SUNDAY • May 30, 2021 • Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $3 INSIDE: A SALUTE TO THE GRADUATING CLASS OF 2021 MEMORIAL DAY OREGON Tobiason champions Central Oregon vets Legislature puts focus on doomed measures State lawmakers have less than a month until they are required to adjourn BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin Dick Tobiason, an 86-year-old retired Army lieutenant colonel and Vietnam War veteran, wipes down one of the granite memorials May 13 while visiting the Bend Heroes Memorial at Brooks Park. Dick Tobiason, of Bend, is pic- tured in 1967 while serving in the Army during the Viet- nam War. He still has shrap- nel stuck in his lungs and forehead from a hand grenade blast during that first tour in Vietnam. He earned a Pur- ple Heart after surviving the attack. BY KYLE SPURR • The Bulletin I n his free time, Dick Tobiason cleans the Bend Heroes Memorial in Brooks Park. The 86-year-old retired Army lieutenant colonel and Vietnam War veteran wipes pollen and dirt from the granite plaque engraved with the names of Bend residents who died while serving their country. The work is never a burden. Tobiason maintains the memorial to honor the veterans listed on the plaque. Last month, he prepared the site for a Memorial Day ceremony he is hosting Monday morning. See Tobiason / A7 Submitted photo The Oregon Legislature was hit with a double dip of stress Friday as it dealt with the official beginning of the end of the 2021 session. Lawmakers have 30 days as of Fri- day until they are required to adjourn. The Oregon Constitution authorizes the Legislature to meet for 160 days in odd-numbered years. What began Jan. 19 must end by June 27. The allotted days include weekends and holidays, making the actual amount of time left for action even shorter. The second big mark on the calendar on Fri- day was the fourth and final “witching hour” that acts as an auto- matic guillotine to lop- off legislation that has “I’m not sure slowed or stalled in what will get committees. To keep on the 160- left behind.” day pace, the Legisla- ture sets four deadlines — Tina Kotek, about a month apart D-Portland, when bills must show House speaker progress. At the stroke of midnight on the deadline, the stragglers are dead for the year. The deadline Friday not only sends hundreds of dormant bills to oblivion, but also mandates the shutdown of most of the 34 House and Senate committees that act as factories for new bills. As of Saturday, no more hearings. No more amendments. No more votes. How severe the final culling of bills will be this time won’t be known until early next week. “I’m not sure what will get left behind,” said House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Port- land. See Legislature / A5 How Tulsa massacre, others spent most of a century unremembered BY DEEPTI HAJELA Associated Press When the smoke cleared in June 1921, the toll from the massacre in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was catastrophic — scores of lives lost, homes and busi- nesses burned to the ground, a thriving Black community gut- ted by a white mob. TODAY’S WEATHER The nightmare cried out for attention, as something to be investigated and memo- rialized, with speeches and statues and anniversary com- memorations. But the horror and violence visited upon Tulsa’s Black com- munity didn’t become part of the American story. Instead, it was pushed down, unre- membered and untaught un- til efforts decades later started bringing it into the light. And Partly sunny High 82, Low 51 Page B5 INDEX even this year, with the 100th anniversary of the massacre being recognized, it’s still an unfamiliar history to many — something historians say has broader repercussions. “The consequences of that is a sort of a lie that we tell ourselves collectively about who we are as a society, who we have been histori- cally, that’s set some of these things up as aberrations, as exceptions of what we un- Business/Life Classifieds Dear Abby C1-8 B6 C3 Editorial Horoscope Local/State A6 C3 A2-3 derstand society to be rather than endemic or intrinsic parts of American history,” said Joshua Guild, an associ- ate professor of history and African American studies at Princeton University. Indeed, U.S. history is filled with dark events — often in- volving racism and racial vi- olence — that haven’t been made part of the national fabric. See Tulsa / A4 Lottery Market Recap Mon. Comics B2 B4 C5-6 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A7 C4 B1-3 John Locher/AP Darius Kirk looks at a mural depicting the Tulsa Race Massacre in the historic Greenwood neighborhood Thursday ahead of centennial com- memorations of the massacre in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 117, No. 329, 26 pages, 4 sections SUN/THU Toll from the 1921 violence was horrific U|xaIICGHy02330rzu Parade Magazine will return next week! Check next Sunday’s Bulletin for this popular insert. Parade publishes every Sunday except 5/30/21, 7/4/21, 8/1/21, 9/5/21, 12/26/21