OF OREGON
hers in the IT
business and his in
the health insurance business.
We flew to Europe and took a
month-long biking trip down the Rhine
and Mosel river, and we stayed at a lot
of beautiful vineyards and wineries and
got bitten by the wine bug on the trip,
Pattie said.
Before then, the couple had dreamed
of one day having a hobby farm. After
the trip, instead of a hobby farm, they
decided they wanted a vineyard.
So we would come out to Oregon on
our vacations, and we would look for
land.
In 2005, they were working in Minneapolis when they pulled up stakes
and headed for Oregon.
Pattie left the IT business, and Mark
came out to Oregon to start laying the
groundwork for the Western region for
United Health Group. He later got a job
as an executive with the Catholic
Health Initiative in Portland.
The couple got to know the area, and
in 2006, using funds from Marks stock
options as an executive with United
Health, the couple was able to purchase
107 acres in the Eola Amity AVA near
Bethel Heights Road. That fall, they
began taking courses at the Northwest
Wine Studies Center at Chemeketa.
The couple planted the first block
that fall, and the first vintage they
made was the 2009 vintage.
Weve planted 28 acres, Pattie said.
We planted all of the vineyard-suitable
land, and the rest remains forest land.
The first vintage, the 2009, was
made by winemaker Aaron Hess at 12th
and Maple Wine Co. in Dundee. The
2010 and 2011 vintage was made by
John Grochau of Grochau Cellars. Beginning in 2012, Pattie began making a
few barrels at Bjornson, while the majority of the wine was made by Grochau Cellars. Finally, after gaining
partial occupancy of their winery in
2014, Pattie took over as winemaker.
In 2013, we finally began construc-

IF YOU GO
Address: 3635 Bethel Heights Road NW
Phone: (503) 877-8189
Tasting room: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays
and Sundays through Labor Day
Tasting fee: $10 for a flight of five wines

VICTOR PANICHKUL / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Pattie and Mark Bjornson began construction on their winery in 2013 and got occupancy in the
wine-making area of the facility five days before the grapes came in the door in 2014.

VICTOR PANICHKUL / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Pattie and Mark Bjornson talk about their wines and the winery as visitors sample wines
during a May tour.

tion on the wine-making facility and got


occupancy in the wine-making area of
the facility five days before the grapes
came in the door in 2014, Pattie said.
The tasting room is still under construction, and the couple have partial
occupancy of the facility, the winemaking areas. Theyre hoping that the
tasting room will be finished next year.
Mark pretty much handles the vineyard side and selling the grapes. At this
point, we sell a lot of our grapes, Pattie
said.

Mark still has his day job but hopes


to transition eventually full time to the
winery business.
Pattie has rolled up her sleeve at
gotten involved from the get-go, working with the Eola Amity Hills AVA
when it was just starting. She also
helped organize Equinox, an annual
wine-tasting event that showcased the
wineries of the Eola-Amity area.
I really believe in this area. I want
it to succeed. If it succeeds, its going to
help us too, Pattie said

One of the things I really love is the


camaraderie that is unique to the Oregon wine industry. Weve had the luxury
of asking questions of anybody and
everybody, and theyve given us guidance. And having worked in more competitive world, its just really refreshing
and a lot of fun.
As the couples plans at the Bjornson
estate vineyard and winery take shape,
theyre also looking farther afield.
We just bought a property in the Van
Duzer corridor near Van Duzer Vineyards. Its 245 acres, Mark said. Were
selling 80 acres and the house thats on
the property and will retain 165 acres,
and almost 100 acres of that is vineyardsuitable.
I like planting grapes. Ill probably
be doing it until Im 90, Mark said.
When he finished planting the Bjornson
estate vineyard, he started to feel melancholy. I started walking back to the
house and was kinda sad that I wouldnt
be planting anymore vineyards. Now
Ive got enough to keep me going for a
while, he said.
At the Van Duzer vineyard, Mark has
plans to try planting some other varieties such as melon de Bourgogne, pinot
blanc, gamay noir and gruet blanc, a
parent of chardonnay, as well as tempranillo, syrah, Mondeuse noire, a red wine
of the Savoy region and gewurztraminer.
Ive always liked growing things,
Mark said. I started gardening as a
child growing up in Bismark, North
Dakota.
The progress on our winery is sometimes frustrating to me, Pattie said.
Its so slow. But looking back now, its
like weve moved at light speed. Its
been a whirlwind.
I think its important to have a goal
and work towards your goal, but its also
important to look back in the rear view
mirror and celebrate your accomplishments.
Victor Panichkul is wine, food and beer
columnist for the Statesman Journal. Reach
him at (503) 399-6704,
Vpanichkul@StatesmanJournal.com, follow
at Facebook.com/WillametteValleyFoodWine
and on Twitter @TasteofOregon.

WINE AND
BEER BRIEFS
Penner-Ash hires new
general manager
Penner-Ash Wine Cellars
has hired Patrick Connelly as
its new general manager.
Lynn and Ron Penner-Ash
have grown their family-run
Penner-Ash Wine Cellars into
one of the best-known Oregon
wineries, producing 16,000
cases of wine last year from
just 125 cases in their first
vintage (1998).
To guide the winerys strategic wholesale and retail business plan and oversee day-to-

day operations, Penner-Ash


Wine Cellars has brought on a
Connelly, allowing Lynn Penner-Ash to focus solely on winemaking and for Ron PennerAsh to expand his industry
relations role and year-round
philanthropic initiatives.
Connelly is a native of Napa
Valley, and his management
experience includes Clos Pegase and Pine Ridge wineries
in Napa Valley, Jackson Family
Wines in Santa Rosa and Kristine Ashe Vineyards and Entre
Nous in Oakville.
Oregon produces some of

the finest wines in the world


and is the future of American
pinot noir, Connelly said. Im
delighted to work with an incredible winery like PennerAsh in the Willamette Valley.
Along with new management, Penner-Ash Wine Cellars
is developing an array of wine
and culinary hospitality programs. Tasting experiences for
visitors will be expanded to
include winery and vineyard
tours, and a menu of offerings
for corporate groups will soon
be available. Penner-Ashs
tasting room on the winery

MAKING PROJECTIONS

estate overlooks the verdant


Chehalem Valley at 15771 NE
Ribbon Ridge Road in Newberg. Hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
daily. For information, call
(503)554-5545.

Gustavs serving new


Breakside beer
Gustavs Bargarten in Keizer is serving a new Breakside
beer brewed specially for Bargarten.
Bargarten Bock is an Oktoberfest-style fest beer. Its a
delicious, stronger lager with a

10

sweet malt character and great


drinkability. Its 5.2 percent
alcohol by volume and has
flavors of bread and toasty
malt notes from Vienna and
Munich malts that are offset by
a kiss of Opal hops.
Gistavs is at 6045 Keizer
Station Boulevard. Hours are 11
a.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays through
Thursdays and 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Fridays and Saturdays.
Victor Panichkul
To promote wine and beer news,
email Vpanichkul@Statesman
Journal.com

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

51

52

73

74

75

103

104

105

BY TOM MCCOY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ


18

Note: When this puzzle is completed, an apt phrase can be found by starting at the top central
letter and reading clockwise.
ACROSS
47 Occurring in March 91 Message to ones
13 Not in the dark
and September, say
followers
1 Choco ____ (Klondike
14 Authorization
treat)
50 Shenanigans
92 Portrayer of
15 Catcher of some
86-Across in Elf
5 School
53 Dietary no-no
waves
93 Artifact
10 Items that may be
54 Grey and ochre
16 Shake-ups in corps.
labeled SMTWTFS 55 There is ____ in
95 Rakes
17 Champagne holder
15 Dog sound
team
97 Cooking-spray brand 19 Seasonal linguine
18 Series of numbers?
56 Pleasant
topper
98 The Downeaster
inflection
____ (Billy Joel
20 Kurt Vonneguts
24 ____ even
song)
57 Park opened in 1964
Happy Birthday,
29 Expunge
____ June
100 Sleep mode?
59 Easy-peasy task
31 Prepare to tie a
21 Former part of the
106 Malt product
60 Chocolate- mint
shoelace, say
British Empire
brand with peaks in 107 Bring home the gold 32 Staple of quiz bowls
its logo
22 Joe Bidens home:
108 Barely manage
33 Redolence
Abbr.
63 Temperature units
109 Breakfast-cereal
35 Pro ____
23 I expected as much 64 Muscles worked by
maker
36 Coin to pay for
leg presses
25 Towering
110 Hyphenated fig.
passage across the
26 Letters of obligation 65 Anti-Revolutionary
River Styx
111 Factions
of 1776
27 Hair piece
112 It was just a joke! 38 Put another way
66 Gets harsher
28 Currency that, in
113 Where writing is on 39 Strewn
68 An example of itself
one denomination,
the wall?
41 Fodder for tabloids
features a portrait
70 Lacto-____
44 Little bugger
of Linnaeus
vegetarian
DOWN
45 Wise ones
30 Garment for tennis, 71 Condemned
1 Mai ____
46 Daughter of Hyperion
perhaps
72 Gone
2 Bottom-row key
48 Condition of sale
32 Not as exciting
76 Hockey team with a
3 Capt. Kangaroos
49 TVs The ____
34 Return from a store
patriotic name
network
Today
37 When blacksmithing 78 Distraction for many
4 Peak thats known as 50 Bring, as to a repair
began
an idle person
The Great One
shop
80 Bests
39 Perfect orbit
5 Rare notes
51
Thoroughfare
81 Capacious
40 Fanatical
6 Crisp bit in a
52 Dog sounds
82 Apple desktop
41 66, e.g.: Abbr.
stir-fry
54 Collapsed, with in
83 National Novel
42 Nav. rank
7 Further
57 Ends of letters
Writing
Mo.
43 Run ____
8 String after B
58 Somebody ____
84
Havana-to-Palm
44 Boarded
9 Seafood-soup base
Beach dir.
59 Words below an
45 Awe-SOME!
10 Series opener
orange on a license
85 Eagerly accept
plate
11 Privy to
86 See 92-Across
Online subscriptions:
Todays puzzle and more
12 Attraction that
60 One of 24 in a glucose
88
Handled roughly
than 4,000 past puzzles,
operates under its
molecule
nytimes.com/crosswords
90 Japanese for
own steam?
($39.95 a year).
61
Bagel
topper
teacher

19

23

20
24

27
32

28

33

34

39

35

25

26

29

30

36

37

48

42

45

49

31

38

41

44

47

46

50

53

54
56
61

57

62

55

58

59

63

65

66

70

64

67

68

71

76

69

72

77

78

80

79

81

83
88

22

40

43

60

21

84

85

89

86

90

92

93

94

99

95

98

106

107

108

110

111

112

68 ____ a one
69 Whats superior to
Lake Superior:
Abbr.
71 Hip-hops Mos ____
72 Hematophagous
creature
73 Buddy
74 Pass
75 Hand source
77 Bank to rely on

87

91

97

62 It might contain
a list of postal
abbreviations
63 Something you might
get a kick out of?
64 Steven Wrights
I intend to live
forever. So far, so
good, e.g.
66 Capital city founded
during a gold rush
67 Mariana, e.g.

82

100

101

96

102

78 Soaks (up)
79 Pouting expression
81 Major stockholder?
83 m and n
85 Hula hoop?
86 Dumbfound
87 Small change
88 June honorees
89 Parts, as blinds
90 Blind parts

109
113

94 Highway number
96 Variety of antelope
99 Fiction
101 Old White House
moniker
102 Unit usually seen
with the prefix deci103 Equal: Prefix
104 Big name in current
research?
105 Point of writing?

4E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

F L AV O R S

Gags, gear,
gifts for Dad
By Victor Panichkul
Statesman Journal

Fathers Day is not far away, but


you still have time to order online
gifts or head to the store if you
havent found that perfect gift yet.
Heres a roundup of gift ideas for the
dad who loves beer, wine or booze.

VICTOR PANICHKUL
COURTESY OF RABBIT

/ STATESMAN

Rabbit Automatic Electric


Corkscrew automatically
removes cork from bottle
upon contact and then ejects
it, with built-in foil cutter,
available in red, black and
silver, $50, at metrokane.com

JOURNAL

For the dad with


the need of a
near-bottomless
glass of wine is
Wine Bottle
Glass from
BigMouth Inc.,
$13.22 at
Amazon.com.
VICTOR PANICHKUL / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Wanna Get Tipsy? Fun stemware from BigMouth Inc.


features a set of two, from $15.22 to $19.95 at
Amazon.com

VICTOR PANICHKUL / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Personalize your gift with custom labels from Josh Cellars.


This free service will allow consumers to write a dedicated
140-character note to Dad, including his name at the top
and the gifters name across the bottom. The labels can be
created online at ATributeToDad.com and will be sent
directly to the consumers home to affix to their bottle for a
unique Fathers Day gift. Labels must be ordered by June 11.

VICTOR PANICHKUL / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Open a bottle of wine to the song O Sol Mio with this


musical corkscrew from BigMouth Inc., from $17.95 to
$26.49 at Amazon.com.

VICTOR PANICHKUL / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Sculpture Barware Decanter set from Nachtmann fine


Bavarian Crystal has heavy crystal with chiseled ice
pattern, perfect for fine whiskey or scotch, $149.90,
riedelusa.net/nachtmann.

COURTESY OF RIEDEL

Fine Riedel Ouverture Beer Glasses from Riedel are


perfect for pilsners, $24 for set of two, Riedel.com.

COURTESY OF RABBIT

Rabbit Jumbo Chilling Stones will chill your favorite


beverage without diluting them, and storage
container keeps them secure and clean in the
freezer, dishwasher safe, $20 for set of two,
metrokane.com.

VICTOR PANICHKUL / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Beer, The Drink of Champions Cooler is perfect for


keeping a can of your favorite brew cool, from
BigMouth Inc., at Amazon.com from $4.99 to $8.33.

COURTESY OF HYDRO FLASK

COURTESY OF SPIEGELAU

Fine glassware for the craft beer enthusiast from Spiegelau, set of four glasses including the IPA glass, stemmed beer
glas, lager glass and wheat beer glass, $49.90, riedel.com.

Dad can keep his favorite brew cooler longer


with a Hydro Flask True Pint double-walled
insulated glass from the maker of the popular
water bottle, available in five different colors
for $19.99 each at Roths Fresh Markets stores.

Arts

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

5E

Take a look inside the Pentacle Theatre actors studio


By Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
and Carlee Wright
Statesman Journal

Have you ever been at a play


and wondered whats going on
inside the actors heads? When
they get a laugh, are they thinking, Man, Im good!? How do
they remember all of those
lines?
Last weekend, audience
members at Pentacle Theatres
production of God of Carnage
and The Book of Liz received
the inside scoop on what really
goes on backstage and inside of
the actors heads during Tom
and Carlees C.A.F.E. with Pentacles cast and crew after the
performance. Here is a sample
of the questions asked and what
they had to say:
Question: How do you remember your lines?
Actor Jeff Sanders: I have
been spending basically every
hour that I am not here or at
work with a script in my hand
... Its repetition. Its also about
learning the flow of the play
and what you want in any given
moment, and then, the lines
start to come and make sense.
(Note: Sanders joined the cast
of God of Carnage about two
weeks before opening night
when someone left the cast. )
Director Heather Dunkin
Toller: We always aim to be
word perfect, so exactly what
the author wrote.
Actor Erika Zuelke: I got
notes because I said bathroom
instead of restroom ... because
thats whats in the script.
Question: How do you deal
with the time commitment
being in a show demands?
Toller: You dont do laundry.
You dont really clean your
house. Your garden suffers.
The reality is that you know,
when you get involved with
Pentacle, that it is about a
three-month commitment.
Question: In Carnage,
adult characters devolve into
children. In Liz, actors play
multiple characters. How do
you train your voices and bodies to do these different things?
Actor Susan Schoaps, who
played six parts: Its definitely a challenge. Once you get on
set and have costumes, that
helps a lot. You put on the different wigs, and that sort of
keys you into becoming the
different characters. Prior to
that, I gave each character a
theme song that I would hum in
my head before I came on
stage, so that helped me with
the different transitions ... At
one point, I have on three dif-

NEXT TOM AND


CARLEES C.A.F.E.
EVENT
What: One Flew Over the Cuckoos
Nest, which stars Jack Nicholson
and was filmed at Oregon State
Hospital
When: 7 p.m. June 17
Where: Historic Elsinore Theatre,
170 High St. SE
Tickets: $5, available at the theater,
elsinoretheatre.com and Tickets
West locations
Information: (503) 375-3574 or
elsinoretheatre.com

ABOUT TOM AND


CARLEES C.A.F.E.
If you are interested in learning
more about the local arts and entertainment scene, join C.A.F.E. for an
event.

CARLEE WRIGHT / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Arts and culture reporter Tom Mayhall Rastrelli (right) interviews the Wild family of Jefferson during the C.A.F.E.
event at Pentacle Theatre on May 30.

Tom and Carlees C.A.F.E. community arts for everyone is an ongoing series of interactive art and
entertainment events in the MidValley. The facilitators of C.A.F.E. are
the Statesman Journals arts and
culture reporter Tom Mayhall Rastrelli and entertainment reporter
Carlee Wright. Their goal is to create events that spark artistic conversation, growth, understanding
and appreciation in the community.

ferent costumes. It gets


warm.
Question: Where do you
keep the furniture and sets?
Stage manager Dani Potter: We store (the Mr.) Peanut
(costume from Liz) on the
couch from God of Carnage.
Weve got a lot of clothes just
lying on furniture pieces ... All
of the walls (from the Carnage set) are folded up and
leaning against the back wall.
We have furniture outlining
the back of the stage. Theres
usually enough room for one
person to walk all the way
around.
Question: Does the script
for Book of Liz actually call
for four people or is that something that Pentacle did?
Toller: The script calls for
it ... I played around with the
idea of casting four people to
do both shows. When auditions
came, they were such different
types of shows that we chose to
use two casts.
Question: When you get a
good laugh and know that
youve really struck the audience, do you let that roll off of
you or do you think, That was
sort of cool? How do you re-

IF YOU GO
What: God of Carnage by Yasmina Reza and The Book of Liz by
Amy and David Sedaris
Where: Pentacle Theatre, 324 52nd
Ave. NW
When: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and June 17-20, plus 2 p.m.
today and June 14
Tickets: $18 for weekday performances and $19 for weekend performances; seniors, students, military and members receive a $1.50
discount. Available at the Pentacle
ticket office, 145 Liberty St. NE, by
calling (503) 485-4300 or at
pentacletheatre.org.
CARLEE WRIGHT / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Jeff Sanders and Erika Zuekle, cast members of God of Carnage, answer
questions during the CAFE event at Pentacle Theatre on May 30.

act?
Schoaps: You have to react
to a certain extent because you
have to allow the audience to
laugh without them covering
up your next line. You have to
give it that pause. As an actor, I
try not to think about it because if you enjoy the fact that
the audience is laughing,
youre not in character, and
that just breaks your moment.
Zuelke: In a way, it does
give energy. You feel the energy, and it feeds you. When
youre doing a comedy and
having an audience that is
quietly enjoying it and there
isnt a lot of laughter, you feel
that, and you really have to
mentally keep your energy up
because there isnt that energy
coming toward you.
Actor Deborah Johansen:

Grassroots publication
sparks dialogue for arts

Tickets for low-income persons:


In partnership with Salem for All,
Pentacle offers two-for-one tickets
to Oregon Trail Card holders. Purchase at the theater box office on
the day of the show. For information, go to salemforall.org.

dering if that was me they


were talking to.
Schoaps: Thats really why
we do it. Hopefully with every
play, no matter what kind of
play we do, we touch the audience in some way.
TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal
.com, (503) 983-6030,
facebook.com/RastrelliSJ and on
Twitter @RastrelliSJ; and
cwright2@StatesmanJournal.com,
(503) 399-6671,
facebook.com/CarleeWrightSJ and
on Twitter @CarleeWrightSJ

29(5:(,*+7"
6ORZ0HWDEROLVP"

By Rebecca McCannell
Special to the Statesman Journal

Margaret Donsbach Tomlinson and


Robert Tomlinson, co-editors of Picture Sentence, a quarterly journal
encouraging dialogue in the arts,
share thoughts on the publication.
What inspired you to start Picture
Sentence and what do you hope it
will accomplish?
Robert: I suggested starting the
publication because I was continually
frustrated by the lack of a regional
platform to document art and literary
activities in the Pacific Northwest. We
felt this publication could contribute
to the vibrancy of the arts community.
Margaret: As far as we know, Picture Sentence is currently the only
print publication
devoted specifically
to documenting this
underground work
and introducing it to
a wider audience. We
recently added reviews of art exhibitions, and we plan to eventually add
book reviews, too.
How do you decide on the theme
for each issue?
Robert: Initially, we played around
with the idea of each issue having a
different theme, but as the issues
organically developed, this seemed
limiting and unnecessary. We did
dedicate the entire third issue to the
My Day project, honoring 10 years of
making unique books by Nate Orton,
Chris Ashby and James Yeary. Were
also exploring the idea of inviting a
guest editor to take on an issue. The
focus of the publication, however, will
always stay focused on the work of
individual artists and writers in our
region.
What do you see as the link between text and imagery?
Robert: The integration of text and
fine-art images has a long history,
beginning when Picasso and Braque
started collaging pieces of newspapers and menus into their paintings in
the early part of the 20th century. The
Dada and Surrealist movements developed these early explorations into
full-fledged art forms. In Pop Art and
Happenings, starting in the 1960s, text
was a core component of the work.
Youll notice that many artists, such as
John Cage, were polyartists, easily
moving between many mediums to
create their works.

Every audience tends to be


different. You get a big laugh
one night at something ... and
then the next night, nothing.
Its odd.
Question: How do you get
involved at Pentacle?
Go to pentacletheatre.org
and join the mailing list to
receive auditions and calls for
volunteers, or contact the main
office at 145 Liberty St. NE or
call (503) 485-4300.
Linda Wild, Pentacle patron
from Jefferson, closed the
night with a statement rather
than a question:
Wild: As a season ticket
holder for several years now,
we have never been disappointed in a show. Some of
them shocked us. Some of
them made us cry, and some of
them made us go home won-

For the kids: Due to strong profanity, high schoolers and those older
are recommended.

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SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL

The arts journal Picture Sentence can be


found in Salem at The Art Department.

,ORVWSRXQGV
,

Margaret: Although visual art and


literary works are obviously very
different art forms, in my experience,
theres also a lot of crossover. We
know quite a few visual artists who
write poetry and vice-versa. In some
of his artwork, Robert uses two-word
poems of seemingly unrelated words
in order to spark the viewers intuition. Ive also experimented with
writing ekphrastic poetry, poetry that
responds to a visual artwork, and find
the process similarly exciting.
How do you select the contributors for the journal?
Margaret: When we come across
artists or poets whose work we admire, and who are not as well known
as we think they ought to be, we ask
them to contribute. There are some
very fine artists and poets in the
Northwest, and we occasionally include a few personal favorites from
outside this area.
Where can one find issues of
Picture Sentence , locally?
Margaret: In Salem, you can find
copies at the art supply store The Art
Department, and in Independence,
Second Chance Books carries the
journal. Anyone can subscribe by
sending a check (made out to Margaret Tomlinson) to Picture Sentence at
P.O. Box 402, Independence, Oregon
97351. Subscriptions are $25 annually
for four issues.
Rebecca McCannell is an artist and
Professor of Art at Western Oregon
University. This article is part of a series
of essays presented by the Salem Art
Associations Community Arts Education
program aimed at promoting dialogue and
critical thinking about art. To learn more,
go to SalemArt.org.

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6E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

NWNavigator

DONT MISS
UPCOMING
EVENTS

Hit the road for entertainment


in the Northwest.
WEEK OF JUNE 7-13, 2015

SALEM

JUNE 13
Coolio: Hip hop, 8 p.m.,
Duffys Hangar, 2275 McGilchrist St. SE. $25; $75 VIP
includes table, dinner and
meet and greet. (971) 2394142.
SEPT. 26
Lewis Black: Comedy, 8
p.m., Historic Elsinore Theatre, 170 High St. SE. $49.50.
Ticketswest.com.

N
Seattle
Grand
Floral Float
Showcase
June 7

Berries,
Brews & BBQs
June 13-14,
20-21

QUINCY, WASH.

Portland
Po
P
orttla
land

5
9

Sisters
Rodeo
June 13-14

PORTLAND
JULY 25
Taj Mahal: Blues, 8 p.m.,
Roseland Theater, 8 NW 6th
Ave. $29.50 to $49.50.
Cascadetickets.com.
AUG. 5-23
Wicked: The Untold Story
o fthe Witches of Oz: 7:30
p.m. Aug. 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12,
13, 14, 15, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22; 1
p.m. Aug. 6, 9, 16, 20, 23; 2
p.m. Aug. 8, 15, 22; 6:30
p.m. Aug. 9, 16, 22, Keller
Auditorium, 222 SW Clay St.
Tickets start at $41. Ticketswest.com.
NOV. 14
Yellowcard and New
Found Glory: Alternative
rock, 8 p.m., Roseland Theater, 8 NW 6th Ave. $22.
Cascadetickets.com.

2
3
Lincoln
City

PA C I F I C O C E A N

JUNE 20
Nickelback: Rock, 7 p.m.,
Gorge Amphitheater, 754
Silica Road. Tickets start at
$44. Ticketmonster.com.

COLUMBIA RIVER

St.
St
S
tt.. P
Pa
Paul
au
ull

Molalla

Keizer
Rickreall
Dallas

Salem

Newport

Albany
Al
A
lba
ba

4
6

10

11
Sisters

GRAND RONDE
AUG. 7 AND 8
The Legacy Tour: The
Ultimate Michael Jackson
Tribute Show: 8 p.m.,
Spirit Mountain Casino,
27100 Salmon River Highway. Tickets start at $15.
Spiritmountain.com.

Rockin
the Coast
June 7
Rickreall
Auto
Swap Meet
June 7

ONLINE NOW
Go to StatesmanJournal.com/
NWNavigator for an interactive map
showing the top things to do in the
Northwest. Youll also nd a link to a
calendar of events for activities in the
Mid-Valley.

LINCOLN CITY
SEPT. 11 AND 12
Lynard Skynard: Rock n
roll, 8 p.m., Chinook Winds
Casino Resort, 1777 NW
44th St. $61 to $91. Chinookwindscasino.com.

MIL
MI
M
IIL
LES
ES
0

Ashland

1 SALEM

barbecue, 4 p.m. Friday and


Saturday, plus Saturday car
show with food, kids area,
jump tents, monster truck
and hot rods, 8 a.m. Saturday, Adams Rib Smokehouse, tented back parking
lot, 1210 State St. $5 cover
charge to enter Beer Garden
and bands. Carshow is free to
the public. (503) 362-2194,
Adams-rib-smokehouse.com.

HOME BASE

Saturday

Today

Deepwood Family Fun


Day: Fairy Tales: Each garden will be themed to a
specific childrens book featuring games, activities and
hands-on crafts, plus participate in a Harry Potterinspired quidditch tournament, join the fencing club
and learn to handle a sword
like Peter Pan and enjoy tea
and scones at the Alice in
Wonderland tea party, 10
a.m. to 1 p.m., Historic Deepwood Estate, 1116 Mission St.
SE. Free. (503) 363-1825,
Historicdeepwoodestate.org.

WCWC Live: See Gangrel,


Eric Right, The Grappler and
his Wrecking Crew and more,
5 to 7:30 p.m., Houck Middle
School gymnasium, 1155
Connecticut St. SE. $10 to
$15. (971) 600-8215, Wcwc.com.

Friday
Steve Hale & The Super
Soul Heroes: Familiar funk
and soul songs dressed in
unique and colorful arrangements, plus barbecue provided by Rollin Smoke, 6 to 10
p.m., Cubanisimo Vineyards
tasting room and patio, 1754
Best Road NW. $10; $5 Wine
Club members. (503) 5881763, Cubanisimovineyards.com.

Friday and Saturday


Adams Rib Micro Fest &
Carshow: Local brews, live
music with Ty Curtis and

2 KEIZER
3.7 MILES

Today
Flap Jack Family Breakfastn Bowl: 8 a.m. to 2
p.m., Town & Country Lanes,
3500 River Road N. $16 for
breakfast/bowling; $9 for
breakfast. (503) 390-2221,

Valdez
Continued from Page 1E

Valdez was born in Anaheim


Hills, California, and has lived
in Salem since he was a child.
His parents immigrated from
Mexico. US law keeps them
from returning. Valdez visited
them during summers, but they
missed his graduation. They try
to FaceTime every day, but
with his schedule and their
unreliable Internet service, its
not always possible. It helps to
see his mom smile, but he
misses being able to hug her.
They have their days when
they miss me, but they have to
see the bigger picture, Valdez
said. Their only son is graduating high school and is about
to go to college and do great
things in life.
Valdezs ultimate goal is to
help people, either through
music or as a police officer.
Hes grateful for the generosity
and help of others who made
his stay possible, particularly
that of his classmate Daniel
Hendrick and his mother, Lisa
Hendrick. Valdez has lived with
them since his parents moved.

Bowlcrazy.com.

3 RICKREALL
13.2 MILES

Today
Rickreall Auto Swap Meet:
Show and shine, raffle, flea
market and more, 7 a.m. to 3
p.m., Polk County Fairgrounds, 520 S Pacific Highway W. $5. (503) 623-8042,
Rickreallswapmeet.org.
Polk Flea Market: 100
vendors will fill 183 tables
with antiques, collectibles,
fine and costume jewelry,
tools and more, with early
admission, 6 to 9 a.m., and
regular hours from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m., Polk County Fairgrounds, Main Building, 520
S Pacific Highway W. $1; $5
early admission. (503) 4288224, Polkfleamarket.com.

4 DALLAS
15.3 MILES

Saturday
Fearless 5K: Free Filipino
lunch with registration, 10
a.m. to noon, Dallas City
Park, Levens Street. $25; $15
ages 12 and younger; $75 for
families of four or more from
the same household; benefits
Grace Community Churchs
High School Philippines
Mission Team. (503) 6234961, my.simplegive.com
/f/?k=3LT3IGRLBHFDQPG7

He calls Daniel Hendrick his


big brother.
Hendrick plays trumpet and
also has earned large scholarships. He will attend Central
Washington University to study
trumpet and music education.
He hopes to return to Salem
and teach aside Zimbelman and
Jaimie Hall, who have been
mentors to Valdez and him.
Valdez and Hendrick met at
the start of seventh grade at
Stephens Middle School. Hendrick had transferred from a
mostly white school. He remembers Valdez flirting with a
girl in the doorway to their
health classroom.
He wasnt getting anywhere, and I literally thought
he was some sort of gangster, a
Boyz n the Hood looking fellow, Hendrick said. I thought
he was going to shoot me if I
messed with his game.
After years of late-night
taco runs, videogame playing
and 18-hour days of school,
rehearsal and homework, Valdez and Hendrick laugh at the
ridiculousness of the memory.
Their friendship has taught
them a lot.
It opened my eyes to realize that people of a different

10 2
10
20
0

40
40

60
60

80
80

10
10
100
00
0

5 ST. PAUL

Pdxbeerweek.com.

22 MILES

9 LINCOLN CITY

Saturday-Sunday
and June 20-21

58.9 MILES

Berries, Brews & BBQs:


Oregon craft brew, barbecue, you-pick strawberries,
hayrides, tube slides, animal
barns and farm animals, pig
barrel train rides and brew
tasting, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday and 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. Sunday, French Prairie
Gardens, 17673 French Prairie
Road NE. Free admission;
some ticketed activities. (503)
633-8445, Fpgardens.com.

6 ALBANY
25.6 MILES

Today
Mother Earth News Fair:
Sustainable living event that
features 200 hands-on workshops and demonstrations
from experts on real food,
organic gardening, homesteading, renewable energy,
green building and remodeling, DIY projects, smallscale livestock, green transportation, natural health and
related topics, 9 a.m. to 5
p.m., Linn County Fair and
Expo Center, 3700 Knox
Butte Road. $20 weekend
passes advance; $30 at the
gate; free ages 17 and
younger. (800) 234-3368,
Motherearthnewsfair.com.

Friday and Saturday

7 MOLALLA
32.1 MILES

Thursday-Saturday

10 NEWPORT

Molalla Brew Fest: Craft


beer, cider, root beer, wine,
food and live music, 5 to 9:30
p.m. Thursday, 5 p.m. to
midnight Friday and noon to
midnight Saturday, Molalla
Brew Fest, 123 E Ross St. $5
to $20. (503) 829-6941,
facebook.com/molallabrew
festival/

84.1 MILES

8 PORTLAND
47.4 MILES

Today
Rockin the Coast Gem
& Mineral Show: 19 dealers
bringing minerals, fossils,
gemstones, rough rock and
specimens, 10 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., National Guard Armory, 641 SW Coast Highway
101. $2; free ages 12 and
younger. (541) 991-8499,
Coastagates.org.

Today

11 SISTERS

Grand Floral Float Showcase: Have a closer look at


this years floats, 11 a.m. to 4
p.m., SW Naito Parkway.
Rosefestival.org.

109.5 MILES

Thursday through
June 21
PDX Beer Week: An 11-day
celebration of craft beer,
times and locations vary.

ANNA REED / STATESMAN JOURNAL

2015 West Salem graduates Juan Valdez (left) and Daniel Hendrick received
scholarships to pursue music degrees in college. Four years ago, Hendricks
family took Valdez in when he chose to remain in Oregon.

skin color are not more dangerous, Hendrick said. Thats


totally what I thought when I
went to Adam Stephens, but
then when I got there, I realized these are people too and
that theyre actually really
nice.
To remain with the Hendricks, Valdez had to bring up
his grades that had dropped
through the transition. He did.
Its taught me that you

Comedy on the Coast:


Jackie Flynn, Barry Neal and
Debbie Praver, 8 to 11 p.m.,
Chinook Winds Casino Resort, Convention Center, 1777
NW 44th St. $15. (541) 9965766, Chinookwindscasino
.com.

have to work hard in life to get


anywhere, Valdez said.
Hendrick put the familys
experience into perspective:
A lot of people take pity on
him (Valdez), but really, hes
done so well that theres no
reason to feel sorry for him.
You should celebrate all the
good things hes done, that Ive
done and my mom has done.
Weve all sacrificed together,
and the common goal is for

Saturday and Sunday


Sisters Rodeo: Watch top
competitors and world champions compete, 9:30 a.m.
Saturday and 9 a.m. Sunday,
Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637
Highway 20. $14 to $20
Saturday; $12 to $17 Sunday.
Sistersrodeo.com.

each of us to be successful.
Zimbelman is proud of their
success and that of Wests
graduating class that has
earned more than $100,000 in
music scholarships.
I think music has saved
Juans life, Zimbelman said.
Sometimes music picks you.
You dont pick music. Hes that
type of kid that has to play
because thats his creative
outlet.
For the past four years,
Big Bertha has been at the
center of that outlet. She is the
tuba, on loan from West Salem,
that Valdez has been playing.
When he first played her during his freshman year, she
dwarfed him, hence the name.
Now, she fits into his arms
like a child in a parents embrace. When he plays her, he
closes his eyes and pictures
something in his mind.
It gives me a sense of direction of where to go, Valdez
said. That time, I was just
picturing rocking a baby. You
just have to be gentle.
TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal
.com, (503) 983-6030,
facebook.com/RastrelliSJ and on
Twitter @RastrelliSJ

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

7E

Faith
Its a parents job to raise, then release kids
The transitions of a child are such a
thrill but also may sadden a mothers
heart.
The middle daughter of the Rev.
Leah Stolte-Doerfler of Immanuel Lutheran Church in Silverton is graduating from Oregon State University on
Saturday, June 13, and two days later
flying to Europe to realize a dream.
Stolte-Doerfler
described her
feelings for her
daughter leaving
the country as a
struggle.
Writing in the
church newsletter,
Hank Arends she added, While
M I D - VA L L E Y
Prague is a very
RELIGION
long way away,
with Skype and
the adventure of getting to travel to go
and see her, instead of grief, I am feeling satisfaction and delight over her
successful completion of her degree
and that she is following her passions.
Speaking of her three daughters, she
added, It seems to me that as parents,
it is our job to raise, equip and release
our kids into the world, in the hope that
they will live out the fullness of who
they were created and intended to be.
The pastor said it is a God-ordained
job for parents that include times of
hard work, pain and joy. She described
steps in the church of baptism as an
infant and confirmation as a young
person.
To the baptized and the confirmed

and all the rest, blessings to all on the


journey! she concluded.

Enjoying Gods creation


Another Silverton pastor reflected
on how wonderfully blessed the residents of the Willamette Valley are in
the late spring.
The Rev. Steve Knox of the Silverton First Christian Church told of recently sitting outside eating lunch in
the sunshine with purple clematis
flowering on one side, a red Japanese
maple on the other and a stately green
fir to the front.
Surrounded by the glories of creation, I ate my pj sandwich; I wondered how such intoxicating beauty is
possible. This feels like paradise at
times.
Looking at the recent Texas flooding and the earthquake in Nepal, Knox
knows that nature can deal some disastrous blows.
We may not suffer the downsides
of the natural order (or disorder) here
in Oregon as much as some places in
the world, but there is no place that is
immune from calamity. Some of our
counties are drought stricken.
The beauty still shines through,
however. The pastor told of a recent
beach visit with a grandson where they
listened to the bark of a sea lion.
Out in the water somewhere, there
was a song being sung. All creatures
of our God and King, lift up your voice
and with us sing Alleluia!

RELIGION
CALENDAR

Beauty lures us into the depths of


things, beckons us to look, and look
beyond, and look within. It pulls us into
the mystery.
He ate his sandwich and realized he
was not alone. A red-striped snake was
sunning itself near the clematis.
He and I decided not to bother each
other. Just warm ourselves in the sunlight, side by side, Knox said.

Be a love song sweetly sung


The songs of the popular musical are
appropriate to the month and with a
little rephrasing also to the church.
The Rev. Rob Bjornstad of Peace
Lutheran Church in West Salem told of
learning June is Busting Out All Over
in high school choir.
When he later participated in a community production of Carousel, he
learned that particular song came from
the Rogers and Hammerstein musical.
Now, whenever the month of June
comes around, I find myself singing of
morning glories on the fence. The tone
of the song is meant to convey the
warm feeling of the promise of summer, when the fruit have set on the
trees and the first berries are beginning to ripen.
At such a time as this, the fields of
grain are even showing signs of a fine
harvest. Generally most things come
easier in the summer time. The words
of the song go: June is a love song
sweetly sung!
The pastor decried studies that show

JUNE 20

TODAY
Oregon Mandolin Orchestra and Oregon Mandolin Chamber Orchestra: Both groups will perform a variety of sacred
and traditional pieces, 4 p.m., St. Pauls Episcopal Church, 1444
Liberty St. SE. Donations accepted. (503) 362-3661.

Much More Going on than Meets the Eye A Reflective


Look at the Reality of Things: Free non-denominational
event, 10 to 11 a.m., Willamette Heritage Center at the Mill,
Dye House, 1313 Mill St. SE. Free. (503) 362-4580,
christiansciencesalem.com.

SATURDAY

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL

Fearless 5K: Free Filipino lunch with registration, 10 a.m. to


noon, Dallas City Park, Levens Street, Dallas. $25, $15 ages 12
and younger and $75 for families of four or more from the
same household; to raise money for Grace Community Churchs
High School Philippines Mission Team. (503) 623-4961.

Jefferson Baptist Church: Ages 4 through sixth grade will


explore Bible stories of Gods power, sing catchy songs, play
fun games, eat yummy treats and create crafts, 9 a.m. to noon
June 22-26, 15002 Jefferson Highway 99 E. SE, Jefferson. Free.
(541) 327-2939, jeffersonbaptistchurch.org.

JUNE 14

Morningside United Methodist Church: Kids experience


Gods unstoppable love and discover how to fuel up and move
in and through life with God, for ages 4 through those who
just finished fifth grade, 9 a.m. to noon Aug. 3-6, 3674 12th St.
SE. $8 per child or $15 per family. Scholarships available. (503)
364-5013.

Coming Alive: From Inspiration to Action workshop:


Revs Bonnie and Andy Anderson present a fun and transformative program to help discover new ways to move into
action, using music and experiential exercises, 12:45 to 3:30
p.m., Woodland Chapel Center for Spiritual Living, 582 High St.
SE. $25 love donation. (503) 362-4139, woodlandchapelsalem.com.

Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church of Salem: Children


in grades K-6 can launch into outer space, with cosmic games,

SUNDAY EVENING JUNE 7, 2015

7:00

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(:31) Paid Program UNCF: An Evening of Stars Supporting minority education.


(5:00) 2015 NBA Finals Cleveland
Jimmy Kimmel
Cavaliers at Golden State Warriors. (N) Live Game Night
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10:30

11:00

11:30

Monopoly Millionaires Club

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Groundhog Day (93, Romance-Comedy) Bill Murray, Andie MacDowell,
can President
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Chris Elliott. A TV weathermans day keeps repeating.
60 Minutes Actor Bradley Cooper. (N) The 69th Annual Tony Awards Honoring excellence on Broadway. (N Same-day Tape)
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approach children. (N) (Part 1 of 4) (N)

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KATU News at 11 (:35) Castle The Final Nail Investigating


(N)
a friend of Castles.

(:01) American Odyssey FUBAR


KGW News at
BUNDY Peter gets in touch with Yusuf. 11 (N)
(N)

(:35) Sports
Sunday

Friends
A Knights
Tale (01)
(12:05) Raw Travel
Budapest, Eastern
Europes crown
jewel.
(12:05) Paid
Program

Globe Trekker
(:15) The Forsyte Saga Soames designs a retreat to save his 50 Years With Peter, Paul and Mary Performances by Peter, Paul and Mary. Rick Steves
marriage; Jolyon reconciles with his sons family; Winifreds
Europe: Remote, Isolated Islands:
marriage sours; Soames dream house materializes.
Sacred, Wild St. Helena
Bobs Burgers
The Simpsons Brooklyn NineFamily Guy Stewie Golan the Insa- 10 OClock News (N)
Oregon Sports
Everybody Loves Raising Hope
Bobs Burgers
(DVS)
Nine Holt and Amy impregnates him- tiable Winter Is
Final
Raymond Maries DysfunctionFuncLinda takes ying Teddy baby-sits
Staying (N)
Meatballs
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lessons.
with the kids.
re-open a case.
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Glee Heart The glee club performs love The Good Wife A Defense of Marriage The Good Wife Battle of the Proxies Oregon Sports
In Depth With
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Theory
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Alicias mother visits for Thanksgiving. The Justice Department puts heat on

Eli.

Moses Moses leads Israelites to freedom in the Promised Land.


Joseph Prince: Destined to Reign
The Stranger
TBN Highlights
2014
Topper Returns (41, Comedy) Roland Young, Joan Blondell, Carole Landis. Second Chorus (40, Musical Comedy) Fred Astaire, Paulette Goddard,
Garage Band
Garage Band
Inside the Law
A ghost urges Cosmo Topper to nd her murderer.
Burgess Meredith. Two musicians compete for a prestigious gig.
Music Videos.
Music Videos.
(42)
The Forsyte Saga

people are not comfortable confessing


their Christian faith. Others are critical, judgmental about the faith with
Jesus being misrepresented.
Bjornstad added, If we are true to
the Jesus of the Bible, our words and
our actions would be a love song sweetly sung. We will be bearers of good
news and carry such gracious warmth
and promise as the early days of summer.

The power of scripture


Another religious funny from the
Internet:
An elderly woman had just returned
to her home from an evening of religious service when she was startled by
an intruder.
As she caught the man in the act of
robbing her home of its valuables, she
yelled, Stop -Acts 2:38! (Turn from
your sin). The burglar stopped dead in
his tracks. The woman calmly called
the police and explained what she had
done.
As the officer cuffed the man to take
him in, he asked the burglar, Why did
you just stand there? All she did was
yell a scripture to you. Scripture?
replied the burglar, She said she had
an axe and two 38s!
Hank Arends is a retired
religion/community events writer for the
Statesman Journal who writes a weekly
column on religion. He may be reached at
hankarends@msn.com or (503) 930-9653.

Bible stories, songs, lunch, crafts, daily contests, popcorn,


photos and giant bounce house, 9:45 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. June
22-26, 4520 Fellowship Way NE. Free. (503) 383-4591.
Our Saviors Lutheran Church: Crafts, snacks, games, music
and more for ages 312 to those entering sixth grade, 9 a.m. to
noon June 22-26, 1770 Baxter Road SE. $12 per person; $30
family in advance. $17 per child or $45 family at the door. $8
T-shirts; $7 for each additional T-shirt while supplies last. (503)
399-8601, oursaviorssalem.org.
Redeemer Lutheran Church: 9 to 11:30 a.m. June 22-26,
4663 Lancaster Drive NE. Free. (503) 393-7121,
edeemer-lcms.org.
Westminster Presbyterian Church: Bible-learning adventures, amazing experiments, team-building games, cool Bible
songs and lip-smacking snacks, 9 a.m. to noon June 22-26,
3737 Liberty Road S. $5 per child and max $15 per family. (503)
364-3327.
Christ the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church: A two-day
kids camp filled with stories, crafts, songs and activities that
center around God, for children in pre-K through middle
school, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. June 26-27, 4440 State St. Free. (503)
363-3726.
Sunnyslope Christian Reformed Church: A week of Bible
stories, songs, skits, crafts, games, snacks and farm animal fun
for ages 4 through children entering sixth grade, 9 to 11:30
a.m. June 29-July 3, 197 Hrubetz Road SE. Free. (503) 363-5159,
sunnyslope.org.
Skyline Baptist Church: Crafts, music, dancing, Bible study,
games, snacks and prizes, for ages 3 to those in fifth grade, 6
to 8 p.m. July 13-17, 4787 Skyline Road S. Free. (503) 362-9552,
skylinebaptistchurch.info.
South Salem Church of Christ: Ages 2 to adults can learn
the importance and enjoyment of exploring the Bible, 9:30 to
11:30 a.m. July 20-24, 310 Ewald St. SE. Free. (503) 881-0009.
Corban UniversityTheatre Camp: A platform to enable
students to explore and express their God-given creativity and
imagination, for grades 4 to 12, 8:30 a.m. to noon July 20-Aug.
1, 5000 Deer Park Drive SE. $150 by June 19; $175 after June 19.
(503) 375-7019, inside.corban.edu/theatre/camp.
Peace Lutheran Church: A week-long kids camp that allows
kids to learn how awesome God is through stories, crafts,
songs and activities, for children K-6, 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Aug.
10-14, 1525 Glen Creek Road NW. Free. (503) 362-8500.

CABLE
DISC

Naked and Afraid Mayan Misery Sur- Naked and Afraid Primal Fear Surviv- Naked and Afraid: Uncensored A
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mother and a loner go to Thailand. (N)
Salem City Council

_ viving a ooded jungle in Belize.

CCTV 5
CCTV2 6

CCTV - Entertainment and Education


Secrets of Eternal Pent OClock
News
Rural Communities

CCTV3 7 Life (Persian).


CTV

CCTV - Community Voices

Naked and Afraid Colombian Conict Naked and Afraid Breaking Borneo 21 Naked and Afraid
The Colombian jungle. (N)
days in Sabah, Borneo.

CCTV - Public
Affairs
CCTV - Entertainment and Education
Reel Film Snobs CCTV, Ent. and NASA
Education
New Start Christian Center
To God Be the Glory
Mercy Meeting
Community Bulletin Board
Public Access
Chemeketa Community College TV

The Habitable
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Planet
Planet
(5:00) PGA Tour Golf Memorial Tournament, Final Round. From Muireld Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio.

PGA Tour Golf Champions: Principal Charity Classic, Final Round. From Des
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(6:30) MLS Soccer Seattle Sounders FC at Sporting Kansas MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at Seattle Mariners. From Safeco Field in Seattle.
Mariners PostMLS Soccer: RevoROOT B City. From Sporting Park in Kansas City, Kan.
game
lution at Timbers
(5:00) MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals SportsCenter (N) (Live)
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
ESPN C at Los Angeles Dodgers. (N)
NHRA Drag Racing Toyota Summernationals. From Englishtown, N.J. (N Same-day Tape)
NBA Tonight (N) ESPN FC Highlights, news, reactions
ESPN2 D
(Live)
and opinions from the day in soccer.
Volleyball FIVB World League: United States vs. Iran. (Taped)
Track and Field Prefontaine Classic.
College Rugby Penn Mutual Championships: Teams TBA. From PPL Park in
CSN E
Chester, Pa. (Taped)
Say Yes to the
Say Yes to the
Return to Amish Broken Family Mary Return to Amish Under Arrest Chapel Gypsy Sisters Revealing who has been Return to Amish Under Arrest Chapel Gypsy Sisters
TLC F Dress: Atlanta Dress: Atlanta continues to be shunned.
confronts Mary. (N)
spreading rumors. (N)
confronts Mary.

(6:00) Knocked Up (07) Seth Rogen, Katherine


Pitch Perfect (12, Musical Comedy) Anna Kendrick, Skylar Astin, Rebel Wilson. College
Stitchers A Stitch in Time Solving
Joel Osteen
FAM G Heigl. A one-night stand has an unforeseen consequence. students enter an a cappella competition.
crimes using dead minds.
Henry Danger
Nicky, Ricky,
Full House Full House High Full House Full House The Full House The Full House The Friends The One (:36) Friends (12:12) Friends
NICK H
Dicky & Dawn
Anxiety
Day of the Rhino Prying Game Bicycle Thief With Two Parts
(Part 2 of 2)

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Jessie Rossed at K.C. Undercover I Didnt Do It
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(DVS)

Repeat-a-Rooney Sea

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King of the Hill
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The Cleveland
American Dad
Family Guy Family Guy China, IL Gummie Aqua Something
TOON J Joy Ride
Say Uncle

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Show

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You Know
(:02) Finding Bigfoot The team join
(:03) Going Native (N)
(:04) The Last Alaskans Everyone
(:05) Finding Bigfoot The team join
(:06) Finding Bigfoot Baby Bigfoot
The Last Alaskans
ANPL K expert Stacy Brown Jr. (N)
prepares to hunt before winter.
expert Stacy Brown Jr.
Investigation of baby bigfoot.

High Prots Of and For the People


Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown High Prots Of and For the People
CNN International
CNN International
CNN L Brian and Caitlin campaign hard. (N)
Anthony enjoys fried hot dogs in Jersey. Anthony samples dishes in Budapest. Brian and Caitlin campaign hard.
The Greg Gutfeld Show (N)
Legends & Lies: The Real West
Legends & Lies: The Real West
The Greg Gutfeld Show
FOX News Sunday With Chris Wallace FOX News Special
FNC P

American Pickers Step Right Up A


American Pickers The pickers nd a American Pickers Mike and Frank gain Texas Rising Blood for Blood Sam Houston directs his army south. (Part 3 of (12:01) American
HIST R former pawnshop owners property.
mound of motorcycles.
access to their white whale pick.
5)
Pickers
(5:30) The Italian Job (03,
The Proposal (09, Romance-Comedy) Sandra Bullock, Ryan Reynolds. A Two Weeks Notice (02, Romance-Comedy) Sandra Bullock, Hugh Grant, (12:01) The
A&E T Crime Drama) Mark Wahlberg.
woman pretends to be engaged to evade deportation.
Alicia Witt. A millionaire confronts his feelings for his lawyer.
Proposal (09)
(6:00) Austin Powers: The Spy Identity Thief (13, Comedy) Jason Bateman, Melissa McCarthy, Jon Favreau. A victim of identity Identity Thief (13, Comedy) Jason Bateman, Melissa McCarthy, Jon Favreau.
fX
U Who Shagged Me (99, Comedy)
theft ghts back.
A victim of identity theft ghts back.
(5:00) The Help (11, Drama) The Blind Side (09, Drama) Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw, Quinton Aaron. A well-to-do white The Blind Side (09, Drama) Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw, Quinton Aaron.
TNT V Viola Davis, Emma Stone. (DVS)
couple adopts a homeless black teen. (DVS)
A well-to-do white couple adopts a homeless black teen. (DVS)
(5:30) The Longest Yard (05)
Rush Hour 3 (07, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker, Hiroyuki Sanada. Carter Men in Black II (02) Tommy Lee Jones. Agents Jay (:45) The Longest Yard (05)
TBS W Adam Sandler, Chris Rock. (DVS)
and Lee battle Chinese gangsters in Paris. (DVS)
and Kay defend Earth from a sultry alien enemy.
Adam Sandler, Chris Rock. (DVS)
(6:53) Bar Rescue Three brothers and (:01) Bar Rescue A Dash of Bitters An (:09) Bar Rescue Storming the Castle A castle-shaped bar (:17) Bar Rescue Lagers and Liars A (:26) Bar Rescue Bartenders who dance
SPIKE Y their struggling bar.
ex-wife and former manager help.
with an angry owner.
family divided over a beer bars debt.
on the bar.
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A (:02) Law & Order: Special Victims
(:02) Law & Order: Special Victims
(:02) Law & Order: Special Victims
(:02) Modern Fam- (:32) Modern Fam- (12:02) Modern
USA Z money manager is found murdered.
Unit A family is torn by sexual abuse. Unit Possessed
Unit Educated Guess
ily
ily
Family
City of Ember (08, Fantasy) Saoirse Ronan, Harry Treadaway, Bill Murray. The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (10, Fantasy) Georgie Henley, The Golden Compass (07)
SYFY [ Two teens must save their underground city from darkness.
Skandar Keynes. A painting draws Lucy, Edmund and their cousin into Narnia again.
Nicole Kidman, Dakota Blue Richards.
(6:46) South Park (:20) South Park (7:54) South
(:27) South Park South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park The (:32) South Park (12:04) South Park
COM Over Logging
Crme Fraiche Park
Cissy
Funnybot
(6:30) Con Air (97, Action) Nicolas Cage, John Cusack, John Malkovich. (:03) Party Down South Kelsie stirs a (:03) Party Down South The roommates (:03) Party Down South Girls Night! A (12:03) Party Down
CMTV Vicious convicts hijack their ight.
heated competition.
explore St. Pete.
girls night out on the town.
South
Reba Barbra Jean (:40) Reba Rebas Rules of Real Estate (:20) Reba Driving The King of
(:36) The King of (:12) The King of Queens Strike One (10:48) The King of (:24) The King of The King of
TVL is jealous of Reba. Reba gets a job interview.
Miss Kyra
Queens
Queens
Doug buys a new car.
Queens
Queens
Queens
Xtreme WaterXtreme WaterXtreme WaterXtreme WaterXtreme Waterparks Worlds tallest water Xtreme WaterXtreme WaterXtreme WaterXtreme WaterXtreme WaterTRAV parks
parks
parks
parks
slide.
parks
parks
parks
parks
parks
Guys Grocery Games ABC game; the Guys Grocery Games Four chefs return Food Network Star Finalists make an Cutthroat Kitchen Carne Diem
Cutthroat Kitchen Martini glass is used Food Network Star
TVF chefs go international.
to Flavortown. (N)
introductory video.
Twisted pan; a kitchen up a tree. (N)
to make banh mi.
House Hunters Renovation A home in Beachfront Bar- Beachfront Bar- Caribbean Life Caribbean Life Island Hunters Island Hunters House Hunters
House Hunters
Caribbean Life
HGTV Somerville, Mass.
gain Hunt
gain Hunt
(N)
International (N)
Deadly Revenge (13, Suspense) Alicia Ziegler, Mark Hapka, Donna Mills. A
Double Daddy (15, Drama) Mollee Gray, Brittany Curran, Cameron Palatas. A (:02) Deadly Revenge (13) Alicia Ziegler, Mark Hapka. A
LIFE woman suspects that her boyfriend is up to no good.
teen impregnates his girlfriend and another student.
woman suspects that her boyfriend is up to no good.
Botched Mo Steroids Mo Problems A Botched Dollyd Up A woman with a Botched House of Horrors Tanya
Rich Kids of Beverly Hills RingOnIt The Grace Helbig Botched House of Horrors Tanya
E!
man with super-sized lips.
possibly unxable nose.
hopes to get rid of a scar. (N)
Brendan surprises Morgan. (N)
Show (N)
hopes to get rid of a scar.
Erin Brockovich (00, Drama) Julia Roberts, Albert Finney, Aaron Eckhart. A woman probes a power company
Halt and Catch Fire New Coke Joe Halt and Catch Fire New Coke Joe Wild Hogs
AMC cover-up over poisoned water.
begins a new job. (N)
begins a new job.
(07) Tim Allen.

GOLF A

(PA) = Parental Advisory

N = New programming

= Closed Caption

! = Broadcast Channels

! = TCI Cable Channels

Prestige Senior Living Southern Hills presents

6$)(7<),567
S

Join us as we host a lecture series to


increase safety awareness on fall
prevention, common home injuries and
provide solutions to keep you and your
loved ones safe!

Learn the 411 on Medicare


Coverage
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1:30 PM

CONCLUDED

Durable Medical Equipment


Can Keep You Independent
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1:30 PM

CONCLUDED

Healthy Back Habits for


Caregivers
WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1:30 PM

CONCLUDED

Elder-Friendly Living: Modifying


Your Home for Safety
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 2015, 1:30PM

Know Your Numbers


WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 2015, 1:30PM

Space is limited for this FREE educational series.


For more information or to reserve your seat please
call (503) 378-7499.
Prestige Senior Living
Southern Hills
4795 Skyline Road S
Salem, Oregon 97306
www.PrestigeCare.com

25

8E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Arts
Jeweler

IF YOU GO

Continued from Page 1E

When: July 17-19

your text around the image. It


was primitive, but I knew that
this was something that was
going to change.
As she continued to paint,
her tech career blossomed. She
moved to Portland and bought
her first home. Then the tech
bubble blew up. She lost her
job. Her retirement was, as she
called it, birdcage liner.
Again, she started over. She
built a successful life-purpose
consulting business, in which
she also did teaching and public speaking engagements.
That sustained her until she
closed the business to paint
full time and, shortly thereafter, discovered her paint
allergy.
Unable to paint, she started
making jewelry. She trained at
Danaca Design in Seattle,
where she studied with top
jewelry instructors from
across the nation. She joined
the Creative Metal Arts Guild
of Portland and is now its
president. Her online jewelry
sales have blossomed on Etsy,
and she is once again a full-

Where: Bushs Pasture Park

What: Salem Art Fair & Festival

Cost: $5 per day, $10 for a weekend


pass, free for ages 12 and younger
For information: Call (503) 5812228 or go to salemart.org/art-fair

LESLIE ZEMENEK / SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL

Layered Sterling Silver and Copper Brooch with Peridot by Leslie


Zemenek

time artist.
The Salem Art Fair will be
her first outdoor festival. Shes
been selected as one of the
fairs two emerging artists.
Even though shes been an
artist for more than three and
a half decades, her career is
emerging. Shell have a veteran artist to show her the ropes
at the fair.
The popular jewelry market

is saturated with artists. Shes


been told that jewelry is the
most competitive category at
fairs. She is looking forward to
asking questions and learning
as much as she can from the
fair experience.
One of my major goals is to
become known and to let people know who I am, Zemenek
said of the fair. So they can
see my work, my style, get to

THIS WEEK
IN THE ARTS
THROUGH JUNE 20
God of Carnage and
The Book of Liz: God of
Carnage, set in present-day
New York City, tells a tale of
two married couples who
meet for the first time after
their sons have a nasty
schoolyard tangle, while The
Book of Liz chronicles the
plight of Sister Elizabeth
Dunderstock, known through
town for her legendary and
delicious cheese balls, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday-Saturday
and June 17-20, plus 2 p.m.
today and June 14, Pentacle
Theatre, 324 52nd Ave. NW.
$16.50 to $21. (503) 485-4300,
pentacletheatre.org.

TODAY
Stamp Out Cancer Crafting
Marathon: Crafters can
spend the weekend at Runaway Art & Craft Studio
stamping, painting, scrapbooking and art journaling,
10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Runaway
Art & Craft Studio, 311 Commercial St. NE. $35 per day or
$60 for the weekend; raising
money for the American
Cancer Societys Relay For
Life. (503) 881-6270, runawayart.com.
The Little Mermaid: A
musical theater performance
punctuated by jazz, ballet
and modern dance presented
by the American Academy of
Performing Arts Company, 2
to 4:30 p.m., Historic Elsinore
Theatre, 170 High St. SE. $15.
(800) 992-8499, ticketswest.com.
Musical favorites by Berlin, Kern and Gershwin:
Musical hits of the 1920s,
1930s and early 1940s, including favorites from Show
Boat, Porgy and Bess and
other Broadway hits, with
fashions from the period, 4
p.m. show sold out; 7 p.m.
show available, Northwest
Wine Studies Center, 215
Doaks Ferry Road NW. $30.
(503) 540-7479, festivalchorale.org.
Oregon Mandolin Orchestra and Oregon Mandolin
Chamber Orchestra: Both
groups will perform a variety
of sacred and traditional
pieces, 4 p.m., St. Pauls Episcopal Church, 1444 Liberty St.
SE. Donations accepted. (503)
362-3661.
Love in the Cucumber
Patch or The Pickled
Road to Romance auditions: Melodrama by Janet
Carter (with additional dialogue by Shannon Copeland
and Sonya Heard), 6 p.m.,
Brush Creek Playhouse, 11535
Silverton Road NE, Silverton.
(503) 508-3682,
brushcreekplayhouse.com.

MONDAY
Salem Oregon paper folding addicts: Club dedicated
to the art of origami, bring
paper, models and any questions you have, 4:30 to 6:30
p.m., Book Bin East, 2235
Lancaster Drive NE. Free.
(503) 364-4736.

TUESDAY
Gallery talk: Join docent
Gary Brown at the Hallie Ford
Museum of Art for a guided
tour of the exhibition Mel
Katz: On and Off the Wall,
12:30 p.m., Hallie Ford Museum of Art, Melvin-Henderson Rubio Gallery, 700
State St. Free. (503) 370-6855,
willamette.edu.

know me and hopefully set the


stage for the future.
While she makes all types of
jewelry, she especially loves
big neck pieces.
Ive never been one to
wear a little pearl necklace or
a little stud earring, Zemenek
said. I loved the big earrings
of the 80s. Ive been known to
dash into traffic to save one
that fell on the ground.
Because she gets bored
easily, she challenges herself
to make intricate and difficult
pieces. She works primarily
with sterling silver, sometimes
mixing it with copper or
bronze.
Beginning with a sheet of
metal or wire, she saws, cuts
and pierces the metal. She
gives each piece texture and
shape by hammering it. She

marionpolkfoodshare.org.

HOT PICK

Snow White: 250 students


of American Ballet Academy
will perform, with dancing,
costumes, sets and music, 7
p.m., Historic Elsinore Theatre,
170 High St. $12 advance; $14
day of show; benefits a Salem
area nonprofit that helps
homeless youth, . (503) 3644738, americanballetacademy.net.

SUNDAY
COURTESY OF ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH

The Oregon Mandolin Orchestra will perform at 4 p.m.


today at St. Pauls Episcopal Church, 1444 Liberty St. SE.

Oregon Mandolin
Orchestra to perform
today in Salem
By Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

The Oregon Mandolin Orchestra will perform


at 4 p.m. today at St. Pauls Episcopal Church,
1444 Liberty St. SE.
If youre unfamiliar with mandolin orchestras, they were mainstream in cities and high
schools during the early 20th century. They fell
out of popularity after World War I until mandolins made a comeback with the folk music revival. Today, many cities have mandolin orchestras.
The Oregon Mandolin Orchestra includes
mandolins, mandolas, mandocellos and double
basses. Elizabeth and Brian Oberlin founded the
ensemble in an effort to revive the beauty and
popularity of the traditional mandolin orchestra.
The orchestra draws from a vast body of music
that ranges from classical and swing to jazz.
The concert at St. Pauls Episcopal is part of
the series Supporting Sacred Music in a Sacred
Setting. The orchestra will perform a variety
of traditional and sacred pieces. The Oregon
Mandolin Chamber Orchestra, which is a subgroup of the larger ensemble, also will perform.
Admission is free. Donations are accepted.
The concert will begin with the service of Evensong sung by the St. Pauls Chamber Singers.
For concert information, call (503) 362-3661
or go to stpaulsoregon.org. For orchestra information, go to oregonmandolinorchestra.org.
TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal.com, (503) 983-6030,
facebook.com/RastrelliSJ and on Twitter @RastrelliSJ

TUESDAY AND
WEDNESDAY
I Ought to Be in Pictures
auditions: A comedy by Neil
Simon, 6 p.m., Brush Creek
Playhouse, 11535 Silverton
Road NE, Silverton. (503)
508-3682, brushcreekplayhouse.com.

WEDNESDAY
Literary Discussion Group:
Discussion of contemporary
and classic literature, 1 to 3
p.m., Salem Public Library,
Plaza Room, 585 Liberty St.
SE. Free. (503) 588-6052,
salemlibrary.org.
Every Day Taste of Plein
Air art reception: Plein-air
style paintings of the modern
world landscapes including
country scenes, city life, industrial areas and architectural
elements to include taste of
(contemporary) everyday
scene of 2014 life, 6 to 9 p.m.,
Oregon State University,
LaSells Stewart Center, 1491
SW Campus Way, Corvallis.
Free. (541) 737-2402.

FRIDAY
Steve Hale & The Super
Soul Heroes: Familiar funk
and soul songs an dbarbecue
provided by Rollin Smoke, 6
to 10 p.m., Cubanisimo Vineyards, tasting room and patio,
1754 Best Road NW. $10; $5

wine club members. (503)


588-1763, cubanisimovineyards.com.

FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY
Salem Philharmonia Orchestra: Experience Beethovens Fifth Symphony live in
orchestras final concert of its
2014-15 season, with Lydia Van
Dreel on the French horn as
the featured soloist in Mozarts French horn concerto
No. 3, 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Salem, 5090 Center St.
NE, and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday,
Chemeketa Community College, Auditorium, 4000 Lancaster Drive NE. $15; $10 ages
65 and older; free ages 17 and
younger. (541) 510-5614, salemphil.org.

SATURDAY
World Wide Knit in Public
Day: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Salem
Public Library, main floor, 585
Liberty St. SE. Free. (503)
588-6052, salemlibrary.org.
Plate Expectations: A tropical experience dinner and
auction for Meals on Wheels,
with tropical drinks and food
while listening to island music,
5:30 to 9 p.m., City of Salem
Center 50+, 2615 Portland
Road NE. $40. (503) 581-3855,

Willamette Valley Jazz


Society: Live Dixieland and
traditional jazz, 12:30 to 5
p.m., Salem Eagles, 2771 Pence
Loop SE. $8 guest; $6 society
member and first time free.
Memberships may be bought
at the door. (503) 363-5780.
Family Clay Sunday: Each
week, the staff at the Willamette Art Center will give instructions for a themed project of the week, 1 to 4 p.m.,
Willamette Art Center, 2330
17th St. NE. $10 for up to a
family of four, including at
least one adult. $3 each per
extra person. (503) 365-3911,
willametteartcenter.com.
Tom Prochaska and Christy
Wyckoff Artists Conversation: 2 p.m., Hallie Ford Museum of Art, Roger Hull Lecture Hall, 700 State St. Free.
(503) 370-6855, willamette.edu.

solders pieces together and


especially enjoys working with
her handmade rivets.
Thats when its really
starting to look like what I
envisioned it to be, Zemenek
said of the riveting process.
Its the Zen moment for me.
The word most people use to
describe her jewelry is organic. Mother Nature is the
original artist, Zemenek said.
Some organic shapes that inspire her are sea creatures,
shells, the Hubble Space Telescopes images and macro
photography of seeds, blood
vessels and cross sections of
stems.
A few times, Ive had people look at my jewelry and say
Im a scientist, Zemenek said.
A person told my husband,
Tell her to look at giardia, its
really cute. I did look it up,
and it is kind of cute.
Google giardia and see for
yourself. At the fair, stop by
and chat with Zemenek. Shes
very interested in getting to
know people, and you wont
catch giardia from her jewelry.
TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal
.com, (503) 983-6030,
facebook.com/RastrelliSJ and on
Twitter @RastrelliSJ

of Oregon Show features the


top 20 award-winning paintings from the Societys Spring
convention, through June 27,
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. MondaysFridays and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturdays, 444 Ferry St. SE.
Free. (503) 581-4642, elsinoregallery.com.
Enid Joy Mount Gallery:
Photography and Fiber to
Fashion show, through June
27, 1 to 4 p.m. Thursdays and
Fridays and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturdays, 980 Chemawa
Road NE, Keizer. Free. (503)
390-3010, keizerarts.com.
Hallie Ford Museum of Art:
Tom Prochaska and Christy
Wyckoff: In the Footsteps of
Charles Heaney, Mel Katz:
Drawings and Small Sculptures and Mel Katz: On and
Off the Wall, Katzs largescale abstract geometric
sculptures drawn from public
and private collections
throughout the Pacific Northwest, as well as a number of
works from the artists studio,
all through July 19, 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays
and 1 to 5 p.m. Sundays, 700
State St. $6, $4 seniors and
students ages 18 and older, $3
ages 17 and younger and
everyone free on Tuesdays.
(503) 370-6855, willamette.edu/museum_of_art.

Lunaria Gallery: Intimate


Spaces, Sacred Places featuring artwork by Rebekah
Rigsby and Helen Wiens,
through June 26, 11 a.m. to 5
p.m. daily, 113 N Water St.,
Silverton. Free. (503) 8737734, lunariagallery.com.
Deepwood: What is That?
Industry & Innovation, with
the beginning of the industrial age, inventors had expanded resources and opportunities to develop items that
could fill an array of specialty
functions, test your analytical
skills as you examine the
items on display and try to
determine what purpose they
were designed to fulfill,
through Sept. 30, 9 a.m. to
noon Wednesdays-Saturdays,
Deepwood Museum & Gardens, 1116 Mission St. SE. $6;
$5 ages 62 and older; $4
students with ID; $3 ages 6 to
15; free ages 5 and younger.
(503) 363-1825,
historicdeepwoodestate.org.
Oregon School of Massage
Art Show: Work of local
artist, Michael Davis, is on
display, through June 23, 8:30
a.m. to 7:30 p.m. TuesdaysThursdays, 2111 Front St. NE
Building 3. Free. (503) 5858912, oregonschoolofmassage.com.

Dayton Community Chorus


10th Anniversary Concert:
The Dayton Community
Chorus celebrates 10 years of
community music-making, 3
to 4:30 p.m., Pioneer Evangelical Church, 300 4th St., Dayton. Free. (503) 679-9328.

ART EXHIBITS
Borland Gallery: Good Ole
Boys Art Show, through June
28, noon to 4 p.m. Saturdays
and Sundays, 303 Coolidge St.,
Silverton. Free. (503) 3639310, silvertonarts.org.
The Bread Board: Paul Griffitts, Dallas High class of 1970,
is currently showing his 3d
fractal art, through June 27,
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays and
Saturdays, 404 Main St., Falls
City. Free. (503) 787-5000,
frackxion.com.
Bush Barn Art Center: Gifts
including unique greeting
cards to handmade jewelry,
through Aug. 31; The Debra
& Edward L. Allis Collection: A
Benefit Sale for the Salem Art
Association in Loving Memory
of Debra Smith Allis, through
June 27; Featured Artist:
Debbie Robinson, through
June 27; Mono x Two: Prints
by Jonathan Bucci and Kim
Hoffman, through June 27,
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. TuesdaysFridays and noon to 5 p.m.
Saturdays-Sundays, 600 Mission St. SE. Free. (503) 5812228, Ext. 302, salemart.org.
Capital Community Television: A variety of media by
local artists, through June 30,
11 a.m. to 9 p.m. TuesdaysFridays and 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Saturdays, Capital Community
Television, 575 Trade St. SE.
Free. (503) 588-2288, throwarock.com/CCTV5.
Currents Gallery: Glass Art
Show by Christine Xthona and
guests, through June 14, 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays-Saturdays and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Sundays, 532 NE Third St.,
McMinnville. Free. (503)
435-1316, currentsgallery.com.
Elsinore Framing & Fine Art
Gallery: Watercolor Society

JUNE 6AUG. 23

Melvin Henderson-Rubio Gallery

willamette.edu/go/hfma_katz
25

503-370-6855

CELEBRATIONS
RECOGNIZING THE SPECIAL
OCCASIONS OF YOUR LIFE

To include your celebration,


call 503-399-6789 or visit:
www.STATESMANJOURNAL.com
/MILESTONES

50TH WED
EDD
DING ANNIVER
ERSA
S RY
Barbara and Gary Weber will celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary June 20, 2015. They were married in Bend,
Oregon, Barbaras home town, on Fathers Day, 1965.
They celebrated their golden wedding anniversary in early
May by taking a Crystal cruise from Vancouver, BC to Los
Angeles, with ports of call in San Francisco and Santa
Barbara where they had spent their honeymoon. Barbara
is a travel consultant with Peak Travel and Gary retired
from the State Employment department where he was a
vocational counselor. They will celebrate the event again
at a gathering of family and friends in mid-July.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

InsideBusiness
INSIDE

ONLINE
StatesmanJournal.com/insidebiz

STATESMAN JOURNAL
MEDIA CLASSIFIEDS
STARTING ON 4F

West Salem entrepreneur uses robotics


to unite mourning families

MOURNING
MILES
A
across
the

People
have
to move where
there is work.
And when the
unexpected
happens, it is
difficult to get
the whole family
back together
for events like
funerals.
STEVE GRAY

Founder, Orbris
Robotics

On screen is
Stephenie Boren
(with sons Trent
and Grant), Steve
and Lisa Gray's
daughter in Austin,
Texas, who are able
to attend via
telepresence a
service at Restlawn
Funeral Home. At
the service is Lisa
Gray, friends Molly,
Jerry, Brock and
Brody McMullen.
COURTESY OF ORBIS
ROBOTICS AND EAN
PERKINS PHOTOGRAPHY

Agenda............................... 2F
Scott Burns......................... 2F

By Brandon Southward | Statesman Journal

ll Steve Gray wanted to do was talk


to his dad.
Three years ago I was having
trouble reaching my father in Indiana,
Gray said. He was constantly forgetting
where he left the phone and often couldnt
remember how to answer it anyway.
Gray, a West Salem resident with an engineering background, needed to find a
way that would allow him to communicate
with his dad on a regular basis.
He remembers thinking: If only he could
teach his dad to Skype, but how do you
teach a 90-year-old with failing memory
how to use a computer? And then the idea
came to him.
I thought, why dont I rig up the computer with a webcam so that I can log on to
it from my home here in Oregon, allowing
me to launch the Skype call myself, Gray
said.
Even better, if I put wheels on that computer I could drive it around and follow my
dad anywhere in his house and just hang
out with him.

See ROBOTICS, Page 3F

Weekly Stocks................... 2F

ONLINE To read news about local and regional businesses,


go to StatesmanJournal.com/market.

REACH US: Don Currie, Business Editor, (503) 399-6677; dcurrie@StatesmanJournal.com

Ongoing
dialogue
is key to
lower fear
As a business owner working
towards excellence, are you working
extra hours, trying to do more with
less and taking on more duties yourself? Todays
business climate calls for
some action on
your part if you
are not only
going to survive, but conLori Cegon
tinue to thrive
for the long
C C C SMALL BUSINESS
haul.
According to
a recent Society for Human Resource Management Employee Job
Satisfaction Survey, employees selected job security for the second
consecutive year as the most important aspect of job satisfaction. Not a
surprise given our economic climate. However, a simple performance management system can
lower the fear of the unknown by
providing ongoing dialogue and information on how each employee can
have positive impact on the well
being of your business.
Performance management is
much more than filling in the blanks
of an employee appraisal form. A
strong system effectively and consistently communicates businessaligned goals, skill development and
pay-for-performance tools that demonstrate to your employees that they
are truly a valued asset. Added benefits include increases in performance, productivity, employee morale and quality of work, plus a reduction in both turnover and employee relations challenges.
A performance management
system may sound a bit daunting.
You may think, Thats for big corporations, but not for my small business. Not at all. While establishing a
performance management system is
a significant undertaking, once the
system is in place, the time needed
to manage the system decreases.
Consider the following components:
Define the jobs purpose, duties
and responsibilities.
Define the performance goals
desired and include measurable
outcomes.
Communicate your performance expectations clearly for each
component of the job. Include opportunities for questions, discussion and
clarification of the key issues.
Provide ongoing positive and
constructive feedback to all employees about their performance. Continue to check with the employee
that goals and expectations are understood and necessary tools are
available.
Maintain a record of performance by jotting notes about contributions, challenges and opportunities throughout the year in an individual confidential electronic or
paper file. Communicate anything
recorded with the employee no later
than three days of the occurrence in
order to be impactful and relevant.
Develop a performance review
document that supports the organizational goals and allows space for
comments and specific examples of
actual performance to support each
performance rating. For best results, also incorporate a separate
feedback form in order for the employee to have a voice and be empowered to provide examples about
their own performance and development needs.
Develop and manage a coaching and improvement plan for employees needing additional tools,
skills and feedback.
It all comes down to COMMUNICATION. A performance management system is an important tool
that sets your employees up for
success. Your consistent willingness
to value and appreciate each of your
employees will pay dividends by
creating a positive workplace, better
two-way communication, higher
productivity and, ultimately, a thriving business.
Lori Cegon is the director of the
Chemeketa Small Business Management
Program (sbm.chemeketa.edu) and owner
of Creating Results Coaching.

INSIDE BUSINESS is a weekly feature of the Statesman Journal,


with essays by local business leaders as well as other business news.

2F

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Do you really need a financial planner?


Question: Do I really need a financial
planner? I have a 401(k), employer pension, and Social Security for retirement.
I have $70,000 in savings and I want to
invest. Should I go
with the guy that
charges 1.2 percent
per year or a feebased only person?
S.S., by email
Answer: Start by
making a distinction
Scott Burns between financial
P E R S O NA L
planning and inF I NA N C E
vestment management. You might see
a financial planner on a consulting basis,
paying a fee at an hourly rate. A visit to
review your finances should give you an
idea of whether youll have enough money to retire when you want to retire.
(With Social Security, a pension, a 401(k)
plan and some savings things are looking
good!)
For most people financial planning is
about getting a handle on whether your
expected income will cover your expected expenses. It can be complicated. It
can be simple. For most people it is pretty simple.
The second part is managing the
money. That, thankfully, has become
very inexpensive as index funds have
displaced managed funds and as employers have offered life-cycle funds in
401(k) plans. Basically, the burden is now

on the managers to prove that they can


justify their expenses. And they cant. So
look for a simple low cost balanced fund
such as Vanguard Balanced Index. And
with $70,000 you can buy the even lower
cost Admiral shares.
Q: My husband is convinced there is
going to be a total devaluation of the
dollar. His solution is to turn a large
portion of his 401(k) into gold-backed
vehicle. How would be the best way to do
this? He doesnt want a mutual fund that
invests in gold, but rather the gold itself
stored in some manner. I am very concerned that this is not safe. S.C., San
Antonio, Texas
A: If you really get into the financial
collapse thing, your husband should buy
lead, not gold. The lead should be in the
form of bullets, preferably of a large
caliber. I am told that when these lead
bullets are inserted into a good handgun,
the lead can be turned into gold very
quickly. This does not require converting
a 401(k), or any other form of investment, into gold.
If youre going to bet on gold, the best
way to hold it is in the form of gold coins
that you store in a secure place in your
house because if there is a collapse, our
financial institutions wont be doing
business as usual.
In the meantime, our first duty is to
take part in the world as is, where is.
That means participating in the system
of saving and investing that we have,

NASDAQ
NAME

WK
CLS

NAME

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

A-B-C
Accuray
6.35
Achillion
9.20
ActivsBliz u25.77
AdobeSy
78.86
AirMedia
u7.07
AkamaiT
75.24
Akorn lf
46.55
Alexion
160.26
AllscriptH
14.26
AlteraCp lf u51.46
Amarin
2.45
Amazon
426.95
Ambarella u103.33
AmAirlines 41.72
ACapAgy d19.77
ARltCapPr
8.64
Amgen
157.25
AmkorTch
6.64
AnalogDev u67.37
AntheraP h u7.13
ApolloEdu 16.68
ApolloInv
7.88
Apple Inc s 128.65
ApldMatl
20.15
AMCC
7.21
ArenaPhm 4.36
AresCap
16.47
AriadP
8.98
ArrayBio
7.66
Arris
33.90
AscenaRtl 15.59
Atmel
9.42
Autodesk
54.61
AutoData
84.26
AvagoTch u143.81
AVEO Phm 2.43
AvisBudg
51.26
Baidu
205.89
BedBath
69.81
BioRefLab u39.62
Biogen
387.86
BioScrip
d3.57
BlackBerry
9.75
BreitBurn
5.53
Broadcom 54.35
BrcdeCm
12.37
CA Inc
29.67
CH Robins 64.18
CME Grp
95.95
Cadence u20.39
Caesars
d6.41
CdnSolar
33.16
CpstnTur h
.55
Catamaran 60.19
Celgene s 110.72
CelldexTh 26.66
CentAl
d11.67
Cerner
66.24
CharterCm 173.97

+.21
-.69
+.51
-.23
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-1.03
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-1.05
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10.01
16.87
26.09
80.74
7.63
78.44
57.10
203.30
17.17
51.91
3.33
452.65
100.84
56.20
24.06
13.44
173.60
12.27
68.97
6.37
34.55
8.87
134.54
25.71
11.75
6.59
17.93
9.89
8.59
37.50
17.69
9.76
65.00
90.23
150.50
3.50
69.76
251.99
79.64
46.74
480.18
8.75
12.63
23.15
57.70
12.96
33.42
77.49
100.61
20.28
18.91
41.12
1.62
60.44
129.06
32.82
31.75
75.72
199.00

5.84
2.65
17.73
58.51
1.65
51.74
27.09
150.06
11.00
30.47
.78
284.00
24.12
28.10
20.12
7.38
114.93
5.77
42.57
1.46
16.05
6.80
88.93
18.63
4.61
3.26
14.63
4.90
2.98
23.71
10.50
6.32
48.38
68.35
68.71
.61
45.94
160.80
54.96
26.09
290.85
3.36
7.30
4.55
34.06
8.89
25.25
59.09
69.16
15.50
7.05
18.68
.41
39.40
76.03
11.93
10.67
50.30
137.51

-15.9
-24.9
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+8.5
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-13.4
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-22.2
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-8.3
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-48.9
-11.2
-21.0
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+4.5
-2.6
-14.3
+8.2
+7.5
-59.1
+37.1
-25.2
+16.3
-1.0
+46.1
-52.2
+2.4
+4.4

WK
CLS
83.79
5.15
28.58
66.29
7.63
u64.60
58.69
58.36
u32.20
38.36
138.78
u6.32
30.00
15.05
76.07
66.24
13.38
.66

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
-.93 88.49 63.70 +6.6
-.47 11.88
3.15
-3.2
-.73 30.31 22.49 +3.5
+1.28 72.89 56.47 +3.9
+.14 11.79
3.99 +52.8
-.12 65.96 41.51 +22.7
+.23 60.85 49.33 +1.2
+.36 60.24 49.26 +1.4
+1.03 32.43 19.68 +41.0
+1.37 51.99 14.02 +105.2
-3.81 156.85 114.51
-2.1
+.42
6.33
3.52 +31.7
-.28 53.33 27.25
-6.9
+.01 16.83 10.25 +20.5
-3.80 87.62 40.74 +67.2
+4.05 70.48 22.12 +67.1
-.35 16.25
8.04
-6.3
...
2.54
.36 +35.2

DavidsT g nud27.00
Depomed 21.89
DirecTV
u91.68
DiscCmA s 34.45
DiscCmC s 31.89
DishNetw h 75.51
DollarTree 77.64
DonlleyRR 19.27
DryShips h
.72
Dunkin
52.47
DurectCp u3.23
E-Trade
u30.67
eBay
u63.23
EarthLink
u6.98
ElectArts
62.90
Endo Intl
83.53
EngyXXI
3.43
Ericsson
11.47
Exelixis
3.35
Expedia
106.40
ExpdIntl
47.95
ExpScripts 86.88
F5 Netwks 124.52
Facebook 82.14
Fastenal
41.89
FifthThird
20.84
FireEye
u51.03
FstNiagara u9.21
FstSolar
51.30
FT DWF5 24.34
FiveBelow 38.30
Flextrn
12.14
Fortinet
u41.04
FrontierCm 4.97
FuelCellE
1.22
FultonFncl u13.02

...
+1.03 28.16
9.85 +35.9
+.64 92.65 82.04 +5.7
+.51 44.99 28.72
+.45 44.00 27.66
-5.4
+4.72 80.75 56.17 +3.6
+2.65 84.22 52.67 +10.3
+.09 20.22 14.32 +14.7
-.01
3.55
.65 -31.8
-.62 54.60 40.50 +23.0
+.63
3.22
.68 +309.4
+1.21 30.76 18.20 +26.4
+1.87 63.03 46.34 +12.7
+.04
7.23
2.95 +59.0
+.14 64.30 31.77 +33.8
-.23 96.58 57.14 +15.8
-.03 24.20
2.30 +5.2
+.21 13.28 10.81
-5.2
+.20
4.55
1.26 +132.6
-.86 115.00 70.91 +24.6
+2.11 49.51 38.14 +7.5
-.26 91.21 65.08 +2.6
-1.17 136.11 106.57
-4.6
+2.95 86.07 61.79 +5.3
+.38 50.98 39.46 -11.9
+.60 21.81 17.14 +2.3
+4.46 49.69 24.81 +61.6
+.30
9.20
7.00 +9.3
+1.59 73.78 39.18 +15.0
-.12 24.86 18.90 +10.5
+5.05 47.89 28.51
-6.2
-.01 12.86
8.46 +8.6
+.98 40.38 21.94 +33.9
-.19
8.46
4.90 -25.6
-.01
2.84
1.05 -20.8
+.36 13.04 10.43 +5.3

NAME
ChkPoint
ChiFnOnl
Cisco
CitrixSys
CleanEngy
CognizTch
Comcast
Comc spcl
CommScpe
Conns
Costco
CowenGp
Cree Inc
Crocs
Ctrip.com
CyberArk n
CypSemi
CytoriTher

D-E-F

17.21 +.03 19.06


3.92 +.06
4.49
113.96 +1.69 116.83

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

A-B-C
ABB Ltd
22.80
AES Corp 13.15
AK Steel
5.25
AT&T Inc
34.57
AbbottLab 48.45
AbbVie
67.40
AberFitc
22.45
AerCap
u48.53
Aeropostl
d2.03
AlcatelLuc
3.83
Alcoa
d12.42
Alibaba n
90.71
AlphaNRs
d.50
AlpAlerMLP 16.26
Altria
48.21
Ambev
5.92
AMovilL
20.32
AEagleOut 16.57
AmExp
79.39
AmIntlGrp u60.50
AmTower
92.52
Anadarko
84.49
AnglogldA
8.72
Annaly
9.94
Apache
59.35
ArcelorMit 10.96
ArchCoal
.51
ArchDan
51.01
ArmourRsd d2.93
Autoliv
124.65
Avon
d6.71
BB&T Cp u40.20
BP PLC
40.56
BcoBrad s
8.76
BcoSantSA 7.22
BkofAm
17.19
BkNYMel
43.36
BarcGSOil 12.07
B iPVixST 19.10
BarrickG
11.47
Baxter
d65.02
BerkHa A 211560
BerkH B
140.76
BestBuy
34.53
Blackstone 42.40
BostonSci 17.85
BrMySq
66.20
CBS B
61.33
CMS Eng
31.78
CSX
34.43
CVS Health 99.95
CblvsnNY 24.06
CabotO&G 33.85
CalifRes n
7.99

+.96
-.45
-.01
+.03
-.15
+.81
+1.98
+.29
+.14
-.12
-.08
+1.39
+.00
-.29
-2.99
+.20
-.68
+.20
-.33
+1.89
-.27
+.88
-.86
-.50
-.49
+.24
+.02
-1.84
-.06
-1.50
-.01
+.73
-.90
-.03
+.12
+.74
...
-.28
+.08
-.39
-1.59
-3240
-2.24
-.17
-1.40
-.42
+1.60
-.39
-2.36
+.35
-2.43
-.45
-.11
+.14

24.15 19.14 +7.8


15.65 11.53
-4.5
11.37
3.62 -11.6
37.48 32.07 +2.9
49.43 39.28 +7.6
70.76 51.37 +3.0
45.50 19.34 -21.6
51.50 35.39 +25.0
4.39
1.70 -12.5
4.96
2.28 +7.9
17.75 12.29 -21.3
120.00 77.77 -12.7
4.16
.49 -70.0
19.35 16.01
-7.2
56.70 40.26
-2.2
7.56
5.51
-4.1
26.95 19.21
-8.4
18.12 10.18 +19.4
96.24 76.53 -14.7
61.28 48.56 +8.0
106.31 87.05
-6.4
113.51 71.00 +2.4
18.69
7.45 +0.2
11.95
9.75
-8.0
104.57 54.34
-5.3
15.69
9.21
-0.6
3.77
.46 -71.3
53.91 41.63
-1.9
4.46
2.96 -20.4
132.19 87.15 +17.5
15.10
6.34 -28.5
40.21 34.50 +3.4
53.48 34.88 +6.4
15.56
8.43 -21.4
10.75
6.61 -13.3
18.21 14.84
-3.9
44.10 34.27 +6.9
25.96
9.24
-3.7
44.60 18.45 -39.4
19.49 10.04 +6.7
77.31 65.14 -11.3
229374 185005
-6.4
152.94 122.72
-6.3
42.00 27.17 -11.4
44.43 26.56 +25.3
18.62 11.10 +34.7
69.86 46.30 +12.1
65.24 48.83 +10.8
38.66 27.90
-8.5
37.99 28.94
-5.0
105.46 74.64 +3.8
26.50 16.87 +16.6
36.49 26.01 +14.3
9.87
3.75 +45.0

NAME

WK
CLS

Calpine
d19.60
Caterpillar 86.05
Cemex
9.25
Cemig pf
4.53
CenterPnt d19.32
CntryLink d32.18
CheniereEn 71.61
ChesEng d13.15
Chevron 101.59
CienaCorp u25.00
Cigna
139.50
Citigroup
56.24
CitizFin n u28.32
CliffsNRs
5.29
CocaCola 40.10
ColgPalm 65.48
ConAgra
37.42
ConocoPhil 63.04
ConsolEngy 27.10
ContlRes s 46.32
Corning
20.71
CousPrp
10.35
CSVInvNG 7.78
CSVLgNGs d1.77
CSVLgCrde 3.31

-.50 24.37
+.73 111.46
-.05 13.14
+.01
9.02
-1.05 25.75
-1.06 45.67
-4.22 85.00
-.96 31.49
-1.41 135.10
+.88 25.49
-1.33 145.33
+2.16 56.95
+1.48 27.87
-.02 18.41
-.86 45.00
-1.31 71.56
-1.19 39.04
-.64 87.09
-.74 48.30
+.76 80.91
-.21 25.16
+.70 13.30
+.54
9.19
-.16 28.71
-.23 43.99

19.52
78.19
8.39
3.51
19.28
32.71
58.10
12.98
98.88
13.77
85.75
46.55
21.35
4.12
39.06
62.53
28.60
60.57
26.11
30.06
17.03
9.40
2.50
1.73
1.79

-11.4
-6.0
-5.6
-8.9
-17.5
-18.7
+1.7
-32.8
-9.4
+28.8
+35.6
+3.9
+13.9
-25.9
-5.0
-5.4
+3.1
-8.7
-19.8
+20.8
-9.7
-9.4
-3.2
-55.5
-32.3

-.38 20.41
+.04 29.29
-.02 51.06
-.35 18.59
-.48 31.36
+.34 30.83
-1.21 53.22
-.38 19.59
+.60 41.83
+.46 33.77
+1.61 51.50
+3.16 95.67
-.07 113.30
+2.91 76.99
-3.38 80.89
... 54.97
-1.94 80.65
-2.88 89.97
+.37 12.48
+1.00 30.92
+.99 118.89
-.27
8.60
-.78 79.85
-1.10 68.80
-.51 24.83
+1.02 55.89
-.40 38.93
+1.01 18.52

16.22
19.29
30.12
6.04
25.11
17.33
8.17
9.45
6.25
20.93
11.07
53.50
78.54
53.70
64.71
41.45
63.70
68.81
4.93
25.07
81.07
4.29
58.50
54.95
10.53
19.78
30.66
11.90

-9.9
+3.4
-12.8
-13.7
+12.2
-11.3
-12.3
-19.6
-49.4
+2.1
-36.8
+12.4
+17.1
+6.8
-12.7
+14.2
-6.6
-12.8
-18.1
-8.1
-2.6
-25.0
+13.2
-4.1
-12.4
-18.6
-9.8
+27.0

D-E-F
DDR Corp 16.54
DR Horton 26.16
DeltaAir
42.90
DenburyR
7.02
DBXEafeEq 30.29
DirSPBear 18.28
DxGldBull
9.79
DrxSCBear 9.65
DirGMBear 7.95
DxFnBull s 32.46
DirDGldBr 15.59
DrxSCBull 90.98
Disney
110.30
DollarGen 75.50
DomRescs 67.14
DowChm
52.07
DuPont
69.07
DukeEngy 72.85
E-House
5.93
EMC Cp
27.34
EOG Rescs 89.68
EldorGld g
4.56
EliLilly
u78.12
EmersonEl 59.21
EnCana g 12.15
ENSCO
24.37
Exelon
33.43
Express
u18.65

NORTHWEST STOCKS
NAME
AlaskaAir s
AllegTch
Amazon
AsburyA
Avista
Banner Cp
BarrettB
Boeing
CascdeBcp
ColBnkg
ColSprtw s
Con-Way
Costco
CraftBrew
Data IO

WK
CLS
65.66
32.63
426.95
u90.00
30.62
46.75
39.53
140.73
4.93
u31.27
58.65
d42.01
138.78
11.07
3.13

WK
CHG
+1.02
+.13
-2.28
+4.88
-1.38
+1.73
+3.52
+.21
-.03
+1.06
+2.60
+1.54
-3.81
+.31
-.06

52-WEEK
YTD
HIGH LOW %CHG
71.40 40.69 +9.9
46.32 27.12
-6.2
452.65 284.00 +37.6
89.97 60.63 +18.5
38.34 30.35 -13.4
47.11 37.50 +8.7
63.45 18.25 +44.3
158.83 116.32 +8.3
5.65
4.14
-5.0
30.97 23.90 +13.3
64.92 34.25 +31.7
53.54 39.29 -14.6
156.85 114.51
-2.1
17.89
9.89 -17.0
3.83
2.60
-7.4

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
-.01
7.95
5.36 -29.6
+.65 93.38 72.74
-9.0
+.17 36.36 28.32
-4.9
+.50 37.76 25.95 +13.0
+1.04 78.32 42.62 +14.0
-.48 41.10 31.00 -18.0
-2.96 70.48 51.70 -14.6
-2.62 37.90 27.12 -12.3
... 13.73
9.09 +19.4
+.15 14.10 11.50
-3.3
-1.79 77.74 46.77 +10.6
+.16
8.50
5.87
-6.8
+6.72 112.00 63.05 +30.5
-.56 18.64 12.46 +5.9
+.91 27.13 18.25 +23.3

NAME
Isis

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

66.15 -1.17

77.80

26.57

+7.1

+.60 11.31
+1.99 36.75
+.29 14.25
+.33 22.40
+15.72 66.00
-2.69 73.12
+.02 11.76
-.31 158.87
+7.04 89.21
-1.08 91.32
+.94 29.64
+2.98 53.97
+1.19 85.70
-2.29 58.66
-1.66 54.74
+.84 29.77
-1.22 49.57
+.10 32.74
+4.01 70.00

6.70
21.78
10.62
9.38
34.71
52.40
9.15
82.42
21.00
53.33
22.90
38.34
61.77
39.95
39.31
22.37
37.56
9.05
36.26

+10.8
+54.1
-4.5
+29.2
+30.9
-19.0
+9.3
-35.1
+7.8
+33.1
+4.9
+2.4
+5.2
+10.0
+7.8
-2.1
+2.3
+5.4
+14.4

J-K-L
JA Solar
9.07
JD.com
35.67
JDS Uniph 13.11
JetBlue
20.49
JunoTher nu68.36
KLA Tnc
56.97
KearnyF s 10.89
KeurigGM d85.93
KitePhm n 62.19
KraftFGp
83.37
LKQ Corp 29.51
LPL Fincl
45.62
LamResrch 83.44
LibtyGlobA 55.24
LibtyGlobC 52.09
LibtyIntA
28.81
LinearTch 46.63
LinnEngy
10.68
lululemn gs 63.80

M-N-0
MannKd
Markit n
MarIntA
MarvellT

6.12
26.51
78.38
14.20

+.94
-.30
+.39
+.21

11.48
27.63
85.00
16.78

3.46 +17.4
20.99 +0.3
59.61 +0.4
11.65
-2.1

NAME

WK
CLS

Mattel
25.62
MaximIntg 34.09
MediCo
29.70
Medivation 118.04
MelcoCrwn 20.95
MemRsD n 19.55
Microchp
47.46
Momenta u22.08
Momo n
17.13
Mondelez u40.02
MonstrBev 125.55
Mylan NV 74.14
NXP Semi u106.98
Navient
19.09
NektarTh
11.69
NetApp
33.94
Netflix
u633.22
NewsCpA 15.00
NorwCruis 55.13
Novavax
8.81
NuanceCm 17.75
Nvidia
22.26
OceanRig
7.08
Oclaro
u2.73
OfficeDpt
9.29
OnSmcnd u12.93
Oncothyr u4.09
Orexigen
5.14
PDL Bio
d6.39
PMC Sra
9.23
PanASlv
9.21
PattUTI
20.92
Paychex
48.43
PennTex n ud19.55
PeopUtdF u15.89
PilgrimsP
24.36
Pixelwrks
7.12
Popular
32.96
PwShs QQQ109.30
PriceTR
79.22
PrimaBio
2.14
PrUltPQQQ 112.75
PShtQQQ 23.69
ProspctCap 7.60
Qorvo n
83.70
Qualcom
68.26
Qunar
51.41
RegulusTh 10.59
RexEnergy 5.12
RosettaR
23.88
RossStrs
97.60

Manage all of your investments in one place anytime, anywhere


so you can kill it in the market.

Bootstrappers Toastmasters: Meets to improve


individual speaking, listening, evaluation and meeting
management skills for adults ages 18 and older.
Guests and new members welcome, 6:15 p.m., University of Phoenix, Room 106, 670 Hawthorne Ave. SE.
(503) 510-9695.

TUESDAY
Active Business Promoters: Business and professional networking group dedicated to the success of
our members through referrals, exchanging business
ideas and networking, 6:50 to 8 a.m., Broadway
Commons, 1300 Broadway St. NE. (503) 991-6892.
Business Networking International - Salem
Partners for Success: BNI is the largest business
networking organization, offering members the
opportunity to share ideas, contacts and most importantly, business referrals, 7 to 8:30 a.m., Chemeketa
Center for Business and Industry, 626 High St. NE.
(503) 375-2707, www.bnioregon.com.
LeTip of Salem Professionals Networking: 7 to
8:30 a.m., Broadway Commons, Keizer Room, 1300
Broadway St. NE. (866) 818-8381, www.philwebb.us/
letip/home.html.
Networking Exchange Club: Weekly meeting of
men and women working together to make the
communities better places to live through programs
of service in Americanism, community service, and its
national service project, noon to 1 p.m., The Night
Deposit Whiskey Library, 195 Commercial St. NE. $30
per quarter for membership. (971) 218-2646.

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
-.19
-.98
+1.34
-14.01
+1.61
+.64
-1.67
+2.23
-.93
-1.57
-1.73
+1.51
-5.28
-.02
+.19
+.54
+9.16
-.15
+.57
-.20
+.88
+.13
-.67
+.13
+.02
-.33
+.67
+.24

40.00 22.32 -17.2


36.37 25.28 +7.0
32.44 19.92 +7.3
141.58 69.11 +18.5
37.00 18.58 -17.5
30.32 15.30 +8.4
52.44 36.92 +5.2
22.14
9.38 +83.4
19.89
9.50 +42.8
41.81 31.83 +10.2
144.69 63.82 +15.9
76.69 44.80 +31.5
114.00 53.81 +40.0
22.71 15.58 -11.7
17.53
9.51 -24.6
43.75 30.85 -18.1
631.44 315.54 +85.4
18.41 14.28
-4.4
57.55 30.44 +17.9
9.95
3.92 +48.5
19.61 13.20 +24.4
23.61 16.77 +11.0
19.97
5.91 -23.7
2.85
1.31 +53.4
9.77
4.26 +8.3
13.50
6.76 +27.6
4.69
1.41 +115.3
9.37
3.11 -15.3

NEWS

SPORTS

LIFE

MONEY

TECH

TRAVEL

OPINION

WEATHER

Smarter. Faster. More Colorful.

ExxonMbl
FiatChry n
FordM
FrptMcM
Frontline

WK
CLS
84.28
15.65
14.78
19.65
2.73

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
-.92 104.76
-.38 17.08
-.39 18.12
... 39.32
+.15
5.05

82.68
-8.8
8.54 +35.1
13.26
-4.6
16.43 -15.9
1.18 +8.8

G-H-I
Gap
38.22
GenElec
27.29
GenGrPrp 26.97
GenMotors 35.12
GenesWyo 84.84
Genworth
7.88
Gerdau
d2.78
GlaxoSKln 42.56
Globalstar 2.32
GoldFLtd
3.19
Goldcrp g 17.24
GoodrPet
2.77
GrafTech
5.03
Guess
19.83
HCP Inc
d37.36
HalconRes 1.19
Hallibrtn
45.73
HartfdFn
41.54
Hertz
20.41
Hilton
29.39
HomeDp 110.37
HostHotls 19.57
IAMGld g
2.06
ICICI Bk s
9.55
iShBrazil
32.72
iShEMU
38.79
iShGerm
28.82
iShJapan
12.96
iSTaiwn
15.51
iShSilver
15.39
iShChinaLC 48.96
iSCorSP500 211.19
iShEMkts
40.11
iShiBoxIG d115.94
iSh20 yrT 117.60
iS Eafe
65.63
iShiBxHYB 89.44
iShR2K
125.40
iShREst
73.48
iShHmCnst 26.65
ITT Ed
3.86
iSh UK
18.86
ItauUnibH 10.46

-.11
+.02
-1.36
-.85
+2.50
-.06
+.01
-1.81
-.33
-.22
-.52
+.02
-.04
+2.29
-1.36
+.14
+.51
+.43
+.52
+.43
-.46
-.35
+.03
-.85
+.45
-.40
-.29
-.09
-.83
-.60
+.20
-1.39
-1.01
-2.33
-5.11
-1.01
-1.47
+1.51
-1.77
+.03
-.51
-.47
-.23

46.85
28.68
31.70
38.99
106.02
18.08
6.51
54.78
4.53
6.01
29.65
30.52
10.88
28.82
49.61
7.50
74.33
43.42
31.61
31.60
117.99
24.50
4.27
13.24
54.56
44.19
32.38
13.35
17.09
20.64
52.85
215.23
45.85
123.90
138.50
70.79
95.43
127.13
83.54
28.82
18.83
22.11
18.49

35.46
23.41
22.92
28.82
80.61
6.75
2.73
41.25
1.56
3.09
17.01
2.35
3.31
16.61
37.91
1.01
37.21
33.64
18.50
20.72
77.75
19.33
1.42
9.36
28.82
34.41
25.00
10.73
14.38
14.63
36.62
183.13
37.23
115.71
110.34
58.29
86.12
103.54
68.59
21.22
1.93
17.11
10.12

-9.2
+8.0
-4.1
+0.6
-5.6
-7.3
-21.7
-0.4
-15.6
-29.6
-6.9
-37.6
-0.6
-5.9
-15.1
-33.1
+16.3
-0.4
-18.2
+12.6
+5.1
-17.7
-23.7
-17.3
-10.5
+6.8
+5.1
+15.3
+2.6
+2.2
+17.6
+2.1
+2.1
-2.9
-6.6
+7.9
-0.2
+4.8
-4.4
+3.0
-59.8
+4.6
-19.5

J-K-L
JPMorgCh u67.42 +1.64 67.19
JanusCap u18.75 +.60 18.98
JohnJn
98.59 -1.55 109.49
JohnsnCtl 52.18 +.42 53.45
Jumei Intl
23.97 +1.44 39.45
JnprNtwk
27.38 -.42 28.26
WK
CLS

54.26 +8.4
10.95 +16.2
95.10
-5.7
38.60 +7.9
12.11 +76.0
18.41 +22.7

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

MicronT
26.59 -1.34 36.59 25.61 -24.1
Microsoft
46.14 -.72 50.05 39.86
-.7
Nautilus
21.52 +.40 22.16
9.75 +41.8
NikeB
102.03 +.36 105.50 73.14 +6.1
Nordstrm
73.58 +.94 83.16 64.92
-7.3
NwstNG
42.77 -1.93 52.57 41.81 -14.3
NwstPipe
21.39 +.62 41.43 20.50 -29.0
OraSure
5.80 -.39 10.93
4.42 -42.8
Paccar
63.53 -.03 71.15 55.34
-6.6
Pixelwrks
7.12 +2.14
9.83
3.86 +56.1
PlanarSy
4.16 -.17
9.17
2.12 -50.3
PlumCrk
40.76 -.50 45.45 38.70
-4.7
PopeRes
68.00 +.45 71.00 59.00 +6.9
PortGE
33.81 -1.15 41.04 31.41 -10.6
PrecCastpt 211.02 -.58 275.09 186.17 -12.4
RadiSys
2.98 +.08
3.67
1.79 +27.4
Rntrak
68.97 +1.06 87.40 43.62
-5.3

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

Keycorp
KindMorg
Kinross g
Kohls
KrispKrm
LaredoPet
LVSands
LendingC n
LinkedIn
Lorillard
Lowes
LyonBas A

u15.10
40.40
2.46
63.42
17.11
14.32
55.00
18.72
213.80
71.06
69.79
99.68

+.52 15.11 11.55 +8.6


-1.09 44.71 33.25
-4.5
+.11
4.47
2.00 -12.8
-2.07 79.60 50.90 +3.9
-.28 22.32 14.82 -13.3
+.70 31.23
7.00 +38.4
+4.17 78.50 49.57
-5.4
-.49 29.29 16.17 -26.0
+18.87 276.18 152.18
-6.9
-1.42 73.02 57.52 +12.9
-.19 76.25 45.10 +1.4
-1.42 115.40 70.06 +25.6

M-N-0
MBIA
MGIC Inv
MGM Rsts
Macys
MarathnO
MVJrGold
MktVGold
MV OilSvc
MktVRus
MasterCrd
McDrmInt
McDnlds
Medtrnic
Merck
MetLife
MKors
Molycorp
Monsanto
MorgStan
Mosaic
NQ Mobile
NRG Egy
Nabors
NBGreece
NOilVarco
NY CmtyB
NewmtM
NobleCorp
NobleEngy
NokiaCp
NorthropG
NStarRlt
OasisPet
OcciPet
OcwenFn
OpkoHlth
Oracle

8.90
u10.85
20.28
u69.25
26.95
24.97
18.83
37.09
18.01
92.62
5.73
95.54
75.46
58.99
54.45
48.87
.41
113.80
u39.29
44.31
5.33
24.38
14.99
1.29
48.88
u18.11
25.91
17.08
44.59
7.12
157.29
17.21
16.66
79.09
9.37
u16.19
43.81

-.12
...
+.23
+2.30
-.24
-.71
-.75
+.45
-.94
+.36
+.27
-.39
-.86
-1.90
+2.19
+2.37
-.12
-3.18
+1.09
-1.26
+1.22
-.82
+.30
-.03
-.31
+.37
-1.33
+.33
+.81
-.17
-1.89
-.93
-.32
+.90
-.79
-1.49
+.32

13.25
7.92
-6.7
11.05
7.16 +16.4
27.64 17.25
-5.1
69.99 54.84 +5.3
41.92 24.28
-4.7
46.50 20.68 +4.3
27.78 16.45 +2.4
58.01 31.51 +3.3
27.46 12.50 +23.1
94.50 69.64 +7.5
8.43
2.10 +96.9
102.62 87.62 +2.0
79.50 58.32 +4.5
63.62 52.49 +3.9
57.57 46.10 +0.7
95.91 45.53 -34.9
2.98
.28 -53.6
128.79 105.76
-4.7
39.24 30.40 +1.3
53.83 40.32
-2.9
10.85
3.22 +36.3
38.09 22.78
-9.5
30.24
9.91 +15.5
4.16
.98 -27.9
86.55 46.08 -25.4
18.17 14.61 +13.2
27.90 17.60 +37.1
30.27 13.15 +3.1
79.63 41.01
-6.0
8.73
6.30
-9.4
172.30 118.23 +6.7
19.74 15.91
-2.1
58.09 10.64 +0.7
105.64 71.70
-1.9
38.80
5.66 -37.9
19.20
8.02 +62.1
46.71 35.82
-2.6

P-Q-R
PG&E Cp
PPL Corp
PalatinTch
Pandora
PeabdyE

51.36 -2.11
30.95 -1.25
u1.00 +.12
18.39 -.28
d3.20 -.18

60.21
35.39
1.34
30.48
17.21

-.14 10.26
+.15
9.86
-.23 15.97
+.72 38.43
-.98 51.72
... 21.02
+.33 15.83
-1.22 32.62
+2.14
9.83
+.47 35.83
-.75 111.16
-1.47 88.64
-.14
6.48
-2.43 119.43
+.46 48.43
-.30 11.05
+1.55 86.75
-.95 81.97
+7.32 54.23
-3.53 25.60
+.10 20.20
+.52 55.45
+1.17 108.91

6.32
6.52
8.49
13.30
40.10
19.20
13.61
20.26
3.86
26.53
90.24
71.78
.42
65.25
22.61
7.42
63.02
62.26
22.11
6.11
2.47
15.92
61.83

-17.1
+0.8
+0.1
+26.1
+4.9
+0.4
+4.7
-12.0
+56.1
-3.2
+5.9
-7.7
+219.4
+15.7
-20.6
-8.0
+18.9
-8.2
+80.8
-34.0
+0.4
+7.0
+3.5

S-T-U

Download the USA TODAY Portfolio Tracker app

NAME
WK
NAME
CLS
ElectSci
d5.46
FEI Co
82.25
FLIR Sys
30.72
Gannett
36.09
GreenbCos 61.27
HewlettP
32.92
Idacorp
56.51
Intel
31.84
JewettCam 12.10
KeyTech
12.76
Kroger
71.01
Lattice
6.42
LithiaMot u113.17
LaPac
17.53
MentorGr u27.02

7.60
3.27 +72.1
32.74 18.87 +9.6
608.91 490.91 +3.6
599.65 487.56 +1.3
98.47 28.65
-6.0
8.43
5.46 -26.3
65.87 35.00 +6.8
20.28
7.51 +106.9
2.84
.92 +62.7
27.66 12.52
-9.1
5.05
.34 -28.5
10.45
5.70 -12.0
36.55 22.70 +36.0
36.90 25.13 +5.0
32.99
7.85 +150.3
27.14 17.13 +25.4
10.77
8.53
-3.9
11.49
8.80 +7.8
374.97 236.25 +21.0
22.86 14.23 +38.3
15.88
5.34 +141.0
21.49
8.32 +45.4
18.25
8.80 -28.1
14.20
6.33
-5.2
24.39 11.94 +23.4
16.39 11.09
-7.3
109.21 77.96 +14.5
12.25
9.80 +8.6

High Noon Toastmasters: Speaking and leadership


training in a friendly setting, noon to 1 p.m., Revenue
Building, Fishbowl Meeting Room, first floor, 955
Center St. NE. (503) 399-9915, www.highnoon
toastmasters.org.

Scott Burns is a syndicated columnist and


a principal of the investment firm
AssetBuilder Inc. Email questions to
scott@scottburns.com.

TRACK YOUR MONEY


LIKE A JUNGLE CAT.

NAME

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

+.23
-.53
+4.21
+1.22
+3.95
-.29
+1.43
+2.62
-.38
-.54
+.07
+.83
+.60
+3.21
-.16
-.40
+.22
+.21
+2.01
+.10
+5.72
+.76
-.81
+.29
+.53
-.09
+1.45
+.18

MONDAY

trying to make it better, and hoping that


our collective wisdom exceeds our collective stupidity. Yes, its looking like it
will be a really close call.
Q: What does one do with the stocks
that have not done very well in an IRA?
In a regular account I could rebalance
and take a loss on my taxes. Then I could
move on to a better performing stock.
But what does one do with the underperforming stocks in an IRA? Is there no
way to mitigate the loss? Could I transfer
the stocks to my regular account and sell
and then take the loss or am I just out the
money? If I am truly just out the money
then investing with IRA funds could pose
a significant threat to ones future retirement. Careful selection is really more
critical in an IRA than a regular taxable
account. J.R., by email
A: You dont get to deduct stock losses
in your IRA because the money that goes
in is tax deferred labor income. When it
comes out, it is treated as ordinary
earned income. Basically, you cant get a
tax break on a tax break.
What you can do, however, is adapt. If
you can invest more than the money that
goes into your IRA or 401(k) plan, make
the tax-deferred investments more conservative and make the riskiest investments in a taxable account.

P-Q-R

13.17
-4.7
1.76 +20.6
78.50 +20.9

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

GluMobile
6.71
Goodyear u31.32
Google A 549.53
Google C 533.33
GoPro n
59.41
Groupon
6.09
GulfportE
44.59
Halozyme u19.97
HanwhaQ
1.79
HawHold
23.68
HercOffs h
.72
HimaxTch
7.09
Hologic
u36.37
HomeAway 31.28
HorizPhm u32.27
HoughMH u25.98
HudsCity
9.73
HuntBncsh 11.34
iShNsdqBio 367.04
iKangHlth 20.80
ImunoGn u14.70
Infinera
u21.40
InfinityPh
12.15
InovioPh rs 8.70
IntgDv
u24.18
Intersil
13.41
Intuit
105.60
InvestBncp 12.19

G-H-I
Gentex s
GeronCp
GileadSci

WK
CLS

AGENDA

42.92
-3.5
29.05
-8.2
.59 +37.0
14.50 +3.1
3.05 -58.7

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

SareptaTh
Schmitt
Schnitzer
StancrpFn
Starbucks s
Supvalu
Umpqua
US Bancrp
VBI Vac rs
Valmont
WashFed
Weyerhsr
WillmValV

26.71 +1.09 35.23 11.33 +84.6


2.65 -.09
3.55
2.58 -10.2
18.63 +.72 28.44 15.06 -17.4
u76.22 +2.00 76.22 59.28 +9.1
u52.19 +.23 52.46 35.38 +27.2
8.81 -.02 12.00
7.20
-9.2
18.18 +.59 18.39 14.70 +6.9
43.99 +.88 46.10 38.10
-2.1
2.83 +.18
5.94
1.90 -15.0
123.05 -1.40 163.23 116.36
-3.1
22.66 +.56 23.43 19.52 +2.3
31.46 -.81 37.04 30.50 -12.3
6.80 -.04
7.23
5.15 +17.2

SBA Com 116.95 +5.14 126.65


SLM Cp
10.19 -.07 10.76
SabreCorp 25.56 -.53 26.83
SanDisk
68.67 +.29 108.77
SangBio
12.54 +.29 19.25
SciGames u16.29 +1.07 16.35
SeagateT 54.43 -1.21 69.40
Sequenom
3.40 +.05
4.80

NAME

WK
CLS

PennVa
4.71
PennWst g 1.93
Penney
8.53
PepsiCo
93.05
PetrbrsA
7.96
Petrobras
8.60
Pfizer
34.09
PhilipMor
79.70
Potash
d30.80
ProLogis
39.98
ProUltSP s 66.53
PUVixST rs 40.73
PrUCrude rs 45.58
ProctGam 77.43
ProgsvCp 27.31
ProUShSP 20.55
PUShtQQQ 34.05
ProUShL20 50.17
PUShtSPX 33.96
Prudentl
88.24
PSEG
40.41
PulteGrp
19.08
QEP Res
18.81
Qihoo360 62.94
Rackspace 39.75
RegionsFn 10.52
ReynAmer 72.14
RiteAid
8.31
RoyDShllA 58.34
Ryder
94.77

96.64 +5.6
8.19
14.86 +26.1
63.00 -29.9
9.39 -17.6
6.97 +28.0
50.44 -18.2
2.74
-8.1

WK
CLS

SigmaAld 138.25
Sina
u56.08
SiriusXM
3.88
SkywksSol u105.74
SolarCity
58.25
SpiritAir
65.37
Splunk
68.66
Sprouts
29.12
Staples
16.45
StlDynam 22.17
Stratasys
37.99
SunPower 31.37
Supernus u15.43
SusqBnc u14.09
Symantec 24.00
Synchron 50.29
SynrgyPh u4.90
TTM Tch u10.51
TakeTwo
28.19
TASER
32.21
TeslaMot 249.14
TexInst
53.79
TiVo Inc
10.64
TrimbleN d23.24
TripAdvis
76.41
21stCFoxA 33.30
21stCFoxB 33.11
21Vianet
21.46
UTiWrldwd 10.38
Umpqua
18.18
UrbanOut 36.34

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
-1.05
+15.35
+.02
-3.62
-1.87
+1.80
+1.04
-.87
-.01
+.36
+2.43
+.98
+1.21
+.20
-.63
+6.25
+.60
+.63
+.82
+.63
-1.66
-2.14
+.11
-.20
+.15
-.30
-.33
+3.40
+.76
+.59
+1.96

140.03 97.38 +0.7


54.09 31.92 +49.9
4.04
3.14 +10.9
111.60 42.90 +45.4
79.40 45.91 +8.9
85.35 52.75 -13.5
74.88 39.35 +16.5
38.45 26.60 -14.3
19.40 10.70
-9.2
25.51 16.51 +12.3
130.83 33.85 -54.3
42.07 22.75 +21.4
15.11
7.31 +85.9
14.06
9.00 +4.9
27.32 21.07
-6.5
54.05 30.19 +20.1
4.93
2.45 +60.7
10.83
5.59 +39.6
30.80 19.25 +0.6
35.00 10.46 +21.6
291.42 181.40 +12.0
59.99 41.47 +0.6
14.29 10.27 -10.1
38.99 23.19 -12.4
111.24 66.04 +2.3
39.27 31.01 -13.3
37.83 30.11 -10.2
32.34 14.23 +38.7
14.75
8.74 -14.0
18.39 14.70 +6.9
47.25 27.89 +3.4

V-W-X-Y-Z
VWR n
25.86
VandaPhm 12.81
VascuBio n 7.50
VBradley d11.23
ViacomB
68.06
Vical
.98
VimpelCm
5.58
Vodafone
37.05
WalgBoots 83.89
WeiboCorp 19.76
Wendys Co u11.27
WDigital
94.87
WholeFood 40.18
Windstm rs d7.39
WisdomTr 21.84
Wynn
d109.14
XOMA
3.61
Xilinx
47.29
YY Inc
71.49
Yahoo
42.81
Yandex
17.56
ZillowGp
90.06
ZionsBcp u31.84
Zogenix
1.76
Zulily
13.63
Zumiez
d24.00
Zynga
3.06

-1.41 28.83
+2.72 16.50
-.55 17.02
-2.31 27.17
+1.18 89.76
+.03
1.39
-.63
9.20
-1.98 39.46
-1.95 93.42
+3.91 26.08
+.03 11.71
-2.49 114.69
-1.06 57.57
-.75 20.79
+.48 22.73
+8.45 220.50
+.09
5.95
-.13 49.50
+6.65 96.39
-.13 52.62
-.47 35.90
-1.33 164.90
+2.96 31.29
+.06
2.39
+.41 42.56
-5.86 41.81
+.11
3.47

-10.5
+26.9
-44.9
-9.6
-6.7
+33.7
+8.4
+10.1
+38.8
+24.8
-14.3
-20.3
-42.6
+39.3
-26.6
+0.6
+9.2
+14.7
-15.2
-2.2
-14.9
+11.7
+28.5
-41.8
-37.9
+15.0

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

+.06
-.03
-.06
-2.68
+.23
+.25
-.66
-3.37
-.68
+.39
-.83
+.21
-1.95
-.96
-.03
+.26
+.42
+3.70
+.63
+3.63
-1.83
-.10
-.02
+10.89
-.34
+.43
-4.61
-.41
-1.38
+3.12

SP Util
StarwdHtl
StarwdPT
Suncor g
SunEdison
SunTrst
SupEnrgy
Sysco
T-MobileUS
TaiwSemi
TalenEn n
Target
TeckRes g
TeekayTnk
TevaPhrm
TW Cable
Transocn
TriContl
Twitter
UnilevNV
UnionPac s
UtdContl
UPS B
US Bancrp
US NGas
US OilFd
USSteel
UtdTech
UtdhlthGp

42.72
84.55
23.11
28.98
30.50
43.02
23.03
37.09
u40.24
22.86
d19.25
79.20
11.65
u7.52
60.62
178.06
19.17
21.71
37.00
41.53
102.28
54.09
100.51
43.99
12.54
19.90
24.90
117.00
116.53

-1.78
+2.17
-.78
-.02
+.53
+.34
-.06
-.07
+1.36
-1.42
-1.07
-.12
+.01
+.77
+.52
-2.83
+.32
-.24
+.33
-1.17
+1.37
-.50
+1.29
+.88
-.33
-.41
+.50
-.17
-3.68

17.28
10.19
11.30
100.76
22.14
20.94
35.53
91.63
38.58
47.56
69.13
281.40
200.85
93.89
27.90
28.71
53.98
63.92
56.70
94.30
44.45
23.36
35.91
104.81
56.20
10.96
77.68
9.07
83.42
100.64

4.32
1.30
5.90
86.71
5.00
4.90
27.51
75.27
30.63
37.12
50.02
38.21
29.45
77.29
23.20
19.82
33.01
38.15
32.17
74.51
34.05
16.56
18.15
44.56
28.80
8.59
55.22
4.42
56.82
77.14

-29.5
-7.2
+31.6
-1.6
+5.0
+17.8
+9.4
-2.1
-12.8
-7.1
+3.7
-67.6
-12.1
-15.0
+1.2
-6.8
-13.8
+8.1
-10.7
-2.5
-2.4
-11.1
-7.0
+9.9
-15.1
-0.4
+12.2
+10.5
-12.9
+2.1

49.78 40.07
-9.5
87.99 68.53 +4.3
24.79 21.53
-0.6
43.49 26.56
-8.8
31.28 13.09 +56.3
43.67 33.97 +2.7
37.05 16.70 +14.3
41.45 35.50
-6.6
40.77 24.26 +49.4
25.77 19.39 +2.1
27.00 18.10
-7.2
83.98 56.29 +4.3
25.03 10.45 -14.6
7.88
3.30 +48.6
68.75 47.36 +5.4
184.89 128.78 +17.1
46.12 13.28 +4.6
22.20 19.12 +1.4
55.99 31.62 +3.2
45.22 36.78 +6.4
124.52 96.17 -14.1
74.52 36.65 -19.1
114.40 94.05
-9.6
46.10 38.10
-2.1
26.42 12.28 -15.1
39.44 15.61
-2.3
46.55 20.13
-6.9
124.45 97.30 +1.7
123.76 77.53 +15.3

V-W-X-Y-Z
-1.61
-1.86
-1.37
-.62
+1.50
-.03
+.80
-.04
-.10
+1.58
+.68
+.02
+1.09
-1.03
+.20
-1.40
-1.09
-.32
-.23
-.60
-.60
-1.20
+.22
-.72
+.19
+.05
-.42

183.35 158.27 +0.3


129.21 109.67
-1.2
213.78 181.92 +2.1
41.82 37.26 +0.5
43.27 35.20 +7.2
84.04 41.63 +3.4
78.46 50.21 +24.0
7.43
1.07 -35.2
118.76 75.60 +5.6
32.45 23.35 +10.1
40.44
8.58 +5.4
5.33
1.50
-7.2
12.79
5.25 +15.3
53.16 41.87 -13.1
47.17 25.47 -12.2
47.70 21.46 -10.7
43.12 32.43
-6.1
13.00 10.56 -11.9
9.75
3.79 +6.5
52.22 44.09 +2.9
76.01 59.21 +8.7
50.22 42.97
-1.9
77.89 61.68 +6.1
101.52 71.70
-1.9
25.14 21.55 +0.2
58.23 48.83
-1.3
43.81 36.58 +3.9

Vale SA
6.51
Vale SA pf
5.62
ValeroE
57.74
VangREIT 77.21
VangEmg
41.43
VangEur
55.79
VangFTSE 40.70
Ventas
63.56
VerizonCm 47.23
Vipshop s 24.56
Visa s
68.37
WPX Engy 12.79
WalMart
73.06
WeathfIntl 14.16
WellsFargo u56.61
WstnUnion 21.76
WhitingPet 33.80
WmsCos
48.77
WT EurHdg 63.89
WTJpHedg u60.13
WT India
21.14
XcelEngy
32.35
Xerox
11.26
Yamana g
3.45
YingliGrn
1.31
YoukuTud u30.78

+.21
+.33
-1.50
-1.93
-.91
-.89
-.65
-2.17
-2.21
-.41
-.31
-.10
-1.21
+.34
+.65
-.19
+.81
-2.33
-1.22
+.35
-.92
-1.70
-.16
-.14
+.30
+3.81

14.93
13.31
64.49
89.27
46.49
61.89
43.48
81.93
53.66
30.72
70.69
26.79
90.97
24.88
57.20
22.84
92.92
59.77
68.72
60.59
24.37
38.35
14.36
9.04
4.04
31.40

5.45
4.57
42.53
71.09
37.30
49.81
36.32
60.63
45.09
16.02
48.80
10.01
72.61
9.40
46.44
15.32
24.13
40.07
51.67
45.88
20.71
29.60
11.12
3.33
.72
11.85

-20.4
-22.6
+16.6
-4.7
+3.5
+6.4
+7.4
-11.4
+1.0
+25.7
+4.3
+10.0
-14.9
+23.7
+3.3
+21.5
+2.4
+8.5
+14.9
+22.1
-4.1
-9.9
-18.8
-14.2
-44.3
+72.8

INDEXES
52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW
18,351.36 15,855.12
9,310.22 7,700.57
657.17
524.82
11,254.87 9,886.08
5,119.83 4,116.60
2,134.72 1,820.66
1,545.79 1,269.45
22,536.78 19,160.13
1,278.63 1,040.47

NAME
LAST
Dow Jones Industrials
17,849.46
Dow Jones Transportation 8,509.64
Dow Jones Utilities
562.95
NYSE Composite
10,979.33
Nasdaq Composite
5,068.46
S&P 500
2,092.83
S&P MidCap
1,526.62
Wilshire 5000
22,167.66
Russell 2000
1,261.01

FRI
CHG
-56.12
+72.74
-7.45
-21.06
+9.33
-3.01
+5.18
+5.91
+9.72

WEEK WEEK YTD


CHG %CHG %CHG
-161.22
-.90
+.15
+209.89
+2.53
-6.90
-24.03
-4.09
-8.92
-76.97
-.70 +1.29
-1.57
-.03 +7.02
-14.56
-.69 +1.65
+1.95
+.13
+5.11
-92.04
-.41 +2.30
+14.47
+1.16 +4.67

Stocks in bold changed 10% or more from the previous weekly close. Footnotes: d - New 52-week low.
g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year.
The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. rs - Stock has
undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within
the last year. u - New 52-week high. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. Source: The Associated Press.

Shopping for a home? Get


your mortgage first!

503-588-3511
503
588 3511
Apply or make an appointment at
www.MortgageSalem.com NMLS 40558

20.60
8.34
3.09
11.57
63.11
.85
3.09
28.63
57.75
12.11
7.61
82.85
36.08
7.70
9.57
97.89
2.92
36.24
50.52
32.93
13.90
81.07
23.72
1.07
9.09
26.56
2.20

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

S-T-U
SpdrDJIA 178.50
SpdrGold 112.24
S&P500ETF209.77
SpdrLehHY 38.80
SpdrS&P RBu43.64
SpdrOGEx 49.50
Salesforce 73.55
SandRdge
1.18
Schlmbrg
90.17
Schwab
u33.23
SeadrillLtd 12.59
SiderurNac 1.93
SouFun
8.52
SouthnCo 42.66
SwstAirl
37.17
SwstnEngy 24.37
SpectraEn 34.08
SpiritRltC d10.47
Sprint
4.42
SP Matls
50.01
SP HlthC
74.34
SP CnSt
47.59
SP Consum 76.52
SP Engy
77.67
SPDR Fncl 24.79
SP Inds
55.86
SP Tech
42.95

NAME

StatesmanJournal.com/subscribe

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Robotics
Continued from Page 1F

He soon realized that his idea


could benefit countless others in
similar situations. Gray got together with a group of engineers
he had worked with before, and
Orbris Robotics was born.
To show his commitment, he
and his wife, Lisa, put all of their
401(k) savings into the initial financing of the business in 2013.
Gray does the mechanical design and 3D printing of prototype parts in Salem. Zephyr Engineering of Salem and AquaJet
of Keizer make all the mechanical parts. Most of the team is
based in California, where the
robots are assembled.
In the beginning Gray worried that people wouldnt understand his vision for the company.
You worry a lot that people
wont see your vision and that
you just gambled your life savings on an idea that can be stolen
or done better or by a bigger
company that has more funds
than you have for marketing,
he said. But thats what all entrepreneurs face and have for

the entire history of our country.


In the end you have to believe in
yourself and you have to take a
few chances along the way. I am
not the first to speak those
words.
Orbris Robotics is a Salem
company that specializes in
manufacturing telepresence robots. The devices incorporate
video-conferencing equipment
with motorized platforms that
can be controlled from remote
locations.
Think of it as a mobile video
conference controlled remotely
by a user sitting at a computer.
The user is able to control the
motion of the robot, encapsulate
the vision of the robot, and communicate through the robot with
speakers and microphones as if
the person were actually there.
Orbris Robotics currently
manufactures two telepresence
robots, the Teleporter and the
CARL.
The Teleporter has a 20inch monitor, can stand 54 inches to 60 inches high and primarily is used for rugged factory
use.
The CARL has a 17-inch
monitor and stands 48 to 50 inches tall. It is used for office and
funeral home use. Both robots

have amplified speakers, noise


canceling microphones, and
plug-in chargers.
Telepresence robots have
seen increased exposure due to
the technology being shown on
hit shows The Big Bang Theory and just this last season on
Modern Family.
It is the CARL robot that
holds a soft place in Grays
heart. It is named for his dad,
Carl, who sadly didnt live to see
the completion of the robot and
led to that realization of another
use of the robot: funeral arrangements.
He passed before we had the
robot ready, which led to the revelation that the robot would also
be great for funerals, Gray
said. It was my brother David
who pointed out when my
daughter who was pregnant
with our second grandchild
could not attend my Dads funeral due to complications that
having the robot there would
have allowed her to be a part of
the ceremonies.
Funeral arrangements already can put bereaved people
through a ringer of emotions
when memories of the deceased
run smack into the reality that
they will no longer be around.

The CARL robot allows family


members and friends to coordinate funeral arrangements even
if they are not together. A family
member in Boring, for example,
can communicate with his or her
family in Miami about the funeral arrangements for a deceased
love one.
Andrew Phillips, funeral director at Farnstrom Mortuary
in Independence, is grateful for
the new technology. Hes had a
CARL since the beginning of the
year.
To date, the reactions that I
have gotten from families range
from interested to enthralled
and have been universally positive, Phillips said. Many of the
families I've spoken to have
seen similar concepts on TV and
are fascinated to see one in real
life.
The most meaningful use of
CARL that I have experienced
was the time it allowed me to offer a grieving sister the opportunity to remotely attend a private
viewing for her brother. She had
been considering a last-minute
1,500-mile flight in order to
spend a few minutes with him,
but the cost was prohibitive, and
she was facing not being able to
say her final good-bye.

3F

This is exactly how Gray envisioned the robot working.


People have to move where
there is work. And when the unexpected happens, it is difficult
to get the whole family back together for events like funerals.
Often the cost of booking a last
minute flight is prohibitive,
said Gray.
People are choosing not to
have the funeral at all since they
cant get everyone together at
the same time anyway. This is
impacting the much needed
closer the traditional funeral
provides family and friends.
Orders for Orbris Robotics
products have come in from Indiana, Quebec, Rhode Island,
Southern California, and Nebraska. Gray says that with two
proven products that are ready
for full production he has been
traveling in search of angel investors.
Gray has a backup plan in
case those plans dont pan out.
Well if this robot thing
doesnt work out at least I have a
3D printer. Ill figure out something fun to make with it.
bsouthward@StatesmanJournal
.com, (503) 399-6709 or follow on
Twitter @B_Southward

Few things dene Oregons


environmental leadership as
eloquently as our Bottle Bill.
Peter Courtney, Oregon State Senate President

Oregons Bottle Bill is woven into the very fabric of our state. It
launched the sustainability surge that put Oregon on the cutting
edge of environmental stewardship. We treasure our commitment
to the environment. And thats a very big return indeed. See more
big returns at obrcbigreturn.com.

Small Deposit, Big Return.


Making the Bottle Bill work for Oregon
OR-0000363801

OR-0000363750

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FIND

5 7/ / '4  


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IN YOUR OWN BACK YARD

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25

4F

Jobs

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Find a job:

Place an employment ad:

ONLINE
CareerBuilder.com
General

515

General

521 Healthcare 521 Healthcare 521 Healthcare 521 Healthcare 523

Professional

Business Opportunity
The Statesman Journal Newspaper
is seeking applicants for

Newspaper Delivery
as independent contractors
in all areas.

501 Agricultual 501 Agricultual

Administers many of the Districts safety


and loss control efforts including
developing hazard control practices and
programs, worker compensation,
liability/property insurance, drug and
alcohol testing and safety related training.
Our ideal candidate has considerable
knowledge and experience in safety/loss
control, is well organized and detail
oriented with effective communication
skills. Is a good problem-solver, a strong
team player, and able to meet deadlines;
experience working in the transportation
industry a plus.

Independent contractors should


have:
1. A reliable vehicle that is insured.
2. A valid drivers license.
3. Available to deliver newspapers
to residential areas in the early
morning hours, 7 days per week.
Our routes are designed to provide
part-time supplemental income to
qualified individuals looking for a
business opportunity.
Our routes have the potential to
profit up to $1000 per month,
depending on delivery area
and route size.
Please contact our hotline at

503-399-6827
or apply online at
http://stjr.nl/routeapp

You can pick up an application at


Salem-Keizer Transit, 555 Court St. NE
Suite 5230, Salem OR 97301, at
www.cherriots.org, or by calling
503-588-2424. Open until filled. First
review of applications June 19, 2015.

511 Education 511 Education

NORPAC Foods has General Labor


Positions Available

Health Services Technician


(LPN)
Oregon Department of
Corrections has a Health
Services Technician (LPN)
vacancy at the Oregon State
Penitentiary in Salem, OR.
Under the supervision of an RN,
physician, or other clinical
manager, the primary purpose of
this position is to perform
nursing functions - consistent
with health care available to the
general public - to adult inmates.
Salary ranges $3047.00 $4164.00. Announcement
closes 6/11/2015. Go to
www.ODOCjobs.com to apply.

515

General

515

General

$800 to $1200+
Per Week
Weekly Paycheck
Full & Part Time
Were expanding our
sales territory & looking
for competitive people
who would enjoy working with an awardwinning sales team. If
you enjoy working with
people & are selfmotivated
Call: (503) 610-8428
We Need: People to market our
in-store & Special Event Promotions
for the:

This solicitation is for services within the Sales Division of Circulation Promotions Unlimited Inc.
Qualified applicants will serve as independent
contractors, not employees.

Brooks Plant
4755 Brooklake Rd, Brooks
Start accepting applications onJune 22nd

Salem Plant
2325 Madrona Ave SE, Salem
Start accepting applications on June 24th

Good communication skills,


management exp, LTC exp req,
MDS exp pref. Root cause analysis,
ownership in a unit a must. We
value your engagement and input.
Hire on bonus.
Please send resumes to:
living_senior@yahoo.com

Number
One

515

General

515

General

OR-0000363806

StatesmanJournal.com

News and
Information
Website.

Get

Every Sunday in the


Statesman Journal

General

StatesmanJournal.com

General

General

515

General

515

General

515

General

General

515

General

Mental Health Specialist II


Yamhill County
Family & Youth

Full-time position to perform


inspections/appraisals of
residential, rural, commercial/
industrial, and specially assessed
properties. Requires Bachelors
in real estate, business, public
administration & 3-5 years
experience or a satisfactory
combination of experience &
training. $3499-$4007/DOE.
Benefits. Closes 07/02/15.
For info regarding
Job #AO15-035 visit
http://www.co.yamhill.or.us/hr
or call (503) 474-4901.
EOE.

Full-time position as a mental


health counselor to students
and their families primarily in a
school-based setting during the
school year. Other duties will be
assigned during school breaks
and Summer months.- $3831
- $4369 DOE. Benefits. Closes
when filled. For info on Job
#FY15-032 and other
current job openings, visit
http://www.co.yamhill.or.us/hr
EOE

515

General

515

General

CNA

CNA

needed

Hire on bonus
non-lift facility, great benefits
and wage packages.
To apply send resume to
smackey@drvhome.com
or come to our facility to
complete an application
EOE

Source: SiteCatalyst, 2010

515

515

Chans Chinese RESTAURANT in


McMinnville, OR seeks COOK
(CHINESE), min 2 yrs exp. as a Cook
(Chinese) including planning, preparing,
seasoning, portioning, cooking and
garnishing traditional Chinese dishes.
Send resume to Mr. Karl Chan, Chans
Inc., 632 NE Hwy 99W, McMinnville, OR
97128. EOE

Appraiser
A
i II - Yamhill
Y hill
County Assessors Office.

515

& Food

COOK
Mental Health Nurse
Open Until Filled (Initial consideration:
6/12/2015)
Take advantage of the lifestyle benefits of this position:
*Work 4 days a week (30 hours)
*Week days only. No nights, no weekends
*Generous Benefits Package, including OPSRP
*Well-established psychiatric team
Visit www.co.benton.or.us for more information
and to apply.

Child Welfare Director/Case Manager I


For persons selected at TL 20.0 - Two-years
experience in supervisory capacity. For persons
selected at TL 19.0 Must have some knowledge
of supervisory practices. For persons selected at
TL 19.0 or TL 20.0 A Bachelors Degree in social
work or an equivalent degree in sociology,
psychology, counseling or law. One-year of full
time experience working in Indian Child Welfare
or two-years of full time experience including
assessment or case management experience in
another public child welfare system or child
welfare agency working in both child protective
services and permanency. Location: Siletz, OR;
Salary: $21.22/hr - $23.31/hr DOE; Closes: Open
Until Filled; Job Posting #: 201507
For an application and job description visit us at
www.ctsi.nsn.us or call 800-922-1399.
Applications must be received by close of
business for consideration.

& Food

521 Healthcare 521 Healthcare

521 Healthcare 521 Healthcare

The Mid-Valleys

Inside
Business

The topics that


matter most to
the Mid-Valley.

Quality Improvement team is seeking an


individual to fill a full-time QI Associate position.
Primary job duties include creating presentation
materials, data tracking and compilation;
scheduling and facilitating meetings; coordinating
policy review; preparing and disseminating
materials; meeting coordination minutes and
preparation; compliance tracking, and assisting
in day-to-day operation of all QI projects.
Qualified candidates must have strong MS Office
Suite proficiency with above average analytical
and organizational skills; demonstrate the ability
to multi-task and meet deadlines independently;
minimum 2 years experience with QA auditing/QI
metrics, and/or Lean Six Sigma. BS/BS degree in
business, Medical Data Management, health
sciences, biostatistics or related field.
Join a team that makes a difference in the lives
of many and apply online at
www.northwesthumanservices.org
EOE

525 Restaurant 525 Restaurant

E-Verify.
AA/EOE/M/F/Vets/Disabled.

Resident Care Manager-RN

Professional

Quality Improvement Associate

Hospitalist for Salem


Hospital in Salem, Oregon.
Completion of Internal
Medicine residency.
Eligible for Oregon
Medical License. Multiple
positions available. Send CV
to Salem Hospital, Attention:
Physician Development,
890 Oak Street SE, Salem,
Oregon 97301.
physician.development
@salemhealth.org

515

'EVIIVW

Property Specialist 2 position for


UHDS at OSU.
F/T, academic-year (10-mo), starting
wage $12.68/hr + benefits.
Go to website
http://oregonstate.edu/jobs for
detailed information and to apply.
Posting # 0014960
Closing date is 6/15/15
OSU IS AN AA/EOE/Vets/Disabled.

930 Washington St, Stayton


Start accepting applications on June 15th

523

CNA Instructor
Senior Living Community that serves
the Willamette Valley is looking for
an RN to teach CNA course
Must have 1-2 years experience in
long term care.
Must have Oregon RN license
Excellent benefit and compensation
package. Fun and exciting
environment to work in.
Hire on bonus
Please email resumes to:
living_senior@yahoo.com

Stayton Plant

OREGON STATE
UNIVERSITY

BY PHONE

1-888-692-7340

sjjobs@gannett.com

515

Safety and Loss Control Specialist

Place an employment ad:

BY EMAIL

StatesmanJournal.com

515

General

515

General

Visit our website at


www.dallasretirementvillage.com
Nationwide Federal Government
Contractor seeks highly experienced
and qualified

HVAC Mechanics and


General Maintenance Workers
for facility maintenance positions in
Corvallis and Newport, OR.
Qualified HVAC candidates must
possess at least 8 years proven
HVAC industrial experience.
Qualified GMW candidates must possess
at least 5 years experience in general
maintenance duties to include but
not limited to, changing light bulbs,
carpentry, painting, plumbing, and
changing filters on HVAC equipment.
These are highly compensated
Union positions with superior
benefit packages including
fully paid family health care.
The ability to obtain and maintain a
Federal Government security clearance
and pass a pre-employment drug and
alcohol screenings is mandatory.

25

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whats going
on RIGHT
NOW in the
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The Statesman Journal shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from an error in or omission of an advertisement. No refunds for early cancellation of order.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

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track market changes


from your phone

Our Real Time Real Estate app shows you changes as they
happen. Use it to quickly search pricing, share favorite
properties by email or text, schedule a home tour, and
morewhenever you want, wherever you are.
Just text BHHSREP to 87778

even better now


Homes Open Today!

www.OregonOpenHouseGuide.com
$100,000
$100
000
OPEN 1 - 3 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/689871-01.jpg
6251 Fairway Av SE
689871

350 Wilshire Dr N
Salem
3 Br 2 Ba 1,344 Sf MLS#690828
Jay Marlette
503 559-6023

1378 Ptarmigan Ct NW
Salem
4 Br 3 Ba 2,801 Sf MLS#690848
Heather Smith
503 400-1819

2120 Robins #197 Ln SE


Salem
3 Br 2 Ba 1,982 Sf MLS#690363
Marion Smith
541 905-6082

7122 Bethel Rd SE
Salem
3 Br 2 Ba 1,806 Sf MLS#684142
Mike Eastlund
503 559-8499

2120 Robins #38 Ln SE


Salem
2 Br 2 Ba 1,708 Sf MLS#688264
Connie Basinger
541 619-2585

6251 Fairway Av SE
Salem
2 Br 1.5 Ba 1,120 Sf MLS#689871
Peggy Mangis
503 428-8969

$200,000
$200
000
OPEN 1 - 3 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/685163-01.jpg
5949 Blue River Dr SE
685163

$230,000
$230
000
OPEN 1 - 3 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/687750-01.jpg
605 Browning Av SE
687750

$344,500
$344
500

$369,000
$369
000
OPEN 1 - 3 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/689804-01.jpg
980 Sahalee Dr SE
689804

$429,950
$429
950

/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/
Photos/688320-01.jpg
409 La Cresta Dr SE
688320

/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/
Photos/685001-01.jpg
3985 Shale St S
685001

$495,000
$495
000
OPEN 1 - 4 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/687069-01.jpg
345 Leelle S
687069

5949 Blue River Dr SE


Salem
3 Br 3.5 Ba 2,090 Sf MLS#685163
Kelly Martin
503 551-5788

605 Browning Av SE
Salem
3 Br 2.5 Ba 1,688 Sf MLS#687750
Jacob Colvin
503 580-4435

409 La Cresta Dr SE
Salem
3 Br 3 Ba 2,637 Sf MLS#688320
Jennifer Bussard 952 240-4525

980 Sahalee Dr SE
Salem
3 Br 2.5 Ba 2,921 Sf MLS#689804
Carol Textrum
503 428-2817

3985 Shale St S
Salem
3 Br 3 Ba 2,884 Sf MLS#685001
Nancy & Eric Fiskum503 931-3454

345 Leffelle S
Salem
4 Br 3 Ba 3,250 Sf MLS#687069
Karen Kerr
503 510-9777

NG
VI
LI

OPEN 12 - 4 PM

SY

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NG
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NE

N
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NG
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NE

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CA

$246,000
$246
000
OPEN 1 - 3 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/687471-01.jpg
15863 Old Mehama SE
687471

E
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TI

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ED
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OPEN 1 - 3 PM

EA

$99 500
$99,500
OPEN 1 - 3 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/
Photos/688264-01.jpg
2120 Robins #38 Ln SE
688264
T
RS
FI

$359,900
$359
900
OPEN 1 - 3 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/684142-01.jpg
7122 Bethel Rd SE
684142

+
55

$97 900
$97,900
OPEN 1 - 3 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/
Photos/690363-01.jpg
2120 Robins #197 Ln SE
690363

ST
JU

$319,000
$319
000
OPEN 1 - 3 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690848-01.jpg
1378 Ptarmigan Ct NW
690848

ST
JU

$184,900
$184
900
OPEN 2 - 4 PM
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690828-01.jpg
350 Wilshire Dr N
690828

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15863 Old Mehama SE


Stayton
4 Br 2 Ba 1,620 Sf MLS#687471
Cindy Yoder
503 910-4195

www.BHHSRep.com/evenbetternow

New on the Market!


$224,900
$224
900
Northeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690865-01.jpg
4047 Iberis St NE
690865

$244,900
$244
900

Pristine Mid-Century Ranch!


3 Br 2 Ba 1,500 Sf MLS#690865
Bruce Kepford
503 689-0920

Northeast

$180,000
$180
000
Northwest
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690944-01.jpg
2947 Twin Oak Pl NW
690944

$275,000
$275
000
Northwest
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690869-01.jpg
2431 Crestbrook Dr NW
690869

$299,900
$299
900
Northwest
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690882-01.jpg
2865 Fillmore Av NW
690882

$149,900
$149
900
Central
Central
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690801-01.jpg
586 20th St NE
690801

Updated & Move-In Ready!


4 Br 3 Ba 1,996 Sf MLS#690975
Sandi Elwood
503 881-5226

Delightful Salemtowne!
3 Br 2 Ba 1,512 Sf MLS#690944
Chic Lidtke
503 931-6789

Room for Everyone!


4 Br 3 Ba 3,059 Sf MLS#690869
Nancy & Eric Fiskum503 931-3454

Mountain Views!
4 Br 2.5 Ba 2,207 Sf MLS#690882
Ty Hildebrand/Brenda Glodt 503 945-0234

Turn of the Century Home!


4 Br 2 Ba 2,054 Sf MLS#690801
Mike & Sandy Manning
503 371-8811

$209,900
$209
900
Central
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690924-01.jpg
2190 Englewood Av NE
690924

$15,000
$15
000
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690938-01.jpg
4940 Sunnyside Rd G-15
690938

$37,500
$37
500
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690831-01.jpg
3100 Turner Rd #141 SE
690831

$229,900
$229
900
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690918-01.jpg
345 Fawk Av SE
690918

$275,000
$275
000
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690806-01.jpg
2380 East Nob Hill St SE
690806

$289,900
$289
900
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690660-01.jpg
2111 Mistymorning Av SE
690660

Prviate Setting in Town!


3 Br 2.5 Ba 2,057 Sf MLS#690924
Terry Mangum
503 930-9175

Super Nice in 55+ Park!


2 Br 1 Ba 780 Sf MLS#690938
Linda Tipton
503 559-5167

Picturesque Home!
2 Br 1.5 Ba 960 Sf MLS#690831
Connie Basinger
541 619-2585

Charm of Old World!


3 Br 1 Ba 1,970 Sf MLS#690918
Marie Hoskins
503 945-0263

Cute-As-Can-Be Cottage!
3 Br 1.5 Ba 1,523 Sf MLS#690806
Karen Kerr
503 510-9777

Nicely Updated!
3 Br 2.5 Ba 2,334 Sf MLS#690660
Nancy & Eric Fiskum503 931-3454

$389,900
$389
900
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690950-01.jpg
2177-2183 Nomad Ct SE
690950

$389,900
$389
900
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690953-01.jpg
2197-2203 Nomad Ct SE
690953

$450,000
$450
000
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690992-01.jpg
5514 Dean Ct SE
690992

$275,000
$275
000
South Salem
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690927-01.jpg
3365 Augusta National Dr S
690927

$625,000
$625
000
South Salem
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690871-01.jpg
2409 Crestmont Cl S
690871

$675,000
$675
000
South Salem
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690996-01.jpg
8447 Saghalie Dr S
690996

Two 4-Plex Units!


8 Br 4 Ba 4,092 Sf MLS#690950
Tom Marks
503 881-9230

Investment Opportunity!
8 Br 4 Ba 4,092 Sf MLS#690953
Tom Marks
503 881-9230

Lovely Property w/ 1.42 Acres!


3 Br 3 Ba 3,129 Sf MLS#690992
Tom Marks
503 881-9230

Bright & Open Illahe Condo!


3 Br 2 Ba 1,772 Sf MLS#690927
Ty Hildebrand/Brenda Glodt 503 945-0234

Croisan Mountain Custom!


4 Br 3.5 Ba 3,946 Sf MLS#690871
Nancy & Eric Fiskum503 931-3454

Custom Built Chinook Estates!


3 Br 3.5 Ba 2,803 Sf MLS#690996
Peggy Jackson
503 930-4225

$299,900
$299
900
Aumsville
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690842-01.jpg
8821 Holmquist Rd SE
690842

$199,900
$199
900
Dallas
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690870-01.jpg
1590 SW Hill St
690870

$329,900
$329
900
Lyons
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/690941-01.jpg
25255 Santiam Park Rd SE
690941

$479,900
$479
900
Lyons
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/691007-01.jpg
1200 Juniper Ct
691007

Nice Country Feeling!


5 Br 2 Ba 2,316 Sf MLS#690842
Sandi Elwood
503 881-5226

Huge Home on Corner Lot!


3 Br 2 Ba 1,928 Sf MLS#690870
John S. Tate
503 580-6540

Overlooking Santiam River!


2 Br 2 Ba 2,860 Sf MLS#690941
Bonebrake & Co. LLC.
503 385-0033

Remarkable River Living!


3 Br 2.5 Ba 1,950 Sf MLS#691007
Bonebrake & Co. LLC.
503 385-0033

4465 Great Plains Dr NE


690975

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Check Out More Great Properties For Sale!

www.BHHSRep.com

$315,000
$315
000
Keizer
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/689562-01.jpg
5679 Waterford Wy N
689562

$245,000
$245
000
Northwest
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/689574-01.jpg
1316 Cara Ct NW
689574

$289,000
$289
000
Northwest
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/689410-01.jpg
1756 Snowbird Dr NW
689410

$290,000
$290
000
Suburban SE
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/684134-01.jpg
4911 Swegle Rd (-4922) NE
684134

$279,500
$279
500
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/689346-01.jpg
3205 Hillside Ln SE
689346

$279,900
$279
900
Southeast
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/678233-01.jpg
554 Creekside Dr SE
678233

$239,900
$239
900
Independence
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/666881-01.jpg
1408-1410 Falcon Loop
666881

Excellent Floor Plan & Location!


4 Br 2.5 Ba 2,758 Sf MLS#689562
Kelly Martin
503 551-5788

Passive Solar Green Home!


3 Br 2 Ba 2,061 Sf MLS#689574
John S. Tate
503 580-6540

Tri-Level in West Hills!


3 Br 2.5 Ba 2,047 Sf MLS#689410
Kathy Dewoina
503 999-4535

Development Opportunity!
2 Br 1.5 Ba 1,356 Sf MLS#684134
Ken Howe
503 371-3013

Close to Downtown!
3 Br 2 Ba 1,866 Sf MLS#689346
Erika Trueax
503 428-6992

Creekside Golf Course!


3 Br 2.5 Ba 1,882 Sf MLS#678233
Linda Tipton
503 559-5167

Investment Opportunity!
6 Br 2 Ba 2,112 Sf MLS#666881
John S. Tate
503 580-6540

$310,000
$310
000
South Salem
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/689438-01.jpg
4137 Cloud Dr S
689438

$345,000
$345
000
South Salem
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/689367-01.jpg
4167 Cloudview Dr S
689367

$435,000
$435
000
South Salem
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/684030-01.jpg
3554 Torrey Pines Dr S
684030

$829,000
$829
000
South Salem
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/689601-01.jpg
8328 Konaway Lp S
689601

$589,000
$589
000
Turner
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/680135-01.jpg
7925 Hilton Ln SE
680135

$1,350,000
$1
350 000
Turner
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/681766-01.jpg
8236 Enchanted Ridge Ct SE
681766

$64,900
$64
900
Mill Cityy
/C/Users/Bhhs/OneDrive/Salem/AdMan/Photos/684481-01.jpg
325 NE 5th Av
684481

Lovely in Great Neighborhood!


4 Br 3 Ba 2,514 Sf MLS#689438
Debbie McMillan 503 910-2449

Wooded Half Acre!


3 Br 2.5 Ba 2,909 Sf MLS#689367
Laura Dorn
503 551-6100

Stunning Craftsman-Built Home!


3 Br 2.5 Ba 2,747 Sf MLS#684030
Julienne Ritter
503 910-0753

Stunning Views!
5 Br 4 Ba 5,083 Sf MLS#689601
Sandi Elwood
503 881-5226

Country Living!
5 Br 1 Ba 1,384 Sf MLS#680135
Joe Savelsbergh
503 931-2973

Simply Spectacular!
3 Br 3 Ba 4,612 Sf MLS#681766
Bonebrake & Co. LLC.
503 385-0033

Great Mountain Views!


3 Br 1 Ba 1,125 Sf MLS#684481
Lisa-Anne Brown/John S. Tate503 910-3740

2SHQ'D\V$:HHN
Silverton 503.873.4602
210 S. Water St, Silverton, OR 97381

Salem 503.371.3013
1220 20th St SE, Salem, OR 97302

Stayton 503.769.3448
1155 First Ave, Stayton, OR 97383

 
             
        !"#          !"#  !$  %  #  !  
!"#   !   &' ()* * % +* 

OR-0000363197

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015


 






 

  



  
 

 
    
       

  
     
 


  
     
   

  



 
  


  
  

 


   
  

   

StatesmanJournal.com

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12F

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

StatesmanJournal.com

CLASSIFIEDS

Rentalnder

503-399-6789

StatesmanJournal.com/rentals

SALEM - SOUTH

Foxhollow Apartments

SALEM - SOUTH

Chancellor Apartments

Ask About Our Specials!


Near Chemeketa Comm College
Easy I-5 Access
Water, Sewer, Garbage Paid
Dishwasher / Garbage Disposal
Washer/Dryer Hookups
Covered Parking, On-Site Manager
Please come visit us at 3800 Ward Dr
(503) 393-8385 or (503) 581-2485
2005grs@mail.com

IVANHOE SOUTH APARTMENTS

Cozy Small Complex!


Washer/Dryer Hookups
Water, Sewer, Garbage Paid
Diswasher/Disposal/Microwave
Near W.U. Campus and Capital
821 Cottage St. NE
(503) 581-2485

Falcon View Apartments

Brook Hollow Apartments


BEAUTIFUL COMMUNITY
1&2 BR Apts. Gated Community
Washer/Dryer Hook-ups 24 Hr
Fitness Center Beautiful Grounds
Seasonal Pool Carport On Site
Management Playground
4154 Sunnyview Rd NE
503 585-5505

1 BR starting at $675.00
2 BR starting at $725.00
W/D Hook-ups Energy Efficient
Fitness Center Heated Seasonal
Pool On-Site Laundry Additional
Storage Unit Dog Friendly
w/Deposit
4892 Liberty Rd S. 503-375-3462
Norris & Stevens Management

SALEM - NORTH EAST

SALEM - NORTH EAST

SALEM - NORTH EAST

Choose from innovatively designed


2br/1ba, 1000sf, priv patio, dishwasher,
walk-in closet, Quiet apartment homes,
where cats are allowed. Surrounded by
luxurious spaces, sunlight, and wonderful
views, youll find unlimited possibilities to
reflect your lifestyle. $625 503-362-3217

CLASSIFIEDS

Rentalfinder

503-399-6789

StatesmanJournal.com

Norris & Stevens Management

Classieds
Search or place ad:

Place ad:

ONLINE

734

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1 - 4

Solid maple Dinaire tbl &


6 chrs. Exclt cond. $750
OBO. 559-7717

KEIZER

$278,000

Clear Lake School! Corner lot, 4 bedroom, 3.5


bath, living room, family room & bonus room.
Possible dual living, ofce or guest room.
Tastefully decorated. Large yard with RV pad.
Walk to school! Dir: Wheatland, R. on Merlot, Z.
on Zinfandel, R. on Sagebrush. (690109)

Brian & April McVay


503.510.6827

715 Hospital/Medical

Supplies & Services

Sauna, 2 transcription
machines (one NIB),
medical research books.
Call w/offer 503-864-2929

721

Misc.
Wanted

FAIR HOUSING LAWS


401 Business
For Sale

AFCH for sale in Salem.


Great home and location. 7 BR, 4 BA house
built in 2001, additions
made in 2009 & 2013.
Camelia, 971-222-6384.

655

Found

737

Flea Markets

Exercise Equipment

"The Federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in


the sale, rental, leasing and financing of housing, as well
as discriminatory advertising, on the basis of RACE,
SEX, COLOR, RELIGION, NATIONAL ORIGIN, MENTAL or PHYSICAL HANDICAP, or FAMILIAL STATUS.
In addition to these categories, the State of Oregon also
prohibits discrimination based on MARITAL STATUS.
(Our local jurisdictions also have specific applicable regulations)"
"These laws cover any potential or actual sale, lease,
rental, eviction, price, terms, privileges or any service in
relation to the sale of or us of housing. The not only prohibit advertisements which clearly restrict access to
housing based on the protected categories, but also prohibit advertisements which indicate a preference for or
against a person based on a protected category. In particular circumstances, use of colloquialisms, symbols or
directions to real estate for sale or rent may indicate a
discriminatory preference."
"It is the intent and goal of this newspaper to have each
advertiser who wishes to place a covered advertisement
in the newspaper comply with the Fair Housing laws.
Any advertisement which is perceived to contain language contrary to these laws will be rejected or changed
to remove the offending reference. There may be situations where it is not clear whether particular language is
objectionable. Such advertisements should be referred
to a supervisor for consideration and determination. Under certain circumstances, advertisers may claim that because of the nature of the housing being advertised,
they are not subject to the Fair Housing laws. Such
claims are irrelevant for purposes of considering advertisements for publication in this newspaper. Every housing advertisement published in this newspaper is subject
to the Fair Housing laws"

Estate
Sales

Auction
Sales

733 Bazaars &

FN German Browning
Patent .32 automatic
pistol with holster & one
clip. $500. 503-897-6106
RICKREALL GUN SHOW
June 13th, 8am-5pm
June 14th, 9am-4pm
Polk County Fairgrounds
Adults $6.00
Kids 12 & under free
503-623-3048 for info.

734

Garage
Sales NE

738

Garage
Sales NW

The Mid-Valleys

CASH FOR DIABETIC


TEST STRIPS
Help those in need.
Paying up to $30/box.
Free pick-up.
Call Sharon 503-679-3605.

727 Sporting Goods/


25

Estate
Sales

POLK FLEA MARKET


Polk County Fairgrounds
Sun, June 6, 2015, 9-3
Admission $1.00

BE SEEN
with color!

Number
One

News and
Information
Website.
StatesmanJournal.com

503-399-6789

Classieds

IN PERSON

Mon-Fri. 8-5 280 Church St NE, Salem

CHARLOTTE HIBBETS ESTATE SALE


This house is full: Lenox-Butterfly Meadow 128 pcs,
fine linens, dining rm. set, newer Maytag W/D, old
clocks, fine jewelry, sofas, loveseats, stereo hi-fi
8-track, butcher block crafters-seamstress dream
come true, lots of fabric, doll parts, cutting tables,
lots of Christmas, yard tool, new scooter & walker,
clothes, yard items, some military items. WOW - just
too much to list! EVERYTHING GOES.
No Minimums -No Reserves Sat 8 to 4, Sun 10 to 3
4395 Jackpine NE
PUBLIC AUCTION DELTA
STEEL SUPPLY 10AM TUES - JUNE 9 17140 SE
Wilde Rd, Clackamas OR
97015 Fab Shop, Steel
Surplus, Rolling Stock (2)
FREIGHTLINER TRUCKS,
Park-Wide Yard Sale
Multi-family sale. W&D,
(2) HYSTER FORKLIFTS,
5422 Portland Rd NE
antiques, furn., tools,
(2) CINCINNATI SHEARS,
#125. Arrowhead Park.
bikes, snowboards,
WELDERS, ASSORTED
Sat & Sun 8am-1pm,
misc. 4035 Deepwood
STEEL INVENTORY, ASTools & Lots of Misc.
Ln NW. Sat 8-6, Sun 8-3
SORTED HAND TOOLS &
MUCH MORE! BID LIVE or
BID ONLINE Terms: Cash,
Cashiers Check,
MC/Visa Cards ONLY
James G. Murphy Co
425-486-1246
murphyauction.com

714 Furniture 732

7425 SAGEBRUSH ST NE

Place ad:

BY PHONE

503-399-6789 or 1-800-556-3975

Classieds.StatesmanJournal.com

Where Neighbors
Connect with Neighbors.

Source: SiteCatalyst, 2010

Garage
Sales South

740

Garage
Sales South

740

xxx MOVING SALE xxx


SATURDAY & SUNDAY, JUNE 6 & 7, 9 TO 5
3529 DOGWOOD DRIVE S, SALEM
HOME: Ethan Allen lighted china hutch, Denmark
table and chairs, lovely brass and wood secretary,
Bosch washer and dryer, Ethan Allen bookcases,
large copper kettle, carved end and side tables,
Salem House antique maple lamp tables, Chinese
Stone leaf bonsai trees, two leather barrel back
swivel chairs, lighted curio hutch, glass top table
and chairs, swivel rockers, leather power recliner
and lift chair, 2 42" flat screen TVs, lamps, portable
bar, game table, two cane chairs, original water and
oil paintings, mud men, large ornate gold wall
mirror, gold gilded beveled wall mirror, Chinese
hand loomed wall rug, 2 metal framed twin beds,
highboy dressers, dresser with mirror, desk and
student desk, Fellows shredder, computer, CPU,
monitor and printer, solid oak chair, typing table,
Meilink floor safe, small drop leaf table with 2
drawers, high poster full size bed, Sprague and
Carleton dresser, Lane cedar hope chest, Grand
Ledge Maple Tapestry Chair, crystal, glassware,
retro, Uggs, Chanel, Sak and Coach purses, Accu
Check blood monitors, German beer mugs, Magic
Crystal sculpture from W. Germany, silverware, full
kitchen, linen, small kitchen appliances, Margaret
Furlong shell angles, stereo system, 3 Mahjong
sets, marble top plant stand, and more.
GARAGE: Vintage fishing, U-Line Wine Cooler,
Sanyo mini fridge, ladders, woodworking tools,
Yamaha receiver, 70s records, Hoover vacuum,
vintage Coleman cooler, white stag sleeping bags,
yard and hand tools, scroll saw, pressure washer,
(Chipper, Vac, Blower), BBQ, wheel borrows, yard
art, dog house, Electrolux vacuum, shredders, Nikon
camera package, Crosley AM/FM, APC Surge with
backup, suit cases, and more.
Security on site. Signup sheet out at 7:00 Saturday
morning. Pictures on Craigs List (enter this address
in the search area). See you there.
D IR EC TION S: Madrona (going west), left on
Dogwood to 3529 or South River Road to Acacia,
right on Dogwood to 3529. Follow the signs.

Homes 247 Homes For


For Sale Sale Outside Salem

$184,900 FSBO 1426


SF, 3 BR-2 BA, AC,
FNCD YRD, LVG/FAM
RM, CUL-DE-SAC.
OPEN HSE WKNDS.
SOLD SOLD SOLD
CUTE AND COZY
CHARM $189,000 578
Rose St NE, 1626 SF,
3BR/2BA. Details & pics
on Zillow. Call David.
503-569-1380

300

367 Homes For


Rent Outside

Oceanfront house. 2 BR,


2 BA, TV, frplc & decks.
Walk to town. $285/3
days. 208-369-3144

BE SEEN
with color!
503-399-6789

ATTENTION
PET OWNERS:
WARNING!
Sometimes pets
are sold for
research without
your knowledge.
When offering your
animal for sale (or
free to a good
home), you may
want to verify the
name and address
of the person
answering your ad.

815

FOUND: Shotgun in
Santiam River.
Please call to ID:
503-931-1315

BE SEEN
with color!
503-399-6789

Stay informed
ON THE GO!

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Classieds

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for everybody.
Well help you find one
thats right for you.
where to go | what to do | how to choose

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Sponsored by:

Pets,
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Chihuahua puppies for


sale - full blooded. Black
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6wks. Both parents on
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RENTALS

& Supplies

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on StatesmanJournal.com

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233

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

'0%77-*-)(7

13F

  

   
 


24/7 Shop when you want, contact dealers by e-mail, and visit Cars.com anytime for cars in the Mid-Valley.

-90+(@

:(;<9+(@

:<5+(@

Get auto advice and check


out the latest trends.

Test drive a new car or nd


out the latest from Click & Clack.

Check out the new car section,


car gadgets and whats hot.

 
         

Outlet

Donofrios

LOCAL RIDES

MID-VALLEY CAR CLUBS

Statesman Journal

Open to any pre-1916 through 1927 auto enthusiasts.


Meets at 7:30 p.m. on the fourth Thursday of each month at
Marion County Fire Station No.1 on Cordon Road NE in Salem.

To submit or update club information, email


pbruce@statesmanjournal.com.
Bent 8 Street Rod Club
Salem
Contact:

(503) 362-3799, www.bent8.org


Meets at 6 p.m. on the first Sunday of each month at Walerys
Pizza on Edgewater Drive NW in Salem.

Salem Area Auto Council

WE CONSIGN RVS, CARS, AND TRUCKS

Salem
Contact: Jeff Foster, (503) 884-1906 or (503) 588-1932,
president@wvsr.org,
Meets the last Monday of each month at Capitol Chevrolet.

2007 FORD FOCUS SE


4DR SEDAN

Capitol Area Mustang Club


Salem
Contact: Jim Ramsden, (503) 585-7311,
www.capitolareamustangclub.org
Meets at 7 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month at Walerys
Pizza on Edgewater Drive NW in Salem.

Capital City Corvettes


Salem
Contact: Glen Campbell, (503) 970-5990,
batf169@msn.com, www.capitalcitycorvettes.com
Meets at 6 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at Flight Deck
Restaurant in Salem.

Cherry City Bombers


Salem
Contact: Brian Taylor, (503) 510-3995,
cherrycitybombers@gmail.com,
www.cherrycitybombers.com
Meets at 7 p.m. on the first Thursday of each month at the Eola Inn
Rock-N-Rogers, 4250 Salem-Dallas Highway NW, Salem.

Chevelle and El Camino Club of Oregon


Stayton
Contact: Marina Anderson, (503) 263-4001,
ceccopresident@gmail.com, www.chevelles.net/oregon
Meets on the last Sunday of each month.Visit the website or call for
time and location.

Early Ford V-8 Club of America,


Mid-Willamette Regional Group

Silverton
Contact: Larry Brown, (503) 873-2738,
Meets at 7 p.m. on the first Monday of each month at Silverton
Realty.

Silverton
Contact: Wes Oster, (503) 873-2573,
www.silvertonflywheels.org
Open to all car enthusiasts.

Salem
Contact: Terry Harris, (503) 393-3836,
chancellor@willamettemgclub.org,
www.willamettemgclub.org
Meets at 7 p.m. on the third Tuesday of each month at McNary
Estates Golf Club Restaurant, 155 McNary Estates Dt. N. Keizer.

Salem,Albany

and Jefferson
Contact: Ray Lancaster, (503) 362-7589
Meets for dinner and club business starting at 6 p.m. the first Thursday
of each month at the American Legion Post #10

Mopar Club and Pentastar Pride Club


Salem
Contact: Lee

Morgan, (503) 364-3569, geetex@aol.com,


www.pentastarpride.com
Meets at 7 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at Elmers
Restaurant on Lancaster Drive NE in Salem.

Northwest Vintage Car and Motorcycle Museum


Salem
Contact: Doug

Nelson, (503) 399-0647, buickdoug@yahoo.com,


nwcarandcycle.org
Meets at 6:30 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month at vintage
Texaco service station at Antique Powerland, 3995 Brooklake Road
NE, Brooks.

Obscure Imports
Not available
Contact: Zach Steffen, (503) 302-9581, Obscure-1@live.com; or
Alex Thomas, (503) 798-3366
Membership is free. Call or e-mail for meeting information.

Salem
Contact: Jim Billings, (503) 930-7151,
jimz28427@comcast.net, www.obsoletefleetclassics.org

Oregon Pioneer Regional Group of Horseless


Carriage Club of America

Willamette Valley Corvette Club

Salem
Contact: Tom Paddock, (503) 409-6115, President@willamettevalleycorvettes.com, www.willamettevalleycorvettes.com
Members must attend two meetings and two club events.
Meets the first Thursday of each month at Capitol Chevrolet.

Willamette Valley Model A


Ford Club of America

Salem
Contact: Beauford Averette, (503) 856-9675,
beauforda@comcast.net, www.willamettevalleymodel-a.org,
info@willamettevalleymodel-a.org
Meets the first Thursday of each month at the Mission Mill in
the Card Room.

Willamette Valley Model T Ford Club

Salem
Contact: Louise Cookie Feskens, (503) 362-7157, cfeskens@
comcast.net
Meets at 7:30 p.m. on the first Wednesday of each month at
Marion County Fire Station No.1 on Cordon Road NE in Salem.

Willamette Valley Miata Club

Salem
Contact: Chris McCarty, (503) 851-1549, www.oregonmx5.com
Meets informally at 9 a.m. every Saturday at Subway,
5765 Commercial St. SE, Salem.

Willamette Valley PT Cruiser Club

Salem area
Contact: (503) 999-7400, community-2.webtv.net/suziep/
WillametteValley
Meets at 7 p.m. first Friday of each month (except January)
at Almost Home Restaurant on Market Street in Salem. Social
hour at 6 p.m.

2003 FORD
EXPEDITION
EDDIE BAUER

OUR PRICE

STK# 148153A

6,495

4X4, 3RD ROW SEAT,


LEATHER, LOADED!

8,995

Salem
Contact: Dave LeCompte, (503) 393-6330,WVSRHQ@gmail.com,
wvsr.org, www.wvsr.org
Meets the first Tuesday of each month at Pietros Pizza on
Hawthorne Avenue NE in Salem.

Acura
ACURA OF SALEM
503-588-5000 or
WE NEED
1-800-336-4148
GOOD CLEAN USED CARS
FREE APPRAISAL
TOP DOLLAR

Chrysler

for your clean, carfax


certified vehicle!

Audi

Ford
WE BUY USED
CARS & TRUCKS

1-800-307-4447
www.hillyers.com

KIA
2003 Kia Sedona EX
$1,550 Cash.
7 passenger, RunsSmokes.

503-399-0771

VIN#442660

Chrysler
1988 Chrysler Lebaron
Convertible
$1,950
CD, Leather $300 down
x $100 x 24mo. 18%
APR on approved credit
VIN#3921204
Toy Co

5,995

1997 FORD F-150


SUPERCAB XLT
4X4, V-8, 5SPD
MANUAL, AIR

OUR PRICE

STK# 158174A

7,995

2007 CHEVROLET
COLORADO
CREW CAB
3.7L, 4 SPD AUTO, AIR, TILT, CRUISE,
POWER WINDOWS & LOCKS

OUR PRICE

STK# 148229A

WWW.SKYLINEFORDDIRECT.COM

13,995

503-339-7 356

Motorcycles & ATVs

Travel Tlrs & 5th Wheels

2001 Harley Davidson XLH


2013 Keystone Half$5000
Ton Series
Custom 883, 30,000 miles. Looks sharp, lots of
$25,998
chrome, runs excellent. 503-843-4149
Slide-out wardrobe,
bunk beds Stk #05489
503-393-3365
Travel Tlrs & 5th Wheels 4843 Portland Rd. NE
1998 Coachmen 320MB Sale Price $16,950
Rear Queen, Large
Slide, Gen, Hyd
Levelers, More!
WagersTrailer Sales
503-585-7713

www.alstrailers.com

2011 Grand Junction


$39,900
4 shades, sleeps 4,
sofa, 2 recliners.
Stk #59338
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

www.wagersrvs.com

2005 Outback
$12,960
2 slides, bunk beds, full
bath.
Stk #13334
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

www.wagersrvs.com

2004 Triumph
$19,900
2 slides, super clean! 2
recliners, bath.
Stk #06207
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

www.wagersrvs.com

2007 Challenger 29RL


$24,800
3 slides, very clean,
sleeps 4, hide-a-bed
sofa, mster closet
Stk #50674
4843 Portland Rd. NE

503-393-3365
www.alstrailers.com

www.alstrailers.com

2001 Artic Fox


$12,900
Air Cond, Large
Slide, Excellent
condition
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

www.alstrailers.com

2009 Wilderness
240RK $17,985
Kitchen, Qn bed,
Slideout, AC.
Stk #25003
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

2005 Tailgator
$10,875
Toy Hauler, Bath,
Fridge, A/C
Stk #53155
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

www.wagersrvs.com

2003 Cameo 34-KS3


Sale Price $21,900
Three Roomy Slides,
One Owner, Washer/
Dryer.
WagersTrailer Sales
503-585-7713

2006 Maverick 8801


Sale Price $8,450
Self Contained, Corner
Bath w/Shower, Jacks,
Aprox 2200lb
Wagers Trailer Sales
503-585-7713

503-399-0771

Buick

Toy Co

1940 MISSION STREET SE | Salem, OR

1995 Snowbird 26.5RK Sale Price $9,950


Nice Original Condition,
Large Slide, A/C,
Awning.
Wagers Trailer Sales
503-585-7713

Lulays will pay top dollar

lulayscarconnection.net

1997 Audi A6
Wagon $4,950
3rd Seat, Leather, moon
roof $300 down x $250
x 24mo. 18% APR On
Approved Credit
VIN#054379
Toy Co

OUR PRICE

STK# 147678B

$$$$

503-363-3426

CALL BJ OR JIM
503-588-5000

V6, AUTOMATIC,
LEATHER, MOONROOF,
FULL POWER

Salem
Contact: (503) 363-2619, woodspokes@aol.com

1998 Buick Regal


GS $2,950
Moofroof, Leather,
$300 down x $150 x
24mo. 18% APR On
Approved Credit
VIN#514548

V-6, AUTOMATIC,
AIR, FULL POWER

Salem and Keizer


Contact: Chris Davie, (503) 873-4952, web@wmclub.org,
www.wmclub.org
Meets at 7:30 p.m. the third Thursday of each month at Round
Table Pizza at Keizer Station.

Willamette Valley Street Rods

Obsolete Fleet Classics

5,995

2007 FORD TAURUS


SE 4DR SEDAN

OUR PRICE

STK# 5259Q

Willamette Motor Club

Mid-Valley Cruzers Club

Willamette MG Club

25

Reynolds, (503) 364-7675


Meets at 7 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month at 990
Cordon Road NE in Salem.

OUR PRICE

STK# 148058A

Silverton Flywheels

Salem
Contact: Bruce

4CYL, AUTOMATIC, AIR,


TILT, CRUISE, PWR
WINDOWS AND LOCKS

Silver T Horseless Club

2003 ACURA TL 3.2


4 DR SEDAN

Toy Co

503-399-0771

Mercedes - Benz
2001 Mercedes
S-430
$6,950
Moonroof, Nav, Custom
Wheels

503-399-0771

VIN#169309

2011 Northwood
Fox Mountain
$22,985
Slideout, Queen bed
Stk #37134
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

2011 Heartland
Cyclone
$45,985
10ft garage, toy hauler
Stk #34717
503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

2010 Keystone
$13,985
Full bath, queen bed
Stk #01213
Toy Co

503-399-0771

503-393-3365
4843 Portland Rd. NE

www.alstrailers.com

14F

MCMINNVILLE

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

June
Sales
Event

ONE PERSON Sales Experience

Jim Doran Subaru


2015 Impreza 2.0i Premium CVT

Loaded option pkg 11, Pop pkg 1, 110 power outlet,


cargo tray, all weather mats and more!

2015 Forester 2.5i CVT

Youll love this! Luggage Compartment Cover, All


Weather Mats, Rear Bumper Cover and more!

21,488

Alloy Wheel pkg, Moonroof, Fog lights, auto dim


compass mirror, all weather mats and more.

21,688

Stk # 3153, Model Code FLF, Vin # FH252001


MSRP $23,230, Dealer Discount $1,742

2015 Impreza 2.0i Premium CVT

24,488

STK# 3203, Model code FFA, Vin# FG821008


MSRP $23,394, Dealer Discount $1,706

Stock# 3152, Model Code FJF, Vin# FH012562


MSRP $24,118, Dealer Discount $1,830

2015 Outback 2.5i CVT

2015 BRZ Premium

2015 Forester 2.5i Limited CVT

All Weather Mats, Ext Auto dim Mirror


w/ compass and much more!

Ready for Spring and Summer fun! Pop Pkg 2C,


dimming mirror w/ Homelink and more!

Leather, Moonroof, all weather mats


and so much more!

24,688

Stk # 3165, Model Code FDB 01, Vin # F3325198


MSRP $26,787, Dealer Discount $2,099

Loaded with leather interior, auto dim compass


mirror, all weather mats, cargo cover and more.

22,288

Stock# 3134, Model Code FRD, Vin# F8243890


MSRP $26,318, Dealer Discount $1,830

2015 Legacy 2.5i Limited CVT

Loaded - Power Moonroof, Navigation, Push


Button Start. All Weather Mats and More!

27,163

25,309

2015 Crosstrek XV 2.0i Limited CVT

27,888

Stk # 3106, Model code FFI 21, Vin# FH538093


MSRP $29,322, Discount $2,159

Stk # 3123, Model code FZA 01, Vin# F9604675


MSRP $27,121, Discount $1,812

Stk # 3167, Model Code FAF 22, Vin # F3053457


MSRP $30,256, Dealer Discount $2,368

Art is for illustration only, all prices expire Monday following publication. Prices do not include licenses, title and processing fees. All vehicles subject to prior sale.

Jim Doran Subaru

1315 NE 3rd St McMinnville


www.doransubaru.com 800-348-9850 503-472-0383

JIM DORAN AUTO CENTER


NEW 2014 Jeep

NEW 2014 MAZDA3

Patriot 4x4

5 DR, GT

0% FOR 60 MONTHS

END OF SCHOO
L
CLOSEOUT!!

NEW 2014 Chrysler

Town & Country Touring

$27,999

MSRP $25,035, Stk#J945/Vin#FD396305

$23,777

NEW 2014 Dodge

NEW 2014 Jeep

NEW 2015 Jeep

Freedom Edition!

$41,995

Fully Loaded, Includes Navigation!


Stk#MJ10/Vin#213197

Journey R/T AWD Rallye

$28,577

Moonroof, Navigation and more.


MSRP $35,880, Dealer Discount $7,303
Stk#D794/Vin#235927

2001 FORD ESCAPE

Wrangler Unlimited 4x4

$32,995

Hardtop
MSRP $36,960, Dealer Discount $3,965
Stk#J622/Vin#199518

w/ safety tec.
MSRP $34,800,
Dealer Discount $6,801 Stk#D749/Vin#231570

Grand Cherokee Overland


MSRP $49,185,
Dealer Discount $7,190
Stk#J726/Vin#521827

PRE-OWNED SPECIALS

2000 FORD EXPEDITION

2001 TOYOTA 4RUNNER 4X4

2008 JEEP LIBERTY 4X4

...................................... $5,277

Hurry, they go fast!

Loaded Limited Edition. STK#J931-1

....................................$10,989

2007 CHEVROLET HHR

2002 GMC ENVOY 4X4

2007 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN

2013 SCION XB SUV

...................................... $4,789

...................................... $5,577

...................................... $6,977

....................................$14,989

Stk#J9103

...................................... $2,977
4DR, Automatic, A/C, Nice. STK#D9062/VIN#619360

Loaded 4x4, Stk#B8363

Vin# 489689, Stk#B9491

........... Stk# J7592


...................................... $5,989
7 Passenger, Summer Ready. STK#B8831/VIN#346907

Nicely Equipped + Low Miles! STK#J893-1

JIM DORAN AUTO CENTER, 3075 N. HWY. 99W


800-348-9856 | 503-399-8422
WWW.DORANAUTOCENTER.COM

JIM DORAN CHEVROLET


JIM DORAN SERVICE LOANER SALE ALL THE GM INCENTIVES AT A GREAT PRICE
2014 CHEVROLET MALIBU
1 @ This Price. STOCK# 2785/VIN# 303958
MSRP
$25,700
Jim Doran Discount $7,703 OFF MSRP
SALE PRICE

18,200

2014 CHEVROLET 1500

1 @ This Price. STOCK# 2705/VIN# 264068


MSRP
$37,945
GM REBATE
$2,500
Jim Doran Discount
$5,500
TOTAL OFF MSRP
$8,000

29,945

$
SALE
PRICE

2015 CHEVROLET 1500

1 @ This Price. STOCK# 2947 /VIN 188640


MSRP
$28,690
GM REBATE
$1,500
BONUS CASH REBATE
$750
Jim Doran Discount
$6,750
TOTAL OFF MSRP
$9,000

$
SALE
PRICE

19,960

2015 CHEVROLET SPARK EV


STOCK# 3201/VIN# 765496

JUST ARRIVED
TWO IN STOCK NOW

1 @ This Price. STOCK# 2684/VIN# 263920


MSRP
$27,455
GM REBATE
$2,500
Jim Doran Discount
$5,500
TOTAL OFF MSRP
$8,000

19,455

SALE
PRICE

2015 CHEVROLET MALIBU


1 @ This Price. STOCK# 2857/VIN# 142401
MSRP
$25,985
GM REBATE
$1,500
BONUS CASH REBATE
$1,000
Jim Doran Discount
$3,500
TOTAL OFF MSRP
$6,000

19,985

SALE
PRICE

PRE-OWNED
2003 Dodge Grand Caravan

2013 Chevrolet Cruze LT

2007 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Extended Cab 4x4

$3,988

$14,988

$15,988

Great value and room for the


whole family!! Stk # D450B

2011 MINI S

Only 28k low miles, 1 owner, cold


weather and convenience pkgs,
like new! Stk # 3143A

25

2014 CHEVROLET 1500

$17,988

Loaded and only 18000 low miles! Automatic, Alloys, PW,


PDL, TL, CC and more factory warranty! Stk#D507

2014 Chevrolet Captivaa LTZ

17k Low miles, Factory Warranty,


t
Moonroof, Leather and loaded!
Stk # D511

$19,988

Longbox, Auto,V8, AC, PW pdl's Tilt, CC, CD Player, Tow


pkg, Alloys and more!
Stk#3020A

2012 Chevrolet Tahoe LT 4x4


4

Loaded LT! Power liftgate, Bose, Leather, Tow, Heated Seats


and much more, only 32k miles!
Stk# #D520A

$33,988

NE 3rd St | WWW.DORANCHEV.COM
JIM DORAN CHEVROLET 1315
800-348-9850 | 503-472-0383

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Lets talk facts. Dollar for dollar, no other media reaches a


more qualied audience in a single day than print. Dont
buy it? See for yourself. The Statesman Journal:

60

Reaches nearly 60% of


Mid-Valley adults each week.

60+

On average, people spend 60+ minutes


with the Sunday edition every week.

100K+

Reaches 67% of households with


incomes of $100K+ every week.

PERCENT

MIN. SPENT

INCOMES

FIND OUT HOW THE STATESMAN JOURNAL


PUTS PRINT TO WORK FOR YOU.

503.399.6602
StatesmanJournalMedia.com

Source: Salem Market Study 2011, conducted by Thoroughbred Research, Inc.

15F

16F

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

WWW.POWEROREGON.COM

HASSLE FREE BUYING

37

FUNCCTIONAL

UP TO

$3,080

OFF MSRP!

1 AT

HWY
MPG

11,950

MSRP $15,030. Sale price after $2,580 Power Discount & $500 Kia Customer
Cash Rebate. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 515035.
Model 31421. Expires 7/6/15.

2015 KIA SOUL

BLUETOOTH &
ACTIVE ECO SYSTEM

UP TO

13,950

EPA
ESTIMATED

1 AT
-$1,500 IF FINANCED WITH KMF*

30

HWY
MPG

$3,685

OFF MSRP!

SALE PRICE

12,450

MSRP $16,135. Sale price after $2,185 Power Discount & *$1500 KMF Bonus Cash. *Must finance with KMF to receive.
Tier 1-8. 580+ Beacon. On approved credit. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 216522. Model B1511. Expires 7/6/15.

2015 KIA FORTE

15,950
$
SALE PRICE 13,950

EPA
ESTIMATED

1 AT
-$2,000 IF FINANCED WITH KMF*

39
HWY

AUTOMATIC

UP TO

MPG

$4,710

OFF MSRP!

MSRP
MS
M
SRP $18,660. Sale price after $2,710 Power Discount & $2,000 KMF Bonus Cash. *Must finance with KMF to receive.

Tier 1-8.
On approved credit. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 395432. Model C3422. Expires 7/6/15.
1 8 580+ Beacon.
B

2015 KIA OPTIMA

HWY
MPG

$5,595

OFF MSRP!

19,450
$
SALE PRICE 17,450

1 AT
-$2,000 IF FINANCED WITH KMF*

34

LOADED WITH
TECHNOLOGY

UP TO

EPA
ESTIMATED

MSRP $23,045. Sale price after $3,595 Power Discount & $2,000 KMF Bonus Cash. *Must finance with KMF to receive.
Tier 1-8. 580+ Beacon. On approved credit. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 621909. Model 53222. Expires 7/6/15.

2016 KIA SORENTO

EPA
ESTIMATED

UP TO

$4,975

1 AT

29
HWY

THE PERFECT
GETAWAY VEHICLE

22,450

-$500 IF FINANCED WITH KMF*


-$1,000 LOYALTY OR COMP BONUS**

MPG

20,950

SALE PRICE

OFF MSRP!

MSRP $25,925. Sale price after $3,475 Power Discount, *$500 KMF Bonus Cash & **1,000 Loyalty or Comp Bonus. *Must
finance with KMF to receive. Tier 1-8. 580+ Beacon. On approved credit. *Must currently own and have registered an applicable competitive
model or own a Kia with a current registration. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 052642. Model 76212. Expires 7/6/15.

powerkia.com
866-981-1264

10-year/100,000-miles limited powertrain warranty


5-year/60,000-miles limited basic warranty
5-year/100,000-miles limited anti-perforation warranty
5-year/60,000-miles 24-hour roadside assistance*

TEXT US AT 503-847-9374

3705 MARKET ST NE SALEM

Art for illustration only. Prices do not include Title, License, Doc Fees. Prices expire Mon. following publication.

10,995

NEW 2015 CHEVROLET CAMARO RS


MSRP $34,045 - $2500 rebate - $3000 discount
VIN 141841. One at this price + lic title and doc fee

5,500 OFF MSRP!

NEW 2015 CHEVROLET TRAVERSE AWD


MSRP $38,165 - $3000 rebate - $3000 discount VIN 233224.
One at this price + lic title and doc fee

6,000 OFF MSRP!

NEW 2015 SILVERADO 1500 DBL CAB 4WD


MSRP $42,605 - $4750 rebate - $4250 discount VIN 236711.
One at this price + lic title and doc fee

9,000 OFF MSRP!

503-769-7691
www.powerchevrolet.com

500 SW Sublimity Blvd, Sublimity


Just minutes east of Salem on Hwy 22 in Sublimity
Prices expire Monday following publication. Art for illustration only.
Prices do not include Lic, Title, Doc Fees. Prices expire Mon following publication.

POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM

ALL 2015 NISSAN ROGUE S


IN STOCK

UP TO

3250

OFF MSRP!

SALE PRICE

22,395

342.71
/MO

$348.00 due @ signing.


@ 72 months

.53

330

/MO

% APR AVAILABLE FOR UP


TO 60 MONTHS ON SELECT
NEW VEHICLES
APR offer in lieu of factory rebates,
contact dealer for details and availability

BUYATPOWER.COM

2015 GMC SIERRA 1500 Crew Cab 4x4


STK#G2094/VIN#250949, MSRP-$47,975
Power Discount- $5,698, GM Rebate- $3,750
1 @ This Price

38,527

FINAL SALES PRICE $

2015 GMC

2015 BUICK

4 @ This Price

1 @ This Price

VERANO

Vin#s: 326067, 304325, 213264, 326067. MSRP $46,500, STK#G2283/VIN#140520, MSRP $24,305,
GM Rebate $4,000, Power Discount $1,528
GM Rebate $3,750, Power Discount $3,723
FINAL SALES PRICE $
FINAL SALES PRICE $

18,777

2015 BUICK

REGAL GS

LACROSSE
1 @ This Price

1 @ This Price

STK#G1973/VIN#181129, MSRP $34,560,


GM Rebate $6,000, Power Discount $2,383

STK#G2189/VIN#239243, MSRP $41,050,


GM Rebate $5,000, Power Discount $2,273
FINAL SALES PRICE $

2015 BUICK

2015 GMC

26,177

FINAL SALES PRICE $

ENCLAVE
1 @ This Price

STK#G2176/VIN#302698, MSRP $53,120,


GM Rebate $3,750, POWER DISCOUNT $4,343.

33,777

TERRAIN

199/MO LEASE
$
1,999 DUE AT INCEPTION

45,027
O V ER 70 0 P R E- O W N ED AVA I L A BL E

OR-0000363625

B U YAT P O W E R . C O M
3675 MARKET ST., SALEM

I-5

1-877-461-9045

BUICK
GMC
CARS SOLD
HERE!

Market St

Market St

I-5

FINAL SALES PRICE $

Lease Payment Based On 24 Payments. Cap Cost $26,190, After $2,000 Factory Rebate And $1,790 Power Discount. Plus
$595 Acquisition Fee. $1,999 Down Cash Or Trade + Factory Rebate. Security Deposit Waved. Total Due At Inception $1,999
+ Factory Rebate And Lic/Title Fees. Total Lease Charge $47,976 + Nissan Factory Rebate. Residual Value $19,306.20. 12K
Miles Per Year. MSRP $27,980. Early Termination Fee $0. 2 At this Price. Vin#169582, Model #G1970, On Approved Credit.

Art for illustration


Prices60
do not
include Title,
License, Doc Fees.FLAG
Prices expire Mon. following publication.
LOOK
FORonly.
THE
FOOT
AMERICAN

powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS

When nanced with Oregon Community


Credit Union or Fifth Third Bank.
Tier 1-3. On Approved Credit.

2015 BUICK

I-5

HWY 22

SALE PRICE

19,145

292.97
/MO

$348.00 due @ signing.


@ 72 months

Prices expire Monday following publication. Art is for illustrations


purposes only. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Tax, license, title
and registration processing fees extra.

POWER

$1,000
DISCOUNT
TOWARDS A NEW 2014 OR 2015 MAZDA

WHEN YOU TRADE IN YOUR KIA!


NEW 2015
$498
POWER
Mazda3 i SV
DISCOUNT
$

MSRP

18,813

TOTAL SALES PRICE

17,565

1 @ This Price. Vin#261218. MSRP $18,813, Power Discount $498, Mazda Rebate $750.

NEW 2015
Mazda6 i Grand Touring
$

MSRP

31,015

$4,500
POWER
DISCOUNT

TOTAL SALES PRICE

26,515

1 @ This Price. Vin# 224686, Stk# M0679, MSRP $31,015, Power Discount $4,500.

NEW 2015
Mazda CX-5 Touring
$

MSRP

$867
POWER
DISCOUNT

TOTAL SALES PRICE

28,225 $27,358

1 @ This Price. Vin# 544357. MSRP $28,225, Power Discount $867.

NEW 2015
Mazda CX-9 Touring
$

MSRP

33,715

$1,812
POWER
DISCOUNT

TOTAL SALES PRICE

27,903

1 @ This Price. Vin# 460116 MSRP $33,715, Power Discount $1,812, Mazda Rebate $4,000.
*Special APR rates are based on approved credit. Must nance through Mazda Capital to
receive the advertised rates. Credit Tier level 1-4, 680 Beacon and above.

866-980-5279
SERVICE & PARTS OPEN SATURDAYS!
3230 Market St. Salem

powermazda.com

Art for illustration only. Prices do not include Title, License,


Doc Fees, Prices expire Mon. following publication.

powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS

DAYS TO
FIRST PAYMENT

39,027

Power
Chevrolet

powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS powermazda.com

POWER

ACADIA

ET

MSRP $24,445.00 Dealer discount $2,800.00, NMAC APR cash $1,000.00, June Nissan
Customer bonus cash $500.00, Nissan Customer Cash $1,000.00 Sale price $19,145.00
plus fees. (Up to $5,300.00 off MSRP) 90 days to 1st payment $292.97 per month, plus
dmv/fees $348.00 due @ signing. @ 72 months @ 3.07% APR OAC with NMAC tier 3,
co score 700 or better. 8 in stock at this price. Stock #N3076, model #13115.

877-351-5689 | 503-581-3849 | www.powernissansalem.com


2755 Mission St SE | SALEM

Buying Has Never


Been Easier

UP TO

5300
OFF MSRP!

$943.00 due
@ signing
@ 36 months.
MSRP $25,645.00, Dealer discount $2,750.00, NMAC customer cash $500.00
Sale price $22,395.00 plus fees. (Up to $3250.00 off MSRP) 90 days to 1st
Stock #2816, model #17215, vin #300430, 3 in stock at this price. With premium package $330.53
payment $342.71 per month, plus dmv/fees $348.00 due @ signing. @ 72
per month with $943.00 due @ signing @ 36 months. MSRP $38330.00 net cap cost $22,584.00
months @3.07% APR OAC with NMAC tier 3, 700 co or better. 4 in stock at this after NMAC lease cash dealer discount $3145.00 & $943.00 due at signing. Total lease charge
$11,899.08 residual $12,265.60 on approved credit @ NMAC 12,000. Miles per year
price. Stock# N3284, Model 22815, Vin # 549058, 547298, 547806 and 539425.

90

ROL

ALL 2015 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5S


IN STOCK

NEW 2015 NISSAN LEAF SL

V
CHE

CASCADE HWY

EPA
ESTIMATED

MSRP $13,095 - $1500 rebate - $600 discount


VIN 715300. One at this price + lic title and doc

LE
M

2015 KIA RIO

NEW 2015 CHEVROLET SPARK

SA

KIA

POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM

POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM

POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM POWERKIA.COM

YOULL ALWAYS DO BETTER AT POWER

powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS powermazda.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

CLASSIC PEANUTS/ by Charles Schulz

GARFIELD/ by Jim Davis

DILBERT/ by Scott Adams

SUNDAY, June 7, 2015

DOONESBURY/ by Garry Trudeau

SALLY FORTH/ by Francesco Marciuliano & Jim Keefe

MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM/ by Mike Peters

ZIGGY/ by Tom Wilson

DENNIS THE MENACE/ by Hank Ketcham

SUNDAY, June 7, 2015

SUNDAY, June 7, 2015

MORT WALKERS BEETLE BAILEY/ by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker

MARVIN/ by Tom Armstrong

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL

JUNE 7, 2015 SECTION U

E1

SUNDAY

Looking cool on
hot days, 3U

Memphis means music


and much, much more, 4U

BANANAREPUBLIC.GAP.COM

MEMPHIS CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU

TELEVISION
CALENDAR
Plan your week in entertainment with these highlights and
pop-culture milestones.

MONDAY
WATCH: Expect

cocktails, conspicuous consumption


and plenty of cattiness on the 10th
season premiere of The
Real Housewives of
Orange County tonight
at 9 ET/PT on Bravo.

BRAVO

TUESDAY
LISTEN: Mont-

gomery Gentrys album


Folks Like Us
is out today. It
marks the duos
rst new album in three years.

WEDNESDAY
WATCH: Kevin Hart, Snoop

Dogg, Zendaya, Jordin Sparks


are among the stars set for
the new season of MTV2s
Nick Cannon Presents:
Wild N Out, premiering
tonight at 11 ET/PT.
SCOTT ENLOW TLC

THURSDAY
ATTEND: Rob Thomas kicks off
his The Great Unknown
2015 tour today in Ontario.
Hell continue through Aug. 10,
joined by special guests
Plain White Ts.

FRIDAY

The Duggar familys popular TLC series 19 and Counting is in limbo after an investigation against son Josh came to light.

Harsh reality can sting


in heat of the spotlight
Duggar familys travails
are latest example of life
intruding on escapism

JOJO WHILDEN, NETFLIX

WATCH: Clear your weekend

calendar, because its time


to indulge in some binge
watching! Season 3 of
Orange Is the New Black
is out on Netix today.
Compiled by Cindy Clark

USA SNAPSHOTS

A record
Broadway season

13,104,078
million
patrons attended
Broadway shows from
May 26, 2014, through
May 24 up 7.3% from
the previous season.

Source The Broadway League

Donna Freydkin
and Maria Puente
USA TODAY

Trauma and turmoil make for


titillating reality TV. Until they
dont.
And thats especially true for
TLCs 19 Kids and Counting, the
networks top-rated show.
It showcased the faith-based,
cloistered, demure Duggar clan,
whose lives were centered on
strict Christian family values.
That was upended when the
news broke that eldest son Josh
acknowledged that he was investigated on suspicion of molesting
ve girls as a teen 12 years ago.
Moreover, his parents, Jim Bob
and Michelle, acknowledged they
knew about it and concealed it,
and Josh was never charged with
a crime.
So what happens when real-life
controversy changes the reality
show script in unwelcome ways?
And what about when theres a
chasm between what a reality
star stands for and what he or she
is accused of?
In the quest for bigger and
splashier shows, and the ratings
that follow, TV networks are

JB LACROIX, WIREIMAGE

grappling with real-life developments in the families they spotlight. TLC has pulled reruns of
the show from the schedule but
has not announced long-term
plans for the show.
In many respects, networks
and families are selling a bill of
goods that doesnt exist, but thats
what makes for compelling television, says Martie Cook, associate
chairwoman of Emerson Colleges Visual and Media Arts
Department and author of Write
to TV: Out of Your Head and

Onto the Screen.


Perfection is boring. And producers love the moment its all
going to implode. Thats what
drives ratings. TV is all about
money, she says.
And oddballs. Reality TV stars
are anomalies to begin with
thats why theyre on TV, says Melissa Click, an assistant professor
of media studies at the University
of Missouri who tracks TV shows
with female-dominant audiences.

Here Comes
Honey Boo
Boo ended
after revelations that
Mama June,
with Alana
Thompson,
was dating a
convicted sex
offender.

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2U

TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

Chris Pratt is
surrounded
by raptors
in the latest
Jurassic Park
ick, which
also stars
a dinosaur
bigger and
more dangerous than
your average
T. Rex.

MOVIES

Greed is the beast in Jurassic World


Brian Truitt
@briantruitt
USA TODAY

There were already three hit


Jurassic Park movies, so why
make a fourth?
Jurassic World director Colin
Trevorrow asked himself the
same question, and the answer
was integral to the treacherous
theme-park environment he
created onscreen.
Well, its to make as much
money as possible, whether its a
good idea or not. Why not make a

movie about that? says the lmmaker, 38, whose previous movie
was 2012s Safety Not Guaranteed.
Trevorrows big-budget adventure (in theaters Friday) continues the dino-mite trilogy
that has racked up more than
$800 million since Steven Spielbergs Jurassic Park in 1993.
Twenty years have passed since
velociraptors and one really
mean T. Rex were cloned from
fossilized DNA on the island of
Isla Nublar, and the park is in
need of some new attractions to
boost attendance.
Naturally, it doesnt go well. A

hybrid monster called Indominus


Rex gets loose, putting visitors in
serious jeopardy and requiring a
behavioral researcher (Chris
Pratt) and the parks operations
manager (Bryce Dallas Howard)
to gure out a way to stop it.
Its not as if they couldnt have
seen it coming: The creature is
billed as bigger than a T. Rex to
lure in visitors willing to plunk
down lots of coin to see what the
fuss is all about.
Science ction has long tackled
societal issues of the era, and Trevorrow saw a way to tap into the
fact that everything is owned and

CHUCK ZLOTNICK, UNIVERSAL PICTURES

operated with the sole goal of


raking in cash.
The concept allowed him to go
beyond the idea of playing God.
Other lms have debated the
downside of that, and so he

turned the story into an exploration of excess, he says. Beyond


our arrogance, (this is about)
what the need for something bigger and better and louder to keep
us entertained can bring.

2U

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E1

PEOPLE

Name game, drone


blow and that kiss
USA TODAYs Cindy Clark digs through the latest
celebrity news for highlights ... and lowlights. Think high
school yearbook superlatives if Reese Witherspoon
and Jaden Smith were classmates.
BIGGEST BABY-NAME ODDS:
KIM KARDASHIAN

The reality star is pregnant with


her second child, and now everyone is weighing in on what the
babys name will be. With her
rst child, a daughter, named
North, the odds on South are
pretty high. And were guessing it
could work for either a boy or a
girl!
MOST PAINFUL INCIDENT
INVOLVING A DRONE:
ENRIQUE IGLESIAS

Drone 1, Iglesias 0. The singer


ended up bandaged and bloody
after his ngers were sliced when
he grabbed a drone during a
concert in Tijuana, Mexico.
During the show a drone is
used to get crowd shots and some
nights Enrique grabs the drone
to give the audience a Point of
View shot. Something went
wrong and he had an accident,
read a statement issued by
Joseph Carozza, a spokesman
for the singer. He decided to
go on and continued playing for
30 minutes while the bleeding
continued throughout the show.
After the show, he was own to
Los Angeles to see a specialist.

MARK ARBEIT, TLC

Jon and Kate Gosselin renewed their wedding vows in Hawaii on Jon & Kate Plus 8. But things
got ugly and accusations of bad parenting ew both ways after the couple split up.

Duggars crossed the line


v CONTINUED FROM 1U

The Duggars Christian values


were part of their appeal, but it
was their gazillion children that
made them stand out, she says.
While the Duggars are one of
the most high-prole examples of
televised family virtue gone
wrong, theyre not alone.
Here Comes Honey Boo Boo,
detailing the antics of a child pageant participant and her country
kin, was yanked off the air in October by TLC after it was revealed
that matriarch June Shannon
was dating a man convicted of
child molestation.
Another TLC show, Jon & Kate
Plus 8, documented the turbulent
life of two parents raising sextuplets and twins. That, too, was put
on permanent hiatus in June
2009 after the ugly, lurid split of
the Gosselins in which Jon accused Kate of being a bad mother
who exploited their brood for nancial gain.
But not all reality-show scandals have the same consequences.
The ubiquitous Kardashians and
their scripted-to-the-max show,
Keeping Up With the Kardashians
on the E! network, survived the
embarrassing debacle of Kims
72-day marriage to basketball
player Kris Humphries in 2011,
because none of the Kardashians
presented themselves as moral
paragons.
Ditto in a different way for Phil
Robertson, patriarch of Duck Dynasty on the A&E network, who
caused a stir over his anti-gay remarks last year. But his views
were not surprising nor in conict with his well-established image as a conservative Christian.
The shows ratings have dipped
since, but its still on the air.
Yet the Duggars, who built
their mini-empire with books, TV
appearances and magazine covers, are perceived to have crossed
a line that goes beyond their purported value system into something unpalatable.

MOST LIKELY TO SKIP OUT ON


A REUNION: MARIAH CAREY

If American Idol decides to round


up past and present judges when
the show takes its nal bow next
season, we already know who
wont be there. When asked on
Australias The Kyle and Jackie O
radio show whether she would
come back for Idols series nale
next year, Mariah Carey made
her intentions crystal-clear:
Absolutely not. That was the
worst experience of my life.
Well, OK then!

MYLIFETIME.COM

The marital problems of Tori Spelling and Dean McDermott


played out in dramatic fashion on Lifetimes True Tori.

These family
shows, they
cant show
the true story
or no one
would watch.
Producer Henriette Mantel

when youre committing (an alleged) crime, especially a crime


against children, that should not
be dealt with on the air.
Even the editors of People
magazine, which has chronicled
the Duggars rise with positive
coverage, are down on the Duggars. Once a shows brand values
are undermined, its all over, says
Kate Coyne, executive editor.
Its like destroying the foundation of a home: Once youve
done that, theres a slim chance
you can rebuild the old structure, she says. Generally speaking, once the core premise of a

THERE ARE BOUNDARIES

Real Housewives of Atlanta star


Apollo Nida was convicted of
identity theft and bank fraud and
was imprisoned in September.
Tori Spelling and Dean McDermott played out their marital
woes cheating and substance
abuse for entertainment on her
Lifetime show, True Tori, in December. But audiences coped.
There are things we will accept. Child molestation is not
one of them, Cook says. You
want to deal with divorce on the
air? OK. But I do believe that
Apollo Nida, with Phaedra
Parks, was imprisoned.
PRINCE WILLIAMS, FILMMAGIC

KAROLINA WOJTASIK, A&E

Outspoken Phil Robertsons controversial views led to a


noticable dip in the ratings for A&Es Duck Dynasty.

show is tarnished, theres no


coming back.
And theres little chance viewers would have an appetite for
seeing the Duggars work through
their issues on their show.
Once we get to the stage that
thats what we want to see, thats
a pretty big statement on society,
says Kristi Russell, president of
Metal Flower Media, a reality
casting agency that works on
shows such as Naked and Afraid
and Trading Spouses. Even the
American public has some level
of decency.
FAME AND THE DARK SIDE

You could argue that reality families are victims of their own
success. They implode because
the people that are starring in
(reality TV shows) are human beings and none of them are perfect, Cook says.
The more people are on TV,
the more famous they are, they
more money they have, the more
pressures there are behind the
scenes.
Every family has a dark side.
You just dont always see it,
says producer Henriette Mantel, who worked on The Osbournes and What Not to Wear.
On the rst season of the Osbournes, Mantel says cameras
captured what really went on:
Ozzy bumbling around, and
the couple and their kids
hanging out.
These family shows, they
cant show the true story or no
one would watch, Mantel
says. The attention span is
short. You cant show what
people are really doing. You
want to see them wash dishes or
read a book? So they set them up
in situations.
The families know what
theyre getting into, Russell says:
Theyre in on the game.
They see the contract. Its not
a short contract. Its lengthy.
Some of them enjoy the process
of embellishing who they are.
Look at Honey Boo Boo, she says.
Russell says she vets her potential cast members carefully,
paying attention to red ags,
from unpaid parking tickets to
felony convictions, but she really
knows only what the families
choose to reveal.
You can have checks and balances in place and at the end of
the day, talent I use that term
loosely all of the sudden they
have a trick up their sleeve.

BEST CAST REUNION: CRUEL INTENTIONS

Things got steamy when Reese Witherspoon, Sarah Michelle Gellar


and Selma Blair reunited last week. The three actresses, who all
starred in the 1999 lm Cruel Intentions, were in Los Angeles to see
The Unauthorized Musical Parody of Cruel Intentions and posed for
some photos including one in which Gellar and Blair re-enacted
the movies famous kissing scene.
BEST PROM DRESS: JADEN SMITH

No rented tux for this guy! Sure, he can


afford to have a made-to-measure tux (and
probably already owns several), but instead Smith opted to wear a dress to prom
with Hunger Games actress Amandla Stenberg. But considering weve already seen
him rock a white Batman suit for his prom
date with Mecca Kalani, who goes by Crystal
Mec, we werent really that surprised!
CRUEL INTENTIONS BY ARAYA DIAZ, GETTY IMAGES; IGLESIAS BY FRANCIS RAMSDEN;
KARDASHIAN BY MIGUEL SCHINCARIOL, AFP/GETTY IMAGES; SMITH BY KEVIN WINTER, GETTY IMAGES;
CAREY BY STEVE GRANITZ, WIREIMAGE

Corrections & Clarifications

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

Larry Kramer

USA TODAY is committed


to accuracy. To reach us,
contact Standards Editor
Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com.
Please indicate whether
youre responding to
content online or in the
newspaper.

EDITOR IN CHIEF

David Callaway
PRESIDENT, ADVERTISING SALES

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PUZZLE ANSWERS

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E1

3U

FASHION

Cool looks
help beat
the heat

5
Protect your face with a canvas cap that
NEON BASEBALL CAP

We are so not ready for summer


the heat, the humidity, the schlepping
to work in same. Time to go shopping.
USA TODAYs Maria Puente takes
a look at apparel that almost makes
summer bearable.
POMEGRANATE SHORTS-AND-TOP

1colorTheyre
not just for playtime, especially in a cool tropical
and a bubble-texture fabric. The shorts and cropped
crewneck with elbow-length sleeves by Vince Camuto
are on sale now. $64.99 at vincecamuto.com

will light up any stadium, in blue scattered


with doodles of gray owers. $28 at
vincecamuto.com

SLEEVELESS
POPOVER BLOUSE

6
Summer is about color, like Banana Republics very berry sheer silk blouse with a split
neckline, chest pockets and a vented hem.
Dont forget your cami underneath.
Comes in other colors. $79.50 at
bananarepublic.com

LETS GET
OUTGOING DRESS

2
Heres a perfect way to stay

STRIPED SKIRT

Dare to wear this Clover Canyon


multicolored striped pencil skirt
in a body-hugging scuba fabric,
with hues of a California horizon.

cool and appropriate, in a


sleeveless navy-and-white
striped A-line dress with
pops of kelly green accents.

$224 at bloomingdales.com

$149.99 at modcloth.com

3
Wear something lush, like this

CROPPED GARDEN PANT

MINT FLORAL LACE SKIRT

For something more demure,


try Dylan Grays lace pencil skirt
in an icy-mint color. $248 at

summerweight trouser with a slim,


slightly cropped leg. J.Crew says
the rich oral print in midnight
and raspberry, is based on a dress
spotted in a vintage shop and recolored to make it more modern.

bloomingdales.com

$128 at jcrew.com

4
Could these sandals

HECTIC FLATFORMS

TROPICAL
ROMPER

scream summer any


louder? Ankle strap, opentoe, chunky grip tread, and
those blue-and-white strips
make these atforms
stand out. $50 at Asos.com

In this Hawaiian-print
crepe romper with a
V-neck front, back
keyhole button, elbow-length sleeves
and elastic tie waist,
you can look as if you
are on vacation
even when youre not.
$98 at thelimited.com

HEALTH

Americans are wild


about their water
Sales will soon
surpass those
of soft drinks
Kim Painter
Special for USA TODAY

After years of taking bigger and


bigger sips, America is gulping
down water: By 2016, bottled water will outsell soft drinks nationwide, and its already the No. 1
beverage sold in big cities from
Los Angeles to Washington, D.C.,
according to the International
Bottled Water Association.
Sales of bottled water rose
more than 7% last year alone, the
group says. Consumer surveys
suggest tap water consumption is
rising, too.
Taking some credit: a campaign called Drink Up from Partnership for a Healthier America,
a non-prot group backed by beverage companies, water lter
makers and other interested parties. First lady Michelle Obama is
an honorary chair and launched
the effort in 2013. She said,
Drink just one more glass of water a day and you can make a real
difference for your health, your
energy, and the way you feel.
The latest phase, which
launches this month, will feature
ads online, on billboards, at bus
stops, in gyms and elsewhere
with the slogan h2ofcourse,
paired with messages targeted to
specic groups. One apparently
for Yankees fans: Dehydration
can make you do crazy things.
Like root for the Red Sox. One
for iers: Pressurized cabins
suck moisture from your skin.
Like thousands of angry little
straws.
While the messages are not
about health per se, drinking water is one of the healthiest things

MATT CARDY, GETTY IMAGES

By 2016, bottled water will outsell soft drinks nationwide, and its already the No. 1 beverage sold in big cities.
you can do, the partnerships But in some cases when you calories, and water doesnt have sugar and salt, Clark says. For
CEO Larry Soler says.
sweat heavily outside on a hot any. It is true, though, that dehy- people working out hard for an
Yet the science of water and day, for example its smart to dration can make you feel slug- hour or more marathon runhealth is murkier than many con- drink extra, she says.
gish and that rehydrating can ners, bike racers and football
sumers might realize. Heres what
Its also smart, she says, to pay perk you back up, Clark says.
players in long summer practices
true and whats myth about sev- attention in the bathroom: If you
a sports drink can provide
eral common beliefs:
urinate every two to four hours WATER IMPROVES YOUR
some extra energy and help keep
and your urine stays light yellow, COMPLEXION.
salt and uid levels in proper
you are well-hydrated.
YOU SHOULD DRINK EIGHT
While serious dehydration will balance, she says.
GLASSES A DAY.
dry your skin, drinking extra
water does nothing for it, Gold- WATER IS MUCH BETTER
Nope. Thats a myth, based on the WATER CAN HELP CONTROL
farb says. When you drink a FROM A BOTTLE.
fact that most healthy people do YOUR WEIGHT.
consume about eight cups of uid It probably does if you drink glass of water, it goes all over your Though bottled water can be cona day in their foods and drinks, water instead of drinks with calo- body, it goes to the skin on your venient and some people prefer
says Stanley Goldfarb, a professor ries, especially sugary drinks such toes, your muscles and organs. the taste to their local tap water,
of medicine at the University of as sodas, fruit drinks and energy It doesnt go to your face prefer- theres no reason to think its
Pennsylvania. Somehow that got drinks, says Barry Popkin, a pro- entially.
healthier. Tap water is regulated
translated into Drink an extra fessor of nutrition at the Univerby the Environmental Protection
eight glasses, he says.
sity of North Carolina-Chapel WATER FLUSHES OUT TOXINS
Agency and subject to frequent
Theres no need to keep count Hill. The general consensus is IN YOUR BODY.
testing and public reporting of reor to get all your uid from water, that liquid calories, particularly Your kidneys do that every time sults. Bottled water (which often
says Nancy Clark, a Boston-area when they come from sugar, con- you urinate. Drinking more water starts as tap water) is regulated
registered dietitian and sports tribute to weight gain.
than you need wont make your by the Food and Drug Admininutritionist: Coffee counts, iced
Less clear, and still under kidneys work better, Goldfarb stration, but manufacturers do
tea counts, so do lettuce, soup, study, he says, is whether water says. Youll excrete the same not have to tell consumers where
oatmeal and fruit.
drinkers do better than diet soda waste products in more urine.
the water comes from, how its
drinkers.
treated or what contaminants it
might contain. And most of the
DRINK WATER EVEN IF
ITS AS GOOD AS A SPORTS
bottles are never recycled, the
YOU ARE NOT THIRSTY.
WATER CAN GIVE YOU
DRINK FOR EXERCISERS.
Most people on most days can be EXTRA ENERGY.
Usually, water is better because U.S. Government Accountability
guided by thirst alone, Clark says. Not really. Energy comes from it doesnt have unneeded calories, Office reported in 2009.

4U

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E1

TRAVEL
DISPATCHES

THOMAS MEREDITH

The Natchitoches National Historic


Landmark District in Louisiana
reects that small-town feel.

Towns with
that signature
Southern charm
The winners of the 10Best
Readers Choice Awards for Best
Southern Small Town are in.
Nominees in the contest, sponsored by USA TODAY and
10Best.com, were chosen by a
panel of experts and voted on by
the public.
1. Natchitoches, La.
2. Abingdon, Va.
3. Bardstown, Ky.
4. Dahlonega, Ga.
5. Natchez, Miss.
6. Eureka Springs, Ark.
7. Beaufort, S.C.
8. Berkeley Springs, W.Va.
9. Floyd, Va.
10. Fredericksburg, Texas
CHIME IN
A new Readers Choice contest
category launched this week. Vote
for Best Gambling Destination at
10best.com/awards/travel/.

MEMPHIS
Pyramid aims
for new peak
Larry Olmsted
Special for USA TODAY

AUSTIN-BERGSTROM INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT

Simpsons dolls greet passengers at


Austin-Bergstrom International.

Its playtime for


Austin layovers
If all the live music offered
each weekday at Austin-Bergstrom International isnt enough
to make you worry about missing
your ight, the colorful exhibition
of dolls and toys on loan from the
yet-to-open Austin Toy Museum
just might.
On view in a post-security area
through Aug. 4, the 20th Century
Toys exhibit includes a complete
set of The Simpsons dolls from
1991, cast metal gures, cars,
wind-ups, electric trains, action
gures and a wide variety of playthings representing popular culture icons and the development
of toy technology.
Classic and vintage toys include a Kewpie doll from 1925
and a streamlined Lionel steam
locomotive with tender from the
1940s. Batman and Robin are
here (in a Batmobile, of course),
along with Spock, an assortment
of fashionably dressed Barbie
dolls from 1961 to 1986 and G.I.
Joe action gures representing
the Army, Navy and NASA space
program of the 1960s.
Harriet Baskas

Sheraton will
get an upgrade
Starwood Hotels and Resorts
announced this week that it will
revamp its iconic Sheraton brand
and open an additional 150 properties by 2020.
The plan includes a new tier
called Sheraton Grand. More
than 100 Sheratons will be part of
that group. Properties will improve food and beverage options
and design, especially in lobbies.
That could include a workshop
for public events, says Dave Marr,
global brand leader for Sheraton.
There are now 430 Sheratons
worldwide. The additions will
make it Starwoods fastest-growing brand; it has 10 brands, including the St. Regis, W Hotels,
Le Merdien and Aloft.
Nancy Trejos

emphis is going to the


birds. More
specically,
to the ducks.
For decades, the Peabody
Hotel has been the top lodging in The Bluff City, famous for is twice-daily Duck
March. Every morning since
1940, a family of ducks has
ridden the elevator down from
their rooftop coop and walked
a red carpet to the travertine
marble lobby fountain where
they spend the day. Perennially
popular with hotel guests and
the public, the marches pack
the lobby.
But suddenly the Peabody is
not the only Memphis hotel featuring waterfowl. April saw the
citys biggest grand opening in
years, Bass Pro Shops at the Pyramid, a Vegas-style architectural
fantasy that combines a huge
Bass Pro retail store, the Ducks
Unlimited Water Fowling Heritage Center museum, a 32-story
outdoor observation deck, the
120-room Big Cypress Lodge
hotel and the Cypress Swamp
Waterfowl Habitat. An ode to the
nearby Mississippi River delta,
the swamp occupies much of
the ground oor, with ponds,
streams, tanks and aquariums,
spanned by footbridges and
showcasing a oating selection of
shing boats. The waters are full
of ducks, catsh, sturgeon and
even alligators.
Long a white elephant along
the Mississippi, the Memphis
Pyramid was built as a sports arena in 1991 and once hosted the
Memphis Grizzlies. But the NBA
team moved in 2004, and ever
since, the worlds sixth-largest
pyramid has sat empty, causing
much local consternation. But after a major investment and early
success, it has been received as a
vital part of the citys larger
renaissance.

REVIVING THE PYRAMID

The Pyramid presented a remarkable opportunity for us to


develop one of the most dynamic
retail stores anywhere in the
world, says Bass Pro Shops owner Johnny Morris.
Known as the Walt Disney of
retail, Morris executed the largest investment the company has
ever made outside of its agship
Missouri headquarters. More
than $190 million later, the basketball court has been replaced
with 600,000 gallons of water

The former home of the NBAs Memphis Grizzlies


has reopened as Bass Pro Shops at the Pyramid after
a $191 million renovation. The new Pyramid includes
a hotel, museum and an undersea-themed bowling alley.
BASS PRO SHOPS

features containing about 2,000


sh, ultra-realistic faux cypress
trees towering 100 feet in the air
and dripping Spanish moss, and
endless animal mounts. In the
middle of it all, the worlds tallest
freestanding elevator glows in neon as it rises to a restaurant and
observation deck.
More than 35,000 customers
came for opening day on April 29,
the best debut in the chains history, and more than 500,000 in
the rst 27 days. We are very
optimistic about the future,
Morris says.
The Bass Pro concept is retail
as theater, but even by its standards, the pyramid is over the top.
Families scramble in and out of
boats tied up at indoor docks, the
main restaurant has an underseathemed full-size bowling alley
with ball returns shaped like
octopi, and life-sized berglass
great white sharks hanging overhead. The store contains separate
shooting and archery ranges.
Many visitors come just for The
Lookout and its views of the river
and downtown Memphis.
But perhaps the most unusual
touch is the hotel, the only one of
its kind at any Bass Pro Shop.
Ringing the second oor atrium
and overlooking the swamp and
retail space, lodging is styled on
rustic cabins, and some are actual
cabins on stilts. Balconies with
rocking chairs open onto the
swamp. All rooms have handhewn beams, virtual replaces
and such luxe creature comforts
as jetted oversized tubs, huge
walk-in showers and generous
welcome baskets of free snacks.

THE PLACE IS HOPPING

Arguably the worlds most notable hotel opening of 2015, the


Pyramid is a huge change to the
Memphis tourism landscape, an
instant must-see and maybe
must-stay. But there is a lot more
going on. The city already has the
nations nest collection of attractions for music buffs, with the
Smithsonians Rock N Soul Museum, Stax Museum of American
Soul Music, Sun Studio and of
course, Graceland, Memphis signature attraction.
And now there are two more
noteworthy newcomers, including the just-opened Blues Hall of

The Pyramid
presented a
remarkable
opportunity ...
to develop one
of the most
dynamic retail
stores anywhere
in the world.
Bass Pro Shops owner Johnny Morris

Fame Museum, which spans two


levels full of artifacts, exhibits
and interactive displays honoring
inductees. The museum was built
and is run by the non-prot Blues
Foundation, which also organizes
the International Blues Challenge, an event that brings more
than 250 performers to the Beale
Street Entertainment District

THE PEABODY MEMPHIS

For 75 years the twice-daily


red-carpet duck march
from elevator to lobby fountain has been a crowd-pleasing xture of the Peabody,
Memphis classic hotel.

each January. The new blues museum sits across the street from
another cant-miss Memphis cultural attraction, the National
Civil Rights Museum at the
Lorraine Motel.
The even newer Memphis Music Hall of Fame
is a satellite of the larger Rock N Soul museum down the street,
a geographically-centered collection honoring musicians from or
with ties to Memphis.
The late B.B. King was in
the inaugural class. The
goal of the museum, which
opens this month, is to showcase the individual behind the
music, with a lot of personal artifacts, including Jerry Lee Lewis
Cadillac. We want people to get
to know the person beyond the
performer, says Executive Director John Doyle. So while we have
one of Elvis jumpsuits, we also
have his rst mobile phone.
While the museum has early
rockers such as Presley and Lewis, it covers every genre soul,
gospel, R&B and local radio personalities. Honorees span Isaac
Hayes to Johnny Cash to ZZ Top.
The site is a stop on the looping
shuttle that connects Graceland,
Sun Studio, Stax and Rock N Soul,
making most music attractions
accessible without a car.
As one of the top places in the
world to catch live music, theres
more for fans in Memphis than
just museums. Before the Beale
Street area boomed, Overton
Square was the spot for live music
and theater. After years of decline, the neighborhood is suddenly thriving again and has
become the trendiest area in
Memphis, full of new restaurants,
shops, brewpubs, yoga studios,
and of course, music.
There has been a resurgence
of the Memphis music scene,
says Darren Jay, headliner of Darren Jay and The Delta Souls and
former president of the Memphis
Blues Society. He predicts the
Blues Hall of Fame will add another place to visit alongside the
citys stalwart attractions.
No visit to Memphis would be
complete without a stop at Graceland, and even this iconic attraction is changing. Much to the
relief of fans, the new owners discarded a plan to remove Elvis
aircraft collection, and instead of
shrinking, Graceland is expanding. Construction is underway on
the 450-room Guest House at
Graceland. Right next door to the
fabled attraction, the massive
new hotel will include VIP suites
designed by Priscilla Presley.

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E1

BOOKS

New &
noteworthy

Dead Ice

by Laurell K. Hamilton (Berkley, ction, on sale


Tuesday)
WHAT ITS ABOUT: In this new Vampire

Happily Ali After:


And Other Fairly
True Tales

Your Babys First


Word Will Be Dada

Hitlers Last Days

WHAT ITS ABOUT: Recounts

the nal days of the Nazi


dictator as Allied troops
closed in on Berlin in 1945.
THE BUZZ: Adapted for middlegrade readers from OReilly and
Martin Dugards No. 1 USA TODAY best seller, Killing Patton.

BOOK BUZZ
NEW ON THE LIST
AND IN PUBLISHING

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WHAT
AMERICAS
READING

BOOKLIST.USATODAY.COM
n Rank this week

THE TOP 10

Jocelyn McClurg

Troops
check
their
vehicles
on the
march
across
Belgium
in 1944.

by Bill OReilly (Henry Holt, nonction, on sale Tuesday)

WENTWORTH BY MICHAEL
LOCCISANO; HAMILTON BY
MA PETITE ENTERPRISES;
OREILLY BY LARRY BUSACCA,
GETTY IMAGES FOR TIME;
YOUR BABYS FIRST WORD
WILL BE DADA, BOOK BY
JIMMY FALLON; DELINSKY BY
KERRY BRETT; PHOTO FROM
HITLERS LAST DAYS BY
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS;
FALLON BY JAMES WHITE,
NBC

OReilly and Martin Dugard have


a wildly successful franchise with
their Killing series, non-ction
books about
the deaths
of historical
gures.
Two titles
Killing Jesus
and Killing
Patton hit
No. 1. Killing
Kennedy
reached
No. 2, Killing
Lincoln hit
No. 3. So whats up with the title
of Killing Reagan, out Sept. 22
from Henry Holt? President
Reagan survived an assassination
attempt in 1981, when he was
shot by John Hinckley Jr. Heres
the subtitle: The Violent Assault
That Changed a Presidency. The
book will deal with Reagans
Alzheimers, the publisher says.
Killing Reagan is just one of the
big books for fall spotlighted last
week at BookExpo America, the
trade show held in New York.
Others with buzz: Purity by
Jonathan Franzen; The Girl
in the Spiders Web by David
Lagercrantz, a sequel to Stieg
Larssons mega-selling trilogy;
The Witches: Salem, 1692 by Stacy
Schiff; Big Magic by Elizabeth
Gilbert; and M Train by Patti
Smith.

fee gets a gut punch


on her 56th birthday when shes
told her daughter will replace
her as host of
their popular
home makeover
show, Gut It!
THE BUZZ: A likable
Barbara
Delinsky
beach read with just a
touch of gravitas,
says Kirkus Reviews.

WHAT ITS ABOUT: The Tonight


Show host writes a childrens
book about sheep, cows and
even mice and frogs doing everything possible to get baby to
say Dada before Mama.
THE BUZZ: Fallon, proud papa of
Winnie Rose, has had two best
sellers with his Thank You
Notes books.

worth writes
humorously
about her
fairy tale
life with
husband
George StephaAli
nopoulos and their
Wentworth
two daughters.
THE BUZZ: Its a follow-up to her
successful book Ali in Wonderland.

Fired up for fall: Bill

WHAT ITS ABOUT: Caroline MacA-

Jimmy
Fallon

by Jimmy Fallon (Feiwel and Friends,


ction, on sale Tuesday)

WHAT ITS
ABOUT: Went-

Blueprints

by Barbara Delinsky (St. Martins Press,


ction, on sale Tuesday)

by Ali Wentworth (Harper, non-ction,


on sale Tuesday)

Mille is kicking off the summer


reading season with a bang with
his rst No. 1 USA TODAY best
seller, Radiant
Angel. In the
newest thriller
in a series, John
Corey, now
working for the
Diplomatic
Surveillance
Group, is worSANDY DEMILLE ried about a
DeMille nally
resurgent
hits No. 1.
Russia. DeMille
has had 14 USA TODAY best
sellers; his highest ranking until
now was Night Fall at No. 3 in
2004. The author is on a national
book tour that wraps June 13 in
East Hampton, N.Y.

Laurell K.
Hamilton

Hunter novel, Anita Blake searches for a


powerful voodoo priestess whos causing
trouble among the zombies.
THE BUZZ: Hamilton has had 33 USA
TODAYs best sellers; her Anita Blake
novel Micah hit No. 1.

USA TODAYs Jocelyn


McClurg scopes out the
hottest books on sale
each week.

Angel soars: Nelson De-

5U

n Rank last week (F) Fiction (NF) Non-ction (P) Paperback (H)Hardcover (E) E-book

Publisher in italics

Radiant Angel
Nelson DeMille

Agent John Corey sees Russia as a


resurgent threat; follow-up to The Panther
(F) (E) Grand Central Publishing

All the Light We


Cannot See
Anthony Doerr

The lives of a blind girl in France and a


member of the Hitler Youth converge
during World War II (F) (H) Scribner

The Girl on the Train


Paula Hawkins

Psychological thriller about the disappearance of a young married woman (F) (E)
Riverhead

Oh, the Places


Youll Go!
Dr. Seuss

Dr. Seuss advice on life is a favorite for


graduations (F) (H) Random House

Paper Towns
John Green

Youth: Young man goes in search of his


missing crush (F) (E) Speak

14th Deadly Sin


James Patterson

The Womens Murder Club investigates a


murder; 14th in series (F) (E) Little, Brown

Piranha
Clive Cussler, Boyd
Morrison

Juan Cabrillo and the crew of the Oregon


ght an enemy that appears to know their
every move (F) (E) G.P. Putnams Sons

Memory Man
David Baldacci

Cop Amos Decker can never forget


anything, including nding his family
murdered(F) (E) Grand Central Publishing

The Life-Changing
Magic of Tidying Up
Marie Kondo

Subtitle: The Japanese Art of Decluttering


and Organizing (NF) (H) Ten Speed Press

10 9

The Wright Brothers


David McCullough

The Pulitzer Prize-winning author tells the


story of Orville and Wilbur Wright (NF) (H)
Simon & Schuster

The book list appears


every Thursday.
For each title, the format
and publisher listed are
for the best-selling
version of that title this
week. Reporting outlets
include Amazon.com,
Amazon Kindle, Barnes &
Noble.com, Barnes &
Noble Inc., Barnes &
Noble e-books,
BooksAMillion.com,
Books-A-Million, Costco,
Hudson Booksellers,
Joseph-Beth Booksellers
(Lexington, Ky.; Cincinnati,
Charlotte, Cleveland,
Pittsburgh), Kobo, Inc.,
Powell's Books (Portland,
Ore.), Powells.com, R.J.
Julia Booksellers
(Madison, Conn.), Schuler
Books & Music (Grand
Rapids, Okemos,
Eastwood, Alpine, Mich.),
Sony Reader Store,
Target, Tattered Cover
Book Store (Denver).

THE REST

11 Conviction/Corinne Michaels
12 11 American Sniper/Chris Kyle, Scott McEwen,
Jim DeFelice
13 The Marriage Season/Linda Lael Miller
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50

Widow Natalie nds solace with her late husbands best friend; second in series (F) (E) BAAE Publishing
Subtitle: The Autobiography of the Most Lethal Sniper in U.S. Military History (NF) (P) William Morrow Paperbacks

Since making their marriage pact, Hadleigh and Melody have found love, but Bex is still waiting; third in series (F) (P)
Harlequin HQN
A Match for Marcus Cynster/Stephanie Laurens
Marcus Cynster is waiting for fate to guide his life, and her name is Niniver Carrick (F) (E) Savdek Management
14 Luckiest Girl Alive/Jessica Knoll
Ani FaNellis perfect life has an ugly past (F) (E) Simon & Schuster
16 The Nightingale/Kristin Hannah
Historical ction about the choices two sisters must make in Nazi-occupied France (F) (E) St. Martins Press
109 Zoo/James Patterson, Michael Ledwidge
A young biologist races to warn world leaders of attacks on humans by wild animals (F) (E) Little, Brown
Against The Tide/Kat Martin
Liv Chandler is running for her life and Rafe Brodie is there to catch her; third in series (F) (E) Zebra
Beautiful Sacrice/Jamie McGuire
Falyn Fairchild can walk away from anything and anyone, except Taylor Maddox (F) (E) Jamie McGuire LLC
12 Gathering Prey/John Sandford
Detective Lucas Davenport investigates the disappearance of his daughters acquaintance (F) (E) G.P. Putnams Sons
20 The Isle of the Lost /Melissa de la Cruz
Malecents daughter Mal learns where the key to true darkness is and sets about to capture it (F) (H) Disney-Hyperion
86 The House We Grew Up In/Lisa Jewell
The Bird family returns to their childhood home to address the present and the past (F) (E) Atria Books
34 Outlander/Diana Gabaldon
Claire Randall is hurled back in time; rst in series; basis for Starz series (F) (E) Dell
29 The Boys in the Boat/Daniel James Brown
Subtitle: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics (NF) (E) Penguin
22 The Liar/Nora Roberts
Shelby Foxworth discovers her late husband is not the man she thought he was (F) (E) G.P. Putnams Sons
Top Secret Twenty-One/Janet Evanovich
New Jersey bounty hunter Stephanie Plum must track down a dirty used-car dealer (F) (P) Bantam
38 Pines/Blake Crouch
Secret service agent Ethan Burke travels to Wayward Pines, Idaho, to recover two federal agents who went missing
one month earlier (F) (E) Thomas & Mercer
23 The Heir/Kiera Cass
Youth: Following in her mothers footsteps, Eadlyns holds a selection of her own and hopes for love; fourth in series
(F) (H) Harper Teen
27 American Wife/Taya Kyle, Jim DeFelice
Subtitle: A Memoir of Love, War, Faith, and Renewal (NF) (H) William Morrow
Summer Fire: Love When Its Hot/Gennita Low, et al. Contains 20 novels of contemporary romance (F) (E) 7th House Publishing
36 To Kill a Mockingbird/Harper Lee
1960 coming-of-age classic about racism; Pulitzer winner; 1962 movie (F) (P) Grand Central Publishing
The White Queen/Philippa Gregory
Gregory, queen of ction about the Tudors, takes on the Plantagenets (F) (E) Touchstone
10 Beach Town/Mary Kay Andrews
Struggling movie location scout Greer Hennessy thinks shes found an ideal spot for a big movie on the Florida Gulf
Coast (F) (E) St. Martins Press
33 Leaving Time/Jodi Picoult
A teenage girl searches for her mother, an elephant researcher who disappeared a decade earlier (F) (P) Ballantine
28 And the Good News Is .../Dana Perino
Subtitle: Lessons and Advice from the Bright Side (NF) (H) Twelve
25 The Longest Ride/Nicholas Sparks
An injured old man remembers love with his wife, and a new relationship begins (F) (P) Grand Central Publishing
Independence Day/Ben Coes
Intelligence agent Dewey Andreas string of bad luck is about to come to an end (F) (E) St. Martins Press
P.S. I Still Love You/Jenny Han
Youth: Lara and Peter were just pretending at love, until they werent (F) (H) Simon & Schuster for Young Readers
31 Fifty Shades Darker/E.L. James
The erotic romance continues between Christian and Ana; second in trilogy (F) (E) Vintage
6 Seveneves/Neal Stephenson
5,000 years after humanity ees Earth to save itself, seven distinct races, 3 billion strong, return home (F) (E)
William Morrow
37 The Road to Character/David Brooks
Brooks makes the case that our Culture of Achievement has thrown our lives off-balance (NF) (H) Random House
The story of Theodore Decker, an art dealer whose life revolves around a Dutch masterwork (F) (P) Little, Brown,
40 The Goldnch/Donna Tartt
$20.00
48 The Husbands Secret/Liane Moriarty
While her husband is away, Cecilia Fitzpatrick stumbles upon a letter meant to be opened upon his death (F) (E)
Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam, $12.99
15 Maximum Ride Forever/James Patterson
Youth: Maximum Ride navigates a post-apocalyptic world searching for answers to what happened; ninth in series
(F) (H) Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, $19.00
35 Hope to Die/James Patterson
Detective Alex Cross must try to save his family as hes stalked by a psychotic genius (F) (P) Grand Central Publishing
26 Bill OReillys Legends and Lies: The Real West
Companion to Fox News series examines the truth behind Western legends (NF) (H) Henry Holt and Co.
Bill OReilly and David Fisher
17 Personal/Lee Child
The Army reels elusive hero Jack Reacher back in after an assassination attempt on the French president (F) (P) Dell
82 The Martian/Andy Weir
Can an astronaut stranded on Mars nd his way home after he is unintentionally left behind? (F) (E) Crown
56 The Whole30/Melissa Hartwig, Dallas Hartwig
Subtitle: The 30-Day Guide to Total Health and Food Freedom (NF) (H) Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
45 Fifty Shades Freed/E.L. James
Christian and Ana navigate their differences; nal in trilogy (F) (E) Vintage

6U

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E1

SCREEN CHECK
WEB TO WATCH

Compiled by Daniel Hurwitz


and Lorena Blas

OUR TOP PICKS


ARRESTING HARRY

Harry is a six-part series from


New Zealand that follows Detective Harry Anglesea, portrayed
by Oscar Kightley, who also
co-wrote the series. Sam
Neill co-stars as his boss
and mentor, Detective
Senior Sgt. Jim Stockton.
Episodes 1 and 2 are available now, and four more
episodes will be available
consecutive Mondays
through June.

Harry
(Oscar
Kightley)
and Jim
(Sam Neill)
are on
the case.

ACORN TV

Wolf Hall
Channel: iTunes
Damian Lewis is Henry VIII; Mark Rylance
is Thomas Cromwell for PBS Masterpiece.
iTunes

acorn.tv

NETFLIX

The girls really are next door in Rashida


Jones documentary about the brave
new world of amateur porn.
Joni Mitchell on Illusions
Channel: Blank on Blank on YouTube
This Blank on Blank episode animates
an interview with the singer.
youtube.com/blankonblank

HOT PROPERTY

The Rashida Jones-produced


documentary, which played at
Sundance earlier this year, is now
on Netix. Directed by Jill Bauer
and Ronna Gradus, the lm
focuses on young women who
have decided to pursue a career
in amateur pornography.
Netix.com

Mr. Robot
Channel: USA Network
The pilot episode of the thriller is available
to watch online ahead of its television debut
June 24. The series stars Rami Malek as
a young hacker. Christian Slater also is
in the cast.
Hulu, YouTube, Google Play VOD,
USANetwork.com

ALL ONLINE TV
WEBTOWATCH.USATODAY.COM

Check out webisodes, Internet TV


and online programming.

TONIGHT ON TV
CRITICS
CORNER
Robert Bianco
@BiancoRobert
USA TODAY

CHAT WITH ROBERT


CCCHAT.USATODAY.COM

Monday, 2 p.m. ET; tweet early


questions to @BiancoRobert

THE TONY AWARDS


CBS, 8 ET/PT

T. REX AUTOPSY
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC, 9 ET/PT

Two Tony winners with equally strong


TV credentials share this years hosting
chores: The Good Wifes Alan Cumming
and Pushing Daisies Kristin Chenoweth,
a Tony nominee for On the Twentieth
Century. Youll get to see Chenoweth
perform with her Twentieth cast, along
with performances from Brian dArcy
James and Brad Oscar (Something Rotten!), Chita Rivera (The Visit), Kelli
OHara and Ken Watanabe (The King
and I) and Lisa Howard (It Shoulda Been
You). The Tonys may not draw the ratings of the Oscars, Grammys or Emmys,
but they tend to be classier and wittier
and they almost always introduce viewers to a star or show they decide they
want to see. Heres hoping that happens
for you, because live theater is an art
and tradition worth nurturing.

Kristin
Chenoweth,
a nominee
in her own
right, plays
host at
the Tonys
Sunday
night.

SLAVEN VLASIC,
GETTY IMAGES

BY Rob Lee

PLACE AT ONES
DISPOSAL

SWEET SOUL MUSIC

EARLY EFFORTS

My mom was very religious,


Bridges says. She might have let
me buy records, but I assumed
that she wouldnt. Instead,
Bridges listened to the radio
when Mom went to work, gravitating toward the smooth R&B
sounds of Ginuwine and Usher.
He mimicked their styles with
his rst creative efforts, downloading instrumentals and adding his own melodies and lyrics.
I wrote my rst song, Conversion, to this little hip-hop instrumental, he says. I went to an
open-mike, plugged my iPod into
the P.A. and sang over the beat.

RAMBO

Bridges wrote Lisa Sawyer, a


Coming Home highlight, about
his mother and her baptism.
Shes a very solid woman, a very
strong woman, he says. When
she lost her job and was not
working for a long time, I had to
let go of my cellphone and work
two jobs to help
pay bills. After I got
the record deal, I
was able to pay her
debt off.
THAT MACCA
MOMENT

Answers placed on Life page 2


Play more puzzles at puzzles.usatoday.com
Puzzle problems? Contact us at feedback@usatoday.com

EDITED Timothy Parker

@brian_mansfield
USA TODAY

GOOD SON

On Valley, Pied Piper


and Hooli enter
binding arbitration,
while on Veep, Selina
addresses the big
data breach. This is
the last week before
the season nales of
these two strong
comedies, so enjoy
them while you have
them.

CROSSWORD

Brian Mansfield

The buzz on Bridges, 25, built after his performances at this


years SXSW in Austin. At one
point, his single Coming Home
was a top-10 viral track on Spotify. Its now No. 25 on USA TODAYs AAA airplay chart. His
debut album is due June 23.

Gilfoyle (Martin Starr) and Dinesh


(Kumail Nanjiani) seek stardom
in the world of start-ups.

PUZZLES

He finds his soul


close to Home

BUILDING BRIDGES

SILICON
VALLEY/VEEP
HBO, 10 ET/PT

FRANK MASI, HBO

ON THE VERGE LEON BRIDGES


SPOTLIGHT ON BREAKTHROUGH ARTISTS

After hearing one of Leon


Bridges songs, a friend asked if
he listened to a lot of Sam Cooke.
I knew about him but had never
really listened to his music, says
Bridges, whose forthcoming album, Coming Home, is steeped
in retro R&B sounds. After that,
I started venturing out and digging in. The Atlanta-born, Fort
Worth-based singer also developed a taste for vintage fashion
as he expanded his musical palette to include the likes of Curtis
Mayeld, Jesse Belvin and even
some singers outside the soul
realm. Lately, its been Townes
Van Zandt, Bobby Womack and
Van Morrison.

Combine our fascination with Tyrannosaurus rex and our


affection for fake gore and you get what could qualify as a
night of gooey, goofy scientic fun as specialists dissect a
fake T. rex. Because you know it cant be a real one, right?

Leon Bridges
Coming Home
reects his
love of classic
R&B.

When I
was singing
Dedicated
to the One
I Love, Paul
McCartney
was up
dancing.
So I was like,
Not bad.

At Aprils Rock and


Roll Hall of Fame
induction ceremony, Bridges performed
the
5
Royales Dedicated
to the One I Love
and Percy Sledges
When a Man Loves
On performing at this years Rock
a Woman. When I
and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony
was singing Dedicated to the One I
Love, Paul McCartney was up
dancing, he says. So I was like,
Not bad.

ACROSS
1 Menaces for
mariners
6 Old Mercury
11 Not as dry as brut
14 Debate
15 Immature hooter
16 ___ be home for
Christmas . . .
17 Brain section
19 Do alternative
20 Cantaloupe cover
21 Golf norm
22 Pilots
announcement,
for short
23 Without praise,
as a hero
26 Walk with great
difficulty
28 Cause of grimacing
29 Scepters companion
32 Along with all the
rest
33 Contractors offers
34 Favorable forecast,
to farmers
36 More than please
39 It may contain
mercury
40 War room discussion
topics
42 Nothing at all
43 What haste makes
45 Do some impressive
work?
46 Certain line crosser
47 Fruit-filled dessert
49 It has water on its
floor
50 Hoagie
51 Hearty cheers
54 Park diversion
for two
56 Word on a penny
57 Radiator part
58 Award for a good
student
59 Praising poesy
60 Largest living turtle
65 Cry from the sound
stage

Universal Uclick

66 Like mutton
67 River of forgetfulness
68 Uncles and nephews,
e.g.
69 Hides
70 Rathskeller vessel
DOWN
1 Luftwaffe foe, for
short
2 Drop the ball, e.g.
3 Its a matter of
pride
4 Charity races,
sometimes
5 ___ ones ways
(obstinate)
6 Lacking in affection
7 Sharp punch
8 Unceremonious
falls
9 Partial refund
after a purchase
10 Says again and
again

6/7

11
12
13
18
23
24
25
27
30
31
35
37
38
40
41
44
46

Some furtive looks


Creme de la creme
Like a sunny day
Type of cat or
rabbit
Kind of violin stroke
Nigerian currency
They can keep you
out of jams
Square dance
sweetie
Steeplechase, e.g.
Mooring line
posts
Naughty
alternative
Beauty contest
prize
Nudgers joint
Computer-speed
unit
Squeaky clean
Tobacco smoke
residue
Frozen fruit treat

Answers: Call 1-900-988-8300, 99 cents a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-320-4280.

48 Engage in shoplifting
51 Bootleg booze
52 Like some pressure or
criticism
53 Sluggish sort?
55 Those between
viscounts and
marquises
58 Not 68-Across
61 Explosive topic?
62 Candid conclusion?
63 Psis preceder
64 Cognizance

CROSSWORDS
ON YOUR PHONE
mobilegames.usatoday.com

 
  



   

Statesman Journal
Sunday

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

KITZHABER BREAKS SILENCE, TAKES ON PORTLAND MEDIA

INACCURATE ...
MISLEADING
... TROUBLING
PATTERN
Carol McAlice Currie

| Statesman Journal

Former Gov. John Kitzhaber ended nearly eight


months of silence this week to criticize Portlandbased media outlets for creating a frenzied atmosphere of falsehoods that ended with his resigning his
unprecedented fourth term in mid-February.
Kitzhaber, in a statement issued to the Statesman
Journal, said he has always believed in a robust freedom of speech and the critical role of journalists to
inform the populace about current events and issues
decided by government.
But he said that Sept. 9 and Sept. 13 admissions by
The Oregonian newspaper that it had run an untrue
news story that put me and my administration in a
false light have compelled him to speak publicly for
the first time since his resignation to weigh in on
the discussion.
See KITZHABER, Page 6A

STICKING TO THE STORY

THE EMAIL LEAKER

TIMELINE

Kitzhabers attorney twice demanded a retraction by


Willamette Week but was rebuffed. Page 8A

The state worker who leaked Kitzhabers emails has


resigned as part of a settlement. Page 9A

A chronology of the events and media coverage


surrounding the Kitzhaber story. Pages 6A-8A

Commentary: The destructive power of one word clobbered Kitzhaber. Page 9A

TODAY'S WEATHER
71 HIGH
45 LOW
Full report, 8C

Bridge...............................2E
Business ............................1F
Causes ......................3D, 4D
Comics .......................Insert

Editorials ..................8D,9D
Horoscope ......................2E
Lottery ............................1D
Mid-Valley.......................1D

Nation/World..................1B
Obituaries .....................11D
Puzzles .......................2E,3E
Sports ...............................1C

Subscriber services:
(800) 452-2511 or
StatesmanJournal.com/subscribe.
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2A

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

THAT WAS THE WEEK THAT WAS

NEWS QUIZ
Your weekly news quiz

1. In her Wednesday column, Capi Lynn wrote about Harold and Jean
Wood, a couple who restore and renovate historic houses. What did
they uncover recently in a 1918 European-style farmhouse not far
from Salem Heights Elementary School?
A. A 6-inch by 6-inch wood post covered with signatures and caricatures.
B. A hidden room with stolen art.
Keizer

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C. A 6-foot by 6-foot mural of woodland creatures.


D. A hidden wall compartment.
2. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame unveiled 15 nominees early Thursday who are eligible for induction in 2016. Which of the following is
NOT one of the nominees?
A. Cheap Trick.
B. Chic.
C. Chicago.
D. Red Hot Chili Peppers.
3. A new study may have discovered the reason cancer is rare in elephants. What is that reason?
A. Elephants are very large.
B. Elephants have 20 times as many copies of a cancer-fighting gene
as humans.
C. Elephants have superior brains.
D. Elephants are resistant to cancer-causing parasites.
4. Name the baby cheetah and puppy that stole our hearts after Metro Richmond Zoo revealed the pair had bonded after the puppy was
abandoned and the cheetah had to be hand raised by zoo keepers.
A. Fido and Spot.
B. Milo and Otis.
C. Kumbali and Kago.
D. Mike and Max.
5. Which former Dancing with the Stars winner filled in for Tom
Bergeron on Monday as the host visited his ill father?
A. Brooke Burke.
B. Alfonso Ribeiro.
C. Melissa Rycroft.
D. Drew Lachey.
6. Bobs Burgers announced that it would be opening a second location in Salem-Keizer area. Where is that location?
A. Salem Center Mall.
B. Commercial Street SE.
C. Lancaster Mall.
D. Keizer Station.
7. Chemeketa Community College produced its own version of four
textbooks that are most used by Chemeketa students. One of the
books, Art for Everyone, saved students how much?
A. $182.
B. $56.
C. $35.
D. $243.
8. How many cannabis businesses have expressed interest in unionizing to the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 555?
A. 75.
B. 35.
C. 50.
D. 60.
9. Gordon Kenyon was recently saved after a fall on North Sister.
How long did he hang on near the edge of a cliff before he was rescued by the Oregon Army National Guard?
A. 10 hours.
B. 3 hours.
C. 24 hours.
D. 6 hours.
10. USA Today released its 2015 college football coaches salaries list
this week. Where on the list does Oregons Mark Helfrich rank?
A. No. 5.
B. No. 15.
C. No. 18.
D. No. 30.
Scoring guide: 10 for 10: So proud of you!; 7-9 correct: Good job!; 4-6
correct: Thanks for trying; 2-3 correct: Extra credit? For what?; 0-1
correct: One of us has failed in this relationship.
Answers: 1. (A); 2. (D); 3. (B); 4. (C); 5. (B) 6. (C); 7. (A); 8. (C) 9. (D); 10.
(D)

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Dick Hughes

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Victor Panichkul

ON CONNECTING
THE DOTS

ON OREGON FOOTBALL

ON CAUSES

ON INSIDE BUSINESS

The Ducks loss Saturday to


the Cougars in Eugene really
hurts even more than their
Utah loss two weeks ago.
Page 1C

A survey of people in Marion


and Polk counties who were
experiencing homelessness
identified housing and food
among top needs. Page 3D

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make sure their produce is
available to consumers
year-round by helping preserve
it. Page 1F

Statesman Journal staff


members observed the Salem
Police SWAT Team during
training. Page 2D

WSU upsets
Oregon

SWAT
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1C

2D
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4A

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Salem Soap Box Derbys


15 season in final stretch
Conner Williams
Statesman Journal

The Soap Box Derby


racers dressed in their
Halloween
costumes
and they readied their
cars at the top of the
track behind McCulloch
Stadium. The young
drivers then squeezed
into their cars and let
gravity take over.
Two drivers race
against each other in
each heat, and after they
get back to the starting
line for a second run, the
wheels from each car
are switched, as well as
the lanes they race in.
Thats how last weekend of Salem Soap Box
Derby car races for the
2015 season began Saturday, Oct. 10, at Bushs
Pasture Park in Salem.
Jim Youngers, regional director of the All
American Soap Box Derby, said switching lanes
and wheels eliminates
the factor of having a
better or more expensive vehicle. Then the
best times are taken out
of the two races, and the
winner advances while
the loser moves on to the
elimination bracket. The
event has a double-elimination setup.
It creates a fair playing field and really
makes it more about the

CONNER WILLIAMS/STATESMAN JOURNAL

Ron Steiner, executive director of the OADP, speaks to the


crowd at the Salem Public Library on Saturday.

Death penalty
critics question
policys validity
PHOTOS BY ANNA REED / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Jim Youngers, the regional director of All American Soap Box Derby, guides new racer Jacob
Roberson, 10, of Salem, before a soap box derby race at Bush's Pasture Park on Saturday.

Our son
really likes
cars, so we thought
itd be fun.
BEN CARPENTER
Watched the Soap Box Derby
racers with his family

driver and less about the


car, Youngers said.
The track at Bushs
Pasture park is the only
one on the West Coast
that is dedicated to Soap
Box Derby racing; all of
the other locations use

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Bryanna Barry, 13, of Bremerton, Wash., competes in a soap


box derby race at Bush's Pasture Park in Salem on Saturday.

city streets. It is 940 feet


from start to finish, and
cars can reach upward
of 30 mph, Youngers
said.
Ben Carpenter, of Salem, and his family took
to the grass on the side of
the track to catch a
glimpse of the action.
Our son really likes
cars, so we thought itd
be fun, Carpenter said
about watching the
event.
Carpenter said that
they saw the racers compete in Redmond back in
August, so they decided
to come see them again
since he and his family

recently moved to Salem.


Youngers said that
there are six weekends
of local racing each year,
including five in Salem
and one in Redmond.
The racers also venture
up to Poulsbo, Silverdale, and Kitsap in
Washington as part of
the regional races. The
national championship
takes place at the end of
July every year in
Cleveland, Ohio.
cwilliams9@states
manjournal.com, (503)
399-6719, or follow on
Twitter
@connerjwil
liams

25

 
          

 


 
  

   

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A small group of likeminded people gathered


at the Salem Public Library on Saturday to discuss their opposition to
the death penalty in Oregon and in the United
States.
They agreed that the
death penalty should be
abolished for a number of
reasons, including its
cost, and that it is an immoral public policy.
Representatives from
the nonprofit organization Oregonians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty held the discussion
as part of the Oregonians
for Peace initiative 34
Days for Peace that continues through Oct. 24.
The main topic of discussion Saturday was the
validity and effectiveness of the death penalty
as a public policy.
The death penalty
lacks proof that it deters
(violent crime), said
Frank Thompson, former
superintendent of the
Oregon State Penitentiary, who presided over the
only two executions to occur in Oregon since capital punishment was reinstated here in 1978.
Thompson said that
personal emotion should
be separate from discussions concerning death
penalty legislation.
Emily Plec, Western
Oregon University communications studies professor and OADP advisory committee member,
agreed with Thompsons
statement.
Emotion plays a role,
but when thinking of (the
death penalty) in terms of
a public policy, its important to consider the evidence, Plec said.
According
to
the
Death Penalty Informa-

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Statesman Journal
October 3 & 11, 2015

The 34 Days for Peace program


still has several events scheduled. Find them at http://
bit.ly/1GCiGZK.
Sign up for the OADP newsletter at www.oadp.orgd.

tion Center, the Oregon


State Penitentiary houses
36 death row inmates as
of April 1, 2015, and the
last execution in Oregon
occurred in 1997.
Ron Steiner, executive
director of the OADP,
said it costs Oregon about
$28 million annually to
keep the death penalty
system up and running,
and that figure includes
only the appeals processes of the litigation.
Other expenses include feeding and housing the inmates, as well as
administrative costs for
the penitentiary. Steiner
said that it is significantly more expensive to
house an inmate on death
row compared to an inmate in the general population. According to the
Death Penalty Information Center, the cost of
putting a person to death
in Oregon is at least 50
percent higher, and maybe up to five times higher,
than the cost of a life sentence without parole.
Thirty-one states now
have the death penalty,
and there have been 1,417
executions in the U.S.
since 1976, as well as 155
exonerations from death
row since 1973, according
to the Death Penalty Information Center.
Randy Geer, an OADP
board member, told a personal story as to why he
advocates for abolishing
the death penalty. He discussed a time when he
was 21 when his father
worked as a prison yard
supervisor
and
was
stabbed to death by an inmate who was then put on
death row.
You wait for justice to
happen and it never really does, Geer said. He reiterated the notion that
the death penalty should
be used as a tool for personal vengeance.
I (eventually) put it
all away and let forgiveness happen.
Former Oregon Gov.
John Kitzhaber ordered a
moratorium on executions in Oregon and desired to reform the system, and his successor,
Gov. Kate Brown, according to news reports, has
asked for legal advice
about the practical aspects of capital punishment in Oregon.
cwilliams9@states
manjournal.com,
(503)
399-6719, or follow on
Twitter @connerjwilliams

25

 
    
  
      
  
 
            
      
   
   

     
    

    
   
    
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Statesman Journal

PUBLIC NOTICE

 



MORE PEACE
EVENTS

Conner Williams

PUBLIC NOTICES
POLICY
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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

  
    
 
      
    
      


   
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5A

6A

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

StatesmanJournal.com

KITZHABER BREAKS SILENCE

KEY PLAYERS

Cylvia Hayes Fiancee of


former Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber, and a focal point of
stories in The Oregonian and
Willamette Week that characterized her as more than nominally involved in his administration while working as a paid
consultant to outside interests
and behaving as if she were a
deputy governor with staff and
aides.

Michael Rodgers Former


state Department of Administrative Services administrator
who admitted leaking emails to
the Willamette Week newspaper and who has now settled a
tort claim notice with the state
for two years salary, attorneys
fees, health insurance and
accrued vacation-hour pay.

Kitzhaber
Continued from Page 1A

On Sept. 9, the Statesman Journal ran a story


detailing how it took The Oregonian nearly five
months to run print and online corrections to
two front-page stories it published in early
April. The stories, by Oregonian reporters Laura Gunderson and Nick Budnick, were written
off of 94,000 emails released by the state following public-records requests by The Oregonian
and others.
The papers watchdog stories published April
5, and again April 8, assert that Kitzhaber was
active in clearing the way for fiance Cylvia
Hayes to be more than just nominally involved
in his administration while she was working as a
paid consultant to outside interests and that
Hayes behaved as if she were a deputy governor with staff and aides.
But in corrections printed on Page 2A of the
Sept. 9 and13 editions of The Oregonian, five
months later, the paper acknowledged errors in
those stories, which had helped shape the conversation at the time the governor resigned. The
corrections were also published on The Oregonians OregonLive website, but they werent
identified as corrections until after readers
clicked on a headline hyperlink.
Kitzhaber was succinct in his written words.
Although I was not contacted concerning the
retraction, the admission by The Oregonian that
it knowingly and materially altered a public document and inserted false information into a direct quote to support a predetermined narrative
exposes a troubling pattern, which includes both
factual errors and the selective mischaracterization of public records, Kitzhaber wrote.
The Oregonian, in its corrections, did not admit to having a predetermined narrative.
After reviewing tens of thousands of my
emails, Kitzhaber said, The Oregonian has resorted to inaccurate and misleading stories to
keep its narrative alive. This raises questions
about the standards of accuracy and journalistic
ethics that guide its reporting and deserves further scrutiny.
Kitzhaber acknowledged the scrutiny his former administration faced by the press and law
enforcement agencies earlier this year and said
that regardless of how he felt about the accuracy of specific news reports, he had chosen to remain out of the public eye to allow the process to
take its course, confident that the outcome
would be positive for his administration and
himself.
A spokesman for the U.S. Attorneys Office
District of Oregon in Portland declined to com-

OCT. 8: Willamette Week


publishes First Lady Inc. and
tells of Cylvia Hayes power in
Oregon political affairs. The
media begins writing of an
inuence peddling scandal.

2014

Walter Beglau Marion


County district attorney, who
reviewed the Oregon State
Police report on Rodgers with
help from Yamhill County.
Beglau said he asked for the
additional oversight to avoid
any appearance of impropriety
because a nephew of former
Gov. John Kitzhaber works as a
deputy district attorney in his
office.

After reviewing tens of


thousands of my emails The
Oregonian has resorted to inaccurate
and misleading stories to keep its
narrative alive.
Statement by former Gov. John Kitzhaber

ment on the status of the federal investigation


into Kitzhaber and Hayes, saying only that the
office makes no comment on pending investigations. Sunday, Oct. 18, will mark eight months
since Kitzhaber resigned.
Five months after The Oregonians April articles, the newspapers corrections noted that public policy consultant Steve Bella and his group,
the Center for State Innovation, never helped arrange a position for Hayes with the Rural Development Initiatives group despite assertions and
takeaways to the contrary that ran in the articles.
The papers correction also stated that the stories had incorrectly inserted the words Columbia River Crossing into the email quotes parenthetically and that Bella had done no work on the
Columbia River Crossing. Both corrections concluded with the line that The Oregonian/
OregonLive regretted publication of the errors.
The print and online corrections were part of a
settlement reached by Bella through his attorney, Charles Williamson, Bella said.
Mark Katches, editor and vice president of
content for The Oregonian, said the paper was
not going to have any comment on the former
governors remarks.
Kitzhabers attorney, Janet Hoffman, of Janet
Hoffman & Associates LLC in Portland, said The
Oregonians errors are only the beginning of
troubling patterns being practiced by some news
outlets.
She said her office hand-delivered two demands for the retraction of statements pertaining to Kitzhaber that were published in Willamette Week, an alternative weekly newspaper and
website, on April 21 and June 9. Both stories were
written by reporter Nigel Jaquiss.
Hoffman said Willamette Week first published a story Feb. 12, the day before Kitzhaber
announced his resignation, that said the governor
sought to destroy thousands of his emails. She
said that it was an improper inference that had no
basis in fact and that the weekly persisted in the
mischaracterization in subsequent stories. She
demanded that Willamette Week retract its false
statements.
She said Willamette Week responded to her demands for retractions with emails that said the

NOV. 7: Oregon
Government
Ethics Commission
opens preliminary
investigation into
Hayes consulting
work.

JAN. 31: After Kitzhaber refuses to


resign, The Oregonian runs a headline
calling the governor deant. The article
said Kitzhaber was shrugging off new
charges of ethics violations.

newspaper did not intend to issue a retraction.


Last week, there was little trace of the Willamette Week Feb. 12 story headlined Gov. John
Kitzhabers Office Sought to Destroy Thousands of His Emails.
Mark Zusman, editor and publisher of Willamette Week explained the missing story by
saying that the newspaper had recently
switched content management systems, and
there was some corruption of data during the
migration. He said, and the Statesman Journal
confirmed, that the story has now been restored
online.
He also said Willamette Week is not retracting its story because it is accurate. He said
Hoffman is planning a lawsuit and the first step
is to demand a retraction.
Hoffman points to several documents published recently that support the Kitzhabers contention that media outlets had preconceived narratives and continued to publish stories with
those conclusions even as evidence to the contrary surfaced.
The Oregon State Police on Feb. 18, the day
Kitzhaber officially resigned, opened Incident
No. SP15051571 to investigate possible unauthorized access and dissemination of state emails
belonging to an executive branch member of the
Oregon state government. The more than 1,500page investigation details myriad interviews
conducted by the state polices major crimes office, criminal investigators, public-safety service officers, computer experts and detectives.
It contained detailed interviews, a copied collection of user access logs, detailed timelines,
association charts, cellphone screen shots, a
master names and phone-numbers list, and
email logs.
It was this report that Marion County District
Attorney Walt Beglau and Yamhill County District Attorney Brad Berry cited in their announcement June 3 regarding possible prosecution of Michael Rodgers, the former Department of Administrative Services employee who
admitted to leaking the public and private Kitzhaber emails to Willamette Week.
Beglau and Berry, in reviewing the state police report, concluded that Rodgers, instead of
delivering all of the emails that were on two
thumb drives to Matt Shelby, copied them on his
own thumb drive, or portable storage device, out
of fear that the emails would be destroyed. Shelby is the communications strategist in the Chief
Operating Office of DAS.
The state police investigation concludes that
Rodgers should have known, in his position as
acting administrator for the technology arm of
DAS, that the system had a backup and a backup
See KITZHABER, Page 7A

FEB.
6: The
Oregonian
runs
Hayes
deep
impact on
Oregon.
The article
says
Kitzhaber
is already
enacting
policies
Hayes was
paid to
promote.

2015

NOV. 4: John
Kitzhaber is reelected for an
unprecedented
fourth term as
Oregons governor.

JAN. 9: Willamette
Week reports an
FBI investigation
of Hayes has been
opened. The FBI
neither conrms nor
denies reports of an
investigation.

A Kitzhaber

TIMELINE

JAN. 12:
Kitzhaber is
sworn in for
his fourth
(nonconsecutive)
term.

Brad Berry Yamhill County


district attorney, who assisted
Marion County DA Walter
Beglau in the review of the
Oregon State Police investigation into the leak of gubernatorial emails to the Willamette
Week newspaper.

FEB. 4: The Oregonians


editorial board calls for
Kitzhaber to resign, writing
that Kitzhabers credibility
has evaporated to such
a degree that he can no
longer serve effectively as
governor.

FEB. 11: Fearing public records would be


destroyed, a Department of Administrative
Services employee, later identied as
Michael Rodgers, leaks 6,000 of Kitzhabers
personal emails to Willamette Week. State
ofcials later said that Rodgers should
have known Kitzhabers emails could not
have been deleted due to multiple backup
systems.

FEB. 9:
Kitzhaber
asks Oregon
Attorney
General Ellen
Rosenblum
to open an
investigation
into Hayes
public role.
Rosenblum
says a criminal
investigation
was already in
progress.

FEB. 12: Willamette


Week publishes Gov. John
Kitzhabers Ofce Sought
To Destroy Thousands of
His Emails.
FEB. 12: State
Democratic leaders
Senate President Peter
Courtney, House Speaker
Tina Kotek and Treasurer
Ted Wheeler call for
Kitzhabers resignation.
Although Kitzhaber has
lost credibility with his top
political supporters and his
ability to effectively pursue
an agenda is in question,
the governor says again
that he will not resign.

KITZHABER BREAKS SILENCE

StatesmanJournal.com

Mark Zusman Editor and


publisher of Willamette Week,
the only weekly newspaper to
win a Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting and the
first to win for an online story.

Nigel Jaquiss Reporter for


Willamette Week who won the
Pulitzer Prize for Investigative
Reporting in 2005 for exposing
former Gov. Neil Goldschmidts
concealed sexual misconduct
with a 14-year-old girl when
hed been mayor of Portland.
Michael Rodgers leaked Gov.
John Kitzhabers emails to
Jaquiss in February.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Ellen Rosenblum Oregons


attorney general, who is married to former Willamette
Week publisher Richard Meeker. Rosenblum has filed a plaintiffs motion in Marion County
Circuit Court for an order specifying terms and conditions of
discovery as the state finds itself
in the possession of the former
governors personal emails
without his permission.

Senate President Peter


Courtney (above), Oregon
Speaker of the House Tina
Kotek and Oregon Treasurer
Ted Wheeler High-ranking
Democrats who called on Gov.
John Kitzhaber to resign in
February, saying hed lost the
publics trust. Kitzhaber, also a
Democrat, was succeeded in
office by Democratic Secretary
of State Kate Brown.

Kitzhaber
Continued from Page 6A

to the backup.
The two DAs said in their opinion, after assessing the facts in the investigation, that they
believed Rodgers could be prosecuted for violating the law because he should have known
that the emails were backed up on redundant
state servers, and contrary to his claim, could
not be destroyed. They said he could be prosecuted for a Class C misdemeanor crime of official misconduct in the second degree, which is
punishable by a maximum of 30 days in jail and a
$1,250 fine for each violation.
The two DAs concluded that justice would not
be served by filing criminal charges against
Rodgers.
And, on June 5, the Department of Justice
General Counsel Division issued an executive
summary of investigation that concluded Rodgers never received any directive from Michael
Jordan, the then DAS chief operating officer, or
anyone else from DAS, ordering him to delete all
emails from the governors personal email accounts.
Despite the collection of findings, Gov. Kate
Brown declined to pursue charges against
Rodgers, telling Willamette Week for an article
dated June 3 that it was something he (Rodgers) did based on the lack of trust in the system
around him and that his intentions were good.
Last week Rodgers agreed to resign from his
state job in exchange for two years salary
($286,200), his health insurance paid through the
end of the year, payment for 300 hours of accumulated vacation time and his attorneys expenses, which amount to $12,158. The settlement
was reached after Rodgers notified the state
that he intended to sue for investigations without proper notice and an opportunity for a hearing as well as published reports containing
false and stigmatizing statements about his being placed on leave Feb. 20. He also agreed, by
signing the document, that neither he or his
agents would make disparaging public statements to news media outlets.
Zusman, the Willamette Week editor, said the
paper stands by its stories.
Were comfortable in its accuracy, he said,
adding that it was logical for Rodgers to fear for

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Former Gov. John Kitzhaber works the room and shakes hands before a debate during the 2014 gubernatorial
campaign against Rep. Dennis Richardson at the Sentinel Hotel in Portland.

the security of the back-up and the back-up to


the back-up with Kitzhaber in charge.
Meanwhile, the state, via Attorney General
Ellen Rosenblum the wife of Richard Meeker,
who was publisher of Willamette Week until
June filed a motion Sept. 16 in Marion County
Circuit Court concerning its possession of the
former governors personal emails.
Since the state did not have Kitzhabers permission to take the personal emails, Rosenblum
says in the discovery motion, DAS never should
have had access to his personal email account
and consequently DAS does not legitimately
possess Governor Kitzhabers personal emails.
These competing interests leave the state in a
precarious position. In its motion, the state said
there is good cause to enter an order establish-

ing whether and under what conditions the


plaintiffs (the state) should review and produce
emails from the former governors private
Gmail account.
In the absence of the courts guidance, the
motion states, plaintiffs will face either legal
action from former Gov. Kitzhaber or a motion
to compel from Oracle.
Kitzhaber, in his statement, said suing the
state is not a priority for him.
I did not sue the state of Oregon because I
gave 35 years of my life to the institution. I love
Oregon, and its government, and would not feel
right about suing the state for damages after
those many years of service.
ccurrie@statesmanjournal.com, (503) 3996746, or follow on Twitter at @CATMCurrie

In the absence of the Courts guidance, plaintiffs will face either legal action
from former Governor Kitzhaber or a motion to compel from Oracle.

Remarks from Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum in a Plaintiffs Motion for An Order
Specifiying Terms and Conditions of Discovery filed Sept. 16 in Marion County Circuit Court

FEB. 18: Kitzhabers resignation becomes


ofcial. Kate Brown takes ofce.

FEB. 13:
Kitzhaber
announces his
resignation.

FEB. 18: Willamette Week publishes Hit


the Delete Button. The piece disputes
previous claims from Kitzhabers staff
that the governors ofce never sought to
destroy emails. Willamette Week reports
that any request by Kitzhabers ofce to
remove personal emails from state servers
would have been requests to delete
them. Kitzhabers attorneys later said
there is a difference between removing
the governors personal emails from state
archives and permanently deleting the
emails.

FEB. 14: The Oregonian runs Deant


Exit. Kitzhaber releases a resignation
letter in which he sharply criticizes media
coverage of the allegations against him
and Cylvia Hayes: It is deeply troubling to
me to realize that we have come to a place
in the history of this great state where a
person can be charged, tried, convicted
and sentenced by the media with no due
process and no independent verication of
the allegations involved.

FEB. 19:
The Columbia
Journalism
Review writes
that aggressive
reporting by
Oregon media
outlets forced
the governor
out of ofce.

APRIL 5: The rst of two stories from The Oregonian that were
later corrected are published. The story, based in part on Hayes
newly released emails, incorrectly said that Steve Bellas group,
the Center for State Innovation, helped secure a position for
Hayes with the Rural Development Initiative. The articles inserted
parenthetical language saying CRC stood for Columbia
River Crossing, a highly controversial building project instead
of the Career Readiness Certicate. No one called Bella to
vet the acronym. The Oregonian later corrects the mistake and
ve months later corrects in print and online that Bella has no
connection to the Columbia River Crossing initiative.

MARCH 5: A
report issued
by the Oregon
Department of
Transportations
Sherry Lauer, who
was assigned to
investigate the
email leak as
a neutral third
party, says Michael
Rodgers, the DAS
administrator
who leaked
Kitzhabers emails,
never received
any direction
or instructions
... to delete
the governors
personal email
records.

APRIL 4:
Gov. Kate
Browns
ofce
releases
94,000 of
Cylvia Hayes
emails.

APRIL 8: The Oregonian


runs a second story on
Steve Bella and Cylvia
Hayes. It, too, would later
be corrected.

APRIL 22: Steve


Bella formally
requests a correction
from The Oregonian.

7A

8A

KITZHABER BREAKS SILENCE

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

StatesmanJournal.com

Willamette Week does not intend to issue a retraction.

Willamette Weeks response to a demand by former Gov. John Kitzhabers attorney


for a retraction for continuing a narrative that Kitzhaber sought to destroy emails

WILLAMETTE WEEK
STANDS BY RODGERS
Carol McAlice Currie
Statesman Journal

Willamette Week, a Portland alternative


weekly newspaper, continues to publish stories
that former Gov. John Kitzhabers attorney says
are based on false statements and foster a preconceived negative narrative.
Janet Hoffman, of Janet Hoffman & Associates LLC in Portland, said her client, the former governor, has attempted twice to get the
newspaper to retract statements pertaining to
him, and both times Willamette Week has refused.
Hoffman said she sought retractions in April
and June and noted that reporter Nigel Jaquiss
continues to rely on information provided by Michael Rodgers, the former interim enterprise
technology administrator in the Department of
Administrative Services.
Rodgers account of why he leaked the governors emails to Willamette Week in February has
since been called into question by a number of
investigations, and yet, Hoffman said, Willamette Week continues to write articles based on
the claims.
As recently as June 3, Jaquiss said in a story
that Rodgers, head of the Oregon state government data center, prevented Kitzhabers office
from deleting the emails while the governor and
first lady Cylvia Hayes faced a criminal investigation into alleged influence peddling. Rodgers
then made a copy of the emails and gave them to
WW, believing someone in state government
could still find a way to delete the records at the
behest of Kitzhabers office. The June 3 story
was referencing a previous Willamette Week article, The Whistle-Blower, published May 27.
An Oregon State Police investigation, an internal Oregon Department of Justice investigation, and an investigation by the district attorneys of Marion and Yamhill counties concluded
that Rodgers, in his high-ranking position,
should have known that the former governors
emails were not pending destruction but instead
pending further review prior to any possible valid future release because the state has a back-up
system, and a back-up to the back-up system located off site.
The Department of Justice report also concludes that Rodgers never received any directive from Michael Jordan, then DAS chief operating officer, or anyone else from DAS to delete
all emails from the governors personal email accounts. The Department of Justice report also
said Rodgers did not address his concern directly with Jordan or seek to clarify his underlying
assumption and that Rodgers misrepresented

MAY 6: The date


that The Oregonian
was legally required
to respond to Steve
Bellas correction
request. The law, ORS
31.215, says a media
organization has two
weeks to investigate
inaccuracy claims
and, if necessary, run
a correction.

JUNE 3: Marion
County District
Attorney Walt
Beglau releases a
statement after his
joint investigation
with Yamhill County
District Attorney Brad
Berry, saying Michael
Rodgers could be
prosecuted for
leaking Kitzhabers
emails and could
have been charged
with the crime of
ofcial misconduct.
The DAs recommend
that charges not be
led.

MAY 18: Willamette Week tells


Kitzhabers attorneys it will not issue
a retraction in connection with its
Kitzhaber reporting.

ASHLEY SMITH / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Some of the more than 1,500 page Oregon State Police investigation into the email leaks to Willamette Week.

to Carter that Jordan had directed him to delete


emails. Sherry Carter is the client agency human resources manager assigned to support the
states Enterprise Technology Services.
Responding to the demands for retractions of
statements pertaining to Kitzhaber, Hoffman

JUNE 23: For a second time,


Willamette Week refuses to
issue a retraction in relation to
its reporting on Kitzhaber.

JUNE 5: A report
from the Oregon
Department of Justice
on the Kitzhaber
emails leak, based
on an earlier thirdparty investigation,
concludes Michael
Rodgers was
never asked to
delete emails and
misrepresented to
his superiors that he
had been directed to
do so.

said she received two denials from Kevin Kono


with the law firm of Davis Wright Tremaine
LLPs Portland office.
She noted that both said, Willamette Week
does not intend to issue a retraction.
ccurrie@statesmanjournal.com, (503) 3996746, or follow on Twitter at @CATMCurrie.

SEPT. 8: Kate
Brown releases
5,000 of Kitzhabers
personal emails.

SEPT. 7 / SEPT. 13:


The Oregonian runs a
correction, Steve Bella did
not help arrange Cylvia
Hayes job, ve months
after the stories containing
errors were published.

SEPT. 9: The
Statesman Journal
publishes an article
on Steve Bella and
The Oregonians
ve-months-later
corrections.

SEPT.
15: Legal
documents in
the case Oracle
v. Oregon show
that the state
may not be in
legitimate
or lawful
possession of
Kitzhabers
personal emails.

OCT. 11:
Kitzhaber
breaks his
silence
with the
Statesman
Journal.

SEPT. 22: Michael Rodgers


settles with the state for more than
$280,000. He had been threatening to
sue the state for wrongfully putting
him on administrative leave.

KITZHABER BREAKS SILENCE

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

9A

STATESMAN JOURNAL FILE

Former Gov. John Kitzhaber faced a scrum of press last October at the Sentinel Hotel in Portland before a debate with his political opponent, Rep. Dennis Richardson.
Kitzhaber won an unprecedented fourth term but resigned just weeks after taking office amid pressure by his partys leaders in the Legislature.

VIRTUALLY IMPOSSIBLE
The state worker who leaked Kitzhabers emails should
have known they couldnt be destroyed, investigators say
Carol McAlice Currie
Statesman Journal

In late September, the former acting enterprise technology administrator for the Department of Administrative Services, who leaked
personal and public emails of former Gov. John
Kitzhaber to a Portland weekly newspaper,
agreed to resign from his job in exchange for a
settlement with the state.
Michael Rodgers filed a tort claim notice
against the Oregon DAS, its officers and employees. A tort claim is notice of an intent to sue. The
state in late September offered Rodgers, in return for dropping plans to sue, two years salary
($286,000), paid health-insurance premiums
through the end of the year, pay for 300 hours of
accrued vacation time, and his attorney fees valued at more than $12,000.
Rodgers, in a tort claim filed on his behalf by
his attorney Stephen L. Brischetto, said Rodgers
reasonably believed the emails he disclosed to
Willamette Week were likely to be unlawfully
deleted by officers and employees of the State of
Oregon.
Those emails leaked to Willamette Week resulted in the online story Feb. 12 that stated that
the governor sought to destroy personal emails
stored on the states servers.
In the tort claim notice, Brischetto says Rodgers was placed on administrative leave without
notice and an opportunity for a hearing. He also
alleges that officers and employees of the state
of Oregon and DAS have retaliated against
Rodgers for disclosing information he reasonably believed was evidence of mismanagement,
abuse of authority, and violations of state and
federal law.
But recent investigations by district attorneys from Marion and Yamhill counties and the
Oregon State Police show that Rodgers should
have known, in his high-ranking position, that
the emails could not have been destroyed because of a back-up system to protect government-archived emails and a back-up to the backup system that is housed out of state.

A statement released in June by both district


attorneys said Rodgers copied the emails onto
his own separate thumb drive, knowing that the
emails were not pending destruction but rather
pending further review prior to any possible valid future release.
In fact, it would have been virtually impossible to accomplish such a task as the state server is backed-up as a matter of protection in two
separate locations, according to the statement.
Rodgers should have been aware of these backup measures as the Administrator of the States
Technology Services.
Walt Beglau, Marion Countys district attorney, and Brad Berry, Yamhills DA, determined
after their own investigation that in their opinion, Rodgers violated state policies, which is a
Class C misdemeanor crime of official misconduct in the second degree, according to Oregon
Revised Statute 164.405. Rodgers could have
been prosecuted for his crimes, they said in an
announcement issued in early June..
Matt Shelby, a spokesman for DAS, said the
department, when notified of Rodgers intent to
sue, considered the outcome to the state and
made a business decision on an employment
matter. He said that when a tort notice is received, the state can settle or deny the claim just
as it can when an actual lawsuit is received or
prior to a trial.
Everything is considered. How much it costs
to go to trial, how complicated the employment
matter is, how much attorney time it will take to
get to trial and during the trial, Shelby said. We
have cases go to court and win them, and still
spend more than some settlement offers. So we
made what was the best possible business decision for the state of Oregon.
The Statesman Journal asked Brischetto,
Rodgers attorney, if Rodgers was aware of the
states redundant back-up system. Brischetto
said he was authorized to say that Mr. Rodgers
has settled any claim with the state and is interested in moving on with his life.
ccurrie@statesmanjournal.com; (503) 3996746 or follow on Twitter at @CATMCurrie

DANIELLE PETERSON / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Marion County District Attorney Walter M. Beglau.

Rodgers did this knowing


that the emails were not
pending destruction but rather
pending further review prior to any
possible valid future release.
An excerpt from a prosecutorial decision regarding
former administrator of the states technology services
Michael Rodgers issued by Marion County District
Attorney Walt Beglau and Yamhill County District
Attorney Brad Berry

The destructive power of one word clobbered Kitzhaber


Oregonians,
including many in
the news media
and in politics,
wrongly portrayed
Gov. John Kitzhaber as seeking to
Michael Davis destroy emails.
COMMENTARY
Investigations
by the Oregon
Department of
Justice, Oregon State Police and two
district attorneys confirm that Kitzhaber never ordered anyone to destroy
email.
Yet that false narrative fed suspicions never proved, at least not yet
that Kitzhaber was engaged in a
Nixonian coverup. And that wrongheaded characterization helped drive
Kitzhaber from office.
Words matter. There is a world of
difference between the words destroy and review.
One suggests willful obliteration and
an attempt to hide.
The other suggests a process.
The three investigations reveal Kitzhaber and his staff were seeking to
separate his personal email from his
official government email account a
review.
Yet the aforementioned false narrative gave cover to Kitzhabers Democratic allies and friends in the state

Words matter. There is a world of difference


between the words destroy and review.
One suggests willful obliteration and an
attempt to hide.
The other suggests a process.
Capitol elected officials whose hides
he had saved or promoted in the past.
Those friends plunged knives in his
back in a Shakespearean drama that
played out before our eyes last February.
Et tu, Peter, Tina and Ted?
Politicians and some in the media
perpetuated the line that, with Kitzhaber and first lady Cylvia Hayes under
investigation, state government had
come to a state of paralysis. It was as if
simply stating it made it so, but it was
an assertion that doesnt hold up under
scrutiny. All one need do is review the
calendars of our elected officials to
understand the peoples business was
proceeding along, albeit with an uptick
in hallway chatter.
House Republican Leader Mike
McLane appeared on a special broadcast of OPBs Think Out Loud on the

day Kitzhaber resigned. Heres a salient passage:


Host Dave Miller: One of the things
we have heard a few times in the public
statements from House Speaker (Tina)
Kotek and from Senate President (Peter) Courtney is that this has become
too much of a distraction, that it is taking attention away from the work of the
state, the work of the Legislature. And
the governor, they say, has simply not
been able to govern. Do you disagree?
Rep. McLane: Yes, I do. I dont
think it was so distracting that he
couldnt fulfill his constitutional duties
as governor. I think John Kitzhaber,
ultimately, was the one who decided
that, and he did. And I respect that. But
I thought it was premature for Sen.
Courtney and Tina Kotek to call for his
resignation.
An ongoing federal investigation is

looking into Kitzhaber and Hayes. It


could uncover evidence of wrongdoing
or a severe ethical breach. Yet Kitzhabers political colleagues convicted
him by pushing him from office. At the
time, they said they feared the investigations could drag on for months as
has happened and that Kitzhaber
would be distracted from his day-to-day
duties.
Kitzhaber, who has not yet been
deposed, remains in limbo while the
FBI sifts through information and interviews witnesses.
When we called the feds to ask how
things are proceeding, they said, We
cannot comment on a pending investigation.
To date, there is no smoking gun, no
firm evidence of criminal wrongdoing.
Meanwhile, we have a supposed
whistleblower who may not have been
much of one. He might have thought
Kitzhaber wanted to destroy records,
but we have found nothing to substantiate such a concern.
Kitzhaber is out of a job. That whistleblower is out of a job, too, but with a
settlement that now seems as outrageous as it is wrongheaded.
Michael Davis is executive editor of
the Statesman Journal. Contact him at
mdavis4@statesmanjournal.com ; P.O.
Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309; or (503)
399-6712.

CREDITS
Statesman Journal reporter Gordon Friedman wrote the timeline. Images of The Oregonian and Willamette Week newspapers were taken by
SJ photographer Brent Drinkut. The photo of Michael Rodgers was taken by Drinkut of a computer playing a KATU video on YouTube.
The photo of Mark Zusman was taken by Eric McCarthy via Wikimedia Commons and is licensed under Creative Commons BY-SA 2.0.
The photo of Nigel Jaquiss is a Willamette Week handout photo obtained via USA TODAY.

10A

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Our Oregon
g

Smog levels low in region


Northwest
complicated
by wildfires
Jes Burns
OPB

Northwest communities are


breathing easier than many
places in the United States after
federal regulators clamped
down on ozone pollution, the
main component of smog.
The Environmental Protection Area last week lowered the
acceptable limit to 70 parts per
billion. The new clean air standard is not as far-reaching as
health and environmental advocates were calling for. But its
more strict than many industry
representatives wanted to see.
As of 2014, no region in Washington or Oregon were averaging greater than 65 parts per billion.
What is ozone?
Ozone is gas thats formed
in the atmosphere, so its not
emitted directly from a tailpipe
or a stack, says Oregon Department of Environmental
Quality Air Quality Manager
David Collier.
But the raw components of
ozone are. Oxides of nitrogen
are made when things are
burned, and volatile organic
compounds are part of the
fumes you smell at the gas station.
That pollution goes up into
the atmosphere and on hot days,
especially when the air is stagnant, it kind of cooks and ozone
is formed, Collier says.
Atmospheric ozone is necessary for human survival it protects us from harmful ultra-violet rays from the sun. But when
ozone forms near the ground,
its a health risk thats better
known as smog.

Ozone in the Northwest


Los Angeles is the spot many
envision when they think smog.
But places like Medford and
Hermiston in Oregon and
Enumclaw in Washington also
see their share of smoggy days.
Its usually downwind from
the metropolitan area where the
traffic and industry is is where
the ozone measurements are
the highest. Like in Seattle, its
toward Mount Rainier, says
John Raymond of the Washington Department of Ecology.
Part of it is luck of geography
and weather. But Oregon and
Washington have also taken
steps to fix air-pollution problems.
At the vehicle inspection station in Medford, cars and trucks
work their way through the
open bays. A technician plugs a
long wire into the cars on-board
computer to ensure the emissions system is working like it
should.
In the beginning we had a lot
of people come in, and they put
little black tape over check engine light, or did all kinds of
things, says Vehicle Inspection
Program Manager Juergen Bigalke. They failed, of course, because there was code in computer, you know, and we couldnt
pass them. But right now, people know before they come over
here, Hey, I need to get that
fixed.
Most vehicles pass, but some
are flagged and their owners
are required to get the emissions problem fixed before the
state will renew their registration. Bigalke says the vehicle inspection station is making a difference.
Look back 15 years, it was
really bad. And thats why the
program was installed. And it
has cleaned up the air really
nicely, he says.

Looking to the future


That doesnt mean the North-

CALENDAR
TUESDAY
Salem Audubon Birders Night:
"Acorns, Buntings and Cabernet": Joel Geier shows how Willamette Valley landscapes have changed
since the first wagons trains and
how this affects larks and other
grassland birds, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.,
First United Methodist Church,
Carrier Room, 600 State St. Free; $2
donation appreciated. (503) 5887340, www.salemaudubon.org.

WEDNESDAY
Amateur Naturalist Series: Geology of Oregon: Scott Pike will be
presenting a geological history
slideshow tour of Oregon through
the many layers of rocky evidence
left behind, 7 p.m. Oct. 14. Fieldtrip
Oct. 17, Straub Environmental
Center, 1320 A St. NE. $5 class; $10
fieldtrip. (503) 391-4145, www.strau
benvironmentalcenter.org.

SATURDAY
English Ivy removal at Fircrest
Park: help remove the invasive vine
and English Ivy from Fircrest Park, 9
a.m. to noon, Fircrest Park, 955
Luradel S. Free. (503) 589-2197.

OCT. 19
Garden Club Day at the Gordon
House: Special guest speaker is
Jenny Meisel, Marion County Water
& Soil Conservation District Native
Plant Specialist, 10 a.m. to noon,
Frank Lloyd Wright Gordon House,
869 W Main St., Silverton. (503)
874-6006, www.thegordonhouse
.org.

OCT. 20
JES BURNS/OPB

Medford vehicle inspection program manager Juergen Bigalke appears in


an exhaust detection tool used to check emissions systems.

west is totally in the clear; this


year, wildfires are complicating
the equation. Many regions, like
the Puget Sound, have seen
more smog because of the drifting smoke.
The EPA wont necessarily
hold communities accountable
for smog caused by natural
events like wildfire. But the pollution is still very real for people who have to breathe the air.

When you think about the


future growth of populations,
growth of air pollution from all
kinds of sources, and as summers get hotter and hotter,
which drives more ozone formation. Collier says. We want
to be very mindful of being
proactive, too to try to prevent problems, even if we might
be sitting good today.

Snowy Owl Talk by Kelly Hazen,


Salem Audubon Societys Meeting: Snowy Owl Diet and Foraging
Behavior in Southeastern Oregon.
Hazen will present an introduction
into the Snowy Owls natural history
and provide some research on the
owls, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., Salem Public
Library, Loucks Auditorium, 585
Liberty St. SE. Free. (503) 588-7340.
Salem Chapter, Association of
Northwest Steelheaders: The
fishing-, conservation-, and education-oriented non-profit organization is open to anglers of all ages,
interests and abilities, 7 to 9 p.m.,
Keizer Heritage Community Center,
980 Chemawa Road NE, Keizer.
www.salemnwsteelheaders.org.

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Schools plans still hazy for


what to do if shooting starts
Lisa Leff
and Ryan J. Foley
Associated Press

Eight years after the


Virginia Tech massacre
led to tighter security at
colleges across the U.S.,
some schools make active shooter training
mandatory for incoming
students, while others offer little more than brief
online guidance on what
to do if theres a gunman
on the loose, a review by
The Associated Press
finds.
The AP looked at public colleges and universities in more than 40 states
after yet another shooting
rampage, the killing of
nine people at an Oregon
community college Oct. 1.
On Friday, there was
more bloodshed, with one
person killed and three
wounded at an Arizona
university.
At some institutions,
such as the Colorado
School of Mines and Arkansas State University,
training on how to respond to an armed intruder has become as much a
part of fall orientation as
lessons on alcohol abuse.
Students hear presentations covering their options, such as running,
hiding or fighting back.
Other schools have
purely voluntary training.
Or they put information
on what to do in an emergency on websites, where
it can easily be overlooked by students and
staff members. Many
public college and university systems leave it up to
their individual campuses
to draw up emergency
plans and decide what level of training, if any, to
give employees and stu-

dents.
In the wake of the recent violence, some professors, students and administrators are asking
whether schools need to
do more to deliver potentially life-saving messages to those on campus.
The challenges are particularly acute at twoyear community colleges,
which often do not have
their own police forces to
conduct training exercises for staff and students. They also tend to
have lots of older, working
students who can be hard
to reach.
That its actually happened recently with the
frequency and danger it
has, I think everyone is
frightened and asking a
lot of questions about how
well-prepared we would
be as a campus, said David Morse, an English instructor who is president
of the Academic Senate
for Californias 113 community colleges.
The 2007 slaughter of
32 people by a student at
Virginia Tech prompted
Congress to require colleges and universities to
adopt procedures for notifying the campus of an immediate threat. Under the
law, schools also must
publicize their emergency response plans in a
manner designed to reach
students and staff.
The AP review found
that most schools have set
up sophisticated alert systems that use text messages, social media or
technology that can remotely take over computers tied to campus servers. Many also have added
armed officers, conducted drills with law enforcement authorities and cre-

ated threat-assessment
teams that try to determine whether an overheard remark or violencetinged essay is a genuine
danger sign.
Some of these measures are credited with
saving lives. When a gunman shot students at a
Florida State University
library a year ago, campus police responded
within minutes of the first
911 call and fired a barrage of bullets that killed
him. Less than two weeks
before, the police had participated in active shooter
training that included a
scenario with a gunman at
the library.
Umpqua Community
College, site of the Oregon
mass shooting, also did
many things right to prepare, and experts said its
efforts may well have
saved lives.
A small, rural school,
Umpqua didnt have its
own police force, but administrators brought in
local officers so they
would be familiar with the
layout. Professors and
staff regularly discussed
how they should respond
if someone started shooting, and where in their
buildings would be the
safest place to hunker
down. The school also had
emergency notification
and lockdown procedures
in place.
But in general, educating students and employees about what to do in the
event of an attack has
proved something of a
stumbling block. While
most schools have created posters, brochures and
online guides, some of
them have yet to figure
out how to get people to
read, much less absorb,

the material.
Richard Turton, chairman of West Virginia Universitys Faculty Senate,
said he wasnt familiar
with his schools active
shooter plan until a reporters question prompted him to do some digging.
He found a PowerPoint
presentation and videos
on the universitys website.
I would suspect many
faculty who are very busy
would tend to not look at
those
things
unless
theyre sort of prompted
several times, Turton
said.
Matt Barnes, 30, a civil
engineering student who
just transferred to the
University of Minnesotas
Twin Cities campus, received a booklet during
orientation that outlined
the schools emergency
notification procedures.
He realized it didnt mention anything about an active shooter situation.
Barnes said he gets
emails any time there is a
crime on campus with details about the incident.
But he said hes not sure
what hes supposed to do if
something happens in a
building where he happens to be.
University spokesman
Steve Henneberry confirmed the booklet doesnt
specifically mention active shooter situations
and said it was written
from an all-hazards planning point of view.
On some campuses,
some of the advice itself
isnt detailed or even particularly helpful.
At Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, the
training that is mandatory
for new students is voluntary for the faculty.

Canyon Creek Complex Fire: After the flames


Dylan J. Darling
The Bulletin

CANYON CITY
Driving up Canyon Creek,
south of John Day toward
Burns, the devastation is
dramatic.
The Canyon Creek
Complex
Fire
tore
through this canyon in
mid-August, leaving the
woods and community
forever changed.
This was so awesome
in here before this, Grant
County Judge Scott Myers said as he drove his
pickup along U.S. Highway 395 through the canyon. For about 8 miles the
highway cuts through
where the wildfire burned
and destroyed homes.
Around each turn comes a
shocking sight, remnants
of once proud homes or
homes that were somehow spared from the
flames.
The Canyon Creek
Complex Fire destroyed
43 homes, 39 in the canyon
in a massive flare-up on
Aug. 14. Another side of
the fire blew up more than
a week later, destroying
another four homes. Now
those who lost homes are
weighing whether to stay
and rebuild or leave the
canyon and live elsewhere. Concerns about
potential flooding factor
into the difficult decision.
The destruction is
some of the worst in Oregon history. By comparison, the Awbrey Hall Fire
in Bend destroyed 22

homes in 1990 and the


Skeleton Fire, also in
Bend, destroyed 19 homes
in 1996. The two Bend
blazes had stood as the
worst in terms of homes
lost in the states modern
history until the Canyon
Creek Complex, Brian
Ballou, an Oregon Department of Forestry spokesman, wrote in an email.
Back in 1936 a wildfire
that likely started in smoldering logging slash
spread into Bandon, on
the Oregon Coast, he
wrote, burning nearly every structure in town and
killing 11 people.
The small size of Canyon City, the closest town
to most of the homes lost
to the Canyon Creek Complex Fire, amplifies the
impact of the fire. A
mining boomtown in the
1800s and still the Grant
County seat, Canyon City
has about 700 residents.
Three times in its history Canyon City has had to
rebuild from disastrous
fire, in 1870, 1898 and 1937,
according to the Blue
Mountain Eagle, John
Days weekly newspaper.
Those
fires
burned
through the towns business district. The Canyon
Creek Complex Fire leveled homes scattered
south of town in the scenic
canyon.
For the people who lost
homes, barns and more to
the Canyon Creek Complex Fire, the past weeks
have been a time to see
what they can salvage and

brace for wintry weather


ahead. The same canyon
that funneled the firestorm could churn with
floodwaters this fall and
winter, a worry also for
people living along Canyon Creek whose homes
did not burn.
We are preparing for
the next big rain, that is
for sure, said Myers, the
rural countys top elected
official. We have a lot of
black dirt with nothing
holding it.
Lightning in the earlymorning hours of Aug. 12
started a pair of fires that
eventually burned together to form the Canyon
Creek Complex Fire. The
fire charred more than
172 square miles of land,
over 110,000 acres, an area
five times larger than the
city of Bend.
Myers lives in the canyon south of John Day.
The fire came within 300
yards, but his home survived. He has been in
touch with about half of
the people who lost
homes. Their feelings
about whether to rebuild
in the canyon are split.
Andy Jones, 56, lived in
a home just off the highway for 15 years. The
house, built in 1941, had
history. It was known locally as Hank and Guernseys Place after the couple who used to live there.
Guernsey Pond, between
the farmhouse and highway, long served as a community ice rink, with
lights to allow for night-

time skating.
The home was likely
the second house destroyed by the fire as it
charged through the canyon, said Jones, an IT
worker for the U.S. Forest
Service. Flames charred
cattails that surrounded
the pond. While Jones and
his wife have been living
in Washington to care for
his ailing mother-in-law,
he said the couple plan to
return to the canyon.
Walking around the
blackened, ash-covered
ground where his home
once stood, he said he and
his wife plan to rebuild.
We are looking at it that
we got to start a new
book, Jones said. We are
hoping that someday well
be able to live here again.
When they do he said it
will likely be up the hill, to
be away from the Canyon
Creek and the flood danger, and to have a view of
Canyon Mountain. The
broad,
rocky-topped
mountain towers over the
surrounding burnt woods.
Since 1975, Arlen Van
Nice, 80, lived in a home
along the highway, in the
canyon. He and his wife
were out Wednesday at
what was left of their
home. Two weeks into
cleaning up the couple
were still sorting out
scrap metal and hoping to
find anything salvageable.
You keep thinking
youll find something, and
you dont, Van Nice said.
Everything is gone.

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USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL

SECTION B

E3

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Black engineers
band together

Spielberg
chats up
Bridge
of Spies

10.11.15
AWARA ADEAGBO

TODD PLITT,
USA TODAY

Sites spend
heavily on
debates; is
it worth it?
Venues cite benets
of national exposure
Nick Penzenstadler
USA TODAY

When the GOP debate series


visits Boulder, Colo., later this
month, the public university
there will roll out the red carpet
for the candidates and the television spectacle hoping to cash in
on the global media spotlight.
The universitys leaders are not
alone in investing thousands or
even millions of dollars to woo
the debates, and to expect a huge
surge in exposure in return.
As the debates unfold over the
coming year or so, including the
Democrats rst primary debate
on Tuesday night in Las Vegas,
the events are sure to draw huge
TV audiences and advertising
dollars. The nancial benets to
the debate sites are less certain.
Documents released under
state open records laws show the
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

TODAY ON TV
uABCs This Week: Rep. Jason
Chaffetz, R-Utah; Republican presidential candidate Bobby Jindal.
uNBCs Meet the Press:
Democratic presidential candidate
Bernie Sanders.
uCBS Face the Nation:
Republican presidential candidates
Ben Carson and Donald Trump.
uCNNs State of the Union:
Democratic presidential candidate
Martin OMalley.
uFox News Sunday: Rep. Jim
Jordan, R-Ohio; former House
speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga.

This is an edition of USA TODAY


provided for Statesman Journal. An
expanded version of USA TODAY is
available at newsstands or by
subscription, and at usatoday.com.

Find USA TODAY Sports in todays local


sports section.

USA SNAPSHOTS

How do you
sleep at night?

Only 8%
of Americans say they
routinely wake up
feeling rested
Source AllerEase survey July 30-Aug. 3
of 1,013 U.S. adults
TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

Up to 97 killed in
peace rally attack
Turkish PM blames suicide bombers as nation mourns
Doug Stanglin and
Special Turkey Correspondent
USA TODAY
ISTANBUL Two powerful blasts
rocked the Turkish capital of Ankara early Saturday morning, killing up to 97 people and wounding
scores of others in the deadliest
attack on the nations soil in recent history.
The explosions, which came
just seconds apart shortly after 10
a.m., occurred during a crowded
peace rally near Ankaras central
train station, where hundreds of
demonstrators many of them
supporters of the pro-Kurdish
Peoples Democratic Party (HDP)

had gathered to protest escalating violence between Turkish security forces and Kurdish
separatist insurgents.
Although the official death toll
stood at 86 killed and 186 wounded, Selcuk Atalay of the Turkish
Medical Associations Ankara
branch said late Saturday that at
least 97 people died, the Associated Press reported. He feared the
death toll could rise, since several
of the wounded were in serious
condition with burns.
The state-run Anadolu Agency
said the attacks were carried out
with TNT explosives fortied
with metal ball-bearings. No one
immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, which came as

This is ... an
attack on the
entire nation
and an attack on
our unity.
Turkish Prime Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu

the country grapples with mounting violence ahead of fresh parliamentary elections on Nov. 1.
Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu said there were strong
indications that the attacks were
carried out by two suicide bombers and declared three days of national mourning. This is an

SUPREME COURT CONSIDERS


REPRIEVE FOR KIDS WHO KILL
Justices
eased life
terms for
young
years ago,
but aging
convicts
in some
states still
locked up

Richard Wolf
USA TODAY

On his 16th birthday, Robert


Holbrook tagged along on a drug
deal in hopes of making a quick
$500. Instead, he became an unwitting accomplice to murder and
received a mandatory sentence of
life without the possibility of parole.
In the quarter century that has
passed since making that fateful
choice, Holbrook has earned his
high school equivalency diploma,
taken paralegal courses and had
some of his writings published.
But not even the Supreme Courts
decision in 2012 banning manda-

COURTESY ANITA COLN

Robert Holbrook was


convicted of
murder in
1990.

tory life sentences for juvenile offenders has given him a second
chance.
He deserved to be punished
for his stupidity and poor
choices, says his sister, Anita Coln, but certainly not for the rest
of his life.
Holbrooks plight is shared by
some 2,000 men and women
serving prison time in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Louisiana, Alabama and a handful of other
states with mandatory sentencing
laws that did not treat the courts
2012 ruling as retroactive. Some
have been imprisoned since they
were 13 with no prospect of ever
getting out until now.
On Tuesday, the justices will

ADEM ALTAN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

An injured woman is comforted following an explosion


at the main train station in
Ankara, Turkey.
attack that does not target a specic group; it is an attack on the
entire nation and an attack on
our unity, Davutoglu said.
Images shared on social media
showed chaotic scenes of devastation, with dozens of maimed bodies on the bloodstained ground,
some covered with peace banners
and colorful ags from the demonstration. About 14,000 people
were believed to be in the area,
according to local media.
One video widely shared on social media shows a group of
young people holding hands and
performing a traditional dance
just moments before the rst explosion ripped through the crowd
in the background, sending a
plume of re and smoke into the
air.
Stanglin reported from McLean, Va.
USA TODAY is withholding the name of
the correspondent in Turkey because of
security concerns.

consider a case brought by Louisiana inmate Henry Montgomery,


who was a 17-year-old playing
hooky from school when he shot
a sheriffs deputy nine days before John F. Kennedy was assassinated in November 1963.
Montgomery, now 69, has been in
the state prison system ever
since.
For the court, the case is a logical extension of its juvenile justice jurisprudence. In 2005, it
barred the death penalty for
those whose crimes were committed before they turned 18. In
2010, it prohibited life without
parole for non-homicides. Two
years later, it blocked all future
mandatory life sentences, even
for murder.
Such a scheme prevents those
meting out punishment from
considering a juveniles lessened
culpability and greater capacity
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Thousands pack D.C. for modern Million Man March


Crowd is younger
than 20 years ago
Melanie Eversley
USA TODAY

Under clear skies


and amid metal detectors, barriers and moderate police presence, thousands of people
crowded onto the National Mall
on Saturday to hear messages bemoaning cases of alleged police
misconduct and to observe the
20th anniversary of the Million
Man March.
The crowd was younger and
WASHINGTON

less dense than it was 20 years


ago, and while it was made up of
mostly black men, there were
many women and children, along
with people of other races. Another notable difference from the
original march was that minister
Louis Farrakhan, organizer and
Nation of Islam leader, widened
his sentiments to include abortion, politics and self-respect,
sounding a inclusive tone.
Meanwhile, some people came
because theyd attended the rst
march. They were hoping for a
repeat of the never-before experienced feeling of unity that they
said was present in 1995.
Among those people was the

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

The Nation of Islam leader, Louis Farrakhan, is projected on a


screen as he speaks during the Justice or Else! rally Saturday.

Rev. Ronald Bell Jr., a 34-year-old


pastor from Wilmington, Del.,
who was there with his 4-year-old
son, Ronald Bell III. The elder
Bell attended the 1995 march
with his own father, the Rev. Ronald Bell Sr., when he was 14. He
never forgot it, he said.
Just to see all those strong
black men in one spot does something to you, said Bell, who
heads
Wilmingtons
Arise
congregation.
Holding his sons hand, he said,
I hope he gets the experience I
did 20 years ago. ... That we may
not be where we thought wed be
20 years later, but were still
strong.

2B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E3

N. Koreas blustery day: Ready for war


Kim Jong Un amps
up rhetoric on showy
70th anniversary
Gregg Zoroya
USA TODAY

North Korean leader Kim Jong


Un vowed Saturday that he is prepared to wage war against the
United States if necessary, using
as a backdrop a massive display of
repower in the form of troop
columns, missile launchers, tanks
and other military hardware during a choreographed parade in
the capital of Pyongyang.
Our military force is ready to
respond to any kind of war the

American imperialists want,


Kim said in his speech marking
the 70th year of party rule, according to the Associated Press.
The heavily rehearsed event
played out in the citys central
Kim Il Sung Square, named after
Kims grandfather and founding
leader of the North Korean state.
Tens of thousands of onlookers
rhythmically waved pink and red
articial owers as throngs of
goose-stepping soldiers paraded
and Kim, wearing his signature
dark Maoist suit, saluted as he
overlooked the spectacle.
Military aircraft ew in a formation overhead spelling out the
hammer, brush and sickle symbol
of North Korea and the number
70. Amid the tanks, drones and

armored vehicles in the parade


was what appeared to be North
Koreas rst intercontinental ballistic missile, the KN-08, carried
on a 16-wheeled vehicle, according to media reports.
Although North Korea has nuclear weapons, it remains unclear
whether its scientists have developed a means of delivering bombs
on long-range missiles. After the
show of military might, the 30something leader delivered 25
minutes of tough-worded remarks reiterating that the U.S. is
North Koreas chief adversary.
Through the line of Songun
(military-rst) politics, our Korean Peoples Army has become the
strongest revolutionary force and
our country has become an im-

ED JONES, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Kim Jong Un talked tough for


25 minutes, saying the U.S. is
North Koreas chief adversary.
penetrable fortress and a global
military power, he said, according to AP.
Standing beside Kim was a visiting dignitary from the isolated
nations primary ally and trade

partner, China. Liu Yunshan, a


fth-ranked member of the Chinese Communist Party, arrived
with a letter from Chinese President Xi Jinping urging the nations ongoing alliance.
But Liu has also urged during
his visit that North Korea resume
six-party talks that are aimed at
pushing Pyongyang to abandon
nuclear weapons in exchange for
economic assistance, according to
Xinhua, the official Chinese-run
news agency. The negotiations
would also involve the U.S.
North Korea uncharacteristically invited large numbers of foreign media and delegations to
attend the showy 70th celebration. Satellite imagery captured
large-scale parade rehearsals.

Some victims families see need for change


v CONTINUED FROM 1B

for change, Justice Elena Kagan


wrote for the 5-4 majority.
Since then, its been left to
state courts or legislatures to decide whether the sentences of
those previously locked away for
life should be reconsidered. Hundreds of them were imprisoned in
the 1980s and 90s, when the battle against juvenile crime peaked;
some date to the 1950s. Fourteen
state supreme courts have said
the ruling must be applied retroactively. Seven others, as well as
four federal appeals courts, have
said it does not.
The courts decision, expected
before the term ends next June,
could mean the difference between freedom and dying behind
bars for people like Trina Garnett, who was 14 when she set a
re that killed two people in
Chester, Pa., nearly 40 years ago.
Quantel Lotts was the same age
in 2000 when he accidentally
shot and killed his stepbrother
during a robbery in St. Louis. Damien Jenkins was 17 in 1992
when he was involved in a driveby shooting in Alabama. All are
serving mandatory life sentences.
They are represented by Bryan
Stevenson, founder of the Equal
Justice Initiative in Montgomery,
Ala., and the lawyer who won the
2012 Supreme Court case Miller
v. Alabama that declared mandatory life sentences for juveniles
unconstitutional. Stevenson likens it to imposing a permanent,
unchanging sentence on someone who is going to change.
Even family members of juvenile homicide victims have registered their hope that the court
will grant a reprieve to the men
and women responsible. Sharletta Evans, one of 11 such relatives
to le a brief with the high court,
has forgiven the 14-year-old who
shot and killed her 3-year-old son
through a car window four days
before Christmas in 1995. She

created a non-prot in Colorado


dedicated to connecting offenders and victims in search of
healing.
Not everyone adopts such an
empathetic attitude. Michigan
and 15 other states have urged the
justices not to make Miller retroactive, so that people such as
James Porter who murdered a
woman and her four children in
1982, when he was 16 are not
given a chance for a new
sentence.
The convictions for these
state prisoners span more than
ve decades, the states brief
says. Thus, the considerations of
nality weigh heavily here. Any
retroactive application of Miller
would challenge the settled expectations of victims that these
violent murderers would never
be subject to release.

$50 a week.
Montgomery wasnt the only
one that received a life sentence,
she says. My mom received a life
sentence. My brother and I received a life sentence.
I have totally forgiven him.
My heart breaks for him. But I do
believe he got a fair sentence.
LIFE SENTENCE: HOW LONG
DOES THAT MEAN?

PHOTOS COURTESY OF INNOCENCE PROJECT NEW ORLEANS

George Toca is reunited with family earlier this year.

ONE-SIZE-FITS-ALL DOESNT
FIT IN THIS CASE

The choice Henry Montgomery made on Nov. 13, 1963, was to


skip school. He was hiding in
some bushes when Sheriffs Deputy Charles Hurt discovered him.
Unfortunately for them both,
Montgomery had a gun.
The 42-year-old white officer
he shot was assigned to Montgomerys majority-black community, and he served it well. He
started a junior deputy program for boys there and would
stop by the home of an illiterate
woman to read her sons letters
from Vietnam and write her letters back.
Hurt left behind a widow and
three children, ages 6 to 11. Montgomery left behind his adolescence. He was sentenced to
death, then had the sentence
overturned and was given life
without parole. He was sent to
the state penitentiary at Angola,
one of the most dangerous in the
country, where he helped start a
boxing team, worked in the silkscreen department and counsels

COURTESY INNOCENCE PROJECT NEW ORLEANS

George Toca attends the annual gala of the Innocence


Projct in New Orleans
other inmates.
One-size-ts-all doesnt t,
his lawyer, Marsha Levick of the
Juvenile Law Center in Philadelphia, says. The notion that one
penalty ts all increasingly offends our sense of justice.
George Toca spent three decades at Angola after being convicted at 17 of accidentally killing
his best friend during a botched
robbery. A seventh-grade dropout
who weighed 125 pounds, he had
to be placed in solitary connement for his own safety. There he
met Montgomery, by then a longtime inmate.
Its hard to describe waking

up with a life sentence, being sentenced to die there in prison,


says Toca, who was freed earlier
this year after pleading to a lesser
charge of manslaughter. At the
time, his lawsuit against mandatory life without parole was to be
the one heard by the Supreme
Court, but questions had been
raised about his possible innocence. He also had earned a bachelors degree in Christian
ministries from the New Orleans
Baptist Theological Seminary
while doing time, along with certicates in carpentry and
horticulture.
The state of Louisiana argues
that re-sentencing Montgomery
more than 50 years after the
crime is impractical. For one
thing, the states brief says, virtually everyone involved in the original trial is dead. For another,
Hurts children would be forced
to publicly relive the anguish of
having been deprived of a father
for the better part of their lives.
One of those children is Becky
Wilson, 61, of Hope, Ark. She recalls a peaceful childhood until
her father was killed, followed by
years of dysfunction as her mother tried to raise three children on

Holbrook falls into the category of locked-away killer who


didnt actually kill. But because
he was among ve defendants
who entered a house in which a
woman was killed, he was judged
culpable and convicted of rstdegree murder.
He kind of got caught up in
the appeal of having money in his
pocket, recalls Coln, his big sister, He was hanging with a bad
crowd, if you will.
When he was convicted in 1990
and sentenced to life, she says,
the family presumed that meant
20 or 25 years once other factors
were considered.
We didnt even understand
that life meant life, Coln says.
We all thought, How long does
that mean?
After the Supreme Court ruled
in 2012 that such sentences were
unconstitutional, Pennsylvania
amended its law. The new minimum sentence for juvenile killers
older than 14: 35 years. For those
previously sentenced, its still life.
Now living at the State Correctional Institute at Greene in Waynesburg,
about
60
miles
southwest of Pittsburgh, Holbrook is hopeful that the new Supreme Court case will offer the
chance for a new sentence. Most
other states, his sister notes, have
done away with mandatory life
without parole.
They dont just lock them up,
she says, and throw away the
key.
Follow @richardjwolf on Twitter
Corrections & Clarifications

Value overstated, economist says


v CONTINUED FROM 1B

University of Colorado-Boulder
has agreed with the Republican
National Committee and CNBC
to shoulder the bulk of the expenses for the Oct. 28 GOP primary debate.
The state university will waive
its normal rental fee of $15,000
for use of the 11,000-seat Coors
Events Center basketball arena.
Only about 1,000 seats will be
available for spectators, of which
only 100 will be distributed to
university students and officials.
Responding to student complaints about being shut out of
the debate, Colorado Chancellor
Philip DiStefano said CNBCs requirements limited space for inperson attendance. He said that
in return for its investments, the
university expects unprecedented national and international
media coverage.
The university also will print
the tickets and provide parking,
free shuttles and a designated
protest area. It plans to pay for
the debate expenses with private
fundraising dollars and insurance
rebates.
We as an institution will get
great branding and PR capacity,
so we feel that it is a good investment, said Ryan Huff, a spokesman for Colorado University.
The value of that media coverage is often overstated, however.
Lynn University, which hosted
a 2012 general election presidential debate in Boca Raton, Fla., estimated the event generated a

Ben Carson, left, and Donald Trump took part in a GOP primary presidential debate on Sept. 16 in Simi Valley, Calif.
staggering $63.7 million in
earned media.
That gure is based on the universitys name appearing in news
stories. But, its an inaccurate accounting, according to Victor
Matheson, an economist at Holy
Cross University who studies the
nancial impact of live events.
That is a laughable number.
Id say its probably inated by a
factor of 20 to 100, Matheson
said. Ask anyone in the U.S.
where one of the 2012 debates
was, do you think theyll say Boca
Raton?
Lynn University estimated the
event generated $13.1 million in
direct impact, but counted its
own $4.5 million investment to
host the debate in addition to attendees spending on hotels, res-

taurants and other costs. One


example: Lynn estimated that
some 4,000 media representatives visited for the debate and
spent $2.6 million while in town.
Once a university declares a
huge windfall from hosting a debate, the gure spreads and gets
repeated by other potential hosts,
USA TODAY found.
Representatives from the University of Nevada-Las Vegas and
Longwood University, both host
sites for 2016 general-election
presidential debates, cited the exact same pre-debate projection of
more than $50 million in publicity issued by Lynn in 2012.
Las Vegas received $4 million
from the citys convention and
visitors authority to cover costs of
hosting next Octobers presiden-

tial debate, an event it says will


garner tremendous media exposure for Las Vegas and reinforce
its reputation as a place to do
business.
Longwood University in Farmville, Va., plans to invest $3 million for its October 2016 vice
presidential debate, paid for with
private donations and cash reserves, not tuition or operating
funds, said President W. Taylor
Reveley. As in Boulder, however,
officials have warned that students most likely wont be able to
attend in person.
Its a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for our students and its
an important civic responsibility
at a national level, Reveley said.
Most host institutions see a
meaningful increase in applications and alumni engagement.
Washington University in St.
Louis will host the second presidential debate on Oct. 9, 2016.
That event will cost the university $1.95 million, paid for with
fundraising and cash reserves,
said Julie Hail Flory, a university
spokeswoman.
Nearly 50 sites inquired about
hosting a general election debate.
Janet Brown, executive director
of the non-prot Commission on
Presidential Debates, said the
commission received 16 bids.
The fact that multiple universities bid says they believe they
get something out of it, Brown
said. These are historic, exciting
events. Some universities have instituted additions to their curriculum around the debate.

USA TODAY is committed


to accuracy. To reach us,
contact Standards Editor
Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com.
Please indicate whether
youre responding to
content online or in the
newspaper.

A story in the Life section Oct. 4


about Jamie Lawsons self-titled
album should have listed a release date of Oct. 16. The date was
revised by Lawsons record label.
The British series Doc Martin is
set in a seaside town in Cornwall.
A story in the Life section on
Oct. 4 misstated the location.

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USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E3

3B

NATION/WORLD
ON POLITICS
Cooper Allen
@coopallen
USA TODAY

As the Democratic presidential


eld readied for Tuesdays rst
debate in Las Vegas as well as
Vice President Bidens decision
on whether to run Capitol Hill
was stunned Thursday when
House Majority Kevin McCarthy
announced he was dropping his
bid for House speaker. More
news from the world of politics:

ISAAC BREKKEN, GETTY IMAGES

TRUMP CAMP: HES IN IT


TO WIN IT (TO THE END)
Donald Trump sought to put
to rest any notion that his campaign would be short-lived after
earlier suggesting he would
return to the business world if his
poll numbers took a dive. Appearing on CNN, he said, Im
not going anywhere, adding, as
he often does, that he continues
to lead the Republican race.
His campaign manager, Corey
Lewandowski, took it further in
an interview with The Washington Post. One delegate or 2,000
and change, were going to the
convention, and theres nobody
who can get him out of the race,
Lewandowski told the Post.
CRUZ EYES TRUMP BACKERS
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz expressed
condence in a radio interview
that hell be the beneciary if
and when Trumps GOP candidacy zzles. I think, in time, I dont
believe Donald is going to be the
nominee, Cruz said in a WABC
radio interview.
And I think, in time, the lions
share of his supporters end up
with us. Cruz, unlike most of the
GOP presidential eld, has
largely been complimentary of
Trumps campaign.
CLINTON SEEKS TO CAPITALIZE
ON MCCARTHY INTERVIEW
The campaign of Rep. Kevin
McCarthy, R-Calif., for speaker
was damaged after he suggested in a Fox News interview that
the formation of a House committee to investigate the 2012
Benghazi attacks in Libya was in
part motivated by a desire to
undermine Hillary Clintons poll
numbers. McCarthy later walked
back those comments, but Clinton wasted little time trying use
them to her advantage.
In an ad that launched Tuesday on cable networks, the Clinton campaign seeks to paint the
McCarthy remarks as evidence
that the Benghazi probe is all
about politics. The Republicans
nally admit it, a narrator says.
Clinton is scheduled to testify
before the committee on Oct. 22.

BILL CLINTON
COMES OFF
2016 SIDELINES
Bit
player is
doing his
bit for
wifes run
at White
House
Polls show
Bill Clinton
remains
among the
most
popular
political
gures in
the USA,
particularly
among
Democrats.

Heidi M Przybyla
USA TODAY

Bill Clintons backstage role in


his wifes presidential campaign
may be coming to an end.
As a critical month for Hillary
Clintons 2016 campaign unfolds,
the former president is becoming
a more visible presence on television and on the fundraising circuit. In the past two weeks, the
42nd president has headlined at
least ve fundraisers and delivered the keynote address at a Jefferson-Jackson party dinner in
West Virginia. Last Tuesday, he
appeared on The Late Show With
Stephen Colbert, part of a series of
interviews his office says are tied
to his foundation and the Clinton
Global Initiative, an effort to nd
solutions to world challenges.
Last year, Bill Clinton told The
Denver Post that when it came to
his wifes potential political plans
he was a bit player, and whatever
she wants to do is ne by me.
Now he appears positioned to
play a greater role, especially with
fundraising. Hillary Clinton
raised just $2 million more than
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders,
her chief rival, in the past quarter.
When this is behind us, Ill be
able to do some more fundraising, the former president told

TIMOTHY A. CLARY, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

CNN last week, referring to the


Global Initiative.
Im kind of like an old horse
that they keep in the stable, the
former president told attendees
at the West Virginia annual fundraising dinner.
Hillary Clinton faces a pivotal
few weeks as she seeks to beat
back a serious challenge from
Sanders, who leads her by double
digits in New Hampshire and rivals her in Iowa polls. She also
hopes to clear the cloud of controversy over her use of a private
email server as secretary of State.
In recent weeks, she staked out
a series of positions aimed at appealing more to her partys left,
including her announcement
Wednesday that she opposes the
Trans-Pacic Partnership a
trade pact she supported while in
the Obama administration.
Shell take part in the partys
rst official debate Tuesday, hold
a series of town-hall-style forums
and face down Republicans during a hearing Oct. 22 before a spe-

The Clintons
hug after
Hillary
launched her
campaign
June 13 on
Roosevelt
Island in New
York.

cial congressional committee


investigating attacks in 2012 in
Benghazi, Libya. She also awaits a
decision by Vice President Biden
on whether hell seek the Democratic presidential nomination.
Bill Clintons re-emergence
comes as Republican Jeb Bushs
campaign weighs whether to give
the candidates brother George
W. Bush a greater role.
Its a little bit like Rocky and
Apollo Creed coming back, said
Steve McMahon, an unaligned
Democratic strategist.
Polls show Bill Clinton remains among the most popular
political gures in the USA, particularly among Democrats.
As he wades deeper into the
public sphere, the big question is
whether his contribution will be
akin to 2008, when his rhetoric
about then-senator Barack Obama may have hurt Hillary Clinton
in South Carolina, or 2012, when
he gave a rousing speech at the
Democratic convention making
the case for Obamas re-election.

Sanders success reshapes Dem debate


Some observers say
hes nudging Clinton
to the left on issues
Nicole Gaudiano
USA TODAY
WASHINGTON By the time Democratic presidential front-runner
Hillary Clinton announced last
week that she opposed a massive
12-nation trade deal, her major
campaign rival, Sen. Bernie Sanders, had been prodding her for
months to take a position.
The same was true of Clintons
statement that she opposed the
Keystone XL pipeline. Before she
revealed her position last month,
Sanders, a Vermont independent
also running for the Democratic
presidential nomination, had repeatedly asked why she hadnt
come out against the project.
The former secretary of State
and Sanders have so far avoided
attacking each other. But Sanders, a self-described democratic
socialist, hasnt missed a chance
to highlight his policy differences
with the more moderate Clinton
on progressive priorities and
drive the debate in that direction.
That approach will likely continue Tuesday during the rst

If we can have a
debate that is
very much driven
by issues and not
... gotcha
questions ... that
is (Sanders)
preference.
Strategist Tad Devine

DARREN MCCOLLESTER, GETTY IMAGES

Bernie Sanders seizes every chance to highlight his policy differences with the more moderate Democratic front-runner.
Democratic presidential debate
on CNN.
I dont see us going in there
saying, Heres the ve attacks
were going to launch today,
said Tad Devine, Sanders senior
media adviser. For him, if we can
have a debate that is very much
driven by issues and not kind of
gotcha questions or political
stuff, that would be his
preference.
Sanders has drawn thousands

of energetic supporters to his


events, surged in polls and raised
millions (mostly in small donations) by calling for a political
revolution focused on ghting
income
inequality,
climate
change, corporate greed and a
campaign nance system that he
says allows billionaires to buy
elections.
Progressives believe the publics response to Sanders message
is reshaping the Democratic

presidential debate.
If it werent for Sanders, we
wouldnt know that theres this
level of passion out there in the
Democratic base for a bold, progressive vision, said Ben Wikler,
the Washington director of MoveOn.org, which has not endorsed a
candidate. The electorate is
speaking, and Clinton is clearly
listening.
Moderate Democrats, however,
worry that the grass-roots energy
supporting Sanders liberal agenda could force Clinton and the
partys brand too far to the left
to be competitive in a general
election.
To get elected, (Clintons) going to have to be more of the middle moderate, said Sen. Joe
Manchin, D-W.Va. Im hoping
that she stays there.
A Clinton spokesman declined
to comment on Sanders impact
on the Democratic presidential
debate.
Speaking in Iowa, Clinton said
Wednesday she doesnt believe
the trade deal meets the high bar
I have set. When she announced
her opposition to the Keystone
pipeline on Sept. 22, she said the
project would hurt efforts to curb
climate change, the same view
adopted by the Democratic Partys left wing.

IN BRIEF
RUSSIAN WARPLANES
STRIKE SYRIA AGAIN
CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES

CARSON PLAYS DOWN


MURDOCH COMMENTS
Media magnate Rupert Murdoch
sparked controversy Wednesday
night after tweeting praise for
Ben Carson, with the added
observation: What about a real
black President who can properly address the racial divide?
Murdoch apologized on Twitter the next day for the apparent
insult to President Obama, and
he was defended by Carson
during a CNN interview.
Carson said of Murdoch, Hes
not a racist by any stretch of the
imagination. Hes just expressing
his opinion. When Carson was
asked whether he thought Obama was a real black president,
Carson responded, Well, hes
the president and hes black
and said the controversy was
one dealing with semantics.
Contributing: David Jackson
and Fredreka Schouten

Russian military officials said


that their warplanes destroyed
two Islamic State command centers in Syria in the past 24 hours
and that their planes also reportedly helped Syrian troops seize a
central village Saturday in erce
clashes with anti-government rebels.
The two claims, while not mutually exclusive, underscore the
complicated role Russia is playing
with its stepped-up military presence in Syria.
To avoid accidents in the skies
over Syria, U.S. defense officials,
overseeing their own coalition
campaign against Islamist militants, held a long-delayed, 90minute secure videoconference
with Russian counterparts Saturday to discuss steps to promote
safe ight operations over Syria.
The discussions were professional and focused narrowly on
the implementation of specic
safety procedures, Pentagon
press secretary Peter Cook said in
a statement. Both sides agreed to
continue the exchange of infor-

WEST BANK ERUPTS AGAIN

HAZEM BADER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

A Palestinian hurls rocks at Israeli soldiers during clashes in


Hebron following the funeral Saturday of a Palestinian man
who was killed by police.
mation in the near future.
Doug Stanglin
OFFICER RECOMMENDS
NO JAIL TIME FOR BERGDAHL

The officer in charge of Sgt.

Bowe Bergdahls Article 32 preliminary hearing has recommended that the soldier accused
of desertion avoid jail time for his
actions, according to Bergdahls
civil defense attorney.
Lt. Col. Mark Visgers report to

Gen. Robert Abrams, the head of


Army Forces Command who is in
charge of the case, also will advise
that the matter be decided at a
special court-martial, lawyer Eugene Fidell told Army Times on
Saturday, conrming reports in
other media outlets. Soldiers facing special courts-martial can receive no more than a year in jail
and no worse than a bad-conduct
discharge; punishments regarding hard labor and pay forfeiture
have similar restrictions.
Visger also recommended that
Bergdahl not face a punitive discharge for his alleged actions,
Fidell said. A memo from Bergdahls defense team to Visger regarding the report released late
Friday by Fidell to media members said the officers recommendations didnt go far enough
and requested non-judicial punishment, better known as an
Article 15, instead of a special
court-martial.
The Article 32 wrapped up
Sept. 18. Berghdal faces one desertion charge and one charge of
misbehavior before the enemy,
which could carry a life sentence.
Army Times

4B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E3

WORLD

Russian behavior in Syria looks familiar


Its denials, deception
slowed opposition
in Crimea annexation
Oren Dorell
USA TODAY

If its role in fomenting conict


in eastern Ukraine is a guide,
Russia has some new tricks in
store for Syrian rebels and their
allies.
Russias involvement in Syrias
civil war is similar in some ways
to its intervention in eastern Ukraine, where it exploited ethnic
conict, provided weapons, employed volunteers and irregular
forces and tried to deceive the
West about its intentions.
That approach is what Russias
chief of the general staff, Gen. Va-

lery Gerasimov, calls new generation warfare.


The Russian military doctrine
combines low-end, hidden state
involvement with high-end, direct, even braggadocio, superpower involvement, said Phillip
Karber, president of the Potomac
Foundation military consultancy.
Karber has briefed U.S. military
leaders on Russias military behavior in the Ukraine conict,
based on observations during
more than a dozen eld visits.
Despite evidence of direct Russian participation in the revolt by
separatists in eastern Ukraine
provided by NATO, the U.S. military, international observers and
many news outlets, Russia continues to deny it. The number of
times this question is asked will
not affect the answer that (the)
Kremlin has, Ilya Timokhov, a

Ukraine analyst at the Russian


Embassy in Washington, said in
an interview.
The role of deceit and subterfuge in the new Russian way of
war means opponents dont always know when Russia has entered a conict, how many
resources are involved or what its
goal is, Karber said.
Russias military buildup in
Syria and its rst airstrikes over a
week ago were met with confusion in the USA. Secretary of
State John Kerry called Russias
foreign minister several times to
seek clarity on Russias plans and
goals, which became clear only as
Russian strikes began hitting
U.S.-backed rebel groups ghting
the regime of Syrian President
Bashar Assad, a close Russian ally.
In February 2014, Russian soldiers appeared on the streets of

Ukraines Crimea
province
without insignia
on their uniforms, while volunteer ghters
claiming to seek
independence
seized Ukrainian
AFP/GETTY IMAGES
government
Putin: Russia
buildings
and
still a leading
held elections
nuclear power.
that the West
called illegitimate.
At rst, Russia denied that its
forces had seized the province,
but Russian President Vladimir
Putin, who presided over the annexation of Crimea, acknowledged later that Russian troops
were involved. He also made nuclear threats. Its best not to
mess with us, he told military cadets in August 2014. I want to re-

mind you that Russia is one of the


leading nuclear powers.
Russias air force put on aggressive displays along the edges
of NATO airspace during this
time. It conducted long-range patrols with its strategic bombers
for the rst time in decades,
buzzed U.S. warships and sent
ghter jets to confront NATO aircraft in the Baltics and near the
United Kingdom, Canada and
Japan.
In Ukraine, Russia launched an
organized effort to spread lies
through traditional and social
media and diplomatic channels.
Russia is pursuing a similar approach in Syria, where its diplomats say 90% of anti-Assad forces
are terrorists. Russian diplomat
Aydar Aganin told USA TODAY
all Russian strikes in Syria targeted terrorists.

U.S. STRUGGLES TO BUILD


SYRIAN GROUND FORCE
OMAR HAJ KADOUR, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Unfocused policy, unreliable allied forces


among reasons cited for failure so far
Jim Michaels
USA TODAY

The Pentagons overhaul of its


troubled program to support a
Syrian rebel force is the latest setback in the Obama administrations struggle to establish
reliable ground forces to ght the
Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.
From the start of its campaign
against the radical group more
than a year ago, the U.S. military
has said that airstrikes alone will
not defeat the militants.
President Obama has refused
to send U.S. ground forces, so
nding other reliable boots on
the ground has been essential
but so far elusive. In Iraq, the

countrys U.S.-backed armed


forces have been reluctant warriors. In Syria, the Pentagons
$500 million plan to eld a force
of moderate ghters to combat
the Islamic State, also known as
ISIL, barely got off the ground.
I remain convinced that a
lasting defeat of ISIL in Syria will
depend in part on the success of
local, motivated and capable
ground forces, Defense Secretary
Ashton Carter said Friday, in announcing a pause in the Syrian
training program.
Finding forces to take the ght
to the Islamic State is hampered
by what potential allies in the region see as a confused U.S. strategy and lack of commitment to
defeat the militants, analysts said.

Theyre not
going to commit
because we
havent
committed. Our
policy is so
muddled.
Michael Barbero, retired Army
lieutenant general and Iraq veteran

Theyre not going to commit


because we havent committed,
said Michael Barbero, a retired
Army lieutenant general who
served three tours in Iraq. Our
policy is so muddled.
Barbero said there are ways to
bolster support for ground forces
short of committing U.S. ground
troops, such as sending arms directly to Syrian and Iraqi Kurds,
who have proven to be erce

A rebel ghter res heavy artillery during clashes with government forces and pro-regime militiamen in the outskirts of
Syrias northwestern Idlib province on Sept. 18.
ghters, and boosting the number
of U.S. advisers in the region.
Until it was suspended Friday,
the Pentagon program that got
underway this year aimed to train
5,400 rebels annually. Yet only a
handful made it into Syria with
bad results. Soon after returning
to Syria, the rst group was attacked by an al-Qaeda affiliate
and dispersed. A second group
that had just entered Syria from
Turkey turned over U.S.-supplied
ammunition and vehicles to the
same group in return for safe
passage through their territory.
The Pentagon said it would redirect remaining money from the
training program to provide
weapons and equipment to rebels
already ghting the Islamic State,

particularly around its de facto


capital, Raqqa. Those groups
leaders will be vetted and trained
by U.S.-led coalition advisers in
hopes of better coordinating airstrikes with those ground forces.
In particular, the Pentagon has
identied several thousand Arab
ghters in northern Syria who
have been ghting ISIL and can
put pressure on Raqqa.
The administration said it has
drawn on lessons learned from
Syrian Kurdish forces that drove
ISIL from Kobani, a town along
the Turkish border, with the help
of coalition airstrikes. Thats exactly the kind of example that we
would like to pursue with other
groups in other parts of Syria going forward, Carter said.

Retired seniors have it


sweet in Switzerland
Helena Bachmann
Special for USA TODAY

Despite Switzerlands
notoriously high cost of living, retirees here have it sweet.
Thats because the practical
Swiss have developed a pension
program that allows retirees to
build up a healthy nest egg to
maintain a comfortable standard
of living as they grow older.
The pension program helps explain why Swiss seniors about
24% of the countrys population
enjoy the worlds best retirement, according to a new Global
AgeWatch Index that rates the
quality of life of older citizens in
96 countries.
One typical retiree, Christiane
Blattner, 68, worked 44 years as
GENEVA

an administrative assistant until


she retired in 2011. Blattner gets
$5,000 a month in social security
and pension benets enough to
live comfortably in a two-bedroom apartment she owns in a
small town near Geneva.
Her monthly income is nearly
double that of American retirees
with multiple retirement income.
They average $2,640 a month, according to a recent AARP Public
Policy Institute analysis.
Many U.S. retirees struggle to
make ends meet and rank ninth
in the Global AgeWatch study,
which compiles data from the
United Nations, World Bank,
World Health Organization and
other agencies.
An AARP analysis of the ndings blames nancial difficulties
among U.S. seniors, who make up

Best nations
for retirees
1 Switzerland (3)
2 Norway (1)
3 Sweden (2)
4 Germany (5)
5 Canada (4)
6 Netherlands (6)
7 Iceland (7)
8 Japan (9)
9 USA (8)
10 UK
Source GlobalAgeWatch
Note 2014 rank in parentheses

20% of the countrys population,


on modest benets provided by
the Social Security program.
About one-third of U.S. households live solely on Social Securi-

The Swiss get scenic views along with comfortable retirements.


ty, but that is not the case in
Switzerland. By law, each workers retirement fund must consist
of contributions from a state-run
pension plan, in addition to the
pension from employers and taxfree personal savings similar to
IRA accounts in the U.S.
This combination of funds
means that when workers retire

they receive a relatively high percentage of their former salary


through the pension plan. An average retiree who worked his
whole adult life gets a monthly
payment of about $1,750 several hundred dollars more than the
average U.S. Social Security benet plus payouts from the other
mandatory income sources.

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E3

Aleppo

Al Tabqa

Hama

sites
lost in
Islamic States
war on history
Homs

SYRIA
R

Tikrit
Haditha
Hadiiitha
ha

Palmyra

IRAN

Fallujah

Damascus
D

Baghdad

IRAQ
Kut
K t
Najaf
Na

Samawah
aw
wa

KUWAIT
KUWA
KU
WAIIT
WA
IT

Wars in Syria and Iraq have cost thousands of lives and immeasurable human suffering.
But the conicts are also the scene of another type of outrage: The destruction of ancient
monuments and artifacts by the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS. A few examples:

SYRIA

1 Temple of

IRAQ

Baalshamin

These photos show the temple before and after its


destruction. Built in the first century, it was one of the
best-known buildings in Palmyra.

1 Arch of

ISIL militants dismantle a frieze in the ancient Iraqi city of


Nimrud, which contains Assyrian ruins from the 13th century B.C.
This is from an Islamic State video in March.

2 Nimrud

Triumph

The arch, dating back


to Roman times, was a
significant monument
in Palmyra. It was
destroyed in October.
It was known as the
Bridge of the Desert
because it linked the
Roman Empire to
Persia.

1 Temple
of Bel

5B

5 Hatra
Islamic State
fighters used
sledgehammers to
knock stone
images like
this from the
walls of this
ancient city.

Satellite images show the 2,000-year-old Temple of Bel before


and after it was dynamited by Islamic State militants in
August. The temple contained a blend of ancient Near
Eastern and Greco-Roman architecture.

4 Apamea
Columns from the Roman
ruins in the ancient trade city
of Apamea, where Islamic
State has reportedly removed
mosaics and sold them to
collectors. Temples in the city
could be the next targets for
destruction.

WHAT IS
ISLAMIC
STATE?
Islamic State, formerly known as the Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant, is an Islamist
extremist group that wants to establish an
independent Islamic nation in the Middle East.
It was part of Osama bin Ladens al-Qaeda
before breaking away in 2014. Its known for
brutal actions, including beheadings, mass
killings and abductions.

3 Mosul

Iraqis inspect the historic grave of the biblical prophet Jonah in


Mosul after it was destroyed by Islamic State in July 2014.

WHY TEAR DOWN


MONUMENTS?
Islamic State says its destruction of artifacts and monuments are justified by their
strict version of Islam, which
forbids worship of false idols.
The destruction also eradicates links to the past and
increases ISILs influence by
provoking Western outrage.
ISIL is also believed to be
looting and selling valuable
artifacts to fund its terrorist
activities.

Sources USA TODAY research; National Geographic; UNESCO World Heritage Center; U.S. State Department; Photos Getty Images, AFP
GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY

WHATS
BEING
LOST?
Much of whats being destroyed dates back
centuries. Syria has six UNESCO World Heritage
sites, some as old as 3100 B.C. Archaeologists say
the region holds an irreplaceable record of human
history that helps us understand how civilization
evolved and expanded across the Middle East.

6B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E3

MONEY
Black engineers join
forces to boost diversity

MONEYLINE

Beth Belton
@bethbelton
USA TODAY

BUSINESS SURVEILLANCE
TWITTER LAYOFFS IN THE AIR
In a nutshell: Twitter is planning
layoffs this week, according to
technology news outlet Re/code.
The cuts will be made companywide, Re/code said. Were not
commenting on rumor and speculation, Twitter spokesman Jim
Prosser told our Jessica Guynn.
The fallout: Twitter had 4,200
employees at the end of June.
Thats more than double the
2,000 employees it had in the
second quarter of 2013. Yet its
user growth has not kept pace.
The layoffs would come one
week after Twitter co-founder
Jack Dorsey was appointed CEO.
He had been serving as interim
CEO since July 1.
More fallout: Twitter has also
apparently shelved plans to
expand into a building on Market Street in San Francisco that is
home to Uber and Square. According to the San Francisco
Business Times, Twitter was close
to nalizing the deal to take
about 100,000 square feet before abandoning the deal.
ON THE FRONT BURNER
DELL-ICIOUS TECH DEAL
EMC shares rose 4% in afterhours trading on Friday on a
report from technology news
outlet Re/code that Dell is offering $27.25 a share in cash and
a tracking stock in VMware. The
Wall Street Journal pegged the
per-share price in the low $30s.
That would mean a total price
tag of $60 billion and make it the
largest tech deal ever, Guynn
writes. VMware is the successful
cloud software company thats
80% owned by EMC. The tracking
stock would follow the 20% of
VMware that EMC does not own.
The bulk of the offer will be in
cash, but Dell is planning to use
equity in VMware to help pay for
the acquisition of EMC, people
familiar with the matter told
Reuters on Friday. CNBC said a
deal could come early this week.
IN THE HOT SEAT
TESLA STOCK SPUTTERS
Shares of Tesla Motors plunged
almost 11% last week to $220.69,
posting their worst weekly
percentage drop in more than a
year. Behind the drop: Several
Wall Street analysts said they
have concerns about the stocks
future pricing. Three analysts cut

/DEV/COLOR

Social events give black engineers a rare opportunity to mingle.

The lonely monoculture of


Silicon Valley led one man to
turn talent into role models
Jessica Guynn
USA TODAY

Makinde Adeagbo knows how isolating it can be


to live and work in Silicon Valley
as an African American. He says
its even more isolating to be a
software engineer here.
Adeagbo, who works for Pinterest, says he can go weeks without spotting another black
engineer in Americas tech hub.
Its not only that you are the
only black person in the room or
in the company, says Adeagbo,
30. Oftentimes you are the only
black person you see in Palo Alto
or Menlo Park.
About 1% of engineers at Facebook and Google are AfricanAmerican. The population of Palo
Alto, Calif., is 2% African-American; Menlo Park, Calif., is under
5%.
Over the summer, Adeagbo
founded /dev/color, a non-prot
for African-American engineers
that officially launched last week.
The group brings together engineers from top companies such
as Facebook, Uber and Airbnb to
provide support and a voice to
African Americans and give them
the opportunity to raise up the
next generation, Adeagbo says.
Adeagbo says he hit on the idea
while volunteering as a mentor to
a couple of computer science
students.
These students knew they had
someone who had their backs,
whom they could look up to and
reach out to when they needed
SAN FRANCISCO

help. I thought to myself: Every


black software engineer could accomplish a lot if they had someone like this, says Adeagbo.
The name /dev/color is a reference to a common directory on
computer systems as well as our
efforts to strengthen the community of black software engineers,
engineers of color, he says.
Adeagbos /dev/color is joining
Black Girls Code, Code 2040 and
the Hidden Genius Project, a new
and growing wave of enterprising
organizations founded by African
Americans aimed at addressing
the scarcity of African Americans
in the tech industry.
The challenge is daunting:
Only 1% of venture-capitalbacked start-ups are led by African Americans and fewer than
1% of general partners at major
venture capital rms in Silicon
Valley the ones that back tomorrows Facebooks and Googles
are African-American.
The high-tech industrys diversity problem is being met with a
growing sense of urgency. The
predominantly white male industry runs the risk of losing touch
with a diverse nation and world
that forms its customer base.
We are a community that
helps one another, and part of
that is that younger people get to
see these role models: black software engineers who are getting
into management or trying to
start their own companies or are
becoming real experts in their
technical domain, Adeagbo says
of /dev/color.
The group has held reside

AWARA ADEAGBO

Makinde Adeagbos non-prot


/dev/color launched last week.
chats with tech pioneer Ken
Coleman and Facebooks chief
technology
officer,
Mike
Schroepfer, and plans more in the
coming months.
To help make a concrete difference in members lives, /dev/color matches each member with
another to offer guidance and set
goals. In an online community,
members pick up the skills and
connections needed to advance in

ents nurtured his interest in science and math, sending him to


every summer program they
could nd. Academic programs
helped him prepare for college. At
the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, he homed in on software engineering.
What always blew me away
with mechanical engineering is
that if you wanted to build a new
car, it takes millions in capital,
but if you want to write software
to compete with Excel, you have
access to the same tools as Microsoft does, Adeagbo says. Its
empowering.
During summer, he landed internships at Microsoft and Apple.
He says he rarely saw any other
African Americans. At Microsoft,
he was the only African American
on a 100-person team.
His rst job out of college was
at Facebook when it had about
300 employees. One of his rst
assignments: work on the popular social networks frequent service outages.
Adeagbo says he was drawn to
solving big problems in the tech
industry and beyond, in search of
ways to make peoples lives tan-

They are not just talking about


the problem. They are acting.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson

the tech industry. Social events


give African-American engineers
a rare opportunity to mingle.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson, whose
Rainbow PUSH Coalition has
urged the tech industry to take
meaningful steps to close the racial gap, commends the effort.
They are not just talking
about the problem. They are acting, he says.
Its in Adeagbos nature to take
action.
Born in Nigeria and raised in
Louisville, Adeagbo says his par-

gibly better, working on software


for schools in Kenya and coaching track in East Palo Alto, Calif.
Currently dev/color has 20
members. Among them is Aston
Motes of Dropbox, who was
Adeagbos freshman roommate at
MIT. Motes says /dev/color has
ambitions to reach engineers
worldwide and give them a place
to start, and stay, in the industry.
Kind of bold, but I think we
can create an organization that
can eventually be home to engineers of all career levels, he says.

JASPER JUINEN, BLOOMBERG

their price target for the electriccar maker and a fourth wrote
hes worried about the stock as
he began coverage of it. Also,
famed short seller Jim Chanos
told The Wall Street Journal that
the manufacturer, whose cars
start out at $75,000, is still far
from being a mass-market
automaker. Tesla has risen
dramatically the past two years,
rocketing 557% during 2013 and
2014, well outpacing the Standard & Poors 500s 44% gain
during the same period. The
shares are roughly at this year.

Human touch
When managing an investment
portfolio, I would prefer a ...

Financial adviser

66%

Computer
algorithm

34%

Source Charles Schwab survey


of 1,808 adults
JAE YANG AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

Quirky moves toward bankruptcy sale


Everything from the incubator companys
patents to its domain name must go
Marco della Cava
@marcodellacava
USA TODAY

Quirky once
the Webs invention-creation darling has retained a rm to help
monetize its remaining assets as
the company prepares for bankruptcy.
Those assets include active and
pending patent applications, U.S.
and foreign registered trademarks, the Quirky inventor platform, 130 registered domains
including Quirky.com, and product inventory and proprietary
software.
In a release, intellectual property consultant Hilco Streambank notes that as of September
30, 2015, Quirkys product line
consists of over 240 SKUs (products) in a variety of industry categories from small appliances to
power supply devices and productivity gadgets. The bid deadline is Nov. 12 with an auction set
for Nov. 17. As yet it remains unclear what will happen to unproduced inventions or remaining
SAN FRANCISCO

royalty payments due creators.


Things werent supposed to
end this way for Quirky, which invited inventors to submit ideas
that were then voted on by the
Quirky community. Each week,
three top vote-getters got backing
to realize and then sell their inventions on the site. Community
members who suggested tweaks
that were then implemented into
the product got a cut of sales.
Call it the democratization of
product creation, giving the people what they want and not what
theyre told to buy.
But in the end, the cost of such
a business exceeded what it took
in. Reports surfaced often of investments that didnt pan out,
such as a fog-free shower mirror
and a device that could turn any
object into a remote-control car.
Developing such gadgets alone
cost Quirky nearly $1 million, yet
neither wound up being sold, according to The Verge.
Earlier this year, Quirky shifted its strategy to invention partnerships with companies such as
audio giant Harmon-Kardon and
toymaker Mattel.

CNBC VIA GETTY IMAGES

Founder Ben Kaufman, 28,


has been a serial entrepreneur since his teens.

Quirky was the


democratization
of product
creation, giving
the people what
they want and not
what theyre told
to buy.

Started by New Yorker Ben


Kaufman when he was 22,
6-year-old Quirky initially looked
to typify a new breed of crowdsourced-based Internet enterprises. Kaufmans passion for the
idea translated into $185 million
in funding from top-tier venture
capital rms such as Andreessen
Horowitz and Kleiner Perkins
Caueld & Byers, as well as pop
culture plaudits in the form of appearances on The Tonight Show
and a spotlight in Fortune as one
of the countrys most promising
companies. The Sundance Channel even created an eponymous
series about the company.
This past summer, the company had around $12 million in cash
left and was actively seeking further investment, which never surfaced. Quirky is survived by
Wink, maker of $50 Internet of
Things home automation hubs.
Late last month, Quirky reported
that it had a $15 million bid for
Wink from California-based supply chain company Flextronics.
Although Quirky may be dead,
dont count out Kaufman, now
28. Hes been an inventor and entrepreneur since his teens, and
while in college started Mophie,
now a well-known purveyor of
iPhone charging cases.

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E3

7B

RETIREMENT

MEDICARE PART B
PREMIUMS

Robert Powell
Special for USA TODAY

or seven in 10 Medicare
beneciaries
2016 will be much like
2015. They will pay
$104.90 per month
for their Medicare
Part B premium just
as in 2015.
But 2016 might not be anything like 2015 for about 30% of
Medicare beneciaries roughly
7 million Americans. Thats because premiums for individuals
could increase a jaw-dropping
52% to $159.30 per month. And
for individuals whose incomes
exceed $85,000, premiums could
end up ranging from $223.00 to
$509.80 per month.
What gives? Blame the hold
harmless provision in the law
that addresses cost-of-living adjustments (COLA) for Social Security benets. That law limits
the dollar increase in the premium to the dollar increase in an individuals Social Security benet,
according to a report by Alicia
Munnell of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.
The consumer price index
(CPI) is not likely to increase in
the period used to determine the
COLA for 2016. That means its
very likely that Social Security recipients for just the third time
since automatic adjustments
started in 1975 will not see an
increase in their benet, according to Munnells report.
NO COLA MEANS
NO PREMIUM INCREASE

Or at least thats the case for 70%


of Medicare beneciaries who are
collecting Social Security and
dont pay an income-related higher Medicare Part B premium, says
Mark Lumia, founder and CEO of
True Wealth Group in Lady Lake,
Fla., and author of Thinking Outside the Money Box.
As for the remaining 30% of
beneciaries, they have to cover
the difference. Part B premiums
for other beneciaries must be

value of delaying Social Security


is far more benecial than the
squeeze from hold harmless, he
says.
uBeneciaries who are directly
billed for their Part B premium.

If youre already getting Social


Security benets, request to have
your Part B premium deducted
from your Social Security check
ASAP; you should still have time
to be eligible for hold harmless,
Kitces says.

TO RISE 52%

uEnrollees who pay an incomerelated higher premium.

FOR 7 MILLION

It is critically important for


folks to review the Social Security
notice of 2016 Medicare B premiums that will be in mailboxes later this fall, says Katy Votava,
president of Goodcare.com in
Rochester, N.Y. Its not uncommon for people to qualify for a
decrease because their income
drops to a lower bracket as a result of specic life-changing
events. The problem, Votava
says, is that Social Security
doesnt know about those events
unless the person noties the
agency.
For those whose incomes are
still above the thresholds: Unfortunately, youre stuck here,
Kitces says. If possible, get your
2015 income below the line, so
that at least if hold harmless kicks
in again ... you can benet slightly
from the second time it ows
through.

ISTOCK

raised enough to offset premiums


forgone due to the hold harmless
provision, Lumia says.
Medicare Part B covers lab
tests, surgeries and doctor visits.

B for the rst time in 2016.

Enroll earlier if youre already


65 and otherwise eligible, says
Michael Kitces, publisher and author of the Nerds Eye
View blog. If youre not
eligible now, Im afraid
youre stuck.

WHO MUST PAY THE HIGHER


MEDICARE PART B PREMIUM?

This group includes individuals


who enroll in Part B for the rst
time in 2016; enrollees who do
not receive a Social Security benet; beneciaries who are directly
billed for their Part B premium;
current enrollees who pay an income-related higher premium;
and dual Medicare-Medicaid beneciaries, whose premiums are
paid by state Medicaid programs.
What might you do or consider
if youre among those who have to
pay the higher premium?

INCOME LIMITS, MEDICARE PART B PREMIUMS FOR 2016

Married

2015

20161

20162

$85,000
or less

$170,000
or less

$104.90

$104.90

$159.30

$85,001
to $107,000

$170,001
to $214,000

$146.90

$107,001
to $160,000

$214,001
to $320,000

$209.80

---

$318.60

$160,001
to $214,000

$320,001
to $428,000

$272.70

---

$414.20

Above
$214,000

Above
$428,000

$335.70

---

$509.80

---

$223.00

1 Held harmless; 2 Not held harmless


Note Premiums are based on your modied adjusted gross income as reported
on your IRS tax return from two years ago, or 2014 for 2016 premiums
Source Medicare.gov and Center for Retirement Research at Boston College
GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY

Since your Medicare


premiums are being paid
by the state at this point,
it doesnt effectively matter whether hold harmless applies for you or
not, as to the extent
higher premiums occur,
they will be paid by the
state anyway, Kitces
says. Not surprisingly, I
believe there are some
states who are not so
happy about this.

uEnrollees who do not


receive a Social Security benet.

uIndividuals who enroll in Part

Single

uDual Medicare-Medicaid
beneciaries, whose full premiums are paid by state
Medicaid programs.

WITHOUT
A COST
OF LIVING
ADJUSTMENT,
MOST FOLKS
GET A BREAK,
BUT THESE
ENROLLEES
MUST PICK
UP THE TAB

Those who are already on Medicare or


could apply immediately
and who were going to Michael
start Social Security Kitces
benets in the next year
or so might consider applying right now instead,
Kitces says.
Those who le in the
BACK TO NORMAL
coming weeks should be
In a few years, Kitces
able to get both Social
says, when CPI presumSecurity benets and
ably does increase again
Medicare in November
and Social Security beneand December, which
ts rise, the excess preCONAN SEGREST
are the two months used
miums on the 30%
for measuring, and Mark Lumia
essentially
unwind
therefore make themthemselves.
selves eligible, he says.
Thats why Medicare
If you are among
premiums dropped in
those considering differ2013 after being up in
ent Social Security
2011 and 2012 the last
time this hold harmless
claiming strategies
scenario played out, he
such as le-and-sussays. Which means,
pend, restricted applicaagain, if you werent gotion and delay to age 70
ing to start Social Securi theres no getting
ty and/or Medicare for
around it. Youll have to
several years anyway,
do cost-benet analysis Katy Votava
this is a non-issue. Its
to see if the benet of
the strategy is greater than the just those who would have startcost of the increased Medicare ed both, and soon, who may wish
to accelerate claiming to try to
Part B premium.
In the long run, Kitces says, get in under the wire.
those who anticipate living a long
time and who will benet from Powell is editor of Retirement Weekly.
delaying Social Security by sever- Got questions? Email him at:
rpowell@allthingsretirement.com.
al years should still delay. The

Social Security COLAs had humble $22.54 start


Lisa Kiplinger
USA TODAY

Ida May Fuller, Social Securitys rst monthly beneciary, got


a check for $22.54 in January
1940. For Fuller, and millions
of other beneciaries, their
rst check
would be what
they could
expect to get
for life.
It wasnt
AARP
until 1950 that
Deb WhitCongress rst
man of AARP legislated an
increase in
benets. Fuller, for example, saw
her check jump to $41.30.
For decades, benets rose
only when Congress enacted
special legislation. It wasnt
until 1975 that automatic annual cost-of-living allowances
(COLAs) kicked in. AARP Chief
Public Policy Officer Debra
Whitman answers some frequently asked questions on how
they work.

First of all, do you pronounce the acronym cola or C-O-L-A?

A: Cola.

Why do we have it?

A: Social Security benets


are modest, and ination can
quickly erode their purchasing
power. The Social Security costof-living adjustment (COLA)
helps Social Security beneciaries bridge the gap between the
benets they receive and higher
costs of living, including the
rising cost of prescriptions and
utilities.

COLAS OVER THE YEARS


Since 1975, Social Security
benet increases have been tied
to the Consumer Price Index
for Urban Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers (CPI-W).
15%

Q A: COLAs currently understate the cost of living for the

1980: 14.3%

How is it calculated?

elderly, because they are based


on increases in the Consumer
Price Index for Urban Wage
Earners and Clerical Workers
(CPI-W), which only measures
the spending of families who
make most of their income from
wage earners or clerical workers.
It excludes families whose main
sources of income are pensions
and Social Security. Retired
families have different spending
patterns than people who are
still working most notably
they tend to spend more on
health care, where prices have
consistently risen faster than
overall ination. So COLAs calculated using the CPI-W do not
necessarily reect how ination
affects Social Security recipients.

10%

8%
1.7%

FILE PHOTO

Ida May Fuller was the rst


Social Security recipient of a
recurring monthly payment
(beginning Jan. 31, 1940).

Q
A: The U.S. Bureau of Labor

How would AARP rather


see it be calculated?

Statistics has constructed another index that more accurately


reects the consumption of
people 62 and older, known as
the Experimental Price Index for
the Elderly (CPI-E). This index
shows that the rate of ination
for those 62 and older has been
higher than the rate measured by
either the CPI-W or other indexes in most years.

5%

2009-10: 0%
1975

How big a deal is it, considering last years increase amounted to about $22
a month for the average
recipient?

A: About half of Social Securitys


59 million beneciaries depend
on their benets for half or
more of their families retirement incomes.
So a COLA makes a tremendous difference in the lives of
Americans as many prices continue to rise.
Older Americans use a disproportionate number of prescription medications, with
many taking multiple drugs on a
regular basis. With skyrocketing
drug prices, older adults will
spend an even higher percentage of their retirement income
on their prescription drugs if
there is no COLA.

2014

Note Payment changes kick in at the


start of the new year following the
COLA announcement.
Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
KARL GELLES, USA TODAY

Q
A: On Oct. 15, the Social Security
When will the COLA for
2016 be announced?

Administration will make an announcement on the COLA for


next year. Any new COLA would
affect benets starting Jan. 1, 2016.

Whats the bottom line for


Social Security recipients
in 2016?

A: The annual COLA helps ensure that the value of Social


Security benets does not erode
over time due to ination. It can
help the millions of Americans
who rely on Social Security to
pay their bills as prices rise.
Retirement benets are modest
on average, $15,624 per year
and every dollar counts.

8B

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E3

TRENDING

MEGA-PHARMACIES
DIAGNOSE, TREAT

ON CAMPUS
LOOKALIKE LEADER
When Kim Jong Un isnt preoccupied with his role as supreme
leader of North Korea, he likes to
take seles on the street, shoot
some hoops and barhop for a
good time on the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
campus. Minyong Kim, also
known as Dragon, is an international student studying international business at the University
of Illinois. He also likes to impersonate the supreme leader of
the Democratic Peoples Republic
of Korea and its gained him
ardent admirers on campus.
The college life is very hard and
stressful, Kim says. If people
can laugh for a while, for 10
seconds, Ill be happy with it.

WALBERT CASTILLO, USA TODAY COLLEGE

Kim Jong Un impersonator


Dragon Kim, gets his signature haircut at Juno Hair.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO

HUMANITARIAN UC

The corner drugstore evolves as a one-stop-shop: Its a


clinic, lab, cloud-based database and, yes, it has drugs

The New York Times Upshot blog


this month placed University of
California schools at the top of
its ranking for colleges that do
the most for low-income students. Of the top seven schools
on the list, UC schools occupied
six of the spots, with the University of California-Irvine at No. 1.
The University of California was
set up specically to be a place
that would educate the masses.
They accept vastly more community college transfers than other
agship state universities. Community college is often where
low-income kids start, Upshot
editor David Leonhardt said.

Drugstores have evolved since the days of lling


prescriptions
and selling aspirin. Todays neighSpecial for USA TODAY
borhood pharmacy chains such as CVS, Rite Aid
and Walgreens are taking on a bigger role by offering more comprehensive services to help consumers manage their health.
Linda Childers

GOPS MIXED MESSAGE


The University of ColoradoBoulder will be the site of the
Oct. 28 GOP debate. But of
11,000 seats available at the
venue, Coors Event Center, only
50 seats will be available to
students. It really feels like they
dont feel like our vote or input is
important at all, says University
of Colorado student William
Raley. A place is not just a
physical location. If youre going
to come to a college campus ...
you have to engage and
represent the community.

USA TODAY COLLEGE

Sarah Porath sorts donations.

nia, Michigan, Illinois, Washington and


Colorado.
For acute conditions that arent
emergencies and dont require a physical exam, consumers can consult virtually with MDLIVE board-certied
physicians (the fee is $49), who can eprescribe medications if necessary.
The program is accessed through the
Walgreens mobile app and Walgreens
website on desktop and tablets.

A MINUTE FOR YOUR HEALTH

AN EASIER BLOOD TEST

In June, CVS announced it was partnering with the U.S. Department of


Health and Human Services (HHS) to
put a health information tool on CVS
minuteclinic.com sites to provide recommendations on preventive health
services based on age and gender.
Many of the preventive services including cholesterol and blood pressure
checks, wellness screenings and vaccinations are available at CVS MinuteClinics, the pharmacys walk-in medical
clinics staffed by nurse practitioners and
physician assistants who specialize in
family care.
There are nearly 1,000 such clinics in
31 states and the District of Columbia,
says CVS spokesman Brent Burkhardt,
adding that CVS expects to add 100 new
clinics this fall, with plans calling for
1,500 clinics nationwide by 2017.
MinuteClinic is open seven days a
week, including weekday evenings, and
no appointment is necessary, Burkhardt says.
The clinics, which also treat minor injuries and illnesses, are an attractive option for consumers who have high
insurance deductibles or who dont have
an established physician, Burkhardt
says. Approximately 50% of our customers dont have a primary care
physician.
The MinuteClinic staff is also available to help patients with diabetes management, smoking cessation and
weight-loss management.

If youve ever put off getting a blood test Relying on cloud-based telemedicine
because of big needles, Walgreens is of- software, Rite Aid provides a high-tech
fering an alternative in some stores. The consultation service in 25 of its Ohio
pharmacy chain
pharmacies through its
recently
partnew walk-in HealthSpot kinered with Therosks.
BEST YEARS
anos, a Palo Alto,
HealthSpot allows users
MAGAZINE
Calif.-based comto interact with nationally
recognized providers in a
pany that is
Find this story and more in
changing the way
private, 40-square-foot staUSA TODAYs BEST YEARS
lab tests are
tion using high-denition
magazine, available now
conducted.
videoconferencing and inon newsstands and at
Theranos
teractive medical devices
onlinestore.usatoday.com.
gives consumers
such as a stethoscope, pulse
access to highoximeter and otoscope,
quality, less invasays
Kristin
Kellum,
sive and more affordable lab testing us- spokeswoman for Rite Aid. Customers
ing blood samples as small as a single ages 3 and older can be treated for midrop taken with a tiny nger stick or a nor health conditions, including cold
micro-sample taken from traditional and u, rashes and skin conditions, earmethods, says Walgreens spokesman aches and seasonal allergies.
Rite Aid also operates RediClinics in
James Cohn. Test results are often
available in less than 24 hours.
the greater Baltimore/Washington, D.C.,
Theranos Wellness Centers are in 40 region, Philadelphia and Seattle marWalgreens stores in the Phoenix area kets, and select cities in Texas.
Clinic patients can be treated for
and one location in Palo Alto. We do
have plans for a broader rollout; howev- non-urgent medical conditions, and clier, we are still in the very early stages of nicians are able to write prescriptions
this program, and along with Theranos, when appropriate, Kellum says. Rediwere continuing to evaluate next steps, Clinics also provide screenings, medical
Cohn says.
tests, immunizations and basic physical
Walgreens also runs a telehealth pro- exams, as well as our weight/lifestyle
gram, available in several states. In col- management program.
Consumers can consult with pharlaboration with telemedicine provider
MDLIVE, the program offers round- macists on medications, immunization
the-clock remote access to a network of needs and Medicare Part D questions,
U.S. board-certied doctors in Califor- Kellum says.

CLOUD CONSULTATIONS

A WARM, FUZZY EFFORT


Mismatched socks might be an
annoyance, but three University
of Nebraska-Lincoln students
seek them out. Put a Sock in It, a
non-prot started by sophomores Tayler Sundermann, Sarah Porath and Josie Jensen, all
19, takes the worlds lonely socks,
making them whole and giving
them back to the community,
according to its website. Unwanted socks collected from 85
bins around campus are
washed and paired with their
closest matches before being
distributed to centers in Nebraska that help the homeless.

Irans detention of journalist absurd

DOING THE MATH

Its a bleak benchmark indeed.


As of Friday,
Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian had spent 444 days in
captivity in Iran. Thats the number of days the American hostages were held by the Iranians.
Rezaians crime? Doing his job.
Hopes that Rezaians detention
might at last come to an end escalated after the U.S. and Iran
reached an agreement in July
aimed at preventing the latter
from building nuclear weapons.
But nearly three months later,
there have been no signs of progress, and the journalist remains
in the brutal Evin prison in
northwestern Tehran.
Rezaians incarceration is an

A degree in applied mathematics combines classes on general


mathematics with models and
formulas used in elds of engineering, science, medicine and
business. College Factual has
ranked colleges based on their
overall quality for applied mathematics programs that challenge students and prepare
graduates to become leaders in
their eld. Its top schools are:
uBrown University
uHarvard University
uStony Brook University
uBryant University
uColumbia University
Compiled by Kristen Rein. Read more
at college.usatoday.com.

Post reporter has


been held as long
as 1979-81 hostages
Rem Rieder
@remrieder
USA TODAY

MEDIA

outrageous act by the Iranians,


one that does little to inspire condence in a nation that has long
been at odds with the U.S.
Iran claims that Rezaian, who
holds dual U.S.-Iranian citizenship, is a spy. The scant evidence
it has cited is laughable.
Rezaian was held for a long
time without being charged. Ultimately accused of espionage, he
was tried behind closed doors.
When proceedings ended Aug. 10,
expectations were that a verdict
would soon follow. Rezaians
mother told the Post he was
steeling himself to the cases
denouement. Since then, nothing.
President Obama has said he
has been working to secure
Rezaians freedom, but efforts
have been fruitless.
The Post commendably has
campaigned vigorously for the
journalists release, doing whatever it can to keep the reprehensible episode in the public eye
and make sure its correspondent
isnt forgotten. In July, the newspaper petitioned the United Nations Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention to come to
Rezaians aid.
United Nations human rights
officials have assailed Irans treatment of the journalist and called

for his release. But he remains


locked up.
The arrest, detention and secret trial of Mr. Rezaian violate
his rights and intimidate all those
working in the media in Iran, the
Post quoted David Kaye, the U.N.
special rapporteur for promoting
freedom of opinion and expression, as saying.
His continued
detention violates basic rules
that not only
aim to protect
journalists, bloggers,
human
rights activists
and others, but
AFP/GETTY IMAGES
to
guarantee evJason Rezaian
eryones right to
information.
As Fridays dark watershed approached, Post Executive Editor
Martin Baron renewed his call for
Iran to at last do the right thing
and free the journalist.
We again call on Iran to release Jason without further delay, Baron said. Jason has been
subjected to a secret, sham trial,
solitary connement, relentless
interrogations, physical mistreatment and psychological abuse. ...
That he has been imprisoned as
long as those taken during the

hostage crisis decades ago should


be cause for shame and outrage.
It has never been clear why
Iran decided to keep Rezaian in
jail. The reporter was arrested
with his wife, journalist Yeganeh
Salehi, and two others on July 22,
2014. But the others were soon
freed. There has been speculation
that Rezaians detention has
something to do with a power
struggle between hard-liners and
moderates. But this is, after all,
Iran. No one really knows.
And while Rezaian has the dubious honor of having been imprisoned in Iran longer than any
Western journalist, harsh treatment of reporters is hardly unusual there. The Committee to
Protect Journalists ranks Iran
No. 7 among the most censored
countries, and says it uses mass
and arbitrary detention as a
means of silencing dissent.
Last month, Iranian President
Hassan Rouhani suggested that
Iran might release Rezaian and
two other Americans held in Iran
if the U.S freed Iranian prisoners
in this country.
Jason Rezaian is no bargaining
chip. Hes a journalist locked up
for doing journalism. Its well
past time for Iran to release him
unconditionally.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

SundaySports
y p

Read more coverage of the Oregon Ducks and


Oregon State Beavers football games, and see
photo galleries, at statesmanjournal.com/sports.

ARIZONA 44, OREGON STATE 7

QB Solomon returns,
Arizona routs Beavers
Bob Baum
Associated Press

TUCSON, Ariz. Anu Solomon was


back. So was the Arizona offense.
The Wildcats even played some defense, too.
Solomon returned from a one-game
absence, the Arizona defense bounced
back from two awful performances and
the result was a 44-7 rout of Oregon State
on Saturday.
The redshirt sophomore and secondyear starter, who sat out last weeks 55-17
loss at Stanford because of a concussion,
completed 17 of 30 passes for 276 yards,
before sitting out the fourth quarter.
He was probably a little bit rusty at
times but I thought he saw the field pretty well, Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez

said.
The Wildcats (4-2, 1-2 Pac-12) amassed
645 yards to 249 for the Beavers (2-3,
0-2).
What Solomon thought of his performance wasnt known because he was not
made available to reporters following
the game. A team spokesman said the
quarterback had to go to the training
room.
Arizona rushed for 368 yards. Jared
Baker led the way with 123, 70 on one
play. Freshman Orlando Bradford
gained 83 yards and scored three touchdowns. Nick Wilson, the Pac-12s leading
rusher entering the weekend, ran for 78
and scored twice.
I was excited, the third-stringer
See BEAVERS, Page 4C

CASEY SAPIO/USA TODAY SPORTS

Arizona quarterback Anu Solomon passes the


ball during the second quarter against
Oregon State at Arizona Stadium.

WASHINGTON STATE 45, OREGON 38 (2OT)

DUCKS CLAWED

RYAN KANG/AP

Washington State wide receiver Dom Williams celebrates with a teammate after scoring a touchdown during the second half Saturday
against Oregon in Eugene, Ore.

Oregon blows late lead, losses to Cougars in 2 OT

2015

EUGENE This loss hurts, even


more than the Utah loss two weeks ago.
Oregon had a 10-point lead with four
minutes left in regulation Saturday at
home against Washington State.
The final: Washington State 45, Oregon 38, in double overtime.
Pete Martini
Its difficult to see how the Ducks
OREGON DUCKS
can pick themselves up after this one.
With a 3-3 record, even making a
bowl game seems like it could be a struggle at this point.
The final two drives for Washington State in the fourth
quarter wiped out what had been a pretty good game by Oregons defense. In fact, that was going to be my focus.
But then it all came crashing down.
Luke Falk finished with 505 yards and five touchdowns on
74 passing attempts for the Cougars. He was tough late in the
game, and his 8-yard touchdown pass with one second left
tied the game at 31-31 and forced overtime.
On the game-tying drive, the Cougars converted a thirdand-21, a third-and-11 and a third-and-12.
That part of it was extremely disappointing, Oregon
coach Mark Helfrich said about squandering the late 10-point
lead. Again, we had some chances to end the game.
This loss is not solely on the defense.

The Ducks offense had three-and-outs on their final two


drives of the fourth quarter. If they could have picked up one
first down on either drive, they likely win the game.
On offense, we had some plays there that, you know, coulda, woulda, shoulda type of deal to extend a drive and not allow them to have another possession, Helfrich said. I
thought our pass rush was really good, and they made some
plays. Thats very frustrating when you know youre extremely close to finishing out, and you need to finish it.
It appears that I was wrong about this team.
I thought that with Royce Freeman and the rushing attack,
the Ducks could come up with a limited game plan for Jeff
Lockie and/or Taylor Alie throwing the ball, and it would be
enough to win.
I was wrong.
The inability to throw downfield is hurting the Ducks offense. And as a result, they are struggling to get the offense
going.
Oregon passed for just 123 yards. No threat to go deep.
Washington State ran 31 more plays than Oregon, and the
Cougars had 13 more first downs. I believe that it started to
take a toll on Oregons defense. Helfrich disagrees.
I dont think so. As a matter of fact, I think they played
See DUCKS, Page 4C

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Starting this spring, the Statesman Journal will have a new companion celebration to stand proudly
alongside our long-standing Academic All-Stars event.
On the evening of Tuesday, June
7, the SJ will roll out the red carpet
for our MidValley Sports
Awards, a gathering of stellar
athletes in a
range of sports
from 36 high
schools in our
Michael
coverage area.
Davis
It promises
to be a spectacC O M M E N TA RY
ular night honoring the accomplishments of area athletes,
capped by an A-list speaker from the
world of sports.
The best way to imagine what we
plan for the event is to imagine a
Mid-Valley version of the ESPYs.
There will be glitz, glamor, laughter,
tears and a feel-good vibe like no
other Salem-based event.
Tickets will be available for purchase to the public.
Among the young women and
men to be honored at the event will
be:
30 Athletes of the Week from the
2015-16 school year
19 Players of the Year from football, soccer, cross country, basketball, swimming, wrestling, baseball,
softball, track and field, tennis and
golf.
Coach of the Year
Male Athlete of the Year
Female Athlete of the Year
Beyond that, high school sports
followers throughout the Mid-Valley
will be able to nominate and vote for
three new categories for athletes:
Courage Award
Heart and Desire Award
Comeback Player Award
Also new will be a Fan Experience
Award, for the school that offers the
best atmosphere with its cheerleaders, dance squads, marching bands
and mascots.
Finally, the Statesman Journal
will be honor one Mid-Valley school
with the Capitol Cup, a cumulative
honor for overall excellence across
all sports and activities during the
school year.
Well be revealing specifics about
the first-ever Mid-Valley Sports
Awards later this fall.
Taken in concert with Academic
All-Stars, the Statesman Journals
Mid-Valley Sports Awards will expand our effort to shine a bright
light on the achievements and inspirational stories of our high school
students, in and out of the classroom.

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

BLAZERS LOSE IN PRESEASON ACTION

SCOREBOARD
MLB

RICH PEDRONCELLI/AP

Trail Blazers center Mason Plumlee (24) drives past Kings


center Willie Cauley-Stein on Saturday. The Blazers lost
94-90. Read about the preseason game at
statesmanjournal.com/sports.

TODAY
IN THE AREA
COLLEGE

Oregon State at California, 11


a.m.

WOMENS SOCCER

Linfield at NWC Fall Classic

Oregon State at California,


noon

Oregon State at Stanford, 1


p.m.

VOLLEYBALL
Oregon at Stanford, 5 p.m.

Willamette at Puget Sound,


noon
Linfield at George Fox, noon
Events are accurate and
up-to-date as of press time

AREA
HIGHLIGHTS
HIGH SCHOOL
CROSS COUNTRY
6A GREATER VALLEY CONFERENCE
West Salem: Senior Ahmed
Muhumed won the varsity
boys meet with the fastest
time in the state this season
at the Sandelie Meet at the
West Nine Golf Course, with
a time of 14:56.

COLLEGE
MENS SOCCER
Corban: The No. 20-ranked
Rocky Mountain College
registered an upset win over
the No. 7-ranked Corban,
winning by a final score of
1-0. For Corban, it is its first
loss of the season, while
Rocky Mountain extend its
advantage atop the Cascade
Collegiate
Conference
standings to six points.

National League
All games televised by TBS
St. Louis 1, Chicago 0
Friday, Oct. 9: St. Louis 4, Chicago 0
Saturday, Oct. 10: Chicago 6, St. Louis 3
Chicago
St. Louis
ab r h bi

GOLF
MENS SOCCER

2015 Postseason Baseball Glance


All Times PDT/MST
WILD CARD
Tuesday, Oct. 6: Houston 3, New York 0
Wednesday, Oct. 7: Chicago 4, Pittsburgh 0
DIVISION SERIES
(Best-of-5; x-if necessary)
American League
Houston 1, Kansas City 1
Thursday, Oct. 8: Houston 5, Kansas City 2
Friday, Oct. 9: Kansas City 5, Houston 4
Sunday, Oct. 11: Kansas City (Volquez 13-9)
at Houston (Keuchel 20-8), 1:10 p.m. (MLBN)
Monday, Oct. 12: Kansas City at Houston
(McCullers 6-7), 10:07 a.m. (FS1)
x-Wednesday, Oct. 14: Houston at Kansas
City, 5:07 p.m. (FS1)
Texas 2, Toronto 0
Thursday, Oct. 8: Texas 5, Toronto 3
Friday, Oct. 9: Texas 6, Toronto 4, 14 innings
Sunday, Oct. 11: Toronto (Estrada 13-8) at
Texas (Perez 3-6), 5:10 p.m. (FS1)
x-Monday, Oct. 12: Toronto (Dickey 11-11) at
Texas, 10:07 a.m. or 1:07 p.m.(FS1)
x-Wednesday, Oct.14: Texas at Toronto,1:07
or 5:07 p.m. (FS1)

Fowler cf
Soler rf
Denorfi rf
Bryant 3b
Rizzo 1b
StCastr 2b

5
2
1
4
3
4

1
1
0
0
1
0

2
2
0
0
0
2

1
2
0
0
0
0

AJcksn lf
MMntr c
Hndrck p
T.Wood p
Schwrr ph
Cahill p
HRndn p
ARussll ss

4
3
1
1
1
0
0
3

1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
1
1
0
0
0
0
1

Totals

Pacific University in a Northwest Conference match. The


Bearcats improved to 6-4-1,
6-1-0 in the NWC.

VOLLEYBALL
Corban: Amber Parker
earned 18 kills for the Warriors, but it wouldnt be
enough to overcome Eastern
Oregon 25-23, 25-19, 25-20.
Oregon: The No. 25 Oregon Volleyball team swept
California in straight sets 2624, 25-19, 25-22. The Ducks
(9-5, 3-2 Pac-12) executed a
balanced offensive attack
through sophomore setter
Maggie Scott. The Ducks finished with a team .350 hitting efficiency.

AROUND
OREGON
ADULT SOFTBALL

WOMENS SOCCER
Corban: College of Idaho
scored two goals in the first
half, blanking the Corban at
Warrior Field 2-0. For the
Warriors, it is the eighth time
in the last nine games that
they have been unable to
score a goal.
Willamette: Veronica Ewers headed in a goal near the
midpoint of the second half
and Willamette maintained
the lead for a 1-0 win over

Oct. 19
At Wallace Marine Park
Coed Rec
Suagr & spice 8, Low Five 7
SWAT 11, Colt .45 1
Sugar & Spice 18, Colt .45 7
Low Five 15, SWAT 5
Sugar & Spice 13, Low Five 6
SWAT 12, Colt .45 7
Coed Int
Mega Foods 8, Dirt Devils 5
Freeloaders 16, Team Chaos 6
Betty Lous 9, Annettes 5
Annettes 12, Dirt Devils 9
Mega Foods 16, Team Chaos 15
Betty Lous 23, Freeloaders 13
Annettes 14, Mega Foods 12
Betty Lous 16, Team Chaos 4
Dirt Devils 13, Freeloaders 11

Statesman Journal

TODAY
ON THE AIR
COLLEGE WOMENS HOCKEY
Ohio State at Wisconsin ........................................noon; CH403 Big Ten

COLLEGE MENS SOCCER


Oregon State at Stanford......................................1 p.m.: CH421 PAC 12

COLLEGE WOMENS SOCCER


Minnesota at Iowa...............................................10 a.m.; CH403 Big Ten
North Dakota at Northern Arizona .........................noon; CH415 FCSP

COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL
Texas A&M at Souther Carolina...............................10 a.m.; CH425 SEc
Oregon State at California...........................11 p.m.; CH420 PAC 12 OR
UCLA at Colorado ...................................................11 p.m.; CH421 PAC12
Auburn at Florida ...........................................................noon; CH425 SEC
Missouri at Alabama ....................................................2 p.m.; CH425 SEC
Oregon at Stanford ................................................5 p.m.; CH421 PAC 12

GOLF
European PGA, British Masters, final round ........5 p.m.; CH33 GOLF
PGA SAS Championship, final round..............12:30 p.m.; CH33 GOLF

MLB
Royals at Astros ............................................................1 p.m.; CH419 MLB
Blue Jays at Rangers......................................................5 p.m.; CH408 FS1

MOTOR SPORTS
Formula One Racing...........................................3:30 p.m.; CH32 NBCSN

NFL
Bills at Titans................................................................10 a.m.; CH06 KOIN
Seahawks at Bengals .................................................10 a.m.; CH12 KPTV
Patirots at Cowboys ...............................................1:25 p.m.; CH06 KOIN
49ers at Giants.........................................................5:20 p.m.; CH08 KGW

NHL
Montreal Canadiens at Ottawa Senators ......4 p.m.; CH418 NHLNET

SOCCER
Euro 2016 Qualifier: Finland vs. Northern Ireland 9 a.m.; CH308 FS1
Euro 2016 Qualifier: Pland vs. Republic of Ireland..11:30 a.m.; CH35
ESPN
Euro 2016 Qualifier: Germany vs.Georgia........11:30 a.m.; CH408 FS1

TENNIS
China Open, final......................................................1 a.m.; CH410 Tennis

WNBA
Minnesota Lynx at Indianna Fever.....................5:30 p.m.; CH35 ESPN
Events are accurate and up-to-date as of press time

ab r h bi

MCrpnt 3b
Pisctty rf
Hollidy lf
Heywrd cf
JhPerlt ss
Moss 1b
MrRynl
ph-1b
Molina c
Wong 2b
JaiGrc p
Lynn p
Jay ph
Villanv p
Grichk ph
Maness p
Wnwrg p
GGarci ph
JBrxtn p

32 6 6 6 Totals

4
4
4
4
4
2

1
0
0
0
0
0

1
1
0
1
0
0

1
0
0
0
0
0

2
3
3
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
0

0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0

0
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0

0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0

33 3 6 3

Chicago
051 000 000
6
St. Louis
100 020 000
3
EJai.Garcia (1), Wong (1). LOBChicago 5,
St. Louis 3. 2BFowler (1), Soler (1). HR
Soler (1), M.Carpenter (1), Wong (1), Grichuk
(1). SBA.Jackson (1). SHendricks, A.Russell.
Chicago
IP H R ER BB SO
Hendricks
423 4 3 3 0 7
T.Wood W,1-0
213 1 0 0 0 2
Cahill H,1
1 0 0 0 0 2
H.Rondon S,1-1
1 1 0 0 0 0
St. Louis
Jai.Garcia L,0-1
Lynn
Villanueva
Maness
Wainwright
J.Broxton

IP
2
1
2
113
2
1 3
1

H
4
1
0
1
0
0

R ER BB SO
5 0 1 2
1 1 1 2
0 0 1 0
0 0 1 1
0 0 0 3
0 0 0 1

UmpiresHome, Bill Welke; First, Mike Winters; Second, Mark Carlson; Third, Dana DeMuth; Left, Brian Knight; Right, Phil Cuzzi.
T2:57. A47,859 (45,399).
Monday, Oct. 12: St. Louis (Wacha 17-7) at
Chicago (Arrieta 22-6), 1:37 or 3:07 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 13: St. Louis (Lynn 12-11) at
Chicago (Hammel 10-7), 1:37 or 5:07 p.m.
x-Thursday, Oct. 15: Chicago at St. Louis,
1:37 or 5:07 p.m.
New York 1, Los Angeles 0
Friday, Oct. 9: New York 3, Los Angeles 1
Saturday, Oct. 10: New York (Syndergaard
9-7) at Los Angeles (Greinke 19-3), late
Monday, Oct. 12: Los Angeles (Anderson
10-9) at New York (Harvey 13-8), 5:07 or 5:37
p.m.
x-Tuesday, Oct.13: Los Angeles at New York,
5:07 p.m.
x-Thursday, Oct. 15: New York at Los Angeles, 5:07 p.m.

COLLEGES
College Football Scores
College Football Major Scores
EAST
Brown 25, Holy Cross 24
CCSU 35, Bryant 33
Columbia 26, Wagner 3
Dartmouth 35, Yale 3
Duke 44, Army 3
Duquesne 53, Alderson-Broaddus 18
Fordham 48, Penn 45
Georgetown 38, Lafayette 7
Harvard 40, Cornell 3
James Madison 51, Towson 30
Lehigh 21, Bucknell 10
Maine 39, Albany (NY) 7
Michigan St. 31, Rutgers 24
Oklahoma St. 33, West Virginia 26, OT
Penn St. 29, Indiana 7
Pittsburgh 26, Virginia 19
Princeton 44, Colgate 20
Rhode Island 20, Delaware 0
Sacred Heart 26, Robert Morris 13
Temple 49, Tulane 10
Wake Forest 3, Boston College 0
William & Mary 38, Villanova 16
SOUTH
Alabama 27, Arkansas 14
Appalachian St. 37, Georgia St. 3
Charleston Southern 37, Monmouth (NJ) 7
Chattanooga 31, Furman 3
Clemson 43, Georgia Tech 24
Coastal Carolina 24, Presbyterian 17
Davidson 14, Kentucky Wesleyan 7, OT
FIU 52, UTEP 12
Florida St. 29, Miami 24
Gardner-Webb 34, Liberty 20
Grambling St. 37, Alabama A&M 14
Hampton 21, Delaware St. 7
Jacksonville 41, Stetson 14
LSU 45, South Carolina 24
Louisiana-Lafayette 49, Texas St. 27
Marist 13, Campbell 10
McNeese St. 21, SE Louisiana 7
Mississippi 52, New Mexico St. 3
Mississippi St. 45, Troy 17
Morehead St. 34, Butler 21
Morgan St. 42, Savannah St. 3
Murray St. 34, Austin Peay 18
NC A&T 27, Norfolk St. 3
NC Central 27, Florida A&M 24
Rice 27, FAU 26
Richmond 27, Elon 14
Samford 49, VMI 13
South Florida 45, Syracuse 24
Southern U. 45, Alabama St. 34
Tennessee 38, Georgia 31
The Citadel 39, Wofford 12
UConn 40, UCF 13
UT Martin 28, Tennessee St. 14
W. Carolina 24, Mercer 21
W. Kentucky 58, Middle Tennessee 28
MIDWEST
Akron 47, E. Michigan 21
Baylor 66, Kansas 7
Bowling Green 62, UMass 38
Dayton 13, San Diego 12
Drake 34, Valparaiso 7
E. Illinois 33, SE Missouri 28
Florida 21, Missouri 3
Idaho St. 37, North Dakota 31
Illinois St. 31, Youngstown St. 29
Iowa 29, Illinois 20
Michigan 38, Northwestern 0
Minnesota 41, Purdue 13
N. Dakota St. 31, N. Iowa 28
N. Illinois 59, Ball St. 41
Notre Dame 41, Navy 24
Ohio 34, Miami (Ohio) 3
Ohio St. 49, Maryland 28
S. Dakota St. 24, Indiana St. 7
S. Illinois 73, Missouri St. 26
TCU 52, Kansas St. 45
Toledo 38, Kent St. 7
W. Illinois 40, South Dakota 21
W. Michigan 41, Cent. Michigan 39
Wisconsin 23, Nebraska 21
SOUTHWEST
Cent. Arkansas 43, Houston Baptist 7
Lamar 44, Abilene Christian 28
Louisiana Tech 34, UTSA 31
Portland St. 66, North Texas 7
Prairie View 45, MVSU 6
Sam Houston St. 59, Incarnate Word 7
Stephen F. Austin 28, Nicholls St. 24
Texas 24, Oklahoma 17
Texas Tech 66, Iowa St. 31
Tulsa 34, Louisiana-Monroe 24
FAR WEST
Arizona 44, Oregon St. 7
BYU 45, East Carolina 38
Boise St. 41, Colorado St. 10
E. Washington 42, Cal Poly 41, OT
Montana St. 35, Sacramento St. 13
Nevada 35, New Mexico 17
UC Davis 38, N. Arizona 24
Washington St. 45, Oregon 38, 2OT
Weber St. 24, Montana 21, OT

The AP Top 25 Fared


No. 1 Ohio State (5-0) beat Maryland 49-28.
Next: vs. Penn State, Saturday.
No. 2 TCU (6-0) beat Kansas State 52-45.
Next: at Iowa State, Saturday.
No. 3 Baylor (5-0) beat Kansas 66-7. Next:
vs. West Virginia, Saturday.
No. 4 Michigan State (6-0) beat Rutgers 3124. Next: at No. 18 Michigan, Saturday.
No. 5 Utah (4-0) vs. No. 23 California. Next:
vs. Arizona State, Saturday
No. 6 Clemson (5-0) beat Georgia Tech 4324. Next: vs. Boston College, Saturday.
No. 7 LSU (5-0) beat South Carolina 45-24.
Next: vs. No. 11 Florida, Saturday.
No. 8 Alabama (5-1) beat Arkansas 27-14.
Next: at No. 9 Texas A&M, Saturday.
No. 9 Texas A&M (5-0) did not play. Next: vs.
No. 8 Alabama, Saturday.
No. 10 Oklahoma (4-1) lost to Texas 24-17.
Next: at Kansas State, Saturday.
No.11 Florida (6-0) beat Missouri 21-3. Next:
at No. 7 LSU, Saturday.
No.12 Florida State (4-0) vs. Miami. Next: vs.
Louisville, Saturday.
No. 13 Northwestern (5-1) lost to No. 18
Michigan 38-0. Next: vs. No. 22 Iowa, Saturday.
No. 14 Mississippi (5-1) beat New Mexico
State 52-3. Next: at Memphis, Saturday.
No. 15 Notre Dame (5-1) beat Navy 41-24.
Next: vs. No. 17 Southern Cal, Saturday.
No. 16 Stanford (4-1) did not play. Next: vs.
No. 20 UCLA, Thursday.
No.17 Southern Cal (3-2) lost to Washington
17-12, Thursday. Next: at Notre Dame, Saturday.
No. 18 Michigan (5-1) beat No. 13 Northwestern 38-0. Next: vs. No. 4 Michigan State,
Saturday.
No. 19 Georgia (4-2) lost to Tennessee 3831. Next: vs. Missouri, Saturday.
No. 20 UCLA (4-1) did not play. Next: at No.
16 Stanford, Thursday.
No. 21 Oklahoma State (6-0) beat West Virginia 33-26, OT. Next: vs. Kansas, Oct. 24.
No. 22 Iowa (6-0) beat Illinois 29-20. Next:
at No. 13 Northwestern, Saturday.
No. 23 California (5-0) at No. 5 Utah. Next:
at No. 20 UCLA, Thursday, Oct. 22.
No. 24 Toledo (5-0) beat Kent State 38-7.
Next: vs. Eastern Michigan, Saturday.
No. 25 Boise St. (5-1) beat Colorado State
41-10. Next: at Utah State, Friday.

NHL
All times PDT/MST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts
Detroit
2 2 0 0 4
Montreal
2 2 0 0 4
Tampa Bay 2 2 0 0 4
Ottawa
2 2 0 0 4
Florida
1 1 0 0 2
Toronto
3 0 2 1 1
Buffalo
2 0 2 0 0
Boston
2 0 2 0 0

MLS
All times PDT/MST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
x-New York
x-D.C. United
New England
Columbus
Toronto FC
Montreal
Orlando City
NY City FC
Philadelphia
Chicago

16
14
13
13
14
13
11
10
9
8

9
12
11
11
13
13
13
15
16
18

T Pts GF GA

6
6
8
8
4
6
8
7
7
6

54
48
47
47
46
45
41
37
34
30

55
39
45
51
55
45
44
47
40
42

39
40
45
53
53
43
54
53
51
52

WESTERN CONFERENCE
W

T Pts GF GA

x-FC Dallas
15 10 6 51 47 38
x-Los Angeles 14 9 9 51 53 39
x-Vancouver
15 12 5 50 42 34
Sporting KC
13 9 9 48 46 41
Seattle
14 13 5 47 40 34
San Jose
12 12 8 44 39 37
Portland
12 11 8 44 31 36
Houston
11 13 8 41 41 45
Real Salt Lake 11 12 8 41 37 43
Colorado
8 14 10 34 30 39
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for
tie.
x- clinched playoff berth
Wednesdays Games
New York 2, Montreal 1
Vancouver 0, FC Dallas 0, tie
Saturdays Games
Montreal 1, Colorado 0
Wednesday, Oct. 14
New York at Toronto FC, 4 p.m.
Vancouver at FC Dallas, 6 p.m.
Portland at Real Salt Lake, 6:30 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 16
NY City FC at Orlando City, 4 p.m.
Sporting KC at San Jose, 8 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 17
Columbus at Toronto FC, 11 a.m.
Montreal at New England, 4:30 p.m.
FC Dallas at Real Salt Lake, 6:30 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 18
Chicago at D.C. United, 11 a.m.
Philadelphia at New York, noon
Seattle at Houston, 2 p.m.
Portland at Los Angeles, 4 p.m.

AUTO RACING
GF
8
7
7
8
7
5
2
4

GA
3
3
3
5
1
12
7
10

GF
12
5
3

GA
6
3
7

3
0
4
4
4

10
3
6
8
9

Central Division
GP W L OT Pts
Winnipeg
2 2 0 0 4
Nashville
2 2 0 0 4
Minnesota
2 2 0 0 4
Chicago
3 2 1 0 4
Colorado
2 1 1 0 2
St. Louis
2 1 1 0 2
Dallas
2 1 1 0 2

GF
9
4
8
9
10
5
6

GA
3
1
6
6
8
4
6

Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts
San Jose
1 1 0 0 2
1 1 0 0 2
Vancouver
Arizona
1 1 0 0 2
Anaheim
0 0 0 0 0
Calgary
1 0 1 0 0
Edmonton
2 0 2 0 0
Los Angeles 2 0 2 0 0

GF
5
5
4
0
1
1
2

GA
1
1
1
0
5
5
9

Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts
N.Y. Rangers 3 3 0 0 6
Washington 1 1 0 0 2
N.Y.
2 0 1 1 1
Islanders
Philadelphia 2 0 1 1 1
Pittsburgh
1 0 1 0 0
Carolina
2 0 2 0 0
New Jersey 2 0 2 0 0
Columbus
2 0 2 0 0

p.m.
x-Wednesday, Oct. 14: Indiana at Minnesota, 5 p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for


overtime loss.
Fridays Games
Winnipeg 3, New Jersey 1
N.Y. Rangers 4, Columbus 2
Detroit 4, Toronto 0
Chicago 3, N.Y. Islanders 2, OT
Arizona 4, Los Angeles 1
Saturdays Games
Ottawa 5, Toronto 4, SO
Tampa Bay 4, Buffalo 1
Montreal 4, Boston 2
Florida 7, Philadelphia 1
N.Y. Rangers 5, Columbus 2
Washington 5, New Jersey 3
Detroit 4, Carolina 3
Nashville 2, Edmonton 0
Minnesota 3, St. Louis 2
Chicago 4, N.Y. Islanders 1
Colorado 6, Dallas 3
Calgary at Vancouver, late.
Pittsburgh at Arizona, late
Anaheim at San Jose, late
Sundays Games
Montreal at Ottawa, 4 p.m.
Mondays Games
Tampa Bay at Boston, 10 a.m.
Winnipeg at N.Y. Islanders, 10 a.m.
Columbus at Buffalo, noon
Florida at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.
Vancouver at Anaheim, 7 p.m.

NBA
Preseason Glance
All Times PDT/MST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L
Pct GB
New York
1 0 1.000
Philadelphia
2 1 .667
Toronto
2 1 .667
1
Brooklyn
1 1 .500
2
1
Boston
0 0 .000
2
Southeast Division
W L
Pct GB
Charlotte
2 0 1.000
Atlanta
2 0 1.000
Washington
1 1 .500
1
Orlando
1 2 .333 112
Miami
0 2 .000
2
Central Division
W L
Pct GB
Indiana
2 1 .667
Chicago
2 1 .667
Detroit
1 2 .333
1
Cleveland
0 2 .000 112
Milwaukee
0 2 .000 112
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W L
Pct GB
Memphis
1 0 1.000
1
Houston
1 1 .500
2
1
New Orleans
1 1 .500
2
San Antonio
0 1 .000
1
Dallas
0 2 .000 112
Northwest Division
W L
Pct GB
Oklahoma City
1 0 1.000
Utah
2 1 .667
Denver
2 1 .667
1
Portland
1 1 .500
2
Minnesota
0 2 .000 112
Pacific Division
W L
Pct GB
Phoenix
2 0 1.000
1
2
Sacramento
2 1 .667
L.A. Clippers
1 1 .500
1
Golden State
1 1 .500
1
L.A. Lakers
0 3 .000 212
Fridays Games
New York 115, Washington 104
Atlanta 103, New Orleans 93
Phoenix 101, Utah 85
Saturdays Games
Philadelphia 97, Brooklyn 95
Chicago 114, Minnesota 105
Detroit 117, Milwaukee 88
Portland at Sacramento, late
Sundays Games
L.A. Clippers vs. Charlotte at Shenzhen, China, 10:30 a.m.
Orlando vs. Houston at Hidalgo, TX, 5 p.m.
Mondays Games
Memphis vs. Cleveland at Columbus, OH, 4
p.m.
Philadelphia at New York, 4:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Miami, 4:30 p.m.
New Orleans at Chicago, 5 p.m.
Portland at Utah, 6 p.m.

WNBA
All Times PDT/MST
FINALS
(Best-of-5)
Minnesota 2, Indiana 1
Sunday, Oct. 4: Indiana 75, Minnesota 69
Tuesday, Oct. 6: Minnesota 77, Indiana 71
Friday, Oct. 9: Minnesota 80, Indiana 77
Sunday, Oct. 11: Minnesota at Indiana, 5:30

NASCAR-Sprint Cup-Bank of America


500 Lineup
After Thursday qualifying; race Sunday
At Charlotte Motor Speedway
Concord, N.C.
Lap length: 1.5 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 194.532 mph.
2. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 193.154.
3. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 193.023.
4. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 192.947.
5. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 192.912.
6. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 192.61.
7. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 192.507.
8. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 192.438.
9. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 192.226.
10. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 192.041.
11. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 191.415.
12. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,
190.624.
13. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 191.618.
14. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 191.605.
15. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 191.056.
16. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 191.056.
17. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet,
190.907.
18. (9) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 190.819.
19. (55) David Ragan, Toyota, 190.483.
20. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 190.436.
21. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 190.382.
22. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 189.947.
23. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 189.64.
24. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 188.607.
25. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 189.9.
26. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 189.813.
27. (7) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 189.221.
28. (51) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 188.64.
29. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 188.521.
30. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 188.501.
31. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 187.833.
32. (95) Michael McDowell, Ford, 187.337.
33. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 187.246.
34. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 187.22.
35. (23) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 187.214.
36. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 186.754.
37. (34) Brett Moffitt, Ford, Owner Points.
38. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, Owner
Points.
39. (35) Cole Whitt, Ford, Owner Points.
40. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, Owner
Points.
41. (26) Jeb Burton, Toyota, Owner Points.
42. (98) Reed Sorenson, Ford, Owner Points.
43. (33) Alex Kennedy, Chevrolet, Owner
Points.
Failed to Qualify
44. (32) Josh Wise, Ford, 185.236.
45. (62) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, 183.411.

GOLF
Presidents Cup Results
Saturday
At Jack Nicklaus Golf Club Korea
Incheon, South Korea
Yardage: 7,380; Par: 72
UNITED STATES 912, INTERNATIONAL 812
Foursomes
United States 2, International 2
Louis Oosthuizen and Branden Grace, International, def. Patrick Reed and Rickie Fowler,
United States, 3 and 2.
Bubba Watson and J.B. Holmes, United
States, halved with Adam Scott and Marc
Leishman, International.
Bill Haas and Matt Kuchar, United States,
halved with Sang-moon Bae and Hideki Matsuyama, International.
Dustin Johnson and Jordan Spieth, United
States, def. Jason Day and Charl Schwartzel,
International, 1 up.
Fourballs
United States 2, International 2
Louis Oosthuizen and Branden Grace, International, def. J.B. Holmes and Bubba Watson,
United States, 1 up.
Phil Mickelson and Zach Johnson, United
States, def. Adam Scott and Anirban Lahiri, International, 3 and 2.
Sang-moon Bae and Hideki Matsuyama, International, def. Jimmy Walker and Chris Kirk,
United States, 6 and 5.
Patrick Reed and Jordan Spieth, United
States, def. Jason Day and Charl Schwartzel,
International, 3 and.
SAS Championship Par Scores
Saturday
At Prestonwood Country Club
Cary, N.C.
Purse: $2.1 million
Yardage: 7,240; Par: 72
Second Round
Kenny Perry
68-68- 136
Joe Durant
69-68- 137
Lee Janzen
70-68- 138
Bernhard Langer
65-73- 138
Tom Lehman
68-71- 139
John Riegger
67-72- 139
Jeff Maggert
73-67- 140
Kevin Sutherland
68-72- 140
Scott Dunlap
67-73- 140
John Cook
72-69- 141
Michael Allen
71-70- 141
Paul Goydos
70-71- 141
Loren Roberts
70-71- 141
Billy Andrade
74-67- 141
David Frost
69-72- 141
Fred Funk
71-71- 142
Jeff Hart
71-71- 142
Woody Austin
72-70- 142
Grant Waite
73-69- 142
Steve Jones
71-71- 142
Colin Montgomerie
70-72- 142
Chien Soon Lu
73-69- 142
Mike Goodes
74-68- 142
Brad Faxon
69-73- 142
Olin Browne
68-74- 142
Stephen Ames
72-71- 143
Sandy Lyle
73-70- 143
Tom Byrum
74-69- 143
Wes Short, Jr.
70-73- 143
Joey Sindelar
70-73- 143
Duffy Waldorf
68-75- 143
Gary Hallberg
72-72- 144
Russ Cochran
71-73- 144
Corey Pavin
73-71- 144
Peter Senior
73-71- 144
Scott McCarron
75-69- 144
Neal Lancaster
69-75- 144
Gene Sauers
67-77- 144
Brian Henninger
72-73- 145
Scott Verplank
71-74- 145
Mark Wiebe
73-72- 145
Skip Kendall
74-71- 145
P.H. Horgan III
74-71- 145
Greg Kraft
68-77- 145
Kirk Triplett
70-76- 146
Tom Pernice Jr.
74-72- 146
Bart Bryant
69-77- 146
Scott Parel
76-70- 146
Hale Irwin
72-75- 147
Jay Delsing
73-74- 147
Mark Brooks
71-76- 147
Marco Dawson
70-77- 147

-8
-7
-6
-6
-5
-5
-4
-4
-4
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
+1
+1
+1
+1
+1
+1
+2
+2
+2
+2
+3
+3
+3
+3

Mark Calcavecchia
Esteban Toledo
Scott Hoch
Steve Lowery
Rod Spittle
Gil Morgan
Tom Kite
Dick Mast
Bob Tway
Jesper Parnevik
Wayne Levi
Roger Chapman
Jerry Smith
Jay Don Blake
Jeff Sluman
Jim Thorpe
Mike Hulbert
Craig Stadler
Carlos Franco
Hal Sutton
Steve Pate
Tommy Armour III
Bob Gilder
Tom Purtzer
Bobby Wadkins
Nolan Henke
Ian Woosnam
John Huston

70-7774-7375-7275-7268-7970-7874-7475-7378-7073-7675-7477-7272-7872-7871-7974-7675-7573-7876-7671-8276-7778-7579-7478-7979-7881-8875-WD
74-WD

147
147
147
147
147
148
148
148
148
149
149
149
150
150
150
150
150
151
152
153
153
153
153
157
157
169

+3
+3
+3
+3
+3
+4
+4
+4
+4
+5
+5
+5
+6
+6
+6
+6
+6
+7
+8
+9
+9
+9
+9
+13
+13
+25

LPGA Tour-LPGA Malaysia Par Scores


Saturday
At Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Purse: $2 million
Yardage: 6,260; Par 71
a-amateur
Jessica Korda
69-67-65-201 -12
Stacy Lewis
72-66-65-203 -10
Ha Na Jang
67-65-71-203 -10
Lydia Ko
71-65-68-204 -9
Shanshan Feng
66-69-69-204 -9
Xi Yu Lin
65-68-71-204 -9
Mika Miyazato
68-69-68-205 -8
I.K. Kim
68-68-69-205 -8
67-68-70-205 -8
Amy Yang
Inbee Park
68-66-71-205 -8
Yani Tseng
66-68-71-205 -8
Ryann OToole
72-66-68-206 -7
Haru Nomura
71-65-70-206 -7
Morgan Pressel
71-73-63-207 -6
Caroline Masson
71-69-67-207 -6
Jaye Marie Green
69-71-67-207 -6
Ariya Jutanugarn
71-67-69-207 -6
Catriona Matthew
70-68-69-207 -6
Michelle Wie
66-72-69-207 -6
Chella Choi
66-69-72-207 -6
Alison Lee
65-69-73-207 -6
Anna Nordqvist
71-67-70-208 -5
Mirim Lee
73-71-65-209 -4
Gerina Piller
73-69-67-209 -4
Eun-Hee Ji
70-68-71-209 -4
69-69-71-209 -4
Pornanong Phatlum
Wei-Ling Hsu
73-68-69-210 -3
Mi Hyang Lee
69-71-70-210 -3
Candie Kung
69-68-73-210 -3
Hee Young Park
71-72-68-211 -2
a-Aditi Ashok
70-73-68-211 -2
70-72-69-211 -2
Karine Icher
Charley Hull
74-66-71-211 -2
Azahara Munoz
71-67-73-211 -2
So Yeon Ryu
68-69-74-211 -2
Julieta Granada
70-72-70-212 -1
Danielle Kang
72-68-72-212 -1
Lexi Thompson
71-69-72-212 -1
Brittany Lang
73-66-73-212 -1
Sandra Gal
68-71-73-212 -1
Minjee Lee
69-66-77-212 -1
Austin Ernst
75-70-68-213 E
Kris Tamulis
72-72-69-213 E
Paula Creamer
73-70-70-213 E
Mo Martin
74-68-71-213 E
Mariajo Uribe
74-68-71-213 E
Q Baek
68-72-73-213 E
Sakura Yokomine
67-70-76-213 E
Kim Kaufman
73-73-68-214 +1
Pernilla Lindberg
75-70-69-214 +1
Lizette Salas
75-69-70-214 +1
Cheyenne Woods
72-72-70-214 +1
Melissa Reid
73-71-71-215 +2
Lee-Anne Pace
71-69-75-215 +2
Karrie Webb
77-71-68-216 +3
Moriya Jutanugarn
70-71-75-216 +3
Christina Kim
71-74-72-217 +4
Min Lee
72-74-72-218 +5
Kelly Tan
70-74-74-218 +5
74-71-74-219 +6
Carlota Ciganda
Jane Park
70-73-76-219 +6
Sydnee Michaels
71-71-77-219 +6
Suzann Pettersen
77-77-66-220 +7
Sei Young Kim
72-76-72-220 +7
Sun Young Yoo
72-75-73-220 +7
Ilhee Lee
70-72-78-220 +7
Angela Stanford
76-73-72-221 +8
Paula Reto
76-71-78-225+12
Jenny Shin
76-72-79-227+14
Michelle Koh
77-75-77-229+16
Cindy Lee-Pridgen
74-80-79-233+20
a-Nur Durriyah Damian 79-71-83-233+20
Ainil Johani Bakar
80-81-73-234+21
Jennifer Rosales
76-85-77-238+25
Hyo Joo Kim
71-76-WD

ODDS

Home Team in CAPS


Major League Baseball
Sunday
American League
Favorite

Line

Underdog

Line

HOUSTON
-175 Kansas City
Toronto
-130
TEXAS
National Hockey League
Sunday
Favorite

Line

OTTAWA

-117

+163
+120

Underdog

Line

Montreal
NFL
Sunday

+107

Favorite

O T O/U

TAMPA BAY
Buffalo
BALTIMORE
ATLANTA
KANSAS CITY
PHILADELPHIA
GREEN BAY
CINCINNATI
Arizona
New England
Denver
NY GIANTS

3 3 42
Jacksonville
3 1 4112 TENNESSEE
8 7 43
Cleveland
8 7 48
Washington
12 9 45
Chicago
412 512 4912 New Orleans
1
9 9 45 2
St. Louis
+2 3 43
Seattle
212 3 45
DETROIT
1
1
1
8 2 8 2 49 2
DALLAS
OAKLAND
612 412 4312
7 612 4312
San Fran
Monday

Underdog

Favorite

O T O/U

Underdog

SAN DIEGO

6 3 46

Pittsburgh

TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Added RHP Ryan
Tepera to the postseason roster replacing LHP
Brett Cecil.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
DALLAS COWBOYS Placed RB Lance
Dunbar injured reserve. Signed WR Vince
Mayle from the practice squad.
DENVER BRONCOS Released FB James
Casey.
OAKLAND RAIDERS Signed S Tevin McDonald. Released S Taylor Mays.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS Released CB
Shareece Wright. Signed G Andrew Tiller
from the practice squad.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES Placed G Robin Lehner
on injured reserve. Recalled G Nathan Lieuwen from Rochester (AHL). Activated G Linus
Ullmark from injured reserve and loaned him
to Rochester. Loaned D Jake McCabe to Rochester.
COLLEGE
HOFSTRA Announced mens senior basketball F-C Ibrahim Djambo will miss the fall
semester to attend to a family matter in his
home country of Mali.
NORTH TEXAS Fired Dan McCarney football coach.

TODAY IN SPORTS
Oct. 11
1890 The first 100-yard dash under 10
seconds is run by John Owens at 9.8 in an
AAU track and field meet in Washington.
1902 Laurie Auchterlonie beats Stewart
Gardner with a 307-total to win the U.S. Open
golf title.
1981 Tommy Kramer passes for 444 yards
and four touchdowns, and the Minnesota
Vikings edge the San Diego Chargers 33-31.
1991 Chip Beck shoots the second sub-60
round in PGA Tour history with a 59 in the Las
Vegas Invitational. Beck cards a 29-30,13 under, to match Al Geibergers second round of
the 1977 Memphis Classic.
1992 Dave Krieg becomes the 15th quarterback in history with 200 touchdown
passes, throwing three in the Kansas City
Chiefs 24-17 win over the Philadelphia Eagles.
1998 San Franciscos Steve Young becomes the 20th player in NFL history to throw
for 30,000 yards in a 31-0 rout of New Orleans.
2003 Buffalo is the third NHL team since
1967-68 to be shut out in each of its first two
games after a 6-0 defeat to the New York Islanders.
2009 Miles Austin catches 10 passes for
a franchise-record 250 yards and scores the
winning TD in OT in Dallas 26-20 win over
Kansas City.
2009 Roddy White sets a team record
with 210 yards receiving on eight catches and
scores two TDs in Atlantas 45-10 win over
San Francisco.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

3C

TOP 25 ROUNDUP

No. 2 TCU rallies past Kansas State


MANHATTAN, Kan.
Trevone Boykin threw
for 301 yards and two
touchdowns, the second a
55-yard strike to Josh
Doctson with 1:10 left in
the game, and secondranked TCU rallied from
a big halftime deficit to
beat Kansas State 52-45 on
Saturday night.
Boykin also ran for 124
yards and two scores for
the Horned Frogs (6-0, 3-0
Big 12), who trailed 35-17
at the break.
Aaron Green added 124
yards and two touchdowns rushing, while
Doctson caught eight
passes for 155 yards and
two touchdowns.
None was bigger than
his catch-and-run just 30
seconds after Jack Cantele had connected on a
37-yard field goal for Kansas State (3-2, 0-2) to knot
the game 45-all.
Texas 24, No. 10 Oklahoma
17:
Tyrone
Swoopes threw a touchdown pass and ran for a
score at home as Texas

found relief in the Red


River rivalry yet again,
upsetting No. 10 Oklahoma.
Coach Charlie Strongs
Longhorns (2-4, 1-2 Big 12)
came to Dallas in the
midst of the programs
worst start in 59 years and
as two-touchdown underdog to the Sooners (4-1,
1-1).
No. 1 Ohio State 49,
Maryland 28: Cardale
Jones threw two touchdown passes, J.T. Barrett
scored three times at
home and Ohio State remained unbeaten and
mostly underwhelming
with victory over Maryland.
Ezekiel Elliott had two
touchdowns for the Buckeyes (6-0, 2-0 Big Ten),
who were tied 21-21 in the
third quarter before shaking free of the Terrapins
(2-4, 0-2) and extending
the nations longest winning streak to 19.
No. 3 Baylor 66, Kansas 7: Seth Russell threw
three touchdown passes,

Shock Linwood ran for 135


yards and a score, and
Baylor romped past Kansas on the road.
Russell threw for 246
yards, all coming in the
first half.
No. 4 Michigan State
31, Rutgers 24: Freshman
LJ Scott scored on a 3yard run with 43 seconds
to play on the road and No.
4 Michigan State won ugly
for the second straight
week.
Scott, who did not play
in the first half, also
scored on a 1-yard run to
help the Spartans (6-0, 2-0
Big Ten) win their 10th
straight game.
No. 6 Clemson 43,
Georgia Tech 24: Deshaun Watson threw two
touchdown passes, Wayne
Gallman ran for two
scores
and
Clemson
surged past Georgia Tech
at home.
On the same soggy
field where the Tigers
(5-0, 2-0 Atlantic Coast
Conference)
outlasted
Notre Dame24-22 last

No. 12 Florida State hold


off Miami in Tallahassee.
No. 18 Michigan 38,
No. 13 Northwestern 0:
Jehu Chesson returned
the opening kickoff 96
yards for a touchdown
and Michigan scored on
offense and defense to
build a four-touchdown
lead by halftime at home.
No. 14 Mississippi,
New Mexico State 3:
Chad Kelly threw for 384
yards and three touchdowns to lead Mississippi
at home.
No. 15 Notre Dame 41,
Navy 24: C.J. Prosise ran
for 129 yards and three
touchdowns, two after
Navy turnovers, and Notre Dame beat the Midshipmen in South Bend.
Tennessee 38, No. 19
Georgia
31:
Joshua
Dobbs threw for 312
yards, ran for 118 more
and accounted for five
touchdowns and Tennessee overcame a 21-point
deficit at home to beat
Georgia.
No. 21 Oklahoma St.

week, they made quick


work of the Yellow Jackets (2-4, 0-3).
No. 7 LSU 45, South
Carolina 24: Leonard
Fournette had an 87-yard
touchdown run, Brandon
Harris passed for a career-best 228 yards, and
LSU beat South Carolina
in a game moved to Tiger
Stadium because of flooding in South Carolina.
No. 8 Alabama 27, Arkansas 14: Calvin Ridley
caught an 81-yard touchdown pass from Jake Coker and Alabama rode its
swarming defense to a
victory over Arkansas at
home.
No. 11 Florida 21, Missouri 3: Kelvin Taylor
rushed for 99 yards and
two first-quarter touchdowns and No. 11 Florida
defeated Missouri on the
road.
No. 12 Florida State
29, Miami 24: Dalvin
Cook ran for 222 yards
and three touchdowns,
the last a 23-yarder with
6:44 remaining, to help

33, West Virginia 26, OT:


Backup quarterback J.W.
Walsh scored on a 2-yard
run in overtime and Oklahoma State held West Virginia scoreless on its possession in the extra period
to avoid and upset on the
road.
No. 22 Iowa 29, Illinois 20: Jordan Canzeri
ran for 256 yards on a
school-record 43 carries
and Iowa held off Illinois
at home for its sixth
straight victory.
No. 24 Toledo 38, Kent
State 7: Terry Swanson
ran for 161 yards and a
touchdown and Kareem
Hunt had two scores in
leading No. 24 Toledo to a
home win.
No. 25 Boise State 41,
Colorado
State
10:
Thomas Sperbeck caught
two
long
touchdown
passes and Jeremy McNichols scored his 13th and
14th TDs of the season,
leading Boise State past
Colorado State on the
road.
Associated Press

PREP FOOTBALL ROUNDUP

Salem Academy set to face off vs. Blanchet


Statesman Journal

JEFFERSON The
Crusaders accomplished
two things in Friday's 52-0
win against Jefferson.
For one, Salem Academy High School's football team takes control of
its destiny in its attempt to
make the OSAA Class 3A
state playoffs for the second year in a row by improving to 5-1 and 3-1 in
the PacWest Conference.
It's quite a feat considering last year was the
team's first trip to the
state postseason in 23
years.
"It's a nice feeling, but
we got to take it one game
at a time," said senior running back Braden Palanuk. "We can't look forward to the playoffs like
oh, well, Nov. 28 is state.
We got to take it one game
at a time and hopefully get
the same goal, win every
game."
The other thing the win
accomplished is Salem
Academy, No. 3 in the
OSAA's power rankings,
sets up an Oct. 16 showdown with rival Blanchet,
No. 4 in the power rankings, for second place in
the PacWest.
"I'm excited," senior
quarterback
Andrew
Baker said. "I think we can
do good things, but we'll
see. We're confident."
Baker was an efficient
15 of 18 passing for 261
yards and touchdown
passes to Rylan Stam-

back, Kaleb Carmony and


Wilson McLean.
In all he mixed six receivers into the passing
game and kept Jefferson's defense on its heels
all night.
"I'd say definitely it's a
chemistry," Palanuk said.
"Every day we're running
routes after practice and
we're getting timing
down, play after play after play and rep after rep."
For a Salem Academy
team that focuses on the
passing game, Palanuk
showed the Crusaders can
grind the ball out on the
ground when they need to.
He rushed for 76 yards
and two touchdowns on 13
carries, only one longer
than 10 yards, and provided a ball-control element
to the game.
"Braden runs really
hard and he's a great running back," Baker said. "I
couldn't ask for a better
running back next to me."
Salem Academy's defense limited Jefferson to
83 yards of offense and
four first downs in the
first half.
The Crusaders also
scored on defense.
Kyle Haslebacher returned an interception 47
yards for a touchdown
and Jefferson snapped an
attempt at a punt through
the back of the end zone
for a safety.
Bill Poehler
Salem Academy 13 24
Jefferson
0 0

9
0

6 52
0 0

FIRST QUARTER

SA- Stamback 17 pass from Baker (kick


failed).
SA- Palanuk 17 run (Williams kick).
SECOND QUARTER
SA- Palanuk 4 run (Williams kick).
SA- Haslebacher 47 interception return (Williams kick).
SA- Carmony 4 pass from Baker (Williams
kick).
SA- Williams 21 field goal.
THIRD QUARTER
SA- McLean 10 pass from Baker (Williams
kick).
SA- Safety, ball snapped out of end zone.
FOURTH QUARTER
SA- Haller 15 run (kick failed).
INDIVIDUAL STATS
Rushing Salem Academy: Baker 15-181-261-3. Jefferson: Baxter 10-23-2-63.
Passing Salem Academy: Baker 15-181-261-3. Jefferson: Baxter 10-23-2-63.
Receiving Salem Academy: Williams
3-86, Smith 3-59, McLean 3-47-1, Stamback
3-44-1, Carmony 3-43-1, Daniels 1-12. Jefferson: Sobel 2-23, Arlundson 1-15, Henderson
3-13.

1A CASCO LEAGUE
Siletz 36, Falls City 32:
The Mountaineers fell
just short in the fourth
quarter. Falls City gave up
the winning touchdown
with 2:09 left on the clock
and was unable to overcome the deficit.
The
Mountaineers
struggled to earn the twopoint conversion, only
completing one attempt in
the first quarter and falling short on every other
attempt in the game.
Siletz
Falls City

8
8

8 6 14 36
6 12 6 32

FIRST QUARTER
FCWeems 15 Run (2pt. Labrado run good)
7:59.
SiletzButler 47 pass to DeAnda (2 pt.
same two) 0:46.
SECOND QUARTER
FC Weems 9 run (2pt. failed) 0:32.
SiletzButler 41 pass to Lindstrom (2 pt.
run Lindstrom good) 0:00.
THIRD QUARTER
FCLabrado 10 run (2 pt. failed) 9:14.
FCLabrado 71 run (2 pt. failed) 5:02.
SiletzButler 35 pass to Lindstrom (2 pt.

failed) 3:36.
FOURTH QUARTER
Siletz Butler 38 pass to Lindstrom (2 pt.
failed) 10:53.
SiletzLindstrom 44 run (2 pt. Butler to
Lindstrom) 2:09.
FC Labrodo 7 run (2 pt. failed) 0:35.
First downs
Rushes-Yards
Passing yards
Comp-Att-Int
Fumbles-Lost
Penalties-Yards

Siletz
10
30-223
202
12-24-1
1-1
8-90

Hood River-Buckly Dallas 2 pass to Montana Kurahara (Valdovinos kick good)0:01.


THIRD QUARTER
Hood River-Buckly Dallas 11 pass to Connor
Coerper (Valdovinos kick good)6:54.
McKay-Manny Miranda 19 rush (Tavera kick
good) 2:02
Hood River-Buckly Dallas 1 rush (Valdovinos
kick good) 1:01.

Falls City
11
38-206
150
8-17-0
1-1
4-27

First downs
Rushes-Yards
Passing
Comp-Att-Int
Punts-Average
Fumbles-Lost
PenaltiesYards

INDIVIDUAL STATS
Rushing Siletz: Lindstrom 19-182; FC:
Labrado 17-128.
Passing Siletz: Butler 12-24-202 4 TD 1
INT; FC: Labrado 8-17-150 0TD 1 INT.
Receiving Siletz: DeAnda 7-110; FC:
Young 4-73.

Hood River Valley 49,


McKay 14: Hood Rivers
defense was to much for
the Royal Scots offense to
overcome. McKay was
only able to bring in 14
points and 232 total offensive yards.
Hood River was able to
double McKays total offensive yards with 563
(220 passing and 343 rushing). McKay was struggling to make plays in the
air going 6-for-14 for only
57 yards.
12 21 14
0 7 7

Hood River
24
43-343
220
15-19-0
1-0
3-3

3-26

7-44

INDIVIDUAL STATS
Rushing Hood River-Michael Jones 12112; McKay-Matthew Jarding 14-57.
Passing Hood River- Dallas Buckley 1519-220 4 TD 0 INT; McKay- Matthew Ritchie
6-13-57 0 TD 0 INT.
Receiving Hood River-Kellan Duffy 565; McKay-Tristian Wilson 2-32.

6A GREATER
VALLEY
CONFERENCE

McKay
Hood River
Valley

McKay
15
50-175
57
6-14-0
0-0
3-2

5A
MID-WILLAMETTE
CONFERENCE
Lebanon 36, Central 35:
The Panthers fell just
short of success. Lebanon
edged out Central by one
point in a 36-35 victory.
Central juniors Luis
Abraham and AJ Morales
both earned four solo
tackles, while senior Madison Stepp led the way defensively with eight total
tackles.
INDIVIDUAL STATS
Rushing Central: Alvin Berroa 25-106
Passing Central: Peter Mendazona 1830-238 4 TD
Receiving Central: Peter Mason 4-130

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0 49
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The Truth Behind Senior


Moments

FIRST QUARTER
Hood River-Buckly Dallas 5 pass to Montana
Kurahara (Valdovinos kick good)7:49.
Hood River Valley- Jones 21 Rush (Valdovinos kick good) 4:23.
SECOND QUARTER
Hood River- Buckly Dallas 23 pass to Tyrone
Stintzi (Valdovinos kick good) 10:30.
Hood River- Touchdown (Valdovinos kick
good) 6:40.
McKay-Matthew 10 rush (Tavera kick good)
4:51.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2015, 1:30PM

Staying Active to Prevent Falls


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015, 1:30PM

Dont Let the Blues Get You


Down
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015, 1:30PM

COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP

Living with Lower Cholesterol

Wolves, Bearcats rally for wins


Statesman Journal

The Western Oregon


football team rallied to defeat North Alabama 24-22
in a nonconference home
game Saturday afternoon.
The
Wolves
(3-3)
scored 14 points in the
fourth quarter and held
off the North Alabama
(4-1) charge.
Western
Oregon
jumped out a 10-0 lead in
the first quarter, but the
Lions scored 16 straight
points to take control of
the game.
Three passers completed 17 of 31 for 227
yards and two touch-

downs for Western Oregon. One was wide receiver Paul Revis for a 15-yard
score.
Three ball carriers
gained at least 35 yards
led by Phillip Fenumiai
with 60 yards and a touchdown.
Shane Kuenzi, Jeremy
Moore and Jonathan Breland forced fumbles for
the Wolves.
Willamette 10 Pacific
Lutheran 9: The Bearcats
won the Northwest Conference road game with a
fourth-quarter
touchdown.
Jimmy Sharpe scored
on a 1-yard touchdown run
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with 14:58 left in the game.


He capped off a 20-play,
74-yard drive that began
in the middle of the third
quarter.
The defense held on
the rest of the way as the
Bearcats (1-3, 1-1) stopped
Pacific Lutheran (0-4, 0-2)
on downs, forced a punt
and when the game ended.
Four ball carriers
gained at least 18 yards
for Willamette, led by
Ryan Foote with 33 yards.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2015, 1:30PM

Advance Directives

Ryan Knowlton completed 17 of 35 for 131 yards.


Linfield 77, Pacific 10:
The Wildcats cruised to
another victory. They
gained 698 total yards in
the Northwest Conference game.
Quarterback Sam Riddle competed 14 of 23 for
266 yards and three touchdowns. Sutter Choisser
led the running game with
53 yards a touchdown.

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Beavers report card


QUARTERBACKS

DCASEY SAPIO/USA TODAY SPORTS

Oregon State Beavers quarterback Seth


Collins looks to pass under pressure from
Arizona Wildcats safety Anthony Lopez
during the third quarter at Arizona Stadium.

RUNNING BACKS

BEAVERS BOX SCORE


Washington St. 45, Oregon 38,
2OT
Washington St.
Oregon

7
10

7
7

7
7

10
7

7
7

7
0

45
38

WSUMarks 7 pass from Falk


(E.Powell kick), 11:42.
OreFG Schneider 26, 8:22.
OreAlie 8 run (Schneider kick),
6:06.

Second Quarter
Arizona quarterback Anu Solomon scrambles against Oregon State during the first half in
Tucson, Ariz.

Beavers
Continued from Page 1C

Bradford said. Coach called my number


and I just wanted to do this for my team.
After giving up 111 points the two previous weeks in blowout losses to UCLA
and Stanford, Arizona allowed a seasonlow seven on Saturday.
Defensively it was the best weve
played all year, Rodriguez said.
The defense was helped greatly by
shifting outside linebacker Jake Matthews to fill the injury-depleted middle
linebacker spot and inserting Paul Magloire into Matthews old position.
Whatever they did against the other
teams, Oregon State first-year coach
Gary Andersen said, and we all know
what the scores were and what have you,
that was a good defense that we played
against today.
Beavers freshman Seth Collins was 8
for 24 for 56 yards with one interception,
ran for 56 yards and scored the Oregon
State touchdown.
I expected these kids to play well today, and I truly thought we would, Andersen said. We absolutely did not.
Collins and his top receiver Jordan
Villamin left the game with injuries in
the first half, Collins limping into the
locker room before the second quarter
ended. Both returned to start the second
half.
Villamin had to be helped off the field
after a crushing hit from Arizona safety
Will Parks in the second quarter.
An official threw a flag on the play but
it was picked up and replays showed
Parks hit was legal.
Rodriguez called the play the tone
setter for the game.
The high in Tucson was 90 degrees and

it probably pushed 100 on the field.


At home, 90-degree weather, we like
that, Rodriguez said.
The Wildcats took the opening kickoff
and needed just 2:06 to go 75 yards in nine
plays, the big one a 50-yard pass from
Solomon to wide open David Richards.
Wilson capped the drive with a threeyard run.
Arizonas next two drives stalled, and
the Wildcats settled for a pair of field
goals by Casey Skowron.
Oregon State was down only 13-7 after
Collins burst up the middle 17 yards for a
touchdown with 10:59 left in the first half,
and it looked like the Beavers might
make it competitive in their bid to give
Andersen his first Pac-12 win.
But the Wildcats, the defending Pac-12
South champions, scored the next 31
points. The first 14 of them came on three
plays from scrimmage.
After Oregon States kickoff, Baker
ran through a big opening up the middle
for 70 yards, setting up Wilsons 7-yard
touchdown run. On the Beavers next
possession, defensive lineman Anthony
Fotu tipped Collins pass into the air, then
gathered the ball in and rumbled six
yards to the Oregon State 1. Bradford
scored from there, making it 27-7.
Arizona got one more touchdown before halftime, converting on third down
four times in a 15-play, 65-yard drive. Solomon threw 11 yards to Richards on
third-and-10, then threw 18 yards to Cayleb Jones to the Beavers 3. Bradford
scored two plays later from the 1 and the
Wildcats led 34-7 at the half.
We were pretty confident going into
the game, and we thought we matched up
pretty evenly against them, Oregon
State linebacker Jaswha James said. We
just had to play harder than them and not
let the heat affect us. Obviously we didnt
do that.

OreFreeman 2 run (Schneider


kick), 1:44.
WSUMarks 4 pass from Falk
(E.Powell kick), :09.

Third Quarter
WSUMartin Jr. 27 pass from Falk
(E.Powell kick), 12:39.
OreFreeman 17 pass from Lockie
(Schneider kick), 3:55.

Fourth Quarter
OreFreeman 1 run (Schneider
kick), 8:20.
WSUFG E.Powell 22, 3:53.
WSUD.Williams 8 pass from Falk
(E.Powell kick), :01.

First Overtime
OreAddison 9 pass from Lockie
(Schneider kick).
WSUFalk 1 run (E.Powell kick).

Second Overtime
WSULewis
(E.Powell kick).
A57,775.

pass

from

Falk

WSU
31
30-136
505
50-75-0
33
6-36.8
3-2
7-45
47:52

Ore
18
50-410
123
13-24-1
2
7-39.9
1-1
5-44
42:08

First downs
Rushes-yards
Passing
Comp-Att-Int
Return Yards
Punts-Avg.
Fumbles-Lost
Penalties-Yards
Time of Possession

Storm Barrs-Woods and Ryan


Nall split time and combined for
90 yards on 17 carries. There
wasnt much room to work.

WIDE RECEIVERS

First Quarter

RICK SCUTERI/AP

Put this performance in the


growing pains category for
true freshman Seth Collins.
Collins, who completed 8 of 24 passes for
56 yards and one pick, did not do a good
job of locating secondary receivers. Backup QB Marcus McMaryion received extended playing time and didnt do much.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGWashington St., Morrow
8-68, Wicks 7-64, Harrington 3-44, Martin Jr. 1-9, Falk 11-(minus 49). Oregon,
Freeman 27-246, Ta.Griffin 11-96, Lockie
8-52, Alie 2-8, Benoit 2-8.
PASSINGWashington St., Falk 5074-0-505, Team 0-1-0-0. Oregon, Lockie
13-22-1-123, Alie 0-2-0-0.
RECEIVINGWashington St., R.Cracraft 9-85, Marks 8-111, D.Williams 7-82,
Lewis 5-48, Morrow 5-43, Harrington 540, Wicks 5-30, Priester 4-30, Martin Jr.
1-27, J.Thompson 1-9. Oregon, Addison 862, Freeman 3-46, Allen 1-12, J.Brown 1-3.

Other than a 24-yard completion to Victor Bolden, OSUs


longest pass play went for 14
yards. It was good to see Villamin return
in the second half.

OFFENSIVE LINE

The running game managed 151


yards thanks in part to a push
from the offensive line.

DEFENSIVE LINE

When a team gives up 644


total yards, including 368 on
the ground and five rushing
touchdowns, the defensive
line isnt getting it done.

LINEBACKERS

See defensive line analysis.

SECONDARY

D-

Arizona quarterback Anu


Solomon returned after a
one-week absence and had
open receivers all over the field. A 70yard deep ball to Johnny Jackson in the
second quarter was a blown coverage.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Trailing 34-7 in the third quarter, a fake punt attempt went


awry in the third quarter
when Brent VanderVeen
overthrew Kendall Hill. It was worth
trying, at least. Nick Porebski punted
nine times not a good sign.

COACHING
With an extra week to prepare for Arizona, the Beavers
took a step back. They were
not equipped to deal with
Arizonas spread offense. OSU managed just seven points against a team
that gave up 111 points in its last two
games.

Ducks report card


QUARTERBACKS

Neither Jeff Lockie nor Taylor Alie


have the arm to stretch the field,
and its hurting the team.
RYAN KANG/AP

RUNNING BACKS

Royce Freeman is an absolute beast,


and Taj Griffin is an amazing young
speed back.

WIDE RECEIVERS

Its not their fault that the quarterbacks cant get them the ball. But
right now, they are almost irrelevant.

OFFENSIVE LINE

B+

The running game was huge,


but the passing game is still
struggling.

DEFENSIVE LINE

A-

They did a great job of applying


pressure on the quarterback.

LINEBACKERS

Good pressure on the quarterback, but WSU still passed for


more than 500 yards.

SECONDARY

At times, they looked better. But


500-plus passing yards allowed.

COACHING

The Ducks had a 10-point lead at


home in the final four minutes.
You have to win those games, and
the Ducks didnt.

Oregon head coach Mark Helfrich talks to the


referees during the first half Saturday.

Ducks
Continued from Page 1C

hard, Helfrich said about the defense.


Obviously, the missed tackles on that
one long run were big. And I dont know if
that was fatigue or just finish. I thought
our pass rush was outstanding there late
in the fourth quarter, and thats a telltale
sign.
Of course, you win and lose as a team.
We all get that. But there is no question
that the quarterback position is holding
the team back. You just cant be successful week by week without having a solid
situation at quarterback.
Up next for Oregon is a showdown at
Washington, which is coming off an upset
win at USC. Then a bye week.
I said it last week, and Ill repeat it
now: Every week is going to be a battle
for the Ducks. They will need to fight for
every yard and every point.
On Saturday, they lost the fight.
Oregon is no longer playing for a
Pac-12 championship or a national title.
Right now, the Ducks are playing for
pride in each other, the coaches and the
program.
They have two paths they could follow, and Freeman said it best: We have
two choices. I mean, you can go downhill
from now and just give up. Or you can get
things together, get focused, said Freeman, who had 292 total yards and three
touchdowns. Well see what this team
identity is on Monday when we get back
to work. So I mean, I cant speak for the
future right now.
pmartini@StatesmanJournal.com or
(503) 399-6730 or Twitter.com/PeteMartiniSJ

RYAN KANG/AP

Oregon running back Royce Freeman warms up before the game against Washington State on
Saturday in Eugene.

DUCKS BOX SCORE

A52,987.

Arizona 44, Oregon St. 7


Oregon St.
Arizona

0
13

7
21

0
10

0
0

7
44

First Quarter
AriWilson 3 run (Skowron kick),
13:02.
AriFG Skowron 37, 5:19.
AriFG Skowron 27, :52.

Second Quarter
OrStCollins 17 run (Owens kick),
10:59.
AriWilson 7 run (Skowron kick),
10:17.
AriBradford 1 run (Skowron kick),
9:06.
AriBradford 2 run (Skowron kick),
3:44.

Third Quarter
AriFG Skowron 20, 9:25.
AriBradford 6 run (Skowron kick),
4:37.

First downs
Rushes-yards
Passing
Comp-Att-Int
Return Yards
Punts-Avg.
Fumbles-Lost
Penalties-Yards
Time of Possession

OrSt
15
31-151
98
12-35-1
0
9-46.4
0-0
5-59
24:14

Ari
27
58-368
276
17-30-0
6
3-53.7
1-0
7-56
35:46

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGOregon St., Barrs-Woods
9-60, Collins 10-56, Nall 8-30, P.Lucas 3-13,
McMaryion 1-(minus 8). Arizona, Baker
10-123, Bradford 19-83, Wilson 12-78,
Randall 6-49, Haden 5-31, Dawkins 2-17,
Johnson 1-8, Solomon 1-(minus 3), Team
2-(minus 18).
PASSINGOregon St., Collins 8-24-156, McMaryion 4-10-0-42, VanderVeen 01-0-0. Arizona, Solomon 17-30-0-276.
RECEIVINGOregon St., Bolden 334, Villamin 3-21, Jarmon 2-17, VanderVeen 1-14, Guyton 1-6, Hawkins 1-5,
Barrs-Woods 1-1. Arizona, C.Jones 4-29,
Phillips 4-26, J.Jackson 3-92, Grant 3-42,
Richards 2-61, Wilson 1-22, Solomon 0-4.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

5C

NFL
WASHINGTON (2-2)
at ATLANTA (4-0)

GAME OF THE WEEK

TIME: 1 p.m.
LINE: Falcons by 712
WHAT TO WATCH: With a
victory, Atlanta
would sweep the
NFC East and own
sole possession of
first place in the
NFC South with
Carolina on a bye.
The Redskins are
1-8 on the road under coach
Jay Gruden. Washington TE
Jordan Reed shares the team
lead with 24 catches but is
out due to a concussion.
Wide receiver DeSean Jackson (hamstring) also remains
unavailable.

SEATTLE (2-2) at CINCINNATI (4-0)

SAN FRANCISCO (1-3)


at N.Y. GIANTS (2-2)

TIME: 1 p.m.
LINE: Bengals by 3
WHAT TO WATCH: A date with the NFLs best secondary should tell us a lot about just how good Bengals
QB Andy Dalton, WR A.J. Green and the rest of the
Cincinnati offense are. The passing game has led
the way to a 4-0 start, but Cincinnati might end up
leaning on RBs Jeremy Hill and Giovani Bernard
more this weekend. The Bengals have averaged
30.7 ponts over their last seven regular-season
games. The absence of Seahawks RB Marshawn
Lynch (hamstring) puts QB Russell Wilson into an
even bigger role. He also seems to be at his best
when Seattle is facing a stout run defense, which
Cincinnati has.

Richard
Sherman

Andy
Dalton

TIME: 8:30 p.m.


LINE: Giants by 7
WHAT TO WATCH: 49ers QB
Colin Kaepernick
is the face of an
offense in utter
disarray. His hold
on the starting
job may be slipping, but he is far
from the Niners
only problem. Hes getting
little help from a defense
that has allowed 6.2 yards per
snap. The Giants have held a
halftime lead in every game.
The 49ers have been outscored 29-0 in the first quarter and 67-20 in the first half.

CLEVELAND (1-3)
at BALTIMORE (1-3)

NEW ORLEANS (1-3)


at PHILADELPHIA (1-3)

BUFFALO (2-2)
at TENNESSEE (1-2)

DENVER (4-0)
at OAKLAND (2-2)

PITTSBURGH (2-2)
at SAN DIEGO (2-2)

TIME: 1 p.m.
LINE: Ravens by 612
WHAT TO WATCH: Cleveland
has allowed the
most yards in the
league. With
Steve Smith suffering from a back
injury and doubtful to play, the
Ravens need wide
receivers Kamar Aiken and
Marlon Brown to gain the
trust of quarterback Joe
Flacco, who is 13-1 against the
Browns since 2008. In those
games he has thrown 18
touchdown passes vs. seven
interceptions.

TIME: 1 p.m.
LINE: Eagles by 412
WHAT TO WATCH: In their
Week 4 loss, the
Eagles ran 28
fewer plays on
offense than the
Redskins. QB Sam
Bradford hasnt
been able to
jump-start the
offense, resulting in few
points, short possessions and
bad karma. The Saints rank
27th against the run, yielding
123.2 yards a game. The
Eagles have averaged a meager 70.0 yards rushing a
game.

TIME: 1 p.m.
LINE: Bills by 212
WHAT TO WATCH: The Bills
have been penalized a leagueleading 58 times.
Two of their 17
infractions last
week negated
TDs. Look for
Titans QB Marcus
Mariota to do the same.
Tennessee has allowed four
completions longer than 40
yards. Buffalo turns to RBs
Anthony Dixon and newly
signed Boom Herron with
LeSean McCoy and Karlos
Williams injured.

TIME: 4:25 p.m.


LINE: Broncos by 412
WHAT TO WATCH: The Broncos are 4-0 for the
second time in
three seasons, but
three of the wins
have come by a
combined 16
points. The Raiders resurgent pass
rush could be a big problem
for Denver QB Peyton Manning and his jigsaw O-line,
which will again be without
LT Ty Sambrailo. The Broncos
offense has struggled on
third down, converting 36.4
percent.

TIME: 8:30 p.m. on Monday


LINE: Chargers by 3
WHAT TO WATCH: Steelers
WRs Antonio
Brown and Martavis Bryant, who
will debut after
serving a fourgame suspension,
form one of the
leagues most
explosive receiving duos. San
Diego QB Philip Rivers gets
his favorite target back, too,
with TE Antonio Gates also
back from a four-game ban.
The Chargers had four sacks
last week after recording one
in their first three games.

TIM HEITMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS

Atlanta receiver Julio Jones.

ST. LOUIS (2-2)


at GREEN BAY (4-0)

CHICAGO (1-3)
at KANSAS CITY (1-3)

JACKSONVILLE (1-3)
at TAMPA BAY (1-3)

ARIZONA (3-1)
at DETROIT (0-4)

NEW ENGLAND (3-0)


at DALLAS (2-2)

TIME: 1 p.m.
LINE: Packers by 912
WHAT TO WATCH: RB Todd
Gurley gained 146
yards in his second game, revitalizing the Rams
offense. All of
Green Bays wins
have come by
double-digit margins. The
Packers offensive line had
protection problems last
weekend. Those must be
fixed with one of the NFLs
best defensive fronts coming
to town and getting RT Bryan
Bulaga (knee) back would
certainly help.

TIME: 1 p.m.
LINE: Chiefs by 912
WHAT TO WATCH: In their
Week 4 win, The
Bears evolving
3-4 defense,
which had been
allowing 135.7
yards rushing per
game, held the
Raiders to 70 (3.2
average) and 243 yards overall (4.3 a play). Chiefs RB
Jamaal Charles and Bears RB
Matt Forte are two of the
leagues best all-purpose
backs. Forte has 500 combined yards, and Charles has
467.

TIME: 1 p.m.
LINE: Buccaneers by 3
WHAT TO WATCH: The Jags,
who beat the
Dolphins in Week
2, can sweep their
Florida counterparts. Since
throwing two INTs
in Week 1, Jacksonville QB Blake
Bortles has thrown one in his
last 122 attempts and has a
career-long streak of 67
attempts without a pick. Bucs
rookie QB Jameis Winston
has thrown a pick-six on his
first pass of the game in two
of his four starts.

TIME: 4:05 p.m.


LINE: Cardinals by 212
WHAT TO WATCH: Arizona
had three turnovers last week
after committing
four in its first
three games. The
Lions have averaged just 17 rushes per game and
less than 3.0 yards a carry.
However they face a Cardinals defense that was gashed
by the Rams in Week 4. Detroit has lost six in a row to
the Cardinals. Arizona QB
Carson Palmer is on pace to
throw for 4,620 yards.

TIME: 4:25 p.m.


LINE: Patriots by 812
WHAT TO WATCH: The Cowboys get DE Greg
Hardy and MLB
Rolando McClain
back from suspensions just in time
to face the
leagues No. 1
offense. LB Sean
Lee (concussion) is also likely
to return. New England is
averaging 39.7 points per
game. Patriots WR Julian
Edelman has evolved into
Wes Welker 2.0. Edelmans 30
catches are nearly double the
total of TE Rob Gronkowski.

AP FILE

New England Patriots wide


receiver Julian Edelman.

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS

Jackson left mark in start against Bengals


Curtis Crabtree
Associated Press

RENTON, Wash. Playing with a


torn pectoral muscle and a small biceps
tear in his right arm, Tarvaris Jackson
managed to throw for a career-high 323
yards the last time the Seattle Seahawks
faced the Cincinnati Bengals.
Its a moment that remains vivid in
the minds of the Seahawks organization
even four years later as the team travels
to face the Bengals for the first time
since that afternoon in Seattle.
Jackson, now the Seahawks backup
quarterback, replaced an ineffective
Charlie Whitehurst under center in the
second quarter just three weeks removed from being injured against the
New York Giants.
I dont think any of us that were there
at the time will ever forget how we felt
about him and the courage that he
showed and the toughness he showed
and the resourcefulness to throw a football in the NFL with a torn pec, head

coach Pete Carroll said. It was a remarkable demonstration of his toughness and will to play for his teammates
and all that.
Without any practice time, Jackson
came off the bench and helped rejuvenate an offense that had been stuck in
park with Whitehurst at the wheel.
When I threw the ball, every time I
felt the strain, Jackson said. On game
day my adrenaline was flowing, so that
helped out. It was going to hurt regardless so I just had to play through it.
Jackson said he wanted to start the
game but Carroll wanted to try and give
him an extra week to recover. But when
Seattle scored just six points in their previous five quarters with Whitehurst at
quarterback, Carrolls hand was forced.
The Seahawks found themselves in a
10-3 hole against Cincinnati as Jackson
returned to the field. Jackson led two
scoring drives and closed the gap to 17-12
in the fourth quarter before a punt return touchdown by Brandon Tate broke
the game open for the Bengals.

ELAINE THOMPSON/AP

Seahawks quarterback Tarvaris Jackson


passes during a preseason game on Aug. 14.

Jackson then went on to start every


game the rest of the year for Seattle despite barely being able to practice on a
weekly basis.
Tarvaris has always been amazing to
us, left tackle Russell Okung said. I

was a part of that offensive line that used


to get him hit a lot. Hes a very tough guy,
tough as nails.
After trading for Matt Flynn in 2012
and drafting Russell Wilson in the third
round, Jackson was traded to Buffalo
during training camp. He was released
by Buffalo after the season and receivers Doug Baldwin and Sidney Rice went
to Carroll to lobby for Jackson to return
to Seattle.
Jackson re-signed with Seattle and
has served as Wilsons backup each of
the last three seasons. Wilson has started
every game over that span and the Seahawks have not needed Jackson to play
significant snaps since his return to Seattle. But his play that season while injured is a big reason why the Seahawks
have full faith in Jackson if they ever do
need to call his number again.
Thats the kind of guy that you want
with you, receiver Ricardo Lockette
said. Youre going to fight for them and
you want guys that are going to fight
with you.

CUBS 6, CARDINALS 3

Cubs put squeeze on Cardinals, even up the series


R.B. Fallstrom
Associated Press

ST. LOUIS For one inning, Jorge


Soler and all those Chicago Cubs rookies
looked like playoff-tested veterans and
the St. Louis Cardinals appeared shaken.
Thats all it took.
Kyle Hendricks and Addison Russell
had successful squeeze bunts and Soler
capped a five-run second with a two-run
homer off Jaime Garcia, and the Cubs
held off the Cardinals 6-3 on Saturday
night to even their NL Division Series at
a game apiece.
Listen, I cant be more proud of our
guys, manager Joe Maddon said. When
you win a wild-card game like we did, I
promise you, you settle in. We didnt win
yesterday but we were not overwhelmed
by anything.
Maddon made all the right moves a
night after the Cubs lost the opener 4-0.
Now the teams shift to Wrigley Field for
Game 3 Monday, the first playoff game
at the friendly confines since 2008,
where Chicagos 22-game winner Jake
Arrieta faces St. Louis Michael Wacha in
the fi best-of-five series.
Getting back there 1-1 with our big
dog on the mound, the atmosphere is going to be good, Anthony Rizzo said.
The usually steady NL Central champion Cardinals made two errors as the
Cubs didnt hit the ball out of the infield
in scoring their first three runs in the
second.
It is hard to watch a club thats

JEFF CURRY/USA TODAY SPORTS

JEFF CURRY/USA TODAY SPORTS

Chicago Cubs left fielder Austin Jackson


scores on a sacrifice bunt.

Chicago Cubs right fielder Jorge Soler hits a


two-run home run against the Cardinals.

played so well defensively, see a couple


things happen that are kind of uncharacteristic for us, manager Mike Matheny
said.
Making his first postseason start, Soler connected off Garcia (0-1), who was
lifted because of a stomach ailment after
the second. The Cubs have been working
Soler back into the mix after he returned
from a left oblique strain in mid-September.
All I was trying to do was help the
team win, Soler said through a translator. He got a ball up where I could hit it
hard.
Garcia told the team he felt a bit ill
about an hour before the game but
thought hed be fine.
I was going to pitch, it was my
game, Garcia said. I worked so hard all

year for this situation and unfortunately


it didnt go my way, but no excuse.
Dexter Fowler, Soler and Starlin Castro each had two of Chicagos six hits in a
game played in front of a lively crowd of
47,859, a postseason record at 10-yearold Busch Stadium, that included thousands of Cubs fans.
Soler also doubled and walked twice
in the Cubs first postseason victory
since 2003. Chicago had lost seven
straight Division Series games.
The Cardinals homered three times,
including a leadoff long ball by Matt Carpenter. Consecutive shots by Kolten
Wong and pinch-hitter Randal Grichuk
with two outs in the fifth chased Hendricks one out shy of qualifying for the
victory in his postseason debut.
Travis Wood (1-0) allowed one hit with

two strikeouts in 2 1-3 scoreless innings


for the victory. Hector Rondon, briefly
stuck in the bullpen bathroom during
Game 1, earned his first career postseason save.
Thats really funny for me right
now, Rondon said with a laugh.
Though none of the runs were earned
in the second, Garcias first postseason
start since 2012 was a disaster.
The Cubs capitalized when Garcia
blew a play on a safety squeeze by Hendricks. The pitcher hesitated instead of
throwing home with a very good chance
of cutting down the run, then made a
wild, flat-footed throw to first for an error.
I didnt even see it, Hendricks said.
I put my head down and started running.
Russell, the next batter, squeezed in
another run, and Dexter Fowler had an
RBI infield hit before Soler drove a high
2-2 pitch over the center field wall.
Everything has to be set up properly
for that, Maddon said. It just was.
The inning was also aided by an ill-advised, off-target relay to first for a
throwing error by second baseman Kolten Wong trying for a double play.
Lance Lynn, the presumptive Game 4
starter, replaced Garcia in the third as
the first in a parade of relievers. Matheny said there are options for Game 4,
with Lynn or lefty Tyler Lyons as possibilities. Two-time 20-game winner Adam
Wainwright fanned three in 1 2-3 scoreless innings.

6C

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

QUOTE OF THE DAY


IM
EXHAUSTED
FROM IT.
Ohio State coach Urban Meyer on
dealing with questions about using
both quarterbacks Cardale Jones
and J.T. Barrett in games

MEYER BY GREG BARTRAM, USA TODAY SPORTS

SPORTSLINE

JEROME MIRON, USA TODAY SPORTS

FIRST WORD
I FEEL LIKE WE HAVE
ONE OF THE FRESHEST
FOOTBALL TEAMS IN AMERICA
AT THIS POINT.
Baylor coach Art Briles, who rested his stars again in the second
half of another blowout, a 66-7
win against Kansas.
MAGIC NUMBER

127.3

Career rushing yards a game for


Georgia running back Nick
Chubb, who left Saturdays game
on a cart with a knee injury.

DAN HAMILTON, USA TODAY SPORTS

The Rangers Rougned Odor has excelled in all areas hitting, eld and baserunning in the early portion of the postseason.

ODOR BRINGS IMPACT


Inelder helps
Rangers build
2-0 lead on Jays
By Joe Lemire
@LemireJoe
Special for USA TODAY Sports

CHUBB BY DALE ZANINE, USA TODAY SPORTS

TWEET OF THE DAY


@TG3II
Prayers for my boy Chubb.
SMH
Rams running back Todd Gurley,
who suffered a knee injury last
season while playing for Georgia.
ALMOST LAST WORD
THERE ARE JUST NOT MANY
SPEEDWAYS THAT HAVE THE
LOOK OF THIS ONE FROM THE
ROAD. IT WAS SOMETHING
REALLY COOL TO SEE.
NASCAR driver Jeff Gordon, who
is making his last appearance at
Charlotte Motor Speedway this
weekend.

In two games of the American


League Division Series, the central character of nearly every key
play has been Texas Rangers second baseman Rougned Odor, who
has homered, slid around tags,
obscured replays, absorbed pitches and barehanded a chopper to
propel his club to an early 2-0
lead.
Signed for $425,000 as a 17year-old out of Venezuela, Odor
was thrust right into Class A ball
as the Northwest Leagues youngest player. He held his own there
and took the fast track to the majors, debuting last season less
than 100 days after his 20th
birthday again the youngest
player, at least for three months
until the New York Mets Dilson
Herrera arrived in the big
leagues.
Hes a young kid that fears
nothing, Texas rst baseman
Mike Napoli said. Hes condent
in himself. ... Some guys get intimidated. Hes not intimidated at
all. Especially on this stage, its
really nice to watch.
His already-accelerated path
sped ahead by a season when

Texas top ineld prospect Jurickson Profar, Odors senior by a


year, had a major shoulder injury
in 2014, clearing a middle-ineld
spot for left-handed hitting Odor.
His performance wasnt gaudy
a .259 average, .698 on-base-plusslugging percentage (OPS), nine
homers and 100 hits in 114 games,
but he held his own while, on average, nine years younger than
his opponents.
Handed the second-base job in
spring training this year, however, he failed to perform early in
the season. By May 8 exactly a
year after his big league debut
he was batting .144 in the 2015
season, prompting the club to demote him to Class AAA. All reassigned players are granted a few
days to get their affairs in order.
Odor was on the eld in Round
Rock, Texas, at noon the next day
to get to work.
They gave me three days off. I
didnt take the three days off, he
said. I just go the next day to Triple A and work on my stuff. Get
out early, hit a lot, take a lot of
ground balls and come back
here.
Odor played 30 games in the
minors and batted .352 with
ve home runs and an OPS of
1.065.
He said that the demotion gave
him extra motivation, and general manager Jon Daniels said the
young player got his edge back.
Upon returning to Texas on
June 15, Odor batted .292 with a
.334 on-base percentage and .527
slugging percentage, slugging 15

home runs among 41 extra-base


hits in 91 games. For the season,
Odor and Astros rookie shortstop
Carlos Correa were the only two
players 21 or younger to have
more than 45 extra-base hits and
an OPS better than .775.
Those two joined Bryce Harper
and Mike Trout as the only players to do so in the last four years.
Of the 17 players on that list since
1990, some other bold-faced
names are Ken Griffey Jr., Alex
Rodriguez, Albert Pujols, Miguel
Cabrera and Adrian Beltre; only
Odor and Kansas City Royals rst
baseman Eric Hosmer have yet to
make an All-Star Game.
I think that (minor league
stint) helped, third baseman
Beltre said. He got his condence back. Hes probably been
the best hitter we have on our
team in the last two months.
That condence and edge
might come, in part, because he
grew up in a family consumed by
the sport. His father, also named
Rougned, used to scout Venezuela for the Cleveland Indians.
(Odor also has a younger brother
named Rougned, who was recently signed by the Rangers.) One
uncle, Rouglas, is the hitting
coach for the Cleveland Indians
Class AAA club while three other
uncles played in the Venezuelan
winter leagues, including Eddie
Zambrano, who played 75 bigleague games for the Chicago
Cubs in 1993 and 94.
Odor has keen baseball instincts. Twice he made great
baserunning plays in Game 2, ad-

vancing from rst to third on a


ground ball when he noticed
third base uncovered during a
shift and later scoring on a sacrice y with a remarkable slide
home, tilting his body away from
Toronto Blue Jays catcher Russell
Martins tag.
The slide was unbelievable,
Beltre said. I think he was probably the only guy that could be
safe on that slide because that
was terric.
There are times that players
just will themselves to score,
Texas manager Jeff Banister said.
In that same game, he grabbed
a slowly bounding ball with his
bare hand for the third out of an
inning and save a run. In Game 1,
he was struck by two pitches
from Blue Jays lefty starter David
Price and later hit a homer
only the fth Price has allowed to
a left-hander in 2015 that was a
straight laser into right eld.
MLB.coms StatCast measured
Odors sprint home on the
Game 2 sacrice y at a swift 20.4
mph and the exit velocity of his
Game 1 homer at 113 mph, the
hardest hit ball this postseason.
Hes a dynamic player with obvious tools whom Daniels credited as being an important on-base
presence in the lower third of the
lineup to set the table when the
order turns over. Those tools and
Odors ery play have put the
Rangers in an enviable position
as they head home for Game 3.
I always play with energy,
Odor said. I try to help everybody, to pick everybody up.

Falcons expected Freeman to emerge


BEN QUEEN, USA TODAY SPORTS

LAST WORD
ALL IM GOING TO DO IS GET
THESE KIDS TO BE THE BEST
THAT THEY CAN BE. AS LONG
AS IM THE COACH, ALL IM
GOING TO DO IS DO MY JOB.
Maryland football coach Randy
Edsall, who is on the hot seat
after another loss.

Breakout back
always had what it
took, team says
Ray Glier
@RAYGLIER
Special for USA TODAY Sports

Edited by Mike Brehm


FLOWERY BRANCH , GA .

USA SNAPSHOTS

Eight is enough

Players
from MLS
teams on the
USAs Under-23
mens roster
for this
months
CONCACAF
Olympic
soccer qualifying
tournament

Source U.S. Soccer


ROXANNA SCOTT AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

Atlanta
Falcons running back Devonta
Freeman did not show up overnight. It just seems that way.
He played on a 6-10 team in
2014 and was injured (hamstring)
in training camp this year, which
helped put him under cover.
But his coach, teammates, and
Freeman saw his burst of six
touchdowns and 209 yards rushing in two games coming. Freeman is not a sudden revelation
for the 4-0 Falcons.
I dont know if it was a revelation or not I knew it was there,
coach Dan Quinn said. Maybe
the rst game or two we didnt
get to see it enough, and now its
like, OK, thats the style we love
and expect to see out of him.
You can kind of tell theyre

like, Who is this guy, where is he


coming from? fullback Pat DiMarco said about defenses getting their rst dose of Freeman.
Hes as talented as it gets. Ive
known him for two years, and
what he is doing now isnt surprising me.
Freeman isnt shocked, either,
even if others are.
I have always been an underdog, an underdog my whole life,
he said, but when I did have opportunities, I made the best of
them.
Freeman had 22 carries for 43
yards in the rst two games of the
season, victories against the Philadelphia Eagles and the New
York Giants. Waiting for his hamstring to heal, plus the emergence
of rookie runner Tevin Coleman,
put Freeman in a reserve role.
Coleman had a strong start
with 80 yards against the Eagles.
But when he suffered a rib injury
against the Giants, Freeman became the featured back in the
Falcons new zone-run scheme.
Freeman is the rst player
since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger
to rush for three touchdowns in
each of his rst two starts. He had

JASON GETZ, USA TODAY SPORTS

Devonta Freeman has become


a touchdown machine for the
Falcons.
68 yards rushing and 81 yards receiving against the Houston Texans last Sunday, and 141 yards
rushing on 30 carries and three
touchdowns against the Dallas
Cowboys in Week 3. Freemans
seven touchdowns lead the NFL.
Its been a fun ride. Nothing

has changed, Im the same person, practice hard every day,


Freeman said.
He was a 1,000-yard rusher in
2013 at Florida State and was
picked in the fourth round of the
2014 NFL draft. He is excelling
behind new offensive coordinator
Kyle Shanahans varied offense
and a rebuilt offensive line.
The NFL can be a hard-hearted existence, but it routinely produces players who t nicely into a
storybook. Players like Freeman.
He grew up in poverty in Miami. I kind of had to cut from my
childhood as he was manning
up as a 12-year-old with his mom
and grandmother, he said.
Published reports said Freeman was snubbed by Miami (Fla.)
in recruiting because of his height
(5-8). Quarterback Jameis Winston absorbed most of the spotlight at FSU, but Freeman was
accustomed by then to being an
afterthought.
Everyday life just growing up
in certain neighborhoods prepare
you for certain things, Freeman
said. I can grind all day long and
ght because of the circumstances I grew up in.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

7C

COLLEGE FOOTBALL
TOP 25

How the
Amway
Coaches
Poll teams
fared

RICK OSENTOSKI, USA TODAY SPORTS

Michigans Jourdan Lewis, center, leads a celebration after an interception in Saturdays 38-0 win against Northwestern.

MICHIGAN MAKES MARK


Big Ten rivals
certain to take
notice of win
Dan Wolken
@DanWolken
USA TODAY Sports

From the moment the 2015


schedule was released, Nov. 21
was circled as one of the denitive dates of the season. Back
then, it seemed so clear the game
that day between Ohio State and
Michigan State would not only
decide the Big Tens East division
but a spot in the College Football
Playoff and perhaps a national
title.
But thanks to Jim Harbaugh,
its time to recalibrate.
Michigan doesnt just look like
a dangerous team at the moment,
it looks like a team that can win
the Big Ten.
The Wolverines thoroughly
dominant 38-0 victory against
Northwestern
has
officially
changed expectations in Harbaughs rst year, which didnt
seem very robust after a 24-17
season-opening loss at Utah. Not
only did Michigan extend its
streak to three consecutive shutouts against Northwestern, but
the Wolverines look more and
more like a nasty, physical Harbaugh-style team fully capable of
knocking off either Michigan
State or Ohio State.
Or perhaps both.
Michigan, as it turns out, gets
both of those opponents in the

Big House this season, starting


with the Spartans next week.
Its no secret previous Michigan coach Brady Hoke recruited
good talent to Ann Arbor. The
question was whether the players
Harbaugh inherited would t in
his system and be committed
enough to play his style.
The payoff has come quicker
than anyone could have anticipated. And the college football
world is officially on notice not
just for the future, but for now.
Other winners:
Texas: After two heartbreaking losses gave way to a blowout
at TCU, it seemed like the Longhorns season was teetering.
Locker-room issues were blowing
up on social media and criticism
was coming hot and heavy for
second-year
coach
Charlie
Strong. But funny things can happen in rivalry games, and the
Longhorns got the biggest victory
of Strongs tenure, knocking off
No. 9 Oklahoma 24-17. At 2-4
with some tough games remaining, Texas faces an uphill climb to
make a bowl. But this kind of win
will relieve pressure, foster buyin from his young players and
fans and make recruits believe
that Strong can survive in Austin
for the long haul.
Clemson: Many gured this
might be a tough spot for the Tigers, coming off an emotional win
against Notre Dame and having
to play against Georgia Techs
tricky option offense. Instead,
Clemson looked sharp all the way
through in a 43-24 win. Even better news is that uber-talented
sophomore quarterback Deshaun
Watson broke out after a slow

start to the season throwing the


ball, completing 21 of 30 passes
and nishing with 265 yards and
two touchdowns.
Connecticut: Much was
made during the summer summer of Connecticut coach Bob
Diaco trying to engineer a rivalry
with Central Florida, even though
the schools have no shared geography or history of playing each
other beyond their two-year association in the American Athletic
Conference. Diaco went so far as
to buy a trophy for the game and
put a countdown clock in the
Huskies locker room. UCF rebuffed the idea of a rivalry, but
Diaco had the last laugh Saturday
in a 40-13 victory against the
Knights, who remain winless and
could very well go 0-12.
LOSERS

Oregon: The Ducks pass defense


let them down again, albeit in the
face of one of college football's
most determined pass offenses.
Washington State outscored the
Ducks 24-14 in the fourth quarter
and two overtimes, beating Oregon for the rst time since 2006.
Oregons FCS neighbor to the
north, Portland State, can say it
did something the Ducks could
not: beat the Cougars in 2015.
Boston College: The Eagles
have given up a total of 40 points
over their past four games but
have just one win to show for it
during that stretch. Saturday was
perhaps the most embarrassing
setback, losing 3-0 at home to
Wake Forest. Boston College outgained the Demon Deacons 270142 and had an 18-5 edge in rst
downs but committed four turn-

overs. The Eagles fell to 0-3 in the


Atlantic Coast Conference.
Georgia: Despite losing star
running back Nick Chubb to an
ugly knee injury on the rst play
from scrimmage the severity of
which wasnt immediately determined Georgia had its game in
hand late in the second quarter,
leading 24-3 after a 75-yard punt
return for a touchdown. But the
Bulldogs gave Tennessee life, allowing a touchdown drive, then
fumbling the ensuing kickoff,
which the Volunteers converted
into another touchdown to trail
24-17 at halftime. Tennessee carried the momentum and held on
for a 38-31 victory to snag its biggest win under third-year coach
Butch Jones. Georgia has allowed
38 points in each of its last two
games and will need help to get
back in the SEC East race.
Syracuse: Though the Orange
suffered multiple quarterback injuries this season, they had
looked promising in building a 3-1
record with a competitive loss to
LSU. But Syracuse took a major
step back Saturday in a 45-24 loss
at South Florida, a team that was
previously 7-21 overall and 0-7
against Power Five opponents
under coach Willie Taggart.
Indiana: The Hoosiers had
never won in Beaver Stadium
since Penn State joined the Big
Ten. This seemed like a good opportunity to not only win but
move to the cusp of bowl eligibility at 5-1. Instead, the Hoosiers
played without quarterback Nate
Sudfeld and running back Jordan
Howard because of injuries and
gained only 234 yards in a nonthreatening 29-7 loss.

uNo. 1 Ohio State (6-0) beat


Maryland 49-28. Next: vs. Penn
State, Saturday.
uNo. 2 TCU (6-0) beat Kansas
State 52-45. Next: at Iowa State,
Saturday.
uNo. 3 Michigan State (6-0)
beat Rutgers 31-24. Next: at No. 21
Michigan, Saturday.
uNo. 4 Baylor (5-0) beat Kansas 66-7. Next: vs. West Virginia,
Saturday.
uNo. 5 LSU (5-0) beat South
Carolina 45-24. Next: vs. No. 12
Florida, Saturday.
uNo. 6 Clemson (5-0) beat
Georgia Tech 43-24. Next: vs. Boston College, Saturday.
uNo. 7 Utah (4-0) vs. No. 22
California. Next: vs. Arizona State,
Saturday
uNo. 8 Florida State (4-0) vs.
Miami (Fla.). Next: vs. Louisville,
Saturday.
uNo. 9 Oklahoma (4-1) lost to
Texas 24-17. Next: at Kansas State,
Saturday.
uNo. 10 Alabama (4-1) vs. Arkansas. Next: at No. 11 Texas A&M,
Saturday.
uNo. 11 Texas A&M (5-0) did not
play. Next: vs. No. 10 Alabama,
Saturday.
uNo. 12 Florida (5-0) at Missouri. Next: at No. 5 LSU, Saturday.
uNo. 13 Mississippi (5-1) beat
New Mexico State 52-3. Next: at
No. 25 Memphis, Saturday.
uNo. 14 Northwestern (5-1) lost
to No. 21 Michigan 38-0. Next: vs.
No. 23 Iowa, Saturday.
uNo. 15 Notre Dame (5-1) beat
Navy 41-24. Next: vs. No. 17 Southern Cal, Saturday.
uNo. 16 Georgia (4-2) lost to
Tennessee 38-31. Next: vs. Missouri, Saturday.
uNo. 17 Southern Cal (3-2) lost
to Washington 17-12, Thursday.
Next: at No. 15 Notre Dame,
Saturday.
uNo. 18 Stanford (4-1) did not
play. Next: vs. No. 20 UCLA,
Thursday.
uNo. 19 Oklahoma State (6-0)
beat West Virginia 33-26 (OT).
Next: vs. Kansas, Oct. 24.
uNo. 20 UCLA (4-1) did not play.
Next: at No. 18 Stanford, Thursday.
uNo. 21 Michigan (5-1) beat
No. 13 Northwestern 38-0. Next:
vs. No. 3 Michigan State, Saturday.
uNo. 22 California (5-0) at
No. 7 Utah. Next: at No. 20 UCLA,
Thursday, Oct. 22.
uNo. 23 Iowa (6-0) beat Illinois
29-20. Next: at No. 14 Northwestern, Saturday.
uNo. 24 Boise St. (4-1) at Colorado State. Next: at Utah State,
Friday.
uNo. 25 Memphis (5-0) did not
play. Next: at No. 13 Mississippi,
Oct. 17.

Texas win vs. Oklahoma


reinvigorates program
Strong and Co.
enthused a week
after debacle
Paul Myerberg
@PaulMyerberg
USA TODAY Sports

There was a mosh pit at


mideld, and Charlie Strong
body-surfed atop the crowd.
Then he donned a faux-gold cowboy hat handed to him by the
Texas governor, while one of the
Longhorns, his eyes on the big
screen atop the Cotton Bowl,
chanted, In your face! In your
face!
In his news conference, after
he had high-ved the rst row of
media members on his way to the
dais, Strong said, That was the
University of Texas. Today was
our day, and thats the team.
This is the theme of a 24-17
win against No. 9 Oklahoma,
shared publicly by Strong and
quietly, in a more personal moment, during an embrace between
the
Longhorns
second-year coach and one of his
players during a raucous postgame celebration. We did this
for you, the player told Strong.
DALLAS

Said Strong, We needed this.


We go to Notre Dame, we dont
play well. We go beat Rice, and we
played well. And we lose, and we
go last week and just looked God
awful. Im just so proud. I think
they said they didnt want to see
me get red, so they were going
to step up and play for me.
The Longhorns did it for
Strong and for each other and
to beat a rival but they did it as
a team, with an effort that exchanged any attempts at ash for
an approach rooted in simplicity.
Run the football, prevent the
Sooners from doing the same;
protect the football, force the
Sooners to be careless; win every
play; do your job.
The way were going to work
today, its going to speak for itself, Strong said. Were going to
run the football, and were going
to run it right at em, and were
going to knock em off the ball,
and nothing else is going to need
to be said because were going to
control the line of scrimmage.
This style is repeatable, and
potentially more nely tuned after an off week in advance of a
Big 12 Conference matchup with
Kansas State. Its also seen best in
a player, sophomore wide receiver Lorenzo Joe, who doesnt appear in the box score.

Joe was targeted once in Texas


win, on a deep heave along the
left sideline perhaps designed as
much to loosen up Oklahomas
defense as for a touchdown; the
pass was batted away, and Joe left
without adding to his year-todate receiving total through six
games one catch, a TD grab in
last weeks ugly loss to TCU.
Yet he threw one crucial block
to free up Marcus Johnson for a
24-yard touchdown in the rst
quarter. Another block helped
pave the way for DOnta Foremans 81-yard run in the third
quarter, the Longhorns rst gain
of 80-plus yards in three seasons.
When
quarterback
Tyrone
Swoopes fumbled into the end
zone on a second-quarter run it
was eventually ruled he scored
before losing control it was Joe
who corralled the loose ball, ensuring an early 14-0 lead.
You love to see that, running
back Johnathan Gray said.
Thats how it starts. He does
what hes supposed to do, and he
does what is asked of him.
From the outside and, at
times, within the program itself
it was a week of turmoil for
Texas. At halftime of last Saturdays loss, freshman cornerback
Kris Boyd retweeted a comment
about transferring to Texas A&M.

MATTHEW EMMONS, USA TODAY SPORTS

Texas quarterback Jerrod Heard, right, celebrates Saturdays


victory against Oklahoma.
An early-week news conference
featured inghting between two
factions of this roster seemingly
at odds: the old guard, the juniors
and seniors recruited by the
Longhorns previous coaching
staff, and the underclassmen
brought in since Strongs arrival
nearly two years ago.
Joe ts into the latter company, as part of a class recruited
during Strongs rst months on
campus. This group has been
blamed for the Longhorns issues,
called out by upperclassmen accustomed to a different standard.
Theyve also been called, rightfully so, the future of Texas football.
Joe hasnt made headlines, lost in
the shadows behind Jerrod
Heard, John Burt and Malik Jefferson, among others.

Hes a great energy guy, Foreman said. He comes to practice


every day with a smile on his face
great energy, great tempo. And
for him to get his start today, his
rst start, I know it felt good to
him. He goes out there and wants
whats best for our team. I understand that he may want some individual stats, but his mind is just
on the team and winning games.
Joes ascent into the starting
lineup a week after not appearing on the depth chart proves
to underclassmen and upperclassmen alike that playing time
will be dictated in a meritocracy.
We always tell players that
you may not be playing now, but
just stay the course, your opportunitys coming, wide receivers
coach Jay Norvell said.

8C

Weather & Sports

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

THE MID-WILLAMETTE VALLEY


Sunny to partly cloudy
today. Winds north 3-6
mph. Partly cloudy
tonight. Winds light
and variable.

TODAY

High

Monday

LOCAL WEATHER

Tuesday

Wednesday Thursday

53 64 69

45

Local Forecast
Portland
69/49

Partly sunny and Mostly sunny and A shower in the Mostly sunny and
nice
pleasant
afternoon
pleasant

Partly sunny

Low

REGIONAL WEATHER

Friday

6 a.m Noon 6 p.m

71

StatesmanJournal.com

73/48

77/51

77/50

79/52

78/53

Beaverton
67/47
Oregon City
67/46
McMinnville
69/45
Woodburn
SALEM
68/46
71/45
Corvallis
73/44

Sunshine and patchy clouds today.


Mainly clear tonight. Partly sunny
tomorrow. Tuesday: partly sunny,
but more clouds across the north.
Wednesday: very warm with sunshine.

Coastal Forecast
Times of clouds and sun in the north
today; sunny to partly cloudy elsewhere.
Partly cloudy tonight. Mostly cloudy
in the north tomorrow; partly sunny
elsewhere.

Mountain Forecast

Albany
71/45

Mostly sunny today. Clear to partly


cloudy tonight. Partly sunny tomorrow.
Tuesday and Wednesday: sunshine.

Eugene
74/44
Shown is todays weather. Temperatures are todays highs and tonights lows.

Astoria
66/47

REGIONAL CITIES
Today

Tillamook
65/48

Newberg
67/46

Pendleton
69/45

The Dalles
72/45

La Grande
67/39

SALEM
Prineville
70/34

Lebanon
72/44

Newport
63/49

Springeld
72/44
Coos Bay
67/49

Ontario
72/36

Bend
68/38

Burns
68/33

Medford
81/47

Klamath Falls
75/34

LOCAL ALMANAC

RIVER LEVELS

Temperatures
High/low ......................................... 74/58
Normal high/low ............................. 67/43
Record high/low ...... 90 (1934)/32 (1929)

Precipitation
24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ........... 0.16
Record .................................... 1.35 (1995)
Month to date (normal) ........... 0.19 (0.64)
Season to date (normal) ......... 0.19 (0.64)

Todays Pollen Index


Trees
Grass
Weeds
Molds
Source: National Allergy Bureau

Todays UV Index and RealFeel Temp

70

71

71

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index


number, the greater the need for eye and skin
protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High;
8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. The patented
AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is
an exclusive index of effective temperature based
on eight weather factors.

Air Quality Index

Yesterdays reading

SKY WATCH

As of 7 a.m. Saturday

Salem through 6 p.m. yesterday

8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon

Lakeview
73/36

Todays Forecast

0-50 Good; 51-100 Moderate; 101-150 Unhealthy


for sensitive groups; 151-200 Unhealthy; 201-300
Very Unhealthy; 301-500 Hazardous
OR Department of Environmental Protection

Willamette River
Flow(cfs) Stage(ft.) Change(ft.)
Eugene
2520
9.90
+0.17
Harrisburg
3932
1.80
+0.14
Corvallis
4226
9.90
+0.12
Albany
4488
2.60
+0.10
Salem
6296
5.00
-0.01
North Santlam River
Mehama
1290
3.23
+0.01
Santlam River
Jefferson
1710
2.18
+0.04
Columbia River
Vancouver
N.A.
1.12
+0.17
Nestucca River
Near Beaver
60
3.50
+0.02
Siletz River
Siletz
60
2.18
+0.02
Alsea River
Near Tidewater
60
1.07
+0.01

TIDES

Yaquina Bay and River at Newport


High
Ht.
Low
12:10 p.m.
7.7
5:57 a.m.
---6:27 p.m.
Depoe Bay
High
Ht.
Low
11:53 a.m.
8.0
5:42 a.m.
---6:12 p.m.
Netarts Bay at Netarts
High
Ht.
Low
12:31 a.m.
5.9
6:53 a.m.
12:43 p.m.
6.5
7:23 p.m.
Tillamook Bay at Bay City
High
Ht.
Low
12:47 a.m.
6.1
7:15 a.m.
12:59 p.m.
6.7
7:45 p.m.
Tillamook Bay at Tillamook
High
Ht.
Low
1:06 a.m.
5.6
8:30 a.m.
1:18 p.m.
6.2
9:00 p.m.
Willamette River at Portland
High
Ht.
Low
6:03 a.m.
0.0
2:33 a.m.
6:21 p.m.
0.0
2:44 p.m.

Ht.
1.3
0.9
Ht.
1.3
0.9
Ht.
1.0
0.7
Ht.
1.0
0.7
Ht.
0.7
0.5
Ht.
0.0
0.0

Sun and Moon

First
Oct 20

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

82/50/s
65/51/c
74/38/s
77/49/s
79/34/s
76/45/pc
63/49/s
65/50/pc
79/51/s
78/35/s
78/35/s
75/39/pc
69/53/c
62/50/pc

North Bend
Olympia
Ontario
Pendleton
Portland
Redding
Redmond
Seattle
Spokane
Tacoma
Tri-Cities
Vancouver
Walla Walla
Yakima

66/49/s
66/43/pc
72/36/pc
69/45/s
69/49/pc
89/54/s
72/32/s
65/51/pc
64/42/pc
65/44/pc
73/40/s
60/50/c
70/48/s
71/39/pc

66/50/pc
66/52/r
75/41/s
74/49/pc
72/54/pc
92/56/s
76/33/pc
64/54/r
67/47/pc
66/52/r
75/45/pc
57/48/r
72/53/pc
74/43/pc

Today

Monday

Today

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Athens
Baghdad
Beijing
Berlin
Buenos Aires
Cairo
Dublin
Hong Kong
Jerusalem

82/68/t
94/67/pc
70/43/s
49/31/s
59/46/sh
90/71/s
58/45/pc
75/68/r
85/65/pc

80/66/pc
95/68/s
75/46/s
47/30/pc
62/48/pc
93/72/s
55/42/pc
75/69/r
85/62/pc

London
Madrid
Manila
Mexico City
Montreal
Moscow
Paris
Rio de Janeiro
Rome

59/43/pc
69/56/t
90/78/t
76/52/pc
65/52/c
38/30/sn
61/43/pc
85/72/pc
70/50/pc

58/43/pc
69/53/t
89/77/t
77/50/pc
72/54/pc
41/28/sn
59/38/pc
87/72/s
71/54/s

Today

Monday

NATIONAL WEATHER
Full
Oct 27

Last
Nov 3

Sunrise today ........................ 7:22 a.m.


Sunset tonight ..................... 6:35 p.m.
Moonrise today ..................... 6:04 a.m.
Moonset today ..................... 6:10 p.m.

Solunar Tables
Major periods last up to two hours after the
time listed. Minor periods are much shorter.
A.M.
MINOR MAJOR

Today
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.

5:11a
5:54a
6:40a
7:29a
8:20a
9:14a

11:21a
12:05p
12:29a
1:17a
2:08a
3:02a

P.M.
MINOR MAJOR

5:32p
6:16p
7:02p
7:52p
8:44p
9:39p

11:43p
12:27p
12:51p
1:40p
2:32p
3:26p

Monday

Hi/Lo/W

79/50/s
66/47/pc
68/38/s
70/46/s
68/33/s
74/44/s
64/51/pc
65/48/s
75/50/s
75/34/s
73/36/s
67/39/s
68/45/pc
63/49/pc

Today

New
Oct 12

Today

Hi/Lo/W

Ashland
Astoria
Bend
Boise
Burns
Eugene
Eureka
Florence
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls
Lakeview
La Grande
Longview
Newport

WORLD CITIES

Ashland
79/50

61

Baker
68/31

Roseburg
78/48

Brookings
66/51

53

John Day
70/47

Monday

City

Monday

Today

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Singapore
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto

90/79/s
81/64/t
72/61/r
70/53/s

90/78/pc
85/62/pc
75/60/pc
70/51/pc

Today

Monday

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Baltimore
Boston
Chicago
Charlotte
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu

81/56/s
49/37/sh
74/57/pc
69/47/s
68/53/s
76/59/s
70/52/pc
72/51/s
72/54/s
95/73/s
84/45/s
85/60/s
72/54/s
90/77/sh

80/54/s
47/38/c
76/61/pc
74/57/s
74/56/s
71/46/pc
76/57/pc
75/51/pc
74/53/pc
93/60/pc
74/45/s
72/47/pc
75/51/pc
89/75/pc

Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Miami
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
Missoula
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Omaha

90/68/s
74/55/s
84/59/s
92/70/s
92/68/s
87/72/pc
74/58/s
82/56/s
61/31/pc
75/52/s
81/61/pc
70/56/s
91/62/s
90/57/s

92/70/pc
77/49/pc
77/46/s
93/71/s
91/72/pc
86/71/pc
70/45/c
60/41/c
69/40/s
82/52/pc
85/67/pc
74/61/s
83/50/s
73/44/s

Orlando
Palm Springs
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Reno
Sacramento
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Diego
San Francisco
Tampa
Tucson
Washington, DC

87/66/c
100/78/s
70/51/s
99/75/pc
70/50/s
84/50/s
88/56/s
81/63/s
73/48/s
85/73/pc
74/57/pc
84/68/pc
93/69/pc
71/53/s

85/65/pc
100/77/pc
74/59/s
101/77/pc
74/54/pc
86/52/s
92/58/s
78/51/pc
77/52/s
85/74/pc
78/62/s
83/67/pc
94/69/pc
75/60/s

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow urries, sn-snow, i-ice.

-10s

In the Sky

Showers

-0s

T-storms

0s

Aquarius the Water Bearer appears low


in the southeast at sunset and is visible
throughout the night.

10s
Rain

Source: Jim Todd OMSI

Flurries

ROAD CONDITIONS

20s
30s
40s

Go to Statesman
Journal.com/Roadcams
to nd updated information
on road conditions

Snow

Ice

WEATHER HISTORY

On Oct. 11, 1984, 25-foot waves off


Vancouver Island, B.C., capsized eight
fishing boats, killing five people.

Cold
Front
Warm
Front

50s
60s
70s
80s
90s
100s

Forecasts and graphics provided by


AccuWeather, Inc. 2015

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

Stationary
Front

110s

GOLF

Presidents Cup has drama; U.S. up by a point


Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

INCHEON, South Korea Whether it


was the South African juggernaut of
Branden Grace and Louis Oosthuizen,
the inspired play of Bae Sang-moon in
front of his home crowd or a format
change that reduced the number of
matches, the Presidents Cup is truly up
for grabs for the first time in 10 years.
Thats all the International team ever
wanted.
And its what this event sorely needed.
Grace delivered two big shots in the
gathering darkness, and the South African duo went 4-0 in team matches. Bae
and Hideki Matsuyama teamed for nine
birdies in 11 holes for the biggest rout of
the week. And the International team
played the Americans to a draw in a double session Saturday to stay just one
point behind.
Considering how lopsided the Presidents Cup has been, it felt like a lead.
We need to win this, Oosthuizen
said. This is huge for us. We believe we
can do it.
The Americans had a 9-8 lead.
They also have Jordan Spieth, the No. 1

player in the world. He made two clutch


putts in morning foursomes to cap off
the biggest comeback at the Jack Nicklaus Golf Club Korea, and he made eight
birdies in 14 holes in a fourballs victory
in the afternoon.
Not since the matches were tied going
into Sunday in 2005 has the Presidents
Cup featured a final day of drama.
This is what we all came here for
for it to be exciting tomorrow, International captain Nick Price said. Im going
to ask my team to go and play golf tomorrow. Each and every one of them has to
play golf, and play to the very best of
their ability. Thats all we can do.
The South Africans have certainly
done their part, with Grace producing
two critical shots.
Grace and Oosthuizen were all square
with Bubba Watson and J.B. Holmes, and
it was clear their fourballs match would
set the tone for the final round. Grace
chipped in for birdie from left of the 16th
green, raising his arm before the ball
reached the cup and sharing a bear hug
with his childhood friend.
The darkness was getting so thick
that Grace had no idea Oosthuizens second shot into the par-5 18th hole had gone
into the water.

Grace could barely see the green


from 263 yards away with a chilly wind
in his face. No matter. He smashed his 3wood, watched it disappear into the
gloaming and had no idea what happened
until he heard a burst of cheers coming
from the grandstands.
The ball narrowly cleared the bunker
and settled on the edge of the green.
I dont know where it finished or how
it got to where it did, Grace said. Just
remarkable to pull a shot off like that.
Watson and Holmes both missed the
green, and when neither chipped in for
eagle, Grace rolled his putt close enough
to be conceded the birdie and a crucial
win.
No moment is too big for him, Oosthuizen said.
The only other team to go 4-0 in the
Presidents Cup was Tiger Woods and
Steve Stricker in 2009.
The South Africans knew they were
playing well, and they suggested to Price
on Thursday after their opening match
to split them up so they could help lift
other teammates. Price stuck with them,
and it paid off.
He just said, Theres no chance
were splitting you. Hes the captain, and
he got that right, Oosthuizen said.

LEE JIN-MAN/AP

International team player Bae Sang-moon of


South Korea has been a big hit in front of his
home crowd at the Presidents Cup.

 
  
 - ./



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1D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Mid-Valley
y
LOCAL FIRST

Shootings strain Salem police detectives


Area has seen 11 major shootings this year
Gordon Friedman
Statesman Journal

Salems police resources can


be stretched thin during investigations of violent crimes, as
evidenced by a spate of shootings this summer.
The area has seen at least 11

major shootings in 2015, six of


them fatal. In July, Salem saw
four shootings take place within
two weeks.
The incidents included: a
shooting at Stars Cabaret that
killed one and wounded three; a
shooting in West Salem that
killed Matthew Pearce, a for-

mer National Guard soldier; an


incident at a bar that left an innocent bystander shot; a daylong standoff between police
and 49-year-old Mark Hawkins,
which ended with Hawkins
dead; and in July, a shooting at
Preselys Playhouse Cabaret
that left a man dead after he was
shot in the head.
Gun violence continues to be

a daily battle for Salems police


officers. This past week, three
guns were recovered during a
drug raid, according to police;
Salem Police have taken 138
firearms into custody since
June 1.
Late last month, two teenagers, ages 13 and 14, were
charged with attempted murder after a gang-related shoot-

ing.
The crimes are a stress point
for Salem Polices detectives.
Any time theres a violent
act thats in progress, its going
to raise our stress level. Were
going to be concerned about the
safety of the public and our
safety, said Lt. Dave Okada, SaSee SHOOTINGS, Page 6D

Nancy Drew books bear a mystery


Trading cards found
inside used novels

PHOTOS BY ASHLEY SMITH / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Becky Willhite discovered trading cards in four used Nancy Drew books that she purchased at the Book Bin in downtown Salem and she
wonders what the story is behind them.

pus and fish, and directions to a party.


Staff and volunteers at the
Friends Bookstore at Salem Public
Library also have discovered more
than their share of discarded mementos,
including
notes, ribbons, receipts,
newspaper
clippings
and pieces
of poetry.
Sharing
Its
whatever
somebody
Recognizing positive stories
has handy
that drive us forward
that they
grab for a
bookmark,
then they
leave it in
the book
and forget about it, said Dana Lynne
Roy, manager of the store operated
by the nonprofit Friends of Salem
Public Library. I have a collection of
bookmarks, and I usually just grab a
scrap of paper. One of my personal
favorites is an airline boarding pass.
Some of Roys most interesting
finds in the 12 years she has been
store manager include an old pass-

GoodNews

25

Becky Willhite loves a good mystery.


Growing up, she was a Nancy
Drew fan. When her mom gave her
the first book from the classic series
about the plucky, no-nonsense investigator for
her birthday,
she thought it
would be fun to
build her collection. Willhite
still has 10 of the
books from her
Capi Lynn
childhood.
F O RWA R D T H I S
She recently
found a used
copy of The Hidden Staircase, No.
2 in the series, at The Book Bin and
purchased it.
When she sat down at home to
read it, a baseball trading card slid
out from among the pages. The card
features Hall of Fame pitcher Juan
Marichal of the San Francisco Giants.
Willhite later returned to the
downtown Salem bookstore and
bought three more used Nancy Drew
titles, each of them harboring a trading card. One was of Bob Watson,
first baseman for the Houston Astros. Another was of Drew Pearson,
wide receiver for the Dallas Cowboys. The fourth was not a sports
card, but one from a
set based on the Planet of the Apes TV
show.
Its a fun mystery
to figure out. How did
they get there? said
Becky Willhite Willhite, a Special Programs Employment
Specialist for the Independent Living Program at SalemKeizer School District. I just want
to know if somebody did it on purpose, like Benny.
Benny is the mystery philanthropist who leaves $100 bills for people
to find at local stores and festivals.
Hes still active, by the way, with
several people reporting they found
his signed $100 bills during the Oktoberfest in Mt. Angel.
But back to this mystery.
When Willhite spoke to employees
at The Book Bin about what she had
found, they didnt quite share the
same level of excitement. For them,
its an everyday occurrence. They
even keep a shrine to forgotten bookmarks near their checkout counter, a
pillar covered with photographs and
other items they have plucked from
used books, including an R2-D2 playing card autographed by somebody.
Imagine anything you can use as
a bookmark, and weve found it,
store manager Kat Baird said. Money, train tickets, photos, cards, notes,
love letters ...
A collection of such items recent-

These are the trading cards Becky Willhite discovered in four used Nancy Drew books that
she purchased at the Book Bin in downtown Salem.

ly filled a glass display case in the


Mark O. Hatfield Library at Willamette University. Alice French, a technical services specialist, discovered
many of them while mending books.
When the exhibit was removed,
she said, the items were placed in an
archival box and submitted to the
Willamette Archives.
Its like a little time capsule,

French said.
She already has a new collection
going that includes ticket stubs,
parking tickets, hall passes, a Cold
Stone Creamery coupon from 2009, a
partially used pack of Zig-Zag cigarette rolling papers, doctor appointment cards, a 1982 blank tax form,
shopping lists, pressed and laminated leaves, a drawing of an octo-

See BOOKS, Page 2D

SJ NOW
CORRECTIONS

MOBILE SITE

SATURDAY'S LOTTERY

Win For Life: 15-39-50-63

To report a correction
or clarification, call the
newsroom at
(503) 399-6773.

SIGN IN!

Go to m.StatesmanJournal.com to view a
version of the Statesman Journal's website
designed for mobile devices.

Megabucks: 3-19-28-29-33-41

Powerball: 12-27-29-43-68
Powerball: 1
Multiplier: 2

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in to full access as a Statesman
Journal subscriber.

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REACH US: Don Currie, local editor, (503) 399-6677; dcurrie@StatesmanJournal.com

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2D

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Connecting the Dots

We shoot to stop a threat.


We dont shoot to kill.
Using whatever theatrical ability I possess, I was
cowering in a bathroom
stall when the Salem Police
SWAT Team kicked the
stall door open.
I knew the officers
would be coming. Still,
their sudden appearance
seemingly from out of
nowhere startled me.
Guns at the ready, they
swiftly escorted me to
safety, telling me to run
away from the building.
Within minutes, the
team had controlled the
gunman, bandaged and
transported the wounded, and evacuated my fellow role players who supposedly were hiding from
the shooter.
We shoot to stop a
threat. We dont shoot to
kill. We shoot to stop a
threat, said the teams
commander, Salem Police
Lt. Shawn Adams. We
have all kinds of tools to
deal
with
different
threats.
The Salem SWAT Team
expends 30,000 rounds of
handgun ammunition during training each year, and
probably an equal amount
of rifle ammo. The snipers,
for example, practice in all
sorts of weather and terrain so they know how
changes in temperature
and other factors will affect their bolt-action Remington 700 rifles.
Depending on their assigned roles, team members carry semi-automatic
rifles and pistols, but also
non-lethal weapons that
fire beanbags and softtipped impact projectiles.
(Those impact projectiles
are not fired via gunpowder, so I learned that calling them rubber bullets

StatesmanJournal.com

dick

HUGHES
News columnist DICK HUGHES
knows which questions to ask
and how to make sense of the
answers. Contact him at dhughes@
StatesmanJournal.com or 503-399-6727.

Sgt. Mike Johnson displays less-than-lethal weapons during


SWAT team training in Salem on Tuesday.

PHOTOS BY ANNA REED / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Assistant team leader Cole Hughes demonstrates a sniper rifle during SWAT team training at
the Department of Corrections Firing Range in Salem on Tuesday.

was incorrect.)
No bullets of any kind
were fired Tuesday afternoon during the hostage
scenario inside a Salem
building. In fact, every
firearm had red tape
placed on its muzzle, indicating it was not loaded
and had been safetychecked at least twice. For
good measure, yellow plastic tabs were inserted into
rifles, making them inoperable.
That is standard protocol for Special Weapons
and Tactics training.
Statesman Journal reporters Kaellen Hessel
and Natalie Pate, photographer Anna Reed and I
spent several hours with
the SWAT unit. Wed arranged to observe the
training in the aftermath
of last springs incident in
which the SWAT team

dealt with a shooter who


was barricaded in a converted bus in a Walmart
parking lot.
As someone who helps
lead newsroom training,
my rationale was that we
could more accurately report on such situations if
we better understood how
the Salem Police SWAT
Team operated.
It was mere coincidence that the training occurred less than a week after the mass shooting at
Umpqua Community College in Roseburg.
Salems team is deployed about 18 times a
year. But its continually
training, just to be ready.
Each officer spends nearly
one-fifth of duty time in
SWAT training.
After watching target
practice Tuesday morning
at the state Department of

WATCH THE
TRAINING
See this column at
StatesmanJournal.com/opin
ion/dick-hughes to view a
gallery of photos from Tuesdays SWAT training.

Corrections Firing Range,


in the afternoon we observed three training scenarios at a house and participated in a fourth inside
a larger building.
During breaks, the
team members were engaging hosts, happy to explain their equipment and
their work. Once a training
situation started, they
were deadly serious.
Theyre professionals.
They do their jobs. They do
it with compassion. And
they save lives, Police
Chief Jerry Moore said.

Salem Police Department SWAT team members practice target


shooting during training at the Department of Corrections.

Seemingly, no detail
went unnoticed as the participants were checked
and rechecked before the
afternoon scenarios began. I even had to dump my
little Swiss Army pocketknife in my van.
The attention to detail
extended to the teams
self-critiques after each
scenario.
Salem has a part-time
SWAT Team that comprises full-time emergency responders: 18 Salem
police officers, two Keizer
police officers and four Salem fire medics, who become skilled shooters as
well as medics.
The departments negotiating team is called out
more often than SWAT.
But wherever the SWAT
goes, negotiators go as
well. The goal is to resolve
situations peacefully but

be prepared for any situation and any development.


Everything we can
concoct in our little brains,
we train for, Adams said.
If anyone should ask:
The team has no automatic
weapons. Neither does it
use any cast-off federal
equipment when it deploys.
Because team members often operate indoors,
they carry a piece of equipment I never would have
thought of: doorstops.
Dick Hughes, who wore
body armor and ear and
eye protection while observing the target shooting, is editorial page editor
and a content coach for
the Statesman Journal.
Contact
him
at
dhughes@StatesmanJour
nal.com; P.O. Box 13009,
Salem, OR 97309; or (503)
399-6727.

Books

TIME CAPSULES

Continued from Page 1D

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port and a significant


amount of Mexican currency. The currency
was so out of date,
though, that it was basically worthless. She did
find a $100 bill and two
$50 bills in one book that
was among several in a
box that had been donated by the family of a deceased person. French
found money only once,
a $5 bill, and since she
knew who the book had
once belonged to, she
was able to return it.
Oftentimes
donations to the Friends
Bookstore are what Roy
refers to as drop and
run situations because
the books are old and
battered. The store may
not be able to sell them,
but she still has to make
sure there isnt a treasured title or something
valuable inside. The
ones the store does plan
to sell are inspected for
broken spines and loose
or missing pages. A similar process happens
with the used inventory
that comes into The
Book
Bin.We
flip
through the books,
Baird said, but theres
always things that slip
by us. We consider it a
bonus if you find something in one of our
books.
A colleagues mom
recently found a $50 bill
between the pages of a
book purchased there.
Willhite plans to use
the trading cards she
found as bookmarks.
Back when she read the
Nancy Drew series the
first time around, she
recalls being partial to a
cat bookmark that had a

Stories like this make me


wonder where time capsules
are buried in the Salem area.
When I was doing research
on the history of the Oregon
State Fair, I learned one was
placed on the fairgrounds
during the centennial celebration in 1965 and is to be
opened Aug. 29, 2065. If you
know of others, please contact me at 503-399-6710 or
clynn@StatesmanJournal.com.

yarn tassel. She would


be thrilled to learn the
story behind the cards,
and if they were sentimental to someone, she
would be willing to return them. I imagine a
girl swiping the cards
from her brother and
stashing them in her favorite books.
The cards arent
valuable,
although
three of them feature
professional
athletes
who were stars in their
day. They arent autographed,
and
they
arent in mint condition.
The Watson (Hostess)
and Pearson (Wonder
Bread) cards were issued by food manufacturers. The Marichal
card is by Topps, and
Willhite said she looked
online and saw that its
worth 99 cents.
Forward This appears Wednesdays and
Sundays and highlights
the people, places and organizations of the MidWillamette Valley. Contact Capi Lynn at
clynn@StatesmanJour
nal.com or (503) 3996710, or follow her the
rest of the week on Twitter
@CapiL
ynn and Facebook @Cap
iLynnSJ.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

LOCAL FIRST

Causes

3D

Food, housing top homeless needs


Survey wondered what
services people needed
Kaellen Hessel
Statesman Journal

In January, people in Marion and


Polk counties who were experiencing
homelessness were asked what services they needed most. The top four
answers were housing, food, transportation and dental care.
It was the first time local social service agencies asked the question as
part of the Homeless Count, an annual
effort to count and interview all of the
homeless residents in Marion and Polk
counties at a single time. The count is
required for the counties to receive
nearly $1 million in grants from the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The local count, led my Mid-Willamette Valley Community Action Agency,
goes beyond simply conducting a census of the homeless population. Officials try to understand their lifestyles
and needs.
"We specifically added (the services
question), hoping it would benefit the
agencies involved," said Amber
Reeves, community resource director
for Community Action.
The survey had previously asked
questions like what caused the respondents to leave their last living arrangement, what the hardest part about being homeless was, and what could be
done to improve their situation.
Reeves said she didn't think the other open-ended questions adequately
addressed what homeless people needed. Respondents were able to choose as
many services as applied to their situation.
Sixty-four percent of respondents
to the street survey said they needed
housing assistance, compared with 43
percent who said housing would improve their current situation. Fortythree percent said they needed food,
compared with 1.6 percent who said
food assistance would improve their
situation. Forty percent of respondents said they needed help with transportation, compared with 8 percent
who said transportation would im-

ANNA REED / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Volunteers Pamela Watson, far left, and Jerry Stevens survey Cindy Honeycutt, 46, about her experience with homelessness. They spoke
Jan. 28 near Highway 22 and Interstate 5 in Salem.

prove their situation.


Thirty percent said a job or money
would improve their situation.
Overall, the numbers homeless people in Marion and Polk counties has
stayed steady over the past three
years, as has the methodology.
The 2015 report, which was released
this week, counted 155 fewer individuals than in 2014.
That was mostly due to the change
in the school count data, said Diane
Merry, community resource manager.
Organizers clarified to schools that
they wanted to know the number of students who were homeless the day of
the count, not the number of students
who had been identified as homeless
for the whole school year, she said.

Although seven more school districts were included in the school


count, the 2015 data shows 352 fewer
homeless students than last year.
According to Oregon's 2015 Point in
Time Count, there were 13,176 homeless people during the last week of January. Statewide, that was a decline of 5
percent from last year.
Marion County came in fourth behind Multnomah, Lane and Josephine
counties for largest homeless population.
At 62 percent, Polk County was one
of four counties where at least half of
the homeless population is classified
as being chronically homeless.
More than half of Oregon's homeless population is unsheltered, accord-

ing to the report. Locally, the opposite


is true. The sheltered homeless population in Marion and Polk counties is
three times greater than the unsheltered.
One possible reason for that discrepancy is that much of Oregon is rural and those areas don't have as many
shelters as the greater Salem area,
Merry said.
In the past few years, the Mid-Valley has lost shelter beds, especially for
families.
"Our shelters are full on the night of
the count," Reeves said.
khessel@statesmanjournal.com,
(503) 399-6743, or follow on Twitter
@KaellenHessel

CALENDAR
friends.org

English ivy removal at Fircrest


Park: Help remove invasive vines
and English ivy from Fircrest Park, 9
a.m. to noon, Fircrest Park, 955
Luradel S. Free. (503) 589-2197.

THROUGH NOV. 21
Sleep Trains Coat Drive for Foster Kids: Donate new coats in all
sizes infant to adult at any
Sleep Train location. (503) 540-0692.

TODAY
34 Days of Peace book reading
and discussion: Mark Babson of
the Friends of Salem Quaker congregation will review and discuss the
book Peace is the Way by Walter
Wink, 2 p.m., Salem Friends Meeting
House, 490 19th St. NE. Free. (503)
569-7223, oregoniansforpeace.org.

THURSDAY-SUNDAY
Friends Fall Book Sale: Friends
Night, 4 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday.
Public sale: 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Friday and Saturday; 1 to 4:30 p.m.
Sunday. Salem Public Library, Anderson rooms A and B, 585 Liberty St
SE. Free. (503) 362-1755, salem-

CONNECT
WITH
THE
TEAM

FRIDAY
34 Days For Peace Friday
Night Folk Music Circle: Bring
your guitar, your kazoo, your banjo,
ukelele, stand-up bass or accordion
and join the circle of folk musicians
that sing the worlds greatest peace
songs. 7 to 8:30 p.m., Unitarian
Universalist of Salem, 5090 Center St.
NE. Free. (512) 948-8842, orego
niansforpeace.org.

ROCK the Casino: Play casino-type


games using scrip for playing and
winning. Winnings of scrip will be
used for live auction and silent
auction items. Fundraiser for Silverton Senior Center, 5 to 10 p.m.,
Seven Brides Brewing, 990 N First St.,
Silverton. $25. (503) 873-3093.
NAACP Freedom Fund Banquet:
Gala event that focuses on raising
money to send young people off to
college. Sponsored by the NAACP, 6
to 9 p.m., Salem Convention Center,
200 Commercial St. SE. $80 per seat.
(503) 507-6234, sknaacp1166.org.

GALA-A-Go-Go!: Join Confluence,


Oregons only mixed LGBT chorus,
for an evening of variety-show
entertainment. Proceeds from the
event will help send chorus members
to GALA, an international choral
event that happens only once every
four years. 7 to 9 p.m., First Congregational Church, 700 Marion St. NE.
$20. (541) 954-3676, confluencecho
rus.org.

OCT. 19
CASA of Marion County orientation: A Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) volunteer is a
trained citizen who is appointed by

SATURDAY

OCT. 20
7th annual Giving People a Second Chance Community Breakfast: 7:30 to 8:30 a.m., Broadway
Commons, 1300 Broadway St. NE.
Call to reserve a seat. (503) 588-5212.

OCT. 21
Liberty House Tours: 8 to 9 a.m.,
Liberty House, 2685 Fourth St. NE.
Free. (503) 540-0288.
Repair Fair & Share: Focus on
fixing small appliances, bike, sewing,
tool sharpening and musical instrument repair. There will also be a
break-out session about how to care

for yard tools. 5 to 7 p.m., Chemeketa Community College, Student


Center, 4000 Lancaster Drive NE.
Free. (503) 365-3180, repairfair.net.
34 Days For Peace Annual
Peace Lecture: Erica Chenoweths
presentation is entitled Non-Violence: Does It Really Work? 7:30
p.m., Willamette University, Recital
Hall, 900 State St. Free. (503) 3938305, oregonsforpeace.org.

OCT. 22
Santiam Hospital Auxiliary annual Fashion Show: Fashions from
Chicos of Salem will be shown and
musical entertainment by The Oregon Spirit Chorus. Serving wine and
appetizers. Door prizes and raffle
drawings. Theme is Black, White and
Red. 5:45 to 11 p.m., Stayton Community Center, 400 W Virginia St,
Stayton. $20 advance; $25 at the
door. Includes one free ticket for a
glass of wine and one free ticket for
door prize drawing. (503) 769-5685.

Reporter

Forward This

Out and About

Calendar

Editorial Assistant

Editor

KAELLEN HESSEL

CAPI LYNN

LEANN MOORE

LEE CLARKSON

DAN BENDER

Phone: (503) 399-6743


Email: khessel@
StatesmanJournal.com
Twitter: @KaellenHessel

Phone: (503) 399-6710


Email: clynn
@StatesmanJournal.com

MARY LOUISE
VANNATTA

Phone: (503) 399-6785


Email: calendar@StatesmanJournal.com
Upload your events at
www.statesmanjournal.com/calendar

Phone: (503) 399-6833


Email: lclarkson@
StatesmanJournal.com

Phone: (503) 399-6731


Email: dbender@
StatesmanJournal.com
Twitter: @DanBender_SJ



   


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Part 1 of a 10 Part Series

25

a judge to represent the best interests of abused and neglected


children in court. Learn about the
program, what it means to be a
volunteer advocate and ask any
questions you may have, 4 to 5 p.m.,
659 Cottage St., NE. (503) 967-6420,
CASAmarionOR.org.

Luxurious Lawns! This 5bd/2.5ba home on 1.87


ac boasts FP in LR, large kitchen, & a beautiful
at lawn for garden, livestock, or fun & games!
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OPEN HOUSE!
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4D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

GET INVOLVED
AARP Driver Safety Program:
Volunteers teach the six-hour
classroom refresher course for
experienced motorists. Training
and materials are provided. $15
for AARP members/$20 nonAARP members. (503) 320-8246,
aarp.org/drive.

THE PROACTIVE
DISC PROGRAM

If you think you need


for your
disc problem, you are
probably
.

surgery

wrong

Call for a Consultation

HANSEN
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC

503.362.8892

3962D Center St NE, Salem


www.salemchirodrx.com

Dr. Terrence Hansen, Chiropractic Physician


25

American Cancer Societys


Cancer Resource Center in
Salem Hospital: Seeking
volunteers to help patients and
their families get the information they need regarding diagnosis, treatment and free services. (503) 795-3914, julie.rob
ertson@cancer.org.
American Cancer Society
Road To Recovery: Seeking
volunteer drivers to help get
community members battling
cancer to their treatments. (503)
795-3971, lily.westlund@can
cer.org.
American Red Cross Blood
Drive: Seeking volunteers to
help with blood drive events
and serve as administrative
assistants. (503) 779-1263, ma
risa.wyckoff@redcross.org.
American Red Cross Disaster
Relief: Seeking local and national disaster volunteers. (503)
585-5414, volunteer.cas
cades@redcross.org.
American Wildlife Foundation: Seeking volunteers in
areas of operation including
animal care, landscape maintenance, education programs and
pen construction and repair.
(971) 227-4036 or awildfoun
d.org.
Birthright of Salem: Help
women who are pregnant or
think they might be pregnant by
providing free pregnancy tests,
listening to their stories and
finding resources and clothing
for them and their babies. (503)
585-2273.

emotional support and local


resources on a 24-hour crisis
hotline (and occasionally in
person). Center for Hope and
Safety is a Marion County nonprofit that provides services to
victims and survivors of domestic
and sexual violence. Training
provided. (503) 378-1572 or
volunteer@hopeandsafety.org.
City of Salem: Seeking volunteers for the Citizens Advisory
Traffic Commission, Citizen
Budget Committee, Civil Service
Commission, Downtown Advisory Board, Housing & Urban
Development Advisory Commission, Human Rights and Relations Advisory Committee, North
Gateway Redevelopment Advisory Board, Salem Housing
Advisory Committee, Senior
Center Advisory Commission,
Salem Social Services Advisory
Board and West Salem Redevelopment Advisory Board. (503)
588-6255, Ext. 7269,
kwest@cityofsalem.net, cityof
salem.net/boardsandcommis
sions.
Deepwood Gardeners: Seeking individuals to join this group
of dedicated volunteers that
have been servicing the gardens
for 35 years. Official work time is
Mondays from 9 a.m. to noon.
The group works most of the
year except for cold and wet
months. The group also helps
Friends of Deepwood decorate
the house for the holiday season. Contact Karen at (503)
749-3039 or Georgia at (503)
393-9452.
Deepwood Museum & Gardens: Seeking history buffs to
lead tours of the house and
volunteers for events and childrens programs. Will train. (503)
363-1825, volunteer@historic
deepwoodestate.org.

Boys & Girls Club of Salem,


Marion and Polk Counties:
Volunteers needed to help
prepare and serve daily hot
meals to our members. Opportunities available at four sites
Monday to Friday. Email ecardel
la@bgc-salem.org to apply,
bgc-salem.org.

Department of Human Resources: Seeking volunteers for


clerical and transportation
positions. Clerical volunteers are
utilized in offices and branches
throughout Marion, Polk and
Yamhill counties. Transportation
volunteers drive children and
adults to appointments. (503)
373-7502, oregon.gov/dhs/
volunteer.

Bush Barn Art Center: Seeking


volunteers to assist gallery staff
in greeting the public, installing
exhibitions, working with artists
and planning special events.
Flexible hours. (503) 581-2228,
catherine@salemart.org, sale
mart.org.

Disabled American Veterans


Transportation Network:
Seeking volunteer drivers for the
Salem area. Must be a licensed
Oregon driver and pass a physical conducted by the Veterans
Administration. (800) 949-1004,
Ext. 55042.

CASA of Marion County:


Seeks volunteers to advocate in
court to help abused and neglected children in foster care
find safe, permanent homes.
Training provided. (503) 9676420, marioncasa@casamario
nor.org.

Eagle Charter School: Looking


to expand its board of directors,
which meets on the third Thursday of each month. eaglechar
terschoolsalem.org, (503) 3397114.

CASA of Polk County: A


trained advocate who works
directly with all the parties to
make sure that the best interests
of the child are always frontand-center. (503) 623-8473,
axtell.katey@outlook.com.
Center for Hope and Safety:
Seeking English and Spanishspeaking volunteers to provide

Shopping for a home? Get


your mortgage first!

503-588-3511
503
588 3511
Apply or make an appointment at
www.MortgageSalem.com NMLS 40558

Friends of the Jefferson


Public Library: In need of
corporate sponsors and volunteers. The library has been
determined to be severely
structurally deficient and is
collapsing, literally and figuratively, under increased
demand for services. (541)
327-2423, library2010@q.com.
Friends of Oregon School for

the Deaf: Seeks a volunteer to


take minutes at monthly board
meetings. Occasionally design
publicity materials, assist with
mailings and help with fundraising activities. couoh_@hot
mail.com.
Friends of Silver Falls State
Park: Seeking volunteers to
work in the Nature Store. Meet
people from all over the world,
answer questions and help park
visitors get as much enjoyment
as possible. (503) 873-8735,
admin@friendsofsilverfalls.net,
friendsofsilverfalls.net.
Gentiva Hospice: Volunteers
visit with patients for companionship, support and respite.
They also help patients at meal
times. Volunteers must be at
least 18 years old and be able to
visit the patients wherever they
live. (503) 574-2900, Ext. 213,
(866) 977-2752, bben
nett@odyshealth.com.
Horses of Hope Oregon:
Volunteers needed to help with
riding sessions. Horses of Hope
Oregon is a nonprofit that
provides therapeutic recreational horseback riding for children
and adults with disabilities in
the Salem area. (503) 743-3890,
horsesofhopeoregon.org.
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Advisory
Committee: The twelve-member committee will meet monthly to provide oversight of the
Marion County Community
Developmental Disabilities
Program as the disability issues
advisory committee. Members
are appointed by the Board of
Commissioners to serve fouryear terms and must be at least
18 years old. The county is
looking for individuals or family
members from the developmental disabilities community,
service providers and advocates
to serve on the committee. (503)
588-7990, ccrocker@co.mar
ion.or.us, or co.marion.or.us/BS/
VOL/.
Joys of Living Assistance
Dogs: Seeking volunteer puppy
raisers to care for, train and
socialize puppies. Raisers attend
weekly training classes with
puppies so both can learn together. (503) 551-4572, face
book.com/JLADjoydogs.
Just Walk Salem: Seeking new
walk leaders. Just Walk Salem is
a network of weekly neighborhood walking groups led by
volunteers. The idea is to give
people an opportunity to be
active and meet their neighbors
at the same time. Looking to
expand citywide to motivate
and enable even more people to
participate. You choose the day,
time and route. If youre already
out walking regularly, its as
simple as inviting others to join
you. If youd like to start a
walking group or link up your
group, email justwalksa
lem@gmail.com or call (503)
373-3760, justwalksalem.com.
Keizer Heritage Center: Seeking volunteers in event hosting,
museum hostess and/or office
help and special tasks. (503)
393-9660, keizerheritage.org.
Lighthouse Farm Sanctuary:
Volunteer each Saturday from 10
a.m. to 1 p.m. and each Wednesday from 10 a.m. to noon to help
care for the animals that call the
sanctuary their home. (503)
394-4486, lighthousefarm
sanctuary.org.
The Lord & Schryver Conservancy: Seeking volunteers to
help maintain the historic Lord &
Schryver gardens at Deepwood
Museum & Gardens, the classic
Salem design firm's only residential gardens presently in the
public domain. We meet Thursday mornings from 9 a.m. to
noon, with a convivial and
educational coffee break, from
February to October. Volunteers
bring their own hand tools.
(503) 365-7102.
Marion County Citizen Review Board: Recruiting volunteer board members. The board
consists of a diverse group of
volunteers who review cases of
children in foster care and bring
a community perspective to the
foster care system. (503) 9865888, rakeem.a.washing
ton@ojd.state.or.us.
Marion County District Attorneys Office, Victim Assistance Division: Seeking volunteers to provide victims with
emotional and informational
support through the criminal
justice process, in addition to
accompanying them to court
and appropriate resource referrals. Training provided.
Spanish speakers also needed.
(503) 588-3571, co.marion.
or.us\DA\victimassistance.
Marion County Historical
Society WHC Library Archives: Seeking volunteers to
help with research on local
historical topics and data entry.
(503) 585-7012 or amyv@willam
etteheritage.org.
Marion County Retired &
Senior Volunteer Program:
Program designed for community members ages 55 and older.
Six RSVP volunteer placement
stations in Silverton/Mount
Angel. (503) 982-5388, mar
ta.trinidad@ci.woodburn.or.us.
Marion-Polk Food Share:
Seeking volunteers to sort and
repack food donations; collect
and deliver food as a driver or
drivers assistant; serve as a food
drive volunteer; work in a
community garden; serve on a
harvest team; work as a program or office assistant; or join
various efforts to increase public

awareness of hunger and its


effects on the community. (503)
581-3855, Ext. 311, marionpolk
foodshare.org.
Marion Soil and Water Conservation District: Seeking
volunteers to fill position vacancies on both its board and its
budget committee. For persons
interested in the environment,
working to provide solutions to
natural resource concerns and
having a voice in decisions made
by the district. (503) 391-9927,
marionswcd.net.
Meals on Wheels: Seeking
volunteers at two meal sites.
Drivers and substitute drivers are
needed to deliver meals to
homebound seniors and disable
adults. Kitchen helpers and
servers are needed to assist
kitchen staff, prepare meals and
serve lunch. (503) 364-2856.
The Office of the Long-Term
Care Ombudsman: Seeking
volunteers for Marion, Polk and
Clackamas counties. Certified
ombudsmen are resident advocates for those who are living
in long-term care facilities and
are trained to educate, investigate and advocate for the
rights of the resident and learn
to be a problem solver. (800)
522-2602, visit oregon.gov/LTCO
or e-mail at LTCO.con
tact@ltco.state.or.us.
Orchard Heights Senior Care
Facility: Seeking volunteers to
assist with activities throughout
the day, including small group
projects, large social gatherings
and one-on-one interactions.
Also, one to two people are
needed to assist in outings. (503)
566-9052 or (951) 566-7313.
Oregon Attorney Generals
Consumer Advocate Program: Recruiting volunteers to
answer the attorney general's
consumer hotline. The program
is part of the Financial Fraud/
Consumer Protection Section of
the Oregon Department of
Justice. CAP volunteers screen
calls for violations of the law,
send out complaint forms when
appropriate, answer questions
on consumer topics, send pamphlets and brochures about
various consumer subjects, refer
callers to appropriate agencies
and generally act as the first
contact that consumers may
have with the Department of
Justice. (503) 373-0371.
Oregon State Capitol: Seeking
volunteers to assist at the Capitol. Positions include gift store
cashier, information kiosk attendant, Capitol tour guide, legislative doorkeeper and assisting
with special events. Support and
training are provided. Active
volunteers receive a 10 percent
discount in the Capitol gift store.
For more information please
contact Lora Howden, volunteer
coordinator, lora.how
den@state.or.us, (503) 986-1388.
Polk County Courthouse:
Seeking volunteers to serve as
greeters to help citizens unfamiliar with the courthouse locate
their desired department. (503)
623-8173.
Polk County Historical Society Museum: Seeking volunteers to help with various tasks
such as typing, filing, displays,
assisting visitors, researching,
cleaning and more. (503) 6236251 or pchsoregon@gmail.com.
Project ABLE: Seeking volunteers to assist and mentor individuals who are recovering from
mental health and/or co-occurring issues. (503) 363-3260.
Providence Benedictine
Nursing Center: Seeking
additional volunteers to assist
residents to and from daily
activities, chapel, musical events,
coffee and conversation, help
with spring gardening projects
and an on-call comfort companion program that provides
comfort and support to dying or
anxious residents and their
families. (503) 845-2744.
Safe Families for Children:
Safe Families For Children is
recruiting families to provide
support to families experiencing
a temporary crisis in Marion,
Polk and Yamhill Counties.
Please join us in serving children
in our neighborhoods by providing temporary respite, generally
two to 45 days. Contact Teri at
(503) 580-4672, safe-fam
ilies.org.
Salem Art Association: Seeking volunteers to help in the
galleries a few hours a week,
participate in special events and
share local history by leading
tours or working with collections in the historic Bush
House Museum. Training provided for each position. (503)
581-2228, Ext. 304.
Salem Audubon Society:
Seeking volunteers to help
remove invasive species at the
SAS Nature Reserve, assist with
special community events and
school programs, build nestboxes in wood shop and help with
occasional mailings and other
office projects. (503) 588-7340 or
laurie@salemaudubon.org.
Salem Free Clinics: Provides
health care to the uninsured in
Salem and Dallas. The clinic is
seeking medical, mental health
and dental providers to volunteer in the clinic. salemfreeclinics.org.
Salem Harvest: Recruiting
harvest leaders and site scouts
for upcoming harvests. Training
will be provided. salemharvest.org.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

5D

Movie lovers needed to volunteer at


the Salem Progressive Film Series

Japanese Steakhouse
& Sushi Bar

Celebrate Your
Birthday With Us
N.Y. STEAK & CHICKEN

DINNER FOR 2

Served with Soup or Salad, Vegetable and Steamed Rice.

33

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Not valid with any other promotional offer.


Not available for TO-GO. No Cash value. Exp. 10/30/15.

1610 Lancaster Dr. NE Salem 363-3552

25

Honey Crisp Apples


Bartlett Pears
Fall Squash Pumpkins

1
$
3 OFF
$
2 OFF
$

PER

POUND

Honey Crisp Apples

limit 10 lbs.

Exp. 10/31/15

28lb. Box of Bartlett Pears


Exp. 10/31/15

Is your Netflix queue filled with


documentaries? Do you value vibrant dialogue? Are you invested
in learning new things? If so, then
becoming part of the all-volunteerrun Salem Progressive Film Series
might just be the perfect volunteer
fit for you.
The series showcases a documentary film followed by expert
guest speakers and audience discussions. Upcoming showings
include Ivory Tower, a documentary about the value of college
in relation to the amount of student
loan debt incurred and Race to
Zero, a film highlighting the steps
needed to reach a zero-waste culture.
Volunteers are the face and the
engine of the series. Volunteers
are needed on film nights to set up,
welcome attendees, sell admission

tickets, and clean up after the film


and discussion. Film nights are the
third Tuesday of each month, September
through May,
at the Grand
Theater, 191
High Street
NE. Doors
open at 6:15
p.m. and volAshley Erb
unteers are
M I D - VA L L E Y
expected to
VO L U N T E E R I N G
be available
before that
time to set up.
Volunteers are also needed to
serve on the board and help with
the behind-the-scenes work, like
identifying the film schedule, finding speakers and raising the funds
needed to continue the organizations work.

SCHOOLS

(503) 881-2123.

Gervais Union High School


Class of 1962: Monthly class
luncheons, 11:30 a.m., second
Thursday of each month at Izzys
on Lancaster Drive NE.
kb7scc@wildblue.net.

North Salem High School


Class of 1958: Class luncheon,
noon second Friday of each
month at Keizer Elks Lodge.
Contact: Judie Mapes, (503)
390-0960.

McNary High School Class of


1966: 50-year class reunion, July
16, 2016 at McNary Golf Course.
Contact: (503) 391-5930.

North Salem High School


Class of 1960: Gathering of
classmates, 11:30 a.m. third
Wednesday of each month at
Keizer Elks Lodge. Contact:
Becky, (503) 390-1225.

North Salem High School


Class of 1956: Class luncheon,
11:30 a.m. first Friday of each
month. Contact: Diane, (503)
364-1104, or Judy, (503) 3937070.
North Salem High School
Class of 1957: No-host luncheon meetings fourth Thursday
of each month at Keizer Elks,
4250 Cherry Ave. NE, Keizer.
Contact: Donna Kelley-Dayton,

North Salem High School


Class of 1966: 50-year class
reunion, July 15-17, 2016. Send
your contact information to Sue
Parker Roessler at sue.roessler@gmail.com. More specifics
will come through your email
and on the Facebook Page
(North Salem Class of 1966).
Salem High School Class of

1942: Luncheon at Rudys at


Salem Golf Club, 2025 Golf
Course Road S. 11:30 a.m. to 2
p.m. third Monday of each
month. Contact: (503) 362-8078.
Salem High School Class of
1944: Monthly luncheons at
11:30 a.m., third Tuesday of each
month at The Sizzler Restaurant
on Lancaster Drive NE. All classmates are invited, guys included.
Contact: (503) 363-1814.
Salem High School Class of
1952: Monthly no-host luncheon, 11:30 a.m. third Thursday
of each month, Schroeders
Guest House Restaurant, 4850
Portland Road NE. Contact: Jim
Kinkaid, (503) 581-8679.
Salem High School Class of
1954: Monthly class luncheons,
third Wednesday of each month
at Keizer Elks, 4250 Cherry Ave.

NE. Contact: (503) 551-6556.


South Salem High School
Class of 1956: Monthly class
luncheons, noon second Thursday of each month, Keizer Elks,
4250 Cherry Ave. NE. Contact:
Sue or Jean, sshs56@com
cast.net.
South Salem High School
Class of 1960: Monthly gathering, 4 to 6:30 p.m. second Tuesday of each month at McGraths
Fish House in downtown Salem.
Contact: Ed Bacon, (503) 5853437, baconem@croisan.com.
South Salem High School
Class of 1961: Lunch gathering
of classmates, 11:30 a.m. second
Wednesday of each month at
Wind Jammer Restaurant.
Contact: Levi, (503) 364-3352,
levicannon@gmail.com.

BIRTH
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Barba-Perry, Aaliyah Miah: To
Aracelia Barba and Jake Perry,
Independence, 6 pounds 5 ounces,
Oct. 3.

Hours: Mon-Fri 9-7 Sat/Sun 9-5

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10325 River Rd N - 4 miles N of Keizer


503-393-9451|JonesFarmProduce.com
Find us on Facebook for weekly discounts

Adsit, Kennedy Grace: To


Patricia and Jason Adsit, Salem, 7
pounds 11 ounces, Oct. 2.

Beskow, Elijah Joseph: To


Sabrina and Adam Beskow,
Jefferson, 8 pounds 6 ounces, Oct.
1.

Exp. 10/31/15

Ashley Erb is the president of


the Mid Valley Volunteer Managers Association and the community engagement and volunteer
program manager at Shangri-La.
Ask her to write about your organizations volunteer needs by contacting her at (503) 581-1732, ext.
328, or ashley.erb@shangrilaor.org.

REUNIONS

The following are birth announcements reported between Oct. 2


and 9. For more, go to States
manJournal.com/Records.

22lb. Box of Apples

This volunteer opportunity does


not require a formal volunteer
application, but rather a meeting
with members of the board over
coffee to identify what skills a
volunteer can contribute to the
organization and what he or she
hopes to gain from the experience.
All necessary training will be provided. Interested volunteers may
call 503-881-5305 or visit salemprogressivefilms.net.

Brambila, Daleyza Xochitl: To


Juanita and Abran Brambila,

Salem, 7 pounds 9 ounces, Oct. 2.


Chapman, Skylynn Mae: To
Latoya Jurgensmeier and Alan
Chapman, Salem, 8 pounds 3
ounces, Oct. 4.
Chavez, Piper Lynn: To Marina
Granno and Anthony Chavez,
Keizer, 8 pounds 6 ounces, Oct. 6.
Durgain, Adelyn Jean: To

Jenifer Wetherbee and Liam


Durgain, Salem, 6 pounds 11
ounces, Sept. 29.
Fahey, Patrick Peter: To Fabiola
Magana and Noel Fahey, Stayton,
4 pounds 11 ounces, Oct. 4.
Givens, Jessica Malikah: To
Michael Rogers and Samuel
Givens, Salem, 6 pounds 14
ounces, Oct. 5.

6D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

CRIMINAL
RECORDS
The following are criminal
convictions reported between
Oct. 6 and 9. For more, go to
StatesmanJournal.com/
Records.

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25

Salem-Keizer Transit
Board of Directors
Budget Committee Citizen Member Vacancy
Three Year Term Ending June 30, 2018
Salem-Keizer Transit is recruiting for one citizen member position to represent Keizer in Subdistrict
#2 on Salem-Keizer Transits Budget Committee. The appointee would serve a three year term that
ends June 30, 2018.
The Budget Committee typically meets three times in the month of May each year to review, discuss, make
changes and approve the proposed budget presented by Salem-Keizer Transit staff. The approved budget
is later presented to the Board of Directors who authorize its adoption. To qualify, you must be a registered
voter 18 years of age or older who resides within the Subdistrict, or within the District at-large.
If you are interested in being considered for the citizen member position, more information and an
application packet are available on the Districts website at http://cherriots.org/budget-committee
or at the Salem-Keizer Transit administration ofce, Suite 5230, 555 Court Street NE, Salem, Oregon
97301/ 503-588-2424.
Completed applications should be returned no later than Monday, November 30, 2015 at 5:00 p.m.
by mail to the attention of the General Managers Ofce at the
address above or by email to linda.galeazzi@cherriots.org.
The citizen member appointment is scheduled to be made
during the December 10, 2015 Board meeting.

MARION COUNTY
CIRCUIT COURT
Criminal cases
The following cases are listed by
name, charge, and disposition
date (defendant convicted
unless otherwise stated):
Aiken, David Robert: Aggravated Theft I, three counts Theft
I, Oct. 7.
Arenas-Rodrigo, Nancy: two
counts Criminal Mistreatment I,
Oct. 7.
Baker, Brandon Deshawn:
Possession of Methamphetamine, Felon in Possession of a
Restricted Weapon, Oct. 7.
Bonczkowski, Michael Joseph: Assault IV, Contempt of
Court/Punitive, Oct. 7.

Dowty, Elizabeth Laura:


Possession of Methamphetamine, Unlawful Possession of a
Firearm, Oct. 5.
Fleming, Tiana Rae: Possession
of Methamphetamine, Possession of Heroin, Oct. 6.
Harper Jr., Ernest Arthur: two
counts Burglary II, two counts
Theft I, Oct. 5.
Maldonado, Jorge Miguel:
Burglary I, Assault IV, Oct. 7.
Miranda, Sintorri Lesane:
Attempt to Commit Murder, two
counts Assault I, Unlawful Use of
a Weapon, Oct. 7.
Paz, Heidi Michelle: four
counts Criminal Mistreatment I,
Oct. 7.
Schneberger, Justin Daniel:
Possession of Methamphetamine, Oct. 7.
Sol, Tyler Michael: Aggravated
Harassment, Oct. 6.
Sotelo-Rodriguez, Rey: Assault
IV, Oct. 5.

Campa-Vasquez, Froylan:
Strangulation, Oct. 6.

Villanueva, Miguel Angel:


Sodomy II, Sex. Pen. w/Foreign
Obj. II, Sodomy I, Oct. 7.

Chumley, Jeanette Christine:


Possession of Methamphetamine, Oct. 8.

Webb, Mahalah Mae: Possession of Methamphetamine,


Oct. 5.

DUII
CONVICTIONS
Salem, Aug. 28, Marion.
The following are DUII convictions reported Oct. 5. For more,
go to StatesmanJournal.com/
Records.

UNDER THE
INFLUENCE
The following residents of
Marion and Polk counties have
been convicted of driving under
the influence of intoxicants,
according to records provided by
the state Driver and Motor
Vehicle Services Division. Included are the defendants
name, age, address, date of
conviction and the court.
Castro, Anthony Francisco:
41, 4798 Dorrance Loop NE,

Long, Amy Beth: 43, 2565 Fifth


St. NE, Salem, Aug. 25, Clackamas.
Mendoza, Arturo: 20, 4629
Indiana Ave. NE, Salem, Sept. 1,
Marion.
Nash, Clifford Wayne: 52,
4075 Glenwood Drive SE, Salem,
Sept. 2, Marion.
Sandoval, Sonia: 23, 695 46th
Ave. SE, Salem, Aug. 31, Salem.
Springer, Rodger Ivan: 67,
2686 River Road S, Salem, Sept.
2, Marion.
Wright, Arthur Travis: 37, 260
Superior St. S, Salem, Aug. 28,
Marion.

DIVORCES
The following are divorces
reported Oct. 2-8. For more, go
to StatesmanJournal.com/
Records.

MARION COUNTY
CIRCUIT COURT
Divorce cases filed

25

Brian M. Bemis and Melissa J.


Bemis; Beatriz Mendoza Zuriaga
and Jorge A. Zuriaga Ramos;
Avraam Postnikov and Nicole
Proctor; Skyler W. Lange and
Julie A. Lange; Jantina Patricia
Howard and Phillip King Howard; Ivan Lee Dixon and Lori Ann
Dixon; Sabrina Jones and Michael Flores; Vincent S. Graver
and Tamara A. Graver; Lillian
Long Killian and Jonathan Paul
Killian; Tanner Jay Lofdahl and
April Marie Lofdahl; Jeffrey A.
Ballard and Diane L. Ballard;

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25

Continued from Page 1D

lem Police spokesman.


But the shootings also
stress the detectives abilities to solve nonviolent
crimes.
Salem has two detectives units one for property crimes and one for persons crimes. This summer,
those detectives were assigned to the shootings,
sometimes pulling them
away from other cases.
With four incidents in
such close proximity, we
had the entire detectives
section working on these,
Okada said.
Two school resource officers temporarily assigned as detectives for the
summer also helped with
the investigations.
When the call of a homicide comes through the department, teams are quickly dispatched.
A detective is assigned
by superiors as the lead on
the case, and another is the
second.
Detectives who normally investigate sex crimes
head to the scene to collect
evidence. They often go
with staff from the city
crime lab. Homicide/robbery detectives focus on interviewing witnesses.
Salem Police Lt. Steve
Birr said that when a homicide call comes in, usually
all the property detectives
and persons detectives are
dispatched.
In the two detective
units there are two detective sergeants, two corporals and 15 detectives. But
because shooting investigations are so resource intensive and detail oriented, not
every crime can be solved
quickly.

Carla Marie Bird and Warren


David Bird; Tammie Lee Rhoads
and Gary Dean Rhoads; Donna
M. Turnbull and John Scott
Turnbull; Amy Zimmerman and
Timindra Zimmerman; Maria
Lourdes Lara-Alvarado and Juan
Pablo Ponce-Prieto; Jeff E. Shutt
and Michelle Shutt; George
Baron Dawn and Anna Guadalupe Dawn; Darlene M. Sprecher
and Jeffrey Lee Sprecher; Miguel
Angel Rosas and Raquel Carrillo;
Nathan A. Brunk and Amanda
Brunk; Wendy Lynn Ash and
James Michael Ash; Adrienne R.
Christian and Joseph Phillip
Christian; Kathleen Lorraine
Beltz and Douglas George Beltz;
Julie Chottikhun and Prach
Chottikhun; Bridgette C. TorresMora and Mario A. Torres-Mora;
Donald Eugene Smith and
Donna Lynn Smith.

I spent six years investigating homicides, and


people think that if we respond and theres been a
shooting and theres a deceased victim there and the
suspect is standing there
and we take them into custody, that its an easy case,
Okada said.
Its not, because theres
a lot of work that needs to
be done in a very short
amount of time.
After a homicide, detectives juggle a slew of responsibilities.
They communicate with
superiors and the district
attorneys office, write reports, collect evidence (if it
hasnt been damaged or
tampered with), interview
witnesses, construct timelines and more.
Okada said its all done
with a sense of urgency, but
it takes time.
People watch this on
TV and they see a crime lab
tech walk up and tell you
what brand of cigarette this
person was smoking and
where they bought it and
those things. We can certainly look at them, but
theyre not done on the
spot.
After the investigations
conclude and the cases are
handed to the courts, police
are still at work on preventing violent crime.
Okada said he hopes the
intensive training at the department and community
outreach can act as a deterrent.
Of the 11 major shooting
investigations this summer,
at least seven have resulted
in charges or convictions.
gfriedman2@states
manjournal.com,
(503)
399-6653, or follow on Twitter @gordonrfriedman, or
Facebook.com/gordonr
friedman

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

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Progressive Classic Insurance


Company vs. Cenobio Nunez
Felix.
Willie Denson vs. Kimberly
Green-DeLaTorre, Francisco
DelLaTorre, et al.
Better Business Managment,
Doing Business As Salem RV Park
vs. Jonathan Thompson.
Vince Granno vs. Megan Phillips,
Evelyn Lewis, et al.
Candice Chambers vs. Rick
Rullman.
Regina Kaye Arnold, LaDonna
Michelle Arnold vs. Sharon Ann
Arnold.
Cascade Collections, Inc. vs.
Christopher George Gollakner,
Ann Margaret Gollakner.
Christopher Iske vs. Sgt. Bowden, State of Oregon.
United Finance Co. vs. Titus B.
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The Equitable Finance Company


vs. Patrick Clouse.
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vs. John Marsolo.
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vs. Michelle Ryan, Dwayne Ryan.
The Equitable Finance Company
vs. Ashley Hill.
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vs. Sheldon King.

The Equitable Finance Company


vs. Donald Hennemann, Brenda
Hennemann.

Anne-Marie Najaf-Pir vs. Sean M.


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The Equitable Finance Company


vs. Steven Gysin.
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Citibank, N.A. vs. Maria Quezada.

Discover Bank vs. Thomas Stalker.

Laurie Louise Pedlar vs. Terrence


Michael Phillips.

Christopher Lee Arguelles vs.


Sara Jane Fortune.

Maria Aceves-Vargas vs. Lodynne Rae Mackaravitz.

Steve Worley, Kathryn Worley


vs. Express Fleet Service Inc.

Discover Bank vs. Sidney A.


Carranza.

Asset Recovery Group, Inc. vs.


Rizwan Abid, Sheryl Abid.

Midland Funding LLC vs. Tara


Adams.

Jesse Lee Ream vs. Guy Hall.

Cambridge Real Estate Services,


Inc., Burnwood Manor LLC vs.
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Others.

Daniel Bret Garges vs. Jeff


Premo.
Lobel Financial Corporation vs.
Surely Billimont.
Discover Bank vs. Jose M. Hernandez.
Charlene Williams vs. McKenzie
Miller.
Portfolio Recovery Associates,
LLC vs. Katharine Rebo.
Shelbie Elise Wolfe vs. Mark
Gordon Smith.

Ray Klein Inc. vs. Ravella A.


Curlee.

Columbia Collection Service, Inc.


vs. Christina L. Gray.

Portfolio Recovery Associates,


LLC vs. Seth Z. Leeper.

Ray Klein Inc. vs. Ravella A.


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Portfolio Recovery Associates,


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Ray Klein Inc. vs. Galiya M.


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Columbia Collection Service, Inc.


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Ray Klein Inc. vs. Ramiro Gabriel,


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Cascade Capital, LLC vs. Victoria


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Columbia Collection Service, Inc.


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CashCo Financial Services Inc. vs.
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CashCo Financial Services Inc. vs.
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Columbia Collection Service, Inc.
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Marion and Polk Schools Credit


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The Equitable Finance Company


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CSO Financial Inc. vs. Sherry Lynn


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The Equitable Finance Company


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Oregon Credit & Collections


Bureau Inc. vs. James Matthews.

The Equitable Finance Company


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Oregon Credit & Collections


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The Equitable Finance Company


vs. Colby Lyday.

Columbia Collection Service, Inc.


vs. Carlos H. Cortes.
Columbia Collection Service, Inc.
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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Opinion

Opinion pages constitute a modern town square, where readers should find a variety of
viewpoints ones that will challenge their own as well as complement their own.

OUR
VIEWPOINT

Salem in need of weekend buses


M

ore than six years have passed


since Salem and Keizer lost
Saturday and late-evening bus
service.
That delay in restoring service is
reprehensible for any community, but
especially for a state capital. And it is
reprehensible in an economically divided community, in which car-based
travel is out of reach for a high percentage of residents.
Six years should be more than long
enough for a pragmatic community to
unite on a solution. Instead, the greater
Salem area has endured six years of
inaction by its civic leaders, by the
Salem Area Mass Transit Board that is
now promoting a payroll tax to restore
Cherriots and CherryLift service, and
by the Salem and Keizer chambers of
commerce, which are opposing the tax.

Transit provides mobility


The transit district operates under
the name of Salem-Keizer Transit, or
Cherriots. The district board, which is
elected by voters, placed the employer
payroll tax on the Nov. 3 ballot. It
would generate about $5 million annually, adding to what the district already
receives from property taxes, state,
federal and other sources. For example, the state already pays Cherriots in lieu of having a transit payroll
tax on state workers.
Cherriots proposed tax is an imperfect solution to restoring late-evening
and Saturday transit service, adding
limited service on Sundays and six
holidays, and providing free bus travel
for many youths.
But the need is undeniable. The
wait must end.
A flawed solution becomes better
than no solution. And given the track
record of the community leadership, it
would be unrealistic for voters to reject Ballot Measure 24-388 on the
grounds that a better answer is just
around the corner.

About todays editorial


This is the third in a three-part series of
editorials about Salem-Keizer Transits proposed payroll tax, which is on the Nov. 3
mail ballot.
Fridays editorial discussed the rationale
for the employer-paid payroll tax. Saturdays
editorial described arguments against the
tax. Todays concluding editorial gives the
Statesman Journal Editorial Boards recommendation on the proposal, which is Ballot
Measure 24-388.

WATCH THE DISCUSSIONS


See this editorial at
StatesmanJournal.com/Opinion to watch
videos of the Editorial Boards recent meetings with supporters and with opponents of
Measure 24-388.

For more than six years, a significant segment of the community has
been sidelined for much of the week.
More recently, many youths have been
unable to play sports or participate in
after-school academic enrichment
programs because without free bus
passes, they had no way to get home.
Mass transit is not quite the economic driver that supporters claim,
but it is a symbol of a communitys
inclusivity.
Buses and CherryLift rides for the
disabled enable car-less residents to
enjoy the same job, school, church,
volunteer and other opportunities as
their neighbors. Transit is increasingly
important among millennials, many of
whom shun the Wests car-driving
culture.

Campaign divides community


The divisive nature of the pro/con
campaigns is unfortunate. All sides
have themselves to blame if they are
unhappy with the outcome:
The transit board lacked the will,
or the skill, to put together the civic
coalition for an equitable funding plan

DANIELLE PETERSON / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Cherriots buses transport passengers in downtown Salem on Friday.

and generate public support. It was not


until this year that district officials
and the Salem Area Chamber of Commerce had formal talks about how to
finance transit improvements.
Only last month did the district
launch route changes that had seemed
like a no-brainer for years: setting
consistent schedules throughout the
day, increasing service on the busiest
routes and decreasing it on the lessused routes, and making it easier to
travel across town without transferring.
The Salem chamber, given the
opportunity to support a five-year
transit property tax instead of having
the district pursue a permanent payroll tax, refused to make that commitment.
Salem Hospital has the irony of
donating $50,000 to the anti-tax campaign after previously receiving a
$50,000 transportation-planning grant
from the transit district. As with many
businesses, the hospital would be hurt
financially by the payroll tax of 0.21
percent, but its employees and customers would benefit from the increased
service.

Despite being shocked by the


Courthouse Square debacle, the community has treated the transit board as
an afterthought instead of finding
board candidates with fresh perspectives and collaborative vision.
When voters get their ballots in the
mail later this week or next week,
Measure 24-388 deserves their support.

of the buses. This reality also proves


the absence of value related to air
quality.
Especially galling is the apparent
belief that this system should be
allowed to take more tax dollars to
support a failing system, which the
October 2013 Salem-Keizer Transit
Long-Range Regional Transit Plan
documents as experiencing a steady
decline in ridership since 2008 while
the operating expenses per passenger mile continue to climb.
Taxation without benefit is a bad
idea and Measure 24-388 should be
defeated.
Barbara Whisenhunt
Salem

of the buses in Salem, especially


those that pass by on Center Street.
It is unusual if there are ever more
than four to five people riding, if
ever.
Why not replace all these big
rigs with more economical vans?
This would be a more cost-effective option than taxing anyone for an
increase in service.
Terry Pohl
Salem

Election not the final answer


That should not be the end, however. If the measure is approved, Saturday service would resume next
summer but the payroll tax would not
take effect until Jan. 1, 2017. That provides time for creative businesses to
develop ways to attract transit-riding
customers, thereby at least partially
offsetting the cost of the tax.
The payroll tax also could be reduced or delayed if civic leaders and
transit officials can collaborate on a
better solution before then.
But after more than six years of
inaction by community leaders, its
time for voters to act: Yes for Cherriots.

LETTERS: PAYROLL TAX

Is bus service or police


more important project
funded by taxpayers?
A new police facility is the most
important publicly funded project
proposed or envisioned for Salem.
The need to replace this is indisputable, if not dire. Are you ready to
pay for it?
I do not like tax increases. As a
citizen, I know that taxes are the way
we fund infrastructure like police,
fire and road repair. I am responsible
to vote for the basics, the absolutely
necessary, the irrefutably necessary.
Before you vote to tax businesses,
think through the facts. Businesses
create/produce jobs; pay from jobs
creates spending; spending causes
other jobs to be created or supported. This healthy circular flow of
money is always disrupted when you
add new taxes.
Replacing our police facility is the
most important and immediate need
for Salem. Salem has no way to pay
for a new police facility but through
a new tax.
A transit system upgrade is important and needed. However, paying
this new tax may sour some of you
next year when you are asked to pay
for replacing our unsafe, antiquated
police facility.
Which taxpayer-funded project is
more important to you? Do you want
to pay for both?
Jim Bauer
Salem

Keep next generation in Salem


by supporting transit system
Im 20, and I have a message for
all of you who dont think Salem employers should support a better transit system.
My generation wants to live and
work here, though some are moving

to Portland, Eugene and Corvallis


where they have better transportation. My friends dont own cars and
Salems buses dont run enough.
I dont own a car either and my
work shift includes evenings and
weekends as well as weekdays. I take
a bus for my weekday shifts and my
family drives me on evenings and
weekends or I couldnt get to my job.
Im lucky I know it disrupts their
lives. I dont even want a car because
I know climate change is real and by
taking buses, less carbon goes into
the air.
So I think a payroll tax, which
Portland and Eugene employers have
paid for years, is the way to pay for
more buses here. And because I
work, I think its fair I pay a bit for
the bus system. So can we do the
same here please, before I have to
leave too?
Im voting yes for Cherriots. Im
asking that you do, too.
Zaccariah Anderson Klem
Salem

Transit district shouldnt be


allowed more tax dollars
As a small business owner and
former county elected official, I am
appalled by the Cherriots proposal to
impose new taxes on selected businesses to prop up and expand an
under-used public transit system.
Cherriots refusal to utilize nontax revenue sources like advertising
sales before attempting to enforce
selective taxation shows particularly
poor understanding of the interactive nature of our economy.
The weak attempts by the transit
district to identify any valid benefit
for those being taxed does not stand
up to any simple research of facts.
The value of services to be added with passage of this tax relate to
evenings, weekends, holidays and
students, but does not alleviate parking issues or roadway congestion
during the current operating times

Employers should step up,


support Cherriots payroll tax
I own a small business and I support the Cherriots payroll tax measure.
The tax Ill pay is reasonable: only
$2.10 per $1,000 of payroll. Weekend
and evening bus service is a critical
need.
Businesses operating on weekends will benefit directly from increased ridership. More customers
will go shopping. More employees
will be available to work. Salem Hospital and other service providers can
schedule services more flexibly,
without building more parking lots.
Everyone will benefit from decreased traffic congestion. High
school students will have safe access
to after-school activities because of
free passes.
Increasing the property tax is not
a fair alternative. Employers should
step up to the plate. They already do
so in Eugene and Portland. Smart
voters will agree.
Sandra Smith Gangle
Salem

Bus ridership in Salem too low


to justify payroll tax measure

Easy to vote yes for Cherriots


once the facts are made clear
Thanks for a very informative
article about our short-sighted
Chamber of Commerces opposition
to the Cherriots measure on the Nov.
3 ballot.
Im sure there are lots of Chamber
members who are unhappy with the
Chamber leadership in opposing a
modest proposal that would allow
workers without cars to get to their
jobs on evenings and weekends and
allow more shoppers without cars to
do their shopping on the weekends.
Cherriots is only trying to raise $5
million a year that they need for this
service improvement and to provide
free bus passes to students. As the
article states, a much larger payroll
tax in Lane County brings in about
$33 million a year and the one in
Portland brings in about $313 million
a year.
The article also states that half of
all businesses will only pay $169 a
year or less.
Clearly, this measure is a win for
the business community and for the
long-term competitiveness of Salem
in attracting new residents and new
businesses, especially young people.
Im sure many business owners
will be voting yes for Cherriots once
they understand the facts.
Evan White
Salem

Ive been observing the ridership

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Columns, letters, guest opinions, blogs, Facebook posts and cartoons represent the views of their authors. Editorials ... Our Viewpoint ...
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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

9D

Opinion
Inventive ways to trim college costs
Sixty percent of Oregons university
graduates leave school owing money
for their college education, according
to 2013 figures. That average debt is
$25,577.
High-priced textbooks are one contributor to that debt. Now Chemeketa
Community College is doing something
about those book costs: It is publishing
several textbooks at a student price of
$12 to $18 each, replacing books that
would have cost as much as $200 or
more.
Thinking about Chemeketas innovative approach, we asked our dedicated corps of Rapid Responders:
Why is college so expensive? What can
be done to lower the costs for students?

What they said


Colleges are not immune to the economic realities that any business faces.
Proper salaries, employee benefits,
facility costs and maintenance are the
same, with the major exception that
they do not produce a retail product to
be sold for profit.
I love Chemeketas book project;
very smart. I hope there are other
areas that can be addressed. Cost is
always there. Managing it is the tricky
part.
Lew Hundley, Salem
Cut the book costs even further;
make all textbooks available online, as
most students usually do not need their
books afterward.
William K. Dettwyler, Salem
One reason that college education is
so expensive is that the government
gives most any kid a guaranteed loan to
pay the cost. When ready cash is available, the colleges raise tuition and the
kids who are not knowledgeable concerning loans dont understand the
burden of paying it back.
Loren Wright, Salem
College costs have increased for a
number of reasons: less government

LETTERS

support for public schools, a large increase in administrative personnel,


high salaries for top administrators,
competition between schools to attract
students which leads to more student
services and amenities, high cost of
textbooks and the lifelong schedule of
debt repayment most students are now
saddled with.
What a shame!
Vonnie Lincoln, Lyons
How do other countries provide free
health care and free education? Stop
trying to save the world and fix OUR
roads, bridges and sidewalks. Also give
free college and graduate school to
those who really can qualify and career
training for the others. A WPA program
would also help with unemployment
problems as it did during the 1930s.
Finally, a national health system is
needed.
Cal Collins, Salem
A New York Times April 2015 opinion blames a disproportionate increase in non-teaching administrative
spending. The real reason for continued
rising costs is that we are still willing to
pay those costs.
We blindly associate life success and
college without an objective cost-benefit analysis. Ive learned a lot from
people who never went to college.
There are many paths to a successful
life.
Richard Pine, Salem
Its great that CCC will be producing
lower-cost textbooks. Other colleges
should follow suit. Maybe administrators could come up with activities
and/or community programs for students to participate in and figure this
into their tuition costs.
Tina Blacksmith, Salem
Finding a way to reduce the cost of
books is a good first step. When I attended PSU in the 70s, I bought used
books when I could.
My sons went to community college
for the first two years, then transferred
to a state university. That reduced costs

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substantially.
Teresa Larocque, Dallas
To become an architect involved five
years at university. That would have
been a huge cost and crippling student
loan. However this was in Wales and
tuition was paid by the state.
I was fortunate in winning a scholarship that also funded my living expenses, so I graduated with zero debt,
and that is what our country should
work toward: funded higher education.
It is an investment in our future.
Geoffrey James, Salem
This question exists because the
perceived value relative to costs fluctuates with the employment market, and
because we have encouraged the financing of education like that of a car
or house, but with incredible risk and
penalty to the borrower. Education
should not be a millstone about our
necks.
Erin Cramer, Stayton
College is just like everything else;
costs just keep going up. They run it
like a business and if they dont see a
profit, they raise the tuition. I, for one,
didnt go because I just couldnt afford
it and you are not guaranteed a job.
That is why so many are working at
minimum wage.
DeWayne Wilson, Hubbard

VISUAL VIEWPOINTS

Time for new national goals to


address gun violence
During the 1960s, President Eisenhower formed a Commission on National Goals. This commission developed a series of inspirational goals
for our nation, which covered a spectrum of major threads which are
predominant in the United States.
The thread which was missing was
firearms control.
The commissions conclusions at
that time can be re-discovered by
simply visiting a library and finding
the publication on national goals.
Bringing that concept and approach into 2015 America, the purposeful activity of focusing the greatest minds on the serious problem of
firearms in society could be the
answer to what is plaguing our nation
at this time.
It is a problem seeking a solution,
which should be focusing our collective action on a scale amounting to
war against violent misuse of firearms in our society.
If force is required to accomplish
this, then lets agree to use force. If
persuasion has an influence, then
persuade. If prayer has any meaning,

then pray. But, in the final event, let


us not fail to act while the iron is
hot!
And, lets not forget that schools
are the crux of what our nation is or
will become.
Lets use them now!
Gene Starns
Salem

Good gun regulation is not a


slippery slope
Can we really expect our mental
health professionals to predict which
of thousands of disaffected young
males will actually commit mass
murder before the shooting starts?
I doubt that Russia has a robust
mental health system, yet our gun
fatalities are many times theirs. Over
30,000 Americans a year die by firearms.
One big difference between us and
other developed countries is easily
documented. We have more guns and
easier gun availability than anyone
else, by a long shot.
America is known as a car culture,
yet we regulate cars more than we do
guns. These regulations have not
outlawed cars. In fact, cars are
everywhere.
It is time we agree that good regulation is not a slippery slope to prohibition, and that our democracy will
be safe and well-armed even with
common-sense regulations like universal background checks and prohibitions on assault rifles.
And next time anyone grabs at the
Second Amendment to prevent any
gun regulation, they should ask themselves: How many gun owners in
America are part of a well regulated
militia?
We should start interpreting the
Second Amendment as the founders
clearly intended, and not as the NRA

Indeed, the major factors are rising


tuition, expensive books and supplies,
and higher rents. But add easier availability of loans and credit cards. The
living standard of many college students has increased in recent decades.
More now have cars, costly electronic
equipment, travel by air, and expensive
habits. To paraphrase Parkinsons Law,
spending expands to fit the available
cash.
Bert Wenner, Salem
Like the GI Bill I had in college, lets
have a Homeland Service Bill where we
grant benefits on a par with the GI Bill
for national service similar to the Peace
Corps or rebuilding efforts in light of
devastation from fires, floods or tornadoes, etc.
Dwight Courtney, Salem
Textbooks, although expensive, are a
fraction of college expenses. Tuition is
the major cost, along with housing and
other living expenses that are allowed
under student loan programs. A high
percentage of students live off their
student loans. Thats why the cost of an
education, via student loans, is so high
in the U.S.
David Thompson, Salem
It is expensive. The more important
question is whether it is worth it. I
think it would help if at least some students delayed going to college for several years and experienced life and
figured a few things out before going to
college. (I recommend the same for
marriage. Its not for people in their
20s).
David Haber, Salem

For colleges to get the much-needed


federal support, they mandate yearly

citizens, or those who weigh in


against the weakness of those who
refuse to defend themselves against
the many threats against its liberties.
At least from this latest horror I
can see the seeds of a solution growing.
It seems the advocates of gun liberty are decrying the lack of adequate mental health care. I look forward to the efforts by the NRA and
its passionate and well-motivated
supporters to spearhead the demand
for universal mental health care coverage.
The shootings at Newtown and
Roseburg were both perpetrated by
sons of target shooters. Im no mental
health expert, but if thats where the
fire is, lets put it out.
The NRA could fund efforts to
have every individual and their family members screened before they
buy guns and visit the range and
then, if that doesnt work, they can
pick up the tab to clean up the mess.
Peter Jones
Salem

Politicians priorities
should be Oregons
welfare, not their own
With the recent tragedy at Umpqua Community College, I must say
how disappointing and politically
incorrect it is of our elected officials
to run down to Roseburg to grab
media attention and grandstand on
the gun control issue.
To use a tragedy of such a nature
for a political agenda and to sway
public opinion is cowardly.
This is no better than any other
public official has done in the past.
They will try to make martyrs out of
people who only wanted to better
their lives. They will drag families
through continued torture of a day
that they themselves and most people
who were there will never forget.
They will do this with one agenda:
self-preservation for their continued
place in public office.
If they are so concerned with bettering the welfare of Oregon people,
why dont they work on getting Oregons economy back on track or creating an effective plan to bring in
more business to Oregon?
Most of all, why dont they work on
stopping the fraud, waste and abuse
of Oregon resources and funds?
How about cutting the state governments cost of living allowance
and using that to help fund school
systems and emergency services?
How about funding mental health and
medical programs?
Shawn Clark
Sheridan

tuition hikes. This means foreign students and rich kids pay the full amount,
or more, so a large percentage of that
amount can be spread around for student aid to those who cant afford to
attend without that support. Its a vicious cycle!
Chuck Sides, Salem

Add assault weapons ban to


Second Amendment

dictates.
Larry R. Nelson
Salem

Repeal concealed weapons


laws; mandate open carry
In the wake of the recent gun violence in Roseburg, I have come to
realize that our elected officials
arent doing nearly enough to address
this issue.
Second Amendment advocates
steadfastly refuse any change, and
gun control advocates are unwilling
to see anything less than zero tolerance.
Weve got to figure out some way
to level the playing field.
One way that could to do this, absent real change, is to repeal concealed weapons laws, with mandated
open carry requirements.
This should appease Second
Amendment advocates; and while it
may not win over gun control advocates (of which Im one), its at
least a start.
Removing the power of a gun owner from concealing their weapon
gives the public more information.
The public gets to see the weapon and
gets to make their own assessment of
the individual carrying it.
Bring back the gun racks and hip
holsters. Level the playing field by
allowing all of us to see whos carrying and let us judge for ourselves
whether or not to trust the individual.
Brian J. Fordham
Salem

Seed of solution growing:


Address mental health care
I dont know which I dread more
every single time a mass killing takes
place: the letters crying out against a
society that values the weapons industry more than the safety of its

My Websters New World Dictionary defines amendment as: 1. A


change for the better, improvement
2. A correction of errors, faults, etc.
3. a) a revision or addition proposed
or made in a bill, law, constitution,
etc. b) the process of making such
changes.
Could not an amendment be
amended? Changed for the better?
Corrected of faults? Improved?
How about the Second Amendment? Would it not be changed for
the better if it included a ban on assault weapons?
Hmm. Maybe worth thinking
about.
Paul Mannen
Dallas

Watch for students red flags


of antisocial behavior
As a former resident of Roseburg,
I feel deeply touched by the mass
murders of those innocent people at
Umpqua Community College.
While in Roseburg, I was employed by Douglas Homecare and
Hospice, which would have been
involved with families of those killed.
My perspective is to upgrade the
mental health system to allow our
investigators to develop total access
to the mass killers red flags of antisocial behavior to match with similar
situations from Columbine onward.
This must include opening up middle
and high school records documenting
early signs of aggression and/or victimization.
Yes, mental health experts need to
see the big picture in order to create
a telling profile.
Let that become the No. 1 priority
for the Legislatures next session.
Barry-Lee Coyne
Salem

Letters to the editor, blogs, guest opinions, columns, cartoons, photos and articles submitted to the Statesman Journal and/or StatesmanJournal.com may be published or distributed in print, electronic, audio or other forms.

10D

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Opinion
Another massacre, another charade
WASHINGTON Theres the cycle
of poverty. Theres the cycle of violence. And then theres the cycle of gun
talk.
It starts with a mass shooting. Guncontrol advocates blame the deaths on
gun-control opponents, who argue, in
turn, that none of the proposed restrictions would have had any effect on the
incident in question. The debate goes
nowhere. The media move on.
Until the next incident, when the
cycle begins again.
So with the Roseburg massacre in
Oregon. Within hours, President Obama
takes to the microphones to furiously
denounce the NRA and its ilk for resisting commonsense gun-safety laws.
His harangue is totally sincere, totally knee-jerk and totally pointless. At
the time he delivers it, he knows practically nothing about the shooter, nothing
about the weapons, nothing about how
they were obtained.
Nor does Obama propose any legislation. He knows none would pass. But
the deeper truth is that it would have
made no difference. Does anyone really
believe that the gun-show loophole had
anything to do with Roseburg?
Universal background checks sound
wonderful. But Oregon already has one.
The Roseburg shooter and his mother
obtained every one of their guns legally.
The reason the debate is so muddled,
indeed surreal, is that both sides know
that the only measure that might actually prevent mass killings has absolutely no chance of ever being enacted.
Mere commonsense regulation,
like the assault weapons ban of 1994
that was allowed to lapse 10 years later,

does little more than make us feel good.


A Justice Department study found no
discernible reduction in the lethality
and injuriousness of gun violence.
As for the only
remotely plausible
solution, Obama
dare not speak its
name. He made an
oblique reference
to Australia, never
mentioning that
Charles
its gun-control
Krauthammer innovation was
confiscation, by
C O M M E N TA RY
means of a mandatory buyback. Theres a reason he
didnt bring up confiscation. In this
country, with its traditions, public sentiment and, most importantly, Second
Amendment, thems fightin words.
Nor did Obama seriously address the
other approach that could make a difference: more aggressive psychiatric
intervention. These massacres are
almost invariably perpetrated by severely disturbed, isolated, often delusional young men.
Yet even here, our reach is limited.
In some cases, yes, involuntary commitment would have made a difference.
Jared Loughner, the Tucson shooter,
was so unstable, so menacing, that fellow students at his community college
feared, said one, that he would come
into class with an automatic weapon.
Under our crazy laws, however, he had
to kill before he could be locked up.
Predictably, he fell through the mental health cracks. A month later, he
killed 12 and was killed himself, another casualty of a mental health system
that lets the severely psychiatrically ill

live and die wretchedly abandoned.


The problem is that these massmurder cases are fairly unusual. Take
Roseburg. That young man had no
criminal history, no psychiatric diagnosis beyond Aspergers, no involvement
in public disturbances. How do you
find, let alone lock up, someone like
that?
There are 320 million Americans.
Schizophrenia affects about 1 percent
of the population. Thats about 3 million
people. Only a tiny fraction are ever
violent and predicting which ones
will be is almost impossible.
Committing the Jared Loughners
would have an effect. But even they are

Principles, party loyalty


plague Republican party
Rep. Tom McClintock of
California is about as conservative a Republican as you can
find in Congress.
It says everything about how
dysfunctional the GOP House
has become that such a solo flier
as McClintock has taken a stand
against the GOP insurgency that
torpedoed House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthys bid to
become speaker of the House.
Last month, McClintock
resigned from the House Freedom Caucus, a rump of some 40
GOP members who have demanded outsize representation
in the GOP caucus. Before McCarthy left, the House Freedom
Caucus announced its support
for Rep. Daniel Webster of Florida. Though McClintock says he
agrees with the groups fiscally
conservative principles, he also
believes that its tactics have
sabotaged the conservative
cause.
In February, the House Freedom Caucus pushed to defund
President Barack Obamas immigration policies and failed.
In May, the caucusers tried to
kill the free trade bill. Failed
again. Worse, the caucus forced
the House leadership to abandon
legally binding action against
Obamas disastrous Iran nuclear agreement in favor of a
symbolic and legally meaningless vote. McClintock believes
that representatives can and
should vote their conscience on
specific legislation. But when it
comes to the party, no Republican should sabotage the leadership.
Were now in a situation
where at least 29 Republicans
have taken the position that if
they dont like the Republican
nominee for speaker, they will

combine with the Democrats


against that nominee, he told
me. Its a dangerous game because Democrats could end up
cutting deals with 29 centrist
Republicans
who
might
care to,
say,
eliminate
the manDebra J.
dated
spending Saunders
caps.
C O M M E N TA RY
Open this
door, it can swing either way.
The Republicans have their
largest majority since 1928
247 seats until you subtract
Republicans who are willing to
sacrifice unity for feckless
gestures. The simple fact is that
the House Freedom Caucus
does not have the votes to put
one of its own at the helm. It can
only stop other Republicans
from winning 218 votes.
After the outgoing House

POLITICAL CHUCKLES
Go to statesmanjournal.com/
media/latest/opinion to view Editorial cartoons: Congress and
Editorial cartoons: John Boehner.

speaker, John Boehner, announced his resignation, his


former lieutenant, Eric Cantor,
took on Boehners detractors in
The New York Times.
Cantor often hears, he wrote,
the lament of the GOP base that
the party needs to fight: On this
I agree. It is imperative that we
fight for what we believe in. But
we should fight smartly. I have
never heard of a football team
that won by throwing only Hail
Mary passes, yet that is what is
being demanded of Republican
leaders today.
Debra J. Saunders is a columnist for the San Francisco
Chronicle, 901 Mission St., San
Francisco, CA 94103. Send
email to dsaunders@sfchron
icle.com.

the exception among the shooters. Yet


commonsense gun control would do
even less. Unless youre willing to go all
the way.
In the final quarter of his presidency, Obama can very well say what
he wants. If he believes in Australianstyle confiscation, why not spell it out?
Until he does, he should stop demonizing people for not doing what he wont
even propose.
Charles Krauthammer is a columnist
for The Washington Post, 1150 15th St.
NW, Washington, DC 20071. Send email
to letters@charleskrauthammer.com.

This is what erasure


looks like, mom says
This, says Roni DeanBurren, is what erasure looks
like.
Shes talking about something you might otherwise
have thought innocuous: a
page from World Geography, a
high school textbook.
A few days ago, you see,
Dean-Burren, a former teacher and a doctoral candidate at
the University of Houston,
was texted a caption from that
book by her son Coby, who is
15. It said that the Atlantic
slave trade brought millions
of workers from Africa to the
southern United States to
work on agricultural plantations. This was in a section
called Patterns of Immigration.
She says the words jumped
out at her. After all, a worker is usually someone who
gets paid to do a job. An immigrant is usually someone
who chooses to come to a new
country. Neither of which
describes the millions of kidnapping victims who cleared
Americas fields and endured
its depravities in lives of unending bondage that afforded
them no more rights under the
law than a dog or a chair.
As the Trail of Tears was
not a nature walk and the
Normandy invasion not a day
at the beach, black people
were neither workers nor
immigrants, but slaves. DeanBurren, who is black, took to
social media to explain that.
You can guess what happened next. The story went
viral, and the embarrassed
publisher, McGraw-Hill Education, scrambled to apologize
and fix the mess.
Thats all well and good.
But let no one think this was
incidental or accidental. No,

there is purpose here. There is


intent.
We are witness to the vandalism of African-American
memory, to acts of radical
revision and wholesale theft
that strike at the core of black
identity.
Once
your past
is gone,
who are
you?
What
anchor
Leonard
holds
Pitts Jr.
you? So
C O M M E N TA RY
DeanBurrens
word strikes a powerful
chord: This is, indeed, erasure
like a blackboard wiped
clean, all the inconvenient
pain, sting and challenge of
African-American history,
gone.
To put it another way:
Black History Matters. So let
us be alarmed at attempts to
rewrite that history for the
moral convenience of others
or to preserve what James
Baldwin and Ta-Nehisi Coates
have described as the fiction
of white American innocence where crimes of race
are concerned. They keep
trying to make it less painful,
says Dean-Burren, like putting a document through a
copy machine and making it
lighter, lighter and lighter
still.
And then, when you look
up, theres nothing on the
page.
Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for The Miami Herald,
1 Herald Plaza, Miami, FL
33132. Send email to
lpitts@miamiherald.com.

College student advocates take the fight to cancer, its patients


CHICAGO When David
Warrens father, Steve, was
diagnosed in 2011 with a rare
form of brain cancer, David
did what any well-educated,
resource-rich person would do:
He became his fathers chief
advocate.
Dad had so many different
doctors, so many experts on
the cancer, the treatment and
the related health issues, but I
wanted to be the expert on the
patient, Warren told me.
I vowed to be there for my
dad through every appointment. I created a form to take
with us to doctor visits that
listed the medications he was
on and refills he needed, what
updates we had for each doctor
since the last visit and what
questions we needed answered.
The systematic approach

that Warren and his father


used to fight a complex form
of cancer got the notice of a
neuro-oncologist at the Comprehensive Cancer Center at
Wake
Forest
Baptist
Health,
Esther
where
Cepeda
Steve was
receiving
C O M M E N TA RY
treatment. The
doctor suggested to the fatherson team that their method for
attacking such a serious diagnosis could help many others.
Before Steve succumbed to
his cancer in 2013, he and David created Take the Fight, a
nonprofit army of college un-

dergraduates specially trained


to advocate for those battling
cancer. The students help patients who arent lucky enough
to have someone like David
already by their side.
With the help of doctors and
administrators at Wake Forest
Baptist Health, Take the Fight
opened an office onsite and
began training its first class of
strategists. The all-volunteerled organization paired students from Wake Forest University with patients at the
cancer center.
The student strategists help
patients by asking questions
and taking notes at doctor
appointments, compiling medication lists, creating contact
lists simple things that can
get lost during stressful encounters that are often accompanied by blood draws and

other tasks that go into managing such a severe illness.


Some of the patients are
low-income with few resources, while others simply
lack family support. All get a
uniquely tailored experience to
their individual situations.
For instance, one patient
was a registered nurse with
the medical knowledge and
resources to navigate the
health care system but lived on
her own. She was paired with a
student who, in effect, was
simply there to hold her hand
throughout her struggle.
One of David Warrens
proudest achievements since
he helped launch Take the
Fight is the positive response
from the oncologists the organization has worked with.
The doctors tell us definitively that we have improved

patient outcomes, Warren


said.
Next up is a push to move
the model out of North Carolina and expand not only across
the U.S., but also to the U.K.
and Canada. The organization
has launched a new two-year
fellowship program for college
students in their senior years
that includes a year of fulltime work following graduation at Take the Fight headquarters. There they will work
to develop tangible solutions to
the problems they experienced
in the health system during
their first year as patient advocates.
Esther J. Cepeda writes for
the Washington Post Writers
Group, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, DC 20071. Send email to
estherjcepeda@washpost.com.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Joan Schuler Flomer

Acosta, Stella Marie: 1 p.m., SalemTowne Towne


Hall, 2900 Oakcrest Dr. NW, Salem.
Delaney, James Alfred: 2 p.m., 3146 Beacon St.
NE, Salem.
Grossman, Lyle F.: 1 p.m., the Scoreboard.
Knapp, Bonnie: (potluck) 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., Painters
Call Community Center, 3911 Village Center Dr. SE,
Salem.
Loyd, Vivian "Mae": 2:30 p.m., Temple Beth
Sholom, 1275 Cunningham Ln SE, Salem.
Woods, Julie Debra: 10 a.m., St. Joseph Catholic
Church.

Obituaries and Guest Book available online at


www.StatesmanJournal.com

Monique Noelle Wetten

The Statesman Journal Obituary Office is open


Monday - Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Obituaries must be submitted by 1 p.m.
You can reach us by phone at 503-399-6794 ,
email at obituary@statesmanjournal.com, or by going to our
website, www.StatesmanJournal.com/Obituaries

REECE DAVIS

June 27, 2014 - October 6, 2015

James W. May

November 26, 1931 - October 4, 2015

Memorial Service. 11a.m.


Sat. Oct. 17, 2015 at Hoodview
Church of God, Woodburn
Or. Arrangements by SimonCornwell Colonial Chapel.

VIRGINIA LORENA
HUSKEY
October 7, 1944 - October 7, 2015
Services for Virginia are
currently pending with Keizer
Funeral Chapel in Keizer, Oregon.

Nadine
May Malone
May 1, 1942 - October 9, 2015
In keeping with Nadines
wishes, no public services will be
held. Assisting is Virgil T. Golden
Funeral Service.

Gary
Wilburn Kline
April 3, 1941 - October 2, 2015
Private Inurnment will take
place at Willamette National
Cemetery.
Arrangements by
Howell, Edwards, Doerksen.

Arlene
Marie Bibby
October 14, 1923 - October 6, 2015
A private service will be
held. Arrangements by Howell,
Edwards, Doerksen Funeral Home.

Janet Louise Jensen


Wallace
June 14, 1940 - October 7, 2015
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Joan Schuler Flomer, 87, of Woodburn, died Sept. 12,


2015, in Wilsonville, with family by her side.
She was born to the late Walter Allan and Dorothea
Kester Schuler on Aug. 31, 1928, in Portland, Oregon.
The family later resided in Astoria, before moving to
Woodburn in 1941.
Joan (pronounced Jo-Ann) graduated from
Woodburn High School in 1946 and Oregon State
College in 1950.
She is survived by son, Tom Flomer, of Woodburn;
sister, Nancy (Schuler) Myers, of Heppner; and nieces and
nephews.
A Celebration of Life Memorial Service will be at 2
p.m. Sunday, Oct. 18, 2015, at Langdon Farms Golf Club,
24377 Airport Rd NE, Aurora, Oregon.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to
Willamette Humane Society, P.O. Box 13005, Salem, OR
97309 (www. whs4pets.org), or a favorite charity.
December 24, 1934 - October 3, 2015

During the early morning of October 3, 2015,


Monique Noelle Wetten peacefully left our presence in
her beloved home in the hills of Silverton.
Monique was born in Aruba, N.W.I. on December
24, 1934, living there for five years before coming to the
U.S.A., settling in Oregon. She graduated from Molalla
Paul
Edward Hochstetler High School, then attended Pacific Lutheran University,
October 28, 1933 - October 7, 2015
graduating in Education. She began her teaching career
A Memorial Service will be
11:00am Thursday, Oct. 15th at in Pacific Grove, California, teaching sixth grade. She
the Salem Evangelical Church later returned to Oregon, settling in the Woodburn area,
(455 Locust St NE). Assisting is
Virgil T. Golden Funeral Service.
selling real estate in the Senior Estates, and caring for her
mother. Later Monique purchased property and built her
Ione Vivian Smithdream home in the Silverton hills, where she enjoyed the
Vanderwall
January 29, 1951 - October 8, 2015
view, quietness, and nature of the area. Monique leaves
Arrangements by Howell, behind two brothers, John and Oliver, and one sister,
Edwards, Doerksen.
Madeleine, as well as nieces, nephews, and cousins. As
per her wishes, no services were requested. Memorial
Raymond
L.
Myers
September 22, 1956 - October 2, 2015
Memorial service at 1:30 PM on Contributions can be made to Chapel In The Hills 111
Saturday, October 31 at Virgil T. Silver Falls Dr. SE. P.O. Box 942, Silverton, OR 97381.
Golden Funeral Service.
Arrangements by Simon-Cornwell Colonial Chapel.

ROBERT
LEE BAKER
October 24, 1956 - October 6, 2015
Family services will be held at
a later date. Arrangements by
Keizer Funeral Chapel in Keizer,
Oregon.

ThSeptember
eresa 11,
D.1957Klopfenstein
- October 2, 2015
Memorial -Sat. Oct. 17th, 2:00
pm-St. Timothys Church, Salem.
Arrangements
entrusted
to
Weddle Funeral Services, Stayton.

Bettie
Lou Anderson
August 26, 1929 - October 8, 2015
SCOTTS MILLS - Private family
services. Arrangements by Unger
Funeral Chapel, Silverton.

Steven Ray Floyd

October 7, 1958 - October 7, 2015

A memorial service will be held


at a later date. Arrangements by
Howell, Edwards, Doerksen.

185 Memorials & Markers

Bernice Hendersen
December 19, 1919 - October 4, 2015

2 plots in beautiful
Belcrest Cemetery. $1800 each
or best offer.
(760) 244-1660

There are no services scheduled


at this time. Farnstrom Mortuary is
handling arrangements.

Capital Monument Co.


140 Hoyt St. S
503-363-6887

Curtis Jon Con

April 22, 1957 - October 3, 2015

Curtis Jon Coffin passed away


peacefully on October 3, 2015,
at the age of 58. His son, CJ
Coffin, and his parents, Frank and
Jeannette Coffin, predeceased
him. He leaves behind a daughter,
Carissa Blume, Snohomish WA,
and a son, Trevor Yunker, Olympia
WA. He also leaves behind his
sisters, Janice Coffin Wiesen
(Allen), Bellevue WA, and Rita
Coffin Hill (Steve), Portland OR,
and brother Vaughn Lee Coffin, Salem OR, as well as
many nieces and nephews. Curtis will be remembered
fondly by his family and friends.

Faye Hackler

November 24, 1916 - October 4, 2015

Faye Hackler was born on


November 24, 1916 to Will and
Mattie Lankford, in Corsicana,
Texas. She was the 2nd youngest
of 5 children and was the last
surviving sibling.
In 1937 she married J.T.
Perkins and spent much of her
marriage on his familys ranch
She taught high school geometry
during the war and delighted in
finding creative ways to make
her students want to learn. A wonderful cook, she made
great meals for the 14 ranch hands living on the ranch,
and for family and friends. She made beautiful quilts and
in her younger years her crocheting was remarkable.
J.T. died suddenly in 1974 after they had been
married for 37 years.
In 1977 Faye married J.L. Barnes. He died in 1985.
In 1988 she married Monroe Hackler, and after a
number of years, she was widowed for a third time.
Faye spent most of her life in the Childress, Texas
area. In 2008, at age 91 she lived in her own home and
faithfully used her treadmill. She suddenly made the
bold and courageous decision to move to Salem to be
near her nephew Wallace Long, Jr. and his family. For
the next 7 years she had family with whom to spend
holidays and share meals. She was thrilled to have her
first Christmas stocking in over 70 years! She loved
attending church at Trinity Covenant, where she was
embraced by a wonderful, caring, church family, and she
looked forward to going out to breakfast for biscuits and
gravy afterward.
She had wonderful caregivers at Southern Hills. They
were very fond of her and good to her.
Faye was loved and she will be missed.
A celebration of her life will be held on Thursday,
October 15th at 4:00pm at Trinity Covenant Church in
Salem.

ON YOUR MOBILE
AND TABLET

AT HOME
DELIVERY

Father Thomas Thien Dang,


OSB, a monk of Mount Angel
Abbey, passed peacefully to
the Lord on October 6, after a
prolonged illness. He was 52 years
old. A Vigil will be held Tuesday
evening, October 13, at 7:30 p.m.,
and the Mass of Resurrection
will be celebrated Wednesday,
October 14, at 10 a.m. in the
Abbey Church.
Father Thien was born in
Vietnam on January 20, 1963, to Huong Dang and Thai
Nguyen. He graduated from Franciscan High School in
Nha Trang, Vietnam, after which he studied philosophy
and theology underground in order to avoid conflict with
the communist government. In 1981 he was arrested for
his beliefs, but escaped in 1983 on a small boat to the
Philippines. There he met a monk from Mount Angel
Abbey who helped him come to the U.S., where he began
his studies at Mount Angel Seminary. He entered Mount
Angel Abbey in 1987.
Father Thien was professed as a monk in 1988
and given the name Thomas Thien after his patron, a
Vietnamese martyr. In 1993, he earned Master of Divinity
and Master of Arts degrees in Theology and was ordained
a priest. He later studied in Rome and Jerusalem and
taught Scripture at Mount Angel Seminary.
Father Thien was proud of his Vietnamese Catholic
culture and loved to celebrate it. He was a gentle, softspoken and gifted monk whose talents will be missed
by all who knew him. He is survived by his father, sisters,
brother, community members, and numerous other
friends and relatives.

Wendy Lee LeGault

January 27, 1949 - October 7, 2015

Wendy Lee LeGault passed


away in her home on October
7, 2015 at the age of 66. Wendy
is predeceased by her parents,
Merle Stanfield and Neva Lee
Ogan, and by her sister, Barbara
Jordan. Wendy is lovingly
remembered by her husband,
Leo LeGault; her four daughters
Sherie Coila, Jennifer Heine, Kristy
Cuevas, and Danelle LeGault; her
twelve grandchildren; and her
siblings Karen Perez, Phyllis Allen, Jackie Oliveira, Gerald
Stanfield, and Kenneth Stanfield.
Wendy was born in Hollister, CA in 1949. She
attended North Hollywood High, and was married to
Leo in Van Nuys, CA in 1966. Wendy worked many jobs,
including operating the Country Kids Pre-school that
her daughters attended. Wendy worked as a paralegal
before her retirement in 2009.
Wendy enjoyed horseback riding, spending time
with her many grandchildren, and performing acts of
service to the community. She is remembered for her
generous heart and fearless spirit.
The funeral service will be held at the LDS Chapel,
1850 Brush College Rd NW, Salem 97304, on Monday,
October 12, 2015 at 4:00 PM. The internment at Zena
Cemetary will follow direct after the service.
Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy
laden, and I will give you rest. Matthew 11:28

  

   

  

   !"!#


 
 

!!   

  



VIA EMAIL

ON TWITTER

ON FACEBOOK


   ! 

 
   
 

Salem
412 Lancaster Drive NE
Salem, OR 97301
(503) 581-6265

Theresa D. Klopfenstein

Theresa Klopfenstein, of Scio,


Oregon, passed away on Oct. 2,
2015 in Salem, Oregon, at the
age of 58. She was born Theresa
Diane DeHart Sept. 11, 1957, in
Puyallup, Washington, to Buster
and LaFern DeHart. Theresa
graduated from Silverton High
School and attended OSU and a
veterinary trade school in Seattle.
Some of her first jobs were as
a waitress at Two Grandmas in
Silverton and a salesperson at Sears. She began working
for the State of Oregon in 1987. She has worked in the
Department of Motor Vehicles, Fairview Training Center,
Oregon State Police, Oregon Military Department and
Joint Force Headquarters Family Programs. She was well
known for her positive, upbeat attitude and her ability
to make her coworkers laugh. Her professionalism and
expertise garnered her a Meritorious Service Medal and
an Exceptional Service Medal for her support of the 2003
wildfire season. Theresa was most proud of her Certified
Payroll Professional certification that she earned in
2008. Theresa was proud of the fact that her father-inlaw Howard Klopfenstein had retired from the military
department in 1987 and that she could carry on the family
name there. Her greatest joy was to spend quality time
with her family. She also was very fond of her horses, and
being a part of horse drill teams and taking road trips.
Theresa was part of the Cascade Sweethearts, Rodeo
Bandits, American Thunder and was an active member of
the 40 Something Cowgirls, Oregon Equestrian Trails, and
the Back Country Horseman. Theresa was the northwest
distributor of Pounds, a horse supplement and was very
active in all of the local horse events. In addition to the
horses she loved to ride the motorcycle with Duane
and the Albany Oregon motorcycle group. Theresa
was preceded in death by her father Buster, survivors
include her husband, Duane, whom she married Aug.
26, 1978 in Salem; mother, LaFern DeHart; daughter,
Rene Breedlove; brothers and sisters, Tommy and David
DeHart, Melanie Land and Ellen Archer; grandchildren,
Courtney and Grant. Funeral service for Theresa will be
held at St. Timothys Episcopal Church, 3295 Ladd Ave NE
in Salem on October 17, 2015, at 2:00. Internment and
reception following service. Memorial contributions can
be made to the JFHQ Family Programs or the National
Guard scholarship program. Arrangements entrusted to
Weddle Funeral Services, online condolences at WeddleFuneral.Com



  
  


 
  
 

September 11, 1957 - October 2, 2015

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January 20, 1963 - October 6, 2015

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in a cemetery or a home.
Locally owned since 1949, we provide
cremations from direct cremation to
memorial and celebration of life services.

25

Sunday, October 11, 2015

A funeral service will begin at


5pm Friday, October 16th in the
Evangelical Bible Church in Dallas.
The Dallas Mortuary Tribute
Center is caring for the family.

Father Thien Dang, OSB

August 31, 1928 - September 12, 2015

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

MARRIAGE
LICENSES
The following are marriage license
applications reported between Oct. 2
and 9. For more, go to Statesman
Journal.com/Records.

Keizer.

Salem.

Taylor Duayne Colling, 24, Woodburn, and Dania Michelle Whalen, 25,
Woodburn.

Dimitry Troy Konovaloff, 29, Gervais,


and Valerie Yakunin, 24, Woodburn.

Jarrod Matthew Ostrem, 47, Salem,


and Shelley Sue Wallace, 47, Salem.

MARRIAGE LICENSES
Marion County applications
Wouter Osinga, 25, Salem, and Hannah Anna Haugen, 24, Salem.

Silas Frank Prince, 25, Salem, and


Cheryl Leeann Miles, 27, Salem.
Christopher Lee Mathis, 28, Keizer,
and Courtney Louise Turner, 24,
Keizer.

Terrance Noah Kelly, 56, Salem, and


Aleta Esther Pierre, 61, Keizer.

Steven Blaine Winslow, 32, Salem,


and Kayla Marye Johnson, 26, Salem.

Joseph Omar Sanchez, 29, Salem, and


Danielle Rae Ball, 28, Salem.

Steven Zachary Smith, 35, Newton,


Massachusetts, and Elizabeth Heidi
Vazquez, 29, Newton, Massachusetts.

Cameron Taylor Whitney, 23, Keizer,


and Hannah Christine Miller, 21,

Flaudio Rafael Villanueva, 25, Salem,


and Liana Maritza Valencia, 21,

Stephen Douglas Young, 28, Keizer,


and Melissa Renee Sabin, 29, Keizer.

and Rachel Roseann Hisgen, 34,


Albany.

Brian Omar Gomez, 32, Salem, and


Poonamjit Kaur, 24, Salem.

Thomas Ryan Evans, 32, Salem, and


Jennifer Roxane Alexander, 25,
Salem.

David Elliot Wilson, 32, Bremerton,


Washington, and Annmarie Helen
Linhart, 28, Bremerton, Washington.

Pavel Mikhaylovich Marchenko, 26,


Orlando, Florida, and Marina Andreyevna Ozerova, 22, Salem.

Brock Thomas Wegscheider, 23,


Salem, and Leslie Nickole Brinlee, 23,
Salem.

Jorge Antonio Leos Gutierrez, 27,


Canby, and Alejandra Hernandez
Cortes, 23, Woodburn.

Matthew Roger Gettman, 35,


McMinnville, and Alex Chelsea Andrade, 40, Salem.

Andrian Morales Davila, 32, Salem,


and Adilene Lemus Torres, 28, Salem.

Jorge Ivan Ramirez Garcia, 25, Keizer,


and Ivette Guevara, 23, Keizer.

Clester Road W (Detroit), 3600 Silverstone Drive NE, 1100 NE Rosewood St.
(Sublimity).

Saturday: 2:04 a.m., 10000 Arndt Road


NE; 3:39 a.m., Portland and Waconda
roads NE; 1:01 p.m., Lancaster Drive and
Auburn Road NE.

David Wayland Miller, 34, Albany,

CRIME
LOG
POLICE
Reported in the 24 hours ending at 4
p.m. Saturday (addresses refer to block
number):

SALEM
Residential and business burglaries: 100
Liberty St. NE, 4600 Seventh Ave. SE,
1500 Lee St. SE.

Traffic crashes: Friday: 7:42 p.m., Center


Street and Lancaster Drive NE; 10:12
p.m., Lana Avenue and Portland Road
NE; Saturday: 2:19 a.m., Market Street
and Hawthorne Avenue NE; 7:49 a.m.,
Mission and 12th streets SE; 11:54 a.m.,
Center and Winter streets NE; 12:34
p.m., Capitol and Center streets NE; 1
p.m., Doaks Ferry Road and SalemDallas Highway NW; 1:21 p.m., Kuebler
Boulevard and Battle Creek Road SE;
2:42 p.m., Madrona Avenue and Fair-

view Industrial Drive SE.

DALLAS
Residential and business burglaries: 300
SE Maple St.
Traffic crashes: Friday: 5:29 p.m., W
Ellendale Avenue and Lange Street.

MARION COUNTY
Residential and business burglaries: 500

Stolen vehicles: 22000 Airport Road NE,


4000 Lancaster Drive NE, 20000 Ferry
Road SE.
Traffic crashes: Friday: 4:22 p.m., 10000
River Road NE; 5:39 p.m., 19000 Arbor
Grove Road NE; 9:49 p.m., Satter Drive
and 47th Avenue NE; 11:23 p.m., Interstate 5 northbound, milepost 266;

POLK COUNTY
Traffic crashes: Friday: 8:55 p.m., Highway 51, milepost 3.

McMinnville steel mill fined $7,000 over water testing


Associated Press

MCMINNVILLE

A
McMinnville, Oregon, steel mill
has been fined more than $7,000
for violating its water pollution
permit.

The Statesman Journal reports Cascade Steel Rolling


Mills is being fined because it
stopped performing required
monthly water sampling for
lead and zinc.
The state Department of En-

Portlands Broadway
Bridge to be closed
until end of October
Associated Press

PORTLAND Portlands
Broadway Bridge will be
closed to motor vehicles
from 7 a.m. Sunday through
Oct. 27 during a repainting
project.
The Oregonian reports
sidewalks on the bridge will

remain open to pedestrians


and bicyclists.
Streetcars, buses and other motor vehicles will not be
able to use the bridge during
the closure.
Alternative river crossings open to motor vehicles
include the Burnside, Fremont and Steel bridges.

vironmental Quality says the


monitoring has been required
since 2002 under the facilitys
National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System permit.
A spokesman for Schnitzer
Steel in Portland, the McMinn-

ville facilitys parent company,


says the mill is now monitoring
as required.
Colin Kelly says Cascade
Steel discovering a monitoring
oversight as part of its internal
review and immediately noti-

fied the Department of Environmental Quality and fixed the


program.
The company has until Oct.
22 to appeal the penalty.

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StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Homegrown

COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION, COLLEGE PARK, MARYLAND

Monuments officer Captain Deane Keller entered the Piazza dei Miracoli in Pisa on Sept. 3, 1944, to discover the Camposanto (the medieval cemetery of Pisa) without its roof.
Within days, experts from Florence arrived in Pisa to gather the shattered fragments that fire and sun had baked off the walls.

The art of saving art


Monuments Men author to discuss preservation of Italys cultural treasures this week at Elsinore
Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

Imagine a world without Leonardo da Vincis


The Last Supper. Did you know this iconic
artwork was nearly destroyed during World War
II?
In order to defeat Mussolini
and have Italy change sides, British and American forces bombed
Italy at night. Due to the technological limitations of the era, pilots were bombing blind. The
risky process worked, but many
people and cultural treasures
Robert
were lost.
Edsel
One bomb landed about 90 feet
from The Last Supper. It blew
the roof and two of the walls off of the building
that housed the painting. The masterpiece was
exposed to the elements for several years.
Robert Edsel, best-selling author, producer

and founder of the Monuments Men Foundation


for the Preservation of Art, called the paintings
survival truly a miracle.
It was sheer luck that this bomb wasnt 10 or
15 feet closer, because it would have obliterated
the thing, Edsel said. If the local art officials
hadnt placed sandbags against the wall, there
would be no Dan Brown book.

History comes to Salem


On Thursday, Edsel will speak in Willamette
Universitys Atkinson Lecture Series at the Historic Elsinore Theatre. Hell tell tales like the
survival of The Last Supper and answer questions about the Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives program known as the Monuments Men
that safeguarded artistic and cultural treasures
stolen by Nazi Germany during World War II.
The title of Edsels free presentation matches
See MONUMENTS, Page 7E

IF YOU GO
What: Atkinson Lecture Series presents Robert Edsel
Saving Italy: The Race to Rescue a Nations Treasures
from the Nazis
Where: Historic Elsinore Theatre, 170 High St. SE
When: 7:30 p.m. Thursday
Admission: Free; doors open at 6:45 p.m. with early
admission for Willamette University students, faculty
and staff with ID. Hallie Ford Museum of Art member
can reserve seats by calling (503) 370-6867.
Information: (503) 370-6867, (503) 375-3574 or
willamette.edu/events/atkinson_lecture/
The lecture is part of Willamette Universitys lecture
series Taking the Long View: Art and Cultural Heritage
in an Age of Terror.

JOIN THE EFFORT


To enlist in the Monuments Men Foundations virtual
army and to help locate and preserve missing cultural
objects, go to monumentsmenfoundation.org.
To report a tip about an object, call (866) 994-4278.

Salem-Keizer boys join mens choir for festival concert


Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

Jim Taylor, director of


choirs at McNary High School,
sat in a Salem church pew 29
years ago and had a musical
experience that changed his
life.
A junior at Sprague High
School at the time, Taylor was
blown away by the experience
of hearing a choir of men, Male
Ensemble Northwest.
I still have the program
from the concert, Taylor said.
I absolutely remember telling
my choir director, Mr. Gary

Frame, that I wanted to someday sing in that group.


Taylor is a member of the
ensemble today and is bringing
them to Salem.
Male Ensemble Northwest
is a group of professional educators, conductors and singers
from Oregon, Washington and
Idaho whose mission is to inspire young men to explore
their artistic sides, grow as
individuals and develop their
talents through music.
I teach the choral arts
because I believe it gives a
See CONCERT, Page 6E

REACH US: Heather Rayhorn, (503) 399-6720, hrayhorn@StatesmanJournal.com

COURTESY OF MALE ENSEMBLE NORTHWEST

Male Ensemble Northwest will perform with a choir of Salem-Keizer middle


and high school boys at 4 p.m. Oct. 17 at Ken Collins Theater, McNary High
School, 595 Chemawa Road N.

If you go
What: Male Ensemble Northwests
festival concert
Where: Ken Collins Theater, McNary
High School, 595 Chemawa Road N
When: 4 p.m. Oct. 17
Tickets: $7 preferred, $5 general,
free with donation. Available at
McNary High Schools front office
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 12-16.
To contribute: Donations to Male
Ensemble Northwests festival can
be mailed to McNary Fine Arts
Boosters, Note: MEN Sing! S-K 2015,
P.O. Box 21832, Keizer, OR 97307.
Information: Leah Garro, president
of McNary Fine Arts Boosters, (503)
551-7392

2E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Heritage Oregon

ONLINE
Go to StatesmanJournal.com/Heritage for more
on area history.

Salem Beer quenched


valleys thirst for decades
Andy Zimmerman
Special to the Statesman Journal

The hops industry has deep


roots in Western Oregon, and
for many years, Salem Beer
was a prosperous sign of it.
Samuel Adolph founded the
first brewery in Salem with
John Brown in 1862 at Church
and Trade streets SE, according to Marion County History:
School Days II.
In 1885, the Capital Brewery
opened for business on the
northeast corner of Commercial and Trade streets SE, just
south of the Marion Hotel, in a
75-feet-by-80-feet building.
A new, modern plant was
constructed in 1910. The beer
started flowing in June 1912.
However, Salem voters had
other plans.
On May 31, 1915, after Salem
voted to become a dry town,
Salem Brewery moved it offices to Portland and ceased
making Salem Beer in Salem,
according to a Dec. 11, 1946,
Capital Journal story. In 1933
after the repeal of prohibition Salem Brewery went
back into business in the capital city. One of the uses of the
plant during those 18 dry years
was to make a loganberry
drink called LoJu.
In October 1943, Sicks
Brewery of Seattle purchased
the Salem plant. With the ownership change, the plant saw
improvements.
In September 1946, new
cellars added storage space for
an additional 50,000 barrels.
The Northwest cannery property, on the northwest corner
of Trade and Liberty streets
SE, was purchased, with the
plan to modernize the plant
and triple production, according to the Capital Journal story.
At its apex, the brewery
complex was four stories
above ground and two-and-ahalf stories below along Trade
Street.
The plant closed June 1,
1953, and 70 workers lost their
jobs. The Capital Journal said
the brewery produced 27 million bottles of beer yearly.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Think about


it: The thing that started out as a
unique experiment is now part of
your daily life. What do you think
the future will bring out of todays
experiments?
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Theres
enough wishy-washy energy out
there in the world. Be specific, direct
and brief. Youll make everything
easier.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Too much
information jams the communication lines.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Make
short-term plans to advance and yet
still honor your current position.

P 1998.012.0055 / WILLAMETTE HERITAGE CENTER

Salem Brewery Association is shown in the 1910s with wooden beer kegs stacked three and four high.

ONLINE

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Extreme


situations bring out the extremes in
people. The day-to-day middle
ground, thats where the basic
nature rests.

LOST SALEM
Do you know of an iconic Salem
event, location or business that has
been lost to history and should be
remembered? Send suggestions to
SJTimeCapsule@gmail.com.

Sicks moved production to its


other West Coast plants.
On May 24, 1955, demolition
work commenced on the brewery building. Eighty-eight big
tanks were salvaged from the
plant, with the capacity of
3,000 to 12,000 gallons each.
The tanks likely were headed
to farmers for storage of silage, according to the May 24,
1955, Oregon Statesman.
The plant closure marked
the end of an era, but not of an
industry.
According to statistics from

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Curious


people learn more; determined
people let nothing stand in the way
of knowledge.

P X2012.033.0011 / WILLAMETTE HERITAGE CENTER

Salem Brewery warehouse is seen during the 1940s.

the Oregon Department of


Agriculture, Oregon produced
more than 8.2 million pounds
of hops in 2014. And
oregoncraftbeer.org says there
are 226 brewing facilities in 71
Oregon cities.
Andy Zimmerman is a for-

Dear Annie: I have a


relative who owns a
jewelry store and pawn
shop in another state.
They have been the victims of a few robberies,
so now his 12-year-old son
carries a pistol in the
store. Under the laws of
their state, the kid is
allowed to carry it on the
premises with the parents present, but not off
the premises or in a vehicle.
It is my belief that a
12-year-old should never
do hazardous work, and
if hes in such danger
that he needs to carry a
gun, then why is he allowed in the store at all?
Im not sure I want anything to do with these
relatives since they put
their child at risk, and I

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mer Statesman Journal copy


editor who writes a column
about local history twice per
month. You can contact him
with comments or suggestions
for future stories at
SJTimeCapsule@gmail.com .

Todays Birthday (Oct. 11). Your


year will sparkle with novelty and
strange coincidences. Youll find
yourself slightly more superstitious
as you follow a mystical calling.
Adhering to your own rules and
beliefs will carry you to a place of
your dreams. December and May
are your luckiest times, and youll
hit upon bonus resources. Capricorn
and Virgo people adore you. Your
lucky numbers are 40, 2, 33, 38 and
15.
To write to Holiday Mathis, visit
www.creators.com and click Write
the Author on her page. You also
may email Holiday at holidaymathis@gmail.com or visit her
website at HolidayMathis.com.

Relative upset over nephews gun

Sudoku is a numberplacing puzzle based on


a 9x9 grid with several
given numbers. The
object is to place the
numbers 1 to 9 in the
empty squares so that
each row, each column
and each 3x3 box contains the same number
only once. The difficulty
level of the Conceptis
Sudoku increases from
Monday to Sunday.

A
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D O
K L E T
H O M
S N O T
A
A S A B
L O N
B U Y O
N A H
E D
H
R C
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R A Y L
O R E L
R D O N
M O
L I A
U M N S
R E
A
E D
W
S

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).


Youve come a long way and
achieved many aims, and yet in
many ways it still feels like youre
paying your dues. Your humility and
modesty let you learn more.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Avoid
cynicism today, and youll come out
unscathed.

Go to StatesmanJournal.com/TimeCapsule to find previous stories and


photos published in the Capital
Journal and Oregon Statesman.

A N N I E ' S M A I L B OX

T
A
C
T
I
N Y C
B E A
C A L

Taurus (April 20-May 20). Studying


is but one tenet of learning. Generally, it also takes experience to really
understand and totally absorb the
information.

Cancer (June 22-July 22). Youll get


to know what a person is really like.

Mitchell
and Sugar

A
V
I
A

Aries (March 21-April 19). Your


senses are dialed up, and so are your
sensitivities. When its wonderful,
you wish they could feel it like you
do, and when its bad, you wouldnt
wish it on anyone.

Gemini (May 21-June 21). In the


future, youll be honored for the
contributions you make today, none
of which will seem too remarkable
as single acts.

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

T
I
F
F

IN THE STARS

T
F I
R
E T
A P I S
C I N G
E E T O
S O
E R
D
V E R
E T O N
L A M E
P O O
A
S C O M
T I V A
I G U P
M S
S T
T R U M
O U F O
R E O P
E S S E

R
O
T
C U
N
L I
E C
T E
E F
R
R
I C
P A
S
D E
U
I S
H
R I
E N
X

B
R
I
E
K
E
R
P
L
U
N
K
S
T
A
S

J
U
J
I
T
S
O U
D
I Z
L E
E D
S
Y
O K
S E
N
O O
G G
R A
E M
S E
L
A
S
S

L
E
A
N
E
S
T

O
S
H
E
A
S

Z
A
G
S

Y
S
E
R

I E
R T
E A
L
E
I
A

E
L
L
S

dont want to go to their


home. I also wonder
whether I should stop
accepting invitations to
any of their events in
order to make it clear
that I dont approve of
what they are doing.
Should I make a case
to Child Protective Services about this?
Brooklyn
Dear Brooklyn: We
agree that if the child
works in a store that is
often robbed, the parents
are endangering him.
Having a gun will not
prevent him from being
shot by an intruder. Before cutting them off and
reporting them to CPS,
however, have you spoken to the parents to hear
their side of the story?
Have you expressed your
concerns to them directly? You might be jumping to conclusions about
the boys hours at the
store. And by refusing all
future invitations, you
are not only excluding
yourself from family
events, you also will no
longer be able to keep an

eye on the situation. Your


disapproval is not likely
to change the parents
attitude. But if, after
listening to the parents,
you still want to contact
CPS, by all means, go
ahead.
Dear Annie: On July
26, my 18-year-old son
was involved in a fatal
car accident that took the
life of the young offender
who crossed over double
yellow lines and hit my
sons car head-on, injuring his passenger and
severely debilitating my
son. The injury will leave
him with a permanently
disabled leg.
My son was one of
those new drivers who
would not insert his key
into the ignition until
passengers had their
seatbelts buckled. Everyone made fun of him for
it, but they eventually
buckled up. I am sending
you a photo of the car so
you can see that seatbelts
save lives.
Pennsylvania
Dear Pennsylvania:
Your sons car was so

severely mangled that


its hard to imagine anyone walking away from
it. We are glad he will
recover and we appreciate the strong warning to
buckle up.
Annies Mailbox is
written by Kathy Mitchell
and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann
Landers column. Email
your questions to anniesmailbox@creators.com.

StatesmanJournal.com

3E

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Taste of Oregon
Sundays are made for enjoying life and Migas
Vics Migas

Victor Panichkul
Statesman Journal

Sometime during my late


20s when I lived in Fort Worth,
Texas, it finally dawned on me
that Sundays were for slowing
down, catching your breath
and taking a moment to just
enjoy whatever.
I had been blindly working
myself into the ground since
graduating from college, and I
was frantically searching for
love in my life.
When it finally dawned on
me that what I really needed
to do was take care of myself
and just give all the rest up to
the universe, I was shocked
when good things started happening. I got promoted at work
at the Fort Worth Star Telegram from a lowly copy editor
to assistant news editor and
then news editor. I started
swimming at the YMCA to
take care of myself and, lo and
behold, I met the love of my
life who also was swimming
laps.
Weve been together 25
years and counting. And it was
my spouse that got me turned
on to what became one of our
Sunday traditions on the
northern part of town near the
Fort Worth Stock Yards: Migas
at Joe T. Garcias. I remember
there always wasa line at the
bakery and cafe portion of the
restaurant, which served
breakfast. But we never
seemed to mind waiting the 15
or 20 minutes to get a table. I
usually took the Sunday paper
to read while we were waiting.
The line snaked past the
bakery, lined with all sorts of
tempting sweet baked and
fried treats like churros. We
were never tempted to buy
any to enjoy while we were
waiting. We were saving our
stomachs for one thing: Migas
There are about as many
versions of Migas as you can
imagine. Its basically scrambled eggs kicked up an infinite

Serves 4

Ingredients

4 tablespoons safflower, peanut


or other high-smoke point oil
3 corn tortillas, sliced in half and
then sliced into strips
a sweet yellow onion, peeled
and sliced into -inch pieces
pound of chorizo (Mexican
sausage, available at Roths and
other grocery stores)
3 jalapeos, seeded and sliced
into small pieces
6 large eggs, beaten
2 large red or golden tomatoes,
sliced into large cube
1 cup crumbled queso fresco
1 avocado, peeled and sliced into
wedges
Cilantro for garnish (optional)
Red or green salsa purchased from
the store

Directions

VICTOR PANICHKUL / THETASTEOFOREGON.COM

Migas are a wonderful way to start off a lazy Sunday.

level, with chorizo (Mexican


sausage), tomatoes, jalapeos,
cheese, tortilla strips and salsa
verde or salsa roja.
Migas are very easy to
make. But before you start,
there are several decisions to
make:
Do you want the tortilla
strips crispy or soft? If crispy,
you start out as I do frying
them in oil before you add
other ingredients. If you want
them soft, you add them later

right before the beaten eggs.


What kind of cheese? You
can use shredded cheddar,
pepper jack or even crumble
some queso fresco (Mexican
cheese).
How kicked up do you want
this to be? Besides tomatoes
and onions, you could add potatoes, canned pinto beans and
even top it with sliced avocado.
What kind of peppers do you
want to use? Anything from
mild (bell peppers) to wild

(habaeros) goes.
Do you want to use chorizo
or a milder Italian sausage?
Heck, you could even use leftover barbecued pork or barbecued or roasted chicken thats
been shredded.
And lastly, what kind of
salsa do you want to use? Red
or green? Heck, you could
even get a tub of both and live
a little.
And isnt that what Sundays
are all about? Living a little!

Buttercup), pumpkins (orange,


white, blue, worted, speckled and
mini)

able.

plums, blueberries, blackberries,


grapes,

Heat oil in large cast-iron or


non-stick skillet over high heat.
Add tortilla strips and cook,
stirring occasionally, until they
begin to turn golden brown.
Add onion and chorizo, and
stir until onion begins to turn
translucent and chorizo is
cooked.
Add the jalapeos, and stir for
a couple of minutes, then add
the beaten eggs, and let the eggs
set a minute before you start to
scramble them with a wooden
spatula. When the eggs are nearly cooked, add the chopped tomatoes, and stir until everything
is mixed.
Top with cheese, turn off heat,
top with avocado wedges, garnish with cilantro and serve with
salsa.

Victor Panichul is food, wine


and beer columnist for the
Statesman Journal. He is also
the author of TheTasteofOregon.com, named one of the
countrys best regional cuisine
blogs in 2010 by Saveur magazine. This story and recipe
previously appeared on his
blog.

FRESH PICK
This list shows the locally grown
produce currently available from
farms and farm stands that are
members of the Oregon Trail Farms
Direct Market Association and are
currently open.

Other: Gourds, Indian corn, straw


bales, cornstalks, apple cider doughnuts

BAUMAN FARMS

EZ ORCHARDS

12989 Howell Prairie Road NE, Gervais, (503) 792-3524; 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Mondays-Fridays and 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. Saturdays.

5504 Hazelgreen and Cordon Road,


Salem, (503) 393-1506; 9 a.m. to 6
p.m. Mondays-Fridays and 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. Saturdays

Fruit: Apples (Honey Crisp, Gala,


Sanza, Ambrosia, Delicious), apple
cider, pears

Fruits: Apples, pears, peaches and


fresh pressed apple cider

Vegetables: Lettuce, cabbage,


cauliflower, broccoli, beans, super
sweet corn, onions, garlic, shallots,
summer squash, tomatoes, peppers
(sweet and hot), winter squash
(Acorn, Delicata, Sweet Meat, Butternut, Spaghetti, Hubbard and

You pick: Flowers, koyo grapes,


peppers
Already picked fruits: Apples,
pears, grapes, apple cider
Vegetables: Broccoli, cauliflower,
lettuce, summer squash, cucumbers,
eggplant, kale, beans, peppers,
beets, cabbage, onions, tomatoes,
corn, pumpkins, gourds

1 Bye at Wimbledon
5 Bonnie who sang Nick
of Time
10 Needle holder
13 Pop star with the
fragrance Miami
Glow
16 Scientist Pavlov
17 Move unsteadily
18 Ikes charge during
W.W. II
19 What King was king
of
21 *Shrink whos
always changing his
diagnosis?
24 Piece in early Indian
chess sets
25 Grasp
26 **What ballet patrons
dine on?
28 One side of a childish
debate or a
phonetic hint to the
answers to the four
starred clues
30 Take care of
31 Lipton rival
32 30 Rocks location
34 Bend
37 Arias, typically
39 Aerosol sound
40 *Oregon States
mascot played by
actress Arthur?
47 Festoon
50 Pick in class
51 Assuming its even
possible
53 Cross, with off
Online subscriptions:
Todays puzzle and more
than 4,000 past puzzles,
nytimes.com/crosswords
($39.95 a year).

3394 Brown Island Road S, Salem,


(503) 931-6840; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesdays-Saturdays

GREENS BRIDGE GARDENS


3730 Jefferson-Scio Drive, Jefferson,
(541) 327-2995; 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily
through November; you pick avail-

Fruits: Peaches, nectarines, New


Crop Honey Crisp apples, Bartlett
pears, cantaloupe, watermelon,

54 **A deal on Afro


wigs?
60 Commercial lead-in
to Balls or Caps
63 Couldnt be
64 Not so awesome
65 Court positions
66 In need of a cracker,
perhaps
68 Listen to Christmas
carolers?
72 Slipshod
73 Overlook
74 Multiple-choice
options
75 Justice Kagan
77 Post-op locale
79 Cold War-era
territory: Abbr.
80 *How actor Bill feels
about houseguests?
86 Hershiser of the
1980s-90s Dodgers
87 Cannabis ____
(marijuana)
88 Chicago suburb
92 Removes from a
can?
95 **Find cake or Jell-O
in the back of the
fridge?
97 Hunger
98 Drawbridge locale
100 The Spartans of the
N.C.A.A.
101 PBS benefactor
102 And other stuff
105 Misconstrue, as
words
109 Other side of a
childish debate
or a phonetic hint to
the answers to the
four double-starred
clues
113 *Fall colors?
117 Talk down?

120 Yawnfest
121 **Question from El
Al security?
123 Like lightning
rounds
124 Tear-stained, e.g.
125 Investigate, as a
cold case
126 Pianist Gilels
127 Woo-hoo!
128 Half of a classic
Mad magazine
feature
129 County of Salem,
Mass.
130 High ____
DOWN

1 Small scrap
2 New Balance
competitor
3 Employing strategy
4 Pyramid crosses
5 Rubbish
6 Cause of some
impulsive behavior,
for short
7 It might begin with a
What if ?
8 Beach walkers
9 Mere vestige
10 They may have you
going the wrong way
11 Announcers cry after
a field goal
12 What knows the drill,
for short?
13 It has a variety of
locks and pins
14 Like buffalo meat vis-vis beef and pork
15 Vegas casino with the
mascot Lucky the
Leprechaun
17 Show piece

19 French cheese
20 Miss
22 ESPNs McEachern
a.k.a. the Voice of
Poker
23 Edible entry at a
county fair
27 Social welfare grp.
with a Peace Prize
29 Neighbor of a ~
key
32 30 Rock grp.
33 Pros position
35 Check
36 Brunch spot
38 Fire away!
41 Dress at the altar
42 PC part of interest to
audiophiles
43 Author Seton
44 Kick back
45 First name in long
jumps
46 Open again, as a keg
48 Sounds of fall?
49 Odettes counterpart
in Swan Lake
52 QB Tony
55 Over my dead
body!
56 Prefix with realism
57 London jazz duo?
58 Sudden turns
59 Belgian river to the
North Sea
60 Play for a fool
61 Restaurant chain
founded by a
celebrity chef
62 Febreze target
67 Goof
69 Greeting on el
telfono
70 Supercharges, with
up
71 Get ones hands on
some dough?

22

Vegetables: Pumpkins, green


beans, tomatoes (Roma and Early
Girl), cabbage, peppers (jalapeno
and sweet peppers).

10

11

12
19

34
41

42

30
35

37
44

45

46

51
54
61

62

66

52

74

69

70

71

75

83

94
98
105

119

85

95

89

96
100

106

107

101

108

109
116

111

112

114

120

121

123

124

125

126

127

128

129

130

90 Dander
91 Part of a flight plan,
for short
92 Pig with pigtails
93 Body of science?
94 Kaplan course for
H.S. students
96 Hwy. violation
97 Like bread dough and
beer
99 Looney Tunes bird

115

110

113

76 Alternative to Soave
78 Nominative, e.g.
81 Administrative
worker on a ship
82 Smoke
83 Bank asset thats
frozen?
84 Google ____
85 Rap shouts
89 Casino activity with
numbered balls

118

79

88

99

104

78

84

87

97

91

73
77

82

93

103

57
65

76

86

90

49

53

72

81

92

48

64
68

59

39

56

63

80

38
47

55

67

58

20

31

36

43

50

15

27

29

33

14

24

26

40

13

23

28

102

5670 Sunnyview Road NE, Salem,


(503) 580-5803; 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
daily

18

25

60

17

21

SUNNYVIEW FARMS

Vegetables: Kale, chard, golden


beets, chioggia beets, fresh parsley,
dill, cilantro, cucumbers, garlic,
sweet peppers, hot peppers, cabbage, kohlrabi, radish, hakurei
turnips, onions (sweet and yellow),
summer squash, pickling dill, tomatoes (cherry, slicers, pastes and
heirlooms)

16

32

Vegetables: Yellow or white supersweet corn, cucumbers, zucchini,


cantaloupe, watermelon, bell peppers, jalapeos

MINTO ISLAND GROWERS

JONES FARM PRODUCE

SOUND ARGUMENT

SCHLECTER FARMS
10143 86th Ave. NE, Salem, (503)
792-3328; 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. MondaysSaturdays and 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sundays.

Other: Local honey and gourmet


foods

Other: hay bales, corn stalks

BY JEREMY NEWTON / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ


ACROSS

Vegetables: Super sweet corn,


pickling cucumbers, tomatoes,
Walla Walla onions, green beans,
potatoes, lettuce

10325 River Road NE, Salem, (503)


393-9451; 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. MondaysFridays and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays through October

Vegetables: Sweet yellow corn,


tomatoes

Other: Fresh cut flowers we cut and


you cut

117
122

103 Play the siren to


104 Chatted with, in a
way

114 Lumber-mill
equipment

115 Hover craft?


106 Emotionally distant 116 Brood
107 Arsenal
118 Film character who
108 Aligns
110 Where capri pants
stop

says, Id
just as soon kiss
a Wookiee!

111 No. 2s at college

119 Some pipe joints

112 Inhumane types

122 King of old Rome

4E

Taste of Oregon

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

StatesmanJournal.com

Nectar Creek in Corvallis is the bees knees


Honey,
water,
yeast.
Three
simple
ingredients. Two
Victor
brothers.
Panichkul
Combine
that with
TA S T E
OF OREGON
passion,
and the
result is something sublime.
The brothers, both home
brewers at heart, one who also
has a knack for beekeeping,
have taken Willamette Valley
ingredients produced by honeybees and fruit farmers and
brewed up a delicious product:
mead.
Phillip Lorenz and his brother Nick founded Nectar Creek
in September 2012 through
their own hard sweat equity in
a small industrial complex in
Corvallis that also launched 2
Towns Ciderhouse.
It kind of has this special
legacy to it because theyve
taken off and have been so
successful, Lorenz said.
The brothers acquired some
of the equipment from 2 Towns
before they moved, and, in a
day or two after they moved in,
the fermentation tanks were
full, Lorenz said.
The brothers had always
worked on farms in the Willamette Valley and had wanted
to go into business together
eventually. When it came time
to go off to college, they headed as far away as they could
from the small town that they
grew up in. Nick went to the
University of Vermont, and
Phillip went to Hampshire
College.
Both of us grew up here,
and we said we had to get the
hell out of this small town,
Lorenz said. And then we
went to the East Coast and
said, Well this place sucks,
and we couldnt wait to get
back to the Willamette Valley.
Its awesome.
Before going off to college,
Phillip had taken a year off and

worked for Queen Bee Honey


Company. And all throughout
college, he took time off to
return to work as a beekeeper,
flying back to Oregon every
chance he could get and then
returning to Massachusetts the
night before classes started
back up.
I was here in spirit the
entire time. I was there minimally physically, Lorenz said.
He did a lot of research on
bees while he was in college,
collecting specimens of bee
pathogens when he was at
home tending bees, then extracting the DNA of the pathogens to study at college. He
managed to amass a lot of
knowledge about bees and
honey as a result of the experience. Before long, he had 200
beehives of his own.
The brothers also had a
passion for home brewing and
were avid beer drinkers .
When I was 16 years old,
my mother caught me with
some Pabst or something, and
her response was to take me to
the local brewers supply and
buy me a carboy (a glass jug
with a narrow neck) and a
home-brew kit and say, if
youre going to drink, then
youre going to make your own
beer. So when I was 16, I said,
Great, Im going to make
beer.
Hearing his story, its no
wonder that they decided to
combine their passion for honey and brewing to make mead.
Throughout college, starting
about 2009 or 2010, the brothers started developing recipes
and going back and forth with
each other, trying different
honeys with different strains
of yeast and different production methods.
We would talk on the phone
for tens of hours a week all
through college, Lorenz said.
So by the time the brothers
graduated in 2012, they decided to launch Nectar Creek and
give it a go for two years to see
if they could make the business successful. Through trial

BRENT DRINKUT/STATESMAN JOURNAL

Nectar Creek co-founder Phil Lorenz shows off his barrels of mead.

IF YOU GO
Address: 33848 SE Eastgate Circle,
Corvallis
Tasting room hours: Noon to 6
p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays
Phone: (541) 760-1343
Email:info@nectarcreek.com
In stores: Capital Market, Liquor
Outlet and Roths stores.

and error with ingredients,


yeast and techniques, they
have been able to create some
wonderful hits, and theyve
been going full steam ever
since.
Our capacity is about 120
barrels a month, Lorenz said.
Weve been running at nearly
full capacity since spring.
Were cooking as fast as we
can and adding new markets as
fast as we can. Most of our
growth is in Oregon. The local
market is important to us. We
work with local farms to
source local fruit, and we work
with local beekeepers. We live
in such an rich agriculturally
diverse valley, and were lucky
to be here and have access to
all of these ingredients right
here in our backyard.
Nectar Creek focuses on
sessionable mead thats dry or

off-dry, not sweet like other


honey wines, and with an alcohol level thats below 10 percent.
The process of making
mead is fairly straightforward.
Nectar Creek starts out with
local honey thats unfiltered,
adds water and yeast and then
ferments the liquid in a fermentation tank thats kept at a
cool temperature to preserve
the flavor and aroma of the
particular honey being used.
At strategic points during the
fermentation, fruit such as
peach, raspberry, Italian blue
plums, herbs such as ginger or
flowers like hibiscus are added
to provide flavor accents that
take center stage in the final
product. The fermentation
process takes two to three
weeks. Then the mead is run
through a filter that removes
all the suspended particles and
yeast. The mead is then carbonated in a bright tank, a
thick-walled stainless steel
vessel that can withstand the
pressure of carbonation. After
the mead is carbonated, its
bottled, labeled and stored,
ready to be shipped.
From the onset, the brothers
wanted to make mead that was
accessible to the beer drinker.

Thats why they chose to make


a dry style of mead.
There are some of these
honey wines that are out there
that have these great flavors
and are delicious, Lorenz said,
but most people whove experienced mead come back and
say, Ive had mead before, and
it tastes like cough syrup. Ive
had mead before, and its really sweet. And we really want
to break that mold. Mead is as
big a category as beer. If you
were to try a stout, didnt like it
and then said you didnt like
beer, how could you say that?
There are so many different
stouts. Theres chocolate stout,
coffee stout, Irish stout. With
mead, the options are endless.
The brothers have created a
line of year-round meads: Waggle, made with wildflower
honey, and Sting, made with
ginger. On top of that, they
created a line of seasonal releases such as Brood, flavored
with raspberry, Propolis, flavored with peach, Honeycomb,
flavored with hops, and Festoon, flavored with hibiscus
flowers and Italian blue plums.
Theyre now adding a third tier
called Single Varietal Series
where specific types of honey
are used. Chicory, the first in
this line, uses chicory blossom
honey.
Nectar Creek is now distributed in five states: Oregon,
Washington, Idaho, California
and Minnesota. Theyll be adding Texas and Georgia in the
next four to six weeks. In Salem, you can find their products at Capital Market, Liquor
Outlet and Roths stores.
If you like beer and have
never tried Nectar Creeks
meads, give them a shot, and
find out for yourself why their
mead is truly the bees knees.
Victor Panichkul is beer,
wine and food columnist for the
Statesman Journal. Reach him
at (503) 399-6704, Vpanichkul@StatesmanJournal.com,
follow at Facebook.com/WillametteValleyFoodWine and on
Twitter @TasteofOregon.

Join SJ columnist for series of cooking demos


Victor Panichkul
Statesman Journal

Join me for the next


series of free Statesman
Journal cooking classes
and get tips on preparing
thrifty, tasty and satisfying meals, plus how to

add fall flavors to salads.


6:30 p.m. Friday:
Tasty, easy and thrifty.
Learn how to make three
simple and satisfying
meals for $5 each that
are packed with flavor.
If youre single or on

a budget, you dont need


to opt for fast food or
frozen food. With a little
planning, you can spend
about as much money as
you would on a fast-food
meal but have a tasty,
healthy and satisfying
meal at home that doesnt



 
        
    

  




 







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BRENT DRINKUT / STATESMAN JOURNAL

Statesman Journal food and wine columnist Victor Panichkul


will be hosting two cooking classes at Natural Grocers and
LifeSource.

The classes are ticketed but free. Space is


limited so don't wait; get

WINE AND
BEER BRIEFS



# $     $ 



     %
 & %   
'
( $  % 
 )*
   )  && 
$    )    %"+

take a lot of time to prepare. Using the idea of a


simple rice bowl and
enchiladas, learn how to
create several different
flavorful toppings. Attendees also willget to
sample the three dishes.
The free class will be
held in the demonstration
kitchen at Natural Grocers, 4250 Commercial
St. SE.
6:30 p.m. Oct. 23: Add
fall flavors to salads.
Learn how to add delicious flavors of fall to
salads. Attendees will
receive recipes and get
to sample the dishes. The
class will be held in the
community room at LifeSource, 2649 Commercial
St. SE.

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Block 15 takes home


gold from beer fest
Block 15 Brewing
Company in Corvallis
took home a coveted gold
medal from the 2015
Great American Beer
Festival held recently in
Denver.
GABF is the largest
national beer competition
and is presented by the
Brewers Association. It
recognizes beers produced in the United
States. The 2015 GABF
competition winners
were selected by an international panel of 242
expert judges from the
record number of 6,647
entries, received from
1,552 U.S. breweries.
Block 15 Brewing Company won for its Turbulent Consequence: Peche,
according to a company
press release.
Peche is a lambic-style
wild ale that is fermented
in oak barrels as part of
Block 15s Turbulent
Consequence spontaneous fermentation program.
Our Turbulent Consequence program utilizes
some of our most challenging brewing techniques to produce some
of our most unique beer,
so it is exciting to be
recognized with a GABF
gold medal from the beer
community for our efforts, said Nick Arzner ,
Block 15 Brewing Companys founding head
brewer, in a press release.
Other Oregon brewers

COURTESY OF BLOCK 15

Block 15's Turbulent


Consequence: Peche is a
wild-fermented ale.

that took home one of


91 gold medals awarded:
Barley Browns Brewpub
in Baker City for Disorder Sout , Barley
Browns Beer in Baker
City for Rachet Strap
IPA, Old Town Brewing
in Portland for Shanghaid IPA, Golden Valley
Brewery and Pub in
McMinnville for
Beaverton Blonde and
Pelican Pub and Brewery
in Pacific City for
MacPelicans Wee Heavy
Ale.

Join Three Legged


Dog, SAW for dinner
Salem Ale Works and
Three Legged Dog in
Independence are teaming up to put on a fall
beer-pairing dinner on
Oct. 18.
The five-course meal
begins at 6 p.m., and the
menu includes: Pumpkin
Shrimp Bisque paired

your tickets now by going to tickets.statesmanjournal.com.

with Dont Hassle the


Hef, Brussels Sprout
Kimchi with White Bite
IPA, Coppa Wrapped
Persimmons with
Azimuth Amber, Lamb
Chop with Parsnip and
Cauliflower Puree with
Cast Iron CDA and a
dessert paired with Imperial American Brown
Ale.
Cost is $50 per person.
Three Legged Dog is at
250 S Main St. in Independence.
To purchase tickets,
go to threeleggeddog.biz.

Dobbes chooses
charitable partner
Dobbes Family Estate
has designated Randall
Childrens Hospital KITE
Clinic as the 4th quarter
beneficiary of the
Dobbes Charitable Giving Program.
Proceeds from sales
of the 2012 Griffins Cuvee Pinot Noir will benefit the hospital, according
to marketing director
Lauren Barnes in a press
release.
At Randall Childrens
Hospital, the KITE Clinic
offers patients and their
families a personalized
plan and ongoing services to help manage
long-term or chronic
conditions related to
cancer or its treatment,
according to the press
release. KITE stands for
Knowledge and Inspiration After Treatment
Ends.
For more information
or to puchase the wine,
go to
dobesfamilyestate.com.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

5E

Travel

PHOTOS BY DANIELLE PETERSON / STATESMAN JOURNAL FILE

Wildflowers bloom in June at the Golden and Silver Falls State Natural Area in southwest Oregon. Hiking trails meander through coastal forests and scenic canyons.

Natural gems not to be missed on trip to Coos Bay


Photos and story
by Danielle Peterson
Statesman Journal

Two must-see destinations


in the Coos Bay area include
Shore Acres, with its jagged
sandstone cliffs, sweeping
oceanfront views and formal
gardens, and Golden and Silver
Falls, two stunning waterfalls
nestled in the scenic canyons
of southwest Oregon.

Golden and Silver Falls


The waterfalls are just a
short hike from one another at
the Golden and Silver Falls
State Natural Area near Coos
Bay.
Rich in early Oregon history, the trail leading to Silver
Falls (about a 15-minute roundtrip hike) follows a part of the
historic Allegany to Scottsburg
Pack Trail used by early homesteaders of the Glenn Creek
valley starting in the 1880s.
Water cascades from a
steep, rounded rock face,
plunging more than 100 feet
onto massive, moss-covered
boulders below. Delicate, purple wildflowers sprout from
lush greenery surrounding the
splash pool. Douglas firs and
maple trees create a cool canopy over the dirt path leading to
the viewpoint.
From the parking lot, a narrow, wooden footbridge serves
as the entrance to the Golden
Falls trail lower viewpoint
(about a 20-minute round-trip
hike). A mostly shaded trail
leads to a clearing in the woods
and picturesque views of the
falls, which plunges more than
100 feet from a sheer cliff
above. Visitors also may hike
to an upper viewpoint (about a
60-minute round-trip hike).
If you go
Directions (from Salem):
Take Interstate 5 south to exit
162 to merge onto OR-38 west
toward Drain and Elkton. Follow to Highway 101 south toward Coos Bay. From the south
end of Coos Bay on Highway
101, follow signs to Coos River,
Allegany and signs for Golden
and Silver Falls State Park.
The park is located 24 miles
northeast of Coos Bay on Coos
River Highway.
Travel time: About four
hours
Travel tips: There is no fee
to use this park; there are outhouse-style restrooms on site
and areas for picnicking and
fishing.
Stops along the way
If youre interested in history, you may consider stopping
in Scottsburg on your way to
the park. The small town, situated along the Umpqua River,
was founded in 1850 and has a
rich history. The upper town
once was the distributing and
shipping point for the mining
regions and communities of
Southern Oregon.
You also may consider stopping at Dean Creek Elk Viewing Area near Reedsport, a
year-round residence for a
herd of about 100 Roosevelt
elk.

The historic Hasard House is a Queen Anne style home built in 1902 in the
small town of Drain, which was originally settled in 1847. Drain is on the
way to Golden and Silver Falls State Natural Area in the Coos Bay area.

Golden Falls plunges over a steep rock face to massive boulders beneath it
at the Golden and Silver Falls State Natural Area in southwest Oregon.
Hiking trails meander through coastal forests and scenic canyons.

Shore Acres
The Coos Bay area park was
once a private estate with an
oceanfront mansion and majestic gardens with plants brought
from around the world aboard
the ships of lumber baron Louis Simpson.
Sadly, there is nothing left
of the mansion, or mansions.
(Simpson actually built two
because fire destroyed the
first one.) But the 5 acres of
formal gardens and the stunning views of the Southern
Oregon coastline are more
than enough to attract visitors.
In the early 1940s, Shore Acres
was purchased by the state for
use as a public park.
Flowering plants, trees and
shrubs from around the world
(New Zealand, Chile, Russia, to
name a few places) make the
gardens a year-round destination. Thousands of flowering
annuals and 800 rose bushes
are on display June to September, along with hundreds of
vivid dahlias from August to
October.
A segment of the Oregon
Coast Trail links Shore Acres
to two other state parks in the
area Sunset Bay to the north
and Cape Arago to the south,
each a 2-mile hike from the
gardens.
If you go
Directions (from Salem):
Take Interstate 5 south past
Eugene to Highway 38 in

About 100 Roosevelt elk. graze the


pastures of Dean Creek Elk Viewing
Area in the Coos Bay area.

Drain, turn right onto Highway


38 and continue for about 50
miles, turning left on Highway
101. Follow to Cape Arago
Highway, and watch for signs
to Shore Acres State Park.
Travel time: About 312 hours
Hours: Open daily from 8
a.m. to dusk
Cost: $5 parking fee
Note: Pets are not allowed
outside vehicles at Shore
Acres. If you are hiking the
trails, you may follow the trails
through the park, but you may
not enter Shore Acres Gardens
with a pet.
djpeterson@statesmanjournal.com
or follow at
Twitter.com/DPetersonSJ

Sweeping views of the Pacific Ocean are seen from atop a sandstone cliff at
Shore Acres State Park near Coos Bay. A segment of the Oregon Coast Trail
links Shore Acres with Sunset Bay State Park to the north and Cape Arago
State Park to the south.

6E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Faith

Blended families are growing fast


Blended families are made up of
those combined after a divorce or
death.
Surveys show that 40 percent of
children live in a blended family, and
the figure is expected to reach 50 percent quite soon.
Counselor Judy
Tuttle Zollner
offered those statistics at the recent annual luncheon and workshop of the Salem
Pastoral CounselHank Arends ing Center. She is
M I D - VA L L E Y
co-director of the
RELIGION
35-year-old center.
Zollners presentation was titled Managing the
Blended Family Experience.
She offered this definition, It is a
family unit usually composed of a couple and their children both from the
current and from prior relationships.
The counselor told her audience that
the typical blended family is not much
like those pictured in the 1960s-1970s
Brady Bunch television comedy.
It is never so easy. It is like blending oil and water, she said.
She speaks both from decades of
family counseling experience and being
in a blended family herself for the past
15 years.
Those optimistic parents who wed or
move in together and expect instant

family harmony soon learn it is more


like making a meal in a slow cooker
than in a microwave oven.
One usually unrealistic wish of all
children caught in their parents divorce is that mom and dad will eventually get back together. Those younger
than 10 seem to have an easier adjustment, while those 10 to 14 have the most
difficulty. The teens closer to adulthood
seem less bothered because of needing
less parenting, which can lead to conflicts.
Zollner told of meeting the stepmother of a 7-year-old who was asked,
When Im here, can I love you, and
when Im with Mom, can I hate you?
A major basic need for all children is
for them to know they are not being
abandoned by their biological parents.
Like so many in conflicted relationships, the counselor said communication between the parents and stepparents are a key to their children adjusting in the new relationship.
In all the arguments, does it really
matter who is right? she asked.
She told a story on herself involving
a new stepdaughter. She reacted in a
conflict and unthinkingly told the girl,
If you make your father choose (between the girl and the stepmother),
youll lose.
Though the years, Zollner has established good relationships with her two
stepdaughters.
A church or other faith-based or-

ganizations may provide support and


advice, as can small groups or family
counseling. There also are numerous
print and online resources that can help.
She added, Remember that Jesus
was a stepchild.

A pair of ancient saints are


relevant for 2015
The annual Visiting Theologian program this week at St. Mark Lutheran
Church in Salem will consider the lives
of Francis and Clare of Assisi.
Speaker will be Susan Pitchford, a
sociologist at the University of Washington. Her presentations will consider
the spirituality and joy of the two saints.
She said, Eight hundred years ago,
two young people in Assisi, Italy,
created a radical new way of discipleship that had a lasting impact on the
church and is still drawing people to
this day.
She is a professed member of the
Third Order, Society of Saint Francis,
and has led programs on inequality and
conflict in Africa, Ireland and Italy.
Pitchford is the author of The Sacred Gaze: Contemplation and Healing
of the Self, Following Francis: The
Franciscan Way for Everyone, God in
the Dark: Suffering and Desire in the
Spiritual Life and Identity Tourism:
Imaging and Imagining the Nation.
Her free, public presentations will be
at 7 p.m. Oct. 16, 9 and 10:30 a.m. Oct. 17

and 10:30 a.m. Oct. 18.


The church is at 790 Marion St. NE,
Salem, and may be reached at (503)
588-0141 or www.stmarksalem.org.

Pastors gather at Turner


The Oregon Christian Convention
presents a Pastors Only meeting for
pastors and ministerial staff 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. Oct. 13 at the convention site just
southeast of Turner.
The Rev. Erik Neilson of Adventure
Christian Church in McMinnville said,
Being a pastor/minister is tough business! Some studies suggest that 95
percent of people who enter full-time
ministry end up leaving!
The reasons are varied and include
discouragement, burnout, moral failure, church politics and exhaustion.
Who is pastoring our pastors? he
asked.
The three areas to be considered at
the meeting include pastoral care for
pastors, dealing with painful circumstances and understanding success in
ministry.
The conference costs $25 per person
or $15 for ministerial students. Information is available at (503) 743-2101.
Hank Arends is a retired religion/
community events writer for the Statesman Journal who writes a weekly column on religion. He may be reached at
hankarends@msn.com or (503) 9309653.

RELIGION
CALEDNAR
7:15 to 8:15 p.m. Mondays and 11 a.m. to noon
Saturdays, Salem Bahai Center, 680 State St.,
Suite 150. Free. (503) 362-6645.

TODAY
Meditative Peace Walk and Interfaith
Worship Service: Representatives from
various Salem faith groups will each lead a
5-minute presentation, 2:30 p.m., Peace Plaza,
ends at Woodland Chapel Center for Spiritual
Living, 582 High St. SE, 555 Liberty St. SE. Free.
(503) 362-4139, Woodlandchapelsalem.com.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY


Benedictine Sisters of Mt. Angel Used
Book Sale: There will be a variety of hardback
and paperback books for sale, including novels, coffee table volumes and books on spirituality, psychology, gardening and many other
topics, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Queen of Angels Monastery, Agatha Hess Hall, 840 S Main St., Mt.
Angel. (503) 845-6141, Benedictine-srs.com.

Interfaith Prayer Service: Offering prayers


for peace, 6:30 p.m., Woodland Chapel, 582
High St. SE. Free. (512) 948-8842, Oregoniansfor peace.org.

FRIDAY-SUNDAY

MONDAY AND SATURDAY

Faith Dialogues: Sociologist Dr. Susan Pitchford will share three lectures and interactive
dialogues including Francis and Clare of
Assisi: A Spirituality of Joy, 7 p.m. Friday,
Faith Beyond Sunday: Having a Rule of Life,

Interfaith Devotions: All are welcome to


join like-minded, spiritually oriented people in
a meditative, peaceful hour of music, interfaith readings and spiritual conversation,

9 a.m. Saturday followed by Faith Beyond


Sunday: Creating Your Rule of Life, 10:30
a.m. Saturday, and a forum with Pitchford
9:45 a.m. Sunday, Saint Mark Lutheran
Church, 790 Marion St, 790 Marion St. NE.
Free. (503) 588-0141, Stmarksalem.org.

SUNDAY

SATURDAY

Whos On Third? concert: From Sea to


Shining Sea by the Just For Fun Singers from
Salem, consisting of a chorus of about 50
seniors from the mid-Willamette Valley, 3 to
4:30 p.m., Woodburn United Methodist
Church, 700 N Cascade Drive, Woodburn.
Free-will offering. (503) 860-6817.

I Still Do Simulcast presented by FamilyLife: One-day marriage event where couples can invest in and strengthen their marriage, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., West Hills Community
Church, 1650 Brush College Road NW. $20.
(509) 895-4398, Istilldo.com.
Discover God Discover Health: Learn
how getting to know God better helps to
improve your health and well-being, 10 to
11:15 a.m., Willamette Heritage Center, Dye
House, 1313 Mill St. SE. Free. (503) 362-4580,
Christiansciencesalem.com.

Salem Bahai Center Open House: An


introduction to the Bahai Faith, with time for
questions and discussion, 2 to 4 p.m., Salem
Bahai Center, 680 State St., Suite 150. Free.
(503) 362-6645.

Fililpino-English Mass: Fr. Paolo Dayto,


Parochial Vicar of of St. James Catholic Church
in McMinnville, will celebrate Mass, with a
reception to follow, 5 p.m., Queen of Peace
Catholic Church, 4227 Lone Oak Road SE. (503)
589-4982.

SUNDAY EVENING OCTOBER 11, 2015

7:00
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8:00

8:30

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Heroes in Camelot work to free Merlin.
(N)

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

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12:00

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toy company CEO.

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KGW News at 10 (:35) How I Met
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with Stan Brock Landscapes and
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cultures in Albukidnapped. (N)
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KGW News at
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Modern Family
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earthquake hits.
(6:00) The Rundown (03) The
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60 Minutes President Barack Obama.
(N)

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serts The bakers make desserts. Episode Two Womens Institute returns;
RAF arrives. (N) (Part 2 of 6)
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gets locked out.
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Masterpiece Classic Indian Summers:


Part 3 Sooni gets into trouble. (N)
(Part 3 of 9)
Family Guy Stewie The Last Man on
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Blue Bloods Critical Condition Jamie
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land. (N) (Part 2 of 3)
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Susanna Foster. A disgured violinist haunts the Paris Opera House.

The Stranger (46, Suspense) Edward G. Robinson, Orson Welles, Loretta Garage Band
Young. Federal agent nds Nazi war criminal in New England.
Music Videos.

Alaska: The Last Frontier The Kilchers Alaska: The Last Frontier Exposed
The changing Alaskan climate. (N)
Salem City Council

Alaska: The Last Frontier The Kilchers Naked and Afraid Fear the Unknown Alaska: The Last Frontier The Kilchers Naked and Afraid
team up to tame the land. (N)
The Mayan jungles of Belize.
team up to tame the land.

CCTV - Public
Affairs
CCTV - Entertainment and Education
Reel Film Snobs CCTV, Ent. and NASA
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New Start Christian Center
To God Be the Glory
Mercy Meeting
Community Bulletin Board
Public Access
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10 OClock News (N)

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Blue Bloods Friendly Fire Danny


shoots a cop.

Oregon Sports
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Praise the Lord

Globe Trekker
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Juan, Puerto Rico.
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Raymond Good Raymond T-Ball
Girls

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The Tim McCarver
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(N)
Hidden Secrets
Garage Band
Music Videos.

Rim of the
Canyon (49)

CABLE
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CCTV 5
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CCTV - Entertainment and Education


Secrets of Eternal Pent OClock
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CCTV3 7 Life (Persian).


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(6:30) College Football Cal State Sacramento at Montana State. From Bobcat Stadium in Bozeman,

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ESPN C Lynx at Indiana Fever. Finals, Game 4.

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High School Football Wilson at Capital.


SportsCenter (N) (Live)

SportsCenter

2015 World Series 2015 World Series of Poker Main Event. From Las Vegas.

Baseball Tonight ESPN FC Highlights, news, reactions College Football LSU at South Carolina. (Taped)
SportsCenter
(N) (Live)
and opinions from the day in soccer.
(N)
Beach Volleyball FIVB World Tour Final: College Football Navy at Notre Dame. Navy (4-0) and No. 15 Notre Dame (4-1) GFL Presents
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meet for the 89th time since the series started in 1927. (Taped)
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young girls. (N)
live with their ancs. (N)
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Pitch Perfect (12, Musical Comedy) Anna Kendrick, Skylar Astin, Rebel Wilson. College
What to Expect When Youre Expecting (12, Comedy) Cameron Diaz, Jennifer Lopez, Eliza- Joel Osteen
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beth Banks. Impending parenthood turns ve couples lives upside down.
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confront a powerful demonic entity.
ing, Maggie Grace.
(6:56) South
(:28) South Park The 40-Year-Old Virgin (05, Romance-Comedy) Steve Carell, Catherine (:15) The 40-Year-Old Virgin (05, Romance-Comedy) Steve Carell, Catherine Keener, Paul
Park
Keener. Three co-workers unite to help their buddy get a sex life.
Rudd. Three co-workers unite to help their buddy get a sex life.
(5:00) Burlesque (10, Drama) Gremlins 2: The New Batch (90, Fantasy) Zach Galligan, Phoebe Cates, John Glover. The Cops Reloaded Cops Reloaded Cops Reloaded Cops Reloaded
Cher, Christina Aguilera.
destructive gremlins descend on a Manhattan high-rise.

Reba Cheyenne Reba Rebas


Reba Barbra Jeans Reba Just Busi- Everybody Loves Everybody Loves Everybody Loves Everybody Loves The King of
The King of
The King of
plans to wed Van. Heart
new gure.
ness
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
Raymond
Queens
Queens
Queens
Most Terrifying Places in America 5 A Most Terrifying Places in America 6 Most Terrifying Places in America 4 A Most Terrifying Places in America 5 A Most Terrifying Places in America 6 Big Time RV
private residence that is haunted.
Ghosts stalk a prison.
force causes visitors to turn violent.
private residence that is haunted.
Ghosts stalk a prison.
Guys Grocery Games Navigating a
Guys Grocery Games Hot dog dinner; Halloween Wars Hybrid Horror Dis- Cutthroat Kitchen Monte Cristo chal- Halloween Baking Championship
Halloween Wars
shopstacle course.
pasta dishes. (N)
plays depicting a hybrid horror. (N)
lenge; rocky road. (N)
Creepy cupcakes; costume desserts.
Hybrid Horror
House Hunters House Hunters Hawaii Life Univer- Hawaii Life Living Island Life (N) Island Life (N) Island Hunters Island Hunters House Hunters House Hunters
Island Life

sity of Hawaii. (N) on the Big Island.


International
Tyler Perrys the Family That Preys (08, Drama) Kathy Bates, Alfre Wood- Tyler Perrys Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage Counselor (13)
(:02) Tyler Perrys the Family That Preys (08, Drama)
ard. Greed and scandal test the mettle of two family matriarchs.
Jurnee Smollett-Bell. A handsome billionaire leads a married woman astray.
Kathy Bates, Alfre Woodard, Tyler Perry.
Keeping Up With the Kardashians Kim Keeping Up With the Kardashians
Dash Dolls Momma Drama Malika
House of DVF Tabloid Fever Tensions Keeping Up With the Kardashians
Dash Dolls
does her best to pick up the pieces.
Scotts behavior spins out of control.
questions her relationships. (N)
swell between the girls. (N)
Scotts behavior spins out of control.
Momma Drama
(6:31) The Walking (:31) The Walking Dead Conquer Daryl nds trouble while The Walking Dead First Time Again (Season Premiere) Rick (:32) Talking Dead (Season Premiere) (:31) The Walking Dead First Time
Dead Try
on a run.
and the others struggle. (N)
(N)
Again Rick and the others struggle.

ESPN2 D of Poker
CSN
TLC
FAM
NICK
DIS
TOON
ANPL
CNN
FNC
HIST
A&E
fX
TNT
TBS
SPIKE
USA
SYFY
COM
CMTV
TVL
TRAV
TVF
HGTV
LIFE
E!
AMC

PGA Tour Golf

Americas Cup World Series

(PA) = Parental Advisory

N = New programming

= Closed Caption

! = Broadcast Channels

! = TCI Cable Channels

COURTESY OF MALE ENSEMBLE NORTHWEST

Male Ensemble Northwest will perform with a choir of


Salem-Keizer middle and high school boys at 4 p.m. Oct. 17
at Ken Collins Theater, McNary High School, 595 Chemawa
Road N.

Concert
Continued from Page 1E

larger voice to the quiet


individual, Taylor said.
One small voice is rarely heard over the crowd,
but 100 voices working
together can get the
crowd to stop and listen.
That collective voice is
glorious.
In addition to performing concerts, the
ensemble offers day-long
educational workshops
called festivals for middle and high school boys.
On Oct. 17, the ensemble
is hosting an event at
McNary. At 4 p.m., the
festival will culminate
with a concert by the
student choir and Male
Ensemble Northwest.
The concert will feature a variety of music
including classical, jazz,
contemporary, shapenote singing and even
television themes. The
men and boys will join
for a premiere performance of Beautiful
Willamette, written by
Jess Gmez and based
on the 19th-century poem
of the same name by
Samuel L. Simpson.
Its a gorgeous piece
about the Willamette and
the valley, Taylor said.
This is the first piece
of music the ensemble
has commissioned for a
festival. Its also the first
time the festival will be
free of cost for students.
The demographics of

our district present financial challenges to


some schools and many
students, so it became
our goal to make the
event free to all participating boys, Taylor said.
Registration is usually
around 180 students, but
with free registration,
300 students already
have reserved spots,
Taylor said.
The festival will cost
around $7,500 to produce.
This includes travel,
music, food and supplies.
So far, the ensemble has
raised $3,500 from the
choir boosters at McNary, West, South and Whiteaker. Anyone who
makes a tax-deductible
donation to the nonprofit
ensemble will receive
complimentary tickets to
the festival concert.
In addition to the free
day-long musical retreat
for students, ensemble
members will offer professional development
classes for educators
about teaching young
male voices.
What we do is centered on live performance. When people
listen, they forget
phones, TV and technology, Taylor said. Its
really hard to find music
and performances that
make people feel like
that, so get out of the
house and go to a show.
TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal.com, (503)
983-6030, facebook.com/
RastrelliSJ and on Twitter @RastrelliSJ

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

NWNavigator

DONT MISS
UPCOMING
EVENTS

Hit the road for entertainment


in the Northwest.
WEEK OF 11-17, 2015

LINCOLN CITY

OCT. 31
Black & Boo Ball: DJ Metal
spins the party tracks, and
enjoy cocktails at the nohost bar. Come in costume,
and you could rake it in
prizes, 9 p.m., Chinook
Winds Casino Resort, 1777
NW 44th St. Free admission.
Chinookwindscasino.com.

Seattle

Madonna
Rebel
Heart Tour
Oct. 17

NOV. 13
Eric Bellinger: R&B, 8:30
p.m., Roseland Theater, 8
NW Sixth Ave. $15. Cascadetickets.com.
NOV. 13-15
The Living Dead Horror
Convention: Three days of
nonstop horror entertainment and attractions, 4 to
11 p.m. Nov. 13; 11 a.m. to 11
p.m. Nov. 14; 11 a.m. to 5
p.m. Nov. 15, Oregon Convention Center, 777 NE
Martin Luther King Jr Blvd.
$25 Friday; $40 Saturday;
$35 Sunday; $60 weekend
pass. Livingdeadcon.com.
DEC. 6
Modest Mouse: Indie rock,
8 p.m., Crystal Ballroom,
1332 W Burnside St. $48
advance; $48 day of show.
eTix.com.
DEC. 11
Kink 101.9 Acoustic
Christmas: With Michael
Franti, Matt Nathanson,
Civil Twilight and more,
7:30 p.m., Theater of the
Clouds, One Center Court.
$10. Ticketmaster.com.

Hood
River

Portland

Tualatin

Martina
McBride
Oct. 17

Canby

Aurora

Lincoln
City
y

PORTLAND

COLUMBIA RIVER

Woodburn

Grand
Gr
G
ra
Ronde

Salem
em

Doubt: A
Parable
through
Oct. 18

Finders Keepers
on the Beach
Oct. 17May 30

Eugene
E

10

GRAND RONDE

The
Hemp and
Cannabis Fair
Oct. 17-18

JAN. 30
Tower of Power with
Average White Band:
Oldies, 7 p.m., Spirit Mountain Casino, 27100 Salmon
River Highway. Tickets start
at $20. Spiritmountain.com.

ONLINE NOW

SALEM

Go to StatesmanJournal.com/
NWNavigator for an interactive map
showing the top things to do in the
Northwest. Youll also nd a link to a
calendar of events for activities in the
Mid-Valley.

MARCH 19
Dancing with the Salem
Stars: Dancers to be announced in January, 7:30
p.m., Historic Elsinore Theatre, 170 High St. SE. $30 to
$50. Ticketswest.com.

MIIIL
M
MIL
LES
ES
0

Ashland
Saturday

1 SALEM

The Bounty of Oregon:


Learn, see, smell, do and taste
the products and services that
make Oregon such an important provider of sustenance
for the entire planet, 11 a.m.,
plus live music by Yamhillbillies Band at noon, Oregon
State Capitol, 900 Court St.
NE. (503) 986-1388,
Oregonlegislature.gov.

HOME BASE

2 WOODBURN

Through Nov. 7

18.5 MILES

Nightmare Factory: A
haunted house benefiting the
Oregon School for the Deaf, 7
to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday
and Oct. 23-24 and 30-31 and
Nov. 6 and 7, plus 7 to 10 p.m.
Oct. 27-29, Oregon School For
the Deaf, 999 Locust St. NE.
$15; $20 VIP; $20 Pitch Black;
$40 Boogers Wild Ride; $6
scare again. (503) 378-3838,
Nightmarefactorysalem.com.

Saturday

Through Oct. 18
Doubt, A Parable: The
winner of the 2005 Pulitzer
Prize and Tony Award, 2 p.m.
today and Oct. 18 and 7 p.m.
Thursday-Saturday, Chemeketa Community College, Building 6 Auditorium, 4000 Lancaster Drive NE. $12. (503)
375-3278, Keizerhomegrown
theatre.org.

Fall Fashion Frenzy: Includes


exclusive discounts, giveaways, swag bag and access to
the gift card raffle with more
than $70,000 worth of prizes,
all proceeds benefit 11 charities, check-in 10 a.m. to noon,
with event from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m., Woodburn Premium
Outlets, 1001 N Arney Road.
$20. Premiumoutlets.com.

3 AURORA
26.5 MILES

Through Oct. 18
Old Aurora Quilt Show:
Aurora: New Beginnings
includes 100 antique, vintage,
contemporary quilts, quilting
demonstrations, live music
and a log cabin store with
quilting fabric, patterns,
vintage textiles and refresh-

Monuments
Continued from Page 1E

his latest book, Saving Italy:


The Race to Rescue a Nations
Treasures from the Nazis,
which debuted on the New
York Times bestseller list.
Edsel is best known for writing
The Monuments Men: Allied
Heroes, Nazi Thieves and the
Greatest Treasure Hunt in
History that was adapted into
the 2014 film The Monuments
Men, directed by George
Clooney.
Five years ago, Edsel spoke
in Salem at the behest of John
Olbrantz, director of the Hallie
Ford Museum of Art. Edsel
focused on the work of the men
and women who risked their
lives preserving the cultural
artifacts of northern Europe
during the war. Olbrantz is
delighted to have him back to
finish the story by talking
about what happened in southern Europe.
You talk about someone
who is passionate and a true
believer in persevering this
history before its lost, Ol-

7E

10 20
10
20

40
4
0

ments, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Old


Aurora Colony Museum, 15018
Second St. NE. $7.50 or $5 a
person for groups of 10 or
more. (503) 678-5754,
Auroracolony.org.

30.2 MILES

Oct. 17-18

32.4 MILES

Saturday
Martina McBride: Country, 8
p.m., Spirit Mountain Casino,
27100 Salmon River Highway,
Grand Ronde. $69. (971) 3528082, Spiritmountain.com

10
10
100
00
0

8 LINCOLN CITY

6 TUALATIN

59 MILES

35.5 MILES

Today

Saturday
West Coast Giant Pumpkin
Regatta: A series of wacky
races in 1,000-pound pumpkin
boats, plus live music, pumpkin pie eating contests, kids
pumpkin carving, face painting, pumpkin golf, a kids
costume contest, hot food
and drinks and more, 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m., 8325 SW Nyberg
Road. Free admission and
some activities.

Lincoln City Fall Kite Festival: Kite-flying demonstrations by experts, free Kids
Kite Making Workshop, Kids
& Kites Parade on the beach,
running of the BOLs, Kids
Passports and some of the
most colorful big kites in the
world, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., D
River State Recreation Site,
on the beach, SE First St.
Free. (800) 452-2151,
Oregoncoast.org.

7 PORTLAND

Saturday through
May 30

47.4 MILES

Saturday

5 GRAND RONDE

80
80

and appreciation for classic


video and arcade games, 10
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday
and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 18,
Oregon Convention Center,
777 NE Martin Luther King Jr
Blvd. $32 weekend pass; $27
Saturday; $21 Sunday; free
ages 10 and younger.
Portlandretrogaming.com.

4 CANBY

Home Orchard Society All


About Fruit Show: See and
taste hundreds of varieties of
heirloom fruit from the Pacific
Northwest including apples,
pears, plums, grapes, kiwis and
quince, plus apple pie contest
and large fruit contest, speakers presenting on a variety of
fruit-growing topics, cider
pressing demos, mason bee
supplies, fruit tree growing
publications, order customgrafted fruit trees, door prizes
and more, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Clackamas County Fairgrounds, 694 NE Fourth Ave.
$6 or $4 members;free if you
join HOS at the show.
Homeorchardsociety.org.

60
6
0

Madonna Rebel Heart Tour:


Pop, 7:30 p.m., Moda Center,
One Center Court. $40 to
$355. Ticketmaster.com.

Oct. 17-18
Portland Retro Gaming
Expo: To create awareness of

Oct. 16-18
Hood River Valley Harvest
Fest: 125 vendors and a
cornucopia of seasonal produce, food, wine, cider and
beer tastings, and local arts
and crafts, plus family-friendly activities, live music, a
pie-eating contest and more,
1 to 6 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. Oct. 18, Hood River
Event Site, 110 Portway Ave.
$6; $3 seniors and military on
Friday, $5 Saturday and Sunday; free ages 12 and younger. (541) 386-2000.

10 EUGENE
66.2 MILES
The Hemp and Cannabis
Fair: Sessions about growing,
harvesting, medicinal uses
and legislation, plus smoking
and vaping accessories, horticulture and grow shops,
hemp products and more, 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 11
a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 18, Lane
Events Center, 796 W 13th
Ave. $15. Thcfair.com.

Edsel said. Its something to


work from.

History at risk today

Edsel comes to history


In the 1990s, Edsel grew
tired of chasing a buck and
closed his oil business in Texas.
There were so many other
things I was interested in, he
said. I thought if I dont take
this leap of faith and get off
this merry-go-round now its
only going to get harder to do.
After traveling Europe, he
settled in Florence, Italy, with
his wife and son and studied
art and architecture. He began
to wonder how Europes cultural works had survived the
wars bombings and the Nazis

9 HOOD RIVER
107.7 MILES

Oct. 17-18

Finders Keepers on the


Beach: Colorful hand-blown
glass floats are placed along
the beach for treasure hunters to find and keep, with
opening weekend, Oct. 17-18,
including a Special Glass Drop
of 50 extra floats, 50 glass art
pieces and a jumbo float with
a weekend getaway package

brantz said of Edsel. Hes


dedicated the last 15 years of
his life to traveling the country
to talk to the remaining Monuments Men and taking their
oral history.
In that time, Edsel has interviewed 20 monuments men
and women. Hes been to the
memorial services for 14 of
them. He founded the Monuments Men Foundation for the
Preservation of Art to preserve
their legacy and continue their
mission because their story
was nearly lost to history.

hidden along the 712 miles of


public beach in Lincoln City,
from the Roads End area to
Siletz Bay. Oregoncoast.org.

DEANE KELLER PAPERS, MANUSCRIPTS, AND ARCHIVES / YALE UNIVERSITY

Lieutenant Fred Hartt, standing next to Lucky 13, watched as Captain


Deane Keller and local workers maneuvered the statue of Cosimo I
de'Medici and his horse, by Giambologna, back into position in Florence's
Piazza della Signoria, Feb. 16, 1945.

systematic looting, relocation


and sometimes destruction of
these works.
I didnt know the answer. I
was hugely embarrassed that I
never wondered about that,
Edsel said.
When he asked others, they
didnt know either, so he start-

ed researching, and the rest is,


well, history.
Whether people saw the
film or not, when you talk
about cultural preservations,
when people see things in Syria destroyed, they know about
the Monuments Men, and that
is an amazing achievement,

Theres much work to do.


History is repeating. The Islamic State is deliberately destroying cultural heritage sites and
items in Iraq and Syria. In August, they destroyed the 2,000year-old temple in Palmyra, a
UNESCO World Heritage site.
In order to stop this cultural
cleansing, Edsel said we need
bold leadership like that of
President Roosevelt and Gen.
Eisenhower who made sure the
Monuments Men succeeded
during World War II.
If you are going to take care
of people, you have to take care
of the things they value, Edsel
said. Who are we as a civilization? Are we not the cumulative
written and artistic achievements? Living in a new and
unthreatened country, its hard
for us to understand that sometimes, but its real for people in
other parts of the world.
TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal.com, (503) 983-6030, facebook.com/RastrelliSJ and on
Twitter @RastrelliSJ

8E

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Arts
Oregon Arts Summit focused on diversity and inclusion
Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

Nearly 200 leaders


from Oregons arts community convened Oct. 1-3
for the annual Oregon
Arts Summit in Ashland
to discuss ways to
strengthen the statewide
arts community.
Brain Rogers, executive director of the
Oregon Arts Commission
and the Oregon Cultural
Trust, described how
Rep. Peter Buckley, DAshland, opened the
summit in the wake of
the Roseburg shootings.
He set the stage in a
very heartfelt emotional
way, Rogers said. This
is a time for the community to come together,
and the arts can play a
central role in helping
people grieve and deal
with their feelings.
David Huff, the commissions assistant director, estimated half of the
summits attendees were
from Southern Oregon.
That led to some
deeper conversations
that might otherwise not
have happened, Huff

JENNY GRAHAM / SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL

Members of Ballet Folklorico Ritmo Alegre perform at the 2015


Oregon Arts Summit in Ashland earlier this month. How art
organizations can embrace diversity and be more inclusive
was a recurring theme at the summit.

said. What can we do to


make our communities
better and solve some of
these intractable problems?
A theme that ran
throughout the summit
was Oregons changing
ethnicity and how organizations can embrace
diversity and be more
inclusive. Rogers said
the commissions new
strategic plan, which was
revealed at the summit,
was written through the
lens of access, equity and

inclusion.
Were going to do a
lot of work in that area,
planning and using national models to act,
Rogers said. How can
organizations be more
accessible and available
for people of color? Its
about creating a comfortable place for dialogue.
Huff said, Thats
work that often cant be
done quickly and is about
showing up and spending
time in the communities
you serve and getting to

THIS WEEK
IN THE ARTS
Addams Family: A New
Musical Comedy: Wednesday Addams has grown up
and fallen in love with a
sweet, smart young man
from a respectable family
a man her parents have never
met, 2 p.m. today and Oct. 18
and 7:30 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday and Oct. 21-24, Pentacle Theatre, 324 52nd Ave.
NW. $21.50 to $26. (503)
485-4300,
Pentacletheatre.org.

THROUGH OCT. 18
Doubt, A Parable: The
winner of the 2005 Pulitzer
Prize and Tony Award, 2 p.m.
today and Oct. 18 and 7 p.m.
Thursday-Saturday, Chemeketa Community College,
Building 6 Auditorium, 4000
Lancaster Drive NE. $12. (503)
375-3278, Keizerhomegrown
theatre.org.

MONDAY
Improv 101: Capitol City
Theaters team members pass
down years of stage-earned
experience during improvisational-comedy workshops, 7
to 9 p.m., Capitol City Theater, 210 Liberty St. SE, Suite
150. $10 per session. (971)
599-1871, Capitolcity
theater.com.
Willamette Master Chorus
auditions: The Willamette
Master Chorus seeks talented
and dedicated singers in all
sections, auditions include
prepared solos (classical or
folk genres), sight-reading
and vocalizations, rehearsals
are 7 to 9:15 p.m., Willamette
University, 900 State St. (503)
370-6929, Willamette
masterchorus.org.

TUESDAY
Tuesday Gallery Talk: Join
museum docent Janet Neuburg for a complimentary
guided tour of the Stilleven:
Contemporary Still Life
exhibition, 12:30 p.m., Hallie
Ford Museum of Art, Maribeth Collins lobby, 700 State
St. Free. (503) 370-6855,
Willamette.edu.

TUESDAY-THURSDAY
Nightwatch: 7 p.m.,
Sprague High School Theater,
2373 Kuebler Road S. $8.
(503) 399-3261.

St. Olaf Orchestra


to perform at
South Salem High
Statesman Journal

Salem Womens Chorus


rehearsals: Musical group of
ladies that rehearses weekly
in preparation for holiday
performances at assisted
living residences, retirement
homes and the likes, 10 a.m.

TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal.com, (503)
983-6030, facebook.com/
RastrelliSJ and on Twitter @RastrelliSJ

CELEBRATIONS
RECOGNIZING THE SPECIAL
OCCASIONS OF YOUR LIFE

To include your celebration,


call 503-399-6789 or visit:
www.STATESMANJOURNAL.com
/MILESTONES

Herbert and Josephine


Hampton celebrated
their 60th anniversary
on May 24th, 2015 at
the Oregon Gardens.
They were married in
May of 1955 and lived
and raised their family
in Oregon. Family and
friends gathered to
celebrate their many
years of marriage
together.

FRIDAY

STEVE NIEDORF / SPECIAL TO


THE STATESMAN JOURNAL

The St. Olaf Orchestra will


perform at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at South Salem
High School.

Lou Boderman, the


districts coordinator
of music and drama,
saw St. Olafs band
and choir at South. She
said the colleges music programs maintain
a high level of professionalism and quality
music.
They train them
well. Thats one of the
first places that I will
look to for music educators, Boderman
said.
Tickets are $10 for
adults and seniors and
free for students. To
purchase, call (800)
363-5487 or go to
stolaf.edu/stolaf-orch.
TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal.com,
(503) 983-6030, facebook.com/RastrelliSJ
and on Twitter @RastrelliSJ

Just for Fun Singers rehearsals: Mixed choral of


senior citizens, no auditions,
9:30 to 11:30 a.m., First Christian Church, 685 Marion St.
NE. (503) 390-2886.
Friday Night Folk Music
Circle: Bring your guitar,
kazoo, banjo, ukelele, standup bass or accordion and join
the circle of folk musicians
that sing the worlds greatest
peace songs, 7 to 8:30 p.m.,
Unitarian Universalist of
Salem, 5090 Center St. NE.
Free. (512) 948-8842,
Oregoniansforpeace.org.

to noon, St. John Lutheran


Church, 1350 Court St. NE.
(503) 588-4481.

THURSDAY
Chamber Music Theater:
Core Ensemble, a theater
group specializing in chamber music theater, will pre-

60TH ANNIVERSARY
Donald and Patricia Van Hees
celebrated their 60th Wedding
Anniversary October 1st, 2015.
They both grew up in Salem,
Oregon.

They have ve children: Julia,


Leann, Chris, Traci, Kurt; and four
grandchildren: Casey, Jameson,
Armand, and Emma.

Many small celebrations will


honor them for their loving and
beautiful life together. They have
traveled extensively, enjoyed
their home, gardening, friends,
and family.

GALA-A-Go-Go!: Join Confluence, Oregons only mixed


LGBT chorus, for an evening
of variety-show entertainment, 7 to 9 p.m., First Congregational Church, 700
Marion St. NE. $20. (541)
954-3676,
Confluencechorus.org.

SATURDAY
Mary Poppins auditions:
Prepare one minute of a
Broadway show song, not
from the Mary Poppins
musical or the Disney movie,
and be ready to learn a short
dance routine, 1 p.m., Pentacle Theatre, 324 52nd Ave.
NW. (971) 241-4912,
Pentacletheatre.org.

SUNDAY

WEDNESDAY

essential role to play in


honoring the cultural
lives of the community
and making sure their
cultural history is protected and preserved.
Next fall's summit will
be in Corvallis. The date
is pending. For more
information, go to
www.oregonarts
commission.org.

Salem Senate Aires rehearsals: As a part of the


international award winning
mens A Capella chorus, the
Salem Senate Aires offers
free voice lessons to all visitors and new members, 7:30
p.m., The Knights of Columbus Hall, 725 Shipping St. NE.
Free. (866) 558-5344,
Senateaires.org.

Tom Mayhall Rastrelli

The St. Olaf Orchestra, winner of the 2013


American Prize for
Orchestral Performance among colleges
and universities, will
perform at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at South
Salem High School
Auditorium, 1910
Church St. SE.
The orchestra, led
by conductor Steven
Amundson, hails from
St. Olaf College in
Northfield, Minnesota,
and is on a West Coast
tour. The concert will
feature pieces by Shostakovich, Ginastera
and Elgar. The orchestra will perform Daniel Kallmans Gaia:
Desecration, Lamentation and Awakening,
which they premiered
on the tour.
The music department at St. Olaf has
deep ties to the SalemKeizer School District.
Many local graduates
have gone there to
study music. Souths
orchestra and choir
directors, Christopher
Noel and Will McLean,
and McKays new
choir director, Peter
Sepulveda, are St. Olaf
alumni. Stanford Scriven, McKays previous
choir director, also is
an alumnus.
In the past, Mary

ropolitan Group, to apply


study data that will improve how arts organizations communicate. Some
findings surprised Huff.
Some of the ways
arts organizations talk
about their work can turn
off some nontraditional
audiences, Huff said.
Moving toward creative
expression was a term
that was more favorable
than talking about the
arts.
Moving forward, Rogers said arts and culture
organizations have an

sent their production of Los


Valientes (the courageous
ones), 7:30 p.m., Linfield
College, Ice Auditorium, 900
SE Baker St., McMinnville.
Free. (503) 883-2802,
Coreensemble.com.

HOT PICK

THROUGH OCT. 24

know the people.


Keynote speaker Roberto Bedoya, director of
civic engagement for
Tucson Pima Arts Council, talked about place
keeping rather than
place making and the
role arts and culture
organizations have in
community identity. Huff
explained how Bedoya
addressed betterment
programs.
If a program to improve a community pushes out people who already live there, thats
not an equitable activity,
Huff said. Place keeping
is working with people in
a place as opposed to
treating low and economically depressed areas as
places where nothing
happens and no one lives.
These are places where
people live and have a
history.
Some other topics
included funding for the
arts, seeing beyond one's
own region and creating
better public will for the
arts. The commission is
working with Building
Public Will, a program by
Arts Midwest and Met-

Camerata Musica Concert:


Blue Box Ensemble: Ensemble of wind and string
instruments, an unusual
combination, 2:30 to 4:30
p.m., Salem Public Library,
Loucks Auditorium, 585
Liberty St. SE. Free.
(503) 364-3929,
Cameratamusica.org.

9-11-65
Lumbreras - 50th
Anniversary
Bardomiano and Isabel
Lumbreras celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary with
a dinner dance fiesta with family
and friends at the Elks Lodge
in Independence. The former
Isabel Salinas and Bardomiano
were married on September
11, 1965 at St. Luke Parish
in Woodburn. Their family
includes sons Alejandro and
Michelle, Cristobal and Teri,
and Noe and Amy Lumbreras,
and daughter, Graciela and her
husband Alberto Davila. They
also have 10 grandchildren. The
couple is retired and resides in
Independence.

Shouldn t the
happiest days in
your life make
headlines?
GRADUATION WEDDING
ANNIVERSARY
ENGAGEMENT BIRTH
RETIREMENT THANK YOU

Celebrations

Milestones

Place your ad at

www.statesmanjournal.com/milestones

Anniversary
Leonard
and
Patricia
Ferschweiler
will
be
celebrating
their
75th
Wedding Anniversary on
October 12. They have farmed
and lived their whole married
life in the St.Louis area.

www.footwearexpress.com
25

290 Commercial St NE, Salem


503-589-9794
2252 Santiam Hwy SE, Albany
541-926-2955

Their children are: Gene


(Barbara)
Rick
(Dianne)
Larry (Deborah) Sue Mills
(Gale) and Ann. They will
be celebrating with their
children grandchildren and
great-grandchildren with a
dinner in their honor.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

InsideBusiness

ONLINE
StatesmanJournal.com/insidebiz

STATESMAN JOURNAL
MEDIA CLASSIFIEDS

INSIDE

STARTING ON 4F

VICTOR PANICHKUL / STATESMAN JOU

Beth Rankin is the woman behind Can-Do Real Food. Her husband, Graham, helps with the business.

Preserving the harvest


McMinnville womans unique idea to can local
farm food headed for compost pile picking up steam
Victor Panichkul |

If people like eating


local food ... then
this is a way that those folks
can get local canned food
that they can enjoy in the off
season.

Statesman Journal

eth Rankin of McMinnville is on a mission to


take the local food movement to the next level by
helping farmers make sure that
their produce is available to consumers year round by helping
them preserve it.
Working out of a commercial
kitchen at McMinnville Cooperative Ministries on Tuesday, she was
canning tomato sauce using tomatoes from Michelle Burgers organic farm, Bethel Springs Farm, in
Rickreall.
Burger gives Rankin seconds,
vegetables that would otherwise
be composted because they may
not be suitable for sale to her customers, and Rankin cans them and
then returns half of the product to
the farmer to sell and keeps the
other half for herself to sell at the
McMinnville Farmers Market.
Rankin said shes been working
on the idea, which evolved into
Can-Do Real Food, for about a year.
It all started last summer, when
she applied for a job as a farm
worker.
Theres a list serve for the
northern end of the Willamette Valley for women farmers, and there
was a job posted by this woman 6
miles south of Amity who needed
someone to help her from the middle of August to the end of the season, Rankin said about Burger.

BETH RANKIN
Owner, Can-Do Real Food

COURTESY OF BETH RANKIN

Workers pick green beans at Michelle Burgers organic farm, Bethel Springs Farm,
in Rickreal.

I get there, and she said: You


know this is hard work.
I said intellectually I know this
is hard work. She said: What
makes you think you could do it? I
said, I know there are farmers older than me and there are farmers
fatter than me. There are compensatory techniques. And she hired
me on the spot.
What Burger didnt realize was
Rankin had considerable experi-

ence visiting other farmers with


other business models. One of the
first things she did was pick green
beans, and Burger was very precise about what she wanted to sell
to the customers. Straight beans
were salable. Crooked beans went
to the compost. So she asked Burger if she could take home the seconds that werent perfect.
Everything was put into the
compost pile. She didnt have any

animals to feed. It wasnt waste,


but it wasnt producing any income
for her, Rankin said. So I
broached the topic to her, and we
mulled it over and decided to give
it a go.
If people like eating local food,
as evidenced by how farmers markets are patronized, then this is a
way that those folks can get local
canned food that they can enjoy in
the off season, Rankin said.
Im really excited about whats
happening, Burger said. In small
farm groups and at conferences
they talk about creating value-added products, and I think what a
great idea. But I dont have time to
do it. So to have something like
what Beth is doing to have a different revenue stream is really
great.
The model also provides the
See HARVEST, Page 4F

Lessons on innovation from a couple of famous airmen


When you think about the early days
of aviation, you probably think of the
Wright brothers. And for good reason.
Out of all the people working to make
flight a reality, they were the first ones to
manage it. And while that day changed
the course of history, it was the efforts
leading up to that first successful flight
that made all the difference.
Heres what historians have to say
about what they did right. How can you
take their lessons and apply them to your
own business?
First, they read a lot, talked to anyone
they thought had answers, and generally
kept learning new things and putting
ideas together. They knew that they had

Agenda............................... 2F
Scott Burns......................... 2F

very few of
the answers,
but that others
could help. So
they asked for
help. Who do
you know who
Marcia Bagnall
can assist you
CCC SMALL
meet some of
BU S I N E S S C E N T E R
your
challenges,
and
when was the
last time you asked those folks for counsel?
Second, they created tools that were
customized to the job at hand. Part of
their innovation was designing the

Rhonda Abrams ............... 4F


Weekly Stocks................... 2F

means to even allow them to create their


new vision. Which of your tools, equipment, systems and protocols needs a new
approach or a redesign?
Third, they were driven to meet their
goal of being the first to fly. They were
serious planners, and had a laser focus.
How does this compare to how youre
seeing your near and distant future? Are
you concentrating with a single-minded
focus on where youre wanting to go?
Fourth, they were willing to second
guess conventional wisdom and challenge long-standing beliefs. Creating
something new usually requires this, but
the truth is that its hard to go against the
grain. So what assumptions or beliefs do

ONLINE To read news about local and regional businesses,


go to StatesmanJournal.com/market.

REACH US: Don Currie, Business Editor, (503) 399-6677; dcurrie@StatesmanJournal.com

you have that may be holding you back?


What ideas do you need to rethink?
And last, they found inspiration everywhere they looked. And if they could
do that, then what about you? What fresh
perspectives do you need in order to address your current challenges?
Marcia Bagnall is Director of the Chemeketa Small Business Development
Center and instructor of Small Business
Management Program. The Small-Business Adviser column is produced by the
center and appears each Sunday. Questions can be submitted to SBDC@chemeketa.edu. Visit the SBDC at 626 High St.
NE in downtown Salem or call (503) 3995088.

INSIDE BUSINESS is a weekly feature of the Statesman Journal,


with essays by local business leaders as well as other business news.

2F

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

The consumer balance sheet: Are we healed yet?


Every three months the Federal Reserve releases an enormous pile of numbers. Its called Z.1 Financial Accounts
of the United
States. It examines the flow of
funds through
our economy and
the
balance
sheets of different sectors. Its
Scott Burns
bedtime
good
P E R S O NA L F I NA N C E reading. My personal favorite is
the Household
Balance Sheet because it tells us how
we are doing, collectively, by reporting
on our holdings of all kinds of assets.
The most recent report, released in
mid September, provides no big surprises. Covering the second quarter, it
tells us that our collective wealth increased by nearly $700 billion from the
previous quarter and that our total assets have been increasing in each year of
the recovery. More to the point, our collective net worth is now higher than it
was at the peak of the bubble in 2007. If
youre lucky, youve noticed. You have a
comfortable feeling of increased ease
and affluence. Then again, maybe you
havent noticed.

Back then, we had total assets of $81.2


trillion and a net worth of $66.8 trillion.
Today we have total assets of nearly $100
trillion and a net worth of $85.7 trillion.
That sounds pretty nice. And in a grand
sense, it is. Richer is better.
Theres only one problem. If you ask
those ever-present nattering nabobs of
negativism questions, a different message starts to emerge: the rich are, quite
definitely, getting richer. Others, not so
much. Heres why:
Consumers are still borrowing to
look good.
We like our stuff. So we keep borrowing to buy it. Over the period the amount
we hold in consumer durables which is
mostly cars rose modestly, from $4.5
trillion to $5 trillion. But consumer credit has more than fully recovered. It rose
from $2.6 trillion to $3.3 trillion, an increase of $700 billion. So we own more
stuff, but we also owe more on it.
This is important because the reality
is that most Americans have more money invested in the used car market (because they own a car or two) than they
have invested in the stock market.
Its also useful to put consumer credit
in perspective. The $700 billion increase
is far smaller than the $1.2 trillion decrease in home mortgage debt.

Housing has recovered, but for


whom?
From its $20.7 trillion peak in 2007,
housing crashed and then recovered
but just barely to $21.5 trillion, a gain
3.9 percent. Things are actually a little
better than that because we also paid
down (or had foreclosed) home mortgages. They went from $10.6 trillion in
2007 to $9.4 trillion, a decline of nearly 12
percent. So our houses are worth a bit
more and we owe less on them.
But those figures dont sort out the
churn. Some people didnt participate in
the recovery. They lost their houses and
became renters. Others may still be
short of recovery, having purchased
close to the market peak. But if you
bought your home well before 2007 (the
earlier the better), youve probably got
more equity than you thought you had in
2007.
Another wrinkle is that the Federal
Reserve figures indicate a recovery nationally, but it really depends on where
you live. According to the Case-Shiller
indexes, Las Vegas, Phoenix and Miami
are still far below their peak in the bubble. San Francisco is just short of recovered. Los Angeles has only 13 percent to
go. Denver and Dallas, on the other hand,
never crashed. They are up a healthy, but

not worrisome, amount.


We may have the same amount of
money in our homes collectively, but it
has moved into different pockets.
Holdings in individual stocks are up.
The value of the stocks we hold is up a
handsome 36 percent, from $9.9 trillion
to $13.5 trillion. But thats another distribution story. Most people dont own individual stocks, so the major beneficiaries
of stock ownership are the big dogs.
Mutual funds are up, too.
The best news is here. The value of
mutual funds we collectively own has
risen from $4.6 trillion to $7.8 trillion, an
increase of 65 percent. With a multitude
of 401(k), 403(b) and IRA accounts out
there, this is where its difficult to argue
that only the rich are getting richer. Lots
of very regular working stiffs have been
getting richer, too.
Another interesting change is that
houses have dropped from 25.5 percent
of our total assets to 21.3 percent. Mutual
funds have increased from 5.7 percent to
8.3 percent. Thats a good thing. It means
were collectively less dependent on
housing for our sense of personal wealth.
Scott Burns is a syndicated columnist
and a principal of the investment firm
AssetBuilder Inc. Email questions to
scott@scottburns.com.

AGENDA
MONDAY
High Noon Toastmasters:
Speaking and leadership training in a friendly setting, noon to
1 p.m., Revenue Building, 955
Center St. NE. (503) 399-9915,
www.highnoontoastmasters.
org.
Bootstrappers Toastmasters: Meets to improve individual speaking, listening, evaluation and meeting management
skills for adults ages 18 and older. Guests and new members
welcome, 6:15 p.m., University

of Phoenix, Room 106, 670 Hawthorne Ave. SE. (503) 510-9695.

TUESDAY
Active Business Promoters:
Business and professional networking group dedicated to the
success of our members
through referrals, exchanging
business ideas and networking,
6:50 to 8 a.m., Broadway Commons, 1300 Broadway St. NE.
(503) 991-6892.
Business Networking International - Salem Partners for

NASDAQ
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WK
CLS

NAME

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

A-B-C
AMAG Ph 40.06
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WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
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3.06
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33.14
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46.47
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16.42
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49.36

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+.63
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+3.44
+.67
+.65
+.20
+1.28
+.80
-2.76
+1.04
+1.67
-1.41
-.34
+1.46
+4150
+2.40
+2.62
-1.17
+2.54
-.04
-.79
-1.99
+2.83
+1.77
+3.04
+.01
+1.32
+1.70
+1.02
+4.96
-.40

14.49
9.42 -22.1
8.00
2.05 -48.5
36.45 30.97
-1.3
51.74 39.00
-7.0
71.60 51.88 -15.0
34.89 21.00 +15.4
4.96
2.28 +5.4
17.75
7.97 -35.0
120.00 57.20 -33.9
340.34 208.64 +6.8
19.08 11.48 -19.3
56.70 44.59 +15.3
6.97
4.41 -15.4
25.40 15.60 -19.6
18.49 11.77 +16.6
94.89 71.71 -16.9
64.93 48.56 +3.9
99.95 58.10 -12.2
13.12
5.64 +9.8
11.65
9.17
-5.6
87.41 35.79 -25.8
13.32
4.96 -39.2
132.19 87.15 +6.5
11.95
3.18 -55.9
60.33 30.15 -20.2
43.85 29.35
-5.7
13.89
5.00 -43.3
9.42
5.11 -27.5
18.48 14.60 -12.9
45.45 35.06
-0.3
22.26
6.90 -25.8
44.60 15.48 -32.5
14.48
5.91 -29.2
19.17
2.96 -27.2
40.90 29.83
-7.4
43.44 32.18 -15.6
36.86
2.92 -71.3
229374 190007 -11.7
25.11 17.94 +8.6
44.43 26.56 +0.9
36.82 27.42 +5.1
51.86
3.72 -66.8
18.62 11.10 +27.4
70.54 47.55 +4.1
39.89 22.00 -37.7
63.95 38.51 -22.1
37.99 24.47 -19.7
113.65 77.40 +5.9
33.28 16.94 +60.0
35.64 20.86 -21.5
9.87
2.26 -14.5
24.37 14.09 -25.8
38.39 18.94 -19.8
54.05 33.11 +8.9

NAME

WK
CLS

Caterpillar 71.30
Cemex
7.87
CenovusE 16.93
CntryLink
25.72
Chemours n 8.03
ChesEng
8.88
Chevron
89.57
Citigroup
51.38
CitizFincl
23.46
CliffsNRs
3.05
Coach
31.28
CobaltIEn
7.80
CocaCola 42.02
Coeur
3.11
Colfax
30.96
ColuPpln n 21.18
ConAgra
41.76
ConocoPhil 56.10
ConsolEngy 11.71
ContlRescs 36.18
Corning
17.52
CSVLgNG rs 6.22
CSVLgCrd rs13.52
CSVInvNG 7.87
CrestwdEq 2.68

NAME
AlaskaAir
AllegTch
Amazon
AsburyA
Avista
Banner Cp
BarrettB
Boeing
CascdeBcp
ColBnkg
ColuSprtw
Con-Way
Costco
CraftBrew
Data IO

WK
CHG
-3.34
+3.07
+7.26
+.69
+.25
+1.76
+2.35
+7.14
+.27
+2.01
+.20
+.15
+8.11
+.07
+.14

52-WEEK
YTD
HIGH LOW %CHG NAME
82.78 40.69 +27.0 ElectSci
37.76 13.66 -46.6 FEI Co
580.57 284.00 +73.9 FLIR Sys
96.58 60.63 +11.0 GreenbCos
38.34 29.77
-5.5 HewlettP
50.50 37.52 +12.9 Idacorp
49.79 18.25 +56.5 Intel
158.83 115.14 +7.5 JewettCam
5.69
4.14 +8.9 KeyTech
33.70 23.90 +18.0 Kroger s
74.72 34.25 +31.2 Lattice
51.25 33.06
-3.4 LithiaMot
156.85 117.03 +8.6 LaPac
17.89
7.00 -39.5 MentorGr
3.83
2.26 -20.4 MicronT

19.06 13.17 -11.8


4.67
1.76
-5.5
123.37 85.95 +6.8
7.03
3.27 +6.2
63.99 25.52 -12.2
32.95 18.87 +11.6
98.47 27.07 -54.0
8.43
3.17 -53.2
56.72 28.97 -15.8
36.81 22.18 +6.2
70.65 48.31
-7.2
9.85
5.65 -10.8
43.00 22.70 +39.4
39.49 10.15 +51.4
16.77
2.23 -65.2
10.77
8.53
-1.3
11.90
8.80 +2.6
47.89 37.95
-2.8
63.08 50.37
-2.2
400.79 247.86 +1.7
242.37 130.00 -19.9
133.62 43.86 +43.6
25.24
9.15 +30.6
13.04
5.32 -32.9
24.53 11.94 +10.5
109.21 77.96 +0.6

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
+5.60 107.12
+.74 12.38
+1.57 26.28
+1.07 41.99
+.95 22.25
+.99 24.43
+8.02 120.17
+1.50 60.95
+.05 28.71
+.49 11.70
+1.93 43.87
+.40 13.52
+1.63 45.00
...
7.45
+1.27 58.63
+2.82 33.00
-.07 45.49
+4.91 75.74
+1.86 42.26
+4.05 64.42
+.47 25.16
+.45 94.05
+2.77 261.60
-.66
9.19
+.15 10.47

62.99 -22.1
6.12 -19.7
11.85 -17.9
24.11 -35.0
5.94 -61.5
6.01 -54.6
69.58 -20.2
46.60
-5.0
21.14
-5.6
2.28 -57.3
27.22 -16.7
6.73 -12.3
36.56
-0.5
2.52 -39.1
28.39 -40.0
17.51 -32.9
32.84 +15.1
41.10 -18.8
8.68 -65.4
22.56
-5.7
15.42 -23.6
5.53 -68.7
7.12 -72.4
2.50
-2.1
2.17 -66.9

+.77 20.41
+.92 33.06
+6.30 98.23
+2.34 51.06
+.89 14.29
+4.52 70.48
-1.99 30.83
-6.73 78.36
+12.88 247.50
+2.07 35.73
-.90 59.82
-6.59 51.50
+8.63 99.00
+7.21 91.21
+2.56 122.08
-4.09 81.42
+2.63 53.80
+6.92 80.65
+3.17 30.92
+10.24 103.04
+1.71 16.93
+3.42 73.82
+.56
8.00
-1.38 92.85
+2.96 65.94
+1.58 21.61
+1.89 35.44
+3.50 69.66

14.71 -10.7
19.29 +21.2
71.85
-9.7
30.12
-4.0
2.37 -54.2
36.01 -26.1
16.98 -10.2
35.24
-7.8
23.60 -58.5
20.93 -13.3
14.03 -54.0
11.07 -44.8
53.50 -13.7
23.01 -40.2
78.54 +12.1
57.09
-4.9
35.11 +3.2
47.11 -20.1
22.66
-6.3
68.15
-5.2
4.79 -28.0
49.21 -19.3
2.45 -35.0
60.58 +24.9
42.21 -23.6
5.55 -36.8
18.62 -13.3
36.84 -28.6

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
+.11
7.95
4.09 -36.3
+4.10 93.30 70.68 -14.6
+.47 34.46 26.34 -11.3
+5.07 67.45 30.35 -28.7
+3.23 41.10 24.30 -27.0
+1.49 70.48 53.71
-.1
+1.63 37.90 24.87 -11.4
+1.04 13.73
7.70 -13.7
+.39 14.10 10.72
-8.0
+.89 39.43 25.42 +18.5
+.18
7.66
3.25 -43.3
-4.88 122.01 63.05 +23.4
+2.62 18.64 12.46 +5.0
+.88 27.38 18.25 +17.3
+2.25 36.59 13.50 -48.1

InvestBncp
IronwdPh
Isis

12.44
11.36
43.24

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
+.25
+.29
-.08

12.72
17.11
77.80

9.80 +10.8
9.77 -25.8
35.26 -30.0

-.50 38.00
-.12 27.36
+5.55 69.28
+2.76 73.12
+3.90 158.87
+2.98 81.20
-.06 32.25
-.45 48.18
+.79 85.70
+.86 58.66
+.88 54.74
+.46 31.62
+1.06 49.57
+.45 28.75
+.62 28.37
+1.63 70.00

21.55 +22.8
9.38 +64.6
33.00
-6.9
44.95 -24.4
45.25 -56.5
61.42 +2.0
22.90 +1.6
36.41 -14.5
61.20 -16.2
39.95 -10.1
39.31 -10.5
22.37
-7.1
36.41
-9.6
2.01 -66.8
1.88 -68.0
37.86
-5.4

J-K-L
JD.com
JetBlue
JunoTher n
KLA Tnc
KeurigGM
KraftHnz n
LKQ Corp
LPL Fincl
LamResrch
LibtyGlobA
LibtyGlobC
LibQVC A
LinearTch
LinnEngy
LinnCo
lululemn gs

28.41
26.10
48.64
53.19
57.55
74.39
28.56
38.11
66.47
45.15
43.26
27.32
41.21
3.36
3.32
52.75

M-N-0
MannKd
MarIntA
MarvellT lf
Mattel
MaximIntg

3.05 -.23
76.47 +5.01
9.41 +.40
22.35 +2.42
34.74 +1.45

7.88
85.00
16.78
32.17
36.37

2.98
59.61
8.21
19.45
25.28

-41.5
-2.0
-35.1
-27.8
+9.0

W
Watching
out for you?

SJ Watch
Every Sunday in the
Statesman Journal
and at
StatesmanJournal.com/sjwatch

NAME

WK
CLS

WEDNESDAY
Women In Networking
Group: A group of local, professional women who are dedicated to excellence in their chosen
field. Members are business
owners, managers, directors,
consultants, agents and representatives committed to increasing their business success
by networking among each other, 7:30 to 8:30 a.m., Broadway
Commons, Russia Room, 1300
Broadway St. NE. (503) 3492479.

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

MediCo
34.88 -4.14 43.79
Medivat s
41.26 -3.63 70.79
MelcoCrwn 17.46 +1.95 28.17
MemResDv 19.39 +1.25 28.44
MerrimkP
9.60 +.39 13.84
Methanx
42.33 +8.33 67.20
Microchp
46.27 +2.89 52.44
Mondelez 45.00 +1.44 48.58
Mylan NV 42.55 -1.11 76.69
NXP Semi 87.32 +1.44 114.00
Navient
11.96 +.92 22.71
NektarTh
11.34 +.17 17.53
NetApp
33.16 +3.41 43.67
Netflix s
113.33 +7.22 129.29
Neurcrine 46.10 +2.03 56.97
NewsCpA 13.96 +.92 17.55
NewsCpB 14.11 +.97 17.11
Novavax
8.04 +1.02 15.01
NovoCure nud21.02 +2.74 20.48
NuanceCm 17.52 +1.01 18.96
Nvidia
u26.07 +1.27 26.28
OceanRig d2.23 +.10 15.54
OfficeDpt
6.68 +.28
9.77
OmniVisn
28.56 +2.19 28.95
OnSmcnd 10.00 +.47 13.50
Oncothyr
2.88 +.03
4.69
Orexigen
2.53 +.35
9.37

19.92
38.08
12.80
14.61
7.36
31.66
36.92
31.83
39.16
53.81
10.62
9.16
28.75
45.08
15.21
12.16
12.24
4.08
15.01
13.20
16.77
2.02
4.26
20.00
6.76
1.41
1.84

+26.1
-17.2
-31.3
+7.5
-15.0
-7.6
+2.6
+23.9
-24.5
+14.3
-44.7
-26.8
-20.0
+132.2
+106.4
-11.0
-6.4
+35.6
+15.0
+22.8
+30.0
-76.0
-22.1
+9.8
-1.3
+51.6
-58.3

27.91
4.58
5.65
3.58
35.78
5.85
12.82
41.59
30.00
13.61
19.26
9.99
84.74
65.88
42.50
65.25
20.19
24.12
5.30
22.12
42.24
52.17
16.55
12.60
1.97
1.85
37.38
9.21

+39.7
-32.0
+12.3
+2.9
-52.4
-14.9
+2.4
+8.4
-12.7
+4.0
-24.4
-4.9
+3.2
-16.7
-3.6
+2.4
-23.8
-20.4
-7.7
+23.7
-35.1
-22.3
+48.5
-34.9
-60.0
-42.2
+4.1
-50.6

P-Q-R
PDC Engy 57.65
PDL Bio
5.24
PMC Sra u10.29
PacBiosci
8.07
PaciraPhm d42.18
PanASlv
7.83
PattUTI
16.98
Paychex
50.06
PayPal n
32.06
PeopUtdF 15.78
PilgrimsP
20.92
Polycom
12.84
PwShs QQQ106.53
PriceTR
71.50
PrUltBio s 60.50
PrUltPQQQ 99.78
PShtQQQ 22.74
ProUShBi rs 36.60
ProspctCap 7.63
QlikTech u38.22
Qorvo n
45.66
Qualcom
57.78
RadiusHlth 57.80
Radware d14.34
RepubAir
5.83
RexEnergy 2.95
RossStrs s 49.04
Rovi Corp 11.16

+2.66
+.13
+2.86
+1.94
+1.44
+1.05
+2.72
+2.29
-.77
+.37
+1.07
+2.19
+2.52
+2.76
-2.80
+6.78
-1.74
+1.24
+.29
+.42
+.70
+2.71
-18.09
-2.33
-.18
+.47
+.31
+.28

61.55
8.60
10.28
8.78
121.95
12.05
30.59
51.72
42.55
16.95
32.62
14.22
114.39
88.64
106.10
128.78
46.30
72.15
9.85
42.90
88.35
78.53
84.64
24.91
15.36
12.53
56.68
26.44

S-T-U
SBA Com 110.20 +4.81 128.47 102.13
-0.5
SLM Cp
7.07 +.13 10.76
6.80 -30.6
SabreCorp 28.76 +.71 29.61 14.86 +41.9
SanDisk
62.36 +2.78 106.64 44.28 -36.4

Subscribe: 1-800-452-2511

ENSCO
EntProdPt
Exelon
ExxonMbl
FMC Tech
FiatChry n
FordM
FrankRes
FrptMcM

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

16.84
28.78
30.82
79.26
34.45
15.67
14.97
38.85
13.49

+2.27
+1.09
+1.00
+3.38
+3.72
+1.64
+.98
+1.09
+2.87

41.99
40.12
38.93
97.20
57.87
17.08
16.74
59.43
32.91

13.26 -43.8
22.01 -20.3
28.41 -16.9
66.55 -14.3
27.94 -26.5
8.54 +35.3
10.44
-3.4
36.10 -29.8
7.76 -42.3

Gap
d27.42
GenElec
28.07
GenGrPrp 27.14
GenMills
56.61
GenMotors 32.95
GenesWyo 68.08
Genworth
5.41
Gerdau
1.79
GoldFLtd
3.01
Goldcrp g 14.47
HalconRes
.97
Hallibrtn
39.65
HartfdFn
46.88
HeclaM
2.52
Hertz
19.20
Hess
61.91
Hilton
25.21
HomeDp 121.33
HostHotls
17.63
Huntsmn
12.75
IAMGld g
1.92
ICICI Bk s
9.14
iShGold
11.18
iShBrazil
25.25
iShEMU
36.61
iSh HK
20.17
iShJapan
12.10
iSTaiwn
14.17
iShSilver
15.12
iShChinaLC 38.66
iSCorSP500 202.50
iShEMkts
35.94
iShiBoxIG 116.16
iSh20 yrT 122.28
iS Eafe
61.05
iShiBxHYB 85.11
iShR2K
115.74
iShREst
74.25
Infosys s
19.15
IBM
152.39
Interpublic 21.04
iShCorEM 43.39
ItauUnibH
7.77

-.31
+2.60
+.68
+.43
+1.22
+6.74
+.70
+.35
+.17
+1.48
+.25
+2.85
+.97
+.48
+1.70
+8.22
+1.63
+3.52
+1.38
+2.07
+.25
+.34
+.18
+2.23
+1.75
+.40
+.45
+.58
+.57
+1.65
+6.43
+2.10
-.08
-2.28
+2.57
+2.67
+5.11
+2.35
+.26
+7.81
+1.40
+2.33
+.73

43.90
28.68
31.70
59.87
38.99
105.49
14.10
5.19
6.01
25.00
3.75
62.85
50.95
3.54
25.72
91.36
31.60
123.80
24.50
27.17
3.39
13.24
12.65
48.08
40.73
24.65
13.35
17.09
17.69
52.85
215.23
44.19
123.90
138.50
68.52
94.95
129.10
83.54
37.28
190.89
22.69
53.17
14.74

27.33 -34.9
19.37 +11.1
23.38
-3.5
47.43 +6.2
24.62
-5.6
57.29 -24.3
4.23 -36.4
1.23 -49.6
2.35 -33.6
11.95 -21.9
.52 -45.5
30.93 +0.8
34.73 +12.4
1.77
-9.7
14.85 -23.0
47.84 -16.1
20.72
-3.4
86.35 +15.6
15.36 -25.8
9.27 -44.0
1.15 -28.9
7.81 -20.9
10.43
-2.3
20.06 -31.0
33.52 +0.8
17.57
-1.8
10.73 +7.7
11.43
-6.2
13.35 +0.4
32.80
-7.1
128.74
-2.1
30.00
-8.5
114.58
-2.7
114.88
-2.9
55.88 +0.3
81.66
-5.0
103.54
-3.2
68.28
-3.4
15.32 -39.1
140.56
-5.0
16.37 +1.3
36.51
-7.7
6.01 -34.3

61.93 +1.12
22.52 +.60

70.61
24.95

G-H-I

J-K-L
JPMorgCh
Jabil

NAME
WK
CLS
4.94
77.20
28.67
38.30
29.30
66.12
32.14
8.74
12.15
38.03
3.91
106.95
17.38
25.71
18.16

+.41
+.06
+2.37
-.03
+2.29
+2.65
-1.36
+.46
+4.09
+2.46
+1.96
-.66
-2.14
-1.60
+3.06
+.25
+.21
+1.92
+2.22
-7.08
-15.84
-21.46
-1.52
+.25
+.47
+3.50

WK
CLS

NAME

Networking
Exchange
Club: Weekly meeting of men
and women working together to
make the communities better
places to live through programs
of service in Americanism,
community service, youth activities and its national service
project, the prevention of child
abuse, noon to 1 p.m., The Night
Deposit Whiskey Library, 195
Commercial St. NE. $30 per
quarter for membership. (971)
218-2646.

Whos

NAME

NORTHWEST STOCKS
WK
CLS
75.92
18.57
539.80
84.26
33.42
48.59
42.89
139.70
u5.65
32.57
58.42
47.52
153.97
8.07
2.69

G-H-I
Gentex s
15.94
GeronCp
3.07
GileadSci 100.65
GluMobile
4.14
GolLNGLtd 32.01
Goodyear 31.88
GoPro
d29.08
Groupon
3.87
GulfportE 35.14
HD Supply 31.33
HainCeles s 54.12
HimaxTch
7.19
Hologic
37.28
HorizPhm 19.51
HorsehdH
5.51
HudsCity
9.99
HuntBncsh 10.79
iShACWX 41.83
iSh ACWI
57.21
iShNsdqBio 308.45
Illumina d147.77
Incyte
105.00
Infinera
19.22
InovioPhm
6.16
IntgDv
21.65
Intuit
92.70

+40.2
-39.3
-22.3
-39.9

D-E-F
DDR Corp 16.39
DR Horton 30.65
Deere
79.87
DeltaAir
47.21
DenburyR
3.72
DevonE
45.24
DirSPBear 18.49
DxSCBear rs44.25
DxGBull rs 46.29
DxFnBull s 27.57
DxBiotBull 18.01
DirDGldBr 13.61
DrxSCBull 69.86
DirxEnBull 36.17
Disney
105.56
DollarGen 67.23
DowChm
47.08
DuPont
56.18
EMC Cp
27.86
EOG Rescs 87.30
EP Energy 7.52
Eaton
54.82
EldorGld g 3.95
EliLilly
86.14
EmersonEl 47.15
EnCana g
8.76
EgyTrEq s 24.88
EngyTsfr
46.39

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

+6.1
+17.9
+40.9
+28.7
-16.1
-19.2
-14.2
-10.0
-1.8
-81.3
-1.4
+70.7
+7.8
+4.2
+38.3
-10.9
-35.6
-13.1
+315.6
+12.0
-2.3
+19.5
-18.0
-6.9
+1.0
+23.7
+14.8
+2.8

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE


NAME

WK
CLS

Success: BNI is the largest business networking organization,


offering members the opportunity to share ideas, contacts and
most importantly, business referrals, 7 to 8:30 a.m., Chemeketa Center for Business and Industry, 626 High St. NE. (503)
375-2707, www.bnioregon.com.
LeTip of Salem Professionals Networking: 7 to 8:30 a.m.,
Broadway Commons, Keizer
Room, 1300 Broadway St. NE.
(866)
818-8381,
www.phil
webb.us/letip/home.html

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

JohnJn
JoyGlbl
JnprNtwk
KeyEngy
Keycorp
KindMorg
Kinross g
KrispKrm
Kroger s
LaredoPet
LVSands
Lowes
LumberLiq
LyonBas A

95.37
17.94
u29.40
.78
13.06
32.35
2.24
d14.41
38.03
13.40
46.98
73.33
18.84
95.45

+1.44 109.49
+2.88 55.40
+2.23 30.03
+.30
4.83
+.08 15.70
+2.72 44.71
+.41
3.71
+.17 22.32
+.89 39.43
+2.34 22.14
+6.11 65.83
+3.10 76.25
+4.74 69.99
+7.02 107.32

81.79
14.02
18.41
.42
11.55
25.81
1.35
13.83
25.42
6.35
36.53
49.85
11.62
70.06

-8.8
-61.4
+31.7
-53.3
-6.0
-23.5
-20.6
-27.0
+18.5
+29.5
-19.2
+6.6
-71.6
+20.2

11.72
7.27
23.70 16.84
73.61 49.72
5.75
.30
134.26 56.57
36.96 14.03
60.38 37.32
34.82 17.92
23.22 12.62
48.23 26.00
22.61 12.50
28.59 17.53
103.47 87.50
79.50 55.54
63.62 45.69
58.23 44.49
126.00 81.22
41.04 30.15
53.83 29.61
55.57 23.20
33.92 14.43
21.78
8.94
2.93
.43
74.93 34.54
5.27
1.90
40.27 22.31
27.90 15.39
22.35 10.34
65.70 29.13
8.58
5.71
176.83 118.24
19.74 11.56
62.87 34.03
40.43
8.04
97.14 63.60
34.34 15.73
19.20
8.02
46.71 35.14

+3.3
-0.7
-22.4
-81.1
-32.6
-30.8
+10.0
-8.1
-11.5
-10.8
+18.0
+21.3
+9.7
+0.6
-10.3
-10.5
-24.9
-15.7
-25.7
-39.8
-42.6
-7.7
-62.6
-37.7
-28.4
+43.1
+0.2
-21.4
-22.6
-11.2
+19.2
-27.6
-16.2
-17.8
-8.7
-20.6
-10.9
-15.3

M-N-0
MGIC Inv
9.63
MGM Rsts 21.23
Macys
51.00
MagHRes
.60
Mallinckdt 66.73
MarathnO 19.59
MarathPt s 49.64
MVJrGold 22.00
MktVGold 16.26
MV OilSvc 32.03
MktVRus
17.27
Masco
27.01
McDnlds u102.76
Medtrnic
72.60
Merck
50.95
MetLife
48.39
Monsanto 89.70
MorgStan 32.72
Mosaic
33.93
MurphO
30.42
NRG Egy
15.46
Nabors
11.98
NBGreece
.67
NOilVarco 40.80
NwGold g
3.08
NewfldExp 38.82
NewmtM
18.93
NobleCorp 13.03
NobleEngy 36.72
NokiaCp
6.98
NorthropG 175.75
NStarRlt
12.73
NuSkin
d36.64
OasisPet
13.60
OcciPet
73.60
Olin
18.07
OpkoHlth
8.90
Oracle
38.10

+.22
+1.44
-.84
+.10
+.86
+2.93
+1.25
+1.54
+1.77
+3.55
+1.71
+1.21
+2.97
+1.47
+.81
+1.42
+3.23
+1.29
+2.94
+4.51
+.59
+2.27
+.16
+2.75
+.65
+3.30
+1.86
+1.56
+5.10
+.07
+8.22
+.30
-7.48
+2.87
+4.81
+.61
-.20
+1.36

P-Q-R
WK
CLS

Microsoft
47.11
Nautilus
16.01
NikeB
u124.94
Nordstrm
68.43
NwstNG
46.93
NwstPipe
15.06
OraSure
4.54
Paccar
55.28
Pixelwrks
3.83
PlanarSy
6.17
PlumCrk
41.20
PopeRes
67.21
PortGE
37.40
PrecCastpt 230.31
RadiSys
2.91
Rntrak
60.85
SareptaTh u37.09

50.07
16.90

-0.4
+3.2

PBF Engy
PPL Corp

32.95 +2.26
33.03 -.01

36.93
38.14

21.02 +23.7
29.18
-2.0

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

+1.54 50.05 39.72 +1.4


+.90 22.95 10.72 +5.5
-.27 126.49 83.85 +29.9
-1.84 83.16 66.81 -13.8
+.83 52.57 42.00
-6.0
+1.42 36.07 12.48 -50.0
-.17 10.93
4.39 -55.2
+3.22 71.15 50.00 -18.7
+.21
7.13
3.40 -16.0
+.20
9.17
3.02 -26.3
+1.21 45.26 36.95
-3.7
+.20 70.50 59.00 +5.6
+.45 41.04 32.52
-1.1
+.02 245.05 186.17
-4.4
+.27
3.00
1.79 +24.4
+3.34 87.40 42.03 -16.4
-2.50 41.97 11.33 +156.3

Schmitt
Schnitzer
StancrpFn
Starbucks s
Supvalu
Tegna
Umpqua
US Bancrp
VBI Vacc
Valmont
WashFed
Weyerhsr
WillmValV

d2.56
17.22
114.78
u60.07
7.58
26.20
16.87
41.58
2.35
105.64
23.69
28.85
6.75

-.34
3.38
+1.82 24.75
+.37 114.94
+1.99 59.71
+.59 12.00
+3.11 33.40
+.82 18.92
+.83 46.26
-.12
3.97
+9.19 139.31
+1.08 24.25
+1.40 37.04
+.02
8.10

2.58 -13.2
12.64 -23.7
60.17 +64.3
35.38 +46.4
6.75 -21.9
20.75 +2.6
14.70
-.8
38.10
-7.5
1.90 -29.4
92.33 -16.8
19.52 +7.0
26.73 -19.6
4.50 +16.4

NAME

WK
CLS

Pandora
20.90
PennVa
d1.05
PennWst g 1.21
Penney
u9.79
PepcoHold 26.49
PepsiCo
99.47
PetrbrsA
4.68
Petrobras
5.67
Pfizer
33.24
PhilipMor
84.07
PlatfmSpc 14.15
Potash
21.74
PS SrLoan 23.16
PrecDrill
5.09
ProShtS&P 21.40
ProUltSP s 61.32
PUltSP500 s 60.41
PUVixST rs 38.11
PrUCrude rs 26.77
ProShtVix 56.88
ProctGam 74.48
ProUShSP 21.03
PUShtQQQ 33.67
PUShtSPX 34.57
PulteGrp
20.12
PureStrg n ud16.60
QEP Res
16.21
RSP Perm 26.70
RegionsFn
9.09
ReynAm s u46.47
RioTinto
39.74
RiteAid
6.28
Rowan
20.04
RoyDShllA 55.27
Rubicon g d.53
RuckusW 13.24
Ryder
75.88

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
-.63
+.59
+.61
-.13
+1.70
+5.31
+.74
+1.03
+.16
+4.12
+.39
+1.62
+.11
+1.14
-.74
+3.74
+5.53
-10.89
+3.87
+6.13
+2.06
-1.44
-1.73
-3.64
+.98
...
+2.29
+3.48
+.18
+2.46
+4.96
+.02
+2.55
+5.44
-.23
+1.24
+4.33

25.24
12.07
6.12
10.09
27.65
100.76
18.77
17.64
36.46
90.25
28.44
37.60
24.46
10.22
24.86
69.13
73.66
281.40
149.15
98.13
93.89
28.71
52.67
56.70
23.36
17.00
30.56
31.15
10.87
46.29
56.82
9.47
25.36
74.59
1.35
13.91
100.64

13.30
.34
.45
5.90
21.61
76.48
3.13
3.72
27.51
75.27
11.96
19.47
22.87
3.49
20.58
50.00
43.00
24.34
17.05
41.63
65.02
19.61
30.69
31.60
16.56
15.50
11.20
19.20
8.54
28.14
31.97
4.42
14.63
45.81
.43
9.11
69.55

+17.2
-84.3
-41.8
+51.1
-1.6
+5.2
-38.3
-22.3
+6.7
+3.2
-39.1
-38.4
-3.6
-16.0
-1.7
-4.4
-8.9
-69.7
-48.4
-7.0
-18.2
-4.6
-14.7
-9.1
-6.2
+3.7
-19.8
+6.2
-13.9
+44.6
-13.7
-16.5
-14.1
-17.4
-46.2
+10.1
-18.3

+6.18
+1.88
+6.33
-.72
+.98
+1.29
+4.65
+2.44
+.11
+6.04
+.62
+1.57
+1.69
...
+1.56
-.01
+1.60
+.22
+2.79
+.15

183.35 150.57
125.58 103.43
213.78 181.92
91.11 47.28
40.56 35.10
51.25 40.29
66.27 31.64
36.47 16.23
4.80
.25
100.54 66.57
35.72 23.35
26.09
5.60
24.22 11.03
11.11
4.65
47.17 28.40
37.26 11.84
40.00 25.22
6.33
3.10
52.22 38.83
77.40 56.63

-4.0
-2.4
-2.0
+4.2
-6.0
-3.7
-16.6
-35.9
-74.2
-10.6
-6.5
-35.3
-28.9
-2.0
-5.6
-53.1
-17.8
+7.7
-9.1
+0.1

S-T-U
SpdrDJIA 170.76
SpdrGold 110.87
S&P500ETF201.33
SpdrBiot s 64.76
SpdrLehHY 36.31
SpdrRetl s 46.23
SpdrOGEx 39.90
SpdrMetM 19.77
SandRdge
.47
Schlmbrg
76.36
Schwab
28.22
SeadrillLtd 7.72
SilvWhtn g 14.46
SouFun
7.24
SwstAirl
39.94
SwstnEngy 12.80
SpectraEn 29.85
Sprint
4.47
SP Matls
44.15
SP HlthC
68.44

NAME

WK
CLS

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG

SareptaTh
SeagateT
Sequenom
SilvStd g
Sinclair
SiriusXM
SkywksSol
SolarCity
SparkTh n
SpectPh
Splunk
Sprouts
Staples
StlDynam
Stratasys
SunOpta
SunPower
SuperMicro
Symantec
SynrgyPh
TASER
TerraFm n
TerraFmP
TeslaMot
Tetraphase
TexInst
TrimbleN
TripAdvis
TrueCar
21stCFoxA
21stCFoxB
2U
UTiWrldwd
Umpqua
UrbanOut

u37.09
49.03
2.11
u6.93
28.54
3.85
79.50
48.94
49.30
6.20
58.21
23.54
12.37
19.09
31.90
5.26
24.98
26.90
21.00
6.32
24.70
8.19
20.01
220.69
9.38
50.87
17.45
67.98
6.40
28.68
28.90
29.22
7.13
16.87
31.22

-2.50 41.97 11.33 +156.3


+5.85 69.40 41.59 -26.3
-.02
4.80
1.53 -43.0
+.14
7.67
3.92 +38.5
+2.30 32.43 23.88 +4.3
+.02
4.04
3.14 +10.0
-4.56 112.88 44.06 +9.3
+2.56 63.79 34.65
-8.5
+5.37 79.50 36.96
-1.4
+.22
8.27
5.42 -10.5
+1.85 76.85 49.61
-1.3
+1.54 38.45 16.41 -30.7
+.22 19.40 11.39 -31.7
+1.29 23.58 16.51
-3.3
+5.30 125.00 24.82 -61.6
+.17 14.25
4.50 -55.6
+3.46 35.11 18.25
-3.3
-.83 42.00 21.50 -22.9
+1.35 27.32 19.07 -18.1
+.22 10.15
2.45 +107.2
+2.11 35.95 13.40
-6.7
+1.74 14.44
6.12 -41.5
+2.75 42.66 13.83 -35.2
-26.88 286.65 181.40
-0.8
+.91 52.90
7.20 -76.4
+2.10 59.99 41.47
-4.9
+1.06 31.04 15.90 -34.3
+1.62 94.00 62.24
-8.9
+1.01 24.71
4.01 -72.1
+.64 39.27 22.81 -25.3
+.60 37.83 22.85 -21.7
-2.84 39.69 15.22 +48.6
+2.68 14.75
4.40 -40.9
+.82 18.92 14.70
-0.8
+1.08 47.25 27.89 -11.1

V-W-X-Y-Z
VanIntCpB 85.26
VanTIntBd 52.81
Verastem
1.93
Verisk
u81.13
VertxPh
110.00
ViacomB
47.48
Viavi
5.84
VimpelCm
4.08
Vivus
2.00
Vodafone
32.32
WalgBoots 85.37
Wendys Co 9.28
WDigital
86.00
WholeFood 34.24
Windstm rs 6.61
WisdomTr 16.88
Wynn
75.40
XOMA h
.99
XenoPort
4.19
Xilinx
44.90
Yahoo
32.52
Yandex
12.37
ZillowC n u33.45
ZionsBcp
28.31
Zynga
2.47

NAME

-.09 88.70
-.28 54.25
+.13 12.35
+1.25 82.00
-5.18 143.45
+3.15 78.00
+.11
8.10
+.03
6.85
+.30
3.70
+.43 39.46
-1.74 97.30
+.57 11.71
+6.56 114.69
+.32 57.57
+.75 17.10
+1.23 26.23
+11.88 192.45
+.00
5.95
-.13
9.60
+2.54 48.73
+1.81 52.62
+1.03 28.87
+6.89 31.75
+.99 33.03
+.11
3.13

WK
CLS

SP CnSt
49.46
SP Consum 77.72
SP Engy
68.94
SPDR Fncl 23.24
SP Inds
53.38
SP Tech
41.48
SP Util
43.79
Statoil ASA 17.58
StoneEngy 8.61
StratHotels 14.02
Suncor g
28.34
SunEdison 9.25
SunTrst
39.43
SupEnrgy 17.01
Sysco
40.93
TaiwSemi
21.95
Target
78.88
TeckRes g 7.46
TevaPhrm 58.96
TimeWarn 73.09
Transocn 16.98
TriContl
20.15
Twitter
30.85
Tyson
u46.33
UnionPac 97.04
UtdContl
55.71
UPS B
103.68
US Bancrp 41.58
US NGas
11.58
US OilFd
15.99
USSteel
12.38
UtdTech
95.37
UtdhlthGp 119.27

84.10
-1.0
51.97
-0.6
1.50 -78.9
57.97 +26.7
96.43
-7.4
36.32 -36.9
4.99 -25.1
3.09
-2.3
.94 -30.6
28.63
-5.4
58.39 +12.0
7.61 +2.8
67.87 -22.3
30.18 -32.1
4.42 -48.7
9.57 +7.7
50.96 -49.3
.69 -72.3
3.35 -52.2
36.24 +3.7
27.20 -35.6
9.94 -31.1
22.99 +20.6
23.72
-0.7
2.20
-7.1

WK
52-WEEK
YTD
CHG HIGH LOW %CHG
+1.62
+1.84
+5.09
+.54
+2.97
+1.40
+.44
+1.94
+2.87
+.05
+1.48
+.98
+1.14
+3.49
+1.53
+1.19
-.65
+2.36
-1.10
+2.50
+3.42
+.68
+4.54
+1.94
+5.14
+3.95
+4.30
+.83
+.30
+1.22
+1.83
+5.60
+.44

50.95
80.61
89.22
25.62
58.23
43.81
49.78
25.89
29.19
14.48
36.35
33.45
45.84
31.37
41.87
25.77
85.81
18.11
72.31
91.34
32.21
22.20
55.99
46.04
124.52
74.52
114.40
46.26
23.73
34.15
42.25
124.45
126.21

43.69 +2.0
61.68 +7.7
58.74 -12.9
18.52
-6.0
47.60
-5.7
31.32 +0.3
40.80
-7.3
13.82
-0.2
3.74 -49.0
11.01 +6.0
24.20 -10.8
6.56 -52.6
33.97
-5.9
12.35 -15.6
35.45 +3.1
17.32
-1.9
58.72 +3.9
4.39 -45.3
47.36 +2.5
65.25 -14.4
11.26
-7.4
18.01
-5.9
21.01 -14.0
37.02 +15.6
79.31 -18.5
39.46 -16.7
93.64
-6.7
38.10
-7.5
11.11 -21.6
12.37 -21.5
9.66 -53.7
85.50 -17.1
80.72 +18.0

V-W-X-Y-Z
Vale SA
Vale SA pf
ValeantPh
ValeroE
VangEmg
VangFTSE
Vereit
VerizonCm
Vipshop s
Visa s
WPX Engy
WalMart
WeathfIntl
WellsFargo
WstnUnion
WhitingPet
WmsCos
WTJpHedg
Xerox
Yamana g
YumBrnds
Zoetis

5.48
4.31
175.94
64.20
36.02
37.93
8.18
44.16
18.17
73.98
8.89
66.69
10.77
52.14
19.13
22.43
43.83
52.24
10.55
2.49
70.25
42.80

+1.00 11.95
4.03 -33.0
+.63 10.40
3.20 -40.6
-6.38 263.81 111.41 +22.9
+1.10 71.50 42.53 +29.7
+1.95 45.08 30.90 -10.0
+1.60 42.51 34.71 +0.1
+.41 12.48
7.38
-9.6
+1.89 51.73 38.06
-5.6
+.02 30.72 14.68
-7.0
+3.31 76.92 48.80 +12.9
+1.53 23.16
5.24 -23.6
+1.71 90.97 61.50 -22.3
+1.71 20.33
7.21
-5.9
+.88 58.77 46.44
-4.9
+.58 22.84 15.32 +6.8
+5.55 74.17 13.50 -32.0
+2.81 61.38 34.64
-2.5
+2.55 60.59 45.68 +6.1
+.70 14.36
9.45 -23.9
+.65
6.07
1.42 -38.1
-11.35 95.90 65.81
-3.6
-.22 55.38 34.16
-0.5

INDEXES
52-WEEK
HIGH
LOW
18,351.36 15,370.33
9,310.22 7,452.70
657.17
539.96
11,254.87 9,509.59
5,231.94 4,116.60
2,134.72 1,820.66
1,551.28 1,269.45
22,537.15 19,160.13
1,296.00 1,040.47

NAME
LAST
Dow Jones Industrials
17,084.49
Dow Jones Transportation 8,253.16
Dow Jones Utilities
583.36
NYSE Composite
10,361.27
Nasdaq Composite
4,830.47
S&P 500
2,014.89
S&P MidCap
1,442.46
Wilshire 5000
21,157.55
Russell 2000
1,165.35

FRI
CHG
+33.74
+61.53
-2.52
+.23
+19.68
+1.46
+2.37
+24.21
+2.11

WEEK WEEK YTD


CHG %CHG %CHG
+612.12
+3.72
-4.14
+379.52
+4.82
-9.70
+6.11
+1.06
-5.62
+387.71
+3.89
-4.41
+122.69
+2.61 +1.99
+63.53
+3.26
-2.14
+56.38
+4.07
-.69
+703.69
+3.44
-2.36
+51.24
+4.60
-3.27

Stocks in bold changed 10% or more from the previous weekly close. Footnotes: d - New 52-week low.
g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year.
The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. rs - Stock has
undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within
the last year. u - New 52-week high. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. Source:The Associated Press.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

3F

4F

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Important reasons why the world needs its entrepreneurs


How do you reduce poverty? Create
jobs? Develop innovative new products
and industries? One of the most important ways is to support entrepreneurs,
start-ups and small businesses. If you
think
that
small companies and startups
can
change
the
world, youre
not alone.
In SeptemRhonda Abrams
ber, the UnitGA N N E T T
ed
Nations
adopted a set
of Sustainable Development Goals, priorities for
the
next
15
years
(sustainabledevelopment.un.org/topics
). Its sort of a global to-do list. High on
that list was Goal No. 8 a commitment
to develop policies that promote economic growth and full employment, including those policies that support entrepreneurs and the growth of small and
medium-size businesses.
Now we have to do it, said Elizabeth
Gore, former Entrepreneur-in-Residence (EIR) for the United Nations
Foundation (unfoundation.org) and now
EIR for Dell (dell.com). We have to get
countries to focus on the policy recommendations and start implementing

them.
Getting that goal adopted took enormous effort. Michael Dell, the U.N.
Foundations Global Advocate for Entrepreneurship and founder and CEO of
Dell, helped create a global movement to
get
Goal
No.
8
adopted
(entrepreneursunite.com).
We had over 1.2 billion actions
around that movement, said Gore. That
demonstrated worldwide support for
government policies that help sustain
small and medium business.
I had a chance to see this commitment
firsthand last June, when I was asked to
moderate a panel of global entrepreneurs on the 70th anniversary of the
signing of the U.N. charter in San Francisco. In addition to Michael Dell, Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon joined us, addressing a core group of start-up entrepreneurs, urging them to mobilize their
fellow entrepreneurs to help support
new business formation globally.
According to Dell, the world needs
600 million new jobs by 2025 to handle
the growing working-age population.
Those jobs, he points out, arent likely to
come from big corporations like Dell,
but instead from entrepreneurs and
small businesses. As an example of the
kinds of government policies that can
help support entrepreneurs and build
new businesses, Gore points to crowd-

funding, which was adopted in the 2013


Title 2 JOBS Act.
Thats a $16 billion new source of
capital in the next two years, said Gore.
She said new policies like these can open
up greater opportunities for those who
may not have traditionally had the same
access to capital or markets. Sixty-five
percent of crowdfunding is going to
women. Thats a game-changer.
Nothing will build a country out of
poverty more quickly than jobs, said
Gore. And entrepreneurs create 70 to
90 percent of jobs worldwide. In turn,
that supports building a health infrastructure, leads to better governance,
and focuses on what people need to succeed.
Gore pointed out that entrepreneurs
not only create jobs, but change how
problems can be addressed and solved.
In the developing world, entrepreneurs are the ones who are monetizing
social solutions, instead of the traditional model of addressing social problems
by non-profits bringing in ideas from different countries, Gore said. Entrepreneurs see a problem, figure out a local solution, and find a way to make money
from that as well whether its waste removal, health care, education. Entrepreneurs are going to be the ones who help
us achieve all the other 17 U.N. goals.
Gore is particularly dedicated to help-

Harvest

Beth Rankin
makes pasta
sauce in the
commercial
kitchen at
McMinnville
Cooperative
Ministries.

Continued from Page 1F

farmer with potential off-season income during the winter,


plus theres no start-up cost for
the farmer because Rankin is
essentially being traded produce for the work. The model
that she has designed is great.
She gets to sell half of what she
makes and I sell half, Burger
said. It works really great for
because the farmer doesnt
have to put out any funds to get
it going, theres no start-up cost.
It makes it a lot easier on me,
Burger said.
Two wineries in the Mid-Valley, Soter Vineyards and Keeler
Estate Vineyard, also have
hired Rankin to create products
like sauces, salsas and jams for
them. She made table grape jam
for Keeler Estate and this year
will make pinot noir jam for
them.
Setting up Can-Do Real Food
wasnt an easy task. Rankin took
online classes from University
of California at Davis on food

ing women entrepreneurs.


Whether in Silicon Valley or Nigeria,
women put 90 percent of their income
back in to their community. Men put only
35 to 40 percent back in, she said. The
day women open their business they
start to think about their triple bottom
line (people, planet, profits).
What Im concerned about is the issues women face when opening their
business, said Gore. How they get access to capital. Its very different in different countries, whether its banking,
loans, venture capital, micro-finance. In
some countries women are not even allowed to have bank accounts without
their husband or fathers permission.
What can entrepreneurs do now to
drive support for global and U.S. policies
that will help them launch and grow?
The number one thing is to start talking about what they need get on social
media, use the hashtag #EntrepreneursUN, Gore urged. If you have a suggestion for a new way to tax, or what you
need for your talent pipeline. Its a platform to have entrepreneurs tell us their
policy needs.
Among Rhonda Abrams recent books
is the 6th edition of Successful Business
Plan: Secrets & Strategies. Register for
her free newsletter at Planning
Shop.com.
Twitter:
@RhondaA
brams.

The model that


she has designed
is great. She gets to sell
half of what she makes
and I sell half.

MICHELLE BURGER
Owner, Bethel Springs Farm

VICTOR
PANICHKUL /
STATESMAN
JOURNAL

processing and then got licensed from the Oregon Department of Agriculture. She
also had to negotiate a laborious
process of submitting recipes
for each product for review,

then making the product and


sending it to a lab so that it could
be tested before the states
Processing Authority at Oregon
State University gave her the
green light. Every new product

has to go through the same process.


To set up this business, its
costing several thousand dollars in training, insurance and
everything else needed to start

up the business, Rankin said.


Rankin and her husband attend McMinnville Cooperative
Ministries and volunteer with
others to help feed about 300
needy people every Saturday
from the churchs kitchen, the
same kitchen that she uses for
her business.
Rankin, whose husband, Graham, helps her, said shes finally
in the black. Rankin said shes
hoping to find more farmers to
partner with.
Its hard work, but Rankin
said enjoys it because of her
passion for local food.
Preserving the local harvest, thats what I like to think
of it as, she said. Its my companys tagline.

New auto safety technology


leaves some drivers confused
Joan Lowy
Associated Press

WASHINGTON Many Americans


buying new cars these days are baffled
by a torrent of new safety technology.
Some features will automatically turn
a car back into its lane if it begins to drift,
or hit the brakes if sensors detect its
about to rear-end someone else. There
are lane-change and blind-spot monitors,
drowsiness alerts and cars that can park
themselves. Technologies once limited
to high-end models like adaptive cruise
control, tire-pressure indicators and
rear-view cameras have become more
common.
The features hold tremendous potential to reduce deaths and injuries by
eliminating collisions or mitigating their
severity, safety advocates say.
But theres one problem: Education on
how to use them doesnt come standard.
Bewildered drivers sometimes just turn
them off, defeating the safety potential.
If people dont understand how that
works or what the car is doing, it may
startle them or make them uncomfortable, said Deborah Hersman, president
of the National Safety Council. We want
to make sure were explaining things to
people so that the technology that can
make them safer is actually taken advantage of.
The council and the University of
Iowa, along with the Department of
Transportation, are kicking off an education campaign Wednesday to inform
drivers on how the safety features work.
The effort includes a website, MyCarDoesWhat.org, with video demonstrations.
In a survey by the university, a majority of drivers expressed uncertainty
about the way many of the safety technologies work. About 40 percent reported that their vehicles had behaved in unexpected ways. The least understood
technology was adaptive cruise control,
which can slow or speed up a vehicle in
order to maintain a constant following
distance. That technology has been
available in some models for at least a
decade.
The features vary from manufacturer to manufacturer, from model to model, and from one options package to another.
Joe Kraemer, 70, a retired accountant
from Arlington, Virginia, said the first
time he drove his wifes 2015 E-Series
Mercedes he nearly jumped out of his
seat. He was beginning to change lanes
when suddenly there was a piercing
beep beep beep beep. ...
Now when that happens, his wife tells
him: Relax. Its just that you have somebody in your blind spot and youre about

DAN HUFF/AP

Insurance Institute for Highway Safety senior


research engineer David Aylor sits in the
drivers seat with an electronic display on the
dashboard on Oct. 1 at the IIHS Vehicle
Research Center in Ruckersville, Va.

to kill us.
Kraemers wife, who has been driving
for 50 years, has been back to the dealer
twice for hour-long lessons on how to use
the cars features.
Shes really learning a computer, he
said.
But as the technologies become more
available in lower-priced models, dealers may not be willing to spend as much
time with drivers as Mercedes has with
Kraemers wife.
Owners manuals also fall short, safety advocates say. They have become
documents written by lawyers for lawyers, said Clarence Ditlow, executive
director at the Center for Auto Safety.
From perhaps a 50-page understandable document 20 years ago, they have
gone to a 500-page opus that is intimidating to all but the most studious car buyer, he said.
Some manufacturers offer CDs or
DVDs on how to use safety systems, but
most of the time drivers dont actually
take the time to review them, said Peter
Kissinger, president of the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.
A study by the foundation of early
safety technology adopters found that
some drivers believed collision warning
systems would brake to stop their vehicles for them, when actually the systems
only alert drivers to an impending collision. Its still up to the driver to hit the
brakes.
Thats a dangerous scenario, Kissinger said.
Some collision mitigation systems, increasing in availability, do more than
warn, actually applying the brake if the
driver doesnt act quickly enough.
Ray Harbin, 67, AARPs state volunteer coordinator for driver safety
courses in Montana, said the frustration
seniors experience learning new-car
technology is similar to what they feel
when they are forced to adapt to software changes in computers like a new
version of the operating system.

Jobs

StatesmanJournal.com

Find a job:

Place an employment ad:

ONLINE
General 515

515

General 515

$800 to $1200+
Per Week
Weekly Paycheck
501 Agricultual 501 Agricultual
Full & Part Time
Were expanding our
HR Analyst 2
sales
territory & looking
Apply by 10/29/2015
for competitive people
Benton County is searching for an exceptional
HR professional to join our team! The ideal
who would enjoy workcandidate will have a track record of establishing
collaborative relationships, success in problem
ing with an awardsolving and contributing to innovative HR
winning sales team. If
programs, and a strong public service
orientation. We value personal accountability,
you enjoy working with
high ethical and professional standards, and a
great sense of humor!
people & are selfVisit www.co.benton.or.us
motivated
for more information and to apply.
Call: (503) 610-8428
We Need: People to market our
in-store & Special Event Promotions
for the:

TELLER
PIONEER TRUST BANK, N.A.
F/T TELLER POSITION
This solicitation is for services within the Sales Division of Circulation Promotions Unlimited Inc.
Qualified applicants will serve as independent
contractors, not employees.

Excellent customer service,


accepting deposits,
payments, check cashing. Ability to
handle cash
accurately, good communication
skills, follow
oral and written directions.
Salary $9.80 - $13.85, DOE
Outstanding benefits.
EEO/AA/MF/D/V
For complete job description & to
apply online go to:
www.pioneertrustbank.com

Willamette University is accepting applications


for the following positions:
Staff Positions
Associate Director of Health Services
Chief Information Officer
Director of Communications, Law School
Director of Digital Communications
Director of Marketing Communications, AGSM
Executive Support Specialist
Facilities Services Technician (swing shift)
Painter
Faculty Positions
Assistant Professor of Civic Communicatoin
&Media
Assistant Professor of English, African-American
Literature
Assistant Professor of Physics
Assistant Professor of Religious Studies
Faculty Position in Accounting
Faculty Position in Finance
Facutly Position in Operations/Supply Chain
Management

RN Assessment Coordinator

General 515

General 515

Adult Protective Services


Investigator
Community Counseling Solutions is a
501(c)(3) corporation serving Oregon in
Morrow, Wheeler, Gilliam, Grant, Harney
and Lake Counties. We are currently
recruiting for an Adult Protective Services
Investigator, Quality Assurance, and
Eligibility Determinations position for
individuals enrolled in Developmental
Disabilities programs. This is a combined
full-time position that will conduct
investigations, ensure the quality of
documentation as per the Oregon
Administrative Rules (OARs), as well as
determine eligibility to be enrolled in the
Developmental Disabilities program within
a 6 county area. Qualified candidates
must have a Bachelors degree in human,
social behavioral or criminal science and
two years of experience in human
services, law enforcement or investigative
experience, or an Associates degree in
human, social behavioral or criminal
science and four years of experience in
human services, law enforcement or
investigative experience. This individual
will investigate allegations of injuries,
abuse, and neglect, and will be
responsible to ensure protective services,
provide comprehensive reports of findings
and decisions of whether abuse exists,
and develop required actions to prevent
further abuse. This position will gather
and review documentation to determine if
individuals are eligible for the
Developmental Disabilities Program by
utilizing guidelines provided by OARs and
the Seniors and People with Disabilities
Services Division. Qualified candidates
must have excellent writing and computer
skills and be able to assist the Program
Manager in meeting the needs of the
community. Salary range is $36,700 $52,900 year, DOEE. Excellent benefit
package, including 401K. Apply online
and upload resume at
communitycounselingsolutions.org.
Positions open until filled. EOE.

Human Services
Specialist II/QMHP

send resumes to:


smackey@drvhome.com
EEO
dallasretirementvillage.com
377 NW Jasper St
Dallas, Oregon

Office Specialist II

General

General 515

Yamhill County Community


Support Services
Full-time position to
provide community-based
therapy and intensive case
management for individuals
with severe mental illness
and/or co-occurring mental
health and substance
use/abuse conditions.
$3889-$4434/month DOE.
Benefits.
Closes 10/20/15.
For info on
Job #CS15-077 visit
www.co.yamhill.or.us/hr
or call (503) 474-4901.
EOE.

Yamhill County Family & Youth


Part-time position (19 hrs/wk)
to provide excellent customer
service and demonstrate the
ability to learn procedures and
computer applications quickly.
The successful applicant will be
self-directed, detail-oriented,
and possess the ability to
work in a team environment,
interacting with coworkers
and the public in a courteous,
professional manner.
$11.72-$13.77/hour/DOE.
Closes 10/13/15.

Deputy County Administrator


- Yamhill County. Full-time
position to assist the County
Administrator in managing
operations of the County,
including, administrative
oversight, budget management,
supervision and policy
development. Requires B.A. in
public administration, business
administration, or related field
with five years of progressively
responsible management
experience involving fiscal,
personnel, & purchasing
administration. Public sector
experience preferred. Salary
range: $6,695 - $7,392/mo. DOE;
Excellent benefits. First review
of applications will be 11/16/15.
For info on
Job #AS15-067 visit
www.co.yamhill.or.us/hr or call
503 474-4901. EOE

515

General 515

Must have computer skills,


assessment skills, and MDS exp.
HIRE ON BONUS of $3000.00

For complete job announcements and to apply


online, please visit
http://www.willamette.edu/dept/
hr/employment/index.html
Willamette University is an EEO employer.

515

General 515

Office Specialist II
Yamhill County Adult Behavioral
Health Full-time position to
provide excellent customer
service and demonstrate the
ability to learn procedures and
computer applications quickly.
The successful applicant will be
self-directed, detail-oriented,
and possess the ability to
work in a team environment,
interacting with coworkers
and the public in a courteous,
professional manner. Salary:
$2033-$2391/month/DOE.
Closes 10/13/15.

For info on
Job #BH15-075 visit
www.co.yamhill.or.us/hr or
call (503) 474-4901.
EOE.

Probation Officer Aide


Yamhill County Department
of Community Justice
Full-time position to perform
professional corrections
casework, supervision
and managing activities of
adult misdemeanor and/
or felony offenders for the
Department of Community
Justice or court services.
$2391-$2786/mo. DOE.
Excellent Benefits.
Closes 10/16/15. For info
on Job #CJ15-076 visit
www.co.yamhill.or.us/hr
or call (503) 474-4901.
EOE

General 515

For info on
Job #BH15-074 visit
www.co.yamhill.or.us/hr or
call (503) 474-4901.
EOE.

General 515

General 517 Government 517 Government


Ofces
Ofces

Business Opportunity
The Statesman Journal Newspaper
is seeking applicants for

Newspaper Delivery
as independent contractors
in all areas.
Independent contractors should
have:
1. A reliable vehicle that is insured.
2. A valid drivers license.
3. Available to deliver newspapers
to residential areas in the early
morning hours, 7 days per week.
Our routes are designed to provide
part-time supplemental income to
qualified individuals looking for a
business opportunity.
Our routes have the potential to
profit up to $1000 per month,
depending on delivery area
and route size.
Please contact our hotline at

503-399-6827

General

OPEN HOUSE

521 Healthcare 521 Healthcare


Registered Nurse (RN)
Director of Nursing Services
Apply online at
www.marquiscompanies.com

Social Service Assistant


Dallas Retirement Village Health
Center is seeking a compassionate,
dependable and enthusiastic Social
Service Assistant to join our team.
The Social Service Department
assists to maximize the well-being of
each resident, and to ensure the
rights of each individual are upheld.
The ideal candidate has the desire to
make a difference in the lives of
seniors and a commitment to meet
the needs of our residents.
Qualifications: A minimum of a
degree in social work, human
services or a related field. Exp
working with people who have
dementia and an understanding of
the physical, mental, and
psychosocial changes associated
with the elderly population
Send resume to:
smackey@drvhome.com
EEO
377 NW Jasper St Dallas Or 97338
dallasretirementvillage.com

516 Customer 516 Customer


Service

Service

NOW HIRING CSRs


100+ positions available!
Apply today
Interview tomorrow
www.gofcr.com
517 Government 517 Government
Ofces

Ofces

Energy Services Coordinator


City of Monmouth has opening for a
candidate who displays superior
analytical, organizational, &
communication skills. Excellent
computer skills a must. Maintain
AMR system & energy efficiency
programs using City, State, &
Federal standards, practices, &
regulations. HS education, possess
valid OR drivers license.
Pre-Employment drug screening &
physical required. Detailed job
description & employment
application are available at:
www.ci.monmouth.or.us
An Equal Opportunity Employer

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Inside
Business

Every Sunday in the


Statesman Journal

HIRING EVENT

GREAT WAREHOUSE JOBS

WEEKLY PAYCHECKS & IMMEDIATE BENEFITS

The Phoenix Inn


4370 Commercial St SE
Salem, OR 97302
The Goodwill Job Connection
1605 Pacic Hwy SE
Albany, OR 97321
OR APPLY ONLINE:
IntegrityJobsStatesman.com
OR-0000369157

EARN UP TO

11

Planning Technician
City of Monmouth has opening for an
Electric Service Planning Technician
who can design, stake, & inspect
electrical layout of UG & OH
facilities. Variety of duties associated
with construction, routing, permitting,
easement acquisition, inspection,
mapping, design, & staking of
electrical power lines. AutoCad &
Excel experience essential. Direct
related experience in electrical utility
systems preferred. Perform all duties
in accordance with applicable MPL
practices & standards as well as
City, State, & Federal safety
practices & regulations. HS
education, possess valid OR drivers
license. Pre-Employment drug
screening & physical required.
Detailed job description &
employment application are
available at:
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or apply online at
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503-399-6789

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4560 SE INTERNATIONAL WAY STE


100 MILWAUKIE, OR 97222

Yamhill Community Care


At Yamhill Community Care Organization,
were looking for professional people that
are passionate about working together to
improve the quality of life and health of
Yamhill Community Care Organization
members. Positions available in
McMinnville, OR
Business Intelligence Specialist Bachelors degree preferred in analytic
field such as Finance, Economics,
Mathematics or related field with 3 years
experience within a healthcare setting
including progressively responsible
experience in the application of statistical
methods to the analysis of healthcare
data; or any work experience and/or
training that would likely provide the ability
to perform the essential functions of the
position.
Quality Oversight Specialist 3 years of experience in the coordination
of projects in a Health Plan or in a
program support role and experience with
regulatory activities; OR any work
experience and/or training that would
likely provide the ability to perform the
essential functions of the position.
Experience with Medicare and/or
Medicaid, provider networks and clinic
operations preferred.
For complete job description and to apply,
visit us online at:
https://career4.successfactors.com/career
?company=C0007187026P&site=VjItK0Z
qSkR1aEoxYWVoaDR2b2lXeEV1QT09.
Position may close at any time. EEO
We are an equal opportunity employer.
We evaluate qualified applicants without
regard to race, color, religion, sex,
national origin, disability, veteran status,
and other protected characteristics.

523

Professional

.50
/hr

NO HS DIPLOMA/
NO GED REQUIRED

When you apply: Please have ID proving your


on background check/drug screen. EOE.

All classied ads are subject to the applicable rate card, copies of which are available from our Advertising Dept. All ads are subject to approval before publication. The
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The Statesman Journal shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from an error in or omission of an advertisement. No refunds for early cancellation of order.

523

Professional

The Doctors Clinic is seeking an experienced


Laboratory Manager
Responsibilities include:
- Ensuring the efficient, compliant operation of
the physician office laboratory
- Managing lab personnel schedules,
performance, training, quality
Position requirements:
- Minimum 5 years experience as Medical
Technologist with ASCP or AMT(or equivalent); 3
years supervisory experience in a highly
automated and high volume laboratory preferred.
- Strong management and interpersonal skills
Full-time, days, salaried.
Salary commensurate with experience.
See detailed job description at
www.drsclinic.com
Submit resume to:
outsidecontact@drsclinic.com

529

General 515

5F

1-888-692-7340

sjjobs@gannett.com

CareerBuilder.com

Visit www.co.benton.or.us
for more information and to apply.

Place an employment ad:

BY EMAIL

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Trades 529

Trades

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
ASE Certified/ASE Master Tech
Signing & Relocation Bonuses
Available - Above industry wages
and benefits (DOE): $26 to $36 per
frh - MUST HAVE OWN TOOLS VALID ODL - PASS DRUG
SCREENING - 5 YEARS
VERIFIABLE EXPERIENCE IN
AUTO REPAIR.
Call Car Care Specialists:
541-996-6099 - Ask for H/R
Email resume:
carcareinc@earthlink.net

6F

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

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./012  3456789: ;;< = 5=>8?8=>8=74@ AB=8> 6=> A?8C678> DC6=EF5988 AD  3456789: ;;< 8CG9F5C8 67F6B6@ AH8I8CJ5E89 6=> 7F8 8CG9F5C8 67F6B6@ AH8I8CJ5E89 9@HKA4 6C8 C8L5978C8> 98CJ5E8 H6CG9 AD
AH8I8CJ5E89 AD H8C5E6: M=E<N OP64 AP95=L Q??AC7P=57@<

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

StatesmanJournal.com

CLASSIFIEDS

Rentalnder

503-399-6789

StatesmanJournal.com/rentals

SALEM - NORTH EAST

SALEM - NORTH EAST

SALEM - SOUTH

To get your listings on StatesmanJournal.com/rentals

IVANHOE SOUTH APARTMENTS


Choose from innovatively designed
2br/1ba, 1000sf, priv patio, dishwasher,
walk-in closet, Quiet apartment homes,
where cats are allowed. Surrounded by
luxurious spaces, sunlight, and wonderful
views, youll find unlimited possibilities to
reflect your lifestyle. $625 503-362-3217

Falcon View Apartments


Brook Hollow Apartments
BEAUTIFUL COMMUNITY
1&2 BR Apts. Gated Community
Washer/Dryer Hook-ups 24 Hr
Fitness Center Beautiful Grounds
Seasonal Pool Carport On Site
Management Playground
4154 Sunnyview Rd NE
503-585-5505

Ask About Our Specials!


Near Chemeketa Comm College
Easy I-5 Access
Water, Sewer, Garbage Paid
Dishwasher / Garbage Disposal
Washer/Dryer Hookups
Covered Parking, On-Site Manager
Please come visit us at 3800 Ward Dr
(503) 393-8385 or (503) 581-2485
2005grs@mail.com

Cozy Small Complex!


Washer/Dryer Hookups
Water, Sewer, Garbage Paid
Diswasher/Disposal/Microwave
Near W.U. Campus and Capital
821 Cottage St. NE
(503) 581-2485

"The Federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in


the sale, rental, leasing and financing of housing, as well
as discriminatory advertising, on the basis of RACE,
SEX, COLOR, RELIGION, NATIONAL ORIGIN, MENTAL or PHYSICAL HANDICAP, or FAMILIAL STATUS.
In addition to these categories, the State of Oregon also
prohibits discrimination based on MARITAL STATUS.
(Our local jurisdictions also have specific applicable regulations)"
"These laws cover any potential or actual sale, lease,
rental, eviction, price, terms, privileges or any service in
relation to the sale of or us of housing. The not only prohibit advertisements which clearly restrict access to
housing based on the protected categories, but also prohibit advertisements which indicate a preference for or
against a person based on a protected category. In particular circumstances, use of colloquialisms, symbols or
directions to real estate for sale or rent may indicate a
discriminatory preference."
"It is the intent and goal of this newspaper to have each
advertiser who wishes to place a covered advertisement
in the newspaper comply with the Fair Housing laws.
Any advertisement which is perceived to contain language contrary to these laws will be rejected or changed
to remove the offending reference. There may be situations where it is not clear whether particular language is
objectionable. Such advertisements should be referred
to a supervisor for consideration and determination. Under certain circumstances, advertisers may claim that because of the nature of the housing being advertised,
they are not subject to the Fair Housing laws. Such
claims are irrelevant for purposes of considering advertisements for publication in this newspaper. Every housing advertisement published in this newspaper is subject
to the Fair Housing laws"

Factory Homes Clearance Center, Inc. Located at


Hope Valley Resort. 8372 Enchanted Way Turner, Or
25

233

Homes 265
For Sale

GORGEOUS CRAFTSMAN 1618 Berkeley


Lane E Spacious and
flexible floor plan with
lots of large windows
971-304-6115

Acreage
For Sale

1-1/2 ac. level lot. 215 ft


on Stout Creek. Exc.
soil, half timbered.
Utilities. Septic appr.
$140,000. 503-859-2613

RENTALS
300

312 Apts For


Rent SE

StatesmanJournal.com/subscribe

Near Bush Park, WU &


hospital, 1 BR, super
clean, quiet, no pets or
smoking. $675/month.
503-364-4951/ 559-0953

Call Terri McArthur at 503-399-6630 or email tmcarthur@statesmanjournal.com

SALEM - NORTH EAST

FAIR HOUSING LAWS

Homes starting at 70k.


Call 503 371-0555 for your private tour.

To place an ad in the Statesman Journal

Chancellor Apartments

655

Finally Downsizing meets upscale living! In the heart


of the Willamette Valley is a private 69 +/- acre, gated
community with walking trail, shing pond, creek,
swimming pool, hot tub, tennis courts, dog park and
recreational center. Currently still under construction,
but we are offering homes for immediate move in and
pre-buy incentives. Visit our resort now and nd out how
you can become a part of our community.

Call Terri McArthur at 503-399-6630 or email tmcarthur@statesmanjournal.com

BE SEEN
with color!
503-399-6789

Classieds

FOUND: Diamond Earring


at Home Depot, S. end,
please text pic of matching
earring to claim.
541-213-9916

the Statesman Journal

734

& Supplies

DOWNLOAD
OUR FREE
APPS NOW

Bedroom set, Sleep by


Number bed, sofa &
loveseat. Stayton.
503-769-1121
Twin Sleep Number bed
& frame $200.
Moveable old time closet
with lockable doors 64"
high x 38.5" wide $100.
Davis treadle Sewing
machine (about 100yrs
old) $100. 503-569-8295

EXPERIENCE

ATTENTION
PET OWNERS:
WARNING!
Sometimes pets
are sold for
research without
your knowledge.
When offering your
animal for sale (or
free to a good
home), you may
want to verify the
name and address
of the person
answering your ad.

StatesmanJournal.com
/NewApps

Misc.
Wanted

721

CASH FOR DIABETIC


TEST STRIPS
Help those in need.
Paying up to $30/box.
Free pick-up.
Call Sharon 503-679-3605.

815

Estate 734
Sales

Estate 734
Sales

Youre
social?

811 Pet Food

Found 714 Furniture

Estate
Sales

So are we.

Pets,
Dogs

AKC English Bulldogs


The Best Pet Yet!
503-631-2555 or
503-730-3237

Hoarders Estate Sale - 2464 Percheron Ct SE 97317


3 Bedrm home & Garage loaded with mixture of Quality Antiques, Decor,
Bedding, Glassware, and Clothing. Due to the massive amount of items in
this home there will be a limited number of people allowed in the home at any
given time. Sign-up sheet starts at 7am. Must be present when doors open.
Parking only on Saddle Club Road. Fri & Sat 8:30-5. Sun 8:30-3.
See our FB Pg, Estate Sales by the Kleens for photos.

BE SEEN
with color!
503-399-6789

Classieds

Estate
Sales

734

Multiple Family
Garage & Estate Sale
8am-5pm - Sat & Sun
18270 Wheatland Rd NW
Get your local news delivered
StatesmanJournal.com/subscribe

Delivered to
you every day,
24-7-365
to your device.

737

StatesmanJournal.com

12F

The Mid-Valleys
Number
One
News and
Information
Website.

AKC German Shepherd


puppies: our bloodlines
make all the difference!
www.windridgek9.com
580-450-0232

Source: SiteCatalyst, 2010

Garage 737
Sales NE

Garage
Sales NE

Shih-tzu/poodle puppy,
1 F, black & white. 1st
shots, crate & potty trained.
$300. 503-428-1967

***HUGE MOVING SALE***


Sat & Sun Oct. 10 & 11, 9:00 to 5:00
4741 San Diego Dr. N.E. Salem, 97305
Home, Garage & Shed FULL!!! Complete household of very nice furniture, depression glass,
collectibles, holiday & lawn dcor, appliances, western
prints by local artist David Ewart. Every room full.
Many woodworking tools including Delta & Dewalt,
lumber & craft wood, Snapper mower, Craftsman tiller,
camping, workbench, garden/lawn care & tools, Hot
Tub w/enclosure, So much more. See details &
pixs on Craigslist Fri. after 7 pm. Directions:
Sunnyview to Brown Rd. to San Fran., East to San
Diego. See you there!

Serv ces

Join the
conversation.

DOWNLOAD
OUR FREE
APPS NOW

StatesmanJournal.com
/NewApps

Directory of Local

Place Your Ad

BY PHONE
503-399-6789 or 1-800-556-3975

Building, Remodeling & Repair


M D & D Construction
Serving our Neighbors since
1990
Building
Remodeling
Roofing
Siding
Painting
Kitchen/Bath
Handyman Free Est.
Decks
ADA Alterations
Windows & Doors
Home to Office Conversion
Custom Design & Building
Senior & Vet Discount
CCB # 69806

Drywall

************************
ALS DRYWALL, INC

Small Jobs - Our


Specialty
Free Estimate.
Licensed, Bonded
& Insured
CCB#121911
Call: 503-375-2113

Hauling

111111111

A-HAULER
Gutter Cleaning Special

Most Houses!
1 Story $65 - 2 Story $105
Most items recycled.
Any kind of Junk Removal
Pressure Washing Cleaning Svcs Rental Cleanouts
Residential & Commerical
Landscaping Materials
Scrap Metal Const Site
Cleanup Free Estimate
Gutter Cleaning

503-877-8252

***********

503-871-6155

Carpet Care & Cleaning

Elderly Care/Adult Care

House Cleaning

Carpet Cleaning
1 story $149

Home Healthcare
Provider Available

BRIGHT HOUSE

2 story home $249


Expert stain removal
Call for appointment...

503-371-8188

Licensed Bonded Insured

SENIOR & VETERAN DISCOUNTS

Was Director of Social Services for 9


years in a nursing home/retirement facility and also have experience as a CNA
in a nursing home setting.

Concrete Contractors

Concrete
Construction
Family Operated - We do the work.
Specialize in tear out, replace,
Driveway-Patio-Sidewalks
Broom Finish, Color Stamping &
Exposed.

Free Estimates
Web site:
www.danskeyconstruction.com
Pole/Barn Concrete Floor &
Construction

Danskey Construction LLC


503-871-4544 Cell
Or

503-982-1702 - Message
CCB #168267

Family owned & operated


Satisfaction Gauranteed!
Licensed

Enjoy working with the


elderly, adults & their families.

L Free Estimates L

FREE CLEANING when you


schedule: Weekly,
Bi-Weekly, Monthly
- Call for more details! -

Landscaping

Painting & Pressure Washing

Roofs & Gutters

Tinas

A. ELIES PAINTING

ROOFING &
SIDING EXPERTS!

Landscape Maintenance
* Lawn Care
* Natural Pruning
* Moss Removal
* Bark Dusting
* Organic Jobs
* Shape pruning
* Pressure Washing
* Gutter Cleaning
* Full Clean-up FREE Yard
Debris/Hauling
* Ongoing maintenance
Residential & Commerical

971-216-1093
www.tinaslandscapemaint.com
Metro CBL #9404

Landscaping

& CONSTRUCTION CO.

Quality Painting
Interior - Exterior
Residential
Commercial

Kitchen & Bath Remodels


Decking: New or Repairs
Texture & Drywall Repair
Siding, Tile & MORE
"No Job Too Small - Since 1980"
FREE ESTIMATES

Call or Text:

BBB Accredited
10 % OFF With This AD!
Lic., Bonded, Ins. CCB # 140917
www.salemroofcare.com

Plumbing

Roofs & Gutters

King and King


Inc
Siding, windows, roofing
all types, fences, decks.

Save 20% First Hour!


Plumbing Repairs:
Faucets, Toilets, Water Heaters,
Garbage Disposals
Pump Service:
Adjust pressure tank pressure, adjust
pressure switch, Check pump control.
Drain Cleaning
All credit cards accepted.

Lic, Bond, Insurance - CCB 156438

Yard Work

Painting & Pressure Washing

Roofs & Gutters

HANDYMAN

HOUSEKEEPING

MAID
FOR YOU

FAMILY MAN
PAINTING LLC

M D & D Roofing

service. Door & window


repair & replace. Shelves,
drywall & texture, gutter
cleaning inspect garbage
disposals, hand rails,
steps, property clean up
and debris removal, decks
build & repair, sheds,
insulation, duct repair.

Call David,
503-999-4585

Background Checks on All


Employees

503-391-4213

503-393-3808

CCB #195482

House Cleaning

CCB #164791.

Angies List Super


Service Award
09, 10, 11, 12, 13

Ask for Dan: 503-351-7162

Handyman

- Experienced - Licensed - Insured -

SENIOR AND VET


DISCOUNTS.

503-964-4844

503-884-3064 - Nadia

Serving The Greater


Salem Area

503-585-6008

Fully Insured - CCB #202316

Blue Lake
Clean Ups P Land Clearing
Mowing P Edging
Weed Control P Bark Dust
Commercial & Residential
Ongoing Maintenance
Free Estimates

All types Roofs & Siding


* 24 HR Leak Repair*
Clean * Treat * Repair *
Skylight Repair/Replace
* Membran * Flat Roofs*
* Re-side & Re-roof *
*Siding Repair/Replace
Vinyl*Cedar*Hardi Plank

(503) 900-0006

Please call: 503-580-6483

Locally Owned

Place Your Ad

Classieds.StatesmanJournal.com

Landscaping
& Maintenance

Looking for positions in Salem as private pay in your home.


Have a Bachelors Degree in Family
Studies/Gerontology

References and Resume


provided upon request.

.com

Home Cleaning

ONLINE

Specializing
in Repaints

F Lead-based Cerifited E

971-283-8053
Look for us on Facebook!

FREE ESTIMATES
x Senior Citizen Discounts! x
Licensed Bonded Insured
Residential Commercial
CCB#205395

Residential & Commercial


Reroof specialist
Composition Tearoffs
Cedar Shakes Tile
Gutters & Gutter Cleaning
Maintenance Contracts
Metal Roofing Skylights
Roofing Treatments
Guaranteed Leak Repairs
Free Est. Senior & Vet Discount
CCB # 69806

541-580-0482
503-877-8252

Personal Service Since 1988


Lawn Maintenance*Clean-Ups
Pruning*Trimming*
Barkdusting * Thatching *
Aerating * Pressure Washing *
Fall Cleanup * Leaves * And
More. Call for details.
Free Estimates
JPsLawn88@gmail.com

Yard Work

HAL/MARK INC.
A Christian Maintenance
Company that Cares!
Residential * Apartments *
Commercial * Field Mowing *
Bark-Aerating * Thatching *
Pruning * Shrub & Hedge Trimming * Cleanups * Spray for
Weed Control for Lawns &
Flower Beds * Also Yearly
Contracts *Free Estimates*

Call: 503-390-4426
halmarkland@comcast.net

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

'0%77-*-)(7

13F

  

   
 


24/7 Shop when you want, contact dealers by e-mail, and visit Cars.com anytime for cars in the Mid-Valley.

-90+(@

:(;<9+(@

:<5+(@

Get auto advice and check


out the latest trends.

Test drive a new car or nd


out the latest from Click & Clack.

Check out the new car section,


car gadgets and whats hot.

LOCAL RIDES

 
     
   

Outlet

Donofrios

MID-VALLEY CAR CLUBS

Statesman Journal

To submit or update club information, email


pbruce@statesmanjournal.com.

Open to any pre-1916 through 1927 auto enthusiasts.


Meets at 7:30 p.m. on the fourth Thursday of each month at
Marion County Fire Station No.1 on Cordon Road NE in Salem.

Salem Area Auto Council

WE CONSIGN RVS, CARS, AND TRUCKS

Bent 8 Street Rod Club


Salem
Contact:

(503) 362-3799, www.bent8.org


Meets at 6 p.m. on the first Sunday of each month at Walerys
Pizza on Edgewater Drive NW in Salem.

Salem
Contact: Jeff Foster, (503) 884-1906 or (503) 588-1932,
president@wvsr.org,
Meets the last Monday of each month at Capitol Chevrolet.

2002 CHEVROLET
IMPALA LS
4 DR SEDAN

Silver T Horseless Club

Salem
Contact: Jim

Ramsden, (503) 585-7311,


www.capitolareamustangclub.org
Meets at 7 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month at Walerys
Pizza on Edgewater Drive NW in Salem.

Capital City Corvettes


Salem
Contact: Glen

Campbell, (503) 970-5990,


batf169@msn.com, www.capitalcitycorvettes.com
at 6 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at Flight Deck
Restaurant in Salem.

Meets

Cherry City Bombers


Salem
Contact: Brian Taylor, (503)

510-3995,
cherrycitybombers@gmail.com,
www.cherrycitybombers.com
Meets at 7 p.m. on the first Thursday of each month at the Eola Inn
Rock-N-Rogers, 4250 Salem-Dallas Highway NW, Salem.

Chevelle and El Camino Club of Oregon


Stayton
Contact: Gene

Bolante, (503) 990-9000


gene@bolante, www.chevelles.net/oregon
Meets on the last Sunday of each month.Visit the website or call for
time and location.

Early Ford V-8 Club of America,


Mid-Willamette Regional Group
Salem
Contact: Bruce

Reynolds, (503) 364-7675


Meets at 7 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month at 990
Cordon Road NE in Salem.
Salem,Albany

and Jefferson
Contact: Ray Lancaster, (503) 362-7589
Meets for dinner and club business starting at 6 p.m. the first Thursday
of each month at the American Legion Post #10

Mopar Club and Pentastar Pride Club


Salem
Contact: Lee

Morgan, (503) 364-3569, geetex@aol.com,


www.pentastarpride.com
Meets at 7 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at Elmers
Restaurant on Lancaster Drive NE in Salem.

Northwest Vintage Car and Motorcycle Museum


Salem
Contact: Doug

Nelson, (503) 399-0647, dokayllc@earthlink.com,


nwcarandcycle.com
at 6:30 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month at vintage
Texaco service station at Antique Powerland, 3995 Brooklake Road
NE, Brooks.

Meets

OUR PRICE

Silverton
Contact:Wes Oster, (503) 873-2573,
www.silvertonflywheels.org
Open to all car enthusiasts.

4X4, V-8, 5SPD


MANUAL, AIR

Willamette MG Club

Salem
Contact:Terry Harris, (503) 393-3836,
chancellor@willamettemgclub.org,
www.willamettemgclub.org
Meets at 7 p.m. on the third Tuesday of each month at McNary
Estates Golf Club Restaurant, 155 McNary Estates Dt. N. Keizer.

6,995

OUR PRICE

STK# 158174A

Willamette Motor Club


Salem and Keizer
Contact: Chris Davie, (503) 873-4952, web@wmclub.org,
www.wmclub.org
Meets at 7:30 p.m. the third Thursday of each month at Round
Table Pizza at Keizer Station.

Willamette Valley Corvette Club

Salem
Contact:Tom Paddock, (503) 409-6115, President@willamettevalleycorvettes.com, www.willamettevalleycorvettes.com
Members must attend two meetings and two club events.
Meets the first Thursday of each month at Capitol Chevrolet.

Willamette Valley Model A


Ford Club of America

Salem
Contact: Beauford Averette, (503) 856-9675,
beauforda@comcast.net, www.willamettevalleymodel-a.org,
info@willamettevalleymodel-a.org
Meets the first Thursday of each month at the Mission Mill in
the Card Room.

Not available
Contact: Zach Steffen, (503) 302-9581, Obscure-1@live.com; or
Alex Thomas, (503) 798-3366
Membership is free. Call or e-mail for meeting information.

Salem
Contact: Louise Cookie Feskens, (503) 362-7157, cfeskens@
comcast.net
Meets at 7:30 p.m. on the first Wednesday of each month at
Marion County Fire Station No.1 on Cordon Road NE in Salem.

Willamette Valley Miata Club

Salem
Contact: Chris McCarty, (503) 851-1549, www.oregonmx5.com
Meets informally at 9 a.m. every Saturday at Subway,
5765 Commercial St. SE, Salem.

Salem
Contact: Jim Billings, (503) 930-7151,
jimz28427@comcast.net, www.obsoletefleetclassics.org

Oregon Pioneer Regional Group of Horseless


Carriage Club of America

Salem area
Contact: (503) 999-7400, community-2.webtv.net/suziep/
WillametteValley
Meets at 7 p.m. first Friday of each month (except January)
at Almost Home Restaurant on Market Street in Salem. Social
hour at 6 p.m.
Salem
Contact: Dave LeCompte, (503) 393-6330,WVSRHQ@gmail.com,
wvsr.org, www.wvsr.org
Meets the first Tuesday of each month at Pietros Pizza on
Hawthorne Avenue NE in Salem.

UNDER 5000

8,995

Buick
1998 Buick Regal GS
$2,950
Leather, Alloys, CD,
Moon Roof. $300 down
x $150x24mo,18% APR
On Approved Credit.
VIN#514548
Toy Co

Dodge

S
G
IN DO
H
T O
T

OUR PRICE

STK# 5289R

8,995

1940 MISSION STREET SE | Salem, OR

5 0 3 - 3 3 9 -7 3 5 6
Ford

Travel Tlrs & 5th Wheels


2006 Keystone
Copper Canyon
Sprinter 2991
Blowout price at
$11,995 + fees.
Rear living room, big
bath. VIN #226101,
Stock #P22834B. On Hwy 22, Exit-12
Power RV 503-769-1200 www.poweroregon.com

WE BUY USED
CARS & TRUCKS

1-800-307-4447
www.hillyers.com

GMC
1995 GMC Suburban
4x4
$2,950
Leather, Alloys, Roof
Rack. $300 Down x
$150x24mo, 18% APR
On Approved Credit.
VIN#736927
Toy Co

503-399-0771

Lulays will pay top dollar


certified vehicle!

2010 Dodge Grand


Caravan
$6,950
Rear air, CD, P.
Windows, P. Locks,
Roof Rack.
VIN#297904
Toy Co

503-363-3426

2002 Jayco Jay


Flight 26FBS.
Budget friendly at
only $6,995 + fees.
Awning, slide-out
front bed. VIN
#EE0105,
Stock #T1160A. On Hwy 22, Exit-12
Power RV 503-769-1200 www.poweroregon.com
2002 Carriage Cameo
SEL 29FKS. This
weekend only
$10,995 + fees.
Double entry &
front kitchen. Very
clean. VIN
#A04321, Stock #P23577. On Hwy 22, Exit-12
Power RV 503-769-1200 www.poweroregon.com

lulayscarconnection.net

503-399-0771

Saturn

2002 Saturn SC2


Coupe 3-Door
2005 Dodge Ram
$3,950
$31,000
1 Ton, 4Dr, set up for trailer options, diesel. Low Alloys, Sunroof, Spoiler,
milage. 503-930-9447
PW, P. Locks. $300
down x $200 x 24mo, 18% APR On Approved Credit.
VIN#167374
Toy Co 503-399-0771

Ford
1999 Ford Expedition
Eddie Bauer $3,950
Leather, CD, Custom
Wheels. $300 down x
$200 x 24mo, 18% APR
On Approved Credit.
VIN#A75405
Toy Co

503-399-0771

1994 Ford Taurus


$1,000 FIRM
127k+ mi. By appointment only: 503-362-3400
503-399-0771

6,995

WWW.SKYLINEFORDDIRECT.COM

for your clean, carfax

CALL BJ OR JIM
503-588-5000

OUR PRICE

STK# 158533A

4 CYL, AUTO, AIR


VERY NICE CAR!

$$$$

ACURA OF SALEM
503-588-5000 or
WE NEED
1-800-336-4148
GOOD CLEAN USED CARS
FREE APPRAISAL
TOP DOLLAR

4 CYL, AUTOMATIC
LOADED!

4 CYL, AUTOMATIC,
GREAT MPG!

Salem
Contact: (503) 363-2619, woodspokes@aol.com

Acura

2008 HYUNDAI
TUCSON GLS

2007 DODGE CALIBER


SXT SPORT WAGON

1995 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Z34 in great shape.


Power everything even seats, Low miles. Stage 2
chip, free flow exhaust, and K&N Filter. Tinted
windows, leather interior, great tires and wheels.
Might consider trade for blazer or pickup full size
4x4. Its a serious head turner. CarFax Available.
Reason Im selling, I have too many cars and
now live in apartments. $1800.00 or obo call or
text (503)560-0021 danielrumbold@hotmail.com

6,995

Willamette Valley PT Cruiser Club

OUR PRICE

STK# 148153A

Willamette Valley Model T Ford Club

Willamette Valley Street Rods

Obsolete Fleet Classics

4X4, 3RD ROW SEAT,


LEATHER, LOADED!

2012 FORD
FUSION 4DR

OUR PRICE

STK# 158760A

Obscure Imports

4,995

1997 FORD F-150


SUPERCAB XLT

Mid-Valley Cruzers Club

V-6, AUTO, AIR

STK# 158613A

Silverton Flywheels

25

Capitol Area Mustang Club

Silverton
Contact: Larry Brown, (503) 873-2738,
Meets at 7 p.m. on the first Monday of each month at Silverton
Realty.

2003 FORD EXPEDITION


EDDIE BAUER

Commercial Vehicles
1991 Freightliner
$6,500
450HP, Detroit joke
power, 10spd Road
Ranger, 5th wheel
cab guard . Runs well,
rebuilt head .
541-999-1572

2002 Alpenlite
Portofino 36RL
On sale now
$22,995 + fees.
3 slides, generator
and much more. VIN
#033511, Stock
#T1144A.
On Hwy 22, Exit-12
Power RV 503-769-1200 www.poweroregon.com
2006 R-Vision Trail
Cruiser 30BHSS
Only $11,005 + fees
Bunk House Model.
Great Condition.
Vin #707400, Stock
#T1165.
On Hwy 22, take Exit 12
Power RV 503-769-1200 www.poweroregon.com

Recreational Vehicles
1995 Fleetwood
Flair 27 Class A
Motorhome. Now
only $8,005 + fees.
Gas engine,
generator & low
miles. VIN #301655,
Stock #P23447. On Hwy 22, Exit-12
Power RV 503-769-1200 www.poweroregon.com

Discover local events with


Northwest Navigator.
Whether youre looking for something 0, 5,
10 or 50 miles from home, youll nd it here.
Sundays NW Navigator page brings you
events and day-trip ideas, all organized by
trip times from Salem and highlighted
on a map of the state.

Subscribe: 1-800-452-2511 or StatesmanJournal.com/subscribe.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

JOBS

14F

FOUND: 194 jobs for you!


See complete job descriptions at

ACCOUNTING

MEDICAL ASSISTANT

Search
S
hb
based
d on last
l t seven d
day lilistings
ti

AEROTEK

ACCOUNTANT

VANDERHOUWEN & ASSOCIATES,

SALEM

EXECUTIVE

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE CLERK

ACCOUNTEMPS

SALEM

DIRECTOR, OREGON DEPARTMENT STATE OF OREGON

SALEM

FACILITIES

ASSOCIATE FINANCIAL ADVISOR

KEYBANK

CORPORATE INTERNATIONAL TAX

SMITHFIELD FOODS INC

FACILITY CONTROLLER (MARION

COVANTA

FINANCIAL ADVISOR

EDWARD JONES (FINANCIAL ADV

SALEM

FINANCIAL ANALYST

ROBERT HALF FINANCE & ACCOU

HILLSBORO

MEDICAL BILLING SPECIALIST

ACCOUNTEMPS

PAYROLL CLERK
PAYROLL SPECIALIST
STAFF ACCOUNTANT

SMITHFIELD, VA

ACCOUNTEMPS
VANDERHOUWEN & ASSOCIATES,
ACCOUNTEMPS

BROOKS

CORVALLIS
THE KROGER COMPANY

CLACKAMAS

FINANCE

WILLIAMETTE UNIVERSITY

MEMBER SERVICES REPRESENTAT UNITEDHEALTH GROUP


YAMHILL COUNTY ADULT BEHAVI
YAMHILL COUNTY ADULT BEHAVI

GANNETT CO., INC.

SALEM

NURSE
FULL TIME HOSPICE ADMISSION

GENTIVA HEALTH SERVICES, IN

HOME CARE NURSE / RN / LPN

PSA HEALTHCARE

SALEM
OREGON CITY

OTHER
35F INTELLIGENCE ANALYST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

46Q PUBLIC AFFAIRS SPECIALI

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

68W HEALTH CARE SPECIALIST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

GRIFOLS

SALEM

CORPORATE INTERNATIONAL TAX


VA

MORTGAGE LENDERS OF AMERICA SMITHFIELD,

SALEM

OUTSIDE SALES / B2B ACCOUNT

FUTURE PAYMENT TECHNOLOGIES

SALEM

PARAMEDIC / LPN - SIGN ON B

SALEM

TELLER

PIONEER TRUST BANK, N.A.

SALEM

PRODUCER- PART TIME- WEEKEN GANNETT CO., INC.

SALEM

SALEM

GENERAL BUSINESS

TRANSFER STATION HELPER

SALEM

GRESHAM

BRANCH OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR EDWARD JONES (BOA)

OFFICE SPECIALIST - CUSTOM

SALEM

BUSINESS PROCESS / IMPROVEM KELLY SERVICES

ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGER

OFFICE SPECIALIST - CUSTOM

BREAKING NEWS REPORTER

HVAC MECHANICS
PLANT SERVICES / SANITATION

MEDIA - JOURNALISM - NEWSPAPER

SALEM

ADMIN - CLERICAL

EXECUTIVE SUPPORT SPECIALS

SANDY

DIRECTOR OF CLINICAL SERVIC

ALOHA

BROOKDALE

WILSONVILLE

REPUBLIC SERVICES

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
94E RADIO AND COMMUNICATION ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

RECRUITER/SALES MANAGEMENT AEROTEK

TIGARD

PROBATION AIDE - PROBATION

SALEM

RETAIL SALES ASSOCIATE (MAN

DENVER MATTRESS CO.

SALEM

PURCHASING - PROCUREMENT

SALEM

SENIOR BUSINESS ANALYST

APEX SYSTEMSRELOCATE TO SALT LAKE CITY, UT

SALEM

GENERAL LABOR

SALEM

CNC MILL MACHINIST

PRICING/ FINANCE ANALYST -

CLACKAMAS

YAMHILL COUNTY DEPARTMENT O

REDDAWAY

SALEM

TUALATIN

QA - QUALITY CONTROL
AEROTEK

WILSONVILLE

94Y INTEGRATED FAMILY OF TE

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

GENERAL LABOR-HEAVY INDUSTR INDUSTRIAL STAFFING SERVICE MCMINNVILLE

PC TECH AND TESTER

PROCOM

HILLSBORO

AUTOMOTIVE

GENERAL LABORERS

REGULATORY AFFAIRS SPECIALI

TALENT FINDERS, LLC

HILLSBORO

TIRE TECH 1

SALEM

GOVERNMENT

SENIOR QUALITY ENGINEER

TALENT FINDERS, LLC

NEWBERG

SALEM

11C INDIRECT FIRE INFANTRYM

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

LEBANON

TECHNICAL SUPPORT TESTER

TEKPARTNERS, A P2P STAFFING

31B MILITARY POLICE - POLIC

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

RESTAURANT - FOOD SERVICE

HILLSBORO

35T MILITARY INTELLIGENCE S

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

DIRECTOR OF DINING SERVICES

CENTURY PARK ASSOCIATES

HILLSBORO

42R ARMY BANDPERSON

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

RESTAURANT MANAGER

RED LOBSTER

PROFILED WASTE SALES MANAGE COVANTA

TIRE TECHNICIAN 1

GCR TIRE CENTERS


GCR TIRE CENTERS

BROOKS

BANKING
PERSONAL BANKER - HILLSBORO KEYBANK
PERSONAL BANKER - ORENCO

KEYBANK

CLACKAMAS

BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT

EXPERIENCED REPORTER- GOVER GANNETT CO., INC.

PROJECT COORDINATOR - HOME

GOVERNMENT - FEDERAL

BONAVENTURE SENIOR LIVING

SALEM

CONSTRUCTION

DESKTOP LEAD

12B COMBAT ENGINEER - CONST

HEALTH CARE

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

DALLAS

SALEM

HILLSBORO

WOODBURN
TIGARD

RESTAURANT MANAGER - CORVAL PANDA RESTAURANT GROUP INC

CORVALLIS

SALES
TEKSYSTEMS, INC

HILLSBORO

AFLAC BENEFITS CONSULTANT

AFLAC 2015

ESTACADA

AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN / MEC

FIRESTONE COMPLETE AUTO CAR

SALEM

68E DENTAL SPECIALIST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN / MEC

FIRESTONE COMPLETE AUTO CAR

GRESHAM

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR OF HEALT

WILLIAMETTE UNIVERSITY

SALEM

COUNTER SALES (RETAIL)

NAPA

GRESHAM

CONSULTANT

HOME CARE NURSE / RN / LPN

PSA HEALTHCARE

INDEPENDENCE

MACHINE OPERATOR (SALEM)

VENTURA FOODS

SALEM

REGISTERED NURSE - LACTATIO

HOME CARE NURSE / RN / LPN

PSA HEALTHCARE

SALEM

MGR DISTRIBUTION I (SALEM)

VENTURA FOODS

SALEM

CUSTOMER SERVICE

HOME CARE NURSE / RN / LPN

PSA HEALTHCARE

GRESHAM

RETAIL SALES MANAGER (ENTRY

SOFA MART

SALEM

92G FOOD SERVICE SPECIALIST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

LPN - SIGN-ON BONUS!

GRIFOLS

SALEM

RETAIL SALES REPRESENTATIVE

THE HERSHEY COMPANY

SALEM

ADMISSIONS REPRESENTATIVE -

ZENITH EDUCATION GROUP

SALEM

LPN LICENSED PRACTICAL NURS

LHC GROUP

SALEM

SALES EXECUTIVE- AUTOMOTIVE

GANNETT CO., INC.

SALEM

ASSISTANT STORE MANAGER - T

HANESBRANDS INC.

OUTPATIENT COUNSELOR

CONFEDERATED TRIBES OF SILE

SILETZ

SALES REPRESENTATIVE - WOOD

MARKETSOURCE

RESIDENT CARE COORDINATOR -

BROOKDALE

GRESHAM

TRAVELING EXECUTIVE DIRECTO

BONAVENTURE SENIOR LIVING

SALEM

THE DOCTORS CLINIC LLP

SALEM

12B COMBAT ENGINEER - CONST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

12N HORIZONTAL CONSTRUCTION ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

PROVIDENCE HEALTH & SERVICE

CLACKAMAS
ALBANY

MILWAUKIE

GRESHAM

CLAIMS ADJUSTER TRAINEE - S

PROGRESSIVE INSURANCE

CUSTOMER SERVICE - WORK F

SYKES

GRESHAM

CUSTOMER SERVICE - WORK F

SYKES

SALEM

42A HUMAN RESOURCES SPECIAL ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

SALEM

42A HUMAN RESOURCES SPECIAL ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

KENDAL FLORAL LLC


TEKPARTNERS, A P2P STAFFING

HELD DESK

TEKSYSTEMS, INC

SALEM

HUMAN RESOURCES

HELP DESK

TEKSYSTEMS, INC

SALEM

PAYROLL SPECIALIST - BILING

HOSPITAL VALET PARKING ATTE

TOWNE PARK

SALEM

SENIOR TRAINING SPECIALIST

LICENSED RELATIONSHIP MANAGE KEYBANK


RETAIL SUPERVISOR

GOODWILL INDUSTRIES

GRESHAM
SALEM

DESIGN
DRAFTER

AEROTEK

FPGA/RTL DESIGN ENGINEER

TEKPARTNERS, A P2P STAFFING

GRAPHIC DESIGNER

EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT PROFESSI

TIGARD
HILLSBORO
TUALATIN

WOOD VILLAGE

SCIENCE

CANBY
HILLSBORO

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

LABORATORY MANAGER

NEWBORN SCREENING AND GENER STATE OF OREGON

HILLSBORO

SKILLED LABOR - TRADES


15F AIRCRAFT ELECTRICIAN

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

31B MILITARY POLICE - POLIC

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

25B INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

88M TRUCK DRIVER

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

25U SIGNAL SUPPORT SYSTEMS

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

91B LIGHT-WHEEL VEHICLE MEC

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

91E MACHINIST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIANS / M

DON AADSEN FORD

FORD MASTER CERTIFIED AUTOM DON AADSEN FORD


OPERATIONS AND POLICY ANALY

STATE OF OREGON

RONAN, MT
SALEM

INSTALLATION - MAINT - REPAIR

GENERAL LABOR: START WORK W

SENIOR GRAPHIC DESIGNER

TEKPARTNERS, A P2P STAFFING

HILLSBORO

MAINTENANCE SHOP TECHNICIAN REPUBLIC SERVICES

SALEM

SENIOR VIDEO NETWORK ENGINE

TEKSYSTEMS, INC

HILLSBORO

91C UTILITIES EQUIPMENT REP

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

OWNER OPERATOR - CDL A TRUC

HUB GROUP TRUCKING

SANDY

WEB APPLICATION DEVELOPER

PROCOM

HILLSBORO

91D POWER-GENERATION EQUIPM ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

OWNER OPERATOR - CDL A TRUC

HUB GROUP TRUCKING

SALEM

DISTRIBUTION - SHIPPING

91F SMALL ARMS/ARTILLERY RE

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

RIVERBEND SAND AND GRAVEL -

OLDCASTLE MATERIALS

SALEM

CLAIMS EXAMINER (FULL-TIME)

REDDAWAY

TUALATIN

91G FIRE CONTROL REPAIRER

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

SERVICE TECHNICIAN

M-B COMPANIES, INC.

SALEM

DELIVERY DRIVER - $2000 HIR

DPI SPECIALTY FOODS

TUALATIN

91H TRACK VEHICLE REPAIRER

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

SPECIALTY WALK-IN BATHTUB I

PREMIER CARE IN BATHING

SALEM

FORKLIFT OPERATOR

DPI SPECIALTY FOODS

TUALATIN

91J QUARTERMASTER AND CHEMI ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

STRATEGY - PLANNING

94F SPECIAL ELECTRONIC DEVI

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

PROJECT COORDINATOR (TELECO SCOM

TUALATIN

FIELD SERVICE TECHNICIAN

EBARA TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

PROJECT COORDINATOR / LEASE

TUALATIN

PACKAGE DELIVERY DRIVER

UPS

PACKAGING ENGINEER

TEKPARTNERS, A P2P STAFFING

PART-TIME PACKAGE DISPATCH

UPS

WAREHOUSE MATERIAL HANDLER AEROTEK


WAREHOUSE SELECTOR-(3 OPEN

DPI SPECIALTY FOODS

HILLSBORO
TUALATIN
HILLSBORO
TUALATIN
HILLSBORO
TUALATIN

EDUCATION
ASSISTANT TEACHER

KNOWLEDGE UNIVERSE

GRESHAM

CENTER DIRECTOR

KNOWLEDGE UNIVERSE

TIGARD

CLACKAMAS

BORING

25L CABLE SYSTEMS INSTALLER

NIGHT SHIFT COMPRESSED WORK AEROTEK

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

RONAN, MT

HILLSBORO

INSURANCE
LICENSED RELATIONSHIP MANAG

NEXTGEN INFORMATION SERVICE

SUPPLY CHAIN
KEYBANK

MILWAUKIE

INVENTORY
INVENTORY CLERK

ACCOUNTEMPS

VALIDATION TECHNICIAN

TEKPARTNERS, A P2P STAFFING

92A AUTOMATED LOGISTICAL SP

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS
SALEM

92F PETROLEUM SUPPLY SPECIA

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

OREGON CITY

92Y UNIT SUPPLY SPECIALIST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

HILLSBORO

92Y UNIT SUPPLY SPECIALIST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

92Y UNIT SUPPLY SPECIALIST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

ALBANY

LEGAL
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

OFFICETEAM

CLACKAMAS

DEMAND PLANNER

CONFIDENTIAL

RELOCATE TO TILLAMOOK, OR

TUALATIN

SALES ASSISTANT

OFFICETEAM

WOODBURN

SR SUPPLY CHAIN PLANNING MA

JACOB GROUP

RELOCATE TO TILLAMOOK, OR

ALOHA

MANAGEMENT

DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS

EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT PROFESSI

LEAD TEACHER

KNOWLEDGE UNIVERSE

SCHOOL BUS DRIVER

FIRST STUDENT

MOLALLA

14G AIR DEFENSE BATTLE MANA

SITE DIRECTOR

KNOWLEDGE UNIVERSE

GRESHAM

MANUFACTURING

TEACHER

KNOWLEDGE UNIVERSE

GRESHAM

ASSEMBLERS-IMMEDIATE OPENIN ULTIMATE STAFFING SERVICES


FAB OPERATOR

AEROTEK

ENGINEERING

TRAINING
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

11B INFANTRYMAN - MANAGEMENT ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CLACKAMAS

11B INFANTRYMAN - MANAGEMENT ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

CORVALLIS

HILLSBORO

11B INFANTRYMAN - MANAGEMENT ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

WOODBURN

HILLSBORO

RN HEALTH COACH - FIELD BAS

KEPRO
EBARA TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

TUALATIN

12B COMBAT ENGINEER - CONST

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

FAB OPERATOR NEEDED

AEROTEK

HILLSBORO

TECHNICAL TRAINER

91C UTILITIES EQUIPMENT REP

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

MANUFACTURING OPERATOR

AEROTEK

HILLSBORO

TRANSPORTATION

91D POWER-GENERATION EQUIPM ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

STAFF/PROJECT ENGINEER II

GEORGIA-PACIFIC, LLC.

HALSEY

CLASS A CDL DRIVERS

GORDON TRUCKING

KEIZER

91H TRACK VEHICLE REPAIRER

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

WAREHOUSE

AEROTEK

TIGARD

CLASS A CDL DRIVERS

GORDON TRUCKING

GRESHAM

94F SPECIAL ELECTRONIC DEVI

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

SALEM

MARKETING

ELECTRICAL / ELECTRONIC ENG

EXPERIS

TUALATIN

SEATTLE

ENTRY LEVEL
11B INFANTRYMAN - MANAGEMEN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

GRESHAM

HILLSBORO

WAREHOUSE
SALEM

NOW HIRING FULL-TIME GENERA

AEROTEK

APPSTAR FINANCIAL

SALEM

PRODUCTION WORKER

AEROTEK

TUALATIN

TRAIL BLAZERS MARKETING INC

TIGARD

PRODUCTION WORKER SWING SHI AEROTEK

TUALATIN

DIGITAL SALES MANAGER - SAL

GANNETT CO., INC.

OUTSIDE SALES REPRESENTATIV


SALES CONSULTANT

CareerBuilder.com makes it easy for Capitol Auto Group to find quality employees. We are able to showcase what makes Capitol one of top 100 businesses
to work for in Oregon. The Statesman Journal provides
des stress free recruitmentt solutions that let us focus on our customers and cars.

Charley Engelfried

Testimonial

Customer Relations
Manager/HR Manager

25

If you are interested in posting a position on CareerBuilder, please call 888.692.7340 or e-mail at sjjobs@gannett.com.

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

15F

StatesmanJournal.com

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

WWW.POWEROREGON.COM

HASSLE FREE BUYING

YOULL ALWAYS DO BETTER AT POWER

POWER
O V ER 70 0 P R E- O W N ED AVA I L A BL E
SU P ER P R E- O W N ED
2015 GMC CREW CAB
4WD DENALI

$28,255
$2,472
$1,500
$750
$2,000

MSRP:
Power Discount:
Factory Rebate:
Sale Price:

Only 9,918 miles

$46,855

$21,533

1 @ This Price. VIN# 374940. License and title not included

$25,945
$2,417
$3,000

$20,528
$20,528

Final Price
Stock# G2106A, Vin# 130224

*1 at this price. VIN# 219834. License and title not included

1-877-461-9045 3675 MARKET ST., SALEM

Market St

LOOK FOR THE 60 FOOT AMERICAN FLAG

Market St

powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS powermazda.com WE BUY USED CARS

PRE-OWNED

POWER

1989 HONDA PRELUDE STK#K6449B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $999


2004 JEEP LIBERTY STK#N3366B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5995
1999 CADILLAC ELDORADO STK#P14186 . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6995
2005 AUDI A4 STK#P14093 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8995
2001 DODGE RAM 1500 STK#P14193 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9995
2013 CHEVROLET CRUZE STK#P13976 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$14995
2009 SUBARU FORESTER STK# M07249A . . . . . . . . . . . . .$15995
2011 NISSAN JUKE STK#M07125A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$16995
2012 KIA SPORTAGE STK#M07124A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$17995
2011 SUBARU LEGACY SKT#M07161A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $21995

NEW 2016 TOTAL SALES PRICE


$
Mazda
22,283
CX-5
MSRP: $22,950 Sale Price: $22,283 Discount: $667 1@THIS PRICE VIN#687133
NEW 2016 TOTAL SALES PRICE
$
Mazda6
22,662

MSRP: $23,815 Sale Price: $22,662 Discount: $1153 1@ THIS PRICE VIN#444680

NEW 2015
Mazda3 I
TOURING

866-980-5279

TOTAL SALES PRICE

19,576

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3230 Market St. Salem

powermazda.com

$889

1 AT THIS PRICE. VIN# 260252. MSRP $21,465,


Customer Cash $1000, Power Discount $889.

Art for illustration only. Prices do not include Title, License, Doc Fees, Prices
expire Mon. following publication. All prices and offers are good through 10/11/15.
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28

$4,225

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2015 KIA OPTIMA HYBRID

EPA
ESTIMATED

NOT YOUR AVERAGE


HYBRID

UP TO

$7,345

Beacon. On approved credit. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 449461. Model C3422. Expires 11/2/15.

40

10-year/100,000-miles limited powertrain warranty


5-year/60,000-miles limited basic warranty
5-year/100,000-miles limited anti-perforation warranty
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$16,450
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Model #11315 & #14115 In Stock. Stock #N2711. MSRP $18,300. Dealer Discount $1,850.
Sale Price $16,450. NMAC APR Cash $250. Customer Bonus Cash $500. Customer Cash $400.
On Approved Credit, All Tiers With NMAC Financing. Final Sale Price $15,300. Expires 10/19/15

Model #22815 & Model SL #22615 In Stock. Stock #3524. SL Rouge MSRP $34,290. Dealer Discount
$4,250. Sale Price $30,040. $250 NMAC APR Cash, $750 Customer Cash On Approved Credit, All Tiers
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Model #12115, #12215, & #12315 In Stock. Stock #N3540. MSRP $18,580. Dealer Discount $2,000.
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877-351-5689 | 503-581-3849 | www.powernissansalem.com


2755 Mission St SE | SALEM

SA
LE

CASCADE HWY

Power
Chevrolet

LET
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expire Mon. following publication.

NEW 2015 ALTIMAS


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Model #13215,Stock #N3314 MSRP $26,150.Dealer Discount $4750.Sale Price $21,400.NMACAPR Cash $750.Customer Bonus
Cash $500.Customer Cash $1500.If FinancedWith NMAC OACAllTiers.Final Sale Price Is $18,650.00WithAll Combined Incentives
NMAC On Approved Credit And Dealer Discounts + Dmv/Fees.Vin#S 425668, 870720, 497600 and 567337 . Expires 10/19/15

Offers end 10/19/2015. Prices expire Monday following publication.


Art is for illustrations purposes only. All vehicles subject to prior
sale. Tax, license, title and registration processing fees extra.
Incentives are subject to change without notice.

NEW 2015 CHEVROLET MALIBU LTZ

8000 OFF MSRP!

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503-769-7691

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Vin 081122. Model Z5222. Expires 11/2/15.

-$2,500 IF FINANCED WITH KMF*

34

HWY
MPG

22,950

MSRP $27,495. Sale price after $4,545 Power Discount, $2,500 Cash Rebate & *500 Owner Loyalty or Comp Bonus. *Must currently own

UP TO

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POWERKIA.COM

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TECHNOLOGY

19,950
$
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1 AT

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HWY
MPG

OFF MSRP!

EPA
ESTIMATED

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580+ Beacon. On approved credit. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 843332. Model 42222. Expires 11/2/15.

MSRP
SRP $18
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645 Sale price after $2,945 Power Discount & *$1,750 KMF Bonus Cash. *Must finance with KMF to receive. Tier 1-8. 580+

2015 KIA OPTIMA

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-$1,750 IF FINANCED WITH KMF*

39
HWY

$4,695

7,500

OFF MSRP!

15,700
$
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EPA
ESTIMATED

AUTOMATIC

PERFECT FOR THE


ROAD AHEAD

UP TO

Beacon. On approved credit. 1 at this price. DMV & dealer admin fee not included. Vin 831771. Model B1511. Expires 11/2/15.

UP TO

POWERKIA.COM

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2016
016 KIA FORTE

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VERANO

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Customer Cash

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thi price
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d ffee.

www.powerchevrolet.com

500 SW Sublimity Blvd, Sublimity Just minutes east of Salem on Hwy 22 in Sublimity
Prices expire Monday following publication. Art for illustration only. Prices do not include Lic, Title,
Doc Fees. Prices expire Mon following publication.

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL

OCTOBER 11, 2015 SECTION U

E1

SUNDAY

Contours like a
Kardashian, 3D

Discover a new side of


Chicagos South Side, 4D

GREGG DEGUIRE, WIREIMAGE

MATTHIAS MERGES

MOVIES

CALENDAR
Plan your week in entertainment with these highlights and
pop-culture milestones.

MONDAY
Watch: Fargo is back on,
dont cha know? The second
season on FX (10 p.m. ET/PT) will
feature Ronald Reagan and a
cast that includes the likes of
Ted Danson, Kirsten Dunst and
Jesse Plemons.

CHRIS LARGE, FX

SPIELBERG
BUILDS A
BRIDGE TO
COLD WAR ERA
The
master
of stories
adds
to his
mythos
with
latest
lm

TODD PLITT,
USA TODAY

Brian Truitt
USA TODAY
NEW YORK

Listen: Demi
Lovatos fth studio
album Condent
is just that.

or a few weeks lming


the new Cold War
drama Bridge of Spies,
British actor Mark
Rylance would show
up in the morning to
nd director Steven
Spielberg already hard at work after yet another sleepless night.
One day, Rylance inquired
about the cause of the Oscar-winning lmmaking legends insomnia. Spielbergs reply: Because
I dont know what this lm is
about yet.
Of course he knew what the
lm (in theaters Friday) was
about. Hes Steven Spielberg,
after all. But, it was that moment when Rylance, an Emmy nominee for PBS
Masterpieces Wolf Hall,
saw the director as akin to
a classic Greek playwright: When most of
us are dreaming, his
soul wont rest because
hes searching for some
essential thing.
Spielbergs hunt to
tell a variety of great
myths, iconic plot lines
and historical revisits
has been going on for
more than 40 years and
has touched generations of
moviegoers, with the adventures of Indiana Jones, the
box-office-chomping monsters
of Jurassic Park and Jaws, aliens
both benevolent (Close Encounters of the Third Kind) and malevolent (War of the Worlds), and

Compiled by Alexandra Korba

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2U

TUESDAY
See: Its been 45 years since
Mary Richards walked into the
lives of audiences everywhere.
PBS is honoring the anniversary
with a new documentary,
Mary Tyler Moore: A
Celebration. Catch it at 8 p.m.
ET/PT on PBS (times may vary).

WEDNESDAY
Watch: Season 2 of the MMA
drama Kingdom isnt holding
back. The series, starring Nick
Jonas, Frank Grillo, Kiele Sanchez, Matt Lauria and Jonathan Tucker, airs 9 p.m. ET/PT on
the DirecTV Audience Network.

THURSDAY
Watch: The third season of
Nathan for You premieres on
Comedy Central. The docureality series follows Canadian
comedian Nathan Fielder.
Tune in to Comedy Central at
10 p.m. ET/PT to catch the antics.

FRIDAY

USA SNAPSHOTS

Id lose
my head if

3%

of hotel guests have left


behind false teeth or
hearing aids.

Source G6 Hospitalitys Motel 6 Items


Left Behind survey Aug. 25-Sept. 1 of
1,060 U.S. adults
TERRY BYRNE AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY

JAAP BUITENDIJK, DREAMWORKS

Tom Hanks and Amy Ryan become targets in Bridge.

ENTERTAINMENT FLASHBACK

40 years ago from New York, its Saturday Night!


Jayme Deerwester
@jaymedeerwester
USA TODAY

It feels as if weve been celebrating the 40th anniversary of


Saturday Night Live for a year
now. In fact, NBC aired an anniversary special in February. But
the sketch series actually premiered on Oct. 11, 1975. So go
make yourself a cheeseburger
and a Pepsi (no Coke!) and lets
look back at the rst episode.
WITH YOUR HOST, GEORGE
CARLIN: The comedian emerged

from the audience, rather than


from backstage, to deliver SNLs
very rst monologue, in which he
talked football. Football wants to
be Americas No. 1 sport and I
think it already is, he argued.
Football represents something
we are: Europe Jr. We play the
Europe game. What was that?
Lets take their land away from
them! Thats what football really
is: a ground acquisition.
WHO SAID THAT? Chevy Chase

was the rst person to utter the


shows signature line, Live from
New York, its Saturday Night!

HERB BALL, NBC

George Carlin delivered SNLs very


rst monologue.

NO HURRY: Talent manager Bernie Brillstein told the authors of


Live From New York: The Complete Uncensored History of Satur-

day Night Live that John Belushi


almost didnt make it on air because he didnt sign his contract
until ve minutes before the
show went live. Good thing he did
sign, or else we wouldnt have
heard him say ...

rett Morris) broke into a couples


(Belushi and Gilda Radner) home
to sell them on Trojan Horse
Home Security, whose products
included tactically positioned
lawn mines and toilet bowl
piranhas.

I WOULD LIKE TO FEED YOUR


FINGERS TO THE WOLVERINES:

ATTACK OF THE KILLER BEES:

The classic line came from the


cold open, in which Belushi
played an immigrant repeating
lines spoken by his ESL teacher.

NBC told producer Lorne Michaels to kill the bees but he ignored them and the shows rst
recurring characters were born.

HAVE YOU GOT $499.99? Entre-

HERE HE COMES TO SAVE THE


DAY: Andy Kaufman lip-synced

preneurs (Dan Aykroyd and Gar-

the Mighty Mouse theme.

2U

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E1

CELEBRITY SUPERLATIVES

Clinton hits high;


Rose hits back
USA TODAYs Alexandra Korba digs through the latest
celebrity news for highlights ... and lowlights. Think high
school yearbook superlatives if Hillary Clinton and
Amy Schumer were your classmates.
FUNNIEST HILLARY JOKE:
HILLARY CLINTON

Impersonator Kate McKinnon met real-life


dopplegnger Hillary Clinton on the season
premiere of Saturday Night Live. The presidential candidate played a bartender named
Val who chatted with McKinnons Clinton
on the trials of running for president, the
Keystone XL Pipeline and Hillarys (perceived
slow start on) advocacy for gay rights. Most
notably, there was talk of mounting Donald Trumps
hair on the wall of the Oval Office.
JAAP BUITENDIJK, DREAMWORKS

Bridge of Spies (starring Tom Hanks) was personal for the Cold War-era raised Spielberg, who
worried about someone overhearing his family speaking Russian and Yiddish.

No plans to slow down


v CONTINUED FROM 1U

retro tales such as Saving Private


Ryan and Schindlers List set in
important time periods.
His most recent feature, 2012s
Lincoln, reminded Spielberg, 68,
of his love for history and country, while his latest showcases the
courage of a man who simply
wants to do the right thing.
Based on real events in the
1950s and 60s, Bridge of Spies
stars Tom Hanks as New York
insurance lawyer James B. Donovan, who is asked by the government to defend alleged Soviet spy
Rudolf Abel (Rylance) when hes
found and arrested in Brooklyn.
Everyone, from Donovans wife
(Amy Ryan) to his law partner
(Alan Alda) to his kids, doesnt
think its a good idea. But constitutional justice is important to
Donovan, even at a time when the
Red Menace fueled American
paranoia and to stand up publicly for a trained enemy was a dangerous thing to do, Spielberg
says. Even with differing ideologies, Donovan and Abel forge a
friendship. Later, Donovan brokers a trade in East Germany for
captured U-2 pilot Francis Gary
Powers (Austin Stowell) and
jailed American student Frederic
Pryor (Will Rogers).
Because an audience spends
two-plus hours with Donovan, its
hard not to internalize his struggle. And reecting on his own life,
Spielberg recalls he has needed
that kind of tenacity when he has
run into those times where everyone warned him off certain
movies.
You really test yourself when
everybody says this is not a good
choice and you persevere, says
Spielberg, dressed comfortably
this warm fall day in a purple
shirt and gray vest paired with
jeans and red-and-blue sneakers.
The greatest satisfaction is when
all the naysayers are proven
wrong, and of course the worst
feeling is when the naysayers
turned out to be right.
But in either case, right or
wrong, I need to make these decisions in concert with myself. I
cant tell somebody elses story if
I dont believe in the story.
His biggest victory over critics?
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, the
1982 family classic that several
studios turned down because everybody thought we were making
a Saturday-morning cartoon
show, Spielberg says, letting out
a proud chuckle.
George Lucas went through
the same thing on Star Wars because everyone thought he was
crazy to do a space opera like
that. You have to listen and you
have to weigh it and the decision has to be made from the
place all honest decisions are
made, which is as deep as it can
be found.
There is one scene in Bridge of
Spies reminiscent of E.T., although instead of a little boy riding a bicycle with a basket
carrying an alien who wants to
phone home, its a pair of kids riding through a long hallway delivering mail as Donovan looks on,
waiting for a meeting in East
Berlin.
Spielberg insists hes not referencing himself. Instead, he wanted a way for people to get
correspondence from one end of
the corridor to another quickly. I
just thought about efficiency, and
Germany is known for their
efficiency.
Ryan was impressed with the
similar
ingenuity
Spielberg
showed crafting a courthouse
scene with Donovan and Abel. In
the lm, the case has caused a lot
of hubbub and a lot of grief for

MOST INTENSE
HALLOWEEN PREP:
HEIDI KLUM

Heidi Klums Halloween costumes have


become the stuff of
legend. In the past, the
supermodel has worn
spooky ensembles
ranging from an
anatomically correct muscle suit to
an elderly version
of herself and
even a couples
costume in honor
of Planet of the Apes. This
year, Heidi has teased her
fans with an Instagram
photo showing herself in
a full body cast with the
caption Its almost time
for my favorite holiday!
We are equal parts excited
and terried to see what
Klum has in mind for the
31st.

MOST BANK ON A BOOK


DEAL: AMY SCHUMER

Amy Schumer is slowly but


surely on her way to a world
(or at least Hollywood) takeover. After an Emmy win and
news that she is collaborating
with Jennifer Lawrence on a
lm, the star recently landed an
$8 million book deal with Simon
& Schuster. Because a starlet is
nothing without a little drama, this
new deal replaces Schumers earlier
$1 million agreement with HarperCollins,
which reportedly hired another writer to help Schumer polish the
prose and punch up the humor. They should have known better.
TODD PLITT, USA TODAY

the lawyer and his family and speaking in rapid Russian and
Ryan remembers a sequence Yiddish and turn them in to the
where the Donovans are rushed FBI.
out of the building with photograI thought, Is there going to be
phers ash bulbs on the oor ev- a knock on the door? Is that going
erywhere. The camera was to be the end of the Spielbergs?
positioned at oor level to show he recalls with a laugh.
The Spielberg clan has grown
the glass as its crushed by trampling feet while also acting as a exponentially since then, though
cinematic metaphor for the chaos the households gotten a little less
busy lately as the directors sevof the time.
He was so excited about it, enth child, 18-year-old daughter
Ryan says of Spielberg. You just Destry, is the last to go off to
got this glimpse of maybe thats college.
what he was like (as) an 8-yearHes putting that extra free
old making lms in his backyard. time, as well as a newfound burst
That love of telling stories of creative energy, to work. Hes
through lm doesnt seem to have currently doing an adaptation of
ever escaped him or tarnished or Roald Dahls fantasy childrens
seem jaded.
book The BFG in theaters July
Spielberg admits that every 1, and starring Rylance as a large,
movie hes ever directed even friendly giant and the director
ones with globe-trotting archae- starts production on the videoologists and hungry sharks be- game adventure Ready Player
came very personal to him. And One in June.
It just seemed like a way to
Bridge of Spies actually started
that way, given the Cincinnati- not have an empty nest. Fill it
born Spielberg grew up during with movies, Spielberg says.
the Cold War
Plus,
era, when airthough his
raid
drills
kids are all
were a part of
building
their
own
daily life and
lives, they
he knew to
all
come
duck and covhome
er in the event
anyway!
of a white
He gures
atomic ash.
that
not
The direcworking has
tor added a
always taken
scene in Spies
more energy
where Donoaway
than
vans son lls
actually
bathtubs with
Filmmaker Steven Spielberg
working, and
water in the
event of a nuclear war. Its exactly even though Spielberg may be
what a 15-year-old Spielberg did past retirement age, Rylance sees
in October 1962 during the Cu- a man whos as fascinated by life
ban missile crisis when he as he was ever was.
Thats the great genius of his:
lled not only two tubs, but also
four sinks and an outside rubber In the center of a multibillionwading pool because I thought dollar industry and with all these
the end of the world was a few experts around him, hes predays away.
served an innocence and a love
There was another cause for for what he does, the actor says.
the future lmmakers worries:
If they ever invent something
His grandparents and great- that allows someone to live 1,000
grandparents were Jews from years, I vote for Steven to be the
Russia and Ukraine, and Spiel- one they give it to. Hed make the
berg was concerned that some- most of it.
one would overhear his family

I need to
make these
decisions in concert
with myself. I cant
tell somebody
elses story if I
dont believe in
the story.

BIGGEST GIRL-POWER MOMENT: AMBER ROSE

Walk of shame, be gone.


Amber Roses foundation held
its rst SlutWalk in downtown
L.A. to raise awareness for
issues of sexual violence,
gender inequality, shaming and
victim blaming against women.
Roses inspiration to get the
event started stems from
derogatory comments made by
Kanye West about his past
relationship with Rose. Not
one to go down without a ght,
Rose started SlutWalk to help
ensure other women wouldnt
go through the same shaming.
You go, girl.
WIDEST RANGE OF TALENT: LADY GAGA

The woman really can do it all and do it well. Famous for her overthe-top musical performances and outlandish outts, the
singer has toned down the wardrobe department recently, opting instead for a series of super-elegant gowns as
she adds actress to her rsum. But never fear, little
monsters: Her debut on FXs American Horror Story:
Hotel promises to have all the same outrageous Gaga
elements we know and love. With a little more gore.
CLINTON BY JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES; KLUM BY VICTOR BOYKO, GETTY IMAGES, FOR
HARRY WINSTON; SCHUMER BY MARK DAVIS, GETTY IMAGES; ROSE BY AMANDA
EDWARDS, WIREIMAGE; GAGA BY GREGG DEGUIRE, WIREIMAGE

Corrections & Clarifications

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

John Zidich

USA TODAY is committed


to accuracy. To reach us,
contact Standards Editor
Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com.
Please indicate whether
youre responding to
content online or in the
newspaper.

EDITOR IN CHIEF

David Callaway
CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER

Kevin Gentzel
7950 Jones Branch Dr., McLean, Va. 22108,
703-854-3400
Published by Gannett
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PUZZLE ANSWERS

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E1

FASHION

3U

HIGHLIGHT YOUR EDGES.

Grab some
kickin kontours
Though the art of adding highlighter and shadow as a
way to enhance or minimize facial features has been
around for decades, the Kardashians definitely put
contouring back on the map by posting to social media
about the makeup trick, says makeup artist Patrick Ta,
who regularly works with the family.
But you dont need to be a reality TV star with a
professional makeup artist to get the look. Ta shares
some tips with USA TODAYs Carly Mallenbaum:
JUST USE BRONZER.

By using a lighter-than-normal shade of foundation or concealer


on the bridge of your nose and the tops of your cheekbones (as Ta
does for clients Kourtney Kardashian and Gigi Hadid), youll make
those features appear slimmer. Be sure to blend the highlighter
into your skin with a brush.
Kourtney Kardashian, left, doesnt
like as much makeup as the rest of
the family, says Ta, but I contour
her nose and cheekbones for
photographs.

SEPHORA

Sephoras Highlight
Lowlight Face
Contour Duo, $20,
can be applied
directed on the face
and then blended
with a brush.

Before investing in a number of other products, just


use a bronzing powder on
the halo of your forehead
and under your chin (as
Ta does for the pregnant
Kim Kardashian, who
wouldnt mind appearing a little thinner). Its
an effective contouring
method.

Some compacts,
like Make Up
For Evers Pro
Sculpting Duo,
offer both
highlight and
lowlight colors,
$39.

MAKE UP FOR
EVER

Kendall Jenner
(right) is another client of Tas.
JAMIE MCCARTHY,
GETTY IMAGES

PAUL ARCHULETA,
FILMMAGIC

Kim Kardashian (above)


has great cheekbones
already, says Ta, so the
makeup artist focuses on
contouring a little on her
forehead, nose and under
her chin.

USE A TINY BRUSH


FOR THE NOSE.
For shading
the nose, Ta
recommends
Macs blending
brush, $25.

MAC

MAC

If you contour the wrong way, the


nose can actually appear longer, Ta
warns. To avoid that result, make
sure to use a very small brush to put
a light shade of makeup in a skinny
line in the center of the nose, surrounded by darker, blended shades.

If you use only


one product,
Ta suggests
Mac bronzing
powder in Matte
Bronze, $26.

Ta sticks with
inexpensive
Up & Up wipes
to remove
makeup, $3.59.

SWITCH TO CREAM
ONLY WHEN YOURE
READY.
Though shading your face with
creams can create a better
on-camera look than powder,
its difficult to do well, even
with an angled blending brush.
With cream, expect adding 10
minutes to your makeup
routine, he says, and he
advises not using a full-face
contour as an everyday look.

The Sephora Pro


Contour Blender
Brush is meant
for shaping
cheekbones and
foreheads, $34.

SEPHORA

TARGET

TAKE IT OFF.
Use setting powder to keep your
makeup on all evening, and then
take it all off for bed! Ta recommends Targets Up & Up wipes.

GREGG DEGUIRE,
WIREIMAGE

HEALTH

Schoolchildren get into stand-up act


Whether
it helps
pupils
focus or
merely
burn off
energy,
standing
at school
is on a
test run

Karen Weintraub
Special for USA TODAY

By now, most adults have gotten the message that slumping in


a desk chair all day long isnt very
healthy. Over the past ve years,
standing desks have gone from an
office oddity to a staple.
So it should come as no surprise that companies that make
standing desks are now looking to
get more students standing. Ergotron of St. Paul, for instance, has
donated its standing desks to ve
classrooms across the country
hoping to spark more interest in
their products.
It certainly worked that way in
the Belle Terre Elementary
School in Flagler County, Fla.
Fourth-graders and their teacher,
Melissa Nelson-Irving, became
huge standing-desk boosters after
trying them out.
When I rst heard of it, I was
wondering would it help me?
Would I be tired? said now-sixth
grader Emma Kalcounos.
But it didnt take long for her
to get excited about her standing
desk. It helped me get more focused, said Emma, a soccer buff
who also loves math. Instead of
being exhausting, standing most
of the day makes me more alert
and ready for the next thing.

My students are more


engaged, alert, on task
much more so than when
theyre sitting.
Teacher Melissa Nelson-Irving

Emma also liked being able to


adjust the desk to her height. The
wheels made it easy for the kids
to rearrange their desks into
groups for projects and into different shapes when they studied
geometry.
Teacher Nelson-Irving, who
has now moved up to fth grade
along with the $500 apiece
desks said shed experimented
with a variety of approaches over
the years to keep her students engaged and awake.
Kids need to be up and mov-

ERGOTRON

ing, Nelson-Irving said. Rather


than creating chaos, as some
teachers fear, standing helped her
students pay attention, she said.
The ones who typically invented
reasons to get up out of their
seats to go to the garbage can,
pencil sharpener or bathroom
stopped needing excuses to move.
My students are more engaged, alert, on task much
more so than when theyre sitting
in traditional desks and groups,
Nelson-Irving said. The freedom
that these desks has given me in
my classroom is just the best.
The scientic support for
standing desks is still catching up
to the anecdotal evidence.
Its not yet clear whether
standing at school improves a
childs performance or health,
said Stuart Biddle, a professor of
Active Living & Public Health at
Victoria University in Melbourne,
Australia.
Early studies into standing
desks have shown that the students like them, even if they dont
end up boosting health or grades.
It also stands to reason, Biddle
said, that getting into the habit of
standing as a child will offer
benets in adulthood.
We need to create an attrac-

tive environment that pushes and


pulls you into different forms of
posture, not just sitting, he said.
When you sit down, the whole
body shuts down and its much
easier to get poor levels of concentration.
People who stand are more
likely to move, shifting from one
foot to the other, standing on
toes, leaning forward and back.
Youre more physically aroused
and therefore more psychologically aroused, Biddle said.
That doesnt mean kids or
adults need to avoid chairs, entirely, he said. Standing endlessly
can lead to back aches and foot
pain especially in 61-year-olds
like him, Biddle said.
But he suggests that people
spend at least 5-10 minutes of every 30 on their feet.
If he were teaching classes, he
said, he would get students to
stand, rather than raise hands, to
show they knew an answer, and
have standing group discussions.
Early research into sitting too
much conrmed that being sedentary is bad for the body. Now,
scientists are analyzing the best
ways to break up the sitting habit,
said Dinesh John, an assistant
professor in the Health Sciences

Teacher Melissa NelsonIrving, left,


of Belle Terre
Elementary
School in
Florida is a
big booster
of standup
desks in the
classroom.

Department at Northeastern
University in Boston.
It has not yet been shown how
much people should stand or
what are the best alternatives to
sitting, particularly for children,
said John, who collaborates with
Ergotron and uses one of its
standing desks in his office.
James Levine said his own research and others suggests that
children benet from any extra
time to burn off energy.
If you give children the opportunity to move while learning,
they will do so, said Levine, codirector of obesity solutions at
the Mayo Clinic and Arizona
State University. Theyll double
the amount of daily movement.
The key is not to tell kids to
move some will naturally be
more active than others but to
give them more opportunities to
move when they want, he said.
Giving children this option
leads to a 10%-15% improvement
in educational scores, better
blood pressure and glucose numbers, subjective improvements in
behavior, and reduced medication for children with ADHD, he
said.
Its not clear whether thats because the kids are able to burn off
excess energy, can stop wasting
energy on keeping themselves
still, or feel special because
theyre in classrooms like Emmas. If you give kids these opportunities, they latch onto
them, said Levine, who recently
studied a classroom where the
students got to sit on yoga balls
instead of chairs.
Levine said he hopes this research eventually will lead to
improvements in American education. There will be a whole
new science emerge to start to
understand precisely how we can
use movement during education
to improve education, he said.
Joseph DiPuma, district technology innovation coordinator
for Flagler Schools, said that
watching the change in NelsonIrvings classroom was all the
evidence he needed to support
standing desks.
If it were up to me, we would
go districtwide with the desks,
he said. To me its a no-brainer.

4U

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E1

TRAVEL
DISPATCHES

SOUTH SIDE STORY

Readers
fairest of
the fairs
The winners of the 10Best Readers Choice Awards for Best State
Fair are in. Nominees in the contest, sponsored by USA TODAY
and 10Best.com, were chosen by a
panel of experts and voted on by
the public.
1. Minnesota State Fair
2. Iowa State Fair
3. Eastern States Exposition
(Massachusetts)
4. State Fair of Texas
5. Great New York State Fair
6. California State Fair
7. Indiana State Fair
8. Ohio State Fair
9. Arizona State Fair
10. North Carolina State Fair
CHIME IN

A new Readers Choice contest


category launched this week. Vote
for Best U.S. Budget Destination at
10best.com/awards/travel/.

CHICAGOS URBAN
RENAISSANCE
Nancy Trejos
USA TODAY

CHICAGO

heres a reason the


Marszewki family included the word
community in the
name of their Bridgeport bar in South Side
Chicago.
Theres more of a neighborhood feel, Mike Marszewski,
owner of Marias Packaged Goods
and Community Bar, says of
Bridgeport. When I lived on the
North Side, I didnt know my
neighbors.
He knows his neighbors now,
and hes determined to invest in
the Bridgeport neighborhood. His
mother, Maria, the namesake of
the bar, took over the property in
1987 when it was Kaplans Liquors. In that time, it has
changed from a tavern and packaged-goods store to a craft beer
and cocktail magnet for locals
and hipsters a destination bar.
We call it the community of
the future, Marszewski says of
Bridgeport.

The South Side


of Chicago has
had a reputation for
being gritty and
MINNESOTA STATE FAIR
crime-infested,
Visitors to the Minnesota
but
many of its
State Fair in St. Paul can enter
neighborhoods
are
through a restored 1930s-era
evolving into livable
streetcar arch.
communities that are
drawing people from
the usual attractions
downtown.

Cruise
lines are
raising
your fees
Planning a cruise for 2016?
Brace yourself for higher daily
fees.
Princess Cruises and Holland
America this month announced
signicant hikes to the daily service charges they tack onto nal
bills, following recent increases at
several other lines, including
Norwegian and Royal Caribbean.
Effective Jan. 1, Princess automatic gratuity charge will jump
by nearly 13% to $12.95 per person, per day for passengers staying in most cabins. Passengers in
suites will pay $13.50 per person,
per day a 16% rise. Holland
Americas service charge will rise
on Dec. 1 from 9% to 13%, depending on cabin type.
Automatic service charges on
ships have become commonplace
in recent years, taking the place
of cash tipping by passengers.
Some but not all lines allow passengers to lower or remove the
charges while on board vessels if
they are unhappy with service.
Still, the practice of adding service charges to passenger bills is
at a crossroads in the industry.
Even as mass-market lines such
as Princess and Holland America
hike such fees, a growing number
of more upscale cruise operators
including Azamara, Crystal, Seabourn and Regent have eliminated them entirely, and the practice
also is disappearing at some river
cruise lines.
Gene Sloan

PRINCESS CRUISES

Princess Cruises is hiking


service fees essentially,
your tip to the crew by 13%
to 16%.

The announcement that President Barack Obama will have his


library and museum built in the
South Side of Chicago is a testament to the growing inuence of
communities such as Bridgeport,
traditionally a working-class
neighborhood, and nearby Hyde
Park, which houses the prestigious University of Chicago. Officials have yet to decide the exact
location of the library, but the
contenders are Washington Park
and Jackson Park near the University of Chicago, where Obama
once taught. The Obamas have a
home on the border of Kenwood
and Hyde Park.
The culinary scene is ourishing and new breweries and entertainment venues are popping up.
A burgeoning arts scene is attracting culturally-minded visitors as well.
The South Side of Chicago has
had a reputation for being gritty
and crime-infested, but many of
its neighborhoods are evolving
into vibrant communities that
are drawing people from the usual attractions downtown.
The whole South Side gets labeled as the dangerous section of
the city and thats just not the
case, says Jason Lesniewicz, cultural tourism manager for
Choose Chicago, the tourism authority for the city.
Hyde Park traditionally has
been a stable bedroom community, yet a culinary renaissance is
giving it a vibrant commercial
base it had very little of before.
Chef Matthias Merges, who
worked at the famed Charlie
Trotters, chose Hyde Park to
expand his culinary empire, in
recent years opening Japaneseinspired Yusho and northern Italian A10.
Merges says Hyde Park was a
gastronomic wasteland when he
arrived.
People thought we were nuts
to come down here, he says over
a lunch at Yusho that includes
cornmeal crusted oyster steam
buns and French fries loaded
with ginger and spicy aioli. It
turned out to be a positive thing
for us.
After lunch, he takes me on a
tour of the neighborhood, probably best known for the university
and the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Robie House. Construction cranes are everywhere.
The library is going to be a big
game changer, he says.
The University of Chicago will
have a role in running the Obama

MATTHIAS MERGES

Yusho, a restaurant run by Chef


Matthias Merges in Hyde Park,
is part of a burgeoning culinary
scene on the citys South Side.
Marz Community Brewing, a
craft beer producer.
Japanese-inspired Osaka Garden provides a soothing stop in
Five years ago, the brothers deJackson Park, a jewel of Chicagos Hyde Park neighborhood on
cided to re-do Kaplans Liquors.
the citys South Side.
While it remains a classic slashie
half liquor store, half neighborwhat used to be a factory in 2004. hood tavern it now has a more
The duo thought it would be stylish look. On a recent evening,
good to bring artists together a chalkboard advertises the Barand also would be good for the tenders Choice for $4.
Its a roll of the dice, says Ken
development and culture of the
neighborhood, says DaHuang Zawacki. I decide not to roll the
dice and order the Marszewski
Zhou.
Artist Amy Donaldson was Mule with ginger beer, Lairds
searching for an up-and-coming Vodka, organic lime juice.
Theres so much possibility,
arts district when she decided to
move to Chicago from Florida. Ed Marszewski says. I always beShe settled into the Zhou B Art lieve you can do anything you
Center two years ago.
want in Chicago but you
Im excited to see
have a better chance of
whats next, she
doing it in our
says of Bridgeneighborhood.
port. Its deKevin Hickey
nitely going to
certainly
bebe the next
lieved so when
art Mecca of
he opened Duck
ADAM ALEXANDER PHOTOGRAPHY
Chicago.
Inn
nine
The Bridgeport Art Center
Its a desigmonths
ago.
draws tourists to traditionally
nation that
The chef grew
working-class Bridgeport, long
few
would
up in Bridgeport
the home of the Daley family.
have thought
but moved away,
Bridgeport would
working in cities
such as San Francisco
Library and museum. Judging by achieve decades ago
and London.
the museums they already have when it was fraught
MATTHIAS MERGES
When he decided to
on the campus, its a good choice. with racial tensions.
open a restaurant in
The Oriental Institute was found- The
neighborhood Yusho offers
Bridgeport, he took over
ed in 1919 and has an impressive also has been home to chicken drua corner building that
collection of antiquities from ve mayors, including mettes with
had been a neighborhood
Egypt, Iran, Syria, and other two members of the lemongrass,
famous Daley political fermented beans tavern since the early
countries in that region.
and watermelon 1900s. His goal was to
Six miles away, the Bridgeport family.
create a restaurant where
Over the years, af- radish.
neighborhood is drawing artists
fordable
housing
as well as chefs.
locals and visitors can
On a recent afternoon in prices have attracted immigrants have an affordable meal on the
Bridgeport, the Zhou B Art Cen- from China and Europe, making casual patio or splurge on fancier
ter is buzzing. The sprawling Bridgeport one of the most ethni- fare in the upscale dining room.
complex houses 40 studios. cally diverse neighborhoods in
It seemed like a great opportunity and timing for the neighBrothers DaHuang Zhou and the city.
Shan Zhou, both artists who
Theres a new contemporary borhood, he says. Bridgeport
moved to Bridgeport from China culture, says Ed Marszewski, reminds me of Brooklyn ve or 10
in 1986, opened the center in Mikes brother and owner of years ago.
ADAM ALEXANDER PHOTOGRAPHY

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E1

5U

10BEST: Steps to Appalachian awe


You dont have to be a gung-ho hiker to see
the Appalachian Trail, which is attracting
new interest because of the film A Walk in
the Woods, starring Robert Redford and Nick
Nolte. The 2,190-mile path is easily accessible and beautiful in autumn colors, says
Laurie Potteiger of the Appalachian Trail
Conservancy (appalachiantrail.org). There
are places of beauty, history and inspiration.
And you know if you step out in one direction, those blazes will lead you to Maine, and
the other way to Georgia. Although the trail
has made news recently due to rowdy celebrations by through-hikers who complete the
entire length, the path has long been revered
for beauty and solitude. Potteiger shares
some highlights with Larry Bleiberg
for USA TODAY.

SHENANDOAH NATIONAL PARK, VA.

Skyline Drive, Shenandoah National Parks famed scenic


highway, crosses the multistate route more than 30
times, making it easy to see hikers at overlooks or a trail
exhibit at the visitors center. There are many ways to
connect with the trail here, Potteiger says. The park,
which is the place through-hikers are most likely to see
wildlife, offers short nature paths along with lodge-tolodge hikes. nps.gov/shen

CLINGMANS DOME,
GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
NATIONAL PARK,
TENN. AND N.C.

An observation deck tops the


highest point (6,643 feet) on the
Appalachian Trail, offering a 360degree view of Great Smoky
Mountains National Park. Its a
big, long, spiral ramp that brings
you above the treetops. Youre
surrounded by mountains as far
as the eye can see, Potteiger says.
Although in an otherwise remote
part of the park, the spot on the
Tennessee-North Carolina line is
easily accessible from a seasonal
road and paved walkway.
nps.gov/grsm

DAVE TACO TACHON, APPALACHIAN TRAIL CONSERVANCY

Hiker Dave Taco Tachon pauses on his Appalachian Trail hike as he passes through Shenandoah National Park in Virginia, the spot hikers are most likely to encounter wildlife.
correspondents memorial, created by a journalist who covered the
conict.
Its a tiny park with a slice of
history and an easy way to have a
little introduction to the Appalachian Trail, Potteiger says.
dnr2.maryland.gov/publiclands

VISITNC.COM

HOT SPRINGS, N.C.


HARPERS FERRY, W. VA.

Not only was this historic town


the scene of John Browns Raid
and failed slave revolt, its home
to the Appalachian Trail Conservancy
headquarters.
Most
through-hikers stop at the visitors center to pose for a picture
on the porch. The front of our
stone-and-stucco building is one
of the top three places on the Appalachian Trail thats photographed, Potteiger says.
appalachiantrail.org

The trail passes down the


main street of this tiny town
look for the AT diamond
symbols in the sidewalk.
You really get the sense of
being in a charming Appalachian Trail town. Its surrounded by mountains,
Potteiger says. Hikers can
follow the French Broad River for a short distance, and
then climb to a rocky outcropping called Lovers Leap.
hotspringsnc.org

BOILING SPRINGS, PA.

Visitors to this small community


nd bucolic scenery with easy
hikes past farm elds and around
picturesque Childrens Lake. Its
a calm quiet place to take a stroll
on the edge of the Cumberland
Valley, Potteiger says. The town
is also home to the Appalachian
Trail Commissions regional office
and visitors center.
appalachiantrail.org

GATHLAND STATE PARK, MD.

This quiet gap once saw action in


the Civil War Battle of South
Mountain. Its now home to a war

MORE 10BEST:
TRAVEL.USATODAY.COM

See lists for travel ideas online.

EXPERIENCE

of the countrys most urban state


and offering views of the Pocono
and Catskill mountains. The
hike (to reach the summit) is just
a very short distance, Potteiger
says. njparksandforests.com
TRAILSIDE MUSEUMS
AND ZOO, BEAR MOUNTAIN
STATE PARK, N.Y.

The trail marks its lowest point as


it passes by the Hudson River and
straight through this park and
zoo. A drive, or steep climb,
reaches the mountaintop, with
sweeping views of the Hudson
River Valley. Youre a relatively
short distance from New York
City, Potteiger says. nysparks
.com/parks/13/details.aspx

HIGH POINT STATE PARK, N.J.

MOUNT GREYLOCK STATE


RESERVATION, MASS.

The aptly named site has the


highest elevation in the state at
1,803 feet, showing the wild side

When hikers reach this summit,


the highest point in Massachusetts, theyre at 3,491 feet and

TRAVEL
AMUSEMENT PARKS

passing through a landscape that


inspired literary giants like Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry David
Thoreau and Herman Melville.
Visitors can drive to an observation tower, but Potteiger says
some like to hike the mountain.
Its quite a climb with quite an
elevation gain.
mass.gov/eea/agencies/dcr/
MOUNT WASHINGTON
STATE PARK, N.H.

The highest point in New England (with a 6,288-foot summit)


offers the possibility of storms
and snow year-round. The combination of being so far north and
the extreme elevation makes it
famous for having multiple
weather patterns converge as
one, Potteiger says. Trees cannot grow here. But visitors have
other ways to get the view: A road
and cog railway also go to the
peak. nhstateparks.org

FOR MORE INFORMATION


USATODAY.COM/EXPERIENCE/

Coasters launch with more speed, drops, rolls


Arthur Levine
Special for USA TODAY

Mad-scientist designers have


been busily assembling a wild variety of thrill machines in their
laboratories, and are ready to unleash them in the coming year.
Hybrid rides meld steel and
wooden coaster elements into
Frankensteins monster mashups.
Launched coasters will forsake
lift hills in favor of magnetic propulsion systems. There will be a
hypercoaster that may cause hyperventilation, a dive coaster that
will amp up riders anxiety levels
to 11 and a ride that will send passengers hurtling into the fourth
dimension.
LIGHTNING ROD
DOLLYWOOD
(PIGEON FORGE, TENN.)

Dolly Parton is something of a


wimp when it comes to riding the
roller coasters at her namesake
park. She may have plenty of
company when Lightning Rod
opens next season as the worlds
rst launched wooden coaster. Its
electromagnetic motors will send
Lightning Rod racing at a giddy
73 mph, which will make it the
worlds fastest wooden coaster.
Toss in a nosebleed height of
more than 200 feet and an acutely steep 73-degree rst drop, and
its likely Dolly would rather
hightail it to an island in the
stream than give her new coaster
a whirl.
THE JOKER
SIX FLAGS DISCOVERY
KINGDOM (VALLEJO, CALIF.)

Ride manufacturer Rocky Mountain Construction (which also is


building Lightning Rod) has
turned the amusement industry
on its head the past few years by
successfully resurrecting aging
wooden coasters. It has been replacing the rides traditional
coaster tracks with newfangled

ward. The nal launch will send


its train racing 62 mph up and
through a massive 150-foot loop.

steel tracks and creating highly


acclaimed hybrid thrill machines.
For 2016, the former Roar at
Six Flags Discovery Kingdom will
get a makeover and re-emerge as
The Joker. With three inversions,
it will literally turn passengers
upside down. The Batmanthemed ride will include loads of
out-of-seat airtime and will surely be deliriously smooth.

GALEFORCE
PLAYLANDS CASTAWAY COVE
(OCEAN CITY, N.J.)

Although a different manufacturer will build it, GaleForce will be


similar to Phobia Phear. The
coaster coming to the seaside
park also will use magnetic motors to launch its train forward
and backward three times. Instead of scaling a giant loop, however, GaleForce will climb a
125-foot tower and free-fall beyond 90 degrees down the other
side.

VALRAVN
CEDAR POINT
(SANDUSKY, OHIO)

For its 18th coaster, the self-proclaimed roller coaster capital of


the world will be taking a dive.
Valravns ultra-wide, eight-seatsper-row trains will climb 223 feet
and hang for what will seem like
an eternity (but will actually be
four seconds) over the edge of a
90-degree, 214-foot drop. It will
then release and hit 75 mph,
navigate a 165-foot-tall inversion,
soar straight down a second 90degree drop, and send riders upside down a couple more times
for good measure. Known as a
dive coaster, Valravn will be the
worlds tallest and fastest.
TOTAL MAYHEM
SIX FLAGS GREAT ADVENTURE
(JACKSON, N.J.)

Its crazy enough that the Six


Flags coaster will climb a 120foot, 90-degree, elevator-like lift
and navigate a multilevel ribbon
of track that will include inversions and beyond-90-degree
drops. But with seats on the outside of the track that will independently spin to and fro like a
Ferris wheel gone bonkers, the
new ride will achieve, well, total
mayhem. The worlds rst 4-D
(for fourth-dimension) free-y
coaster, Batman: The Ride, debuted in 2015 at Six Flags Fiesta
Texas to widespread praise. Expect similar positive spin from
Total Mayhem in 2016.

THE NEW REVOLUTION


SIX FLAGS MAGIC MOUNTAIN
(VALENCIA, CALIF.)
DOLLYWOOD

Dollywoods Lightning Rod is sure to attract a lot of energy as


the worlds rst launched wooden coaster.
MAKO
SEAWORLD (ORLANDO)

At 200 feet, the Shamu-sized Mako hypercoaster coming to SeaWorld will pierce the Orlando
skyline and tie the record for
Floridas tallest coaster. Reaching
73 mph, it will denitely be the
states speediest coaster, and will
boast nine airtime hills. Its manufacturer, Bolliger & Mabillard, is
known for its precision-made
steel coasters. Appropriately
enough, SeaWorld is building this
fearsome ride in the Sharks
Realm section of the park. After
disembarking, frazzled riders
may head over to the Shark Encounter exhibit and see real apex
predators.
STORM CHASER
KENTUCKY KINGDOM
(LOUISVILLE)

Another Rocky Mountain Construction makeover, Storm Chaser will repurpose some of the
structure of the dual-track Twisted Twins wooden coaster. The

UNIVERSAL ORLANDO

Flight of the Hippogriff will


thrill Muggles at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter.
new, steel-track ride will climb
100 feet, hit 52 mph and include
three inversions.
PHOBIA PHEAR COASTER
LAKE COMPOUNCE
(BRISTOL, CONN.)

Known as a Sky Rocket coaster,


Phobia Phear (whose name may
trigger an investigation by both
the Department of Redundancy
Department and the Spell Check
Police) features three magnetic
launches both forward and back-

Dating to 1976 (when it was


known as the Great American
Revolution), the venerable ride
secured a place in amusement
park history as the rst modern
steel coaster to include a major
inverting loop. After Six Flags
added over-the-shoulder restraints, however, it became infamous for its uncomfortable ride.
For Revolutions 40th anniversary, the park is promising a
smoother ride by introducing
sleek trains without the restrictive restraints.
FLIGHT OF THE HIPPOGRIFF
UNIVERSAL STUDIOS
HOLLYWOOD

With no inversions, a low-prole


lift hill and a relatively poky
speed, Flight of the Hippogriff
would be virtually indistinguishable from a slew of comparable
junior coasters and not all that
noteworthy were it not for one
signicant distinction: It will be
one of the attractions at Californias edition of the Wizarding
World of Harry Potter, opening in
2016. The anticipation level
among Muggles for the new land
is off the charts.

6U

USA TODAY STATESMAN JOURNAL


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E1

BOOKS

COURTESY OF THE OKLAHOMAN

George Machine Gun Kelly leaves a courthouse


under the guard of armed law enforcement officers.

THE OKLAHOMAN

Berenice and Charles Urschel during the kidnapping trial, March 9, 1938.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

J. Edgar Hoover shakes hands with Melvin Purvis,


Special Agent in Charge of the FBIs Chicago office

1930s GANGSTERS RULE


IN YEAR OF FEAR
Matt Damsker
Special for USA TODAY

n an America where the


exploits of legendary
gangsters like Al Capone and Machine Gun
Kelly have almost entirely faded from living
memory, its the task of
earnest historians to
cut through the pulp
ction and tell it like it was. The
brazen bootleggers and racketeers of the 1920s and 30s were
colorful enough, but
BOOK
they were mainly
REVIEW
products of their
time nasty, brutish, short-lived avatars of Prohibition,
the Depression and crude capitalism.
They also were the perfect bogeymen and women for an
under-ripe
federal
lawman
named J. Edgar Hoover to chase
down in his quest for glory. He
may have been a creepy obsessive, but Hoover had vision. He

built a potent Federal Bureau of


Investigation to transcend the
loose, corrupt network of local
and state police who often were
in cahoots with the gangsters
especially when their marquee
crime was providing illegal liquor
to a population that craved it.
But once Prohibition ended,
and as the Depression and the
Dust Bowl were instead wringing
America dry, the criminal element kicked up a reign of terror,
robbing banks (until there was
less and less cash to be grabbed)
and kidnapping rich folk for ransom. And thats where The Year of
Fear, Joe Urschels entertaining
new history of 1933, takes off, in a
wheel-spinning urry of detail
that brings the era to life.
The book chronicles the kidnapping of a tough Oklahoma oil
magnate, Charles Urschel (no relation to the author), and the
manhunt that ensued a Hoover-hounded circus that distracted the nation and generated
feverish headlines for weeks, until the Feds triumphed and the
FBI had pretty much made its

bones. They trapped the dapper


kidnapper, George Machine
Gun Kelly, his fashionable fortune hunter of a wife, Kathryn,
and assorted accomplices. A lively
trial was the public payoff.
This is Joe Urschels rst book
in a varied career. Hes a former
editor at USA TODAY who led
the creation of the popular Newseum in Washington and is now
executive director of the National
Law Enforcement Museum. He
carefully cites the extensive
source material that bolsters the
y-on-the-wall reportage of The
Year of Fear.
If anything, there are too many
heroes, villains and bit players to
keep track of, and too often the
reader cant. But Urschel builds
atmosphere and suspense with a
swift narrative and a strong sense
of place.
He also delineates his characters well. Its impressive to learn
how the blindfolded oil baron,
plucked at gunpoint from his
home while playing bridge with
his wife and another couple,
made remarkable mental notes of

Joe
Urschel
SAM KITTNER/KITTNER.COM

THE YEAR OF FEAR: MACHINE GUN


KELLY AND THE MANHUNT THAT
eeeg
CHANGED THE NATION
Joe Urschel
Minotaur
269 pp.

every sensory detail of his captivity.


Once freed by payment of a
$200,000 ransom (about $3.1 million in todays dollars), he was
able to guide the lawmen to a dis-

tant farmhouse and even assisted


them, gun in hand, in capturing
some of his abductors.
As for Machine Gun Kelly, author Urschel draws a humorous
portrait of this fabled but doomed
dude. Unlike most of the days
gangsters, Kelly wasnt a poor boy
gone bad so much as an educated,
well-spoken, middle-class lout
who preferred the easy money of
rum running and bank robbing to
an honest living.
Despite his prowess with an
automatic weapon a trademark
that his canny wife promoted to
the press he was hardly a mad
dog. In releasing an unnecessary
hostage from his Cadillac, Kelly
made a point of leaving the man
with $10 to catch a cab home.
Desperate times they were, but a
certain civility still ruled, and
Urschel draws a subtle bead on it.

Dying for senior sex


Fates and Furies:
Marriages ip sides in Jongs latest novel
Eliot Schrefer
Special for USA TODAY

Two beautiful people meet in


college. They have their own sorts
of glamour: Lotto (short for Lancelot) is full of passion and charisma, destined for
artistic greatness.
REVIEW
Mathilde is cool and
melancholy.
In the rst half of
her absorbing
new
novel,
Lauren Groff allows Lotto
to take center stage, as we
follow the couple from
shotgun marriage to bohemian beginnings to Lottos
eventual success as a playwright. Fates and Furies
sprawls as it goes, but any
potential sluggishness is
warded off by Groffs powerful and exotic prose,
which renders majestic
even the most familiar moments of everyday life. (He
looked inside the apartment
through the window, where
the phone persisted unringing on the mantel.)
In the novels rst half, Groff
paints a convincing portrait of a
male genius who perceives himself as heroically individual,
prone to forget that his artistic
condence is the joint product of
an adoring mother and a devoted
wife. Eventually, he comes to see
the fullness of his wife and the
realization isnt welcome. For
twenty-three years, hed thought
hed met a girl who was as pure as
snow, a sad, lonely girl. He had
saved her. Two weeks later, they
were married. But, like a squid
from the deep, the story had
turned itself inside out.

Modernday heroic
Lancelot
meets his
match in
melancholy

MEGAN BROWN

Groff belts out a


mythic tale.

FATES AND FURIES


Lauren Groff
Riverhead

eeeE
390 pp.

The second half of the novel


switches viewpoint to the partner
who is quiet, watchful. In order
to bring Mathilde fully into focus,
Groff (Arcadia, The Monsters of
Templeton) jumps us through
time, replaying and recasting
much of the tale she established
in the rst half. The Mathilde who emerges is far
more empowered than the
wan and doting wife Lotto
thought he knew. She can
be ruthless, even cruel, and
though her love for Lotto is
absorbing and undeniable,
the sum of her life, she saw,
was far greater than its sum
of love.
For the most part, Groffs
writing is striking and revelatory, taking on levels of
mythic resonance appropriate to the grandeur of this
god-kissed
relationship.
Sometimes she overplays
her hand, and her prose
feels strained and overly
loud, like a gifted singer belting
out every note because she can.
Some readers may roll their
eyes at a modern character
named Lancelot and in these
pages, too, there is a Gawain and a
Roland and a dog named God.
Fates and Furies can seem out to
make an impression rst and tell
a good story second, but if occasional affectation is the cost of
such ambition, it was worth the
gamble.
Eliot Schrefer is the author of
Threatened, a 2014 National Book
Award Finalist.

Four decades after


Flying, getting old
replaces getting it on
Patty Rhule
Special for USA TODAY

Erica Jongs ribald, raunchy


novel Fear of Flying coined an unprintable phrase for sex without
emotional entanglement and
made her a feminist
literary lioness in
REVIEW
1973.
Jongs latest novel, Fear of Dying, is
the story of actress
Vanessa Wonderman, 60, happily married to the
wonderful and wealthy Asher
and longing for more. Asher is 20
years older than Vanessa and
they read obits together more often than they make love. Vanessas parents are declining, as is
her beloved dog, Belinda.
Vanessas best friend is Isadora
Wing, the heroine of Fear of Flying whose pursuit of the magical
sexual encounter propelled her
into an affair at a therapists convention. But that was four decades ago. This time, older and
wiser Isadora acts as an adviser
and shaman to Vanessa.
Against her friends advice, Vanessa turns to a website called
Zipless, inspired by Isadoras signature catchphrase (the zipless,
uh, sex act), in hopes of nding a
discreet gentleman to celebrate
eros one afternoon a week.
Zipless.com is about as satisfying as Tinder, if you read Vanity
Fairs recent takedown of the sexswipe site. Zipless potential dates
for Vanessa include a relentless
sadist, a man who wants to be her
personal slave (not as good as it

FEAR OF DYING
Erica Jong
St. Martins Press

eegE
273 pp.

sounds, warns Isadora) and another who says what she really
needs is Jesus.
In Flying as in Dying, sex without connection is not the answer.
Jongs passages about the humor and heartbreak of growing
older are knowing, soul-baring,
moving
and
funny. Vanessa
gets a face lift,
which stacks
up there with
all the other
female rituals
genital mutilation, footbinding, whalebone
corsets, Spanx.
Amid the agony
of watching her
parents diminish and die, the
gradual transformation of a
difficult parent
into a demisaint, Vanessa
muses about beloved daughter
Glindas struggle with addiction, becomes a grandmother
and ghts with her sisters about
money and pearls.
The book also takes some illadvised turns and, here, Dying is
just dying for a stronger editors
hand. Isadora sends Vanessa a
spacey sci- missive via email
that inexplicably gets snapped up
by Hollywood.
Vanessa gets her groove back
on a spiritual retreat to holy caves
in India. If you are intrigued by
this sometimes maddening journey, by all means, overcome your
fears.

MARY ANN HALPIN

Erica Jong

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