Bulletin Daily Paper 10-07-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1

WEDNESDAY october7,2015 'h

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OUTDOORS • D1

bendbulletin.corn TODAY' S READERBOARD

Minimum wage hike: a challenge for rural economies?

REED MARKET ROAD REOPENING

lll SpertS —Prep coverage from soccer to water polo. C1,C4

Plus: C.J. McCollumTheBlazers' next star?C1

By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

Joseph Barker, owner

SupremeCourt —one

of Ochoco Brewing in Prineville, cringes at the

D.C. institution cracks down on paid line-sitting.A4

thought of an increase in

Oregon's minimum wage, which at $9.25 an hour is

Odamacare —will the u.s.

the second-highest in the

-

follow California and cover immigrants here illegally?A6

country. "I can't see any good coming out of it," Barker

said Tuesday about a pair of ballot measures filed

StumptownCoffee —Independent brand purchased by Peet's Coffee andTea.C6

for next year's November V

election. One, which is supported by Oregon House Speaker

And a Wed exclusive-

Tina Kotek, D-Portland,

Racehelped shapedthe politics of U.S. Senatecandidate Kamala Harris of California. benclbulletin.curn/extrns

would raise the state's minimum wageto$13.50over a two-year period. The other would jump Oregon's hourly minimum wage to $15 over a three-year time span. The $13.50-an-hour proposal, created by a union-led coalition called

c Rod

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Raise the Wage, is intended

The egg

to put pressure on Oregon lawmakers during the 2016

i VI

ov •

legislative session to raise

sandwich: a surprising history

Project Manager Brent Pierson carries away the road closed sign blocking the intersection of SE American Lane and Reed Market Road to open the stretch of road to traffic Tuesday afternoon in Bend, marking the completion of an $18.3 million project.

By Sarah Kaplan

The station sold gas for $1.99 per gallon from 4-7 p.m. to celebrate the big day.

the minimum wage. SeeWage/A5

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Below, TomMealy, owner of the Expressway Corner Market & Deli at SE 15th Street and ReedMarket Road, pumpsgas for patrons. The Washington Post

That sound you heard at

11 a.m. Tuesday — those exultant cheers swiftly muffled by mouthfuls of English muffin, bacon, egg and cheese? They

By Kailey Fisicaro

road construction began,

The Bulletin

right in a row. Even with their regular customers rolling through, the loss of drive-by traffic really hurt the business. The Healys are ready for a

year wait, residents and business owners' patience was

After more than a two-

Cops help colleagues in distress By Christine Byers St. Louis Post-Dispatch

are the victory cries of

rewarded'IItesday afternoon

thousands of McDonald's breakfast lovers, who for

when traffic began flowing in both directions again at

the first time in 43 years

Reed Market Road in south-

Others, like Ray Mar-

will (officially) be able to consume Egg McMuffins

east Bend. The $18.3 million project

couiller, 89, and Ted Wilcox,

Straughter. A call for all available units boomed

at whatever time of day

included the addition of a

they deem fit.

second lane eastbound east of American Lane bridge,

75, are just looking forward to having a set path home again. The men have been next-door neighbors at Newberry Drive just off of SE

But, as we celebrate the triumph of breakfast over

revival.

a center turn lane and

theoppressiveforcesof socially mandated meal-

6-foot-wide bike lanes. The BNSF rail crossing also was

times, it's worth remem-

rebuilt and the American

bering that McDonald's is

Lane bridge was moved and reconstructed. Sidewalks and landscaping, which are part of the project as well, still need

business to tie the last few balloons acknowledging the big day. At 4 p.m., just down the street and west of the rail-

they lost business but regular

some work, but the official

road crossing, a handful of people, mostly officials, did a

neither the only or the first fast-food provider to dish

up the portable, delectable combination of egg, meat, cheese and bread. SeeSandwich/A5

Corrections In a story headlined "Reed Market opens —early," which appeared Tuesday,Oct. 6, on Page A1,the number of travel lanes in both directions was incorrect. ReedMarket Road will only have two lanesfor eastbound traffic between American Laneand SE15th Street.

In a story headlined "Hopes for Skyline Forest project aran't dead yet," which appeared Tuesday, Oct. 6, onPageA1, the price for nearly 200,000 acres of timberland purchased by Whitefish CascadeForest Resources was incorrect. Fidelity National Financial, the

company that sold the land, reported it received atotal cash distribution of $63 million for 197,000 acres of property in Deschutes andKlamath counties. The Bulletin regrets the errors.

both directions.

Healy's son, Daniel Healy, was one of the people to help cut the ribbon.

"We' re very relieved," Daniel Healy said, adding, that

from SE Third Street to 27th Street was at 4p.m. 7ttesday. At 20 minutes till, Tom

ceremonious ribbon cutting. But the real monumental

customers mostly remained. "We kept a loyal following." The Healy family has owned the market and gas

moment came when the bar-

station for 20 years, but just

Healy, co-owner of Express-

rierswere removed justafter

way Corner Market & Deli at SE 15th Street and Reed

4 p.m. and drivers began traveling the road again — in

before Daniel took over daily operations a few years ago,

opening of the stretch of road

the recession hit, and then

test to Joan "Joann" Glover

have a clear route to get to

across the St. Louis police sergeant's radio, but she didn't flinch. Questioned later about why she didn' t respond, she exploded in anger, then cried. Three days before, at a restaurant where she worked a security job, Glover Straughter had fatally shot a man who raised a gun at her after ignoring her commands to drop it. She went through the

Fred Meyer again, he said.

motions of department pro-

Reed Market for more than Market Road, headed out to the corner in front of his

ST. LOUIS — Filling out

a traffic crash report felt as challenging as a chemistry

two decades. As different sectionsoftheroadw ere worked on over the past cou-

ple years, Marcouiller and Wilcox had to continually update their ways home from

running errands by car. Marcouiller is glad he' ll 'Whoa, let's get out of the

way!" Wilcox said jokingly just as the ribbon was cut, anticipating a rush of traffic. SeeMoving/A5

tocol: completing a psychological evaluation, making a statement to investigators

and returning to work three days later.

SeeCops/A4

Colleges that honoredCosbyface tough question By Sydney Ember and Colin Moynihan

New Yorh Times News Service

Every spring for decades, a similar scene played out at colleges across the United States: Students picked up

their degrees — and Bill Cosby stood alongside them.

Schools wanted Cosby, the

popular, education-embracing comedian, to give their commencement address, and he

routinely showed up, often in a school sweatshirt, offering high-fives, hugs and homespun advice. In exchange, universities and colleges gave

TODAY'S WEATHER i<'~~

Cl o uds and sun High 72, Low 46 Page B6

him honorary degrees in categories like education, public service and law. Few people in U.S. history have been recognized by universities as often as Cosby, whose publicist once

honorary degrees. The New oredfall sfrom grace. York Times, in a quick search, Some are sticking with found nearly 60. longstanding policies that But now, as dozens of wom-

estimated that the entertainer

en have come forward to accuse Cosby of sexual assault, colleges are confronting the question of what to do when

had collected more than 100

someone who has been hon-

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Outdoors 82 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1 6 S I E1-8 Dear Abby D6 Ob ituaries B5 N'/Movies

D1 - 6 C1 4 D6

An Independent Newspaper

vol. 113, No. 280, 32 pages, 5 sections

prohibit the revocation of

such awards. Some are still debating what to do. And

some are rescinding Cosby's degrees. SeeCosby/A4

Q Ill/e use recycled newsprint

': IIIIIIIIIIIII o

8 8 267 02329


A2

THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

HOW to reaCh US

SOUTH CAROLINA FLOODING

STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

PriSOner releaSe —The federal Bureau of Prisons plans to release 6,000 prisoners at the end ofOctober, implementing a decision last year to slash the number of incarcerated drug offenders by nearly half. Officials said the nationwide releasesover four days starting Oct. 30 will be the largest in U.S. history. Last year, in line with a concerted effort by the Obamaadministration to reduce the number of drug offenders in U.S. prisons, the U.S.Sentencing Commission voted to cut drug sentences by an average of two years, potentially affecting as many as46,000 out of 100,000 cases.

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MideaSt ViOlenCe —Asthe bodies have piled up during the past week — four Israelis killed in two Palestinian attacks, four Palestinians slain by Israeli troops — peoplehavebeennervously debating whether it is the onset of athird intifada. But even asthe violence continued Tuesday, thevery notion of a Palestinian uprising may beoutdated, a futile look to history to define events unfolding in profoundly different circumstances. Analysts sayPalestinians today lack the strong leadership that in1987 harnessedspontaneous stone-throwing to an organized movement leading to theOslo PeaceAccords, or that orchestrated the campaign of suicide bombings starting in 2000.

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RuSSia and Turkey —Tensions between Russia andTurkey widened onTuesdayover the Russian bombings of Syrian rebels and multiple violations of Turkish airspace. Aside from blunt warnings, there appears to be little President RecepTayyip Erdogan cando about Russia's assertive military actions in Syria, which haveundercut his priorities to oust the Syrian leader, BasharAssad, andestablish a buffer zone onSyria's border with Turkey. While in manyways close to Russia, Erdogan is nowleaning more heavily on his NATO allies, reflecting the shifting forces buffeting Turkey as it copeswith the military, economic and humanitarian fallout of Syria's civil war.

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Flooding is shown around homes in theCarolina h i gh water. Forest community in Horry County, betweenConway T u esday was the first dry day since Sept. 24 in and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. South Carolina's capital of Columbia, where amidOwners of inundated homeswere keeping close n i g ht-to-6 a.m. curfew was in effect. watch on swollen waterways asthey pried open swol- B u t officials warned that new evacuations could len doors and tore out soakedcarpets. So far, at least come as the huge mass of water flows toward the 17 people havedied in the floods in the Carolinas, sea, threatening damsand displacing residents along some of them drowning after trying to drive through the way.

Yemen dOmdihgS —The Islamic State extremist group claimed responsibility for a series of bombings in Yemen's two largest cities Tuesday that killed at least 25 people, including troops from the Persian Gulf who are fighting Yemeni rebels. Thefirst attacks — coordinated bombings in the southern city of Aden —werethe largest in that city by the Islamic State since the group surfaced in Yemen last year. Along with the bombing of a mosque inSanaa,the capital, that killed at least sevenpeople later Tuesday,the attacks are the latest sign that Sunni extremists are gaining strength amid the country' s multisided war.

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The

istan now believes that U.S.

troops did not follow their own rules in calling in the

confirm it was a legitimate target before calling in the strike, the officials said. Regardless of what mistake may have been made, Campbell told a Senate committee Tuesday that the strike was

vestigating officer, Brig. Gen. Richard Kim, suggest a chain

ultimately the result of "a U.S. decision made within the U.S.

tails about the attack, which killed 22 on Saturday.

airstrike that d e cimated a Doctors W i t h out B o r d ers chain ofcommand." He took

hospital when no U.S. and Afghan troops were in extreme

Refugee CrOWIifuIIdiIIg —As Syrian refugees continue to flee the violence at home,President Barack Obamais turning to the modern tools of Silicon Valley entrepreneurship as asupplement to the more traditional means of humanitarian relief. At the request of officials from the White HouseOffice of Digital Strategy, the crowdfunding website Kickstarter has begun its first social service campaign aimed at raising moneyfor the United Nations refugee agency on behalf of Syrian refugees. Visitors to the site cancontribute $15 to buy a sleeping bag, or $70for an emergency rescue kit, or $160, which the site says could payfor a refugee's shelter.

of mistakes likely led to the attack on the hospital. In his

COmmerCe in Cuda —The United States commerce secretary, Penny Pritzker, told Cubanofficials on Tuesdaythat the Obama administration wants to create asmany business opportunities as possible in their nation for American companies despite the long embargo and more than five decades ofColdWarestrangement.

testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee,

Campbell offered few new de-

— From wire reports

responsibility for th e sustained bombardment of the medical facility, which he said

danger, according to officials with direct knowledge of the took place in response to an general's thinking. Afghan call for help. "Obviously, the i n vestiUnder the rules, airstrikes are authorized to kill terror- gation is still underway, but ists, protect U.S. troops and Campbell's thinking now is help Afghans who request t hat the Americans on t h e support in battles — like the ground did not follow the Taliban'8 recent takeover of rules of engagement fully," Kunduz — that can change said one of three U.S. offithe military landscape. The cials, all of whom emphasized idea is to give troops leeway that no final conclusions had but keep Americans out of b een reached and that t h e daily combat. inquiry could yield different The Special Operations reasonsforwhat transpired. forces did not meet any of the If U.S. troops did not follow criteria, the commander, Gen.

the rules, it is not clear why, or

John Campbell, has said in private discussions, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not autho-

how far up the chain of com-

crete e

smo ec ears.

mand the decision to allow the strike was made. Nor is it

clear whether any of the Afghan or U.S. troops involved

rized to discuss the matter.

in the strike knew that they

The Special Operations forces also apparently did not

were unleashinga sustained air attack on a hospital.

have "eyes on" — that is, were

Campbell's public remarks unable to positively identify and what he has said privately, — the area to be attacked to based on reports from his in-

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Terrorismcited in killing in Australia lastweek By Michelle Innis

offense," she said, adding that

New York Times News Service

SYDNEY —

investigators suspect the boy C o u nterter- had been influenced, either

rorismpoliceofficersarrested four people this morning in connection with a teenager's

fatal shooting of a police accountant last Friday, an attack that officials have described

ideologically or politically, to kill. It was not clear how the boy might havebeen connected to those arrested today in the

case. as terrorism. The four were all male and Raids in Sydney's western from Sydney's northwest subsuburbs early today involved urbs, ranging in age from 16 more than 200 officers from to 22, the police said. A fifth the joint counterterrorism and state crime homicide squads.

The raids were linked to the killing of Curtis Cheng, 58, who was shot by a 15-year-old at the Police Headquarters in the Sydney suburb of Parramatta as he left work on Friday

afternoon, the police said. Officers responding to the attack then fatally shot the

man was detained on a fraud

warrant and later released. The police also visited a mosque in Parramatta where it was believed the boy worshiped, according to local news reports. On Tuesday they also reportedly visited his school, where another youth

was questioned about his posts on social media and later

• -

15-year-old after he continued arrested and charged with asfiring, the police said. He was saulting the police. later identified by local news Scipione said the 15-yearmedia as Farhad Jabar Khalil Mohammad. "We don't know the motiva-

old had no criminal record.

tion of the 15-year-old," said

day that it was not credible

the New South Wales deputy

that a 15-year-old could com-

police commissioner, Catherine Burn. " What we a r e

mit such a murder without some form of assistance or

investigating is a terrorism

encouragement.

Mike Baird, the premier of New South Wales, said Tues-

a I

m•I •


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015•THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY It's Wednesday,Oct. 7,the 280th day of 2015. Thereare 85 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Nndel PriZe —Chemistry will be the next prize to be announced.

DrOne Safety —FAAofficials go before the U.S.House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee in ahearing

HISTORY Highlight:In1985, Palestinian gunmen hijacked the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro in the Mediterranean. (The hijackers killed Leon Klinghoffer, a Jewish-American tourist, before surrendering on Oct. 9.) In1765,the Stamp ActCongress convened inNewYork to draw up colonial grievances against England. In1849, author Edgar Allan Poe died in Baltimore at age 40. In 1858, the fifth debate

between illinois senatorial candidates Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas took place in Galesburg. In1929,former Interior Secretary Albert Fall, one of the main figures of the Teapot Dome scandal, went on trial, charged with accepting a bribe from oil tycoon Edward Doheny. (Fall was found guilty and sentenced to ayear in prison; he served nine months. Doheny was acquitted at his own trial of offering the bribe Fall was convicted of taking.) In1954, Marian Anderson became the first black singer hired by the Metropolitan Opera Company in NewYork. In1960, Democratic presidential candidate John F.Kennedy and Republican opponent Richard Nixon held their second televised debate, this one in Washington, D.C. In1979, Pope John PaulII concluded his weeklong tour of the United States with a Mass on the Washington Mall. In1991,University of Oklahoma law professor Anita Hill publicly accused Supreme Court nomineeClarence Thomas of making sexually inappropriate comments when she worked for him; Thomas denied Hill's allegations. In2004, President George W. Bush and VicePresident Dick Cheney concededthat Saddam Hussein had noweapons of mass destruction as they tried to shift the Iraq war debate to a new issue, arguing that Saddam wasabusing a U.N. oil-for-food program. Ten years ngo: The Nobel Peace Prizewasawarded to the International Atomic

Energy Agencyandits chief, Mohamed EIBaradei. Five years ego:NewJersey Gov. Chris Christie canceled construction of a decadesin-the-making train tunnel between NewJersey and Manhattan, citing cost overruns that had ballooned the price tag from $5 billion to $10 billion or more. One year ngo: North Korea publicly acknowledged to the international community the existence of its "reform through labor" camps, amention that appeared to comein response to ahighly critical U.N. human rights report.

BIRTHDAYS Retired South African Archbishop andNobel Peace laureate DesmondTutu is 84. Author ThomasKeneally is 80. ComedianJoy Behar is73. Actress Jill Larson is 68.Singer JohnMellencamp is64.Rock musician Ricky Phillips is 64. Actress Mary Badham("To Kil a Mockingbird" ) is 63.Actress Christopher Norris is 62. Rock musician TicoTorres (BonJovi) is 62. Cellist Yo-Yo Mais 60. Gospel singer Michael W.Smith is 58. Olympic gold medal ice dancer JayneTorvill is 58. Actor Dylan Baker is57. Recording executive and TV personality Simon Cowell is 56. Rhythmand-blues singerToni Braxton is 48. Rock singer-musician Thorn Yorke (Radiohead) is47. Electronic musician Flying Lotus (AKA StephenEllison) is 32. MLB player EvanLongoria is 30. Actress Lulu Wilson is10. — From wire reports

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

Toyota conceptcanmerge t in Sta nOW onto highwayhands-free a outt e 0 e win in SICS By Craig Trudeg and Yuki Hagiwnrn Bloomberg News

TOKYO — Touch a button on the steering wheel

''C'<

and put your hands up-

this Toyota will take it from here. That's the gist of the ex-

By Carolyn Johnson

of decades earlier.

The Washington Post

The mile of rock above would act like a filter and the

perience Toyota offered

scientists would measure the

Tokyo. Its "highway teammate"concept car,a m od-

The Nobel Prize is near-

ly always high concept stuff — and perhaps the physics one most especially. Even for

thosewho are interested and thrilled by the origins and future of the universe or the

fundamental particles that make up matter, the frontier of knowledge in physics can be a little hard to grasp. Which makes the humble neutrino stand out. Two

interactions between the neutrino and the particle inside.

This detector identified neutrinos created from the sun, but far too few. "That was where the hint came from that there weren' t

enough neutrinos coming from the sun," said Kate Scholberg, a p hysicist at Duke University. "That lasted forever; it started in the '60s, when they detected less

to reporters Tuesday in ified L exus

G S s e d an,

pulled off automated feats ToyotaMotor Corp. via Bloomberg News including entering public Toyota's "highway teammate" concept cer can pull off automated expressways, switching feats including entering public expressways, switching lanes and lanes and steering to the steering to the offremp. offramp, all while picking spots to speed up or slow

down based on the surrounding traffic. T he demonstration i l -

physicists, Takaaki Kajita of the University of Tokyo and Arthur McDonald of Queen' s University in Canada, shared the Nobel today for showing

than predicted by the model. Is something wrong with the model? Something wrong

that neutrinos have mass.

with the detector'?"

That means a lyrical John Updike poem needs an offi-

for his work, but also set off

wanted to keep a driver ful-

cial correction: Neutrinos, they are ve ry small. They have no charge; they have no-maes; a tiny amount

several decades of scientific soul-searching.

of mass;

The answer would come from the work that led to this

year's Nobel prize. Neutrinos, physicists figured out, came in three flavors. Davis' detector was

ly engaged, the Japanese automaker is now in the same camp as companies like Google in developing its technology all the way to cars going fully driverless, according to Moritaka Yoshida, Toyota's chief safety technology officer. "The technology we' re showing today is at the lev-

sensitive to only one — the

el where all the operation

electron neutrinos produced

for driving is possible by itself," Yoshida said in an

They do not interact at alL The earth is just a silly ball To them, th r ough which

they pass Like dustmaids down a

drafty hall. If a poet can get excited

Davis would win the Nobel

"Solar Neutrinos: Where

are They?" a 1972 article in Science magazine asked.

about neutrinos, so can we. Here's my case for why we, like physicists, should cele-

by the sun. That meant may-

brate the neutrino:

switch identities. But for that to be true, the particles would

A figment of physicists' imaginations The neutrino was invented

to fix a loophole in an equation. Who hasn't stared at a

math problem and notbeen able to figure out why the numbers don't add up? When that happened for physicists in 1930, who were trying to figure out why there was some troubling missing energy in radioactive decay, Enrico Fermi and Wolfgang Pauli invented an imaginary particle to solve the problem.

be he was finding so few because the neutrinos could have to have a mass and everyone had assumed they didn' t. The experiments that McDonald and Kajita led -

cavernous underground detectors in Canada and Japan — were able to finally show that neutrinos have mass and

technology that essential-

ly turns cars into co-pilots that boost the driver' s skills. W h il e e x ecutives

have in the past said they

interview. "We will keep in-

creasing its accuracy." The concept car tak-

mous-driving features than

this year installed with a sep-

at a similar event Toyota hosted two years ago. At

arate safety technology that uses a dedicatedradio fre-

that time, the automaker

quency to communicate with

highlighted a system for the surrounding infrastructracing lanes and keeping ture and other vehicles. the car centered. The vehi-

The people's particle Perhaps more than any

steering assistance to avoid c ollision. Those are t h e

other particle, the neutrino is

sorts of features now be-

also the people's particle. It was a daring fiction concoct-

to fellow scientists. "I have

ed in the mind of a scientist,

come to a desperate way out.

confirmed aquarter century

... I admit that my solution

later, that has continued to tease the scientific world with

its elusive nature for another half century. Even knowing it

or Lexus models. "For the future beyond 2020,

forts, will direct joint research

centers being established by driverless car is a possibility," the automaker at S t anford en for test d rives today said Yoshida. University and Massachusetts was equipped with more The automaker will begin Institute of Technology. sophisticated aut o no- sellingcars before the end of

were changing identity. The particles weren't disappearing — they were changing flavors.

"Dear radioactive ladies and gentlemen," Pauli wrote

may appear to you not very probable a priori, since one would probably have seen the neutrons a long time ago if they exist. But only one who

lustrates how far Toyota has come in developing

coming more widely available The Crown sedan will be in showrooms. the first of three Toyota modAt this point, the modified els going on sale in Japan this Lexus concept is capable of year that can deliver audio going into autonomous mode and visual alerts when a drivonly on Tokyo expressways. er has taken his or her foot The car can indicate on its cen- off the brake and has started ter screen as well as play an to creep into an intersection. audio message when it wants The system also can caution the driver to take over if other the driver when he or she apvehicles aren't letting it merge. proaches a red light and hasn' t Returning to manual mode is eased off the accelerator. Once simple — just grab the wheel stopped, the car counts down or press the brake. how much time remains until The Lexus GS made avail- the light turns green. able to reporters Tuesday was Toyota last month hired the developed in close collabora- U.S. military's top robotics ention with Toyota group sup- gineer as part of a $50 million pliers including Denso Corp., investment in a r tificial-intelYoshida said. Toyota aims to ligence research to build on introduce cars with automat- its semi-autonomous driving ed highway driving by around efforts. Gill Pratt, who had 2020. Yoshidadeclined to say beenprogram manager forthe whether the technology will be Defense Advanced Research made available first in Toyota Projects Agency's robotics ef-

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cle had radar that detected vehicles or pedestrians

up ahead, automatically decelerating or triggering

Sun SPot Reduction IPL PhotoFacral $135 (r1 15 savings) Cannotcombinewith anyotheroffer.Bpirrs 11/30/15.

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EÃ8"

has mass doesn't solve things,

because that simple fact chips dares wins." away at a canonical framePauli suggested "the neu- work in physics, called the trons" be called neutrinos in- Standard Model. Further exstead — little neutral ones. periments on neutrinos may help us crack a philosophical The poltergeist panicle conundrum: why the universe Science can often seem is made up of matter and not quite dry, its results presented as if their certitude was

anti-matter.

never in doubt. But science is a risky business, more a process of continuously being wrong about stuff and trou-

of the little town o f L e ad, South Dakota, where the co-

Take a Darkness to Light Training and help save a child from abuse.

I calledMayor Jerry Apa nundrum about neutrinos that was ultimately solved by

scientists today first began, it is about enjoying moments to ask him how he felt about of lucid insight. As if an ad- his town's role in this ongoing mission of that fact, the Nobel mystery of the universe. Prize-winning e x periment Lead isn't a university town that confirmed the neutrino or even a very big place — its bleshooting experiments than

was real in 1956 was called

population hovers a little over

Project Poltergeist. If ever 3,000 people. But it recently one needed a reminder that put up a statue, made of the even physicists pondering the actual metal of the original smallest components of mat- detector, he said, to honor ter or the biggest questions Ray Davis, the scientist who about the universe are just started the head-scratching like us, that name is a power- solved by today's prize-winfulpiece ofevidence. ning work.

The answer to a longtime scientific mystery In the 1960s, a physicist

named Ray Davis set up a huge detector 4,850 feet underground in an active gold m ine i n S o uth D a k ota. I t was a massive vat, filled with

"I don't k now t h e e x act year that Dr. Davis started his neutrino project down in t he Homestake Gold M i n e at the 4,850 level. But I know that prior to that, all Dr. Davis

had was a theory. And when he set up his initial project, that proved his theory," Apa

100,000 gallons of perchlorethylene, to catch neutrinos

said. "We' re especially proud

that might interact with the chemical. The miners in the

have now a long-term based neutrino project going in.... They' re going to do further

gold mine called it "the tank." Which, bythe way, means

and very excited that we do

KIDS Center

a child abuse intervention center

experimentation on the mass

and makeup of the neutrino, Dakota town were aware of a and we' re very excited about major scientific experiment to this. We' re very happy. And capture a mysterious particle we' re very proud that we' re that a German and Italian sci- b asically the h ome o f t h e entist had proposed a couple neutrino." that miners in a tiny South

Sign up at kidscenter.org


A4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

Cops '

Continued fromA1 But as the i nvestigation moved ahead, she felt like she

'I'j

was moving backward. R outine paperwork

'I •III'»

t ook

Supreme Court to attorneys:

hold yourownplacein line

hours. She would get ready for work three hours early but

By Robert Barnes

barely arrive in time. Sometimes, she couldn't remember

WASHINGTON — Membership in the Supreme Court

how she got where she was.

Bar isn't nearly as exclusive tend to attend argument will

"It was like my brain was not

clicking like I was accustomed to," she explained recently. "It was like I was trying to do hopscotch and wasn't sure which

leg I wanted to move." Some colleagues noticed her distress, and told her they understood. For years, some city officers involved in shoot-

Most won't t al k

p u blicly

be allowed in the line for the

thousands of lawyers have paid the $200 admittance fee even though they will never argue a case at the court. But membership has its privileges. One of them is a separate and much shorter waiting line to see a Supreme

Bar section; 'line standers'

associates.

Line-standing has become son — the only way anyone big business in Washington, can see an argument at the where companies supply a Supreme Court, where televi- placeholder to, for instance, sion cameras are banned. make sure a lobbyist gets into The court announced on a congressional hearing. Inits first day of the new term creasingly, they havebecome

s ~ip

part of the spectacle of a major Supreme Court hearing, where people pay up to $50 an hour to have someone secure one of several hundred

spots in the grand marble chamber. will not be permitted." A couple of years ago, Slate. In other words, lawyers corn foundthat some were cannot pay someone to hold a paying about $6,000 for the spot for them when the court multi-day ordeal required to has a big argument — or even ensure admittance through send one of the firm's lowly the public line for an oral argu-

as it sounds: Thousands upon

Court oral argument in per-

I

ings have informally mentored each other through the variety of emotions — including anger, grief and paranoia — that follow. about it. As one put it: "I really don't want to unpackage that."

Monday something that previously had seemed unnecessary to spell out: "Only Bar members who actually in-

The Washington Post

ment on same-sex marriage.

(The court's directive Monday did not change the rules for the public.) Similar camp-outs have occurred when the court confronted Second Amendment cases and the Affordable Care Act.

Other cops, who never shot

anybody, also opened up to Glover Straughter about living J.B. Forbes I St.Louis Post-Dispatch via Tribune News Service risky off-duty lifestyles to keep St. Louis Police Officers Joan Glover Straughter and Dondrell up the adrenaline rush the job Harris are being honored and called heroes for an incident in 2013 has conditioned their bodies when they stopped a would-be robber in a restaurant full of peoto crave. And to dissipate the ple. The two officers were working a secondary job when anarmed emotional traumas that build man came into the restaurant and pointed a gun at them. Straughup. Call to call. Day to day. ter was forced to shoot the robber when he refused to put the gun Yeartoyear. down."People thinkwe are gun-happy and we wantto shootand Glover Straughter has made kill, but that's not the case," Glover Straughter said. it her mission to minister to

them, freely trading stories of their experiences.

was under challenge in social media.Police conduct became a headline topic in news sto-

ing inward, too. Now it refers

The conversations intensi-

Their role as hero-protector

Continued fromA1 Fordham, M a r quette, Brown and the University

of San Francisco all announced in the past two weeks that they were re-

voking the honor they bestowed on Cosby. "It has become clear,"

them, physically or mentally. clude mental health awareness Violanti said police already training in their academy, in- under high stress were demorcluding a suicide awareness alized after Ferguson, when class, said Sgt.Jeremy Rorno of "... all of a sudden, it seems like the Crisis Intervention Team. all people think all officers are Rorno's team typically trains bad." He explained, "Most cops police on de-escalating situa- sign up for the job because they tions involving the mentally ill. want to help people, and that After Ferguson, it began look- may decline over the years, but

fied after the Ferguson police killing of Michael Brown. Cops repeatedly endured verbal and physical attacks while facing off with angry protesters.

Cosby

St. Louis County police in-

they' re still there.

"And to not be appreciated ries that equated some cops to officers in need to two mental race-driven murderers. health professionals with law for risking their life every day "People t h in k we ar e enforcement b a ckgrounds. is not a good feeling." gun-happy and we want to That helpsovercome relucshoot and kill, but that's not tance to confide in an outsider, Officer symptoms the case," she said. "Because of he said. Trauma recovery research"One my faith, the Word tells me as a thing F e rguson ers at the University of Missoupolice officer, I'm a minister of brought to light nationwide is ri-St. Louis, who are studying God. And Scripture tells us we that law enforcement does a re- officers working within 30 have to defend by self-defense." ally good job of taking care of miles of Ferguson, were surShe hopes the Ferguson people in the community with prised to get 300 responses shooting can be the catalyst for mental health needs, but we do when, as associate professor publicly addressing not only a horrible job of taking care of Zoe Peterson put it, "There' s police behavior but the mental our own," Rorno said. not much incentive to admit challenges that can shape it The president's task force you have PTSD." The last of — the very core of her hushed said, "An agency work envi- three rounds of queries will conversations among con- ronment in which officers do come in December. That most cerned cops. not feel they are respected, sup- didn't collect the $20 participaIncreasingly, it looks like she ported or treated fairly is one of tion stipend "speaks to the fact may get her wish. the most common sources of that they wanted a little bit of Recommendations that de- stress. a voice to say where they are partments formally address hurting," said Tara Galovski, Mental health issues the mental health of officers a formerassistantprofessor at are part of both the President's The mental health issue UMSL who remains part of the Task Force on 21st Century Po- lurks behind some high-profile study. licing and the Ferguson Com- controversies. An officer who So far, officers have reportmission's reports. It's unclear resignedaftervideo showed ed a range of emotions, from how or when that may play him forcefully dispersing a mild anxiety or sleeplessness out. crowd of teens at a pool party to excessive drinking and In the meantime, the St. Lou- in McKinney, Texas, had just flashbacks, Galovski said. is Police Wives Association has responded to back-to-back sui- Some started calling in sick or been raising money to provide cides, his lawyer, Jane Bishkin, withdrawing from family and mental health care as need- said. "With all that had hap- friends. ed by local officers and their pened that day, he allowed his Glover Straughterrememfamilies.And researchers at emotions to get the better of bers an overwhelming sense of the University of Missouri-St. him." paranoia following her shootLouis are studying the effects But poor mental health can- ing. She feared retaliation or of the Ferguson experience on not be an excuse for miscon- that the department would cops. duct, said Dr. John Violanti, a fault what she did. Glover Straughter couldn' t research professor at the UniAll kinds of emotions teem be happier about it. versity of Buffalo who testi- just below the surface. "A lot goes on in the streets. fied before the president's task Dandridge, of the wives asYou see things, like babies force. "Personality factors and sociation, remembers getting getting hurt, and our brains a lot of different things can a call from the scene where a are not equipped for that day lead to that behavior; stress is 5-year-old boy was killed in in and day out," she said. "And a contributor," he said. An of- north St. Louis. The commandyet you don't think about main- ficer's disposition, exposure to er thought some officers might tenanceon your brain.We get incidents in a given shift and need emotional help. That was our hearts checked ... try to the time of day can matter, he logical, Dandridge figured, givwork out. So my question is, sard. en the violent death of a young 'You are trying to take care of "In a period of 20 years, can child. all this, why not taking care of you imagine the trauma an ofBut there was more to this your brain?'" ficer sees?" asked Violanti, a one. It happened in a neighNew York State Police trooper, borhood where police felt great Ferguson investigator and department apprehension - "Black Lives St. Louis Police Chief Sam psychological assistance coor- Matter" signs in windows and Dotson said his department dinator for 23 years. yards conjured up memories was talking a b out m e ntal A study in the president's of confrontations from protests health before the Ferguson task force report estimates that past. Officers didn't expect an shooting. "We noticed that po- police kill themselves almost outpouring of gratitude for trylice departments in Missouri 2Yz times more often than oth- ing to save the child and find are woefully behind in ad- ers kill them. his killer. dressingthese issues, "he said. Violanti cited the most reWhen residents started hugLarger departments like his cent Centers for Disease Con- ging the cops, it was too much have "early warning systems" trol and Prevention data that for some of them to take, Danto gauge whether an officer suggestpolice are at a 69 per- dridge tearfully recalled. "Evis struggling. While the city cent greater risk than the av- erything that they had tried to seekstoupgrade itssystem, he erage U.S. worker of commit- keep in the back of their minds said his department is focused ting suicide. He said various came to the f orefront," she on trai ning peercounselors. studies estimate that between 7 said. "If there is some type of percent to 19 percent of all offiFor G l o ve r St r a ughter, mental or physical problem, cers experience post-traumatic talking among her peers and it's going to affect an officer' s stress syndrome at some point. with professionals has helped performance, and it's a domino Glover Straughter said she put the trauma of the shooting effect," he said. believesshehashelpedprevent in the back of her mind. InvesPresident Barack Obama's three officers from taking their tigators concluded the killing policing task force saw the lives. was justified, and she w as same thing. Peer programs work, Vio- awarded a Medal of Valor. "Hurt people can hurt peo- lanti said, because police trust She still avoids the restauple," member Tracey Meares each other. Many fear that re- rant where it happened. And warned a hearing in February. vealing themselves to bosses the fact the man she killed was That group's report, released might cost them promotions, or 20 — close to the age of her in March,concluded:"The'bul- even their jobs. own kids — resonates. "Knowing how much I love letproof cop' does not exist. The He said officers who resist officers who protect us must mandatory counseling may them, it hurt to the core to also be protected — against respond to incentives and fi- know somebody's son was not incapacitating physical, mental nesse. He recommends cash going to be home for the holiand emotional health problems bonuses or extra time off to re- days," she said. "It's something as well as against the hazards ward cops who submit to "well- I always say we just weren' t of their jobs." ness checks" for whatever ails prepared for on this job."

Christina Paxson, the president of Brown, said in her statement that "by his own

admission in legal depositions that became public this summer, that Cosby

has engaged in conduct with women that is contrary to the values of Brown

and the qualities for which he was honored by the uni-

at the moment." "What makes the case compelling," he said, "is the very

alma mater, Temple University, which accepted his resignation from the board in December,

serious pattern of misconduct and Spelman College, a historthat's been revealed both in ically black women's college in journalistic accounts and by a Atlanta that in July terminated large number of women who a professorship endowed by have now bravely come for- Cosby. ward and has been validated The recent wave of schools by Cosby's own testimony in rescinding Cosby's honorary deposition about his pattern of degrees has only resurrectconduct." ed the issue, particularly at For schools, honorary de- schools where administration grees are a way to reward policies have fallen under scruwell-respected i n dividuals, tiny in recent years for their draw attendance by celebrities handling of sexual assault. and perhaps generate a finanCosby is far from the first recial gift. Revoking them is an cipientof an honorary degree administrative formality and who has held on to his award public rebuke. despite subsequent i n tense Cosby has taken in at least criticism. 57 such degrees since 1985. He received them from every kind

DePauw University in In¹i ana, for example, has not re-

But Yale is among the

of school, from the very big,

scinded the honorary degree

schools that have taken a

like the University of Southern

it awarded Richard N i xon

versity in 1985."

differ entapproach — no ac- California, to smaller schools, in 1957,years before his role tion, even in the face of an like Berklee College of Music in Watergate as the nation's online petition to strike the in Boston. Several of Cosby's president. Morehouse College award given in 2003. honorary degrees came from in Atlanta has similarly not "Revoking Cosby's doc- historically black colleges, rescinded a 1983 honorary detorate is about more than i ncluding D e l aware S t a t e gree it gave Robert Mugabe, achieving justice for his University, Fisk University in the president of Z i mbabwe, victims," Marissa Medan- Nashville and Dillard Univer- who has a much criticized resky, a recent graduate who sity in New Orleans. cord on human rights. started the petition, wrote Typically the schools honBut as many schools point in the Yale Daily News last ored Cosby for his success as out, honorary degrees are not month. "It is a gesture, how- an entertainer, as well as his Nobel Prizes. And many stuever small, against sexual pronounced support for edu- dents on college campuses toviolence wherever these cation and his espousal of the day are often barely familiar h einous crimes occur sort of bootstraps persever- with past honorees. That is including at Yale and other ance that would serve young certainly true of Cosby, who recollege campuses." graduates well. ceivedsome ofhis aw ardsde"As an actor, a humorist and cades ago, before some current Yale said in a statement that it had never rescind- a citizen, Bill Cosby has been students were even born. "We' re not even thinking ed an honorary degree, one of America's most elowithout elaborating on its quent advocates for education about Bill Cosby," said Edwina reasoning. and the value of developing ev- Harris Hamby, vice president Some schools say they ery individual mind," Carnegie for institutional advancement do not want to condemn in

Mellon's president, Jared Co-

the court of public opinion a man who has never been found guilty in a court of law, or even charged with a crime. Cosby has denied all wrongdoing. "We give out honorary degrees based on what

hon, said in 2007 when Cosby n ow don't even know w h o received his degree. Bill Cosby is unless they look

we know at the time," said

Cosby said in an interview with The Times in 1998: "I like to see thesefresh, wet faces

going out into the world. Other than at church or a wedding you don't see people like this. It's a getting for me, but it' s

also a giving. It's a spiritual experience." advancement at Talladega A spokesman for Cosby, College in Alabama, where David Brokaw, declined to disCosbywashonoredin 1992, cuss the issue of his honorary "and at the time he was ev- degrees. erybody's favorite dad." Schools began d i stancS till o t hers a r e s t i l l ing themselves from Cosby grappling with what to do, months ago, including his like Ohio State University,

at Fisk. "Most of the students at Netflix or something like that."

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THIS WCCKCHD'5 ISSUE


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7,2015 •THE BULLETIN

Wage

Juan Carlos Ord6nez, the

the economy to absorb a lot of

Continued from A1 communications director for Washington currently has the Silverton-based Oregon the highest minimum wage Center for Public Policy, disin the U.S. at $9.47 an hour putes the notion that small and Washington, D.C., has an businesses would be p ut hourly minimum of $9.50. out by either measure and "That's a tough one for us counters that more money

that. But in our tricounty area

would circulate through local communities.

goods up," predicted Barker, who employs approximately 15 people at his brewpub, depending on the time of year. "Every time minimum wage goes up, basic goods go up considerably. It it takes a big hike, like $15 an hour, that' s huge. I'd probably have to charge $18 or $20 for a burger

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

than 20 years, but known the

Bend as they went. If you don' t

unrecognizable.

Tom Healy's wife and co-own-

be good for rural America," s aid Aurolyn S t wyer, t h e

cially in that area of town, they said, has made it almost

owner of Red Sky Trading Post in Warm Springs, who has one full-time employee and one part-time worker. "Realistically, I'd have to look at decreasing hours (for employees)." Stwyer pointed out that would be especially disheartening on the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Res-

now that the road is reopened,

but it's an improvement. Another local r e sident, Brent Anderson, 45, parked

his car in a space at the market after getting gas. He lives

ervation, where the unem-

ployment rate is significantly munities and smaller busihigher than other parts of the nesses is disproportionate state. compared to the rest of the "We've got60 to 70percent state," said McLane, whose unemployment," Stwyer said. District 5 5 i n cludes r ural "People feel lucky to find a parts of Deschutes, Crook, place to work. When I first Jackson, Klamath and Lake startedthreeyearsago,Ihad counties. Prineville is the largtwo dozen people here look- est community in District 55.

off of 27th Street with his fam-

ily and is more than happy Two cyclists, Judie and Da- he gets to take Reed Market vid Decks, both 66, stopped again to get home. "We' re ecstatic," Anderson tomers decreased. McKeach- at the station to check out the ie turned to m arketing the traffic in the roundabout and said. business heavily online. He' ll express their relief. They have — Reporter: 541-383-0325, be relieved when he can rely lived in SE Bend for more kflsicaro@bendbulletin.corn McKeachie said. After t h at

from inside the store.

though, the construction started and the number of cus-

Sandwich

"We may start them out

"I don't think it's the state' s

business to have anything to do with business," he said

about minimum wage laws. "That's none of their business — that's not what they' re

there for." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbullet in.corn

laborers;food writer James

done, because it was a crazy

Beard believes that the Den-

idea — a breakfast sandwich," the breakfast menu would Kroc recalled in his memoir. "... soon be available until closing. "This i s t h e c o nsumers' I boggled a bit at the presentation. But then I tasted it, and I idea. This is what they want us

Continued from A1

ver Sandwich traces back to a sandwich prepared by Chibeen easing early-morning nese chefsat railroad gangs routines since long before the and logging camps, who golden arches ever graced an adapted it from the traditional American skyline. Egg Foo Yung. Their rise to prominence parallels the emergence of Workers' meals the modern worker — overThat the breakfast sandworked, underpaid and hun- wich came about at the same gry. And their unfailing suc- time as industrialization was cess, regardlessoftimeperiod no accident — it was solidly a or time of day, is a testament staple of the industrial workto two essential facts: every- ing class. In rural areas, where one needs breakfast, and ev- farmers had a wealth of ingreeryone is too busy to make it dients available to them and themselves. a day of backbreaking work ahead, breakfast was typically Englishbreakfasts hotand huge, according to the The story begins in the ear- Oxford Encyclopedia: breads ly 19th century, on the smog- sweetened with syrup, wafgy streets of East London, fles, pancakes and popovers, Breakfast sandwiches have

was sold. Wow!"

Hoping for a breakfast boost McDonald's breakfast was a breakaway success. Within

a few decades, it accounted for a quarterof the chain's sales — even though it was only offered for five or six hours out of the day For a long time, the chain Daniel Acket / Bloomherg News file photo

Mcoonald's now offers breakfast all day. Though the restaurant invented the Sausage McMuffin with egg, it didn't invent the breakfast sandwich.

began offering a similar concoction, dubbed the Egg Mcexplained breakfast historian deep-fried fruit fritters, an ar- Muffin. According to company Heather Amdt-Anderson. ray of meat and fish, potatoes legend, it was the brainchild of Seeing a need for a cuppa in various forms and coffee, California franchisee Herb Peand a quick bite among the tea or hot chocolate all ap- terson, who loved Eggs Benelegions of factory workers peared onruraltables,some- dict and wanted to re-create the trudging to work each morn- times all at the same time. dish without the mess of Holing, street vendors began to But forworkers at factories, landaise sauce. The result was set up stalls to serve them. construction sites, mines and a broken-yolked egg cooked Patrons would swiftly down logging camps, for whom food a mug of coffee, hand the mug budgets were tight and kitchback to the vendor, then walk en access often nonexistent, away with a sandwich. It enclosed classic break-

the tricounty area," he added. "An increase like this could be quite disconcerting." Not all small-businesses owners in the rural parts of

cial gain of $3.2 billion in ad- at minimum wage, but once ditional wages for the state' s they show they have some exlow-wage earners. perience or that they' re learn"Now a lot of these cus- ing or they look like they' re tomers have more money to going tobe a good employgo outfor a meal," Ord6nez ee, webump them up,"said argued. "It makes them Pinckney, who employs 32 better customers for small people at his store. "We just businesses." feel it's worthwhile to reward Oregon House Minori- good employees." ty Leader Mike McLane, That being said, PinckR-Powell Butte, disagrees ney's not necessarily a fan with the group's assessment of the state — or anyone, for of a proposed minimum wage that matter — telling him or hike and its effect on small any other business owners businesses. how they should run their "The impact on rural com- companies.

city has gone through, espe-

Decks said. She said she still needstobecarefulon herbike

into the station to fill up. A big

graces its marquee: "Yeah.. part of that may have had to Were still open." do with the temporary price D avid Mc K e achie, 3 0 , reduction, at $1.99 a gallon, but of Bend bought the lot and the change was welcome. opened it right before work on Tom and Daniel ran around the road began a couple years with the gas attendants, wipago. ing windshields, offering free "The first month was great," cookies and grabbing change

backbone of communities in

mates, that would be a finan-

The amount of change the

sarcastic confirmation t h at

have folks who are owners of small businesses that' ll have to layoffpeople and work more hours themselves. "Small businesses are the

minimum wage shoots up by as much as 62 percent. "I don't believe it would

"The last month was really hard to be patient," Judie

those workers tend to spend

trict 55, we' re small towns. We

sion to see whether the state' s

city much longer than that.

recognizethecarlotby name, er, Carol Healy, watched as you might recognize it for the lines of cars started pulling

"Raising the m i nimum wage puts more money in the pockets of low-income workers," Ordonez said. "We know

(Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson counties) and in my Dis-

money locally and quickly and that's pumped back into Central Oregon are worried the economy." about the potential wage inAccording to the center for creases. John Pinckney, who and tell people not to tip." public policy, an estimated owns La Pine's Ace HardRural business owners 589,000 Oregonians would ware, said he almost always throughout Central Oregon see their wages increased pays his employees more are watching the proposed if the minimum wage was than minimum wage to enballot measures and next raised to $15 an hour by 2018. sure he has the best people year's short legislative ses- Based on the center's esti- possible.

Vehicles use the roundabout at SE 15th Street and Reed Market Road on Tuesday afternoon in Bend after ell the lanes were opened.

again on traffic — by car and by foot — for potential customContinued from A1 ers. After the ribbon cutting, A fterward th e t w o m e n peoplewere already stopping walked back toward Newber- by. ry, passing Quality Cars of Back at the market and deli,

"The Portland-metro area has

ing for work."

because it' ll drive the cost of

Moving

stopped serving McMuffins and the rest of its breakfast offeringsat 10:30 — eggs and hamburgerpatties need to be cooked at two different tem-

that a limited list of items from

to do," Mike Andres, McDonald's USA President, told the Wall Street Journal. "That' s why I think this could be the catalyst for our turnaround." T hat McDonald's is n ow

turning to all-day breakfast — and the breakfast sandwich — to ease its financial troubles is no surprise to Amdt-Anderson, the food historian. Although demand for other fastfood products has flatlined,

breakfast is one of the few sectors of the industry that's still growing. Now, as always, peoperatures, and it didn't make ple need to eat. And now, as in a round Teflon frame, then sense to keep a separate grid- always, working Americans piled onto a buttered English dle for eggs running all day. lack the time in the morning to muffin with cheese and a slab But the past few years have cook for ourselves. "There's kind of a long hisof Canadian bacon. seen a dramatic decline in Peterson put the sandwich revenue, and this summer Mc- tory of breakfast being part on a plate and served it to Mc- Donald's announced it would of fast food menus," she said. Donald's President Ray Kroc be losing a net 125 stores in the "When restaurants are sufferduring a visit. coming year. ing economically they know "He didn't want me to reject it A few weeks after that, the they can rely on breakfast to out of hand, which I might have company caved, announcing keep them afloat."

a portable meal that could be eaten en route to work was

fastfoods — afried egg,m eat, essential. sometimes cheese — between The link between a taste for two halves of a soft roll called

a "bap." The bread would sop up and contain the egg yolk and bacon or sausage grease, turning the elements of an English breakfast into something that could be easily eaten on the go. The bap sandwiches proved popular, and the merchants who sold them made a killing. "It was easy to have the rolls

ready to go, there's not a lot of construction and it's low-cost to prepare," Amdt-Anderson said. "It was a really profitable thing to make." It didn't take long for the

breakfastsandwich to cross the Atlantic. As in England, the sandwich was the break-

the breakfast sandwich and

the state of the worker is so inextricable there have been sociological studies on it. A 2011

report from Ireland attributed the popularity of the "jumbo breakfast roll" (a half baguette stuffed with fried or grilled sausage, bacon rashers, blood pudding, a fried egg and ketchup) to the proliferation of

B UY 2, G ET I

Drink in A m erica, the first fornia-based chain Jack in the truly A m e r ican b r e akfast Box debuted the first modern

sandwich, though it was not to-go breakfast sandwich: egg, always eaten in the morning. meat and cheese on an EnAnd it too may have started glish muffin. out as a way to feed hungry A year l ater, McDonald's

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A6

THE BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

FAA proposesfine of nearly 2 million for drone operator

TODAY'S READ: OBAMACARE

ai ornia's ea on ea care orimmi rans? • 0 OW

LOS ANGELES — Like many blue states, Cal-

8, )IIS

iteII" PoIt e«

signing up millions for health insurance. Now, it' s venturing into a potentially costly and controversial new frontier of health policy: offering medical

that health care is a human

right, not a privilege," said Warren Gunnels, Sanders' policy

careto such residents jumped

KatieFalkenberg / Los AngelesTimes via Tribune News Service

from 11 to 48. And in June, Gov.

director. "Your ability to access Workers install a 700-square-foot banner in July on the side of Jerry Brown signed a state bud- health care services should not the building of The California Endowment in Los Angeles. The get that for the first time funds be dependent on your income installation was In honor of the Health For All Kids budget signed health care for such children. or your immigration status." by the governor. Across California, elected officials made the same Key state legislators have On the Republican right, for- policy decision over andover this year: to provide health care to vowed not to stop until all im- mer Pennsylvania Sen. Rick undocumented Immigrants.

migrants living in California Santorum said California's illegally have coverage, a pro- approach is at cross purposes posal that could cost the state with what's best for the nation. "Look, we can't be in a situmore than $1 billion annually. The effort has set California ation where we are encouragapart from most other states ing behavior that we know is and the federal government, dangerous to people and danwhich barred those here ille- gerous to our country, which is gally from signing up for in- either coming into this country surance under the landmark illegally" or less dangerously Affordable Care Act, which overstaying a visa and "simply overhauled the nation's health not going home and signing up care system. With 2.6 million such im-

for benefits," Santorum said in

a recent post-debate interview. migrants, the Golden State is South Carolina Sen. Lindpolitically sympathetic to their sey Graham, a GOP moderneeds, said Randy Capps, di- ate in the race, also disagreed rector of research for U.S. pro- with the California approach. grams at the Migration Policy "I think it's going down a bad Institute, a nonpartisan think road there," he said. The solutank. "It's logical that Califor- tion, he said, is to provide a nia would be out front about this," he said.

strong. Laura Martin, commuLawmakers voiced concerns nications director for the Pro- about both the cost and making gressive Leadership Alliance of the state too welcoming to imNevada, noted that state's attor- migrants, said Alberto Moreno, ney general has joined a lawsuit executive director of the Orechallenging President Obama's gon Latino Health Coalition. program to granttemporary He said he plans to push the bill immunity from deportation to next year. "We hope to follow thousands of immigrants. California's suit," he said. "I couldn't imagine having Mirna Castro, with Servicios

SkyPan International Inc.

er use of commercial drones. But SkyPan's operations probably still would be pro-

of Chicago operated 65 un-

hibited under the regulations

the conversation now to talk

aircraft.

De La Raza in Denver, said

about providing health care for California is seen as a laboraundocumented children," she tory. Colorado health advocates said. "We are not the same as and legislators will watch to see California."

structure Committee hearing

Flying drones in violation on what the agency is doing to of federal regulations "is ille- address safety hazards creatgal and can be dangerous," ed by drones flying too close said FAA Administrator Mi- to manned aircraft. chael Huerta. "We have the FAA officials have said safest airspace in the world, they are receiving multiple and everyone who uses it reports daily of drones flying must understand and observe in the vicinity of airports and our comprehensive set of airplanes. Between Novemrules and regulations." ber 2014 and August 2015, Karl Brewick, a SkyPan the FAA received over 700 reproduction coordinator, said ports by pilots of drone sightthe company had not had ings, although questions have a chance to review the fine been raised about whether proposaland had no imme- some involved birds mistaken diate comment. SkyPan has for drones. Most of the flights 30 days to respond to the appear to be unauthorized.

how the nation's largest state

One test could come in Ore- finances and manages expandgon. The state expanded Med- ed medical care for immigrant icaidunder Obamacare to cov- residents in the years ahead. "It' ll definitely inform Coloer poor residents, but a bill to inpathway to legal status for clude immigrant children died rado ... to maybe take a step in people living here illegally and this year in the Legislature. that direction," she said.

But even here the issue re- who aren't criminals. Republican candidates Carly ties have opted not to offer such Fiorina, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, care. And a recent USC Dorn- Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Florisife/Los Angeles Times poll da Sen. Marco Rubio did not refound that though close to half spond to requests for comment. of state voters believed immiB esides C a lifornia, j u s t grants here illegally should be four states — Massachusetts, eligible to receive free or low- Illinois, New York and Washcost health insurance through ington — and Washington, Medi-Cal or a similar program, D.C., have agreed to provide a statistically equivalent 47 per- health coverage to children in cent said they opposed such the country illegally. Legislapolicies. tors in those jurisdictions will National Immigration Law probably soon consider broadCenter attorney Gabrielle Les- ening those programs to insard saidthe nature of debate dude adults, health advocates among political leaders over predict. expanding such benefit s has changed in California over Starting with kids UCLA's Wallace said more the last 15 years. The legal and philosophical arguments states may well begin extendagainst providing health care ing coverage to children in services to those here illegally the U.S. illegally because it's a generally have receded, and small, healthy population, and "the only conversation about is seen as agood investment bethis has been about cost," she cause many eventually become

tions this year to allow great-

because the flights took place March 2012 and December at higher altitudes than would 2014 in some of the nation's be permitted and over densem ost congested airspace, the ly developed areas. FAA said in a statement. The previous largest fine Forty-three flights were in for drone operations was the heavily restricted Class B $18,700, proposed in SeptemNew York airspace without ber against Xizmo Media, a air traffic control clearance, New York video production the agency said. Class B air- company, the FAA said. space is generally from the One reason the fine against ground up to 10,000 feet in SkyPan is so large is because altitude, and often shaped like FAA inspectors asked the an inverted wedding cake company to stop making the with a 5-mile radius around flights but they continued a major airport at the bottom anyway, FAA spokesman Les and an approximate 40-mile Dorr said. radius near the top. Tuesday's announcement The drones also lacked the comes one day before an FAA two-way radio, transponder official is expected to face and altitude-reporting equip- tough questioning at a House ment required of manned T ransportation an d I n f r a-

the country illegally.

cost, government-run medical

world of aerial and panoramic photography." The FAA proposed regula-

authorized flights between

coverage to hundreds of thousands people living in

committed to providing low-

includes photos of the New

a record $1.9 million fine against an aerial photography company for fl ying drones in crowded New York and Chicago airspace without permission.

. 4„")g

ifornia enthusiastically embraced Obamacare,

left of Clinton and gaining in the Democratic field, "believes

FAA. The company's website

The Associated Press

W ASHINGTON — T h e York and Chicago skylines, Federal Aviation A dminis- and proclaims itsdrones are tration on 'Ibesday proposed "ushering in a whole new

By SoumyaKarlamangla sLos Angeles Times

In a matter of months, the number of California counties

By Joan Lowy

mains contentious. Some coun-

said.

Indeed, the price of providing medical coverage to immigrants remains a hurdle for legislators and advocates — even more so in other parts of the

That Connect Your Community.

"Kids are kind of a low-hang-

Central Oregon communities continue to grow due to a nationally-recognized appreciation for the region's quality of life. From providing the mostbasic needs of food, shelter and security, to creating and maintaining positive social, educational, recreational and professional environments, Central Oregon's nonprofit community is a foundation for our area's success and sustainability. Hundreds of organizations and thousands of volunteers make up this nonprofit network.

ed," he said. "It's politically attractive, and

n o t t e r ribly

tum inside California for mo-

services to all 11 million immi-

mentum outside of California,"

grants in the country illegally because less expensive primary care can avoid serious and

costly illnesses that require patients to be treated in emergen-

cy rooms. However, Federation for

try illegally in some regions, American Immigration Reform offeringmedical coverage to spokesman Ira Mehlman pointsuch immigrants could be the ed to a 2009 Congressional next big health care policy Budget Office report that found battleground. expansionof preventive care They note that t h e U . S. generally leads to higher, not Supreme C o ur t up h eld lower, spending. Obamacare this summer, al-

A hfagazine Highlightingthe Vari ety of Organizations

ing fruit of the undocument-

expensive." Advocates argue it's financially smart to provide health

ceptance of those in the coun-

L

citizens.

country. "I wouldn't mistake momen-

Capps said. Still, some experts say that with an improving economy, easing pressures on government budgets and greater ac-

4I'

Mehlman said states are be-

lowing supporters of univer- ing forced to choose between sal health care coverage to picking up large ER costs from press new initiatives. And the uninsured immigrants, or prolead being taken by California viding them medical coverage, might help, they said. because legislators have passed "I'm sure we' ll inspire other other laws encouraging immistates," said UCLA health poli- grants to come here illegally. cy professor Steven Wallace."I One example, he said, was Calthink it's inevitable." ifornia's decision to offer driver's licenses to such residents.

The political debate

"Either way, these are not good

There are signs the debate could spill into the 2016 presi-

choices," he said.

Through the publication of Connections, The Bulletin will both define and profile the organizations that make up this network. Connections will provide readers with a thorough look at nonprofit organizations in Deschutes, Jefferson, and Crook Counties. SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 5th CALL 541.382.1811 TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY.

ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS

15 states, induding Florida and immigration policy has been a Texas, chose not to expand

The Bulletin is in theprocess ofverifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon.Pleasefill oijt this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail backto: The Bulletin, Attn: Karl MaIlser, P.O. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. E-mall information lo colllIectlolls©bendbIllletln.corn or call 541-383-0379

dominant theme.

Medicaid, the federal health

Spokespersons for Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump, who has made deporting immigrants here illegally a centerpiece of his campaign, and the leading Demo-

program for the poor, under Obamacare, meaning large numbers of legal residents in those states remain uninsured.

Name of Nonprofit Group

dential contest, especially from

That's a view still shared in much of the country. More than

the political bookends, where

cratic candidate, Hillary Clin-

Advocates in those places say

their first priority is securing health insurance for those

ton, declined requests from the low-income U.S. citizens. Los Angeles Times to address And in some states that did the issue. expand Medicaidto cover the But Vermont Sen. Bernie

poor, resistance to extending

Sanders, who is running to the benefits to immigrants remains

Contact Person

E-mail

Organization Phone Number

Website

Nonprofit Mission Statement/Purpose


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

BRIEFING

JEFFERSON COUNTY

cour ouse es isoric isin

Tax kicker is confirmed Tax day will be alittle sweeter for a lot ofOregonians, asthe state has confirmed it will divvy up a $402 million tax surplus amongtaxpayers. The Office of Economic Analysis confirmed Tuesday thosewhopaid state incometaxesin 2014 will get a"kicker" credit of 5.6 percent of that year's tax liability applied to their 2015taxes when they file nextyear. That will still amount to a median ofaround $124 per person,said Paul Warner, thestate's nonpartisan legislative revenue officer. To figure theamount of the credit, multiply 2014 tax liability before any credits, except credits for taxes paid toother states, by 5.6percent, according to theOregon Department of Revenue. The kicker, unique to Oregon, is triggered when actual tax revenues during a two-year budget cycle exceedestimates by 2 percent or more. Taxpayers won't get a check, asthey did during the last kicker in 2007, when Oregontaxpayers got a median$295. The 2011Legislature changed thekicker to a tax credit rather thana check as acost-saving measure. If taxpayersare owed moneyafter filing their 2015 taxes,the5.6 percent is added tothat.

By Ted Shornck

ber 2013.

The Bulletin

Jansen has dedicated long days to restoring the nearly 100-year-old building, which was used for Jefferson County offices, Madras City Hall

The old Jefferson County courthouse building in downtown Madras has been listed

on the National Register of Historic Places after facing

Half of the first floor is now plans to rent out the second

floor courtroom for weddings

"I' ve poured a lot of blood

Steve Jansen purchased

building was to preserve and protect it for future generations. SeeCourthouse/B5

and sweat into this building

the two-story brick building on D Street from Jefferson County for $10,000 in Decem-

to get it to where it's safe," said Jensen, who is retired and lives in Madras.

pUR SCHppLS OUR STUDENTS

+~y

o in o o

e a '?

— Bulletin staff report

The Bend Park & Recreation District would like to

spend the next several years navigating a series of regulatory hurdles. The proposed bridge, to be located at the southern edge of the current urban growth

boundary, would link segments of the Deschutes River Trail on the east side of the

'4-

river with trails crisscrossing the Deschutes National Forest

'll: i1

What:Public hearing on south Deschutes River canyon crossing When:6 p.m., Oct. 28 Where: 799SW Columbia St., Bend

river was designated a state

scenic waterway. Havel said each of Oregon's

downstream from the Mead-

20 state scenic waterways

ow Camp Day Use Area. First, the district will have

are subject to limits on development to protect the rivers'

to persuade the Oregon Parks

scenic and recreational value,

and Recreation Department

while only two — the Upper Deschutes and the Metolius-

to change a rule that bars any entity from applying to build a river crossing. The rule applies to 28 miles of the Deschutes River upstream of

Bend, which is designated by state parks as a state scenic waterway.

The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department has scheduled a public hearing for Photos hy Andy Tullie i The Bulletin

the proposed rule change. Chris Havel, a state parks spokesman, said the prohibition on accepting applications forcrossings datesfrom the 1980s, when the section of

cross the river a short distance

to the west. The bridge would

have additional prohibitions

against bridges. He said it's a little unclear what kind of concerns prompted the adoption

of the restriction for the Upper Deschutes

"If there's anybody still around who was around back then, we hope to hear from them," he said.

SeeBridge/B5

Oct. 28 to take testimony on

Bend High School freshmen Bailey Colvin, center, end senior Samantha Jackson, right in black

jacket, lead e group of classmates Tuesday during a low-impact PEclass in Bend.

Deschiites RiverTrail

• Area high schools offer walking class for those looking fOr loW-imPaCtPE

'7

— Existing trail -- Proposed trail route

DESCHUTES NATIONAL, FOREST

By Abby Spegman The Bulletin

The redheaded boy eyed

'I '

f it

I

"That's Steve Prefontaine," said Dave Williams,

Bend High School junior Mallory Mozzetti, center, shares a

the school's athletics direc-

during PE class Tuesdaymorning.

tor. "You don't know about Prefontaine?" "I'm not into sports," the

boy replied. He'd come to the right place: For those uninterested in traditional physical education, Bend High School offers a low-impact class where students primarily go on walks around the school's campus. Bend High also offers weightlifting, athletic conditioning, something called club fitness, even a basket-

ball class. But those may not appeal to all students, and they

need to take at least one year of PE to graduate.

laugh with freshman Nathan Thunderhawk as they walk together

"I didn't really want

Williams briefed the stu-

to take PE in general, so this was the easy c/ass. Youcan be on your phone or whatever."

dents on the day's route — along a walking trail to Ponderosa Park, then west

on SE Wilson Avenue and north on Ninth Street back to the school — and they set out.

They don't have to change High School freshman into PE uniforms but most wore sneakers; some carried water bottles and head"Everybody can walk and phones to listen to music see the benefits of walking along the way. It was about and of leading an active, 2 miles, and to finish in the 50-minute class period they healthy lifestyle," Williams said. "I'm not asking them to had to keep up a fairly brisk run an eight-minute mile." pace. After taking attendance, SeeWalking class/B5 — Ocean Robinson, Bend

Colo r s below indicategenre the ofthe mainfeature; accompanyingshorts may not beoithe samegenre.

Narrative Time Tower Theatre

Documentaries . ::'3p.m.

Regal , Radi c al Old Mill 161 l:::Grace Regal Old Mill162

. :4

. :5

~o

l:::6.

Shorts blocks

t h~er

:7

Breakinga Monster

a nsla

al

Site of proposed dridge

Source: Bend Park & Recreation District

ThursdayBenffFilm schedule FI M 'ryPE$

Cent '

l„.

the award statue of a runner

inside the Bend High School trophy case. Why does it have a mustache'? he wondered aloud.

ak Rd

t"

Admission is $12 inadvance or at thedoor. At 8 p.m., it's time to

If yougo

The Bulletin

south of Bend but is likely to

835 NW Wall St., Bend.

head to theOxford Hotel, 10 NW MinnesotaAve., for the Opening Night Reception, being held in the Minnesota Ballroom. Tickets are $35 inadvance, $40 at thedoor. Look for more coverage of BendFilm inGO! Magazine onFriday. For more information, visit www.bendfilm.org or call 541-388-3378.

By Scott Hammers

build a pedestrian bridge in the Deschutes River canyon

US B. |' B.WB.

Smoky air hangs over Bend

BendFilm Festival, Central Oregon's very own indie film fest, opens Thursday. One of Thursday's highlights is the documentary "Breaking a Monster," in which a heavy metal trio, made up of young black men, goes from "YouTube sensations playing on the streets of NewYork to Hollywood, where they encounter the surreal music industry and reckon with their rockstar dreams," asBendFilm puts it. Show time is 5:30 p.m. Thursday at the TowerTheatre,

Bulletin file photo

bridge over Deschutes

to keep all or part of individual kickers fromanyone who owesthe state money in othertaxes, child support, court fines orschoolloans. Oregon alsohasa corporate kicker,which was also triggered this year, but that moneynow funds schools.

BendFilmFestival starts Thursday

Places. Andy Tullie/ The

Bend parksseeking

Educational newsandactivities, an oca f san e irac ievemen s • School notes and submission info,B5

The state has the right

Smoke hanging over Bend on Tuesdaynight probably was coming either from a controlled burn to the southwest or a wildfire to the northwest. Willamette National Forest had aprescribed fire burning Tuesday; Mount Hood National Forest had awildfire putting up smokenear Badger Lake,said Maria Maragni, manager of the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center in Prineville. SeeLocal briefing/B3

in Madras is now listed on the National Register of Historic

and anniversaries once restoration is complete. But Jansen said the main reason he purchased the

and the courthouse starting in 1917.

possible demolition nearly two years ago.

The former Jefferson County Courthouse

.JIIADRA5,

being rented out to an attorney for office space. Jansen

:8 :

, 9

:::10

Frame by Frame

Songs My Brothers Taught Nle Embrace of the Serpent

For all of ourBendFilmcoverage, plus Sundayshowtimos, visit www.denddIlletin.coNi/bendfilm

V

Pete Smith i The Bulletin

Parks district approves HillsideParkimprovements By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

dogs off private properties adjoining the park.

The largely undeveloped Instead of surrounding the off-leash area at Hillside Park o ff - leash area with a chain-link will remain more or less intact fe n ce, the district will instead under a plan approved 'Ibesday build a short, post-and-rail by the Bend Park 5 Recreation f ence strung with fabric to deDistrict board. ter dogs from climbing inSide Earlier this year, throughit. The fence ' What the the district roused will be broken at several park will poi n ts around the pesome opposition with look like55 nmeterto allowpeople its plans for the park on the south slope of to freely come and go Awbrey Butte. Neighborswho fr o m the off-leash area, he frequent the park objectedto sai d, and will be set back from a proposal to fence the nearly th e edge of the arkp to pre10-acreoff-leash area,raising s e r ve existing walking trails. concerns that the fencing Vince Proctor, speaking on would make it more difficult beh a lf of a group of neighborfor walkers to freely wander

hood r esidents that organized

through the park. to lobby for a design that Park district landscapearwo u l dn't segregate users of the chitect Jim Figurski calledthe off - l eash area from other park plan approved 'Tuesday a omc u sers, thanked district staff promise, combining neighbors' and board members for workpreference for an open space in g with the group. and the district's desire tokeep See Hillside Park/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

E VENT TODAY BEND FARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NW Brooks St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket. corn or 541-408-4998. SHADOWCATCHER: EDWARD CURTISTHROUGH NATIVE EYES:Justine Lowry, part-time faculty and professor of Native American art history, will explore

contemporary responses tothe photographic works of Edward Curtis; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. CHELSEAGRIN: The deathcore band performs, with The Plot in You, Vanquish the King, Gravewitch and Existential

Depression; 6:30 p.m.; $15plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.redlightpro.corn

ENDA R

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

or 541-388-1106. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: 'lL TROVATORE' LIVE":A live showing

www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1 881.

Road, Redmond; 541-548-8777. MAKE-A-BAND 2015:Musicians will be asked to perform at spotlight events being held at Silver Moon THURSDAY Brewery starting in October; during THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read these events producers will pick and discuss "The Signature of All musicians to come together to form Things" by Elizabeth Gilbert; noon; bands;6 p.m.;$5;SilverM oon Redmond Public Library, 827 Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; Bend; 541-81 5-0574. 541-312-1055. LOVE GIGANTIC:The rock 'n' roll BENDFILM FESTIVAL: BendFil m band from Portland performs; celebrates the voice of independent 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. cinema through films, lectures Francis School,700 NW Bond St., and education; 5 p.m.; $250 full Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or festival pass, $150 film pass, 541-382-5174. $12 individual tickets; various "FINDING NOAH":A film about locations, 1000 NW Wall St., Suite a group of archaeologists, 260, Bend; www.bendfilm.org or theologians and explorers as they 541-388-3378. embark on a dangerous expedition "THE WIZARD OFOZ" up Mount Ararat's desolate summit THROWBACK THURSDAY: A in a search for the final resting showing of the classic musical; place of Noah's Ark; 7 p.m.; $12.50; 5:15 and 7:30 p.m.; $7.50, $5 for Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and seniors and children; Redmond IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Cinemas, 1535 SW OdemMedo Bend; 844-462-7342.

of Verdi's opera; 6:30 p.m.; $24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend;www.fathomevents.corn or 844-462-7342. THE VONTRAPPS: The classical pop band from Portland performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St.,

Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or 541-382-5174. "UNBRANDED":Featuring a showing of the film about four men, 16 mustangs and 3,000 miles; 7 p.m.; $10 plus fees; The Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG EXTENDED EDITION": An extended version of the film, with an exclusive introduction from

The von Trappa / Submitted photo

Classical pop bandThe von Trappswill perform at 7 p.m. at McMenamins Old St. Francis School today. director Peter Jackson; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents. corn or 844-462-7342.

THE GODDAMN GALLOWS:The Detroit band performs, with Dirty Kid Discount and Harley Bourbon; 8 p.m.; $8-$10; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend;

1VEWSOF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at8:48 p.m. Sept. 8, in the 20700 block of Majestic Court. Theft —A theft was reported at11:39 p.m. Sept. 25, in the700 block of NW Bond Street. DUII —Cherish Nicole Barackman, 23, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:26a.m. Oct.2, intheareaof NW Franklin Avenueand NWHil Street. Theft —A theft was reported at11:20 a.m. Oct. 2, in the20100 block of Reed Lane. DUII —Christine Marie Davenport, 53, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:36 p.m. Oct. 2, in thearea of SE Reed Market Roadand American Lane. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at9:25 a.m. Oct. 3, in the area of NE Lotus Driveand NE Purcell Boulevard. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at9:36 p.m. Oct. 4, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at11:14 a.m. Oct. 5, in the19600 block of Hollygrape Street. Theft —A theft was reported at11:17 a.m. Oct. 5, in the19600 block of Harvard Place. Theft —A theft was reported at11:37 a.m. Oct. 5, in the61100block of Loy Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at12:22 p.m. Oct. 5, in the19600 block of Hollygrape Street. Burglary —Aburglary, theft and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest wasmadeat11:07 p.m. Oct. 2, in the1000 block of NW Newport Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:26 a.m. Sept. 25, in the19700 block of Mt. Bachelor Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:51 a.m. Sept. 29, in the800 block of SE Business Way.

DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Theft —A theft was reported at11:49 a.m. Oct.1, in the17000 block of Whitney Road. Theft —A theft was reported at1:31 p.m. Oct.1, in the17600 block of Sutter Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:40 p.m. Oct. 1, in the8900block of Forster Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:59 p.m. Oct.1, in the1600 block of A Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:07 a.m. Oct. 2, in the63300 block of U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:29 a.m. Oct. 2, in the51600 block of Huntington Road. Theft —A theft was reported at10:14 a.m. Oct. 2, in the63300 block of U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:09 p.m. Oct. 2, in the25300 block of Deer Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at11:18 a.m. Oct. 3, in the 52000 block of River Birch. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:21 p.m. Oct. 3, in the52500 block of Railroad Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:47 p.m. Oct. 3, in the60300 block of Zuni Circle. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:42 p.m. Oct. 4, in the16300 block of Leona Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:47 p.m. Oct. 4, in the600 block of N. Arrowleaf Trail.

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at1:33 p.m.May 29,inthe2200blockofSW Canal Boulevard, and anarrest was made at 2:22 p.m.Oct.4. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:10

p.m. July 20, in the200block of NW Sixth Street, and anarrest was madeat 8 a.m. Sept. 28. Burglary —A burglary and theft were reported at 4:04 p.m.Sept. 23, in the 5400 block of W.State Highway126, andanarrestwasmadeat8:27a.m. Oct. 2. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen, anact of criminal mischief was reported and anarrest was made at1:56a.m. Sept. 28, in the 1500 block of SW33rd Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:40 a.m. Sept. 28, in the300block of NW Oak TreeLane. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:56 a.m. Sept. 28, in the2000block of NW CedarAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at1:26 p.m. Sept. 28, in the2100 block of SE First Street. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 3:45 p.m.Sept. 28, in the area of SW27th Street and SW Highland Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 6:21 p.m. Sept. 28, in the600 block of NW 32nd Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at7:05 p.m. Sept. 28, in the 2200 block of SW29th Street. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at10:07 p.m. Sept. 28, in the 1200 block of SWHighland Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:49 a.m. Sept. 29, in the2300 block of SE College Loop. Theft —A theft was reported at1:16 p.m. Sept. 29, in the300 block of NW Oak TreeLane. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 2:01 p.m.Sept. 29, in the 2100 block of S.U.S.Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:29 p.m. Sept. 29, in the700block of SW Umatilla Avenue. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 9:01 p.m.Sept. 29, in the 100 block of NWCedar Avenue. DUII —Brian Earle Smith, 57, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:44 a.m. Sept. 30, in theareaof NW19th Street and NWFir Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:04 a.m. Sept. 30, in the2800block of NW Ninth Place. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat1:18 p.m. Sept. 30, in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 5:46 p.m.Sept. 30, in the 2500 block of SW29th Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:15 p.m. Sept. 30, in the2900 block of SW 23rd Street. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 7:05 p.m.Sept. 30, in the 1600 block of SWReindeer Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:39 p.m. Sept. 30, in the1600 block of SW Odem MedoRoad. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat1012 a m. Oct. 1, in the 300blockofNW OakTreeLane. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at10:19a.m. Oct.1, inthe 600 block of SWRimrock Way. Theft —A theft was reported at10:51 a.m. Oct. 1, in the600 block of E.Antler Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat11:46 a.m. Oct.1, in the 300blockofNW OakTreeLane. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at 1p.m. Oct. 1, inthe 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:35 p.m. Oct.1, in the area ofSW36th Street and SWReservoir Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:06 p.m. Oct. 1, in the 300blockofNW OakTreeLane. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at4:19 p.m.Oct.1, in the 1700 block of S.U.S.Highway97. DUII —Jose Jaramillo, 33, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:23a.m. Oct. 2, in the areaof SW10th Street and SWGlacier Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 12:09 p.m. Oct. 2, in the1300 block of SW ObsidianAvenue. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 3:57 p.m.Oct. 2, in the area of SW13th Street and SW Forest Avenue. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 4:27 p.m.Oct. 2, in the 700 block of NWFifth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:23

p.m. Oct. 2, in the900 block of SW 23rd Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at8:03 p.m. Oct. 2, in the 2200 block of SW19th Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 4:58a.m. Oct. 3, in thearea of S. U.S. Highway 97and SWAirport Way. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at9:55 a.m. Oct. 3, in the 300blockofNW OakTree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:43 p.m. Oct. 4, in the300 blockof NWOak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:53 p.m. Oct. 4, in the2300 block of NW Hazelwood Avenue.

Highway. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 8:24 p.m.Oct. 5, in thearea of NE Third Street.

reported at 8:54 p.m.Oct. 2, in thearea of Juniper Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:06 p.m. Oct. 3, in the12900block of SW Cinder Drive.

in the area ofSmith Rock Way. 9 — Medical aid calls. Sept. 29 9 —Medical aid calls. Sept. 30 11:23 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, BEND FIRE RUNS 919 NWCedarAve. Friday 7:46 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 3150 NWLower Bridge Way. 2:23p.m.— Brush or brush-and10 —Medical aid calls. grass mixture fire, 1255 NW Galveston Ave. Thursday 15 —Medical aid calls. 12:28 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 350 SW 89th Place. Saturday 19 —Medical aid calls. 6:19 p.m. —Authorized controlled burning, 147 SWFourth St. Sunday 10 —Medical aid calls. 6:40a.m. — Smoke odor reported, 60604 Woodside Road. Friday 9:35p.m.— Building fire, 20120 6:40a.m. —Smokeodor reported, Pinebrook Blvd. 12322 NW 29th Court. 17 —Medical aid calls. 13 —Medical aid calls. Monday Saturday 10:14 p.m.—Chimney or flue fire, 495 7 — Medical aid calls. NE BellevueDrive. Sunday 30 —Medical aid calls. 7:46 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 2627 NW74th St. REDMOND FIRE 8:25a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 1959 SW28th Court. RUNS 4:64p.m.— Unauthorized burning, Sept. 20 3115 NENegusWay. 1:42 —Authorized controlled burning, 14 —Medical aid calls.

JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 6:17a.m. Sept. 28, in the area of SELone Pine Road. Burglary —Aburglary, theft and an act of criminal mischief were reported at 8:44 a.m. Sept. 29, in the800 block of SE RodeoLane. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at12 p.m. Sept. 29, in the area of SWGolden Mantel Road and SW Peninsula Drive. Burglary —Aburglary was reported at 10:55 p.m. Sept. 29, in the800block of SE TumbleweedLane. Theft —A theft was reported at11:08 a.m. Oct.1, in the 8600 block of SW Sand RidgeRoad. Theft —A theft and anact of criminal mischief were reported at11:05 a.m. Oct. 2, in the area ofGreyButte. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 8:13p.m. Oct. 2, in thearea of U.S. Highway 97nearmilepost 81. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was

PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 7:55 a.m. Oct. 5, in thearea of SWHigh Desert Drive. Theft —Atheftwas reported at10:26 a.m. Oct. 5, in thearea of NWMadras Highway. DUII —GenaroSotelo, 48, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:27 p.m. Oct. 5, in thearea of NWMadras

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015• THE BULLETIN

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REGON

oo er'smo erwro e 8 ou uns in on inc orum By Gosia Wozniacka and Alina Hartounian The Associated Press

AROUND THE STATE Sledgehammer Slaying — A19-year-old manhasbeensentenced to adecade in prison his role in the sledgehammer death of his great-grandmother. Washington County JudgeRick Knappsaid Tuesday he would havesentenced JodaCain to morethan 10years if not restricted by sentencing guidelines. Ajury rejected murder charges at Cain's recent trial, and instead found himguilty of manslaughter. Cain did not make statement a Tuesday.Jaqueline Bell, a retired utility company executive, was killed two yearsago ather suburban Portland home. Prosecutors said Cainplannedthe murder and helped his cousin carry it out. Thedefenseclaimed his cousin killed Bell and Caintried to stop him. Thecousin's case is pendingafter a finding in March that he was unfit to stand trial.

PORTLAND — The moth-

er of a gunman who killed nine people and himself at an Oregon community college allowed her troubled son to have guns and acknowledged

Train death —A man working at a lumbermill has died after being struck by atrain about 30 miles west of Portland. Officials with the Washington County Sheriff's Office said in anewsrelease that deputies werecalled to the Stimson Lumber Mill near Gaston on Tuesday afternoon. Theyfound 46-year-old Antonio Avalos of McMinnville dead atthe scene. Deputies believeAvalos fell off the front of a slow-moving train while working in the rail yard.

in online posts that he strug-

gled with autism, but she didn't seem to know he was

I

/

potentially violent. r Irjwtt@Ts iu@

The online writings by Laurel Harper date from a year ago to nine years ago and offer fresh insight into the gunman, 2 6-year-old

Sf~a

Christopher Harper-Mercer,

and his relationship with his mother. T he

A s s o ciated P r e s s

didn't speak with H arper about the online postings; a knock on her door went un-

Chris Pietsch I The (Eugene) Register-Guard via The Associated Press

not need to imposemandatory water restrictions this year, asthe drought-depleted water supply is keeping upwith demand. The11 streams andsprings in the city's watershed are producing about 2 million gallons per day.Public Works Director Michelle Owensaid that' s less than half the volumetypical for October. Owensaid residents are sticking to the voluntary water curtailment request the city made three months ago, with demandaveraging about 2.6 million gallons per day. Those levels, combined with the possibility that demandwill drop with the temperature, haveOwensaying shedoes not foresee mandatory restrictions.

A Douglas County Sheriff's Deputy screens visitors at the entrance to Umpqua Community College

near Roseburg onTuesday. answered Tuesday, and her phone's voicemail box was full. However, the postings In her online postings, Lauincluded an email address rel Harper talked about her that is linked to Harper. love of guns and her son' s She and Harper-Mercer emotional troubles, but there shared an apartment outside are no hints of worry that he Roseburg. Investigators have could become violent. "I keep two full mags in recovered 14firearms — six found at Umpqua Communi- my Glock case. And the ARs ty College, where the killings & AKs all have loaded mags. o ccurred, and eight at t h e No one will be 'dropping' by apartment. Neighbors of the m y house u ninvited w i t h mother and son in C alifor- out acknowledgement (sic)," nia, where they lived before reads a 3-year-old posting. moving to Oregon in 2013, She was referring to a have said the two went target Glock handgun and to milishooting together. tary-style rifles. A Glock and Investigators say H arp- a military-style rifle were er-Mercer's mother has told among the weapons seized them the son was struggling after the Roseburg shooting with some mental health rampage. issues.

Baker City water Supply —BakerCity officials saythey may

H arper w r ote i n

er posting: "I love the long guns & I have an AK-47 en route." She complained about gun control efforts in "lame states."

She posted several times that her son had Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of

shooting rampage, where Harper-Mercer killed eight studentsand a teacher before killing himself. While living in California, Harper-Mercer g r a duated from a learning center for students with learning dis-

autism.

abilities and emotional prob-

One posting reads, "He's no babbling idiot nor is his life worthless. He's very intelligent and is working on a career in filmmaking." She wrote that she read aloud to her unborn son from

lems. His parents divorced

Donald Trump's "The Art of the Deal."

Investigators have not yet said whether they suspect

a n o t h- a motive in last Thursday's

when he was a teenager and he lived with his mother. Harper-Mercer's f a t her, Ian Mercer, still lives in Cal-

ifornia. Over the weekend he said he had no idea his son had any guns. "How on earth could he compile 13 guns? How could that happen?" Ian Mercer told CNN on Saturday.

SiCk elk —Oregon authorities are enlisting hunters and other outdoors types in the fight against a diseasehurting the region's elk. The state Department of FishandWildlife is asking people who spendtime in the woods to watch for and report limping elk. Thoseanimals could be suffering from hoof disease, abacterial infection that causes severe lameness. Elkwith the diseasehavedeformed, overgrown or broken hooves andother abnormalities. Department veterinarians say last year's public sightings werehelpful in tracking the disease. Fishand Wildlife veterinary staffers are alsoasking hunters who kill infected elk to save the hooves sothe department can analyze them. Hoof disease does not affect the meat of theelk and is not arisk to human health. FOreStry gift —A California lumber companyhas donated $6 million to OregonState University to help fund theschool's forest science complex. Sierra Pacific Industries' gift will go toward the construction of the OregonForest ScienceComplex, which will be part of the new Corvallis campus of theOSUCollege of Forestry. The $6million is earmarked for a 20,000-square-foot laboratory for the development of advancedwood products such as cross-laminated timber, atype of engineered woodpanel that is replacing steel andconcrete in some high-rise buildings. Thenewlabwill be namedthe A.A. "Red" Emmerson AdvancedWood Products Laboratory in honor of Sierra Pacific's co-founder. Two ofEmmerson's children areOSUgraduates. — From wire reports

Find It All

Labor commissioner isrunning for secretary of state By Steven DuBois The Associated Press

His decision to run for sec-

joining state Sen. Richard Devlin of Tualatin and state

positions on the State Land

PORTLAND — Oregon Labor Commissioner Brad Ava-

kian said Tuesday that he' s running for secretary of state. Avakian, 54, becomes the third Democrat in the race,

Rep. Val Hoyle of Eugene. second-highest elected office perhaps best known for ruling Board, which oversees lands Secretary of State Jeanne At- in Oregon, and the secretary that a Gresham bakery must that provide revenue for public kins, appointed to the post in is first in line to be governor pay damages to a same-sex schools. March, does not plan to run. if the chief executive dies or couple denied a wedding cake. The secretary of state is steps down. That's what hap- In another high-profile case, in charge of registering cor- pened when Kate Brown took he filed a complaint against Find Your Dream Home porations, applying election over in February following the Daimler Trucks North Amerlaws, auditing government resignation of John Kitzhaber. ica, alleging employees at its agencies and m aintaining Avakian has been labor Portland plant were subjected the state archives. It's also the commissioner since 2008. He' s to racial slurs and threats. • • • Th e Bulletin

in Real EState

Stolen truck found inPortland, but T G tofu and organicdrinks still missing The Associated Press PORTLAND — A delivery

truck stolen from an area of Southeast Portland h as turned up, but the tofu and

organic drinks that were inside are missing. Portland police Sgt. Pete

awarded in July through the Oregon Community Foundation. Continued from Bf Local public safety agencies have beentraining first responders Earlier this weekJean Nelin high-performance CPR, which son-Dean, DeschutesNational emphasizes deep,consistentcomForest spokeswoman, said pressions as soon aspossible. firefighters in the national forest "The idea is to get theseout to were waiting for more moisture in the patrol fleet and have(them) Central Oregon before lighting any available for when theemergencontrolled burns. Burns hadbeen cies happen," Burleigh wrote in an plannedsouthandwestofBend. email Tuesday.

Police Automated External Defibrillators will soon be inmost of the Bend Police Department's patrol fleet, according to BendPolice Lt. Glint Burleigh. Thirty-two AEDs,which deliver a shock to the heart in the event of a cardiac arrest, were purchased with $42,295 in grant funding from the Helen LorenzFoundation

et m

it can improve participation

I foundDad's remote in the fridge again. ...I'm beginning to get worried.

and engagement. Boosting civics education in schools is a

good place to start, he said.

Call us with questions

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OREGONDEPARTMENT OF HUMANSERVICESPROGRAIN

Simpson said in a news re- ing a tip, officers found the lease that a delivery truck truck in another area of the belonging to Seattle-based city Tuesday afternoon. The R&K Foods was stolen from a tofu and organic drinks had parking lot Tuesday morning been taken. while the driver was inside a Anyone w it h i n f ormagrocery store. tion is asked to call Portland Simpson says after receiv- police.

LOCAL BRIEFING

Most police patrols will have defibrillators

e

eWe can use the Land Board

retary of state had been ex- to create clean-energy jobs, pected. Rather than discuss jobs that will boost our econthe workaday functions of omy and provide a healthier the office, Avakian said Tues- environment," Avakian said in day he wants to create jobs an interview. and fight climate change. He Avakian described Oregon pointed out that the secretary as "ahead of the curve" when it of state holds one of the three comes to elections, but he said

(Brad) Avakian has been labor commissioner since 2008. He's perhaps best known for ruling that a Gresham bakery must pay damagestoa same-sex couple denied a wedding cake.

Online

bendbulletin.corn

Part of StormKingTrail to close The Deschutes National Forest plans to close aportion of the Storm King Trail west of Bend during weekdays beginning today until mid-November due tothinning. Loggers are set to cut andhaul timber in three sale units covering a combined 118acres, according

to the national forest. The trail closure covers the Storm KingTrail, a popular mountain biking trail, from intersection No. 34 with the Tiddlywinks Trail to intersection No. 31 with Forest Road 41.

During the closure the trail will be cl osedfrom 4a.m.Mondays to 4 p.m. Friday, according to the national forest. Deschutes officials planned to start the closure at 4 a.m.today. The thinning is part of the 26,000-acre West BendProject, which the national forest started in 2013. Intended to makethe woods west of Bendbetter able

ee.

Now offering PEMCO Insurance. Call today for a no-obligation insurance review.

to withstand wildfire and insect

infestations, the project may continue until 2025.

For more information about the West Bend Project and trail

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Patrick O'Keefe serviceocascadeinsure.corn

336 SW Cyber Drive Suite 104 Bend, OR 97702 541-382-7772

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77420 09/2015


B4

THE BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

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et's connect a missing piece of the Deschutes River Trail. The 33-mile trail fails to connect on the south end of Bend to the trails in Deschutes National Forest. The Bend Park & Recreation District has petitioned the Oregon Parks andRecreation Department to change the rules so it would be legal to build a bridge for pedestrians and bicyclesacross the river in that stretch. Oregon state parks should change the rules. Changing the r u les doesn' t mean the bridge would be built. That could be years away. The rule change makes it legally possible. There would still be a number of steps to go, with plenty more opportunity for public input. For instance, the park district would still need a permit to build an actual bridge. It would need to work with the U.S. Forest Service on the impacts of the additional traffic generated on the Deschutes River Trail and other environmental concerns. It would also need to decide where the bridge would be. Basically, if you were to walk out of Entrada Lodge and head toward the river, that's the general area on the river's west side. The park district does not own the land on either side of the river in that area. The process of permit-

ting and approval would be much more complicated if the bridge is located on federal land on either bank. The location is also important because of how it may cut down on peopledriving to access recreation. Bicyclists have to go miles to get to a bridge that is usable. The Bill Healy Bridge is about 3 miles downstream. The bridge near Benham Falls is 9 miles upstream. To some, that may be seen as a brake on trail traffic that reduces impacts. We see it as a unnecessary barrierto recreation and enjoyment of the outdoors. Oregon State Parks and Recreation has set up a meeting for Oct. 28 at 6 p.m. at the Bend Park & Recreation District about its proposed rule change. The change does haveprecedent,in aw ay.Most other stretches of state scenic waterways do not have blanket prohibitions about bridges. And the park district has plenty of experience in building tasteful pedestrian/bicycle bridges across the river. Approve the rule change. Connect the trail.

Gov. Brown'sintervention helped Roseburgfamilies

O

regon Gov. Kate Brown did homes for transportation back to

the right thing for families who lost relatives during the shooting at Umpqua Community College. The shooting Thursday left 10 people dead, including the gunman, and at least another nine injured. The bodies of those who died were sent to the State Medical Examiner's Office in Clackamas, some 175 miles north of Roseburg, where the community college is located. In Oregon, the medical examiner is charged with determining the cause of death in any fatality that requires an investigation, and the Clackamas off ice handles homicide investigations for Roseburg and surrounding Douglas County. But undernormal circumstances, it's a family's responsibility to have a body returned home. In this case, that meant local families likely would have had to pay for arrangements with f uneral

Roseburg. That's w h y the go v ernor stepped in.She arranged for the Oregon Air National Guard to return all the victims' bodies to Roseburg. A pair of helicopters took them back. The federalgovernment will pick up the tab. The shooter's family made separate arrangements to have his body returned. Brown — or her staff— apparently also arranged to have victims' bodies driven to Camp Withycombe, near the medical examiner's office, for pickup. That gesture may not have been the most critical thing on the governor'sagenda lastFriday, but surely it was among the most appreciated. It meant one less hassle for nine families that have suffered a horrible loss, and in that respect its importance cannot be overstated.

Int ewo r

's ar in ByJack Matthews regon State University-Cas-

O

cades' recent initiative to offer incentives to students who

ride their bicycles to campus is, in my view, a tacit admission that their

parking management plan is seriously flawed.

the students and faculty, 15 percent

shots of our three high schools

walking, and 15 percent biking, would all converge on campus, re-

— Bend, Mountain View and Summit — showed the total number

gardless of Bend's winter weather.

of driving-age students (11th- and 12th-graders) was 2,187.

Only a campus with robust student housing in a city with a robust

C'mon man!

mass-transit system could achieve The total number of faculty and staff at the three schools was 297. Kittleson's 30 percent number. "The initial 10-acre campus will Thus the total number of potential I believe OSU-Cascades' parking eventually serve 1,960 students, fac- drivers was 2,484. numbers are aspirational at best. ulty, staff and visitors ... no more Since the opening of the three And like the poet Robert Burns than an estimated 957 people will schools I have conducted my own wrote in "To a Mouse," "The best be on campus at any one time ... research, and it involved walking laid schemes of mice and men often and most every parking spot will be the parking lots and counting cars go awry." used multiple times each day." and bicycles. On any given school Taken literally, L. Frank Baum's I believe that anyone who be- day I counted on average of 1,590 "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" is a lieves such nonsense is delusional. cars in those combined parking lots child's fantasy, a fairy tale book that Do they really believe that students and 72 bicycles in the racks. And has generated countless literary inwho find parking spaces — out of who knows, those bikes could very terpretations. We all know that the 300 available for their 8 a.m. classes well have belonged to ninth- and Wizard had no real magical powers; — will actually leave campus at 8:50 10th-graders. he was more about duplicity and a.m. and then return and endeavor We now know that, on average, creating illusions by simply manipto find other spaces for their 11 a.m. 1,590 cars are in our high schools' ulating devices behind a curtain. In classes' ? parking lots each school day to ac- other words, making people believe OSU-Cascades' home page an- commodate approximately 2,484 what they want to believe. swered the question about its park- potential drivers. Now that OSU-Cascades' site has ing numbers: "Our parking numSo I ask, does it sound reasonable survived the appeal process, it' s bers ar e s o und. O SU-Cascades to you that 300 parking spaces at time we rip away the curtain and based its numbers on an analysis by OSU-Cascades' new campus could expose everyone in this city who Kittelson & Associates, a nationally accommodate 2,030 potential driv- so readily and quite cavalierly aprecognized parking and transporta- ers — their numbers, not mine — re- proved of this parking charade. tion demand engineering firm." gardless of the ridiculous notion of I believe the city staff and city I'm sure Kittleson & Associates the constant ebbing and flowing of council availed themselves of apused a sophisticated, mathematical cars in the parking lot'? pallingly weak city codes to accede formula in predicting the parking I made an assumption that those to the wishes of OSU-Cascades and numbers, but quite frankly I don' t s tudents not living i n B end w i l l by doing so are directly complicit in think they have a clue about the drive to campus. Those out-of-town- this whole parking sham. Allowing driving habits in Bend, particularly ers present yet another sticky di- OSU to manipulate the weaknesses among our high school students that mension to the 300 available spaces of the system has done a huge discould be (should be) the principal re- on campus. service to this community. cruiting pool for OSU-Cascades. Incredibly, one of Kittleson's basic — Retired Lt. Col. Jack Matthews, That said, the 2014 online snap- assumptions was that 30 percent of of the U.S. Marines, lives in Bend.

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

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

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.corn Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

o F ace oo , r i vac isnot ree

tion from you not just when you actually like, "like" something, but when a cebook is f o l lowing y ou you load a page that has a "like" around the Web. You knew that, button on it. They want Facebook to right'? How else would Face- agree to use a "Do Not Track" stan-

Bloomberg

book know to serve that panda video

IN MY VIEW

OSU-Cascades' home page states:

By Megan McArdle

F

ro em

dard that will keep all that potentially

straight into your newsfeed and leave profitable data from the greedy eyes your college friend's ill-informed rant of advertisers. about Pacific trade deals in the dark Of course people should be able to bowels of its servers'? How else would hide data about what sites they use. it know to serve you with 7,000 ads But there's a perfectly good way to for wedding dress vendors the very do this: Stay signed out of Facebook day you announce your engagement? and tell your browser not to accept Facebook knows what you like. It cookies, or otherwise let advertisknows what you don't like. It probably ers follow you around the Web. The knows whether you have been naugh- problem is, this level of security is ty or nice, and will be selling that data incredibly inconvenient, because you to Santa this Christmas season. have to spend a lot of time painfully This bothers many people, espe- re-entering data. The other problem cially since Facebook keeps expand- is that naive users, who probably ing the list of things it knows about don't spend a lot of time thinking you and the ways it is willing to use about privacy, won't bother.

Privacy-obsessed folks who carefully hide their activity

from the Internet and adhating readers who install blockers are effectively having their free media and social media platforms subsidized by the folks who don't know or don't mind. them really don't care enough — at

least, not enough to put up with all that inconvenience. Enforcing someone else's preferences about priva-

cy may not be liberating; it may be counterproductive. For let us remember that, dingy

and dispiriting as it may be, these really have to naive users who don' t companiesdo need to make money. soon target ads using your "likes" spend a lot of time thinking about There's an old saying in advertising: and "shares" has triggered some privacy? Some of these users un- If you can't figure out what's being Olympic-level teeth-gnashing from doubtedly don't realize that they are sold,then you're the product."Free"

that data to make money. The recent announcement thatFacebook would

But what obligation do companies

the Electronic Frontier Foundation,

exposed, but we should not reject out

products and services usually aren' t;

because Facebook will get informa- of hand the possibility that most of

someone has to finance them, and if

they' re not charging you for your use, bring about the death of the firm. But then they' re charging someone else there's a problem with this, which to use you. Privacy-obsessed folks you see a lot in politics: Someone who carefully hide their activity from will say "We' ve got this modest plan, the Internet and ad-hating readers and it would only raise costs (or lowwho install blockers are effectively er revenue), by some small amount, having their free media and social say, what we could raise with a onemedia platforms subsidized by the cent surtax on ballpoint pens," and folks who don't know or don't mind. this is true. Except there are several Because someone has to read the ads thousand people who have similarly that pay the bills. modest plans, and the next thing you The interwebs are full of splendid know ballpoint pens cost $20 apiece things that social media companies and the drugstore has to lock them could do to make life easier for var- up with the pregnancy tests. The ious people, and perhaps better for collective weight of the suggestions society, if only those social media for improvement (and the third-parcompanies didn't have to make mon- ty software to facilitate same) might ey. The problem is, if the social media well make the Internet kinder and companies implemented them all, gentler. It might also kill off many of they would probably go out of busi- the ways we spend our Internet time. ness. That would, of course, take care Privacy matters, but privacy is not of problems like Twitter harassment free.And the best people to assess and Facebook'sstalker-like record the trade-offs between privacy, acof your Internet activity, but most cess and convenience are probably people do seem to like having those the individuals wielding the mouse, social media platforms, even at the rather than the activists wielding the expense of some exposure to these megaphone. risks. — Megan McArdle is a columnist No one fix would be unlikely to for Bloomberg.


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015• THE BULLETIN

Hillside Park

BITUARIES Orra Rose Sides, of Redmond July 22, 1938 - Oct. 3, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private family gathering will be held at a later date.

Carol Lee Alexander, of Redmond Feb. 28, 1938 - Oct. 3, 201 5 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family. 541-548-3219 www.redmondmemorial.corn Services: Graveside service on October 15 at 10 AM at Powell Butte Cemetery. Memorial service/ Celebration of Life at 7 PM at Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 OR Hwy 126, Powell Butte, OR. Contributions may be made to:

Project Love Program at Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 Oregon Hwy 126, Powell Butte, Oregon 97753, 541-548-3066.

Sharon Lippincott, of La Pine July 28, 1943 - Oct. 2, 2015

Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdfh.corn Services: A Celebration of Life will be held Thursday, October 22, 2015, 1:OOPM at the La Pine Moose Lodge,located at 52510 Drafter Rd. in La Pine. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, 541-382-5882, www.partnersbend.org

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnote from around the world:

Hillside Parkmasterplan

The park district has finalized amaster plan for this west-side undeveloped park that sits on the south side of Awbrey Butte.

Continued from B1 "I think this is really pretty

good government," Proctor sard.

FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES

Olga Hirshhorn,wife of museumfounder, was mllector in herown right

The park district has bud-

"A lot Of PeOPle think you have to be Museum and Sculpture Gar- wealthy to collect art," den, who was well known as she once said. "t paid

artists a hundred dollars a month for pieces."

thropist and collector in her own right, died Saturday at her home in Naples, Florida. She was 95. Her death, while she was by-sitting service and, finally, under care for numerous ail- an employmentagency called ments, was confirmed by her Services Unlimited. Her agenson John Cunningham, a cy provided domestic help

portions of the park. Future work a t Hi l l side Park could include a skate-

Also on Tuesday, the board approved a $219,000 contract

with Cameron McCarthy for planning, architectural and engineering work at b oth Hillside and Rockridge Park, a proposed park just south of Lava Ridge Elementary School in northeast Bend.

"P Source: Bend Park &Recreation District Pete Smith /The Bulletin

divorced in 1962. After a pe-

riod in which they mutually charmed and impressed

testimony. Don Horton, the Bend park

each other, Hirshhorn issued his proposal to her. "Lose 10

district's executive director, said he's also unsure why new bridges were banned upstream of Bend.

pounds," he said, "and I' ll marry you." 200 years. The challenge was easily Symbolic of the meaning of met, and they married. philanthropy, and of the transThey seemed a particularly fer of art from private to pub- well-matched couple. "We had lic hands, was a visit she once such fun," she said. She congreat works of art of the past

made with a reporter to the

verted to Judaism to be buried

sculpture garden of the Hirshhorn Museum.

alongside him. The

c o uple m a i n tained

a home in Washington for tion of the famous statue of the many years, and the force of French novelist Honore de Bal- her gregarious personality zac by the celebrated French was said to have made her, sculptor Auguste Rodin. In- and them, many friends. In tended to convey character addition to Naples and Washand personality rather than ington, she also spent long pemere physical likeness, it is riods on Martha's Vineyard, regarded as a landmark in the Massachusetts. history of sculpture. Joseph Hirshhorn died in "This used to stand at the her arms in 1981, as they were top of our driveway in Green- returning from a performance wich," Hirshhorn said. at the Kennedy Center. She On another occasion, she tried CPR, but it failed. She gestured in the direc-

"My life was shattered at that moment," Hirshhorn said later. But she carried on the tradi-

Chantal Akerman, 65: The "That was in our dining room," Belgian director whose rumi- she said. native, meticulous observation As a wealthy collector' s tions of collecting and philanof women's inner lives, often wife, Hirshhorn met and be- thropy begun during her marusing long takes, made her a friended some of the major riage; she served on the board pioneer in feminist and ex- figures of 20th-century art, of the Corcoran School of Art perimental filmmaking. Died including Pablo Picasso, Wil- and supported other museum Monday in Paris from an un- lem de Kooning and Georgia projects, art associations and O'Keeffe. known cause. women's groups. She also was Arpad Goncz, 93:A muchPicasso signed one of his described as one of Washingloved Hungarian writer and works, "To Olga with love." De ton's best-known art collectors. translator wh o s u r vived a Kooning created something After her husband's death, communist-era life sentence for her and signed it "Love, she maintained a small house for taking part in the 1956 Bill." Picasso's wife, Jacque- in Washington's Embassy anti-Soviet revolt and l ater line,designed a dress for her, Row area. It was so diminutive become Hungary's first dem- and the artist signed it. that she dubbed it the "mouse ocratically chosen president. The child of a blue-collar house," but it contained a large Died Tuesday in Budapest. couple, Hirshhorn through and eclectic aggregation of art. — From wire reports her marriage and her person- Many of the acquisitions came al charm expanded her cirde without great outlays of cash. of acquaintances far beyond "A lot of people think you have what may once have seemed to be wealthy to collect art," possible. "Joe brought me into she once said. "I paid artists a a very exciting world," she hundred dollars a month for once said. pieces." Death Notices are freeand Once, her son recalled, as he At least one of the adornwill be run for oneday, but struggled to support a young ments in her house was said specific guidelines must be family while on the lower to have come from the old followed. Local obituaries rungs of the academic ladder, Georgetown flea market, with are paid advertisements he got a call from his mother, a coin toss used to settle the submitted by families or fuwhose life existed on another price. The entire place gave the neral homes. Theymaybe plane. "Hi," she greeted her impression of what one writsubmitted by phone, mail, son. "I'm having lunch with the er called a "creative hodgeemail or fax. TheBulletin podge," ranging from a Calder queen of England." reserves the right to edit bronze to a Balinese betel nut Developing her interest in all submissions. Please art, Hirshhorn acquired many cracker. include contact information pieces on her own, later donatIn 1995, a show of works in all correspondence. ing or promising them to mu- from her collection had a conFor information on anyof seums including the Corcoran siderable effect on an art writthese services or about the Gallery of Art in Washington. er for The Post. obituary policy, contact "You can't look at this show Her enduring interest in art 541-61 7-7825. began in her early days with without being impressed by Deadlines:Death Notices Joseph Hirshhorn. the collector's voracious eye are accepted until noon "I had to choose whether to and refreshingly open apMonday through Friday for learn about art or finance or proach," wrote Jo Ann Lewis. next-day publication and by mining," she said, "and I chose "She likes what she likes, con4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday art s noisseurship be damned." publication. Obituaries Many pieces were promised Olga Zatorsky was born must be receivedby5p.m. April 26, 1920, in Greenwich, to galleries and museums othMonday through Thursday the daughter of a chauffeur er than the Hirshhorn, with at for publication on the secand a homemaker, both immi- least some to be bequeathed ond day after submission, grants from Eastern Europe. after her death. by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday The explanation given was From a young age, she was, in publication, and by 9a.m. many ways, an independent that the collection, and the MondayforTuesday spirit in which they were aswoman. publication. Deadlines for At 18, she married one of sembled, might have been display ads vary; pleasecall her teachers, John Cunning- overwhelmed in the museum for details. ham, at Greenwich (Connecti- on the Mall. In addition to her son John Phone: 541-617-7825 cut) High School. She had Cunningham, survivors inthree children by age 25, and Email: obits©bendbulletin.corn clude another son, Denis she went into business in her Fax: 541-322-7254 hometown to help support Cunningham, several grandMail:Obituaries children and one great-grandthem. P.O. Box6020 A learn-to-swim group for child. According to a relative, Bend, OR97708 toddlers led to a day camp, Olga Hirshhorn was preceded

Obituary policy

in death by a third son.

the rules were being made,people in Bend were concerned about urban growth, and

has sent notices to every address within a quarter mile

his name on the Washington Mall.

She and her first husband

no evidence to support this — but at the time

Continued from B1 Havel said his department of the proposed bridge site advising them of the hearing, but anyone is welcome to attend the hearing and submit

then a nursery school, a ba-

e

"Asbest as we can tell — and there's really

Bridge

it," she told The Washington Post in 1982.

pointed to a bust of Madame Renoir, wife of th e p ainter.

Trenton Ave.

Hillside Park:

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulleti n.corn

and sculpture collection to establish the museum that bears

enhanced by the beauty and stimulation of some of the

v

for the wealthy residents who

more College in New York. lived in Greenwich's many A Washington, D.C., resi- mansions. Through it, she met dent for many years, Hirsh- Hirshhorn. "He said he was attracted horn was the fourth wife of Joseph Hirshhorn, the business- to me by my voice, by my effiman, financier and mining ty- ciency, by the fact that I ran my coon who donated his painting own business, that I'd created

w ich, Connecticut, life w as

.

ments to the more developed

$900,000.

At the home that the Hir-

-

walk along Northwest 12th Street and minor improve-

said, at an estimated cost of

shhorns shared in Green-

~ ---41rakoark - ",,A,

construction of a new side-

Olga Hirshhorn, widow of the founder of the Hirshhorn

sculptor and professor at Skid-

(9.64 acres for off-leash dog recreation)

=:;f p(ayers>,

geted $750,000 for the initial stage of the project. Figurski said that figure should cover the improvements to the dog park, the

The Washington Post

enthusiastic art patron, philan-

Fenceddogpark

yVild side, i

park, parking and access and other improvements, Figurski

By Martin Weil

an exuberant, energetic and

B5

they didn't Want any bridge CrOSSingS On the

Deschutes River." — Don Horton, executive director of the Bend Park & Recreation District, on rules that bar any entity from applying to build a bridge

to change the rule against

end of th e

bridges, the district will need

boundary, but Horton said it' s too early in the planning pro-

to conduct a study that convinces the Forest Service that a bridge will not over-

"As best as we can tell

— and there's really no evidence to support this — but

u r ban g r owth

cess to know when construc-

burden the trail system west

tion might be possible. Havel said state parks

of the river. The section of

staffers will compile a report

river is also designated as a outlining testimony at the being made,people in Bend federal wild and scenic river, Oct. 28 hearing, which will be were concerned about urban he said, which could pres- submitted to the state parks growth, and they didn't want ent a dditional r e g ulatory commission. The commisany bridge crossings on the complications. sion is scheduled to vote on Deschutes River," H o rton The 2012 park district bond the prospective rule change said. designated approximately in February, he said. Horton said if the park dis- $1.2 million for a bridge and — Reporter: 541-383-0387, at the time the rules were

trict can persuade the state

Walking class Continued from B1 It could be harder as the year goes on; Williams said they will walk through rain or snow, as long as it's not too deep or icy.

connecting trails at the south

walking a few miles may be a sard. challenge, he said. Others may — Reporter: 541-617-7837, be injured or have medical aspegman@bendbullet in.corn conditions that prevent them

from playing Frisbee or flag football that other classes do.

Back at Bend High, the class was rounding the corner at

How to submit

Ninth Street, the final stretch. "I didn't really want to take

Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.)

Toward the back of the

pack were freshmen Emily

PE in general, so this was the easy class," said freshman Ocean Robinson. "You can be on your phone or whatever."

Felt and Natalie Kemnitz. "We' re not that athletic," Felt said. "It just seemed

like a fun class, a relaxing thing." Both girls went to High Desert Middle School last year, where they only had one choice when it came to PE class. Options, said Kemnitz, are "for sure" a

good thing.

sham mers@bendbulletin.corn

Ahead of h im ,

f r eshman

Riley Chubb said the class seemed like a good option, but a few weeks in it is starting to

feel repetitive — there's only so many routes they take, and

walking is walking. "It gets kind of boring," she

Ahead of them, freshman Mae Joseph listened

to Panic! at the Disco on her headphones. She originally signed up for the athletic conditioning class but switched out when she found out how intense it is.

SCHOOL NOTES

youth@bendbulletin.corn Mail:P. O.Box6020,Bend, OR 97708

Other schoolnotes:College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-633-2117, bulletin@be ndbulletin.corn

Story ideas

TEEN FEATS

Nolan Beal,a senior at RidgeviewHighSchool,wasnamed a CommendedStudent in the M ountain V i e w H i g h School started offering a 2016 National Merit Scholarship Commended students similar l ow-impact class Program. last year. Dave Hood, placed among thetop 5percent Mountain View's athletics of more than 1.5 million students who entered the 2016competition director, said the idea is just to get kids moving. Stu- by taking the 2014Preliminary dents come with a variety SAT/National Merit Scholarship of capabilities and for some, Qualifying test. "There was, like, a jungle gym workout," she said.

Courthouse

Contact: 541-633-2117,

Schoolnews:Itemsand announcements of general interest. Contact: 541-383-0354, news@bendbulletin.corn Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story? Contact: 541-383-0354, aspegman©bendbulletin.corn

"I'm trying to reuse

lows Hall building next to

and rePurPOSe What' S

the formercourthouse isone

Continued from B1 "I'm trying to reuse and re- in the building as purpose what's in the build- much as I can. It's a ing as much as I can," said slow, painstaking j Jansen. "It's a slow, painstak— Steve Jansen, who is ing job." The process of getting the renovating the courthouse building listed on the National Register has also been arduous and slow-going. was located at the old court" It took q u ite a w h i l e, house building until 2013. mainly because there wasn' t The historical society is now much documentation on this looking for a new location for building, so they really had to the museum. do some research on it," JanJerry Ramsey, who is on

ob."

of the others of historical importance to the city. "They' re the heart of down-

town Madras," said Ramsey of the two brick structures. The former courthouse has

a small adjoining jailhouse with t wo ,

t w o-person jail

cells. A new 30,000-square-foot county courthouse is being constructed in Madras and

is expected to be completed next year. The current courthouse was built in 1961.

sen said.

the board ofdirectors for the

Jansen hopes to have the

Staff with the Oregon State Historic Preservation Office helped out with the application process, he said.

society, said the building is one of the few remaining in Madras of significant historic value.

former courthouse completed restored by 2017, when

A National Register list-

ing provides opportunities for federal grants that can

The 100-year-old Madras

hotel burned down last fall on C and Fourth streets. It was condemned the previous

the building will have been standing for 100 years. He recently installed a new fire escape on the building. This month, he plans to have

new windows placed in the properties. year, but was from the same upstairs courtroom. The Jefferson County His- era as the former courthouse. — Reporter 541-617-7820 torical Society and Museum Ramsey said the Odd Feltshorach@bendbulletin.corn be used for restoring historic


0

B6 T H E BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

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

'

i

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH 72' i f ' 1

ALMANAC

Low

EAST: Mostly cloudy in the north today with Seasid TEMPERATURE a little rain at times; 63/66 Yesterday Normal Record clouds and some Cannon 79 66 90' i n 1979 sunshine south. 62/56 36' 35' 17' in 1974

PRECIPITATION

O c t 27 N o v 3

crescen tmoonintheeasternskyonehour before sunrise. Source: JimTodd,OMSI

High: S6' at Medford Low: 26' at Lakeview

~ a

i

The higherthe AccuWeaffter.rxrmIIV Index number, the greatertheneedfor sysandskin protscgon.0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms.

POLLEN COUNT G rasses

Long

T r ee s Lo~w

Wee d s Ab s ent

Roseburg

0'

BO/53

63/

Bro ings

As of 7 a.m.yesterday

Reservoir C rane Prairie

Acr e feet 266 2 0

Wickiup 16600 Crescent Lake 4 9 5 22 Ochoco Reservoir 10163 Prinaville 44995 30Vo River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 124 Daschutas R.below Wickiup 467 547 Deachutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1270 Little Deschutes near LaPine 49 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 25 Crooked R.above Prinevilla Raa. 0 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 62 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 277 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 2

FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver Redmond/Madras Sisters Prineviue La Pine/Gilchrist

Not available Not available Not available Not available Not available Source: USDA Forest Service

Chr i stmas alley

74/45

76/43

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• Lakeview

77/38

Jordan V Hey

Frenchglen

Klamath

82/5

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77/45

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 88/49/0.00 Akron 75/51 /0.00 Albany 71/46/0.00 Albuquerque 73/53/Tr Anchorage 47/36/0.00 Atlanta 76/60/0.00 Atlantic City 68/54/0.00 Austin 88/57/0.00 Baltimore 76/44/0.00 Billings 70/41 /0.00 Birmingham 82/66/0.00 Bismarck 65/33/0.00 Boise 81 /51/0.00 Boston 64/48/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 69/47/0.00 Buffalo 63/55/Tr Burlington, VT 63/47/0.00 Caribou, ME 62/39/0.00 Charleston, SC 70/61/Tr Charlotte 75/51/0.00 Chattanooga 82/63/0.00 Cheyenne 62/44/0.00 Chicago 71/55/Tr Cincinnati 78/56/0.00 Cleveland 70/49/0.00 ColoradoSprings 72/50/0.31 Columbia, MO 73/55/0.00 Columbia, SC 76/59/Tr Columbus,GA 81/63/0.01 Columbus,OH 79/52/0.00 Concord, NH 68/38/0.00 Corpus Christi 89/63/0.00 Dallas 84/58/0.00 Dayton 79/52/0.00 Denver 58/46/0.05 Des Moines 72/55/0.00 Detroit 69/56/0.00 Duluth 66/51 /0.00 El Paso 78/59/0.69 Fairbanks 47/26/0.00 Fargo 63/43/0.00 Flagstaff 55/45/0.46 Grand Rapids 65/57/Tr Green Bay 69/46/0.00 Greensboro 74/50/0.00 Harrisburg 74/45/0.00 Harfford, CT 72/40/0.00 Helena 74/35/0.00 Honolulu 83/74/0.05 Houston 89/65/0.00 Huntsville 90/63/0.00 Indianapolis 75/56/0.00 Jackson, MS 88/62/0.00 Jacksonville 74/63/Tr

Today Thursday HiRo/W 88/64/pc 72/49/pc 69/47/pc 68/53/c 45/39/r 80/61/s 73/58/pc 91/65/pc 75/54/pc 75/49/pc 86/65/s 71/47/pc

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Hi/Lo/W 87/64/r 73/59/pc 63/46/s 71/54/pc 51/44/r 81/62/pc 69/58/s 90/67/c 72/56/s 69/52/c 84/65/pc 63/37/pc 81/57/pc 61/49/s 66/53/s 63/53/pc 58/41/s 54/31/s 81/65/pc 80/60/pc

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Still The Oldest 4 Largest Furniture Store in Central Oregon/ I

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87/65/pc 88/67/pc 84/65/s 88/67/pc

100/76/s 76/60/Tr 80/62/pc 83/57/1 75/51/0.00 76/57/pc 72/58/s 80/68/0.23 85/67/pc 92/71/s Pittsburgh 76/50/0.00 72/48/pc 73/59/pc Portland, ME 69/40/0.00 67/45/s 61/42/s Providence 70/43/0.00 72/49/s 64/48/s Raleigh 73/51/0.00 79/57/s 80/62/pc Rapid City 66/44/0.00 77/49/pc 66/43/r Reno 79/48/0.00 81/51/s 85/52/pc Richmond 73/46/0.00 79/58/pc 75/61/pc Rochester, NY 62/53/Tr 66/46/pc 63/51/pc Sacramento 82/59/0.00 85/56/s 89/56/pc St. Louis 77/61/0.00 78/62/pc 84/61/pc Salt Lake City 71/59/0.06 73/51/pc 75/52/pc San Antonio 90/64/0.00 91ft0/pc 87/71/c San Diego 76/64/0.00 78/67/s 81/68/s San Francisco 74/60/0.00 72/55/pc 75/57/pc San Jose 78/58/0.00 78/56/s 82/56/pc Santa Fe 72/47/Tr 66/44/t 70/45/pc Savannah 78/61/Tr 80/59/s 81/65/pc Seattle 65/50/0.00 62/56/r 70/58/pc Sioux Fags 72/57/0.00 72/57/pc 69/43/pc Spokane 72/46/0.00 61/51/r 71/53/pc Springfield, MO 72/54/0.00 78/61/pc 81/58/pc Tampa 85/68/0.00 8703/pc 88/74/t Tucson 79/65/0.21 76/58/pc 84/63/s Tulsa 80/52/0.00 82/59/pc 86/59/c Washington,Dc 77/50/0.00 77/58/pc 74/60/s Wichita 79/57/0.00 82/61/pc 87/57/c Yakima 76/40/0.00 71/48/sh 75/49/pc Yuma 85/69/0.00 91 ft0/s 98/73/s

9

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86/67/0.00 9502/s

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68/47/s 69/53/c 86/67/s 91 90/pc

81/60/pc 83/64/pc 68/51/pc 73/50/sh 84/66/pc 87/67/pc 87/7 4/t 88P5/t 64/52/s 72/52/ah 64/54/pc 67/46/c 85/59/s 84/64/pc 8600/s 86/69/pc 74/56/s 70/58/s 75/55/s 70/56/s 76/62/pc 74/63/s 83/60/pc 86/61/c 76/57/Tr 78/61/pc 79/49/c 86/66/0.00 86ft1/pc 86/72/t

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80/60/pc 71/58/pc 73/47/pc 84/56/c 81/61/pc 82/62/pc 76/61/pc 63/38/s

59/48/sh 78/64/pc 61/46/pc 95/71/s 89/77/t 67/46/s

NATIONAL WEATHER

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vsgas Lexington Lincoln

76/54/1

64/55/0.82 63/53/pc Boston 84/63/0.00 79/66/pc • 77/52 ee /51 Auckland 65/54/0.00 64/55/pc • Rani City etmu ff w York Baghdad 103/79/0.03 99/71/c 2/50 5/57 ha Bangkok 87/75/0.16 90/7 Tn heyenne Ta/ 1 Precipitation: 0.76" ilsdelphia Beijing 83/59/0.00 79/52/pc Im '~9 Des Moi es 4 /5 Beirut 82P5/0.18 78/74/ah at Laramie WY an anciico Salt Lake ty 5 7 • Den 73/51 Berlin 63/51/0.02 65/48/c 72/55 ington 74/8 us lie 77 Les y ss Bogota 68/46/0.00 67/46/1 +VVV 81/eo 86/6 Kansas City si. , Budapest 66/48/0.00 69/51/c 77/eo 78/ Buenos Ai r es 63/55/0.18 64/45/ah • avhvll Cherie 91/72/0.04 92/73/t Cabo San Laces 85/5 e , 4/45 • L' Cairo 88/70/0.00 85/70/s Phbiu Anchorage +Buq u e Ida homai c v 8 68 • At • 8 Calgary 52/34/0.00 61/40/pc n 0 9 v v v- -v Cancun 88/68/0.00 88/73/pc air in ha • usga Juneau Dublin 63/55/0.42 57/43/pc se/ 89/6 Edinburgh 63/55/0.28 56/40/r 51/43 Geneva 61 /55/0.71 59/47/pc ax Harare 85/62/0.00 87/56/s Q w Orleans 1/47 Hong Kong 87/79/0.23 88/78/c Honolulu Sd/70 e Istanbul 68/64/0.06 71/62/pc 87/73 Jerusalem 77/60/0.10 72/59/c y '47/efr ~ x x v. v. a7/49 v. Johannesburg 87/65/0.00 89/64/pc 4 Lima 71 /64/0.00 72/64/pc Lisbon 70/63/0.00 69/57/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 66/57/0.39 59/44/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 70/60/0.00 71/49/pc Manila 89/79/0.00 90/77/t

Yesterday Today Thursday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

Yesterday Today Thursday

City

82/64/pc 63/42/pc

79/59/pc 71/47/pc 78/53/c 71/58/pc 53/40/c 72/59/t 44/31/c 57/40/pc 68/40/s 69/54/r 66/50/r 80/61/pc 71/55/s 67/46/s 70/45/pc 86/74/pc 88/69/pc 87/66/pc 80/60/pc 88/67/pc 82/68/pc

Yesterday Today Thursday City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 65/47/0.00 65/51/r 67/55/pc L a Grande 79 / 34/0.00 66/47/c 77/50/pc Portland 77/5 4/0.0069/55/r 76/57/pc Baker City 81/29/0.00 69/41/c 76/42/pc La Pine 75/28/0.00 70/43/pc 76/49/pc Prinevigs 76/ 3 8/0.0073/43/pc 76/44/pc Brookings 59/54/0.00 67/52/pc 68/56/pc M edford 86/5 0/0.00 84/52/pc 84/54/pc Redmond 81 / 32/0.0075/40/pc80/43/ pc Gums 80/33/0.00 75/39/pc 80/40/pc N ewport 63/5 0/0.00 63/52/r 6 5/53/pc Roseburg 82 / 52/0.00 80/53/pc 81/54/pc Eugene 74/50/0.00 75/50/c 76/53/pc N o rth Bend 6 4 / 54/0.00 66/52/pc 69/55/pc Salem 77/51/0.00 74/52/r 76/55/pc Klamath Fags 77/34/0.00 77/38/pc 80/41/pc Ontario 82/40/0.00 77/48/pc 80/47/pc Sisters 78/31/0.00 73/47/c 78/46/pc Lakeview 77/28/0.00 74/40/pc79/43/pc Pendleton 76/42/0.00 69/54/sh 76/52/pc The Dages 8 1 /41/0.00 73/53/sh 78/54/pc Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday

~ f ga ~ gs

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afternoon shower

76/54/pc 74/50/pc 76/62/pc 72/50/s 55/43/pc 75/57/1 42/32/pc 66/49/r 61/37/pc 70/46/s 63/45/pc 80/58/s 75/52/pc 73/47/pc 66/48/pc 87/73/pc 91/67/pc 87/62/s 77/57/pc 90/66/s 81/64/pc

Yesterday Today Thursday

Ca p acity NATIONAL 46% 6% 57% 23Vo

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67/5

Source: OregonAgsrgyAssociates 541-683-1577

WATER REPORT

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UV INDEX TODAY 2 p .m. 4 p .m.

lington 72/52 5

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SUNDAY

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10 a.m. Noon

Warm with intervals of clouds and sunshine

Partly cloudy andmild

Portland

24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.42" in 1923 Lincoln Month to date (normal) 0.0 6" (0.06") periods of rain; clouds 63/64 Year to date(normal) 6.96 " (7.25") and somesunshine Newpo Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 6" across the south. 63/62 WEST: Cloudy in the SUN ANDMOON north today with some Tach Today Thu. rain, mainly this morn- 61/63 7:10 a.m. 7: 1 1 a.m. ing; cloudy to partly Floren e 6:36 p.m. 6: 3 4 p.m. sunny south. Lq/63 2:06 a.m. 3: 0 4 a.m. 4:09 p.m. 4 : 4 0 p.m. OREGON EXTREMES First Fu ll Last Oct 12 Oct 20

~

SATURDAY

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Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

High

FRIDAY

L OW ~~ ' 4 - v 7 8 ' 46' ~ 47'

Timesofcloudsand sun

I

THURSDAY

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72/55/pc 63/39/pc 91/70/s 55/51/r 75/52/s 75/61/sh 88/78/pc

49/30/pc 70/61/c 80/74/t

83/73/pc 75/60/s 60/54/ah 64/54/c 58/51/r 51/30/s


IN THE BACI4 BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N FL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4 MLB, C3 NHL, C4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

MLB

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G

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

i •

Ellsdury denched in Yankees' loss

Parity

NEW YORK — Ma-

dras native Jacoby Ellsbury, signed to a $153 million contract by the Yankeesless than two years ago, was left out of New York's starting lineup for Tuesday night's 3-0 loss to Houston in the American Leaguewildcard game.

reigns supreme in Pac-'l2 By John Marshall

With left-hander

The Associated Press

Dallas Keuchel starting for the Astros, Yankees manager JoeGirardi wants to get right-handed-hitting Chris Young in the starting lineup. Brett Gardner took Ellsbury's spot in center

12's football coaches talk about the abundance of parity in the conference. Every season, the same

field and atop the bat-

teams seem to end up

ting order and finished 0-for-4 with three strikeouts. Ellsbury entered the game in the eighth inning and poppedout to shortshop. "Something that I mulled over for a couple days," Girardi said. "When it camedown to it in the end, it wasGardy's numbers against left-handers this year compared to Jacoby's." Ellsbury was 2-for-4 in his only gameagainst Keuchelthis season. "I told him I wanted to play, but then I let him know I' ll obviously be ready to go atanypoint in the gameand willing to do whatever it takes for this team to win," Ellsbury said before the game. Since the All-Star break, Ellsbury hit.220 with five homers and23 RBls and Gardner batted .206. But Gardner hit .263 against lefties over the span andEllsbury just.223. Young, who was batting second and playing left field, entered 6-for-20 (.300) against Keuchel. He finished Tuesday 0-for-2 with a strikeout and awalk.

on top. This season has

— The Associated Press

PHOENIX — Every season, the Pac-

seen a shift. The calls

of parity are actually on the mark. This is a new version of the Pac-12, in which new teams are on the rise and the

unexpected has become the norm.

"It's the Wild West

right now," Stanford coach David Shaw said.

The Pac-12 hierarchy in recent years started with Oregon.

The Ducks played for the national title

in 2011 and again last season, and they have won five of the

past seven Pac-12 championships. They were picked to win the Pac-12 North Division again this season.

But Oregon already has two losses, the latest one of the

biggest surprises of the college football season: Utah 62, Ore-

gon 20, in Eugene.

"To the outside world, the Utah-Or-

egon game was crazy," Shaw said.

• MCCollum has hissights on starting where heleft off — on a scoring tear

Inside • Astros ace Kuechel dominates Yankeeson three days' rest,C3

ORTLAND — C.J. McCollum's gaze was piercing.

See Pnc-12/C4

This must have been the more confident body language Damian Lillard spoke of, McCollum's killer-instinct attitude that was on full display during the Portland Trail

PREP

Blazers' final three games of the NBA playoffs last season.

WATER POLO MAC Invite set for Friday, Saturday MADRAS — Ten

teams are scheduled to take part in the Madras Aquatic Center Invite high school water polo tournament, set for Friday and Saturday at the MAC pool. The boys field is made up of Madras, Bend High, Ridgeview, Summit and Sunset. The girls field consists of Madras, Bend, Mountain View, Ridgeview and Sunset. Matches in pool play will start on the hour from 9a.m. to 6 p.m. on Friday and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday. Championshi p matches, if necessary, are set for Saturday at 6 p.m. for the girls and 7 p.m. for the boys. Admission eachday is $3 for adults, $1 for students, and free for MAC members.

10th overall pick by the Blazers

that has driven McCollum into

in the2013 draft who averaged less than six

Portland's training camp ready to prove that his impressive showing in that small sample size was no fluke. His gaze at the team's media day last week was convincing: C.J. McCollum is blossoming into the Blazers'

points over his first 108 career

regular-season and Postseaso games, found a groove. It was during

GRANT LU('A5

the final three games of that

first-round series against the Memphis Grizzlies when he explodedfor25.7pointspergame.

next star.

The NcCollum lie Name:C.J. McCollum Pos: Guard Ht/Wt:6-3,190 From:Canton, Ohio College:Lehigh Draft:2013, 1st round (10th)

CAREERSTATS

Oregon St. at Arizona When:1 p.m. Saturday KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM Washington St. at

Oregon When: 3 p.m. Saturday TV:Pac-12 Radio:KBND 1110-AM

Team GP-GSMin Pts FG%3P%Reh Ant 013-14 POR 38-0 12.5 5.3 .416 .375 1.3 0 2014-15 POR 62-3 15.7 6.8 .436 .396 1.5 1.0

SeeMcCollum/C3

Inside • Ducks unsure about what to do at QB. Pac-12 notebook,C4

PREP GIRLS SOCCER

Ravens top Panthers for 1st IMCvictory this season Inside

just need to clean up a few little mistakes heading into the second part of the IMC

victory of the season in a 7-1

•No.6Bend High,No.7 Mountain View draw in boys soccer. Prep roundup,C4

girls soccer win at crosstown rival Redmond on Tuesday afternoon. Aspen Jeter led the Ravens

© Seemorephotosfromthe game onThe Bulletin's website:hendhngetin.corn/slideshows 25th minute, assisted by

Bulletin staff report REDMOND — Ridgeview

matched its largest margin of

— Bulletin staff report

with three goals and an as-

sist, bookending Ridgeview's scoring with a goal in the

NFL Seahawks both lucky andgood Seattle admits it was on the good end of abad call, but that does not change the fact that the Seahawks' defensewas dominant once again. NFL notebook,C3

Next up TV:FS1 Radio:KICE 940-AM;

It was that breakout performance

It was then that McCollum, the

"But to those of us

who know, when Utah is hitting on all cylinders, they' re extremely good."

seventh minute and two more in the 44th and 53rd. Hailey

Jordan Fox. It was DeChristo-

pher's second and Redmond's For more coverageof third goal of the season. Central Oregon prepsports: "We just keep getting hendhniietin.corn/sports/highechooi better with every game,"

O

Williamson and Saylor Goodwin each scored two goals in to 5-4-1 overall (1-2-2 IMC). "I think with our conferthe first half to give the Ravens a 5-1 halftime lead. ence being as strong as it Ridgeview's Aspen Jeter, right, takes n shot against Redmond on

Tuesday afternoon. Jeter hndthree goals in the Ravens' 7-1 win.

Redmond coach John Cripe

said. "The girls are playing hard, and that's all I can ask of them."

geview's first in the Inter-

prove and we' re right where

Redmond next plays at Bend on Thursday, while the

mountain Conference and improved the Ravens' record

we want to be," Ridgeview

Ravens travel to face the Lava

coach Kyle Chown said. "We

Bears next Tuesday.

The victory was RidRyan Brennecke/The Bulletin

season." Sarah DeChristopher scored the lone goal for the Panthers (0-3, 0-8-1) in the

is, we' re continuing to im-


C2 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREB DARD

TODAY BASEBALL

MLB playoffs, ChicagoCubs at Pittsburgh

Time 5 p.m.

T V /Radio TBS

HOCKEY

NHL, N.Y.Rangers at Chicago NHL, SanJose at LosAngeles GOLF Presidents Cup

5 p.m. NB C SN 7:30 p.m. NBCSN 7 p.m.

Golf

THURSDAY GOLF EuropeanTour, British Masters Presidents Cup EuropeanTour, British Masters

4 :30 a.m. Gol f 5 :30 p.m. Gol f 4:30 a.m. (Fri) Golf

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Charlotte, practice NASCAR,Xfinity, Charlotte, qualifying NASCAR,Xfinity, Charlotte, final practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Charlotte, qualifying Formula One,Russian Grand Prix, practice SOCCER Euro 2016 qualifier, Ireland vs. Germany Euro 2016 qualifier, Scotland vs. Poland Women's college, Purdue atOhioSt. Women's college, Auburn at South Carolina Women's college, OregonSt. at Stanford

10:30 a.m. NBCSN n oon NBC S N 2:30 p.m. NBCSN 4 p.m. NB C SN 4 a.m. (Fri) NBCSN 1 1:30 a.m. 11:30 a.m.

4 p.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.

E S PN FS2

Big Ten SEC Pac - 12

BASEBALL

MLB playoffs, Texas atToronto MLB playoffs, Houston at KansasCity

12:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m.

FS1 FS1

FOOTBALL

College, S.C.State at Bethune-Cookman College, SMUat Houston NFL, Indianapolis at Houston College, Washington at Southern Cal

4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5 p.m. ES P N2 5:25 p.m. CBS, NFL 6 p.m. ESPN

ON DECK Today Boys soccer: Sutherlin atSisters, 3p.m. Girls soccer: Sutherlin atSisters, 4:30p.m. Volleyball:Sutherlin atSisters, 5p.m. Cross-country: Ridgeview,LaPine,Gilchrist, Trinity LutheranatLaPine Invitational, 4 p.mcMadrasat Estacada XCInvitational, 5 p.m.

6 p.m.

ter Classic8, a.m.; Culverat HeppnerTournament, noon; CentralChristian at North Lake, 2p.m.; Gilchrist atTrinity Lutheran,5:30p.m. Crosscountry: Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit, Sisters, CrookCounty atGeorge Fox XCClassic in Gervais,11:20a.m.; La Pineat BristowRocknRiver5Kin Pleasant Hil,10 a.m. Boys waterpolo:Bend,Ridgeview,Summit, Madras at Madras Aquatic Center Invite Girls waterpolo:Bend, MountainView,Ridgeview, Madras at MadrasAquatic Center Invite

HOCKEY NHL

NBA preseason, GoldenState at Portland

7 p.m. C S NNW, KBND 1110-AM;KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM

NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT

Today'sGames MontrealatToronto, 4 p.m. N.Y.RangersatChicago,4:30 p.m. Vancouver atCalgary, 7p.m.

SanJoseat LosAngeles,7p.m. Thursday'sGames Winnipegat Boston,4 p.m. OttawaatBuffalo, 4 p.m. Philadelphiaat TampaBay, 4:30p.m. CarolinaatNashvile, 5p.m. Edmonton at St.Louis, 5p.m. PittsburghatDalas, 5:30p.m. MinnesotaatColorado,6 p.m.

BASKETBALL Lynx even WNBA Finals — sylvia Fovvleshad21points and nine rebounds andthe Minnesota Lynx evenedthe best-of-five WNBA Finals at onegameapiece with a 77-71 victory over the Indiana Fever on Tuesday night in Minneapolis. Fowles made 10 of 13 shots and Maya Moore added 19points and eight boards for the Lynx, whoare looking for their third championship in the past five years. Briann January scored 17points and TamikaCatchings had 11points, nine rebounds and five assists for the Fever,who nearly vvontheir second straight game onthe road to openthis rematch of the 2012 series won by Indiana. Game 3 is Friday night in Indianapolis.

Horllots' Kidd-Gllcllrlst oUt 6 mohtlls —charlotte Hornets forward Michael Kidd-Gilchrist is expected to miss six months after having surgery on his right shoulder Tuesdaynight. The team's top defensive player tore his labrum anddislocated his shoulder in a preseason gameSaturday night against Orlando. Hornets coach Steve Clifford plans to spendthe rest of the preseason looking at different combinations to fill the void left by Kidd-Gilchrist but said former Trail Blazer Nicolas Batum is expected to seemore action than first expected at small forward.

BASEBALL Ichiro re-signs with Marlins —Ichiro suzuki signeda$2 million, one-year contract Tuesday to remain with the Miami Marlins in hopes of reaching 3,000 hits. Suzuki, who turns 42 onOct. 22, is tied for 33rd on Major LeagueBaseball's hits list with 2,935. Healso had 1,278 in Japan.Suzuki had 91hits in 153 games for the Marlins this year but batted acareer-low.229, dropping his career averageto.314.

FANTASY NeW York AG OpenS inquiry — TheNewYork attorney general began an inquiry Tuesday into the prospect that employees of daily fantasy football sites havevvonlucrative payouts based on inside information not available to the public, asking two leading companies, DraftKings andFanDuel, for a range of internal data anddetails on hovv they prevent fraud. Word of the inquiry came as the revelation that DraftKings andFanDuelallowed their employees — many with information not available to customers — to play ateachother's sites for large amounts of moneycontinued to rattle the sports world. In a letter to both companies, Attorney General Eric Schneiderman demanded the names,job titles and descriptions of any employees who aggregate andcompile awide range ofdata that perhaps could be used to gain apersonal advantage — including ownership percentages and pricing algorithms. "It's something we' re taking a look at — fraud is fraud," Schneidermansaid in aradio interview early Tuesday before the inquiry was announced. Neither DraftKings nor FanDuel would specify how many of their employeescompeted and won money on other sites.

MOTOR SPORTS Harvick celedration raises eyebrowsamongrivalsKevinHarvick's victory celebration at Dover on Sundaymadesome of his competitors wonder if the reigning Sprint Cupchampion had something to hide. Manybelieve Harvick backedhis car into the wall during his celebratory burnout, creating damage to hisChevrolet. Harvick on Tuesdaydenied anyknowledge of hitting the wall, but some wondered if the action wasdone to limit NASCAR'sability to inspect the car after the race. BradKeselovvski said Tuesday it was "absolutely" common for drivers to intentionally damagetheir cars after a race, andDenny Hamlin called on NASCARto figure out a way to keep cars intact for the technical inspection.

Ecclestone says F1 could de soldthis year —Formula One commercial chief Bernie Ecclestone saidTuesdaythat the series could be sold this year andthere are three interested buyers. The 84-year-old Ecclestone did not identify the potential new owners but said he wants to remain in his current role, running F1 on adayto-day basis. F1's largest and controlling shareholder is currently investment fund CVC Capital Partners. Ecclestone earlier this year raised the prospect of buying back F1himself. eWe'll see,e Ecclestone said when asked if hewas one of thethree interested parties. The Associated Press reported in Junethat F1 is atakeover target for Qatar Sports Investments, which hasFrench soccer club Paris Saint-Germain in its investment portfolio and linked upwith Miami Dolphins owner RSE Ventures to consider a bid. — From wire reports

WILD CARD Tuday'sGame Houston3, NewYork0 Today'sGame ChicagoCubs(Arrieta 22-6) at Pittsburgh(Cole198), 5:08p.m. DIVISIONSERIES

(Best-ot-5;x-it necessary) Thursday'sGames Texas(Gallardo 13-11)atToronto(Price18-5),12:37p.m. Houston(McHugh19-7) at KansasCity (Ventura13-8), 4:37 p.m Friday'sGam es Texas(Hamels7-1) atToronto (Stroman4-0), 9;45a.m. Houstonat KansasCity (Cueto4-7),12:45 p.m. ChicagoCubsor Pittsburgh atSt.Louis, 3:45p.m. NewYork(deGrom14-8) at LosAngeles (Kershaw 16-7), 6:45p.m. Saturday'sGames ChicagoCubsor Pitsburgh atSt.Louis, 3:37p.m. NewYork(Syndergaard9-7) at LosAngeles (Greinke 19-3), 6:07p.m. Sunday'sGames KansasCity(Volquez13-9) atHouston, 1:10p.m. Toronto(Estrada13-8) atTexas(Lewis 17-9), 5:10p.m. Monday'sboxscore

Astros 3,Yankees0

th

Houston

Saturday

Football:Gilchrist atTriad, 7p.m. Boys soccer: Irrigonat Culver, 1p.m. Volleyball:Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit, CrookCounty, Sistersat Clearwa-

BASKETBALL

SPORTS IN BRIEF

In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck 10/Z www.gocomrcs.corn/inthebreachers

Friday Football:Ridgeviewat Bend, 7p.muMountainView at Gladstone, 7 p.mcRedmondat Summit, 7p.m.; Cottage Groveat Sisters, 7p.m.;Glideat LaPine,7 p.m.;CulveratHeppner,7p.m. Cross-country: Bendat SandelieXCClassic in Wilsonville, 4p.m. Volleyball:NorthLakeatGilchrist, 2 p.m. Boys waterpolo:Bend,Ridgeview,Summit, Madras at Madras Aquatic Center Invite Girls waterpolo:Bend, MountainView,Ridgeview, Madras at MadrasAquatic Center Invite

NBCSN

Listingsarethemost accurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.

MLB playoffs MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL All TimesPDT

Thursday Football:MadrasatCrookCounty,7p.m. Boyssoccer.RedmondatBend,3p.m.;Summitat MountainView, 3p.m.; SweetHom e at Sisters, 4:30 p.m.; La Pine atCentral Linn,4:30 p.m.; LivingstoneAdventist at Central Christian,4 p.m. Girls soccer: Summit at Mountain View,4:30 p.m.; Redmondat Bend,4:30 p.mcSisters at Sweet Home, 7 p.m4LaPineat Jefferson,4:30p.m. Volleyball:HoodRiver Valley at Ridgeview,6:30 p.m.;SistersatSweet Home, 6:30p.me Harrisburg at La Pine, 6p.mcWeston-McEwen at Culver, 4 p.m. Girls water polo:Madrasat Summ it, 6:30 p.m.; MountainViewatRedmond, 3:30p.m. Boys water polo:Madrasat Summ it, 7:30 p.m.; MountainViewatRedmond, 4:30p.m.

HOCKEY

NHL, Minnesota at Colorado

BASEBALL

IN THE BLEACHERS

BASKETBALL NBA preseason NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPDT

Tuesday'sGames

Washington129,Philadelphia95 Indiana115, Detroit112 Chicago105,Milwaukee95 Memphis 92,Houston89 Denver 96, Dallas86 Utahvs.L.A.LakersatHonolulu, Hawaii, late

Today'sGames Atlantavs.ClevelandatCincinnati, 4 p.m. Orlandovs.Miamiat Louisvile, Ky.,4:30p.m. DallasatHouston, 5 p.m. OklahomaCity at Minnesota,5 p.m. Sacramento atPhoenix, 7p.m. 2015-16 TRAILBUIZERS SCHE DULE

Thursday Oct. 10 Oct. 12 Oct. 18 Oct. 19 Oct. 22 Oct. 28 Oct. 30 Oct. 31 Nov. 2 Nov. 4 Nov. 5 Nov. 8 Nov. 9 Nov. 11 Nov.13 Nov.15 Nov.16 Nov.18 Nov.20 Nov.22 Nov.24 Nov.28 Nov.30 Dec.1 Dec.3 Dec.5 Dec. 7 Dec.8 Dec.11 Dec.12 Dec.14 Dec.16 Dec.18 Dec.20 Dec.21 Dec.23 Dec.26 Dec.27 Dec.30 Dec.31 Jan. 3 Jan. 4 Jan. 6 Jan. 8 Jan.10 Jan.13 Jan.15 Jan.16 Jan.18 Jan. 20 Jan. 23 Jan. 26 Jan. 29 Jan. 31 Feb. 2 Feb. 4 Feb. 6 Feb. 8 Feb.10 Feb.19 Feb. 21 Feb. 23 Feb. 25 Feb.27 Feb.28 March1 March2 March4 March 6 March8 March11 March12 March14 March17 March18 March20 March23 March24 March26 March28 March31 April 2 April 3 April 5 April 6 April 9 April 13

Preseas on Golden State 7 p.m. CSNNW 7 p.m. at Sacram ento at Utah 6 p.m. utah 6 p.m. CSNNW at L.A.Lakers 7:30 p.m. NBA at L.A.Clippers 7:30 p.m. Regularseason NewOrleans 7 p.m. BlazerNet at Phoem x 7:30 p.m. CSNNW Phoenix 7 p.m. BlazerNet at Minnesota 5 p.m. CSNNW 6 p.m. BlazerNet at utah Memphis 7:30 p.m. TNT Detroit 6 p.m. CSNNW at Denver 6 p.m. CSNNW SanAntonio 7:30 p.m. BlazerNet at Memphis 5 p.m. CSNNW at Charlotte 2 p.m. CSNNW at SanAntonio 5:30 p.m. CSNNW at Houston 5 p.m. CSNNW LA. Clippers 7 p.m. CSNNW at L.A.Lakers 6:30 p.m. CSNNW 7 p.m. CSNNW Chicago L.A. Lakers 7 p.m. BlazerNet at L.A.Clippers 7;30 p.m. CCSNW Dallas 7 p.m. CSNNW Indiana 7 p.m. CSNNW at Minnesota 5 p.m. BlazerNet at Milwaukee 5 p.m. CSNNW at Cleveland 4 p.m. CSNNW at Phoenix 6:30 p.m. CSNNW NewYork 7 p.m. CSNNW NewOrleans 7 p.m. CSNNW at Oklahoma City 5 p.m. BlazerNet at Orlando 4 p.m. CSNNW at Miami 10 a.m. CSNNW at Atlanta 5 p.m. CSNNW at NewOrleans 5 p.m. BlazerNet Cleveland 7 p.m. BlazerNe t at Sacram ento 6 p.m. CSNNW Denver 7 p.m. CSNNW 6 p.m. CSNNW at utah at Denver 6 p.m. CSNNW Memphis 7 p.m. CSNNW LA. Clippers 7 p.m. BlazerNe t GoldenState 7 p.m. CSNNW Oklahoma City 6 p.m. CSNNW utah 7 p.m. CSNNW at Brooklyn 4:30 p.m. CSNNW at Philadelphia 4:30 p.m. CSNNW at Washington 11 a.m. CSNNW Atlanta 7;30 p.m. BlazerNe t LA. Lakers 7:30 p.m. CSNNW Sacrame nto 7 p.m. CSNNW Charlotte 7 p.m. CSNNW Minnesota 6 p.m. CSNNW Milwaukee 7 p.m. CSNNW Toronto 7 p.m. BlazerNet at Houston 2 p.m. CSNNW at Memphis 5 p.m. CSNNW Houston 7:30 p.m. BlazerNet 7 p.m. CSNNW Golden State Utah 6 p.m. CSNNW Brooklyn 7 p.m. BlazerNet Houston 7 p.m. CSNNW at Chicago 5 p.m. CSNNW at Indiana 3 p.m. CSNNW at NewYork 4:30 p.m. CSNNW at Boston 4:30 p.m. CSNNW at Toronto 4:30 p.m. CSNNW at Detroit 3 p.m. CSNNW Washington 7 p.m. BlazerNet at Golden State 7:30 p.m. CSNNW Orlando 7:30 p.m. BlazerNet at Oklahoma City 5 p.m. CSNNW at SanAntomo 5:30 p.m. BlazerNet at NewOrleans 5 p.m. CSNNW at Dallas 1 p.m. CSNNW Dallas 7:30 p.m. BlazerNet at L.A.Clippers 7:30 p.m. CSNNW Philadelphia 7 p.m. CSNNW Sacramen to 7 p.m. CSNNW 7 p.m. CSNNW Boston Miami 7 p.m. CSNNW at Golden State 5 p.m. BlazerNe t at Sacram ento 7 p.m. CSNNW Oklahoma City 7 p.m. BlazerNe t Minnesota 7:30 p.m. CSNNW Denver 7:30 p.m. BlazerNet

"So ... Have you and your husband chosen a single sport for your next child that will suck the life out of your marriage on a daily basis?"

WNBA playoffs WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION

All TimesPDT FINALS

(Best-of-6;x-if necessary) Tuesday'sGame

Minnesota77,Indiana71,seriestied1-1

Friday'sGame Minnesota at Indiana 5p.m. Sunday'sGame Minnesota at Indiana 530pm Wednesday,Oct. 14 Indiana atMinnesota, 5p.m.

FOOTBALL America's Line HOME TEAMINCAPS NFL

Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog Thursday TEXANS N L NL NL Colts Sunday 3 3 42k t Jaguars 3 2t / t 42 t /t TITANS Bt/t Bt/ t 4 3 ' /t Browns IP/t P/2 4 P/z Redskins t/t 10 gy, 4 5 Bears 41/2 5 49 Saints 9t/t 9 t/ t 4 6 ' Iz Rams 3 3 44 Seahawks 3 3 44 LIONS 8 B t / t 4 9 ' /t COWB OYS 5t/t 5 43'l z RAIDER S 7 7 43 49ers Monday C HARG ERS 3 3 45' I z Steelers

NewYork ab r hbi ab r hbi Altuye2b 4 0 1 1 Gardnrcf-If 4 0 0 0 Springrrf 4 0 1 0 CYounglf 2 0 0 0 Correass 4 0 0 0 Ellsuryph-cf 1 0 0 0 CIRsmslf 3 1 1 1 Beltranrf 4 0 1 0 Gatti sdh 4 0 0 0 ARdrgzdh 4 0 0 0 CGomzcf 3 1 1 1 BMccnc 4 0 0 0 Lowrieph 1 0 0 0 Headly3b 2 0 0 0 M rsnckcf 0 0 0 0 Bird1b 3 0 1 0 Valuen 3b 4 0 1 0 Rfsnyd 2b 3 0 0 0 Carter1b 0 0 0 0 Gregrsss 3 0 1 0 V illar pr 0 1 0 0 MGnzlz1b 1 0 0 0

Jcastro c 2 0 0 0 Totals 30 3 5 3 Totals 3 0 0 3 0 Houston 0 10 100 100 — 3 N ew York 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 DP — NewYork2. LOB—Houston5, NewYork5. AMERICAN CONFERENCE 2B — Springer (1). HR—Col.Rasmus (1), C.Gomez East —Altuve(1), Vilar (1). W L T Pct PF PA (1). SB IP H R E R BBSO NewEngland 3 0 0 1.000119 70 Houston N.Y.Jets 3 1 0 . 75095 55 KeuchelW,1-0 6 3 0 0 1 7 Buffalo 2 2 0 . 500 110 92 Sipp H,1 1 0 0 0 1 1 Miami 1 3 0 . 250 65 101 W.HarrisH,1 1 0 0 0 0 0 South GregersonS,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 W L T Pct PF PA NewYork Indianapolis 2 2 0 . 5 0072 93 TanakaL,0-1 5 4 2 2 3 3 Tennesse e 1 2 0 . 333 89 77 Ju.Wilson 11-3 0 0 0 1 0 Houston 1 3 0 . 250 77 108 Betances 12-3 1 1 1 1 4 Jacksonvile 1 3 0 . 250 62 107 A.Miller 1 0 0 0 0 2 North T—3:04. A—50,113(49,638). W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 4 0 0 1 .000121 77 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 . 5 0096 75 SOCCER Baltimore 1 3 0 . 250 93 104 Cleveland 1 3 0 . 250 85 102 MLS

NFL

NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All TimesPDT

West

MAJORLEAGUESOCCER W L T Pct PF PA All TimesPDT 4 0 0 1.000 97 69 2 2 0 . 500 97 108 T oday'sGames 2 2 0 . 500 96 110 13 0 . 250 100 125 Montrealat NewYork, 4:30p.m. FC DallasatVancouver,7 p.m. NATIONAL CONFERENCE Saturday'sGame East W L T P ct PF PA Montrealat Colorado,6p.m. Dallas 2 2 0 . 500 95 101 N.Y.Giants 2 2 0 . 500 102 82 DEALS Washington 2 2 0 . 5 0078 79 Philadelphia 1 3 0 . 25078 86 Transactions South Denver Oakland SanDiego Kansas City

Carolina Atlanta Tampa Bay NewOrleans

W L 40 40 13 13

North

T 0 0 0 0

P ct PF PA BASEBALL 1.000108 71 AmericanLeague 1.000137 93 CLEVE LANDINDIANS—Promoted Chris Antoneti . 250 72 117 to presidentof baseball operations,MikeChernoffto . 250 86 104 generalmanager andDerek Falveytoassistant general

manager. W L T P ct PF PA NationalLeague GreenBay 4 0 0 1 .000113 71 MIAMIMARLINS—PromotedJeff McAvoyto vice HOUSTN O 22 25'lt 74'lt Smu Minnesota 2 2 0 . 50080 73 president-playerpersonnel,Brian Chattin to assisSOUTHER NCAL17 16'It 56 Washington Chicago 1 3 0 . 250 68 125 tant generalmanager and David Keller to director-pro Friday Detroit 0 4 0 . 000 66 96 scouting.Agreedto termswith OFIchiro Suzuki ona MARSHALL Bt7t 5 5 8 t/t So Miss West one-year contract. VA TEC H 1t/2 PK 49'/t Nc State W L T P ct PF PA BASKETB ALL Saturday Arizona 3 1 0 . 750 148 73 NationalBasketball Association Oklahoma 16 1 7 6 1 Texas St. Louis 2 2 0 . 50074 89 MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES— SignedFSampsonCart er. Minnesota 1 3 46 PURDUE Seattle 2 2 0 . 50087 71 FOOTBAL L Akron 9 7t7t 53'It EMICHIGAN SanFrancisco 1 3 0 . 250 48 110 NationalFootballLeague WVIRGINIA 7 7 5 8 Oklahoma St ATLANT A FALCONS—SignedS Charles Godfrey PENNST Indiana Thursday'sGame and TE TonyMoeaki. ReleasedTEMickeyShuler. Placed Duke 10 12 47'/t ARMY IndianapolisatHouston, 5:25p.m. WRDevin Hester oninjured reserve-return. TEMPLE 15 16 48'lt Tulane Sunday'sGames BUFFALOBILLS— SignedRBDanHerron.Placed 10WA 10t/t 11 illinois Chicagoat KansasCity, 10a.m. TE MarcueisGrayoninjured reserve.SignedWRWalter OHIO ST 32 54'7t Maryland St. LouisatGreenBay, 10a.m. Powell tothepractice squad. Buff aloatTennessee,10a.m. BOSTON COLL 9t7t 8 3 6'It WakeForest CHICAGB OEARS—PlacedCWill Montgomeryon QHIQ u 17 16 48 Miami-Ohio Seattle at Cincinnati, 10a.m. injuredreserve.SignedTNickBectonfromthepractice TOLEDO 16'lt 15 44 KentSt WashingtonatAtlanta, 10a.m. squad.SignedSSherrodMartin. SignedDTBrandon NO ILLINO IS 11 1 0'/t 54'/t Ball St JacksonvilleatTampaBay, 10a.m. GunnandCBarrettJonesto thepractice squad. Waived App'chian St 19 16 59'lt GEORGIA ST NewOrleansatPhiladelphia,10 a.m. PSpencerLanningandLBJohnTimu.PlacedWRJalen C level a nd at B al t i m ore, 10 a. m . PITTSBU RGH 8 10 46'It Virginia Saundersonthepractice squad/injured list. Terminated at Detroit,1:05 p.m. WMICHIG AN 6 Plt 51'It CMichigan Arizona the practicesquadcontract ofDTTerryWilliams. at Oakland, 1:25p.m. ALABAMA 16 16'/t 50'/t Arkansas Denver CLEVEL ANDBROWNS—SignedDLRayDrewand AIR FOR CE 19 24 54'/t Wyoming NewEnglandatDallas, 1:25p.m. DB TyZfmmerman tothe practice squad. Released DL BOWLGREEN 12'lt 13 77'lt UMass SanFranciscoat N.Y. Giants,5:30p.m. DylanWynnandOL Garth Gerhart fromthepractice 301/2 30yt Troy Open:Carolina, Miami,Minnesota, N.Y.Jets MISSST squad. Monday,Oct.12 MISSISSIPP I 41 42'lt 70'lt NewMexico St GREENBAYPACKERS— SignedDTBruceGaston 7t7t 55'It BYIJ 7 ECarolina PittsburghatSanDiego, 5:30p.m. to thepracticesquad. 41'It 4 4 7 7 Baylor KANSAS MINNESOTA VIKINGS— TradedLBGeraldHodges FLAATLANTIC 3 3t/t 58t/t Rice to SanFranciscofor CNickEastonanda2016sixthOREGO N 18 17 70 Wash St round draft pi c k. TENNIS Georgia 3 3 5 5'7t TENNES SEE TAMPABA Y BUCCANEERS — Signed K Connor WKENT UCKY 10 Bt/t 65t/t Mid Tenn St Barth.SignedWRDonteeaDyeand DEHoward Jones WTA Tour TULSA 91/2 gt/t 66t/t UL-Monroe from the practice squad.PlacedDETJ. Fatinikun oninChinaOpen juredreserve.ReleasedTMartin WallacefromthepracNOTRE DAME 14 14'lz 54'lz Navy Tuesday atBailing tice squad.SignedTReidFrageland DEJoshShirleyto ARIZONA ST 15 15 55'/z Colorado SecondRound the practicsq euad. FLORIDA ST 10 9'/t 5(p/t Miami-Fla 8 3 5'Iz Northwestern FlaviaPennetta (3),Italy,def.Teliana Pereira, Brazil, HOCKEY MICHIGAN 7 5 4'7t 3-6, 6-0, 6-4. NationalHockeyLeague CLEMSO N 8 Ga Tech AnaIvanovic(6),Serbia, def.VenusWilliams, unitCHICAGO BLACKHAWKS— RecalledDVile PukUL-LAFA YETTE 5 4 7 1'/t TexasSt 7-6(3), 6-2. ka fromRockford (AHL). Assigned0 Viktor Svedberg UTAH 7 7 6 1 t/t California ed States, CarolineWozniacki (8), Denmark, def.WangClang, to Rockford.Placed0 Michal Rozsival onlong-term CFLOR IDA 2 2 3 8'lz Connecticut China, 7-5, 6-0. injured reserve. FLA INT'L 14'/z 1 4'/z 46'/z utep AngeliqueKerber(10), Germ any, def. Dominika COLOR ADOAVALANCHE—Signed FJack Skile La Tech 13 1(p/t 6(p/t UTSA to a one-year contract. Reassigned FDennis Everberg BoiseSt 15 15'Iz 59 COLOR ADOST Cibulkova,Sloyakia,6-1,6-4. TimeaBacsinszky (12), Switzerland,def. Mariana to San Antonio(AHL). 31/2 Florida MISSOU RI Duque-Mari n o, Col o mbi a , 7-5, 6-2. EDMON T O NOILERS—SignedFBradenChristoffer 12'/t 13 49'/t SCARO Lsu LINA AndreaPetkovic (13), Germany, def. SamanthaSto- to a three-year, entry-level contract. 10t/t 9 6 1'/t Oregon ARIZON A St MINNES OTA WILD—Placed RWJustin Fontaine 3 4 8'lz Syracuse sur, Australia,6-2, 7-5. SFLOR IDA 3 BethanieMattek-Sands, united States, def. Lara on injuredreserve.AssignedDMikeReily to iowa Tcu 8 9 6 3'/z KANSAS ST Spain, 0-6, 6-2,6-0. (AHL).PlacedCJordanSchroeder onwalvers. TEXASTECH 12kt 12kt 74'7t iowaSt Arruabarrena, SaraErrani, Italy,def. Caroline Garcia, France,6-4, MONTREAL CANADIENS— ClaimedFPaulByron MichiganSt 16'Iz 15 51'Iz RUTGE RS off waiversfromCalgary. AssignedGDustin Tokarski, NEBRA SKA 1 1t/t 4 8t/t Wisconsin 3-6, 6-1. 0MarkBarberioandFJacobDeLaRosetoSt.John' s NEVAD A 7 5t/t 55 '/t NewMexico (AHL). 3 5 41/2 UNLV SanJoseSt 3 ATP World Tour NEW JE R S E Y D E V IL S — Ac qui r ed F B ri a n O' N eil l utah St 1(77t 11'7t 47Kt FRESNO ST from LosAngelesfor a2017conditional seventh-round JapanOpen 2t7t 1t7t 46'/z SanDiegoSt HAWAII draft pick.AssignedDSeth Helgesonto Albany(AHL) TuesdayatTokyo and FPavelZachato Sarnia(OHL). First Round NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Claimed G Jean-FranCollege SteveJohnson, unitedStates, def. BernardTomic, cois Berube offwaiversfromLosAngeles. Australia,6-3,2-1, retired. All TimesPDT ST. LOUIS BLUES—Named Rob DiMaio director Gilles Muller, Luxem bourg, def. KevinAnderson of playerpersonnel. (5), South Africa,6-2, 6-3. Pac-12 T AMPA BA Y LIGHTNING— AssignedC MikeAnJeremy Ch a rdy, Fra nce, def. Sam G r ot h , Au st r al i a , North gelidis, GKristers Gudlevskis, RWJonathanMarches6-3, 2-0, retired. Cont Overall MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus,def. FernandoVerdas- saultand0 LukeWitkowskito Syracuse(AHL). W L W L PF PA TORO NTOMAPLELEAFS — ClaimedDFrankie , 6-1. Stanford 3 0 4 1 175 95 co, Spain7-5, StanWaw rinka (1), Switzerland,def. RadekSte- Corradooff waiversfromVancouver. AssignedDScott California 2 0 5 0 217 117 Harringtonto Toronto(AHL). panek, CzechRepublic, 7-5, 6-3. Oregon 1 1 3 2 211 187 WINNIPE GJETS—Agreedto termswith FThomas Gilles Simon(3), France,def. Mikhail Youzhny, OregonSt. 0 1 2 2 92 105 Russia,6-4, 6-4. Raffl onaone-year contract. Washington 0 1 2 2 117 63 COLLEGE A ustin Kraj i c ek, uni t ed S t a t e s, def. Ma t h ew E bd en, Washington St 0 1 2 2 113 106 Australia,5-7,7-6(4), 7-6 (5). ST.JOHN'S— NamedMitchRichmondmen' sbasSouth BenoiPai t re,France,def.Grigor Dimitrov (8), Bul- ketballspecialassistantandGregSt.Jeanmen'sassisW L W L PF PA garia,6-4,3-6,6-1. tant basketbalcoach. l utah 1 0 4 0 155 75 UCLA —Announcedjunior LB Myles Jackhas RobertoBautista Agut, Spain, def.RichardGasquet UCLA 1 1 4 1 174 110 (4), France, dropped outof school andwil entertheNFLdraft. 6-4, 6-1. SouthernCal 1 1 3 1 187 70 Nick Kyrgios, Australia, def. AlbertRamos-Vinolas, Arizona St. 1 1 3 2 138 134 Spain,6-7(3), 6-3, 6-3. FISH COUNT Colorado 0 1 3 2 167 107 Arizona 0 2 3 2 210 176 ChinaOpen upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack Tuesday atBailing chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCoThursday's Game First Round lumbiaRiverdamslast updated Monday. WashingtonatSouthernCal, 6 p.m. NovakDjokovic (1) Serbia def SimoneBoleli Chnk Jchnk SBhd Wstlhd Saturday'sGames Italy, 6-1,6-1. Bonneville 6,083 66 2 8 1 4 205 OregonSt.atArizona, 1p.m. RafaelNadal(3), Spain, def.WuDi, China, 6-4, T he Dattes 7,261 867 1 ,513 5 0 2 WashingtonSt.atOregon,3p.m. 6-4. J ohn Day 4,468 657 1 ,876 7 0 3 CaliforniaatUtah,7p.m. DavidFerrer(4), Spain,def.ThomazBellucci, Bra- M cNary 5,112 1,061 1,519 4 8 9 ColoradoatArizonaSt., 7p.m. zil, 6-4, 6-3. Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, Thursday,Oct. 15 John Migman,Australia, def. TommyRobredo, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected UCLA at Stanford, 7;30p.m. Spain,4-6,6-1, 6-0. ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedMonday. Saturday,Oct.17 VasekPospisil, Canada,def.Victor EstregaBurgos, Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd OregonSt.atWashington St., 1p.m. Dominican Republic, 4-6,7-5, 6-0. Bonneville 1,269,371106,348 254,730 92,950 SouthernCalat Notre Dame,4:30 p.m. Lu Yen-hsun,Taiwan, def. Adrain Mannarino, The cages 882,737 104,150 195,500 68,208 ArizonaatColorado,6 p.m. France, 6-3, 6-2. John Day 737,993 75,215 155,015 53,554 Arizona St.at utah, 7p.m. John Isner(6), unitedStates,def. Dominic Thiem, McNary 668,971 58,377 146,071 47,368 OregonatWashington, 7:30p.m. Austria,7-5,6-1.

College

Thursday


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015• THE BULLETIN

C3

NFL NOTEBOOK

Seahawks' defensewas lucky onfinal stand, but alsodominant The Associated Press

he understood about the rule

T he Seahawks have a l -

prior to Monday's missed call, lowed one field goal in their had simply fallen on the loose he would have "done the exact opponents' past 18 offensive ball as it bounced, there would same thing" as Wright. possessions, including their "I didn't know the rule ei- Week 3 shutout of Chicago. be no controversy hanging over the Seattle Seahawks. ther," Carroll said. "I' ve never Sixteen of those 18 possesInstead, Wright did as he seen it come up and I' ve been sions have ended in a punt, has been instructed, to make coaching for — I don't even and that defensive dominance sure the ball did not end up know how many years it is of the past two weeks coincidback in the hands of the De- and how many games it pos- ed with Kam Chancellor endtroit Lions. It was calculated sibly could be. I don't see how ing his holdout and returning and intentional and added anybody would have known to the team. another Monday night contro- that one. If they did, they did." It just seemed appropriate versy to Seattle's history. Had Wright been flagged, that Chancellor would be the Yes, the Seahawks received the Lions would have gotten one making the game-saving a break when a flag was not possession back at the Seat- play. "I just realized that I could thrown on Wright for illegal tle 1-yard line. Instead, things batting after he guided Cal- w ent Seattle's way but t h e get the ball out," Chancellor vin Johnson's fumble out of n oncall o v ershadowed t h e said. "It just happened to be in the back of the end zone for performance of the Seattle a situation where I saved the a touchback, giving Seattle defense. game, but I saw a lot of brown possession. For th e s e cond s t raight of the ball, and I saw it loose, The Seahawks are freely week, Seattle did not allow an so I just punched at it. We admitting as much after their offensive touchdown. The Li- practiced that all the time." 13-10 win. Pete Carroll said ons were held to a total of 256 Carroll said that running on his Tuesday morning ra- yards, 90 of those coming on back Fred Jackson suffered dio show that, based on what Detroit's final possession. what appears to be a high-anSEATTLE — If K.J. Wright

kle sprain but had no update agreement with Totten ham on how much time Jackson Hotspur of the Premier League might miss. He also said the for a minimum of two games a Seahawks expect to get back year over 10 years once Spurs wide receiver Ricardo Lock- open their new stadium in Lonette, who left Monday's game don. That is due for 2018. with what was announced as The NFL already has played shortness of breath. one regular-season game in Mexico City in 2005 and is try-

Owners to meet today

NFL owners will look west

(Los Angeles), east (Europe) and south (Mexico) at their fall meetings today. The owners will further considerthe desire ofthree franchises — the St. Louis Rams,

Oakland Raiders and San Diego Chargers — to move to Los Angeles. Nothing will be decided at these meetings. The league wants to add more games to its international

series— threearebeingplayed in London this year. The NFL

is looking at more games in England and already has an

MLB PLAYOFFS

ing to land another one there,

Nick Easton and a sixth-round

draft pick. Hodges, a backup outside linebacker in Minnesota's 4-3 scheme his first two

seasons, was the starter this season at middle linebacker in the base defense. Easton was

acquiredby the49ersin a deal with the Baltimore Ravens last

likely next year. month. He was undrafted out Germany also is a possibil- of Harvard. ity; several of its cities have

made preliminary bids for a regular-season game. Mark

Colts QBLuck limited in practice

Wailer, executive vice president, international, of the Na-

Indianapolis Colts coach Chuck Pagano said quarter-

tional Football League has said b ack A ndrew L uc k t h r ew Brazil is a potential candidate; some passes at Tuesday's practhe Pro Bowl has been men- tice and that he "looked good." tioned as one possibility there. Luck increased his workload, but it remains uncertain if he 49ers acquire will play Thursday at HousLB Hodges from Vikings ton. Luck continues to recover The San Francisco 49ers from an injured right shoulder acquired linebacker Gerald that forced him to miss his first Hodges in a Tuesday trade with NFL game Sunday.

nextpp

McCollum

cue e, sross u ou an ees,a vance 0

Minnesota for rookie center

Continued from C1 . "I don't need any clarity

Golden State at P ortland

(tnhlsrole), satdthe6-foot

3-inch, 190-pound guard Th d p from I.ehigh. "I just need to TV:CSNNW Radio:KBND 1110be able tp get pn the flppr

AM, KRC0690-AM,96.9-FM

and I look forward to prov-

l e a ding scorer, or the dam-

ing myself this year." The 24-year-old f ro m

age he inflicted upon Memp h is in the 2014 playoffs. Of

Canton, Ohio, has proven

c o u rse that kind of resume

and I' ll take care of the rest. I feel like I' ve worked hard McCollum accomplished in and I' ve proven myself when college, where he became I' ve gotten opportunities, the Patriot League's all-time

himself already to the pow- will a llow for heightened ers that be in Portland, like confidence. BlazerscoachTerryStotts.

But thi s p a s t o f fseason,

ways been a confident play-

He tr a v eled t o T oronto,

" I think he's more confi- M cCollum went dent," Stotts said. "He's al- further.

a

s t ep

er. But we' re going to ask w here Blazers assistants him tobe a playmaker, be a Jay Triano and David Vanbackup point guard, be able terpool were preparing the to do more than what he's Canadian men's basketball done in the past. Certainl y, I think, a l o t

t e a m for the FIBA Americas

of players, when they know the op- "I a/WayS portunity's there, / f ee W I WBS t hey play w i t h

©

ao

i n Toronto, M c C ollum, k n o w n

more as a scorer

more confidence.

than a distributor

As a young play- Of tJeliig 8 er co1111nginto pf pQUCt jy e

during hi s f i r s t

a 50-win t e a m,

you worry about making mistakes. He was hindered b y injuries. He was always kind of having to fight back from s etbacks. This year,

4

Championships. During his time

he's ready to take

two NBA seasons, spent three days working out with

P ~Ye"'

ThiS is Stuff two-t i me NBA gI1gg tpireppy M V P S teve Nash I to develop a more w ell - r o u n d e d gO lrig tO game as a point g g p pefl t ~ guar d . That experience only added ~U

to

McC o l lum's

it full-on."

Kathy Willens I The Associated Press

Houston's Luke Gregerson, left, reacts as a fellow teammate leaps in the air at the final out of the Astros' 3-0 win over the New York Yan-

kees in the American League wild card gameTuesday night in NewYork. By Howie Rumberg The Associated Press

N EW Y OR K — Dal l a s Keuchel and the Houston As-

tros defied expectations all season long. Facing his biggest test yet, the bearded ace

beat the odds and the Yankees once again. Pitching on three days' rest for the first time in his career,

Keuchel baffled New York for six innings of three-hit ball. Colby Rasmus and Carlos Gomez homered, and the Astros won 3-0 Tuesday night in the American League wild card game. The Astros, who secured

their spot in this winner-takeall game on the last day of the regular season, advanced to

the AL Division Series to face the defending AL champion Royals, set to begin Thursday night in Kansas City. "To come to Yankee Stadium and play that well was tru-

ly remarkable," said Keuchel, the AL's only 20-game winner. Aggressive from the start in their initial playoff appearance as an American League

MLBplayoffsnotedook A LOOK ATTONIGHT PITTSBURGH — Tonight's National League wild card gamebetween the Pittsburgh Pirates and the ChicagoCubs lsthe first postseason meeting between theteams, who havebeen in the same division since 1969. And it features a pair of CyYoung Award contenders in a highly anticipated pitching matchup. Jake Arrieta went 3-1 with a 0.75ERAin five starts against Pittsburgh this season. That included a gem on Sept. 27 when hetossed one-hit ball over sevn scoreless innings, striking out nine without a walk. Gerrit Cole is 7-1with a 2.88 ERAin nine career starts against Chicago, including 2-1 with a 2.13 ERA this season. Colewent 9-3 with a 2.83 ERAin 15 starts at PNCPark this year. The winner headsfor St. Louis to play the NL Central champion Cardinals ln abest-of-five Division Series beginning Friday. ROYALS TOTURN TO VENTURA The KansasCity Royals will start hard-throwing youngster YordanoVentura in Game1 of the AL Division Series against Houston onThursday night. Johnny Cueto will pitch the secondgameand Edinson Volquezwill start Game 3, with the rest of the rotation to be announcedonly if Games 4and Keuchel said. "We hit a lot of

club — and first since being home runs, pitch well and play swept by the White Sox in defense." the 2005 World Series — the

AL hits leader Jose Altuve

Astros came out swinging against Masahiro Tanaka in

had an RBI single off All-Star

front of a revved-up Yankee

Stadium crowd. Rasmus sent Tanaka's first pitch of the second inning soaring into deep right field. Gomez, who only had five plateappearances after miss-

ing nearly two weeks with a strained chest muscle in mid-September, connected on

the first offering of the fourth. "That really settled me down, and that's who we are,"

reliever Dellin Betances in the seventh.

Reliever Tony Sipp walked

5 are necessary. "For us, the last two weeks, threeweeks, all three of those guys havebeenthrowing the ball good," Royals managerNedYost said. "Ventura has beenexcellent in his last six, sevenstarts. And we wanted to keepeverybody on five days' rest. We thought that would work out best for us." The 24-year-old Ventura weathered arollercoaster year that saw him briefly banished to Triple-A Omaha.But the star of Game6 of last year's World Series reboundeddownthe stretch, flashing his 100 mphfastball while going 4-1 with a 3.14 ERAin seven starts in September. KERSHAW TOSTART GAME 1 OF NLDS The Los Angeles Dodgers set their pitching rotation for the first three games of their best-of-five NL playoff series against the NewYork Mets: Clayton Kershaw will start Game 1 onFriday at Dodger Stadium, as expected, against Jacob deGrom. Zack Greinke will take the moundfor Game2 on Saturday against Mets rookie NoahSyndergaard, followed by left-hander Brett Anderson against Matt Harvey in Game3 back in NewYork on Monday. It's uncertain who would start for the Dodgers if a fourth game is needed.

celebration a few years in the making. The Astros had averaged 104 losses in their previousfourseasons. "Now we get to go to Kansas City. It's going to be some grind-it-out baseball," Rasmus said. "We have to come

— The Associated Press

manager Joe Girardi said. Fans taunted the 27-yearold Keuchel the moment he

walked to the outfield for warmups. Then he toyed with the Yankees from the first batter,

striking out Brett Gardner looking. "I felt like I had never been

one, and Will Harris and Luke

in there the way we came in

Gregerson were each perfect for an inning to finish the

tonight. It's going to be fun." on the mound before with the The Yankees lost six of sev- adrenaline I h a d," K euchel en toclose the regular season. sard. And despite all the talk of a Keuchel is the first starter playoff reset for the struggling with a scorelesspostseason lineup, they went bust against start on three days' rest since a new nemesis in their firstJosh Beckett pitched a shutout and only — postseason game for the Marlins at Yankee Staof thepost-Derek Jeter era. dium in the clinching Game 6 "Just didn't get it done," of the 2003 World Series.

three-hitter. The boos grew

with each out as Gregerson closed for a save. The Astros raced to an area

between first and second after Brian McCann grounded out to end it and jumped up and down in a big serum. It was a

abOut When. I d e termination to And he has al- Wpfgey I1gyy become a staple ready substantiatf f o r the Blazers for PU™P yearsto c ome. ed himself to Lil"When you lard, the All-Star in a POSitiOn g uard and the face gp SUCCeey come in t o th e of the franchise. NBA, your goal fi "Me and C.J is to be one of the have been friends ... it W aS juSt go - to players, be since c o l lege,"mpye ggpUg a guy your team said Lillard, who can depend on, be P" P " 8 a guy w h o's conplayed at Weber State while Mc- my S e lf fOr it." sis tently performCollum was at Leing every night C" McCollum and getting conhigh. "I remember there was a time sistent m i nutes," when, inmylastyearin col- M cCollum said. "When an lege, I was tracking him as opportunity presents itself, the scoringleader in college you make sure you're preand he was tracking me, be- pared to seize it. I' ve prided cause we were competing myself onbeingreadywhen against each other. (Lillard o pportunities have presentfinished second in the nation e d t hemselves to me. I look

in scoring and McCollum f orward to taking this by the was sixth.) It's going to be h orns and doing what's necfun to see him get that op-

e s sary to keep that and gain

portunity to show what he m ore fromit." can do, what we all know he Whi l e at Lehigh, McColcan dp. lum proved himself as a reliMcCollum is well aware ablescorer.Afterasuffering that he is three years re- a broken foot in his rookie moved from a standout ju-

s e ason with Portland and

nior year at Lehigh and that fracturing his right index he has suffered injuries in f i nger last year, he showed each of his first two NB A

he s t i l l h a d t h e o ffensive

seasons. He understands explosiveness and fortitude that he needs to show he is a in the playoffs. The Blazers consistent scorer for a young

h a v e f aith i n h i m , shown

Blazerssquadthisseason. by t h e t eam picking up He is in line to back up h i s fourth-year option last Lillard at point guard, even week, locking McCollum up start alongside the franchise through the 2016-17 season. cornerstone a t

sh o o t in g

McCo l l u m's i n tense yet

guard. soothing gaze is convincing: "I always knew I was ca- He is ready — and he will pable of being a productive soon become — Portland's NBA

p l ayer," M c C ollum n e x t star.

"I don't feel any pressure said, noting that his first opportunity arose only be- at all," he said. "As an athcauseofinjuriestoplayersin l ete, you look forward to it. front of him in the rotation. You pray for it. I prayed for "This is stuff that I already an opportunity to play every knew was going to happen. day. I just asked for opporIt was just about when. I t u n ity. And when it comes, worked hard to put myself you don't shy away from it. in a position to succeed, and I wasn't raised to shy away I think ... it was just more

f r o m this. This is what I was

about me preparing myself built for." for it."

Forget for a moment what

— Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas®bendbulletin.corn.


C4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

PAC-12 NOTEBOOK

PREP ROUNDUP

ou BrSSCore B e 0 F BW Wl Bulletin staff report Mountain View c o ach Jerry Jimenez minced no

words: His Cougars were fortunate to escape with a 1-1 Intermountain Confer-

ence boys soccer draw on Tuesday. A fter playing No. 6 Bend High to a scoreless tie at th e h alf, the sev-

enth-ranked Cougars (20-1 IMC, 6-2-1 overall) put themselves in a hole midway through the second half. A Mountain View de-

B V B B B FS

PREP SCOREBOARD

(1-0-2, 5-1-3) with a 1-0 lead. With just a

m i nute to

play, however, the Cougars came through. Taylor

Boys soccer Standfngs IntermountainConference Team Conference Overall MountaiVi ne w 2 - 0-1 6-2-1 Summit 2-1 3-3-2 Bend 1-0-2 5-1-3 1-2-1 4-3-3 Ridgeview Redmond 0-3 0-6

Girls soccer Standfngs IntermountainConference Team Conference Overall Summit 3-0 6-0-1 Bend 2-1 7-1-1 Mountain Vie w 1 - 1 -1

Emerson redirected it into the net to help Mountain

2-5-2 5-4-1 0-6-1

prove to 5-0 in league play. Haley Smith and Allison Taylor each had six kills for the Storm, while Smith and Jade Waskom both recorded four

aces. Brook O'Keefe led Redmond (0-5 IMC) with 12 digs, Kenzie Jackson added six kills

and seven digs, and Jen Meeker had six assists. Bend 3, Ridgeview 0: The

25-13, 25-5. Tatiana Ensz led

IntermountainConference Team Conference Summit 5-0 Bend 4-1 M ountaiVine w 2-2 1-4 Ridgeview Redmond 0-5

and Diego Nunez added a goal. East Linn Christian 5, La Pine1: LA PINE — Justin Petz

Bend coach Nils Eriksson said. "It's unfortunate not

to come out with (a win)."

1-7-1 overall.

Bend (4-1 IMC) with 11 kills, 12 digs and six aces. Kaelyn Hanson had30 assists forthe

scored on an assist from Mea-

gan Bakker to give the Lava Ridgeview 12, Redmond Bears the lead with just over 1: REDMOND — Malachi 10 minutes remaining. Abby Stalberg had three goals Nopp scored in the 17th minand two assists to lead the ute for Mountain View (1-1-1, visiting Ravens to an Inter- 2-5-2). mountain Conference win. Crook County 3, Madras 0: Nakoda Sanders scored MADRAS — Th e Cowgirls twice and had an assist

picked up their first Tri-Val-

for Ridgeview (1-2-1 IMC, 4-3-3 overall), and Jonathan Irby had two goals. Angel Ortiz and Cade O' Neill finished with two

ley Conference win of the season courtesy of three second-half goals. Erin Bush had two goals and assisted an Audrey Bernard score for Crook County ( 1-4 TVC, 3-5 overall), and Bernard assisted on both Bush goals. The

Corbett 3, Madras 0: CORBETT — Jordan Patt had six aces in the third set, but the

White Buffaloes lost 25-7, 25-12, 25-21 to drop to 1-6 in

winning 25-16, 25-16, 25-16.

Emily Eidler had 16 kills and Allison Jorge had 32 digs to lead Trinity Lutheran, which entered the contest as the No.

3-ranked team in Class IA.

Girls water polo Summit 12, Ridgeview 6: Paige Miller scored six goals to lead Summit over Central

Valley League opponent Ridgeview. Emily Touchette, Jenna Wimmer and Eden VanderHoek scored two goals apiece, assists apiece. Justin Ketand Haley Joyner had one tle scored the lone goal for goal. The Ravens were led by the Panthers (0-3, 0-8). Tristy Osborne's three goals, Madras 3, Crook County White Buffaloes slip to 0-5 in and Alex Boize, Meeka Eggli3 : PRINEVILLE — V i c - the TVC and 2-7 overall. sion and Kyrie Prescott each tor Villagomez scored for Pleasant Hill 4, La Pine 0: had a goal. C rook County on a f r e e

PLEASANT H I L L

— The

kick midway through the Hawks lost by four goals, but second half t o s alvage La Pine coach Scott Winslow a Tri-Valley C onference said t h e t ea m's C l ass draw. Madras (4-0-1 TVC, 3A/2A/IA Special District 4 7-0-2 overall) led 3-2 at match was its best of the seah alftime

a f t e r A nd r e s son. "We learned more today

Acuna scored twice and

Boys water polo Summit 19, Ridgeview 5:The

Swim 8e Fitness Center and

'I/'ets turn to tryouts after cap increase gary. "It's a tough business, deal eight days later. "I felt confident that someas you get older. Things can ENGLEW O O D , Colo. change quickly. thing positive would come," "And they can change pos- said Bernier, who had 16 goals The locker stall belonging to By Pat Graham

The Associated Press

pletely deared out except for

wants and needs a gritty guy with offensive touch, Glen-

to Michigan State and Utah, but was clearly affected by the

with the New Jersey Devils last season. "You tell yourself

you' re not the only one, and el bags hanging on hooks. cross can be that guy." there are worse things in life." Two bags Glencross no lonWhen free agency began A gamble on himself — that ger needs. over the summer, Glencross is the way Avalanche forReleased by Colorado on thought for sure he would be ward Jack Skille viewed his Monday — and by Toronto on a roster and competing for professional tryout situation, last month — the 32-year-old playing time, not a roster spot. especially in the current land"Didn't turn out that way," scapeofthissalary cap era. is searching for work again. These arethe perils of be- Glencross recently said. He is not an economist, ing on a professional tryout, Look around the league just an NHL realist. Work is where nothing is guaranteed, and you will see plenty of a little scarce for players like him — a 28-year-old seasoned least of all a roster spot. players in the same boat. It is an awkward position With t h e s e ason s tart- forward who makes a decent to be in for a player like Glen- ing today and rosters being wage. cross, with 507 NHL games trimmed, some were recently The upper limit of the cap and 134 goals. But he is far released from their tryouts, only increased $2.4 million for from alone. such as defenseman Sergei 2015-16 to $71.4 million. That With the salary cap in- Gonchar in Pittsburgh, goal- is a smaller amount than the creasing only a m o dest ie Ray Emery in Tampa Bay, previous year when it went up amount this season and big forward Devin Setoguchi in $4.7 million to $69 million. money going to the bigger Toronto and defenseman Jan Not only that, but more names, there are quite a few Hejda in Chicago. young players are showing up middle-tier players trying to This l e ss-than-desirable NHL-ready and don't need as latch on through professional route worked out well for for- much time in the minors. "It's an unfortunate situatryouts. ward Tomas Fleisch mann, "Makes you realize how who just agreed to a one-year tion to have to come in withfortunate you are to have one contract with Montreal. out a contract," Skille said. of the jobs," said Avalanche Steve Bernier, too. He was "But the bright side is it's anforward Jarome Iginla, who with the New York Islanders otherchance to prove myself was teammates with Glen- on a professional tryout basis and earn something I actually cross when both were in Cal- Sept. 9 and signed a one-year want."

on."

field. He then placed one hand

on Tumpkin to shove him farther back, followed by two hands to force him toward the

bench. MacIntyre also wagged a finger at his assistant. "That's not w h o I

am.

That's not in my character," MacIntyre said Tuesday at

his weekly news conference. "Sorry for the way it was handled. Joe and I are fine. There

are no issues there, whatsoever. That's something that won't happen again." The Pac-12 is not looking into the incident.

Injured VCR LB jack drops out, heads to NFL Injured UCLA linebacker Myles Jack has dropped out of school, and he plans to enter the NFL draft next year. UCLA coach Jim Mora ex-

pressed trepidation about the injured Jack's decision when

he announced it Tuesday. "He's taking his chips and scout t e a m qua r t erback. Freshman Travis Jonsen, who he's shoving them into the was expected to redshirt, is middle," Mora said. "We hope

injury. "It's tough, it's really tough injured. Helfrich said he has confor me, especially this being my senior year," Adams told fidence in Lockie and Alie if reporters this week. "I gotta Adams cannot go. "They' re both capable of be 100 percent before I can go out there. I want to give this executing the whole thing, but team my 100 percent because they played well enough and they' re giving me this oppor- executedata high enough levtunity to come in and compete, el to warrant (playing both)," and play for the Ducks. I just Helfrich said. "We' re not done gotta give them my 100 per- game planning for WashingLockie started at quarter-

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

two Colorado Avalanche trav-

tice last week to merit playing," Helfrich said. "We felt, is certain about the Oregon looking at the game plan, Ducks at quarterback is there we could parcel out aspects is a lot of uncertainty. for each. We had it divvied Vernon Adams Jr., who has up pretty well in our minds, a broken index finger on his unless something f r eaky passing hand, sat out of last happened." weekend's 41-24 victory at ColBut receiver Bralon Addioradowhilebackup JeffLock- son threw one of the Ducks' ie and former walk-on Taylor best passes in the game, takAlie tag-teamed for the Ducks ing a handoff from running (3-2, 1-1 Pac-12). back Royce Freeman and tossTherecould be more ofthe ing a 39-yard touchdown pass same this Saturday against to wideout Charles Nelson. Washington State — all three Oregon offensive coordinaare listed as the potential start- tor Scott Frost said the game ing quarterback on the Ducks' plan for Washington State depth chart released Tuesday. would depend on Adams' "I would be comfortable do- finger. ing it if it makes sense," Ducks There are not too many opcoach Mark Helfrich said tions for Oregon at quarterabout rotating quarterbacks, back besides Adams, Lockie not tipping his hand. and Alie. Addison, who played Adams broke the finger in quarterback in high school, the season opener against his is an unrealistic option, and former team. He tried to play probably so is redshirt freshin both of the Ducks' losses, man Morgan Mahalak, the About the only thing that

Valley League win at Juniper

from a loss than we do from

itively for him, too. If a team

The Associated Press

cent so that's what I'm waiting

J o n athon a win over a team we should

Curtis Glencross was com-

c oicemi t ea o t e m

Storm built a 10-2 halftime lead on their way to a Central

improve to 4-0 on the season. Devan Swan had four blocks Reynoso goal. Villagomez beat," Winslow said. Sydney in goal for Summit. Miles Flypaced Crook County (1- Bright made four saves for the nn hadthree blocks in the sec3-1, 3-4-1) with two goals, Hawks (2-4 SD4, 2-7 overall). ond half for the Storm. assisted on a

o tions, Llc s

digs. The Ravens drop to 1-4 in the IMC.

10 to remain undefeated in the J imenez, h owever, i s Bend 2, Mountain View 1: Tri-Valley Conference. Abby now looking ahead to the The Lava Bears scored two Smith had eight aces and Thursday's match against goals in the 68th minute to notched 29 assists, while Jenthree-time defending IMC come from behind and beat nifer Roth led Crook County champ Summit. the Cougars in an Intermoun- (7-0 TVC) with 11 kills. Jenni"This is a big week," tain Conference match at 15th fer McCallister and Laura FraJ imenez s a i d . "We' re Street Field. Bend (2-1 IMC, ser each had six kills, while still in first place. We' ll 7-1-1 overall) tied the match Fraser had two aces. take th i s mom e n t um when Tayla Wheeler scored Trinity Lutheran 3, North into Thursday and hope- on a pass from Brooke Jolma, Lake 0: SILVER LAKE — The fully use it well against who was brought up from ju- Saints rolled in a nonleague Summit." nior varsity. Thirty seconds road match against Mountain Also on Tuesday: later, A m ide e Colleknon Valley League foe North Lake,

Boys soccer

Brennan Linsley/The Associated Press

Oregon's Taylor Alie, left, is one of three players listed as the Ducks' starting quarterback for Saturday's home game against Washington State.

Bears, and Erin Roath had 21

MOLALLA — The Cowgirls swept Molalla 25-6, 25-8, 25-

Girls soccer

ur

Lava Bears beat Intermoun-

tain Conference foe Ridgeview in straight sets 25-10,

Tri-Valley Conference play. "It wa s a f r u s t rating scored for the Hawks, who Celestine Morning Owl redraw, to be scored on with fell to 1-5 in Class 3A/2A/1A corded 11 digs for Madras. a minute and a half left," Special District 3 action and Crook County 3, Molalla 0: View salvage the draw.

S

Storm swept the visiting Panthers 25-8, 25-10, 25-20 to im-

Willman sent a cross into

the box, and a sliding Zach

Volleyball Summit 3, Redmond 0:The

1-2-1 ew fender took down a Bend Ridgevi Redmond 0-3 player in the penalty area, and Chance Flammang Volleyball converted the penalty kick Standfngs

to provide the Lava Bears

P

ton State yet, so that we' ll see."

Buffaloescoach

back for the Ducks against Colorado, then Alie stepped in. Playing both quarterbacks was by design, although in the end Oregon did not go with a

apologizes for altercation

Pac-12

football left that it's just point-

Colorado football coach Mike MacIntyre said he was

that he draws a good hand. At least I do." Jack is out for the rest of his

junior season after tearing a ligament in his knee during a noncontact drill in practice

last month. He will leave after just 29 games at UCLA. Mora has known Jack since the

player was 12 years old, and the coach expressed support for Jack even while acknowl-

edging serious concerns about the decision. "I think it's very risky to do

this," Mora said. "Having been on that side, there's going to

sorry for getting into a sideline be a lot of speculation as to altercation with an assistant exactly what he is and where strictly scripted rotation. coach during the Buffaloes' he fits. As I told Myles on SunAlie finished 4-for-9 for loss to Oregon. day, NFL teams are very, very 83 yards, while Lockie was Safeties coach Joe Tumpkin conservative. If there's any 8-for-11 for 54 yards and an drew a 15-yard unsportsman- question whatsoever, they' ll interception. like penalty for saying some- pass on you in a heartbeat. "We had a plan going in, thing to the officials in the sec- They' re going to take the sure and we w anted to execute ond half Saturday night. thing. I explained that to him, that plan. They' ve both done MacIntyre angrily pushed but I feel like they had already enough good things in prac- his assistant away from the made their decision."

Continued from C1 The Utes have been one of

less to talk about anything but Cal Berkeley." Cal, Utah's next opponent,

the biggest surprises in college has been another team on the football, not just the Pac-12. rise in the Pac-12. Utah struggled after joining The Bears went 1-11 their the conference in 2011, fin- first season under Sonny ishing no higher than tied for Dykes in 2013 — 0-9 in conthird in the Pac-12 South. ference— and improved to 5-7 The Utes opened the 2015 last season. Cal had some talseason with a 2 4 -17 home ent coming back, led by quarvictory over Michigan and terback Jared Goff, but was followed with three more vic- still picked to finish third in tories. The win over Oregon the Pac-12 North behind Oretwo weeks ago put Utah on gon and Stanford. the national map, and the Utes The Bears opened with a moved up to No. 5 with seven pair of routs, outlasted Texas first-place votes in the latest in Austin and started conferAP Top 25. ence play with victories over Utah's run has drawn com- Washington and Washington parisons to the 2004 and 2008 State. Cal moved up to No. 23 teams, which both finished in the AP poll after beating the undefeated and won major Cougars 34-28 at home last bowls. week. "It's still really early. We' re Of course, the Bears were still only one-third of the way 4-1 at one point last season

through it," Utes coach Kyle and faltered down the stretch Whittingham said. "There's so after the schedule got tougher much football left that it's real- — just as it is about to do again ly hard to make a comparison this season. "I think this year's team is yet to either of those teams. There is somewhat of a similar feel with the national attention

we' ve received and that type of thing, but there's so much

The entire conference has been tough to predict.

Stanford opened the season with a disheartening loss to Northwestern, but the Cardi-

nal are now atop the Pac-12 North and up to No. 16 in the

AP poll. UCLA rocketed up to No. 7 in the poll two weeks ago after throttling Arizona on the

road, only to fall back 13 places after losing to Arizona State at home. The Sun Devils won that

game on the heels of a blowout loss to USC the week before.

Colorado, at 3-2, has already surpassed its win total from last season, and the confer-

ence still does not have a team that is under.500.

The only concern is that the parity could hurt the Pac12 when the College Football

Playoff comes around. With no clear-cut dominant team, the conference could be left

out of the playoff party. "This is an amazing conference," UCLA c oach Jim Mora said. "There is not a

weak team in this conference. "We' re a different team defen- It's also very scary, I think for sively and I think it's going to probably all of us. We don' t serve us welL" want to eat each other." a lot different," Dykes said.


C5 O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.corn/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015 16,790.19 4 DOW , +1 3.76

S&P 500 1,97 9 .92 -7.13

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NA SDAQ 4,748 . 36 -32.90

TOdap Eye on trade

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North westStocks NAME

CRUDEOIL $48.53+2.27

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StoryStocks The stock market's short rally stalled on Tuesday, and the Standard & Poor's 500 index finished lower following five days of gains. Biotechnology stocks were hit hard on speculation that soaring drug prices will put the industry under increased scrutiny. That led health care to the steepest loss among the 10 sectors that make up the S&P 500. Six other sectors also fell. Energy stocks were the day' s leaders as Chevron, Exxon Mobil and other oil and gas companies rose with the price of crude. DuPont, the chemical giant, led the Dow Jones industrial average to a modest gain, following news that CEO Ellen Kullman would retire next week.

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HIGH LOW CLOSE 16865.09 16746.03 16790.19 DOW Trans. 8073.91 7967.12 7971.86 DOW Util. 585.21 577.74 580.54 NYSE Comp. 10205.11 10124.92 10156.38 NASDAQ 4783.37 4711.79 4748.36 S&P 500 1991.62 1971.99 1979.92 S&P 400 141 6.12 1402.97 1407.06 Wilshire 5000 20889.83 20681.02 20763.14 Russell 2000 1143.62 1127.11 1133.69

Source: Factset

SILVER $15. 9 8+.28

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Vol.:12.4m (1.6x avg.) P E: . . . Vol.:7.1m (1.4x avg.) P E: 2 2.5 Mkt. Cap:$114.4b Yie l d: 7.0% Mkt. Cap:$142.6b Yie l d: 2.9%

DuPont

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

PepsiCo

Close:$97.07 L1.26 or 1.3% The food and beverage company reported better-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue and gave a positive outlook. $100

DD Close:$55.21 %3.93 or 7.7% The chemicalcompany announced that CEO and Chairwoman Ellen Kullman will retire next week, following a challenging year. $60

Container Store Group TCS Close:$1 2.67 V-2.90 or -1 8.6% The storage products retailer reported a drop in fiscal second-quarter profit and little revenue growth, disappointing Wall Street. $20

Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ 82.78 74. 5 3 - 6 .38 - 7.9 V V V +24. 7 +8 4 .9 2 859 15 0 . 8 0 -6.2 + 1 2.9 2 5 7 1 8 1. 3 2 Aviate Corp A VA 29.77 ~ 38.34 3 3. 1 5 -.42 -1.3 V L V -12.3 -8.1 65675 17 0 .20 Bank of America B AC 14. 60 ~ 18.48 15. 6 9 ... ... L V L Barrett Business BBS I 1 8 .25 ~ 49.79 4 1. 4 8 -.97 -2.3 L L V +51.4 +4. 6 122 dd 0.8 8 55 15 Boeing Co BA 115.14 ~ 158. 8 3 13 4.63 + . 61 +0.5 L L L +3.6 +8.8 29 6 6 1 8 3. 6 4 50 L L +5.4 +5.8 71 23 Cascade Bancorp C A C B4 .14 ~ 5.69 5.47 -.01 -0.2 L J A S J A S L L +13. 6 +2 8 .9 12 1 2 0 0 . 72a ColumbiaBnkg COLB 23.90 ~ 33.7 0 3 1. 3 6 -.05 -0.2 L 52-week range 52-week range ColumbiaSportswear COLM 34.25 ~ 74. 72 57.20 -2.94 - 4.9 V V V +28 . 4 + 6 4.7 2 0 6 2 9 0 . 6 0 $47.11 ~ $85 .65 812.55 ~ $23.88 Costco Wholesale CO ST 117.03 ~ 1 56.8 5 148.41 + .34 +0.2 L L L +4.7 +21 . 6 2 037 28 1 . 6 0 Vol.:40.4m (6.1x avg.) PE: 1 6.5 Vol.:2.1m (8.9x avg.) PE:2 9 . 2 L L -39.7 -46.1 18 cc Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 7.00 o — 17.8 9 8 .04 -.08 -1.0 L Mkt. Cap:$49.98 b Yi e ld:2.8% Mkt.Cap:$607.96 m Yie ld: ... - 5.2 60 8 1 8 0 . 44 FLIR Systems F LIR 26.34 ~ 34.46 2 8. 4 2 -.20 -0.7 L T L -12.0 General Mills GIB Illumina ILMN Hewlett Packard HPQ 2 4 .30 ~ 4 1.1 0 28.00 +.82+3.0 L L L -30.2 -20.9 20413 11 0 .70 Intel Corp INTO 24.87 ~ 37.90 31. 7 4 +. 5 3 +1.7 L L L -12.5 -5.5 33794 13 0 .96 Close:$55.70 V-1.52 or -2.7% Close:$145.81 V-17.36 or -10.6% The geneti c analysis andsequencK EY 11.55 ~ 15.70 1 3. 2 4 -.05 -0.4 L V L -4.7 + 0.4 6407 13 0 . 30 The food company is recalling 1.8 Keycorp million boxes of Cheerios and Honing company disappointed Wall L L + 15.7 +45 .4 5 01 9 19 0 .42f ey Nut Cheerios that were incorrect- Street with a weak revenue outlook Kroger Co K R 2 5 .42 ~ 39.43 3 7. 1 3 - .94 -2.5 ly labeled gluten-free. for the third quarter. Lattice Semi LSCC 3.25 ~ 7.66 3.84 +. 1 2 + 3.2 L V V -44.3 -46.0 1556 dd $60 $250 LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.64 15.8 6 +. 3 5 +2 .3 L V L - 4.2 +15.1 2435 d d 58 200 MDU Resources MDU 1 6 .15 ~ 28.51 18 . 7 2 + . 2 6 +1.4 L L L -20.3 -29.7 1486 dd 0 . 73 MentorGraphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 7.3 8 25.23 . .. ... L V L +15. 1 +2 6 .8 4 5 8 1 9 0. 2 2 56 150 Microsoft Corp MSF T 39.72 ~ 5 0.0 5 46.75 +.12+0.3 L L L +0. 6 + 3.9 25556 32 1.44f 00 J A S J A S Nike Inc 8 NKE 83.85 — 0 12 6 .49123.19 -1.08 -0.9 V L L +28. 1 +3 8 .9 3 556 31 1 . 1 2 52-week range 52-week range -1.07 -1.4 V V L -7.7 + 7 . 8 2 362 2 0 1.48a Nordstrom Inc JWN 66.81 ~ 83.16 7 3 . 2 7 $47.45~ $5 8.87 $1$D.DD ~ $242.37 j L L - 7.3 +13.9 82 25 1. 8 6 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 42.00 ~ 52.57 4 6. 2 4 -.60 -1.3 L p. Vol.:5.0m (1.4x avg.) P E: 26.3 Vol.:17.2m (9.1x avg.) P E: 4 4 .6 a' Paccar Inc PCAR 50.00 ~ 71.1 5 5 4. 0 9 -.16 -0.3 L V L -20.5 - 3.0 2144 1 2 0 . 96 Mkt. Cap:$33.35b Yie l d: 3.2% Mkt. Cap:$21.01 b Yield: ... Planar Systms P LNR 3.02 ~ 9.17 5.98 +.0 2 +0 .3 L L L -28.6 +70.8 9 5 20 Skyworks Solutions S W K S Celgene CELG - 5.1 + 8. 3 5 8 7 3 8 1 . 7 6 Plum Creek P CL 36.95 ~ 45.26 4 0. 5 9 -.13 -0.3 L L L Close: $80.71 V-1.16 or -1.4% Close: $112.19 V-4.43 or -3.8% L L -4.5 - 0.5 90 7 1 9 0 . 12 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 245. 0 5 22 9.96 -.39 -0.2 V The semiconductor company will Biotech stocks are under pressure SchnitzerSteel S CHN 1 2.64 ~ 24.75 16. 7 6 + . 9 2 +5.8 L L L -25.7 -29.1 648 d d 0 . 75 buy rival PMC-Sierra for about $2 from concerns about patent protecSherwin Wms SHW 202.01 ~ 294. 3 5 23 6.68 -4.49 -1.9 V V L -10.0 +12.8 1190 24 2 . 68 billion in a move to expand its prod- tion overseas and continued scrutiny of the cost of some medications. StancorpFncl SFG 60.17 ~ 114. 9 4 11 4.54 + . 15 +0.1 L V L +64. 0 +8 2 .5 12 2 2 0 1 . 30f ucts and customer base. $120 $140 L +43.1 +57 . 3 5366 27 0 .64 StarbucksCp SBUX 35.38 ~ 59.3 2 5 8. 6 9 -.35 -0.6 L L 100 UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 8.9 2 16.53 +.06+0.4 L V L -2.8 + 4 . 5 1 549 1 7 0 .64f 120 Housing barometer 80 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.26 4 1. 4 9 -.07 -0.2 L L L -7.7 + 2 . 1 5 232 1 3 1 .02f Average long-term mortgage rates WashingtonFedl L L + 4.2 +18 . 2 93 0 1 4 0. 5 2 WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.2 5 23.08 - .15 -0.6 L 60 00 J A S J A S have stayed below 4 percent for -5.1 + 3 . 4 14003 13 1 . 50 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 $y 58.77 52 .03 -.38 -0.7 L V L 52-week range 52-week range 10 straight weeks. Weyerhaeuser WY 2 6.73 a — 37. 0 4 2 7 . 83 -.14 -0.5 L L L -22.5 -10.1 2560 27 1.24f $44.D6 ~ $112.88 $85.16~ $ 145 72 That's making it more attractive DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 8 -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last 12 months. f - Current Vol.:15.1m (3.3x avg.) PE: 2 1 .1 Vol.:8.4m (1.5x avg.) PE: 42 . 5 to borrow money to buy a home. annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$15.42 b Yi e ld: 1.3% Mkt. Cap:$88.98 b Yield: ... dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend The average rate on a 30-year, announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP fixed-rate mortgage fell again last value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. week, slipping to 3.85 percent. Did Freeport-McMoRan says it QpIyipeyiy gas business, Freeport that spur more would-be buyers to NET 1YR is considering spinning off a $pp tlight Mc MoRan said that it's also P apply for a mortgage last week? TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO its oil and gas business to considering joint-venture Find out today, when the focus on its copper mining arrangements or further spending 3-month T-bill .01 Mortgage Bankers Association business. cuts. The company also shook up e 6-month T-bill . 0 6 .06 ... V V V .04 reports its latest weekly home loan The announcementcomes six its board of directors, cutting its application data. 52-wk T-bill .23 .23 T L .09 weeks after activist investor Carl size to nine members from 16. 2 -year T-note . 6 1 .61 ... V T L .54 I I Icahn revealed he had bought a big These are the latest steps that The yield on the Mortgage applications survey stake in the company, which is Freeport-McMoRan has taken to 5-year T-note 1.33 1.35 -0.02 w T T 1.69 seasonally adjusted percent change 10-year Treasury struggling with falling prices for oil adjust to the changing marketfell to 2.03 10-year T-note 2.03 2.06 -0.03 V T V 2.42 18% percent Tuesday. and copper. Icahn said at the time place. Earlier this year, it slashed 30-year T-bond 2.87 2.90 -0.03 L V V 3.13 13.9 11.3 Yields affect that he wanted to discuss cuts in its quarterly dividend 84 percent. rates on mortIn August, it announced a Freeport-McMo Ran's operations. NET 1YR gages and other Besides a spinoff of its oil and cost-cutting plan. BONDS TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Monsanto's latest quarterly results are due out today. Wall Street projects that the agriculture products company's loss narrowed in its fiscal fourth quarter versus a year earlier. Monsanto, which abandoned a nearly $47 billion takeover bid of rival Syngenta AG in August, has been hurt by decreased demand for its best-selling product, biotech and corn seeds.

SU HIS

0

0.2

-6.3 -7.0

-6.7

FreePOlt-MCMORan (FCX)

Price-earnings ratio:Lost money

$8 8/21 8/28 9/ 4

9 / 1 1 9/1 8 9/25

Tues day's close: $11.83

$33

(B ased on past 12-month results)

Total return 1-y r -62.2% FCX

Div. yield: 1.7% *annualized

AP

Week ending Source: Factaet AP

&md Focus This fund is run by an experienced FAMILY team that takes a "relatively American Funds cautious tack" in a rocky municipal-bond market, according to Morningstar.

Selected Mutualpunds

3-yr * -30.4

5-yr'

consumer loans.

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.67 2.70 -0.03 L V Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.37 4.36 +0.01 V V Barclays USAggregate 2.30 2.26 +0.04 V V D i v idend: $0.20 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 8.04 8.20 -0.16 L L RATE FUNDS Source: FactSet Mcodys AAA Corp Idx 4.04 3.95 +0.09 L L TEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.28 1.29 -0.01 V V 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.41 3.37 +0.04 V 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

-20.8

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 MarhetSummary AmBalA m 24 . 14 -.02 -0.9 +2.5 +9.5+10.4 A A A Most Active CaplncBuA m 56.62 +.17 -2.5 -0.7 +6.0 +7.0 A 8 A CpWldGrlA m 44.22 +.01 -2.5 -1.7 +8.8 +7.5 D C C NAME VOL (ggs) LAST CHG EurPacGrA m 47.15 +.07 0.0 -0.5 +6.6 +4.4 C B C PMC Sra 773910 10.24 +2.55 FnlnvA m 50. 4 4 - .14 -1.1 +2.6 +12.5+12.0 8 C C Gen Elec 700053 27.29 +.47 GrthAmA m 42.92 -.30 +0.6 +4.2 +14.0+12.8 C 8 C BkofAm 656745 15.69 Fidelity NewYorkMunicipal Income (FTFMX) IncAmerA m 20.40 +.04 -3.2 -0.9 +7.5 +8.7 0 C 8 Alcoa 568557 10.98 +.57 InvCoAmA m 35.12 -.02 -3.5 -0.3 +1 2.5 +11.7 D C D FrptMcM 526331 11.83 +.65 LIMITED MODERATE EXTENSIVE NewPerspA m37.02 -.11 +2.0 +4.7 +10.9 +9.7 A A A Micron T 509536 18.22 +.65 WAMutlnvA m38.87 -.08 -3.8 +0.2 +11.6+12.7 8 8 A Apple Inc 471830 111.31 +.53 Petrobras 412094 5.16 +.27 DO Dodge &Cox Income 13.44 +.02 -0.4 +0.2 +2.2 +3.6 E 8 B Vale SA 408839 4.79 + . 16 IntlStk 38.87 +.18 -7.7 - 11.1 +7.5 +4.4 E A B DuPont 388901 55.21 +3.93 Stock 168.67 +.17 -5.0 -2.1 +14.3+13.5 D A A Fidelity Contra 99.24 - . 8 9 +2.3 + 5 .9 +13.5+13.6 B C B Gainers ContraK 99.2 4 - . 89 +2.4 + 6 .0 +13.6+13.7 B 8 B NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 48.61 -.04 +0.4 + 5 .3 +14.1+13.6 A B A Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg69.79 -.25 -2.3 +2 .8 +13.0+13.6 B 8 A PeabdyE rs 26.51 +6.79 + 34.4 ArchCoal rs 4.66 +1.18 + 33.9 FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeC m 2.19 +.01-6.4 -8.0 +3.7 +5.7 E C B PMC Sra 10.24 +2.55 + 3 3.2 IncomeA m 2. 1 6 +.01-6.0 - 7.6 +4.1 +6.2 E C B Unit 18.30 +4.37 + 3 1.4 FrankTemp-TempletonGIBondAdv 11 .52 -.01 -4.9 -6.5 +0.9 +2.6 D B B HorsehdH 3.61 +.84 + 3 0.3 Oakmark Intl I 22.54 +.35 -3.4 -2.3 +9.3 +6.6 C A A Tronox 6.98 +1.55 + 28.5 RisDivA m 18 . 87 -.12 -5.0 +1.0 +9.9+10.9 C E D StoneEngy 8.36 +1.81 + 2 7.6 MorningstarOwnershipZone™ Oppenheimer RisDivB m 16 . 67 -.10 -5.6 + 0.2 +9.0 +9.9 D E E TriVasc Tc 6.12 +1.25 + 2 5.7 Vertical axis represents averagecredit Willbros 2.33 +.47 + 2 5.3 RisDivC m 16 . 55 -.10 -5.6 +0.2 +9.1+10.1 D E E quality; horizontal axis represents C&J Engy 5.03 +.95 + 2 3.3 SmMidValA m45.21 -.16 -6.9 + 1.0 +13.6 +9.9 C 8 E interest-rate sensitivity SmMidValB m37.93 -.14 -7.5 + 0.3 +12.7 +9.0 C C E Losers BIChpGr 69.8 3 - . 85 +3.8 + 8 .5 +16.4+16.4 A A A CATEGORY:MUNI NEW YORK LONG T Rowe Price NAME L AST C H G %C H G GrowStk 54.4 3 - . 62 +4.8 + 9 .7 +15.9+15.6 A A A HealthSci 71.4 6 -1.83+5.1 +16.6 +26.2+27.4 A A A -8.55 -46.1 IBORNINGSTAR ExactSci h 9.98 Newlnccme 9.4 8 + .01 +0.8 + 1 .7 + 1.6 +2.9 C C C Tantech n 7.42 -2.16 -22.5 RATINB~ ****f r -.70 -21.5 IndSvAm If 2.55 Vanguard 500Adml 182.70 -.66 -2.3 +2.9 +13.0+13.6 8 8 A ASSETS $1,671 million Radware 14.01 -3.31 -19.1 500lnv 182.70 -.66 -2.4 +2.7 +12.8+13.5 8 8 A EXPRATIO .47% -2.90 -18.6 ContainStr 12.67 CapOp 50.97 -.70 -3.4 +4.4 +19.2+15.4 C A A Iglg.INIT.INVES T. $10,000 Eqlnc 29.67 -.03 -3.0 +1.5 +11.3+13.6 A C A PERCEN T L O A D N/L Foreign Markets IntlStkldxAdm 24.80 +.13 -2.8 -5.9 +4.1 NA D D HISTORICALRETURNS StratgcEq 31.51 -.27 -2.1 +5.2 +17.2+16.4 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2020 28.12 -1.2 +1.2 +7.2 +7.8 A A A Return/Rank Paris 4,660.64 +43.74 + . 95 TgtRe2025 16.28 -1.5 +1.1 +7.8 +8.3 A A 8 London 6,326.16 +27.24 + . 43 YEAR-TO-DATE +2.4 TotBdAdml 10.80 +.01 +1.2 +2.5 +1.7 +2.9 A C D Frankfurt 9,902.83 +88.04 + . 90 1-YEAR +3.4/B Totlntl 14.83 +.08 -2.9 -5.9 +4.0 +2.4 D D E Hong Kong21,831.62 -22.88 -.10 3-YEAR +3.0/A -4.90 -.01 TotStlAdm 49.56 -.21 -2.6 +2.9 +13.1+13.6 8 8 A Mexico 43,561.42 5-YEAR +4.0/8 Milan 22,182.65 +202.57 + . 92 TotStldx 49.55 -.20 -2.7 +2.8 +13.0+13.5 8 8 A Tokyo 18,186.10 +1 80.61 +1.00 3and5-yearrets$ssaressnsaazed. USGro 30.69 -.31 +2.6 +9.3 +16.1+15.6 A A A Stockholm 1,457.15 + .18 + . 0 1 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption Sydney 5,199.02 +14.89 + . 29 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Zurich 8,761.68 +20.85 + . 24 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar.

Commodities

FUELS

Oil jumped more than $2 per barrel to its highest settlement price since August. Gold rose for the third straight day and touched $1,150 per ounce for the first time in a week.

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

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the euro, British pound and other currencies. It also dropped against the yen as the Bank of Japan held a meeting on monetary policy.

hfdf 88

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 48.53 46.26 1.62 1.61 1.61 1.55 2.47 2.45 1.44 1.39

CLOSE PVS. 1146.80 1138.10 15.98 15.70 933.00 911.10 2.36 2.36 706.35 687.85

V V V L V V L

2.95 4.39 2.33 5.95 3.98 1.9 9 3.07

%CH. %YTD +4.91 -8.9 -0.7 +1.61 +4.08 -1 2.7 +0.82 -1 4.5 + 3.67 + 0 . 1 %CH. %YTD -3.1 +0.76 + 1.76 + 2 .7 +2.40 -22.8 -0.04 -16.9 +2.69 -11.5

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.25 1.22 +2.46 -24.5 Coffee (Ib) 1.28 1.28 +0.43 -23.1 Corn (bu) 3.98 3.94 + 1.21 + 0 . 3 Cotton (Ib) 0.61 0.61 + 0.34 + 1 . 4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 232.20 224.30 +3.52 -29.9 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.08 1.06 +1.46 -23.0 Soybeans (bu) 8.88 8.84 +0.42 -1 2.9 Wheat(bu) 5.26 5.16 +2.09 -1 0.8 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5231 +.0075 +.49% 1.6049 Canadian Dollar 1.3 0 45 -.0033 -.25% 1.1153 USD per Euro 1.1275 +.0092 +.82% 1.2619 -.29 -.24% 109.01 JapaneseYen 120.21 Mexican Peso 16. 6973 -.0450 -.27% 13.4262 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8553 -.0218 -.57% 3.6803 Norwegian Krone 8 . 2804 -.1323 -1.60% 6.4923 South African Rand 13.5730 -.0352 -.26% 11.2539 Swedish Krona 8.2 3 25 -.1176 -1.43% 7.2035 Swiss Franc .9665 -.0092 -.95% . 9 614 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1 3972 -.0130 - 93% 1.1432 Chinese Yuan 6.3560 +.0115 +.18% 6,1390 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7500 -.0000 - 00% 7.7552 Indian Rupee 65.189 +,034 +.05% 61.520 Singapore Dollar 1.4202 +,001 3 +.09% 1.2764 South KoreanWon 1162.15 +2.01 +.17% 1064,85 Taiwan Dollar 3 2.60 + . 0 8 +.25% 30,50


© www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

BRIEFING

IN EUROPE'SHIGH COURT

Projections on home prices Home prices in Oregon could increase by 5.1 percent by August 2016, CoreLogic reported Tuesday. The data analysis firm reported single-family home prices in Oregon were up 9.1percent for the year ending in August. Oregon wasfourth among states with the greatest appreciation in home prices for the same period; Colorado was first at10.4 percent, including sales of distressed properties. CoreLogic identified Deschutes County as one of 44 overvalued housing markets in the U.S. The firm defines overvalued ashaving a CoreLogic HomePrice Index of 10 percent above the long-term fundamental value. CoreLogic quoted its chief economist, Frank Nothaft, as saying that higher mortgage rates coupled with more single-family housing starts next year nationwide should dampen demand and slow the growth in home prices. — Bulletin staff rep/t

Virginia governor wooingDeschutes Virginia Gov.Terry McAuliffe has confirmed he's putting forth incentives for Deschutes Brewery of Bend to pick his state as its newEast Coast site. News outlets report that Deschutes is looking at places onthe East Coast to house its first area location. McAuliffe recently confirmed that he visited the brewery in mid-September to help entice it to break ground in the commonwealth. McAuliffe says he's under a nondisclosure agreement and could not say muchabout Deschutes and its interest in Virginia but that the brewery is deciding between Virginia and another state. CEO Michael LaLonde says nothing has been ruled out and that Deschutes will make adecision by the end of the year. Other states the brewery has lookedat include North Carolina and South Carolina. McAuliffe stopped at the Deschutes Brewery & Public House onNW Bond Street in mid-Septemberonaneconomic development trip up and down the WestCoast. — From wire reports

;If

By Mark Scott New York Times News Service

Europe's highest court on Tuesdaystruck down an international agreement that

called on the European Com-

mission to complete a new digital information like peosafe harbor agreement with ple's Web search histories and the United States, a deal that social media updates between has been negotiated for more the European Union and the than two years and could limUnited States. The decision left the in-

Andy Tullie /Ttte Bulletin

Robert Schluter, president at Element 1 Hydrogen Generators, checks out the company's new

space in Bend.

ternational operations of companies like Google and Facebook in a sort of legal limbo even as their services continued working as usual. The ruling, by the European Court of Justice, said the so-called safe harbor agree-

it the fallout from the court's

decision. Some European officials and many of the big technology companies, including Facebook and Microsoft, tried

to play down the impact of the ruling. The companies kept their services running, saying that other agreements with

eIH ave

leaks from Edward Snowden, the formercontractorforthe

the EU should provide an adequate legal foundation. But those other agreements are now expected to be examined and questioned by some of Europe's national privacy watchdogs. The potential

National Security Agency,

inquiries could make it hard

made it clear that U.S. intel-

forcompanies totransfer Europeans' information over-

• The new building will allow Element 1 to grow, presidentsays

ligence agencies had almost unfettered accessto the data, infringing on Europeans' rights to privacy. The court said data pro-

ment was flawed because

it allowed U.S. government authorities to gain routine access to Europeans' online

By Stephen Hamway The Bulletin

"We have clients from around the world.

The Bend-based company Element 1 began in 2010 by providing hydrogen fuel cells for backup power generators and continuous power in emerging markets. Today, however, that's just a small part of the overall

Wehad one conference room in the other building, and kind of a common office area, so it was very difficult to have a private

conversation." — Rob Schluter, Element 1 president

portfolio of services it offers

to partner companies. In part to accommodate some of these new markets,

the company finalized a move to a new building at the beginning of October. The new space, at 63050 Plateau Drive, is just a couple blocks away from its previous home at 62971 Plateau Drive, but is more than twice the size.

"It allows us to hire more people, to be more efficient in what we do," said president Rob Schluter. "We can take on projects that are

larger scale." The company's previous

ference room in the other building, and kind of a common officearea,so it was very difficult to have a private conversation."

Schluter and CEO Dave Edlund met as neighbors in the late 1990s and decided to

begin Element 1 as a way to leverage Edlund's 19 years of experience in the fuel cell industry. The company had planned to focus on technology development, but some applications of hydrogen fuel cells — including their use in hydrogen-powered automobiles — have yet to

space, which it moved into

take off, Edlund said.

in 2012 after spending two years at a startup space on

"I think it would be fair to say that the market op-

SW Cyber Drive, was 5,200

portunity has been slower

square feet, including floor space and a small confer-

to materialize than was projected," Schluter said.

ence room. The new one is 11,000

According to Roger Lee, executive director of Eco-

square feet, with the option

nomic Development for

to add an additional 3,000 square feet within the next

Central Oregon, there are currently three large fuel cell manufacturing firms in

year. Schluter said the added

space allowed the company to add amenities, like extra conferencerooms, that were

sorely lacking for a growing company. around the world," Schluter said. "We had one con-

Bend: Element 1, CV International and H2 PowerTech.

IdaTech, a spinoff of Bend Research, had its product line purchased by the Canadian firm Ballard Power

Systems in 2012. Because of slow-develop-

had to be creative.

CFO Greg Haugen, who joined the company in 2012, said the company has developed a licensing model where it develops technol-

ogies on behalf of partner companies, which can monitor the process and add

manufacturing and sales expertise. In addition to working on

hydrogen generators, the company refines natural gas. While many companies burn the gas after extraction, a process known as "flaring," Element 1 is attempting to purify the gas. In the same vein, the company is working on converting natural gas to methanol. Schluter said the process

information. The court said

tection regulators in each of the EU's 28 countries should

have oversight over how companies collect and use online

information of their countries' citizens. European countries have widely varying stances toward privacy. Data protection advocates hailed the ruling. Industry executives and trade groups, though, said the decision left a huge amount of uncertainty

The Associated Press

"We were totally maxed

out on office cubicle space," Schluter said. "We wouldn' t

have had room to hire anyone."

ing markets, Element I has

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulletin.corn

con tinuingedisoftware/.

• BuildaBusinessWebsite with WordPressBeginning II:For people whoalready haveaWordPress website and need tolearn howto use it; requirements: musthave ahosted WordPresswebsite — notaWordPress.corn site — with usernameand password;meetstoday, Oct. 16 andOct. 23; $199;9a.m.; Central OregonCommunity College —Redmond Campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond,541-3837270, www.cocc.edu. SATURDAY • HomebuyerEducation Class:Learn theprocess of purchasingahome; $45 per household; 9a.m.; RedmondNeighborlmpact Office, 2303 SWFirst St., Redmond, 541-323-6567, www.neighborimpact.orgl homebuyer-workshopregistration/. • QuickBooks Pro2015 Intermediate:Explore

the advancedfeatures of QuickBooks Pro2015; prerequisite:some QuickBooks andaccounting experience;meetstoday and Oct. 17;$99, includes textbook; 9 a.m.;Central Oregon Community College, 2600NW CollegeWay,Bend, 541-383-7270, www.cocc. eduicontinuingedisoftware/. MONDAY • Swivel Digital+ Creative MarketingConference: A two-day search, social media, creative and marketing conference featuring speakers from around theworld; 8a.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend, 541-350-0594, www.

worksheets, applyadvance functions, addgraphics and use templates; through Oct. 14; $89; 6p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600NW CollegeWay, Bend, 541-383-7270, www. cocc.edulcontinuingedl software/. • Pinterest for Business: Learn to set upaPinterest business account, engage your customersand implement analytics for measurement; throughOct. 26; $79; 6 p.m.;Central Oregon Community College, 2600NW CollegeWay, Bend, 541-383-7270,www. cocc.edulcontinuingedl marketing--social-media/. • LaunchYourBusiness: Learn about pricing and swivelnow.corn/. profitability, cash flow • Dealing withRentals: management, financial Learn about restrictions, stability and defining your solutions andhowto marketingmessage;$199; deal with renters; $25for 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community Association Community College Institute members;$35 RedmondCampusnonmembers; 11:30a.m.; Technology Education The Oxford Hotel, 10NW Center, SEAirport Way, Minnesota Ave,Bend,541541-383-7290, 719-8224, www.caioregon. Redmond, www.cocc.edu/sbdc. orgleventregistrationl core-october-12th-luncheon. • For the complete calendar, • Excel Level2013 Level II: pick up Sunday'sBulletin or Learn to managemultiple visitbendbullefin.corn/bizcal

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed Sept. 29 • Steven L. Gritten, 755 NW Second St., Prineville • Allanah M. Keiper, 1893 NE Taylor Court, Bend • Marcus J. Petrelli, P.O. Box 511, Bend Filed Sept. 30 • Sean T. Spensley, 412 Foss Drive, Terrebonne • Nichole Johnson, 7487 SW Sand RidgeRoad, Terrebonne • JasonDarrah, 7487 SW Sand RidgeRoad, Terrebonne Filed Oct. 1 • Gayle J. Martinez, 179 SW Hayes Ave., No.19, Bend • Michael W. Prickett, 19734 NuggetAve., Bend Filed Oct. 2 • Wendy K. Thompson, 900 NE Butler Market Road,No. 142, Bend Filed Oct. 5 • Awbrey L Beard, 61854 Dobbin Road, Bend Chapter 13 Filed Oct. 2 • Rodney L. Temple, P.O. Box 2206, Terrebonne • Archie K. Carroll, 2471 SW 23rd St., Redmond

in Chicago who helped to negotiate the original safe harbor agreement. "The ruling is so sweepingly broad that any mechanism used to transfer

data from Europe could be underthreat."

to operate. International stores

11 bankruptcy protection

retail stores in 19 countries as

of Sept. 30.

now locked in a contentious a

ness development manager for American Apparel, said

legal fight with the retailer. American Apparel cau-

that investors could suffer big

losses on their investments. American Apparel has lost money every year since 2010, with revenue wilting as competition from fast-fashion re-

John Brooks, a former busiMonday that while it's not a

surprise that the company is seeking protection, it will be interesting to see who will ben-

efit from the bankruptcy filing and what the business will look like after. The chain also said that it

will pay all of its suppliers in full under normal terms for

pany's biggest shareholders,

goods and services provided on or after bankruptcy filing Monday. The plan will wipe out more than $200 million in bonds held by the retailer in exchange for equity interests. Lenders will provide about $90 million in debtor-in-possession financing. American Apparel's board has approved the restructuring

for defamation.

plan, which is expected to be

tailers has increased. The com-

pany is being sued by ex-CEO Charney, who was fired in December following allegations that he had violated its sexual

harassment policy. Charney denies those charges. Charney has also filed a $30 million lawsuit against Standard General, one of the com-

adding graphicsandusing templates; $89, including textbook; 9 a.m.;Central Oregon Community College Chandler Lab,1027NW Trenton Ave.,Bend, 541383-7270, www.cocc.edui

yer with Baker & McKenzie

almost a year after ousting founder Dov Charney, who is

haveenough financingtokeep operating for the next year and

wouldn't be able to do without added amenities.

"We can't assume that

anything is now safe," Brian Hengesbaugh, a privacy law-

are not affected. American Apparel hadapproximately 227

in the old building. Additionally, the company, which currently employs 11 people full time, is looking to grow to about 18 couple years, something it

arrangements. And the ruling appeared to leave smaller companies with fewer legal resourcesvulnerabletopotential privacy violations.

Apparel has filed for Chapter

NEW YORK — American

tioned in August that it didn' t

employees within the next

seas under the current data

American Apparel files for bankruptcy

wouldn't have been possible

BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • BusinessStartup Class: Cover thebasics inthis two-hourclassanddecide if runningabusiness is for you; $29; 11a.m.; COCC Chandler Lab,1027NW Trenton Ave.,Bend,541383-7290, www.cocc.edul sbdc. • EmpezandoSuProprio Negocio:(Business StartupClassinSpanish); Mas informacion sobre los requisitos, permisos, prestamos financieros y otros detalles parainiciar su propio negocio; $29; 6p.m.; COCCChandler Lab, 1027 NW TrentonAve., Bend, 541-383-7290, www.cocc. edu/sbdc. • Electronics101:Eight two-hourclassesforanyone interested in electronics; no prior technical knowledge required; $100; 6p.m.; E::SpaceLabs,48 SE Bridgeford Blvd., Bend, www.espaceslabs.coml basic-electronics-101.html. FRIDAY • Excel 2010LevelII: Take yourExcel2010 knowledge tothe next level by managingmultiple worksheets, applying advance functions,

for big companies, many of which rely on the easy flow of data for lucrative businesses like online advertising. They

allowed companies to move

"We have clients from

BEST OF THE

Data transfer pact ruled invalid

lirr

The Los Angeles company

completed in about six months.

said that its U.S. retail storesas well as wholesale and U.S. manufacturing — will continue

It still needs approvals from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

Peet's Coffee &Teabuying StLlmPtOWnCOfee ROaSterS The Associated Press PORTLAND — Peet's

Coffee 8 Tea is buying the popular premium coffee company Stumptown Coffee Roasters, bringing the once independent brand more into the mainstream. Terms of the deal an-

nounced Tuesday were not disclosed.

2011. Stumptown now operates 10 stores in Portland, Seattle, New York and Los

Angeles and describes itself as a pioneer of the cold-brew

coffee movement. The companies say Stumptown will continue to operate

independently but will have access to Peet's resources and scale. Privately held Peet's,

Stumptown, based in Portland, was started in 1999. Investment firm TSG Partners

which is based in Emeryville, California, says it hopes to

bought a majority ownership position in the company in

leadership position in premi-

capitalize on Stumptown's um and cold-brew coffee.


IN THE BACI4 ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing Report, D5 O< www.bendbulletin.corn/outdoors

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

Bluetongue

MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL GUIDE

WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6

dlSec)Se

killing deer in the

BRIEFING PCT hike presentation set

Northwest

Bend's Jim Kress will give a presentation on hiking the Pacific Crest Trail at 7 p.m. Oct. 22 at the Central Oregon Community CollegeCoats Campus Center in Bend. "Lessons from the Crest" will last about 90 minutes, and will include stories from Kress'1989 hike of the Pacific Crest Trail. Kress hiked the 2,600-mile trail from Mexico to Canada over five months, creating memories that he says have lasted his whole life. The presentation will include tips on hiking the trail, as well as lessons on how to get more out of life. Kress says his experience on the PCT taught him how to "live life to the fullest" and "sort the important from the not so important." Admission is free. A donation of $5 is recommended to the COCC Foundation Scholarship Fund.

By Rich Landers The (Spokane, Wash.) Spokesman Review

A drought-stoked outbreak of viral disease first detected in August is kill-

ing hundreds of deer from the Colville area south to

the Lewiston region, wildlife biologists from Washington and Idaho say. At least 68 whitetails

dead from bluetongue have been collected in the

town of Colville, Terry LeCaire, manager of the city's streets department,

said. Bluetongue has killed mostly white-tailed deer, Photos by Mark Morical / The Bulletin

Most of the McKenzie River Trail

runs right alongside the river, and fall colors are popping up inmany sections of the trail.

but in recent weeks the disease also has been confirmed in some dead mule

deer. The animals can die

in a few days once symptoms or mouth and nasal discharge occur. Bluetongue is closely related to epizootic hemorrhagic disease, which is common in whitetails in

September but usually on a small scale in isolated areas, said Kristin Mans-

— Bulletin staff report

field, Washington's state wildlife veterinarian.

Wildlife officials are especially concerned that

TRAIL UPDATE With ChrisSabo Fall weather is here with shorter days and cold overnight temperatures. Before heading out for an extended hike, be prepared for the unexpected by packing the 10 essentials: navigation tools (map and compass or GPS), water, food, extra clothing, light source (headlamp or flashlight), firstaid kit, fire source (waterproof matches or lighter), sun protection (sunscreen and sunglasses), repair kit and tools (knife or multipurpose tool) and emergency shelter. Oregon rifle deer hunting season continues through Friday. Trail users may hear gunfire and encounter hunters on the forest trails. As a safety precaution, trail users should wear bright colors. Some campgrounds are closing for the season. Up-to-date information on campground closures is posted online at hoodoorecreation. corn/campgrounds/ deschutes. Lava River Cave is now closed for the season. This is the last weekend the Lava Lands Visitor Center and the Paulina Visitor Center will be open for the season. Hours are Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The visitor center parking lot is open year-round for access to the lava flow trails. Access to Lava Butte by vehicle closes Monday. Trail conditions are staying relatively the same, mostly dry and dusty. Tumalo Falls and its viewpoint remains closed to all public access until further notice. Phil's Trailhead is open, but be alert to construction equipment and work crews.

• The McKenzie RiverTrail offerssomething entirely different from high desert singletrack

this year's outbreak is

the bluetongue variety of hemorrhagic disease, which can affect a wider

Fish Lake

NcKenzieRiverTrail

Editor's note:Mountain Bike Trail Guide, by Bulletin outdoors writer Mark Morical, features different trails in Central

Oregon and beyond. The trail guide appears in Outdoors on

Trail begins

widespread than in the

Section 1 (2.7 mi.)

bi,~ )„qggph

alternating Wednesdays through the riding season.

Clear Lake

,SA M ER+~+

MCKENZIE BRIDGE-

Section 2 (5.8 mi.)

about an hour's drive west from How to getthere

How can one of the most heralded ribbons of

singletrack in the country be located in Oregon, but not exactly in Central Or-

following signsfor Eugene.Noticetheupper trailhead on theleft just past FishLake. I Continuedown 1 Hwy. 126another20 miles justpastthe McKenzieBridgeRanger Station to alargeparking area alongthehighwayat the bottomtrailhead.You can leave your shuttle car here.Returnio the upper trailhead to begin your ride. Or ride thetrail oui andbackfromthe south end without a Section 4 shuttle. (6.5 mi.)

MARK MORICAL

egon, which over the last 10 or 15 years has become

a national hot spot for mountain biking? Maybe we should not worry about that, but rath-

through a heavy canopy of mossy old-growth trees along the clear McKenzie

River surging deep in

the MRT — as it is known

the Willamette National Forest. That's not to knock

among trail enthusiasts-

our trails here in the De-

is ONLY an hour away. The trail is so different

schutes National Forest. It's just that during this

from the high desert style of singletrack we are ac-

time of year, when a lack

er celebrate the fact that

customed tohere. Rather

of rainfall can make for dusty trails, the MRT

than a dusty trail through sage brush, ponderosa

remains largely dust-free

pines and manzanita,

Cascades. SeeMcKenzie/D2

the MRT is a damp path

GARY

~5

LE WI S

narian Mark Drew said.

"Some variet iesarenastier than others," he said, noting that no livestock

deaths had been reported from bluetongue in Idaho this fall. MILES 0

3

The WSU lab has confirmed bluetongue virus in 45 whitetail samples

submitted from Washington and Idaho, plus one ty and another in Garfield County.

SeeBluetongue /D4

acquiring scent, losing it, and picking it up again. As soon as she locked up, on point, two partridge jumped into the air. I tipped one into chest-high rye and, moments later, two more

we would trade off shooting

the small collection of grave markers shaded by pines and yellowed vine maples and wild rose and hid the rigs in a gully. Joe Biggs joined us for this hunt, a guide from Double Barrel Ranch in the Spokane Valley. Bob Mulligan turned

pictures and shooting my 20-gauge CZ Ringneck.

close to heel. My cousin, Neil Lewis, carried the camera-

livestock every year, Idaho state wildlife veteri-

Section 3 (10.7 mi.)

e un arian ar ri es

We turned on a dirt road past

man shorthair, and kept her

However, bluetongue is present in Great Basin

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Cemetery.

out Duchess, a 4-year-old Ger-

is uncommon in cattle."

Trail Bridge Reservoir

Trail ends

Out on a low hilltop on a

HUNTING theMica Creek

versity. "Bluetongue can affect international trade (of livestock), while EHD

mule deer in Asotin Coun-

little rectangle carved out of

farm ground near Rockford, Washington, there's a quiet place called

EHD is important," said

Washington State Uni-

I

BelknapSprings

on the wet west side of the

aun e

field said. "The distinction between (bluetongue) and Charlie Powell, spokesman for the College of Veterinary Medicine at

From Sisters,headabout Tamolitch Falls 30 mileswestonU.S. (Blue Pool) Hwy. 20 to Hwy.126,

tinue to take a toll until a disease to the deer, Mans-

I

away.

past. The disease will conhard frost occurs to kill the gnats that deliver the

Sahalie Falls

he McKenzie River Trail is only Bend, but it might as well be a world

range of animals, and that it's significantly more

"We' ll head to that little

partridge were aloft. After the shooting was over, Liesl made a retrieve on her first Hungarian partridge. entific name for the bird we

and forth through these little

affectionately call the Hun. Early in the 1900s, this bird

seemed to catch the scent

first, tightening her circles,

k.;

Perdix perdix is the sci-

hilltop to start, then work back washes," Biggs whispered. Liesl, my almost 2-year-old pudelpointer, and Duchess worked ahead, quartering back and forth. Duchess

.,s )

was successfully introduced in the United States when some

40,000 partridges were transplanted from the game coverts of Europe into America.

SeePartridges/D5

Courtesy Gary Lewis / For The Bulletin

Bob Mulligan, left, with Duchess and Gary Lewis with Liesl, at the

end of a hunt for Hungarian partridge in Eastern Washington.


D2

THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

Submit your best work at Q benfibulletin.corn/reafierphotos. Your entries will appear online, and we'l choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Also contribute to our other categories, including good photos of the great Central Oregonoutdoors. Submission requirements:Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

-~~

a

.re@ '% am

e

r

WIZARD FALLS Nate Wyeth captures some beautiful fall colors on a section of the Metolius River.

McKenzie Continued from D1 In 2008, Bike Magazine declared the McKenzie River Trail the best mountain biking trail in the United States. I cannot a r gue w i t h t h a t

(though admittedly I h ave rarely ridden my bike outside the Northwest).

The Cascadia earthquake is coming.

On its north end, the trail

starts out easy around the west side of Clear Lake and becomes extremely technical

over the rugged lava rock near Sahalie Falls and Koosah Falls all the way to Trail Bridge Reservoir.

Then, just when you are totally cooked and can't go on,

Mark Morical/The Bulletin

A particularly clear stretch of the McKenzie River.

the trail turns into a smooth,

easy ride along flowy singletrack all the way down to the McKenzie Bridge Ranger Station. From the start near Clear

Lake, about 30 miles west of Sisters along state Highway

er section of the singletrack.

narrow that cyclists must pop

I have ridden the entire trail several times, and each time

their bikes up on the back wheel and push the bikes in

the extensive lava rock section became excessively tiring.

front of them as they walk

Technical r o c k

s e c tions

What are you and your business doing to prepare?

across. One striking characteristic

126, to the finish 26 m iles are dispersed throughout the of the trail is how dark it can south near the McKenzie McKenzie River Trail, but gen- be in the middle of a bright, Bridge Ranger Station, riders erally, the path is less technical sunny day. The forest is so are treated to some of the most from Trail Bridge Reservoir to thick in spots that heavy shade stunning scenery in the state. the south end of the trail near is almost constant. The endBut that view comes with a the ranger station. less vegetation makes for proprice for the fat-tire set: They As I started from Para- lific bug life, and at one point must tackle some challenging dise Campground, the trail alongside the trail I noticed a portions of trail, negotiating climbed gradually through spider nearly the size of a golf jagged rocks and steep cliff- the lush, green forest. The riv- ball in the middle of a perfectside portions with nothing but er provided cool air as I con- ly spun web. the rushing water below. The tinued along the singletrack, I rode north along the trail north-to-south ride includes which cuts through Belknap for nearly two hours before an elevation loss of 1,600 feet, Springs and crisscrosses the tiring to the point that I felt but it nevertheless remains an

river.

compelled to turn around near

aerobic challenge. To skip the more difficult

Olallie Campground, just a few miles south of Trail Bridge

portion of the trail, I opted to ride the MRT last week as an

The McKenzie River is crystal clear and ever-changing, from calm, rocky pools to churning whitewater. The trail

out-and-back from the south

undulates along the river, at

begin riding back, I realized

end of the trail near Paradise

times rising hundreds of feet

how much I had actually been

Campground. Sure, I would above the water. miss out on the waterfalls and Although the southern half Clear Lake, but I was more of the MRT is considered the interested in riding the easi- easier portion, it does include

climbing. The return ride was deceptively fast as I cruised

lots of rocky areas that make

NcKenzieRiver Trail Length:26.5 miles, four to eight hours Rating:Aerobically strenuous andtechnically advanced Trail features:Incredible scenery along the McKenzie River, including waterfalls, old-growth trees and rugged lava flows. Thetrail descends 1,600 feet but is extremely demanding if ridden in its entirety.

through the quiet, dense forest, the only sound the rush-

ing of the river. I encountered a few other bikers and hikers,

while on some of the more technical sections.

but otherwise I enjoyed lots of solitude.

One constant along the so different from any trail in Central Oregon — is the lush greenery of th e

Dr. Daniele McKay, professor of geology at OSU-Cascades Kelley Okolita, director of disaster management services atCambia Health Solutions Sgt.Nathan Garibay,Emergency Service Manager for the Deschutes

County Sheriffs Office.

Reservoir. When I did turn around and

a full-suspension bike worth-

trail — and what makes it

Join experts for a panel discussion on Cascadiaand an in-depth look at how the major earthquake predicted to hit the Oregon coast sometime in the next 50 years could impact Central Oregon — with a special focus on what businesses should do to prepare. The panel includes:

By the time I arrived back

at Paradise, I had ridden about 21 miles in just short of four

Four key organizations are paftnering to bring this important preparedness event to you. Don' t miss this free event for a first-hand look at the predicted Cascadia quake and for important tips on how to prepare yourself, your family and your business to survive the immediate aftermath.

Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2015 7 p.m, at the Tower Theatre A panel presentation with time for audience questions, Free and open to the public. Tickets and information: www.towertheatre.org

st-74a-4Sas

hours, and I was spent. A few W i l lamette years ago, I rode the entire

National Forest. Bright green trail and it required about six ferns, moss-covered Douglas hours. That's just too long in firs and e ndless deciduous the saddle for me these days. trees line the trail and provide The out-and-back ride from a nearly constant canopy. Fall the south end offered a memcolorsofyellow and red were orableexperience, providing beginning to arrive last week. plenty of scenery along one of Numerous narrow bridge the country's most renowned crossings are required along mountain biking trails. the McKenzie River

T r ail.

Most of the bridges are so

— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletirt.corn

I The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1909

American Red Cross

Oregon State Cascades

I

St@(paries HEALTH SYSTEM


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015• THE BULLETIN

D3

a e r ecautions can e so 0 unters survive By Brett French eThe Billings (Mont.) Gazette

lthough the opening of the rifle season for big game in Montana won't flood the r".'

woods and prairies with hunters until Oct. 24, solo hunters have already been garnering headlines because of untimely deaths and injuries

t' -j <4 r<

AS gr.

=

,I

this fall. A hunter in Idaho snapped both bones in his lower leg when he slipped while stepping between downed trees and spent two days crawling through the woods for miles before he was found. A Kalispell archeryhunter was found dead Sunday in the Big Hole Valley a week after he was reported missing. And last week, an 84-year-old Wyoming hunterwas found dead after a six-day search. Hunting, hiking or backpacking alone is not asking for trouble, said Wayde Coo-

perider. He oversees Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks hunter safety programs, which includes instruction on basic survival tactics and hunt planning as part of the course re-

Safety gear With a variety of survival, location and communication to cellphones — there are plen-

ty of gear options available to hunters as well as others who

Hunters have been in the headlines lately after two died, one in Montana and the other in Wyoming. Precautions can help adventurers

venture off the beaten path.

who have to spend anunexpected night or two outside.

"The technology piece is quired of all new hunters. But soloadventurersneed to take so easy to do now, and it's afsome precautions, he said. fordable," said Jon Trapp, a member of the Carbon County Be prepared Search and Rescue and a Red Cooperider is too old to be Lodge Fire Department capa Boy Scout, but he's always tain. "Most hunters pay more prepared for the worst when for the scope on their rifle." he goes hunting. Trapp was referring to de"I have never had to spend vices like the SPOT beacon an unexpected night out, but I and DeLorme's inReach satelcould do it if I had to," he said.

lite communicators that allow

"I may not be comfortable, but outdoors folk to send text mesI could do it." sages if they are fine, or send The most basic advice a an SOS if they are injured. solo hunter can follow is to tell The messages include the lofriends or family where they cation of the device, providing are hunting and when they ex- rescuers with a very narrow pect to return, and then make area to search. "My wife takes great comcontact if plans change. "The thing most people fort in knowing I pack that don't take into account is the around," Cooperider said of impact on others," Cooperider his SPOT beacon. sard.

Not only do family and

Light my fire

friends suffer the emotional distress, but search and res-

For those who don't want to spend the hundreds of dol-

cue members may face peril in trying to find folks in rugged backcountry areas in often less-than-optimum weather

lars and service fees for the beacons, there are several

conditions.

"c

gear available these dayseverything from GPS locators

Brett French /The Billings (Mont.) Gazette

start a fire: waterproof match-

cue volunteer, told him about

es, a lighter and a steel striker are options. Fires not only provide life-saving heat to ward off hypothermia but can also be used to signal rescuers. "Keep a big pile of green boughs right next to the fire," Trapp said. "Throw them on

a motorcycle rider who got caught in a rain and snow-

top of the fire and it will create

rain and snow for six hours.

storm while riding in the foot-

hills. The cyclist was wearing cotton clothing and was quickly soaked. "By the time the crew got to the guy he had been in the

Solo hunting safety advice

ty at lower elevations • A small first-aid kit capable of stopping bleeding and Here are some of the other bandaging cuts • Duct and electrical tape, items WaydeCooperider which can be wrapped around suggests hunters or other a flashlight about a half-inch outdoor adventurers carry to ensure their survival in an to three-eighths inches thick • A metal cup to heatwater emergency situation: in or a small backpacking stove • Water filter or some type and pot or cup of water purification device or • A 50-gallon trash can tablets to stay hydrated or reflective or orange bivy • GPS with a compass shelter that can double as a backup along with maps of raincoat or shelter the area • A reasonable length of • A few freeze-dried meals parachute cord in case an unexpected night • Even when archery huntout turns into two or three ing, he carries a hunter orange nights out vest which can beused to sig• Bear spray, especially this nal someone or to makehim year with all of the bear activi- more visible.

a bunch of smoke. Otherwise, The wind was howling," Cooit can be incredibly difficult to perider said. "Luckily, they see someonefrom the air." got close enough to hear him A no-cost piece of advice is mumbling" or they might not to stop moving. have found him in time to save "A lot of hunters think if his life since he was already they keep going they' ll find hypothermic. their way out," Trapp said, but That brings up some other that's not always the case. low-cost devices that are good The old advice given to lost to add to a day pack: a whischildren was to hug a t ree, tle, signal mirror, flashlight or Cooperider said. rescue strobe light. "The bottom line is, if you "The strobes make a suthink you' re lost, stop, build a per-bright pulse that really fire — as long as it's not a dan- stands out with night vision he needs to survive a night ger — and wait," he added. technology, or even a couple or three out in the woods

courage people to be prepared

of miles away with the naked

for various things that could

Making noise

a waiting a

r e scue, but h e

"The bottom line is: I en-

eye," Trapp said. takes solace in the knowledge happen and to truly test the be packed along. Key among Cooperider said his stepCooperider admits he prob- that he's prepared for most equipment that their life may them are at least two ways to son, who is a search and res- ably carriesmore gear than eventualities. depend on," he said. more mundane items that can

i e-s arin ro rams aina oe o in ew erse long walk. "The system would not have succeeded,governmentally or politically, if it had been concentrated only in a few areas," Fulop said. In Hoboken, officials are holding off on a start date,

By Matt A.V. Chaban New York Times News Service

JERSEY CITY, N.J.— On a recent Wednesday, Steven Fu-

lop, the mayor of Jersey City, got ready for one of his regular morning bike rides. He had his helmet on, but rather than his

usual spandex jersey, he wore khakis, an oxford shirt and a

but Zimmer said it would be "within weeks, not months."

light down vest. And instead of his $3,000 Kuota carbon-fiber racing bike, which Fulop,

start with a similar number of bikes — 250 at 29 stations-

a former Marine, rides in tri-

as Jersey City' s, but at a quar-

athlons, he mounted a hefty, bright blue Citi Bike. "I'm impressed," the mayor said as he coasted past Ham-

ter of the cost: $500,000 invest-

ilton Park. "I was not excited

al membership in Hoboken is cheaper: $95, compared with $149 in Jersey City. Because of the cost, Jersey City will begin with roughly half as many bikes as the mayor hoped, although there are plans to ex-

Hob oken's program will

ment instead of $2 million. Both systems get their funding from private sponsors. Annu-

about this bike ride, to be honest. I didn't appreciate how easy these bikes are to ride."

Although he has spent the past two years trying to bring a bike-sharing program to New Jersey's second-larg-

pand to 500.

Hoboken got the number of bikes it wanted, and its sys-

est city, it was only on that

Wednesday, five days before the Monday afternoon start of

tem works still work without

Citi Bike, that the mayor actu-

docks.

ally rode one of its bicycles. That night, less than a mile

"If you want to run into the store,or the racks are all full at the PATH station, we don' t

to the north, Dawn Zimmer,

Thinkstock

the mayor of Hoboken, had a In order to help overcomethe challenge of public transportation in large cities, bike-sharing programsare becoming amore popular pair of community meetings option for residents. to attend. Rather than walk or

drive, she did what she often does: ride her trusty Special- can be far away and far from ized hybrid bike. Afterward, reliable, and where parking she met up with her husband, can be a nightmare. who had left his bike at home. I ndeed, there may be n o "We were joking that it's too greater testament to the growbad we don't have a bike share ing popularity of urban cyyet," Zimmer recounted the cling than its adoption in the next day. land of "Racing in the Street" In a few weeks, she will not and "Thunder Road." "In the face of the ever-preshave that problem anymore. With the recent success of ent and ever-stigmatizing car bike-sharing in New York City, culture, both cities have done to say nothing of cities around a stellar job in improving overthe world, cycling systems are all bikeability," said Charles now hitting the streets of Jer- Brown, a senior research spesey City and Hoboken. cialist at the Alan M. Voorhees The programs are meant to

provide a convenient way to get around these cities, where

train, bus and ferry service

Transportation Center at Rut-

gers University. Even so, the road to each

program was not smooth.

Initially, Jersey City, Hoboken and a third city, Weehawken, wanted a unified bike-sharing system serving nearly 325,000 residents with 800 bikes. The program was

Fulop, a Democrat, wanted tern we felt was best for our a program that could be in- residents," Zimmer said. tegrated with Citi Bike, since his constituents tend to work and relax in Manhattan (600 of them already have Citi

W eehawken had it s o w n

problems. Without local support or private funds, it began studying Hoboken's system unveiled at the end of 2013, not Bike memberships). Zimmer, before starting its own. At 3 long after Citi Bike got rolling also aDemocrat,preferred a p.m. on a Monday, 350 bikes in New York. cheaper system proposed by a were activated in Jersey City, The system aimed to be a partnership of Bike and Roll, served by 35 docks across its unique model that eschewed P3GM, Next Bike and e3think. 21 square miles. the typical d ocking sta- That system meant the cities Citi Bike had initially urged tions for bikes that could be could afford more bikes, and Fulop to focus his program locked up almost anywhere. Zimmer wanted to ensure that downtown, where there was a Equipped with GPS, they every resident was within a 3- critical mass of riders, but he to 5-minute walk of one. could then be located with a rejected that idea. He feared smartphone app. Unable to agree, Hoboken a lienating residents in o u tBut within months of the and Jersey City went their sep- lying areas where getting to announcement, the cities' pri- arate ways last summer. trains often involves driving, "We both selected the sys- waiting for the bus or taking a orities diverged.

want you to worry about what you' re going to do with your bike," Chris Wogas, the president of Bike and Roll, said. Although Hoboken's system is incompatible with Citi Bike,

it offers regional no-fee zones, allowing riders to leave bikes in seven hubs in Weehawken and Jersey City. Despite the schism, resi-

dents in the cities seem eager to share bikes — even if they cannot share them across city

lines. Mandee Bellarosa, who was walking her dog in Hoboken, said that cars were once a necessity, but no longer. "I think in a lot of places, it's all about

cars, but we' re so much more urban here," she said. "At least

half my friends don't even own cars."


D4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

UTDOORS FISHING CENTRAL OREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome;7-9 p.m.; meetson the first Tuesday ofeachmonth; Abby's Pizza, Redmond;www.cobe.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeachmonthat6 p.m.; 50 SW Bond St., Bend, Suite 4; 541306-4509, deschutestu©hotmail. corn; www.deschutes.tu.org. BENDCASTINGCLUB:A group of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m .;club meetson

E ND

the fourth Wednesday ofeach month; location TBA;541-306-4509 or bend castingclub©g mail.corn. THE SUNRIVER ANGLERSCLUB:7 p.m.; meets onthe third Thursday of each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www.

sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERS CLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third W ednesday ofeachm onth;Bend Senior Center; www.coflyfishers.org.

HIKING FULL MOON HIKE:Join a Sunriver Nature Center Naturalist for a guided full moon hike along LakeAspen,

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click 'Add Event" 10 days before publication.

Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn,541-383-0318.

the Deschutes, and through a meadow; listen and look for nocturnal creatures; registration required; 8-9 p.m. on Oct. 27; $6 for adults, $4 for kids; kirstinrea©gmail.corn or 541-593-4394. DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Ledby skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds and take in spring wildf lowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.

HUNTING CENTRAL OREGON CHAPTER

ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION:Meetings are scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on select Wednesdays, including Oct. 21, Nov. 18, and Dec. 2; meetings are held at the VFW Hall in Redmond; contact Dave Fuller at 541-447-2804. THE BENDCHAPTEROF THE OREGONHUNTERS ASSOCIATION:7 p.m.; meets the secondWednesday ofeach month; KingBuffet,Bend;ohabend.webs. corn. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OF THE OREGONHUNTERS ASSOCIATION:7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month;

Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTER OF THEOREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION:7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFW Hall.

Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy action shooting club; second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www. SHOOTING pinemountainposse. corn. COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear Cowboy action shooting with and eye protection are provided; pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 parent or guardian must sign in a.m.; first and third Sunday of each for each child; fee for each child is month; Central Oregon Shooting $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each Sports Association range, milepost month; Central Oregon Shooting 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; Sports Association range, milepost 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass. 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don corn.

untin eeront eremote o ia By Julie Herrmann

ond-largest island in the Ko-

The Kodiak (Alaska) Daily Mirror

diak Archipelago and is locat-

K ODIAK, A l aska —

We

ed just to the north of Kodiak

took off on a slightly damp day, heading from the city of Kodiak to a bay on Afognak Island just to the north, hoping to harvest some Sitka black-tail deer Aug. 30 and 31. Heavy packs loaded with plenty of food, gear, a rifle,

Island. Although Kodiak Island has several villages, the

knives and meat sacks joined

Residents were relocated to

settlements on Afognak are

limited to logging camps, a hatchery and lodges. The village of Afognak was destroyed in the tsunami following the 1964 earthquake.

Stuck on Afognak

Afognak Island is the second-largest island in the Kodiak Archipelago and is located just to the north of Kodiak Island. Although Kodiak

Continued from D1 Bluetongue also was confirmed in one dead bighorn sheep in Nez Perce County,

Idaho, Powell said. Dead or sick deer are more likely to be reported in more populated areas, said Dana Base, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife bi-

ologist in Colville. Far more deer in rural areas are likely to be sick or dying undetected, he said. Cases have been confirmed in eight Eastern Washington counties and four counties in the Clearwater region of Idaho. Until last week, the outbreak had been documented as far west as the Davenport

area, where whitetail range gives way to mule deer country, said M ichael Atamian,

Fish and Wildlife biologist in Spokane. However, at least three cas-

es of mule deer dying of bluetongue in th e

M oses Lake

area were confirmed this week, Mansfield said. "One Palouse River land-

was not easy, but we made

We awoke early on a Mon- it almost all the way back to day. Our flight was supposed the cabin before being blown t o arrive sometime in

late

morning, and we were wor-

But as the afternoon wore

to themeat and back down beforethe aircraftarrived.

on, we began worrying about

A small boat was beached n ext to th e c abin an d w e

cliffs and off to the side into

w ouldn't have t o

It didn't come on Tuesday either. We had plenty of food, and if that gave out, we had lots of deer meat, but we had

c hose to paddle it so w e By that time, the deer was

approaching the top of the mountain. It p aused and Bridger fired a shot aiming high because of the distance. His shot broke the deer's spine and it tumbled down the

mountain, stopping against trees. I had started heading in the

direction I expected Bridger had gone before hearing the shots and I sped up after hear-

ing his first shot. After the second shot killing the second deer, Bridger called my name. We made quick work field dressing the first deer and slid the pieces into game bags. We loaded up, hiked to the second deer and butchered it. We tied some of the meat in

a tree cache and headed down with heavy packs. S ince we didn't w ant t o

go up and around a meadow of trees with our packs,

we wound up bushwhacking through heavy salmonber-

h au l t h e

the lake.

lar Mountain above Kodiak

Nevertheless, we made it across and tied it to a tree.

Back through the woods and devil's club yet again. T he i nformation i n

th e

Every Friday In mmhGAzmez The Bulletin

City. Finally, o n W e dnesday morning, the plane arrived. The pilot told us because of the small size of the lake with

cabin told us to be extremely careful of bears and not to

mountains high around it, it needed to be flat calm or the

ry bushes about o ne-third

leave any food out, but when

plane couldn't land.

of theway down the mountain. Branches caught at our

we returned to the high mead-

W e loaded up an d t o ok off for Kodiak. The next few

clothes, and we ended up los-

ow, we found that neither the tree cache of meat nor the gut

days were busy with cutting

ing an empty Nalgene water bottle in the brush. Then it was once again through all the devil's club and we arrived at the edge of the lake just as it got fully dark. Exhausted, we chose to leave Bridger's heavy pack in a tree on the edge of the lake, and he took my lighter one to

piles had been touched. Listening breathlessly every time we heard a plane, we headed back down the mountain, piled our meat into the

Using kayak paddies, one of which was broken, to paddle

py to have our own meat in

carry back around the lake.

a boat that is made for rowing

winter.

boat and paddled back across

the lake. The wind was gusting and trying to blow us into shore.

I

the plane. It didn't arrive.

meat around the lake, which no phone and I was unable to included a l a r g e d ogleg call my work and tell them I t hat doubled th e w a l k i ng wouldn't be coming in. distance. We spent time playing Checking the shed, Bridger cribbage, speed, gin rummy, discovered that not only were Scrabble and speed again. there no oarlocks (nice to The nice thing about cabins have, but certainly not a ne- anywhere is they typically cessity), but there weren't any have at least a deck or two of oars. There were two kayak cards and a few magazines. paddle halves, or, more accuIf we had known the plane rately, there were two halves wasn't going to come, we of two completely different would have hiked up again to kayak paddies. try for another deer. One was a somewhat nice It was sunny and we hiked metal one, while the second to the b each, a f i v e-minwas made entirely of plastic ute walk from the lake, and and the threaded part where basked in the sun. Through the two parts of it joined to- the spotting scope, we could gether broke part way across just see the windmills on Pil-

whitetails for weeks from vored the reproduction of the Moscow t o Gra ngeville, Culicoides gnats that carry said Jen Bruns, department the EHD and bluetongue virus," Base said. spokeswoman in Lewiston. "We' re finding dead whiteWoody Myers, a Washi ngton F is h a n d Wi l d l i f e tails just about anyplace the research biologist, said the deer get around mud, which incidenceof disease appears is where the gnats are pro— Dana Base, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife to besevere in most affected duced," Atamian said. The agencies are monitorbiologist In Colvllle areas. " This year's outbreak i s ing the outbreaks, mapping very widespread across far reports from the public and Powell said. year tosome degree,but in Eastern Washington," said taking tissue samples in new Paddlers h av e r e p orted my 17 years working in this Myers, who's working on a suspected outbreak areas to dead deer along the Little district, this is the widest I' ve multiyear whitetail study. confirm cause of death. "Mortality rates for whiteSpokane River, he added. seentheproblem spread with Bluetongue and EHD are Southern Spokane Counlots of hot spots," Base said. tails that contract the virus spread by biting gnats, not ty rancher Mike Proff conLeCaire said his street de- are very high — 80 to 90 per- from deer to deer, and are firmed 18 dead whitetails on partment staff collected 81 cent," Myers said. not transmissible to humans, his land near Plaza. deer dead from EHD within Significant Eastern Wash- Mansfield said. "My neighbor has seen Colville city limits in the fall ington EHD outbreaks also N onetheless, Fish a n d some, too, and there are like- of 1996. That was a year of coincided with drought con- Wildlife discourages hunters ly many more," Proff said. spotty but not widespread ditions in 1988 and 2004, My- from shooting and consum"Sometimes they disap- disease reports, wildlife biol- ers said. ing animals that are obviouspear so quickly you can' t ogists say. Whitetails in the Kamiah, ly sick. "This is the worst outbreak m ake a goodcount.I found However, the f o llowing Idaho, area required at least two dead next to each oth- harsh winter was devastat- three years to rebuild popula- I' ve seen in my 13 years with er one day. The next day I ing to northeastern Wash- tions after a major EHD outwent out on my four-wheel- ington deer, requiring years break in 2003. "This year, we' ve had er and they were gone, com- to rebuild populations, Base pletely eaten by coyotes and sard. t he perfect storm fo r o u t scavengers." I daho F is h a n d Ga m e breaks on account of the long While exact numbers can' t D epartment o f f icials h a v e drought and high temperabe compiled, the extent of been fielding reports of dead tures, which probably fathe outbreak has biologists concerned.

Weekly Arts 8r Entertainment

We were wiped out.

ried we wouldn't make it up

"This year, we' vehad the perfect storm for outbreaks on account of the long drought and high temperatures, which probably favored the reproduction of the Culicoides gnats that carry the EHD and bluetongue virus."

owner called (WSU) say"Bluetongue a n d EHD ing he has counted 30 dead whitetails on his property," probably affect deer every

ashore.

Island has several villages, the settlements on Afognak are limited to logging camps,a hatchery and lodges.

therestofthebags and boxes Kodiak Island and named the the meadow while I waited bein the back of the float plane new community Port Lions. low. I expected him to go up, destined for the state park The state of Alaska park scout for 15 minutes or so, and cabinon PillarLake where we system keeps up two cabins then be back, but I ended up were going to stay. in Afognak Island State Park, waiting there for more than After a landing involving a which is about 75,000 acres an hour. stomach-dropping quick de- on the north and east sides After an h o ur, I h e aded scent in a tight bank, we un- of the island. The cabins are along a game trail in search loaded our gear and watched available for public use. We of Bridger and came nose to the plane leave. reserved the Pillar Lake cabin nose with a nice buck. My husband, Bridger Herr- online. He couldn't have been more mann, and Ionly had acouple After arriving, we chose than 30 yards from me and we short days before we had to be to hike up to a steep meadow stared ateach other for five back to work, me to my job as that looked like a likely place minutes while I whispered, a reporter at the Kodiak Daily for deer. A wooded slope led "Bridger!" repeatedly and Mirror and him to his position up to the base of the moun- wished that we had a second as lead mechanic with local tains across the lake from our gun. The buck meandered out airline Island Air. small cabin. of the little meadow. We chose to hunt on AfogThe 45-minute hike through Meanwhile, Bridger had nak because it's off the road the woods, which we would covered a lot of the meadow system. Hunting in Game end up making threemore while I was waiting below. Management Unit 8 is divid- times, was awful. The ground From the cliffs he had spotted ed into two parts: everything between the trees was cov- one of the bucks we'd seen beclose to the road system in ered in devil's club that stuck fore and crept up on it, but it and around the city of Kodiak, into our jackets and stabbed moved behind trees just when and everything else. On the through my pants. he was about to take a shot. road system, people are limPulling stickers from our He hiked across the meadow ited to one buck. Off the road hands, we climbed atop a to where he would be above system, people can take three rock outcropping below the the buck and sat there until bucks from Aug. I to Sept. 30 meadow. We spotted several the buck popped out of the and three deer from Oct. I to deer immediately because, in trees. He stopped and Bridgthe end of the year. The deer late August, they are bright er shot from about 150 yards are small, and it takes several tan and easy to see even from above the deer, dropping it to get a full winter's meat. a distance, although we had instantly. W e had unsuccessfull y to use a scope to check for Bridger began hiking to hunted on the road system for antlers. the deer when he heard brush deer in fall 2014 toward the Leaving the outcropping, cracking and saw a second end of the season when the we hiked up the meadow to buck run out of the trees. It deer were skittish from being just below where the meadow was covering ground headhunted for weeks already. turns into cliffs at about 1,200 ing straight up a gully to the feet up the mountain, head- top of the mountain. Bridger Huntingoffthe road ing for where we had seen the quickly moved to a better vansystem deer. tage point and got into a prone Afognak Island is the secBridger headed up into the position.

Bluetongue

I eB 0

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the meat up into steaks, stew

meat, roasts and smaller pieces for grinding into burger. Lifelong Alaskans, Bridger and I have both grown up hunting and living off the meat our families harvested.

Since we hadn't been successful in 2014, we are hapthe freezer for the upcoming

the agency," Mansfield said. The impact of the outbreak on fall hunting seasons isn' t clear, Base said.

"At the end of last year, we

decided deer numbers had

finally reached the point we could liberalize hunting on antlerless whitetails — give

youth, senior and disabled hunters the entire season to shoot a doe," Base said. "When the winter turned out

to be mild and deer survival was good, we were feeling good about that decision." Emergency hunting season adjustments are difficult to

enact and enforce and are not anticipated, wildlife officials say. "Now this (disease) happens and we' re watching closely. Even if the disease

progresses, trying to change seasons at this point wouldn' t be an easy call," Base said.

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PROGRAMS SATURDAY, OCT. 10TH 3 PM- 9 P.M. ATlAS CIDER CO., BEND

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bendbulletin.corn


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015• THE BULLETIN

Ie

IS BA

or triO

l10 eBC By Richard 0'neill The (Roseburg) News-Review

Our party of three (Lane

des effect. We were walking through the snowy plover preservation

area. The endangered snowy self) began walking enthusias- plover spends its entire life on tically on the beach near Ban- the sand and it is easy for backdon's Face Rock, our eagerness packers to inadvertently step on buoyed by clean skin, recently eggs or young chicks. Therelaundered clothing and fresh fore, hikers are required to walk leg musdes. on wet sand at surf line while That would all change by the the dry sand and dunes are off end of our three-day backpack, limits. Easier said than done at Harris, Dale Prohaska and my-

including perfectly intact sand dollars, a few pieces of petrified wood and a flat rock that had a stain on it that resembled

the second coming of Elvis. At Floras Lake, we replenished our water supply and took a lengthy nap next to the large lake. After F1oras Lake, we en-

joyed one of the few "real trail" segments of this hike as we grabbed the Oregon Coast Trail running from Floras Lake

as we arrived at Port Orford

times, as the waves have cut a

with unwashed bodies pungent enough to trigger a smog alert, legs aching from 30 miles of soft sand and with enough wind-blown grains of sand

chest-high bluff of sand. As we walked, we became to Blacklock Point. The trail intimately familiar with the in- tunneled through a trough of tricacies and vagaries of sand dense coastal vegetation and walking. Periodically, one of the ground was blessedly solid. us would find a vein of hard We camped near Blacklock sand and we would weave to Point as the wind soughed and fro, chasing the ribbon of through the trees and animals hard sand like a miner work- of unknown species chattered ing a depleting vein of gold. We in our campsite. The beam of also learned to surreptitiously light from the Cape Blanco eye the hiker next to us and if Lighthouse swept through the his footsteps were only an inch trees. I found the rhythm of the deep, we would cut in front of light soothing; it was as if the him in a desperate try for firm- lighthouse was keeping watch er footing. over us.

crammed into ears, nostrils

and backpacks to constitute an entire beach of its own. Was this a great hike, or what?

Oregon's coast is incredibly scenic and is also eminently accessible from the numerous

parks and waypoints on Highway 101. However, south of Ban-

don the busy highway heads inland, leaving the coast to the seagulls, wind, fog and three At just about the 10-mile backpackers from Roseburg. mark, we crossed the former When we started, the tide was out and we enjoyed several miles of sand that was flat and

mouth of the New River and

The last day of our hike was

a workmanlikehike up and over Cape Blanco, the light-

shortly thereafter, a sign post house affixed atop the cape like atop adune marked the BLM the tassel on a Shriner's fez. We hard, just like my abs. With the "campground." The c amp- had intended to camp at Elk aid of a brisk wind pushing us ground consisted of several River but a strong ocean breeze along, it was easy and fast go- planks to sit on and official per- was cuffing us about and there ing until we reached the mouth mission to pitch a tent on a san- was no place to camp out of of the New River. Actually, the dy overlook of the New River the wind. So after crossing the river' smouth was pretty much meandering through a grassy thigh-deep river, we held a brief dosed shut as the New River marsh. We didn't complain at confab. We were all feeling apparently gets landlocked in all about the lack of amenities walky, so we continued onward summer. as we were happy simply to below the tall cliffs marking While there was no river to pitch our tents and enjoy a spec- where Oregon ends and the wade across, there was plenty tacular sunset. ocean begins. of soft sand to walk on while Day 2 dawned cold, clammy Port Orford was only about weighed down by a fully load- and foggy. If anything, the sand 3 milesaway and we arrived ed pack. Walking in soft sand had gotten softer than the day at the car in short order, comuses the same muscle groups as before, like butter accidentally plaining vociferously about the required by that quaint torture left out on the kitchen count- sore leg muscles, grains of sand instrument in the gym known er overnight. It was a tough 5 in our ears and each other' s as the stair-stepper, and with miles to F1oras Lake, but we body odor. Like I said, was this the same screaming leg mus- each collected a few treasures, a great hike or what'?

D5

FISHING REPORT ANTELOPE FLATRESERVOIR: The water remains dirty and low. Recent sampling indicated many trout available in the 10- to 13-inch

FLY-TYING CORNER

range.

BEND PINENURSERY:Pondwas stocked recently with rainbow trout. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: Trout daily catch limit may include one rainbow trout over 16 inches and onenon-fin-clipped (unmarked) rainbow trout. CROOKEDRIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM:Fishing for trout and whitefish has beenexcellent. Fish that are being releasedshould not be removed from thewater. EAST LAKE: Anglers report good fishing for kokaneeandtrout. Unmarked rainbow trout must be released. FALL RIVER:Fall River below the falls closed to fishing Sept. 30. Fishing abovethe falls is open all year. Anglers report good fishing for trout. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. HOOD RIVER:Steelhead fishing on the Hood will be slow through the summer andearly fall. Anglers can expect a fewfish in November and December. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK:Fishing for kokanee hasbeenexcellent. Anglers are reminded there are small numbers of spring Chinook andsummer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook aspart of the reintroduction effort. Please release these fish unharmed. LAURANCE LAKE:Should provide excellent opportunities. Angler success usually improves in early fall prior to the season

closure. METOLIUSRIVER: Special fishing regulations apply to the Metolius River. All tributaries except Abbot, Lake and Spring Creeksare closed to fishing. Opportunities for challenging catch-and-release fly-fishing for native redband trout and bull trout in a pristine mountain stream areexcellent. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM:Angling is restricted to artificial flies and

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

UV2 Fuzzy Bug Dark Stone, courtesy Deschutes Angler Fly

Shop, Maupin. When theycanget them, trout eat stonefly nymphs year-round. That's why it's hard to go wrong with a stonefly nymph. This pattern is tied with UV2dubbing. Ona No. 12 hook it is a good choice on mountain streams. Krystal Flash,copper rib and abrass beadgive it even moreeyeappeal. What is the bigdealwith ultraviolet fly-tying materials? UVFisthe fluorescent wavelength in bright colors which are visible at greater distance underwater. UVR is reflective ultraviolet light, visible to insects andanimals.TheUV2dubbingscombinebothUVFandUVR. TietheUV2FuzzyBugDarkStoneonaNo.12longnymphhook. Slide a small brassbeadupagainst the eye.Forthe tail, use CDC with two strands of Krystal Flash.Build thebodywith black or dark brown UV2nymph dubbing and rib with fine copperwire andsmall Krystal Flash. Usepheasant or partridge for the hackle andfinish with an ostrich herl collar. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin lures only; two trout per daywith an 8-inch minimum length. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Recent sampling indicated good numbers of trout up to 16 inches long. Excellent numbers of smallmouth bass, especially along the rocky shorelines near the dam. ODELLLAKE:Closed to fishing for bull trout and any incidental caught bull trout must be released unharmed. All tributaries to Odell Lakeare closed to fishing. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR: Thewater level is low. All boat ramps at the Reservoir are now closed. Crappie and smallmouth bass opportunities are excellent. PRINEVILLEYOUTH FISHING POND: The pond will be stocked this week

with rainbow trout. ROCKCREEKRESERVOIR: Anglers should be prepared that low water conditions due to irrigation withdrawals will limit success in Rock Creek reservoir. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Stocked recently with rainbow trout. Open to fishing all year. Limit is two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to anglers17 years old and younger. WALTON LAKE: Recentsampling indicated good numbers of healthy trout. Most trout average 10to 12 inches long but there aregood numbers of trout up to 16 inches long. WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Closed upstream of ODFW markers located near West South Twin boat ramp.

Seattle womansetsspeedrecord hiking the Appalachian Trail ByRich Landers

for the 2,663-mile Pacific Crest

The (Spohane, Wash.)

Trail from Mexico to Cana-

simultaneously.

She achieved "unsupportReview Spokesman da in 60 days, 17 hours and 12 ed" status by packing her food, A Seattle woman, 34, has set minutes. mailing it to food drops along an unsupported speed record After averaging 42 miles a the way, collecting what she for hiking the 2,189-mile Appa- day since Aug. 1, she walked needed herself and carried lachian Trail through 14 states off Springer Mountain in her own supplies, water and from Maine to Georgia in 54 Fannin County, Georgia, the shelter. days, 7 hours and 48 minutes. way she started the odyssey On July 12, ultra marathoner Heather Anderson (trail on Maine's Mount Katahdin Scott Jurek, 41, set a supported name "Anish") is no fleeting — alone. speed record for the Appalamoment in trail-record history. Anderson is the first to chian Trail in 46 days, 8 hours, In 2013, she set the unsupport- hold the unsupported re- 8 minutes, boosted by a team ed backpacking speed record cord on the AT and the PCT shuttling his stuff.

Partridges Continued from D1 Henry Oldys, a biologist of the day, wrote in his report "Introduction of the Hungarian Partridge into the United States," that the first success-

2011 by Jennifer Pharr Davis. Considered unathletic as a

kid, Anderson wrestled with

brown or orange. Their eyes cause our dogs were tired and of the headstones only listed are surrounded by a pen- the weather was unseason- a first name, date of birth and cil-thin border of red. Flanks ably warm, but we each had passing. and breasts are splotched a bird in hand and that was Tendrils of wind ghosted in with markings of chocolate. enough. the treetops. If one inclined We often find the birds in

short, light cover. And they are almostalways a surprise ful transplant was in 1899 at when we expect quail or Lynnhaven, in Princess Anne pheasant instead. County, Virginia. Ninety-sevWe had to stop early been birds were stocked in the Willamette Valley i n

Anderson has broken the AT weight issues until she discovunsupported record of 58 days, ered her love for backpacking. 9 hours, 38 minutes set in 2013 But even after taking the leap by Matthew Kirk. from enjoyable hiking to the The previous women's un- suffering of record attempts, supported record was 80 days, she said she's been pestered by 13 hours, 30 minutes set by Liz self-doubt as well as competi"Snorkel" Thomas. tive naysayers. "The trail has a way of anThe women's supported speed record of 46 days, 11 swering the questions you most hours, 20 minutes was set in need answered, even if you are

I took a few minutes to walk

an ear at dusk, he might hear

through the old cemetery. It was officially established in

the partridge. Kieerr-ikk. Kie err-ikk.

1905, but there were older

Some of the people at rest

markers, probably all belong- here, no doubt, were hunter/ ing to a single family. Many farmers who welcomed the

struggles with self-esteem. "I was too afraid to ask, but the trail knew the question

in my heart: 'Was the PCT a fluke?' The AT answered with

a resounding, 'No! '" Every footstep was a commitment to face her perceived inadequacies, she said. " So now, I walk off o f Springer Mountain, alone just afraid to ask," she wrote in the as I came. My pack, my feet, first Facebook post announc- and my heart are light, unburing her record and her years of dened at last."

European import with the orange head and grey legs and habit of holding tight on little

hilltops like this one. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV" and author of "John Nosier — Going Ballistic," "Fishing MountHood Country," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www.GaryLewisaufdoors.corn.

1 9 00.

• C •

A Free Public Service

Some 2,000 partridges were releasedin Eastern Washington over a three-year period starting around 1906. After

three years, along the northern border of the state they were reportedto be "almost as

plentiful as pheasants." In my experience, this partridge is a bird of open farmland, preferring coverts in tall wild rye, native grasses, millet and other crops. I' ve found

them in coveys of half a dozen to as many as 15. They run

ahead of the dogs then try to hold or flush atop a rise. The rise can be explosive as birds seem to pop out and go in various directions. Most, though,

Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties

go the same direction and the

birds can be located again atop the next rise. I find where there are Huns,

there are hunters haunted by them. Joe Biggs is one such, as

I

he has chased them since he

was a kid.

I

I

I

"We have Huns here, na-

tive to the area," Biggs said. "The habitat suits them well.

They love the bluegrass fields and the wheat fields, and live

out on the rolling hilltops and Fldges.

The grey partridge has an understated beauty with wings of white and mottled brown that allow the bird to

hide by holding still. A pastel-grey on the breast blends on the head with shades of

0 © Eggs o~

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D6

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

e ina in asen ure u san owns TV SPOTLIGHT

"It was very frustrating ... and

feeling I had as a child came up inside me, and I took him to the be an actor as a career choice side and said, 'Look, we' re gobecause of that year of not act- ing tohave getover ourselves ing and not knowing what I for Ian because this is no fault wanted to do at all," she nods. of his.' My ex-husband's par"I'd go on one audition and ents are still married, so he didn't get the job, and I just re- had no idea what that feels member being ~ated ev- like. I said, 'It feels real crappy ery day, every day just waking for him right now. And I know

"The Leftovers" 8:25 p.m.Mondays, HBO By Luaine Lee Tribune News Service

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.

and I was on the other. And that

maybe that's what helped me decide that I really did want to

-

Even though she'd been acting since she was a kid, Regina King thought it was a hobby. What she really wanted to be was a dentist. Or maybe a flight

«-: Q

up frustrated. I never did other

attendant.

Looking at her today, in her glamorous off-shoulder chiffon gown, it's hard to imagine her in a white coat aiming a dental drill. As a new character in HBO's absorbing thriller, "The Leftovers," and winner of an Emmy,

King is finally convinced she chose the right field. She plays a doctor in "The Leftovers," in a

small town that escaped losing part of its residents to a mysterious force.

"I was successful as a child

or teenage actor, but I was go-

ing to USC and I got a job on 'Boyz n the Hood.' And after I did that, it became clear as day

that this is my career choice. I can ACT like a dentist." Her mother was a teacher,

a resourcespecialist,and supported both Regina and her sister, Reina, in whatever they wanted to do.

"My sister and I were both on

what that feels like. It does not

jobs. I do not take that lightly," feel good.' He was like, 'You' re she said. right.' "And at that moment we deIt was her role as Cuba Gooding Jr's wife in "Jerry Maguire," cided together to make it work. that really boosted her credit Now we' re great friends. We go rating, but she had to audition to dinner together. He's dating a three or four times and perform really coolwoman now." several table-reads with actors Though her son's 19 and other than Tom Cruise. away at college, King has deShe read with Robin Wil-

voted her life to him. After he

liams (reciting the Tom Cruise was born she vowed not to acpart) and Connie Britton (en- cept work outside L.A. — a bold acting the role that went to Re- move for an actor who must nee Zellweger.) "Cuba was the stalk the work. only one in it throughout all the Deeply spiritual, King says, tablereads of 'Jerry Maguire.' "We grew up in Religious SciCuba was the only one ... I was ence so things like the book, Courtesy HBO via Tribune News Service pregnant with my son and he the seeker — our mother was Regina King plays amother and dentist in "The Leftovers," in a was a month old when I found preaching and teaching us all small town that escapes the strange disappearances that are hap- out I got the part," she says. the time. She's a practitioner; pening in the surrounding communities. The birth of her son, Ian, those ideas that we' re all conchanged everything. After 12 nected. If you can see it you can years together, she and her hus- achieve it. Love and fear are the with both of us," she recalls. neighborhood in Los Angeles, band, Ian Alexander, divorced. same energy, just one applied "NBC wanted to put me in she says,"Justacrossthe street "My parentsdidn'thave a re- negatively and one applied posone of those schools, with kids was one of the biggest gang ter- allygood divorce.Iremember itively. I think all of those things from (the network). She didn' t ritories in L.A. I was exposed to them at my sister's graduation preparedme forbeinginabusiwant to do that. She kept me in both worlds." and my graduation, and they ness that's so vicious. I think public schools." From the time she did "227" never spoke. I just remember I' ve been lucky enough to have

shows at the same time. I think

Her parents had divorced

with Maria Gibbs as an adoles-

how that felt. "So we were at one of my

a mother that instilled, at a very

that made a really huge impact when she was8 and her father cent, till she was cast in "Boyz young age, your value is not in for me because my mother wasn't around. And though she n the Hood" at 19, she was out son's basketball games and (my what others think It's how you hired someone to sit on the set grew up in an upper-dass black of work for a little over a year. ex) was on one side of the court, feel about yourself."

te son an is sister are actin

wa toocose orwiesmmort Dear Abby: I am happily mar- and because I haven't witnessed wash clothes, shower and use the ried to a great man. I have a young what you have observed, I can't ad- Internet. I finally had to tell her this daughter from a previous marriage, vise you other than to suggest that was not acceptable, and that she and my husband has family c o unseling needed to decide to either live here two teenagers, a boy might be in order to or move in with her boyfriend. She and girl, from a prior determine w h ether moved out. DFP,R marriage. Like many the kids have a norNow, it is uncomfortable when ABBY blended families, we mal sibling relation- she comes around. I don't feel I did have our struggles, ship or if it has gone anything wrong, but my daughter but one is becoming over the line. thinks I shouldn't have made a big increasingly difficult to deal with. Dear Abby:Last spring we helped deal out of her sleeping at her boyI don't know how to put t h is our daughter's longtime friend friend's house and using our house tastefully, but I' ll state it this way: move out of the college dorm room as a place to park her stuff, eat and My stepchildren are "too close," if she shared with our daughter. Her wash her clothes. What do you you know what I mean. They flirt,

parents are divorced and weren' t

constantly touch each other and playfully tease each other. (A few

available to help her move or give us money to help her, and she had just broken up with her boyfriend. W e rented a van and off ered to let her stay at our home as long as she helped pay for groceries and got a job. She got the job, but never helped pay for food or did anything around the house, including keeping her room clean. After two weeks, she and her boyfriend got back together, and she was spending every night with him at his parents' house. She

people have even mistaken them

for a couple.) My husband doesn' t seem to notice this unhealthy be-

havior. How can I get through to my husband or deal with this? — Repulsed in Pennylvania

Dear Repulsed:Was the relationship between your husband's children making you uncomfortable beforeyou married theirfather? If

so, did you bring it to his attention at that time'?

Family relationships can vary,

would return to our home to eat,

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, OCT. 7, 2015:This yearyou become more invested in your friendships andsocialconnections,as companion-

think'? — No time For Freeloaders

Dear No Time:You were generous to be as supportive as you were

of your daughter's former roommate. This has nothing to do with her sleeping at her boyfriend's. You asked only that she behave like an adult and contribute by paying for her food and keeping her room clean. She didn't keep her part of the bargain. You shouldn't feel uncomfortable; she should, for not be-

having responsibly. — Write toDearAbbyat dearabbycom or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

ship becomesevenmore important to to a pursuit with information he or she you. Your intuition will help point you in the right direction. If you are single, you shares. You might be a bit more rigid easily could meet someone who presents than you realize. Tonight: Stand up for many qualities you seek in a potential yourself. suitor. Explore the CANCER (June21-July 22) 8tars showthe kind possibilities here. ** * * You will want to open up to a of dsy yon'll hove If you areattached, new possibility that you have not yet ** * * * D ynamic the two of you considered. You initially might have ** * * p ositive need to make more eliminated some ideas, but why not test ** * Average tim e for each other.out a suggestion now? Go through this ** So-so Develop patterns process with an eye to getting where you that allow you to * Difficult spend quality time want to go. Tonight: Visit with friends. together. Schedule LEO (July 23-Aug.22) more weekends out of town together. LEO ** * * Your sense of direction will take is always a friend. you down a new path. Others might be reluctant to follow, but eventually some ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You could be getting more than will join you. A conversation with several you bargained for. Don't worry — you can friends could help you to understand where others are coming from. Tonight: handle whatever comes up. Your interest Time for some midweek fun! might be focused on a child or loved one. You seem to be deep in reverie, so it VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) would be wise to make decisions at a later ** Continue down a more thoughtful point. Tonight: Say "yes." path, and try to be less involved with the TAURUS (April 20-May20) chaos of the moment. As a result, you ** * * Someone you meet could have will gain a more complete understanding. a lot of depth. This person might be very Know what is wanted and expected of different from your usual type of acquain- you by a partner or dear friend. Tonight: tance. Don't jump into a relationship or Expect the unexpected. friendship with this person too fast, as he LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) or she seems to be very judgmental. Hit ** * * Take charge of your schedule by the brakes. Tonight: Share a vision. focusing on what you want. You won' t GEMINI (May 21-June20) be happy if you defer to others too often. ** * * Your ability to get past a problem This tendency could create problems increases because of a willingness to wherethereshould be none.Open upto walk away from someone who is being potential change and more opportunities. unreasonable. A friend could add fervor Tonight: In a flurry of activity.

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0 and IMAX movies. • irtovie times are subject to change after press time. «

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Regal Old Mill Stadium61& IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BLACK MASS (R) 12:40, 3:30, 6:50, 9:45 • EVEREST (PG-13) f:10, 10:40 • EVEREST 3-D (PG-13) 4:15, 7:40 • THE GREEN INFERNO(R) 2, 5, 8, 10:30 • THE HOBBIT: THEDESOLATIONOF SMAUG EXTENDED EDITION(PG-13) 7:30 • HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 2 (PG) 12:15, 3 40, 630, 9:20 • HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA2 3-D (PG)1,3:40,7:l0,9:40 • THE INTERN (PG-13) f:20, 4:30, 7:20, 10:25 • THE MARTIAN (PG-13) I2:30, 3:55, 7:25, 10:35 • THE MARTIAN 3-D (PG-13) noon, 3:25, 6:55, 10:15 • MAZE RUNNER:THE SCORCH TRIALS (PG-l3)12:20, 3:20, 6:20, 9:30 • THE METROPOLITANOPERA: "ILTROVATORE" (No MPAA rating) 6:30 • PAWN SACRIFICE(PG-13) f:30,4:15, fo:45 • SICARIO (R) 12:45, 3:45, 7:15, I 0:30 • SLEEPINGWITH OTHER PEOPLE (R)f:40,4:40,7:05, 9:50 • THE VISIT(PG-13) f:50, 4:50, 10:10 • THE WALK IMAX3-0 (PG) 12:55, 4, 7, IO • A WALK IN THEWOODS(R) 12:10, 3:15, 6:f 0 • WARROOM(PG)12:05,3,6,9 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

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ANT-MAN (PG-13)9 MINIONS (PG) 2:30 MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE — ROGUENATION(PG-13) 5:30 Younger than 2t may attend aii screenings if accompanied by alegal guardian. «

• • • •

you knowhowmuchyouare appreciated. Tonight: Follow your instincts.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * Don't worry about what others think you should do. You might care a little, as some people seem to have good ideas that you hadn't considered. A conversation could be so off the wall that you

can barely evenrespond. Tonight: Allow someone else to take the lead.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * You might have difficulty with a friend. This person continues to demand that a personal matter goes the way he or she desires. You could opt to play this game, but there will be ramifications that needtobeconsidered.Usecautionwhen handling funds. Tonight: Relax. © King Features Syndicate

over the start of her college career leads her to be a bit too loose-lipped with Devin (guest star Gia Mantegna) about Axl (Charlie McDermott). Atticus Shaffer also stars. 8p.m. on 5, 8, "The Myster-

ies of Laura" —Howwasa tech wizard murdered inside a building with a security system that supposedly no one could break through? That' s the question for Laura (Debra

Messing) and company in the new episode "The Mystery of the Locked Box," and time is of the essence in solving the crime: The victim's ideas, which could yield a fortune in profits, suddenly are up for grabs. Gabriel Mann ("Re-

venge") guest stars. Josh

Lucas, Laz Alonso and Gallic Thorne also star. 8 p.m. on10, "Rosewood"Rosewood(Morris Chestnut) is the only supporter a bright young man — and multiple-murder suspect — has in the new episode "Have-Nots

8 Hematomas." Villa's (Jaina

Lee Ortiz) social skills, or lack thereof, pose problems as she tries to pursue the investigation. As usual, Rosewood also has other concerns involving his health and love life. Miami Heat basketball star Chris Bosh appears as himself, and Mackenzie Astin and Nicole Ari Parker also guest star. 8:30 p.m. on 2, 9, "The Goldbergs" —Intending their building of a robot to be a bonding experience, Murray

(Jeff Garlin) finds a wedge driven between himself and

Adam (SeanGiambrone) instead in the new episode "Jimmy 5 Is Alive." They have such different ideas of how to go about the project, they end up at odds with each other. Barry (Troy Gentile) doesn't know what to do after he accidentally records over one of Beverly's

(Wendi McLendon-Covey) most cherished family-event

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** * * You often get mixed messages; however, today, a partner will make his or her requests clear. Acquiesce to this person, but only if you feel that his or her ideas are on the right path. A boss will let

Sue's (EdenSher) enthusiasm

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CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)

8p.m. on2,9,"The Middle" — Mike (Neil Flynn) picks an inopportune time to change his usual sort of attire in the new episode "The Shirt," as he trades his usual flannel wear for a Hawaiian-styled garment — just as he and Frankie (Patricia Heaton) are heading out to dinner with others.

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562

** * * You could be at the point where you don't know which direction you should head in. Social and professional pressure might persuade you to follow the conventional mode. If you see adifferent path that others don' t, and believe it will be successful, go for it. Tonight: Out late. ** * * Your ability to come to terms with a challenging situation will benefit you. Someone else might see a situation differently from you how you envision it, but that is OK. Look at the matter from both perspectives. You will know what to do. Tonight: Choose something exotic.

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

CoNSTRUCTION

• MERU (R) 8 • PHOENIX (PG-13) 5:30 DESIGN i BUILD i REMODEL

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777

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EVEREST (PG-l3) 5:45, 8:30 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 2 (PG)415, 630, 8 45 THE INTERN (PG-13) 5, 7:45 THE MARTIAN (PG-13) 5:15, 8:15

Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • BLACK MASS (R) 6:30 • EVEREST (PG-13) 6:30 • THE INTERN (PG-13) 6:15 • THE MARTIAN (PG-13) 6 Madras Cinema5,1101 SW US. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • EVEREST (PG-l3) 4:20, 7 • HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 23-0 (PG) 4:20, 7:05 • THE INTERN (PG-13) 4:35, 7:15 • THE MARTIAN (PG-13) 6:30 • THE MARTIAN 3-0(PG-13) 3:30 • MAZE RUNNER:THE SCORCH TRIALS (PG-13)4,6:40 •

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

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To place an ad, call services from out of l whoodle. 3 yrs., curselling multiple sys- 541-310-0343 541-385-5809 l the area. Sending l rent shots, very pretty, tems/ software, to disor email loving, house broken. ' cash, checks, or close the name of the classified ObendI credit i n f ormation $350. 541-4'I 0-1581 business or the term bulletin.corn may be subjected to "dealer" in their ads. Yorkie pup, 9 wks. old, I FRAUD. For more Private party advertisThe Bulletm female, AKC, $850. information about an t serving Central Oregon sincetgttg 541-382-3537 reduced! Howa ers are defined as 541-241-0518 wood stoves. advertiser, you may I Price Redmond 1500 300 Win. Mag. those who sell one Patio table bistroi call t h e Ore g on i 541-923-0882 208 210 style, and 2 tallnchairs, 267 ' State Atto r ney ' New, never f i red. computer. n Madras Wood stock, stainless Pets & Supplies Furniture & Appliances I General's O f fi ce table top is 32 x32 Fuel & Wood 541-475-6889 an d a c t ion. Good classified ads tell made of synthetic Consumer Protec- • barrel the essential facts in an Prineville granite, legs are tion h o t line at i Great deer or elk gun, interesting Manner. Write 541-447-7'I 78 The Bulletin recombargain priced-wife metal, stands 32" tall. WHEN BUYING I 1-877-877-9392. or Craft Cats mends extra caution from the readers view not says sell $599 Call Good cond.,$89 obo FIREWOOD... 541-389-8420 when purc h as541-419-6408 541-389-3694, leave the seller' s.Convert the i The Bulletin i ing products or serservtng Central Oregon since fgog message. facts into benefits. Show To avoid fraud, vices from out of the the reader howthe item will Pilates Power Gym Pro, The Bulletin Ruqer SR-556c new, extras. $200 area. Sending cash, help them in some way. recommends pay3-piece hardwood wall 212 (AR-15), Folding OBO. 541-408-0846 checks, or credit in0 ment for Firewood This nH, glass • A nti q ues & unit, 91 Lx79 battle sights, Picatf ormation may be advertising tip Portable deep f r yer, only upon delivery shelves, $400' obo inny Rails, 2 Magpul subjected to fraud. and inspection. brought toyouby like new, $175 obo. 541-526-1879 I Collectibles 30-rd Pmags, Slide For more informa• A cord is 128 cu. ft. 541-279-8908 Fire "Full Auto" Stock, tion about an adver4' x 4' x 8' The Bulletin Need help fixing stuff? The Bulletin reserves Carrying Case, $925. serving Cent el Ongononce lggs tiser, you may call Call • Receipts should the right to publish all Also Leather Rifle A Service Professional Stow Master 5000 by the O regon State include name, ads from The Bulletin Scabbard (New), Fits 257 Tow Master. $350. Attorney General' s find the help you need. newspaper onto The Win 94, Marlin 336. phone, price and www.bendbulletin.corn Musical Instruments Generator exhaust Office C o n sumer kind of wood 325 Bulletin Internet web- $30. Call Rob system, Gen Turi, Protection hotline at site. purchased. Hay, Grain & Feed 541-234-4644 ACE GUITAR with case. $ 7 5 . 1-877-877-9392. 7 piece be droom • Firewood ads 503-936-1778 SOUNDGEAR by Sauer Mosquito .22 MUST include set, $350. 1 roll top The Bulletin Sigsemi-auto First Quality green grass serving Central Oregonsince tgttg The Bulletin Ibanez 4-string, black pistol, like desk & chair, $300. species & cost per Serving Central Oregon sincetggg hay, no rain, barn stored, exc. cond., with prenew, have box, holcord to better serve 1 hall tree, $200. 2 263 $250/ton. mium padded case, ster, & papers. $300. our customers. leather chair reclinCall 541-549-3831 Tools strap and amplifier. 541-923-8378 or e rs, $30 0 b o th. Patterson Ranch, Sisters $285. Fender electric 907-299-8869 541-504-9945 The Bulletin Quality o rchard/grass guitar, Squire Strat 8 14n Jet bandsaw, runs S&W SD 9VE 9mm g ood, $ 30 0 o b o . case, $199. Vintage mix $225-$245 ton, 541-504-4038 black/SS NIB $350. banjo, 5-string, new small bales, between Unique scalloped 541-788-6365 n All Year Dependable keys 8 strings, $150. Bend Redmond, del. C hicago pheumatic 4.5 table top: 35$/~n diDaniff puppies, Great dry avai. 541-280-7781 541-385-4790. model 85 conangle ai r g r i nder, Firewood: ameter, has sailing Taurus Dane and M astiff Lodgepole, split, del, ceal/carry, 38 cal, new C P9110 12,00 0 1 /$195; ship design on the cross, ready to go and 260 2/$3 6 5 . Straw for Sale. in box, never fired. RPM, used very little. Multi-cord discounts! Wheat top. Base is an old 1 st s h o ts . $5 0 0 Also, weaner pigs. Misc. Items $275. 541-603-0675. $260. 503-936-1778 oak dock capstan. 509-593-9103 cash, check, Visa, MC 541-546-6171 Dinette,seats 6, good Very unique piece, Walther Colt M4 carLog chains, handy man 541-420-3484, Bend Deposit c a n s/bottles cond., $400; Coffee could sell separately. b ine 2 2 LR , N I B Bernina 820 in exneeded for local all table, nic e w ood, $359. Also Vintage jacks, cable winches, Ponderosa pine fireLooking for your $496. 541-788-6365 cellent condition. $ 10 e a. misc . volunteer, non-profit $400; Queen b e d, wash bowl & pitcher next employee? Price includes lot of w renches, soc k et wood split, $160 or cat rescue. Donate: Serta mattress, head- set, white & light blue Call The Bulletin At bobbins, carrying Place a Bulletin trade. 541-419-1871 Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 board, v e ry clean, sets. 541-310-0343 541-385-58N with gold trim.$79. case, all sewing feet, help wanted ad Bend; Petco, Red- $1200. 805-720-3515 See more pix at Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Barbie case and all Look at: 269 today and mond; Smith Sign, KI More Pix at Bendbulletin.ct bendbulletin.corn At: www.bendbulletin.corn instruction books. Bendhomes.corn reach over 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; Gardening Supplies 541-419-6408 $4700 cash. 60,000 readers for Complete Listings of CRAFT in T u malo. WANTED: Collector & Equipment 541-205-8525. each week. Can pick u p Ig . seeks high quality fishArea Real Estate for Sale 215 Your classified ad amounts. 389-8420. ing items 8 upscale fly • C oins & Stamps www.craftcats.org Buying Diamonds BarkTurfSoil.corn will also rods. 541-678-5753, or /Gold for Cash 503-351-2746 appear on French bulldog puppy, Private collector buying Saxon's Fine Jewelers bendbulletin.corn PROMPT DELIVERY b rindle, female, 1 0 Estate Salepostagestamp albums & 247 541-389-6655 which currently 542N89-9663 weeks old. $2,200. collections, world-wide Cash only! Sporting Goods receives over 541-350-1965 Bedroom set: double and U.S. 573-286-4343 BUYING - Misc. 1.5 million page enchantabull.corn (local, cell phone). Lionel/American Flyer bed w/headboard & MARK V SHOPviews every trains, accessories. mattress, 3 drawer SMITH Model 510 For newspaper 240 1970 Pool table, like month at no 541-408-2191. dresser w / mirror, bandsaw, scrollsaw, delivery, call the new. Balls and 4 cue extra cost. nightstand, SOLD. • Crafts & Hobbies strip sander, t hickCirculation Dept. at sticks included. Slate BUYING &5 SELLING ness planer, dust col541-385-5800 Bulletin Breakfast table: 4' All gold jewelry, silver top, felt is in new round oak, seats 4+ Crafters Wanted To place an ad, call Classifieds and gold coins, bars, lector, support table, condition. $750. 541-385-5809 leaf seats 6, 4 upOpen Jury Get Results! rounclsi wedding sets, lathe chisel set, ring541-388-6910 holstered c h a irs, Sat. Oct. 10th, 9:30 a.m. or email Call 541-385-5809 German shepherd class rings, sterling sil- master, wall mount- olaggifiedtiitbendbullertn.Corn $300. Highland Baptist Crossbow, Botec Off- ver, coin collect, vin- ing brackets for storor place your ad puppies, AKC, our Dining room: 6'x4 Church, Redmond. on-line at bloodlines make all spring, NEW, lists for tage watches, dental a ge, s et-up a n d The Bulletin dark wood buffet, Jan 541-350-4888, SelvirtgCentral Ofegoll since tglg $749, sell for $550. gold. Bill Fl e ming, operation manuals. the difference! bendbulletin.corn n glass Tina 541-447-1640 $300. 6'x3'6 541-306-8111. 541-382-941 9. $2,500. 541-383-7124 windridgek9.corn dining room table, 8 www.snowflakebouMalemute/Husky, blue upholstered chairs, tique.org eyed male, 1 1/2 yr. $800. 541-504%228 $500, 541-688-1708 241 Bicycles & Accessories 202

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421

Schools & Training

I

IITR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235

I

WWW.IITR.EDU 470

Domestic & In-Home Positions Active female senior needs live-in caretaker. Prineville. Call Scott at 503-961-5812. Alison's Resort House Keeping Service Offering resort, residential, and commercial cleaning. 541-213-5288 476

Employment Opportunities

PLACE MY PLACE HOTEL BEND, OREGON

Now accepting applications Full & Part-time positions

Room Attendants Maintenance We offer competitive wages and vacation benefits. Applications can be mailed, picked up, or e mailed:

.

I•

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BEND Illly Place Hotel Attn: Tara 550 SW Bond Street

Bend, Oregon 97701 OI'

bendolegacymgmt.org MY PLACE Hotel is an

Equal Opportunity Employer

I

G iant Talon 1 2 9 e r hardtail, small, excellent condition, $625. 541-408-1676

Og peat'.

245 260

286

Estate Sales

Sales Northeast Bend

Estate sale 60805 Willow Creek Lp. Thurs. 8th-Sat. 10th, 9 AM-4 PM ESTATE SALE Oct. 9 & 10, 9-4:30. 10280 NE

Garage Sale Kit

Place an ad in The B ulletin fo r yo u r sale and receive a G arage Sale K i t FREE!

262

Multi-family sale. Fri & Sat. 8-4. power tools, band saw, shaper, industrial sewing machine, furniture, Total G m 8 misc. 64711 W" ood Ave. b ehind Tumalo School.

CHECK YOUR AD

** FREE **

1st St., T e rrebonne cross street NW Eby KIT INCLUDES: Ave. Nice fridge, CA • 6 Garage Sale c aptain king bed, 2 Signs couches, kitchen good- • $2.00 Off Coupon ies, crafts, Christmas To Use Toward stuff, dresser, storage Your Next Ad cabinets. Cash onlyl • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" Sales Northwest Bend

Golf Equipment

PICK Up YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

tervtng Central Oregon srncs t903

I 'I 'I

on the first day it runs to make sure it is core rect. Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin Classified " LIKE N E W n

Adam' s Idea Combo i rons. 3 -4-5 H . B . 6-P W GRPH S R s h a fts, $360 obo. 951-454-2561

I

246

Trigger Happy Guns

541-526-0617, Bend

Sales Southeast Bend BERETTA PX Storm Door-to-door selling with 45 ACP, NIB, $479. fast results! It's the easiest BARN & YARD SALE 541-788-6365 from o l d Alf a l fa way in the world to sell. R anch, Barn a n d CASH!! Shop. 9 A M F riday For Guns, Ammo & The Bulletin Classified and Saturday. Reloading Supplies. 541-385-5809 61060 Billadeau, Bend 541-408-6900.

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HUNTiNG TENT & GEAR 10x10 White Stag Canvas! Plus queensize air mattress, 2 sleeping bags! Various other camping gear included. 81375 OBO 541-000-000

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

(Cash for guns)

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

'

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

541-385-5809

,•

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Item Priced ai: Your Tofttl Ad Coston • $499 or less....................................................................... $39 • $500 to $999...................................................................$49 • $1000 tQ $2499.............................................................. $59 • $2500 and over............................................................... $69 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. (maximum up to 3 itemsper ad.j

I I

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• • •

Your ad will a/so appear in:

• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads • bendbulletin.corn

'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Somerestrictions app/y



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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCT 7, 2015

DAILY B R I D G E

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD vjijjj $j)plrtz

C L U B w edn~day, october 7,2015

Solving a mystery By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency I used to e n joy E l l e ry Q u een mysteries: complex edifices that gave the reader the clues he needed to solve a crime — provided he was a genius. Problem-solving is the essence of b ridge. Tr y t o d ay's d ea l a s a defensive problem. Cover the East and South cards. Against three hearts, you lead the k in g o f d i a monds: deuce, three, nine. What do you lead at the second trick? You can seefour defensive tricks: two diamonds, a heart and a spade. But on the bidding, East can have no useful honors. Your only chance for a fifth trick is to give him a spade ruff, but yo u m u s t d o t h a t w i t h o ut sacrificing your spade trick.

ACROSS

one diamond, you respond one heart and he bids two clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: Your best contractgame or slam — is uncertain. Partner can have many differenttypes of hands, so for you to bid 3NT would be indiscreet. Bid two spades, the "fourth suit," to Iet him continue to describe his hand. If he has a hand

Lead the king of spades, hoping South has A-x-x. He takes the ace and leads a trump, and you grab your ace and lead the jack of spades. As you hope, East ruffs dummy's queen and returns a diamond, and you win and cash the ten of spades. If you think North's bidding was questionable, I agree. North-South could have made 3NT. Didyou beat three hearts?

DAILY QUESTION

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21 Emailed, say 22 Surname on a financial weekly 23 Cameron of "Charlie's Angels" 25 Classic Duke Ellington tune 27 They may be determined by sonograms 29 Hand-wringer's word 300n the contrary 31 Head honcho

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

SOUTH

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By Howard Barkfn O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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10/07/1 5


THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880

870

Boats & Accessories

Moto r homes

881

932

933

935

Travel Trailers

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

00

1996 Rockwood tent t railer, s l eeps 6 , queen/full beds, ext ends t o 1 9 fe e t , stove, furnace, ice

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541-419-7478 Fleetwood Southwind, F o rd, 3 2 ' , 1994, 82,000 miles, queen bed & sleeper ILK sofa, TV, cooktop, oven, m i crowave, refrigerator 8 freezer, trailer hitch 19' Ampex. 2011. Slide equipped, new tires, out and other extras. just serviced. Tows well $12,500. 541.316.1367 $9,800. 503-459-1580.

908

1/3 interestin Financing available.

$125,000

)I •

(located O Bend) 541-288-3333

19' C lassic 1 9 90 Mastercraft ski boat.

Pro-star 190 conventional in-board, custom trailer, exc. cond. $8,995. 541-389-6562

FUN & FISH!

2006 Smokercraft

Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and many extras. Stored inside $19,900 541-350-5425

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

34' Winnebago One 2013 30RE. $25,000. Two slides. Fully loaded. Full photos and info sent upon request. Family illness requires sale.

Lexington 2006 283TS class B+motor coach, full GTS pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 541-923-2593 burner range, half time oven, 3 slides Flagstaff tent t r a iler w/awnings, Onan 2005, exc. cond., fully gen., King Dome sat- loaded w/bath, gaellite system, Ford raged. $5100. Call for V10 Triton, auto-levinfo. 541-598-4327 eling system, new tires, Falcon tow bar. RV Non-smoker, mainCONSIGNMENTS tained in dry storage. WANTED Can email additional We Do The Work ... pictures. $55,000. You Keep The Cash! 541-520-3407 On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

Monaco Monarch 31' 2006, F ord V 10, 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides, queen b ed &

$59,000.

541-815-6319

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

The Bulletin 875

Watercraft ds published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

.L SeaDoo 2004 RXP 72 hours, very good condition, stored indoors, cover, trailer, e xtras, $7,1 0 0. 206-963-4311 '

.

"

~

-

Pace A r row V i s ion 1997, Ford 460 enLooking for your next employee? gine w/Banks, solar, walk-around queen Place a Bulletin help bed, 2 door fridge, mi- wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 cro-convection oven, WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, readers each week. Your classified ad needs work, (photo will also appear on similar to actual rig) bendbulletin.corn $9,500. 541-280-0797 which currently receives over 1.5 milRV lion page views evCONSIGNMENTS ery month at no WANTED extra cost. Bulletin We Do The Work ... Classifieds Get ReYou Keep The Cash! sults! Call 385-5809 On-site credit or place your ad approval team, on-line at web site presence. bendbulletin.corn We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

880

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs.

Call on one of the professionals today! HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville.

Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546

Save money. Learn 882 to fly or build hours with your own airFifth Wheels c raft. 1968 A e ro Commander, 4 seat, 30' Alpenlite 1990 5th wheel i n e x cellent 150 HP, low time, cond., $5,700 obo. full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-410-6945

541-390-7179

CHECKYOUR AD

Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available. Call 541-815-2144

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-lev- Pkg, rear camera, eling system, 5kw gen, B luetooth. Also i n power mirrors w/defrost, cludes NEW Adco all916 2 slide-outs with aw- weather coach cover. Trucks & nings, rear c a mera, $78,900. Call Jim cell Heavy Equipment trailer hitch, driver door 209.401.7449 (can w/power window, cruise, email addt'I photos) 1997 Utility 53'x102" dry exhaust brake, central Need to get an freight van. S liding vac, satellite sys. Re- Tow Dolly Roadmaster, ad in ASAP? li k e axles, leaf springs, duced price: $64,950. m odel 3 4 77 , new-never used, You can place it 503-781-8812 good tires, body & electric breaks, magswing doors in exc. online at: netic lights w/wiring cond., has no dings, Just too many harness, profession- www.bendbulletin.corn road ready! $7500 collectibles? ally wired. $ 1450. o bo. S isters, O R . 541-419-5151 541-385-5809 541-719-1217 Sell them in 925 The Bulletin Classifieds Laredo 31'2006, Utility Trailers 5th wheel, fully S/C 541-385-5809 one slide-out.

Beaver Contessa 40'2008, four slide diesel pusher. Loaded, great condition. Warranty. Pictures/info at www.fourstarbend.corn 541-647-1236

Winnebago 22' 2002 - $26,900 Chevy 360, heavy duty chassis, cab & roof A/C, tow hitch w/brake, 22k mi., more! 541-280-3251

Winnebago Journey

2001 36' 2nd owner, 300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 80k miles. D r iver s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat screen TVs, refer, Columbus by Thor 30' generator, inverter, moto rhome, 1 9 9 4, Dome, tow bar. Chevy 454, B anks King N on-smoker, n o p ower w / ne w e r pets, no c h ildren. transmission, w a l klean, and w e ll around queen bed, C maintained, $43,000 41K miles, full gas 541-390-1472. t ank! $ 9,500 o b o . 541-598-6978 B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , one slide, low mileage, very clean, lots of storage, $28,500. 541-639-9411

Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or refinance. Call 541-410-5649

2013 7 f t .X18 f t .

Carry-On open car hauler trailer. Used only three times to haul my 1967 Camaro, and looks like new. I had the front barrier made and installed and added the tool box. It also has a mounted new spare tire. $3995

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,

You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

obo. 541-876-5375 or cell: 503-701-2256.

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

Redmond:

541-548-5254

Canopies & Campers

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessorie 4 almost new Blizzak 245/70R16 s t udless winter tires on basic

steel r im s.

541-280-1474.

Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 34,000 miles. Wintered in h eated shop. $78,995 obo. 541-447-8664

W innebago L e Sharo 1985, $5,900. Good Condition. Renault Turbo Diesel (24 miles/gal.). Includes good C Band radio. 541-526-9534

Northlander 1993 17' camper,Polar 990, good shape, new fridge, A/C, queen bed, bathroom, indoor/outdoor shower, lots of storage, customized to fit newer pickups,$4500 obo. 541-419-9859.

Sunbeam Tiger 1966 Very clean car. Always garaged since repaint 30 y e a rs ago. Original 260 V-8 engine totally rebuilt 9,400 miles ago. Factory hard top, good condition soft top, many LAT dealer sold options so car is considered 935 "stock" at car shows. Sport Utility Vehicles I have owned the car f or 18 year s . $ 70,000. Te l 5 4 1 548 3458

4

'-iii~g VW Beetle c lassic 1972, Exc. shape, no rust, very clean, fully restored, has had 2 owners. $4, 0 0 0. 541-815-8147

Toyota FJ40 Landcruiser 1977 with winch, $18,000

$ 2 00.

stu d de d tir e s , 235/70R16, only used 1 s e ason, $ 2 0 0. 541-419-7550

541-312-9312

541-729-4552

Michelle

975

Kia Forte SX 2012 hatchback, $15,700, 32,015 miles, still under 60k warranty, exc. condition, see craigslist for full details. 541-948-7687

Toyota Camry Hybrid 2007, 1 51 k m i l es, one owner, garaged, cruise, non-smoker, fully l o a ded, all r ecords, $850 0 . 541-350-9806

Toyota Corolla S 2007, 93 k m i l es, automatic, s i l ver. N ew brakes a n d battery. Super clean, no smoking. Cruise control, CD player, c loth s eats, A C . Price: $6500. Call 541-480-2700

to view. NO T E XTS PLEASE! pattym51 © q.corn

VW Jetta 1999, 187K

mi., 1 7 " wh e els, R aceland Ulti m o coilovers, Kenwood stereo. New radiator hoses, motor mount and new C V a x le. $2500. 541-420-2016 or 541-279-8013

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

'13 -3 lines, 7 days '20 -3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

Looking for your next employee?

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

Lexus ES350 2010, Excellent Condition 32,000 miles, $20,000 214-549-3627 (in

Bend)

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

I The Bulletin recoml Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, exc. cond., always garaged. 155K miles, $9,500. 541-549-6407

Automobiles

extra caution I I mends when p u rchasing x f products or servicesf from out of the area. f S ending c ash ,f checks, or credit in- x I formation may be I

J subject to FRAUD. For more informalf tion about an advertiser, you may call

f

I the Oregon State ]

Take care of Attorney General's I your investments Office C o nsumer I / Protection hotline at with the help from 1-877-877-9392. The Bulletin's Chevy Tahoe 1995 4x4 4 dr. auto, tow pkg, BMW Z3 R o adster "Call A Service ServingCentra/ Oregon since 1%8 new brakes and ro1 997, $4500. C a ll Professional" Directory tors, g r ea t ti r e s, 541-548-0345 to see. leather, power, runs g reat, v er y go o d cond., $4800 .

I

933

/

Pickups

~m.BW.t. ~

GA L LW

TODAY%

Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or

541-385-4790

Ford Explorer Sport 2011, 6 cyl. auto., 4WD, 3rd seat, $21,995. 541-598-5111

541-420-621 5.

Buick Lucerne 2008 Very clean 6 cylinder, auto., leather interior, 87k mi. $7450/OBO Will consider p a rt trade. Call or text Ron at 541-41 9-5060

Mercedes-Benz SLK230 2003, exc. cond., auto, convertible retractable hard top. 54,250 miles, carfax available.$13,000. 541-389-7571

Porsche B o x ster 2008, exc. c ond., less than 18K mi., black/black, s p o rt pkg., stored in wint er. $25,0 0 0 . 224-558-1887, Bend.

,

,

-

.

.

.

,

.

,

"SOL>

.

u(]et(n CI+ssj fjegs Get Result>!

]Ps Mjchelin tires, A))tip, (cather interior, heated front seats, premium factor)i sound, 6 CD ln dash player and sub-woofer, heated I outside mirrors, dua

moonroof, tow pkg., roof rack, always garaged, no smoke or dogs. Exc. cond.

Vehicle Priced at: • Under $4999 • $5000 to $9999 • $10,000 tQ $14,999 • $15,000 fQ $19,999

AdCo st:

$50 $70 $85 $95

OR 12-MonthPkg. 2" Adwith Photo Until SOLD, 2" Ad with Photo, Border whichever comes 8 Bold Headline, regardless of item price. first! $149 flat rate

'Photo o iional

Your ad will appear in:

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903

Four studded tires on Devino alloy rims 225/ 55R-17XL off Subaru Outback. Tires used one season $400.

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, never been off road or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, very clean. $26,000. Call or text Jeff at

541-389-7113,

12-Week Package 1" ad*

931 885

dard 4 cyl engine, Want to impress the 22+ mpg, one senior owner, relatives? Remodel n on-srnker, w e l l your home with the maintained, nearly help of a professional from The Bulletin's new tires, original "Call A Service s pare near n e w, runs exce l lent. Professional" Directory $14,750. 541-633-9895

NVIIFE

Cameo LX1 2001, Check out the 32 ft. 5th wheel, 2 A/C, micro, classifieds online Southwind 33' 1989 slides, DVD, CD p l ayer, www.bendbulletin.corn on Chevy chassis, conv. an d i n vert. Updated daily 64k mi., 454 motor, New batteries, tires new front brake pads, and shocks. Quad 6.5k Onan generator. carrier. Quad avail. $9000. 541-389-7669 $11,900 OBO.

Sunseeker 2500 T S 2015 by Forest River triple slide Class C. Purchased June 2015, used twice (wife became ill) F ULLY Loaded with Platinum Full Body paint, auto level system, Arctic

Jeep CJ5 4x41967, first year of the orig. Dauntless V-6, last year of the "All metal" body! Engine overhauled: new brakes, fuel pump, steering gear box, battery, alternator, emergency brake pads, gauges, warn hubs, dual exhaust, 5 wide traction tires, 5 new spoke, chrome wheels. NO rust, garage stored. $7,495 OBOI (775) 513-0822

GMC Pickup 1983 w/ topper, 4 wheel drive, 1947 Stinson 108-2, Mercedes 450 SL r uns good, go o d engine has been gone 1979 Roadster, soft winter truck. $1,500 Lincoln Na v i gator through, the m a gs & hard tops, always obo. 907-310-1877 2 003 A WD , or i g . h ave b ee n g o n e garaged, 122k mi., owner, local vehicle, new tires, shock and through, new carb, always gar a ged, $79 0 0 . brakes rebuilt, new in- b reaks, auto., navigation, suns trument panel & 541-548-5648 roof, DV D p l ayer, gauges, new ELT, & heated 8 A/C seats, much more. Fresh c ustom g r i ll , all annual.Signed offby records, new Michelin Bend Ace mechanics, T oyota Taco m a t ires. $10,0 0 0 . Bend airport. $24,000. 2 006, r eg . c a b , 541-815-5000. 541-385-5662 4x4, 5 sp d s tan-

541-447-51 84.

Motorhomes

35' 2005 Winnebago Suncruiser. 58000 +/miles. Chevy 8.1 L, Allison transmission, 3 slides, Blue Ox towing hitch $46,000 OBO (541)-480-7239

The Bulletin Classifieds

:f

Redmond:

541-548-5254

Unique R-Pod 2013 trailer-tent combo, f ully l oaded, e x tended service contract and bike rack. $16,000. 541-595-3972 or 503-780-4487

FIND IT! BUT IT! SELL IT!

1/5 share in very nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 Cessna 150 with Lycoming 0-320 150 hp engine conversion, 4000 hours. TT airframe. Approx. 400 hours o n 0- t i med 0-320. Han gare d in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One of very few C-150's that has never been a t rainer. $4500 w i l l consider trades for whatever. C all J im Frazee, 541-410-6007

hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, convection microwave, 2 TVs, tow package.

PR!CEREDUCTION!

Hard top 1965, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition. $12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

Columbia400,

Great cond., 31K ~ has been in covered ~ MH. miles, slider, $32,000.

Ask ing[ 541-508-9700

Cadillac CTS 2010, Chevy S-10 1988 4.3L F ord Explorer X L T V-6, s unroof, many 1991 r eliable w e l l V 6 I n j ection, 6 custom features, su- cared for, clean, non- Speed A u tomatic. per clean, always ga- smoking, incl. 4 stud- Luxury series. Exteraged. $3200 obo. ded winter tires, new rior: Black Raven, 541-388-0811. Light TitaH D b attery, 1 9 0 k Interior: nium/Ebony. 22,555 miles, 20k towed be- miles. 4 door. Exhind mot o rhome cellent condition all $1500 obo Message around. Has A r i541-241-4896. zona plates. This is car is a great mix of luxury, com f o rt, Chevy Sil v e rado Need to get an ad style, and workman2 500HD 2002, 4 x 4 ship. $24,000 in ASAP? Crew cab, canopy, Call 541-408-3051 85K original miles, loaded. $17,500 OBO. Fax it te 541-322-7253 541-647-0565 The Bulletin Classifieds What are you looking for? You' ll find it in Honda Accord 2005, V6, fully l o aded, The Bulletin Classifieds Nav, Moon roof, CD, perfect leather interior, one owner, full 541-385-5809 I nfiniti F X3 5 A W D maintained, always 2009 Sporty 3.5 V6, 7 garaged, never spd auto, 40K miles, wrecked, 143K road Bose sound sys, 20" miles, $7,999. Great alloy whls. Nav sys. car ready to drive. Dlx tour, premium and Mike 541-499-5970 tow pkgs. Most options included. Al- HUNTER S P E CIAL: Dodge Big Horn ways maintained and Jeep Cherokee, 1990, Ram 2500, 2005, 6 g araged. Just d e - 4x4, has 9 tires on speed manual. Extailed, non s moker. wheels. $2000 obo. tra tires and rims, Midnight Mocha color, 541-771-4732 canopy goes with. tan leather int. Exc. Excellent condition, I mpala E 4 0 0 , cond. in & out. Clean '70 well mai n tained, title. $2 6,950.OBO $2,500. '76 Nova, runs great. 1 6 0K 541-647-2257 $1,800. '03 Honda miles. $2 8 ,500 700cc MC, $ 2 000. 541-620-1212 541-410-5349

Ford Mustang

Aircraft, Parts & Service

18' 2003 S un I Cruiser - pontoonI boat, fully equipped. I Has only been used I Itasca 2003 31' Class C a handful of times &

[ storage.

975

Automobiles

box. $1,700 o bo.

17' SunCraft, 2 motors. $1,200. 541-593-7257

r-

975

Auto m obiles

541-385-5809 'Private party merchandise only.

• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace

• The Central Oregon Nickel Ads • bendbvlletin.corn

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

E6 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015 •THE BULLETIN

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

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Legal Notices

10, 2015 at 10:00 AM, and/or cashier' s LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE in the main lobby of C itiBank, N.A. a s Deutsche Bank Na- Federal N a t ional checks made payable the Deschutes County tional Trust Company, Mortgage Associato Deschutes County Trustee for AmeriSheriff 's O ffice,63333 as Trustee for Ameri- tion, its successors Sheriff's Office will be can Home M ortW. Highway 20, Bend, accepted. P ayment gage Assets Trust can Home Mortgage in interest and/or Oregon, sell, at public Asset Trust 2007-1, assigns, Plaintiff/s, must be made in full 2006-3, o ral auction to t h e Plaintiff/s, v. Deanna v. Brian D. Stevens; immediately upon the Mortgage-Backed h ighest bidder, f o r close of the sale. For Pass-Through CerCranston; Riley Cran- Joseph P. Tennant; cash o r ca s hier' s ston; t ificates Seri e s Rev i t alizing John J. T e nnant; more information on check, the real prop- American Properties, Thomas A. Tennant; this s al e g o to: 2006-3, Plaintiff/s, v. erty commonly known Inc.; and Persons or Mary http: //oregonsheriffsGlenda Taylor aka F. as 19635 SW Harsales.org/ Glenda Lee Taylor, Parties unk n own Tennant-Laic r; vard Place, Bend, OrIndividually and as claiming any r i ght, Michael J. Tennant; LEGAL NOTICE Personal R e p re- egon 97702. Condi- title, lien, or interest in Anne M. Green Tree Servictions of Sale: t he P r operty d e - Tennant-Buell; sentative of the Esing LLC, its succesPotential bidders must scribed in the com- Robert E. Tennant tate of Dan L. Taysors i n in t e rest arrive 15 minutes prior plaint herein, Defen- and Nora Brady dba 15CV0219FC. NOlor; Paul Taylor aka LEGAL NOTICE and/or as s igns, to the auction to allow d ant/s. Case N o . : Tennant Investors, T ICE O F SA L E (30) days from the Paul Joseph Taylor; Bank o f Am e rica, date of service of this L eah Taylor a ka Plaintiff/s, v. Garry the Deschutes County 1 4CV0542FC. N O - an Oregon PartnerUNDER WRIT OF N.A., successor by William Todd SR. Summons upon you. Leah Eleanor TaySheriff's Office to re- TICE OF SALE UN- ship; Robert TenEXECUTION merger to, BAC Home If you fail to appear lor; all other Peraka Bill Todd; Yasview bidder's funds. DER WRIT OF EXREAL PROPERTY. nant; Tillicum VilServicing, LP and defend this mat- sons or Parties unmin M. Todd aka Only U.S. currency ECUTION - REAL lage Homeowners Notice is h e reby Loans FKA Cou n trywide Miri a m ter within thirty (30) known claiming any and/or cashier' s PROPERTY. Notice is A ssociation, I n c . ; Y asmin given that the DesHome Loans ServicW o o dside checks made payable hereby given that the Kevin D. P adrick, Todd; c hutes Cou n t y ing, LP, Plaintiff/s, v. days from the date of right, title, lien, or Ranch Home-Ownpublication specified to Deschutes County Deschutes C o u nty Chapter 11 Trustee; Sheriff's Office will, in the Real Donald P. Byrne; Su- herein along with the interest ers Association; OcSheriff's Office will be Sheriff's Office will, on U nited Stated o f on Thursday, DeProperty commonly san Byrne; Donald P. required filing f e e, known as 2254 NE cupants of the preaccepted. P ayment Thursday, December America; and Occucember 3, 2015 at Byrne, Trustee of the W ELLS mises; and the Real FARG O 5th Street, R e dmust be made in full 3, 2015 at 10:00 AM, pants of the pre1 0:00 AM, i n t h e Donald P. and Susan BANK, N.A. will apply m ond, Property located at immediately upon the in the main lobby of main lobby of the Ore g o n mises, Defendant/s. Byrne Living Trust, to the Court for the re- 97756, Defendant/s. 60235 R i dgeview close of the sale. For the Deschutes County Case Deschutes County No.: Dated April 29, 1999; Drive East, Bend, more information on Sheriff S heriff's Offi c e, Susan Byrne, Trustee lief demanded in the Case No.: 's Office,63333 14CV0210FC. NOOregon Complaint. The first 13CV1208FC. NOthis s al e g o to: W. Highway 20, Bend, T ICE O F 63333 W. Highway SAL E of the Donald P. and date of publication is T ICE O F 97702-9741, Defenhttp: //oregonsheriff20, Bend, Oregon, SAL E Oregon, sell, at public UNDER WRIT OF Susan Byrne Living September 16, 2015. UNDER WRIT OF dant/s. Case No.: ssale.org/ sell, at public oral o ral auction to t h e EXECUTION Trust, Dated April 29, NOTICE TO DEFEN- EXECUTION 14CV0683FC. NOauction to the highh ighest bidder, f o r REAL PROPERTY. 1999; Unknown Suc- DANTS: T ICE O F SA L E READ REAL PROPERTY. est bidder, for cash cash o r ca s hier' s Notice is h e reby cessor Trustees of the T HESE UNDER WRIT OF LEGAL NOTICE PAP E RS Notice i s or cashier's check, h e r eby check, the real propgiven that the DesP. and Susan CAREFULLY! You EXECUTION Deutsche Bank Nathe real p roperty Donald erty commonly known c hutes Coun t y that the DesByrne Living Trust, must "appear" in this given REAL PROPERTY. tional Trust Comcommonly known as c hutes Coun t y as 3033 NW Winslow Sheriff's Office will, Dated April 29, 1999; Notice is h e reby pany, as Trustee for case or the other side Sheriff's Office will, 4040 W Antler AvDrive, Bend, Oregon on Tuesday, DePersons or Par- will win automatically. on Tuesday, NoA merican H o m e 97701. Conditions of cember 8, 2015 at given that the Desenue, R e d mond, and Unknown claim- To "appear" you must vember 24, 2015 at c hutes Cou n t y Mortgage A s sets O regon 977 5 6 . ties Sale: Potential bid1 0:00 AM, i n t h e ing any right, title, lien, file with the court a le- 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e Sheriff's Office will, Trust 2006-5, MortConditions of Sale: ders must arrive 15 main lobby of the r interest i n t h e gal paper called a on Tuesday, Degage-Backed Potential b i d ders o lobby of the minutes prior to the Deschutes County property described in "motion" or "answer." main cember 8, 2015 at Pass-Through Cermust arrive 15 minDeschutes County auction to allow the S heriff's Of fi c e , the complaint herein, The "motion" or "an- S heriff's 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e t ificates Ser i e s Deschutes C o u nty 63333 W. Highway u tes prior to t h e Offi c e , D efendant/s. C a s e main lobby of the 2006-5, its successwer" must be given 63333 W. Highway auction to allow the Sheriff's Office to re- 20, Bend, Oregon, No.: 1 4 C V0271FC. Deschutes County sors i n in t e rest view bidder's funds. sell, at public oral to the court clerk or 20, Bend, Oregon, Deschutes County N OTICE OF S A L E administrator w i thin S heriff's Offi c e, and/or ass i gns, Only U.S. currency auction to the highSheriff's Office to sell, at public oral NDER WRIT O F thirty days along with auction to the high63333 W. Highway Plaintiff/s, v. Kathy review bid d er's U and/or cashier' s est bidder, for cash EXECUTION - REAL the required filing fee. est bidder, for cash 20, Bend, Oregon, Fish aka Kathy J. f unds. Only U . S. checks made payable or cashier's check, Notice is It must be in proper or cashier's check, sell, at public oral Fish aka Kathy Jo currency an d / or PROPERTY. to Deschutes County the real p roperty given that the form and have proof the real p roperty Fish; Discover Bank auction to the highcashier's c h e cks hereby Sheriff's Office will be commonly known as Deschutes C o unty o f service o n t h e commonly known as est bidder, for cash Issuer of the Dismade payable to accepted. P ayment 20434 Ahha Lane, Sheriff's Office will, on or cashier's check, cover Card; Ridgeplaintiff's attorney or, Deschutes County 2254 NE 5th Street, must be made in full B end, Oreg o n Thursday, November the real p roperty water II Homeownif the plaintiff does not Redmond, Oregon Sheriff's Office will immediately upon the 97702. Conditions 5, 2015 at 10:00 AM, have a n ers As s o ciation; close of the sale. For of Sale: P o tential commonly known as a t t orney, 97756. C onditions be accepted. Payin the main lobby of proof of service on the of Sale: P o tential State of O regon; more information on 60235 R i dgeview ment must be made bidders must arrive the Deschutes County plaintiff. IF Drive East, Bend, Oak View PUD HoYOU bidders must arrive in full immediately this s al e go to: 15 minutes prior to Sheriff's Office, 63333 HAVE ANY QUESOregon meowners Associaupon the close of 15 minutes prior to http://oregonsheriffsthe auction to allow W. Highway 20, Bend, TIONS, 97702-9741. Condit ion; a n d O c c u - sales.org/ YOU the auction to allow the sale. For more the Desc h utes Oregon, sell, at public S HOULD SEE A N the tions of Sale: Poof the information on this Desc h utes pants County Sheriff's Ofo ral auction to t h e tential bidders must premises, D e fenA TTORNEY I M M E - County Sheriff's Ofsale go to: http: //orf ice to revi e w LEGAL NOTICE h ighest bidder, f o r arrive 15 m inutes dant/s. Case No.: DIATELY. If you need f ice to egonsheriffssales.or rev i e w bidder's funds. Only cash o r ca s hier' s help in finding an at- bidder's funds. Only E state o f AN N E prior to the auction 13CV1157FC. NOU.S. currency g/ WALKER. Notice to check, the real prop- torney, you may call U.S. to allow the DesT ICE O F SAL E currency and/or ca s h ier' s LEGAL NOTICE erty commonly known the O regon S t ate and/or Interested Persons c hutes Coun t y UNDER WRIT OF ca s hier' s checks made payBank of A merica, as 19947 Antler Point Bar's Lawyer Referral checks made pay(No. 15PB04202). In Sheriff's Office to EXECUTION able to Deschutes N.A., its successors Drive, Bend, Oregon S ervice a t the Circuit Court of review bid d e r's REAL PROPERTY. (503) to Deschutes County Sheriff's Ofin interest and/or 97702. Conditions of 684-3763 or toll-free able funds. Only U . S. Notice is h e reby the State of Oregon Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c assigns, Plaintiff/s, Sale: Potential bid- in Oregon at (800) fCounty for the County of c urrency d / or given that the Desice will b e ac cepted. P a yment cashier's can v. David P uckett; ders must arrive 15 452-7636. The object cepted. h e cks c hutes Cou n t y Deschutes, Probate P a yment must be made in full O regon Telc o minutes prior to the of the said action and must be made in full Department. In the made payable to Sheriff's Office will, i mmediately u p on Community Credit matter of the Estate auction to allow the the relief sought to be immediately upon Deschutes County on Tuesday, Not he close o f t h e U nion; John a n d Deschutes C o u nty o btained therein i s of Anne W a lker, sale. For more inSheriff's Office will vember 17, 2015 at t he close o f t h e Jane Does I through Deceased. Notice Sheriff's Office to re- fully set forth in said sale. For more inbe accepted. Pay1 0:00 AM, i n t h e f ormation on t h is V, Occupants of the view bidder's funds. hereby given that ment must be made main lobby of the an d is f ormation on t h i s sale go to: http: //orsubject p r o perty, Only U.S. currency complaint, Karen Anderson has in full immediately Deschutes County briefly stated as folgo to: http: //oregonsheriffssales.or and all other Perand/or cashier' s lows: Foreclosure of a sale been appointed as upon the close of S heriff's Of fi c e , g/ sons or Parties unchecks made payable Deed of Trust/Mort- egonsheriffssales.or personal representhe sale. For more 63333 W. Highway g/ known, claiming any to Deschutes County gage. Grantors: JUtative of the above LEGAL NOTICE information on this 20, Bend, Oregon, right, title, interest, LEGAL NOTICE estate. All persons Federal Nati o nal sale go to: http: //orSheriff's Office will be DITH J. MANN. Propsell, at public oral lien or estate in the accepted. P ayment erty address:16048 City of Bend h aving clai m s Mortgage Association egonsheriffssales.or auction to the highagainst the estate (" Fannie Mae"), Plain- g/ property herein demust be made in full CASCADE LANE, La Sole Source est bidder, for cash scribed, immediately upon the Pine, OR 97739. PubPublic Notice a re r equired t o t iff/s, v. K a ren L . or cashier's check, LEGAL NOTICE Defendant/s. Case Smith; Lee Alan Smith close of the sale. For l ication: The the real p roperty present them to the Ben d No.: 13C V 0510. more information on Bulletin. DATED this Date of Public Nopersonal represenII; Oregon Affordable Green Tree Serviccommonly known as NOTICE OF SALE Housing Assistance ing LLC, Plaintiff/s, this s al e g o to: 23 day of June, 2015. t ice: O ctober 7 , 62665 H a w kview tative in care of the UNDER WRIT OF http: //oregonsheriff2015 undersigned attorCorporation; Parties in v. Michelle Elmer R oad, Bend, O r Brandon Smith, OSB EXECUTION ney at 234 Pacific ssale.org/ possession, D efen- aka Michelle Ruth egon 97701. Condi¹ 1 24584, Emai l : REAL PROPERTY. Anticipated Award Building, 520 S.W. d ant/s. Case N o . : Elmer; N o r thwest tions of Sale: Pobsmith © robinsontait.c LEGAL NOTICE Notice i s h e r eby Date: December 1, Yamhill St., P ort1 5CV0273FC. N O - Bank; River Cantential bidders must Christiana Trust, a Di- om, Robinson Tait, 2015 Estates yon given that the DesTICE OF SALE UNarrive 15 m inutes land, Oregon 97204 P.S., Attorneys for vision of Wilmington Plaintiff, Tel: ( 206) Homeowners' Assoc hutes Coun t y within four months DER WRIT OF EXprior to the auction Savings Fund Society, 676-9640, Fax: (206) Description: Online Sheriff's Office will, after the date of first ECUTION - REAL ciation, Inc.; Occuto allow the DesFSB, not in its Indi- 676-9659. on Thursday, NoReal Estate L ien PROPERTY. Notice is pants of the Proppublication of t h is c hutes Cou n t y vidual Capacity but as vember 5, 2015 at Service S e rvices S heriff's Office t o notice, as s t ated hereby given that the erty, D efendant/s. T rustee fo r A R L P No.: 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e suc h Deschutes C o u nty Case (Con duits TM) review bi d der's b elow, o r Trust 3, Plaintiff/s, v. main lobby of the claims ma y be Sheriff's Office will, on 14CV0374FC. NOf unds. Only U . S. Jeffery S. Carey; Lisa T ICE O F SA LE Deschutes County LEGAL NOTICE P rospective C o n Tuesday, November currency an d / or barred. All persons Sheriff's Off i c e, C. C a rey; B a nco C itiBank, N .A . a s tractor: NetAssets 17, 2015 at 10:00 AM, UNDER WRIT OF cashier's c h e cks whose rights may Popular North Trustee for American Corporation 63333 W. Highway be affected by the in the main lobby of EXECUTION made payable to A merica; and P e r - Home Mortgage As20, Bend, Oregon, proceedings in this the Deschutes County REAL PROPERTY. Deschutes County sons or Parties un- sets Trust 2 0 06-3, Amount: $1 50,000 estate may obtain Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 Notice is h e reby sell, at public oral Sheriff's Office will known claiming any Mortgage-Backed auction to the highover 2 years additional informaW. Highway 20, Bend, given that the Desbe accepted. Payright, title, lien, or inPass-Through CertifiCou n t y est bidder, for cash tion fr o m the Oregon, sell, at public c hutes ment must be made terest in the Property cates Series 2006-3, The City of Bend Sheriff's Office will, or cashier's check, records of the Court, o ral auction to t h e in full immediately described in the comon Tuesday, Nothe real p roperty Plaintiff/s, v. E l iza- intends to contract the personal repreh ighest bidder, f o r upon the close of plaint herein, Defen- beth Royalty; Tho- with NetAssets Corcommonly known as sentative or the atcash o r ca s hier' s vember 24, 2015 at the sale. For more 19161 S h o shone dant/s. Case No .: m as Royalty; a n d torney for the percheck, the real prop- 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e poration for online information on this 1 4CV0964FC. N O - Persons or P a rties r eal e state l i e n R oad, Bend, O rsonal erty commonly known main lobby of the sale go to: http: //orTICE OF SALE UN- unknown clai egon 97702. Condiming any search services usrepresentative. as 228 N W A n tler Deschutes County egonsheriffssales.or DER WRIT OF EXOffi c e, right, title, lien, or intions of Sale: Poing Property InterDated and first pubLoop, Redmond, Or- S heriff's g/ ECUTION REAL terest in the property est tential bidders must Pub l ications lished: September egon 97756. Condi- 63333 W. Highway PROPERTY. Notice is 20, Bend, Oregon, described in the com- System (Conduitarrive 15 m inutes 23, 2015. K a ren tions of Sale: Potenhereby given that the plaint herein, Defen- sTM). It has been LEGAL NOTICE Anderson, Personal t ial b i dders m u s t sell, at public oral prior to the auction Deschutes C o u nty dant/s. Case N o .: to allow the Desdetermined based Deutsche Bank NaRepresentative. arrive 15 minutes prior auction to the highSheriff's Office will, on 1 4CV0791FC. N O - on written findings c hutes Coun t y tional Trust Company, Norman A. Rickles, to the auction to allow est bidder, for cash Tuesday, December TICE OF SALE UN- that the services are Sheriff's Office to as Trustee for Ameri- Attorney for P e r- the Deschutes County or cashier's check, review bid d e r's 1, 2015 at 10:00 AM, DER WRIT OF EXavailable from only can Home Mortgage sonal RepresentaSheriff's Office to re- the real p roperty in the main lobby of ECUTION - REAL one source. funds. Only U . S. Asset Trust 2006-1, tive, 23 4 P a c ific view bidder's funds. commonly known as c urrency an d / or the Deschutes County PROPERTY. Notice is Plaintiff/s, v. Amanda Building, 520 S.W. Only U.S. currency 61310 Huckleberry cashier's c h e cks Sheriff's Office, 63333 hereby given that the Any entity may proM. Allen; D iscover Yamhill St., P ortand/or cashier' s P lace, Bend, O r W. Highway 20, Bend, made payable to Deschutes C o u nty test the determinachecks made payable egon 97702. CondiBank, G E M o n ey land, Oregon 97204, Oregon, sell, at public Sheriff's Office will, on tion in accordance Deschutes County Bank; and Persons or (503) 208-2951. to Deschutes County tions of Sale: Poo ral auction to t he Thursday, November with Sheriff's Office will OAR Parties unknown Sheriff's Office will be tential bidders must h ighest bidder, f o r 19, 2015 at 10:00 AM, 1 37-047-0710 n o be accepted. Payclaiming any r i ght, LEGAL NOTICE accepted. P ayment arrive 15 m inutes cash o r ca s hier' s in the main lobby of ment must be made later than 5:00 p.m., title, lien, or interest in Estate of J e ffrey must be made in full prior to the auction check, the real prop- the Deschutes County October 14, 2015. in full immediately t he P r operty d e - Gates Jackson. Noimmediately upon the to allow the Deserty commonly known Sheriff's Office, 63333 P rotests must b e Cou n t y upon the close of scribed in the com- tice to I n terested close of the sale. For c hutes as 16184 Snowberry W. Highway 20, Bend, submitted in writing the sale. For more plaint herein, Defen- Persons. Case No. more information on Sheriff's Office to Lane, La Pine, Orreview bid d er's information on this Oregon, sell, at public t o: City o f B e n d dant/s. Case No.: 15PB04065. In the this s al e go to: egon 97739. Condi- oral auction to t he f unds. Only U . S. sale go to: http: //orP urchasing, 7 1 0 1 4CV0909FC. N O - Circuit Court of the http: //oregonsheriffstions of Sale: Poten- h ighest bidder, f o r currency an d / or egonsheriffssales.or NW Wal l S t r eet, TICE OF SALE UN- State of Oregon for sales.org/ t ial b i dders m u s t cash o r cashier's c h e cks ca s hier' s B end, Ore g o n DER WRIT OF EXg/ the County of DesLEGAL NOTICE arrive 15 minutes prior check, the real prop- 97701. Copies of made payable to ECUTION - REAL chutes. In the MatLEGAL NOTICE Federal Nati o nal Deschutes County to the auction to allow commonly known the determination or PROPERTY. Notice is ter of the Estate of Bank o f Am e rica, the Deschutes County erty Mortgage Association Sheriff's Office will as 767 Sage Country additional informahereby given that the Jeffrey Gates JackN .A., Plaintiff/s, v . (" Fannie Mae"), Plain- be accepted. PaySheriff's Office to reRedmond, Or- t ion may be o bDeschutes C o u nty son, deceased. NoPauline K. Roe now view bidder's funds. Court, t iff/s, v . Robe r t ment must be made 97756. Condi- tained by contactSheriff's Office will, on tice is hereby given known as Pauline K. Only U.S. currency egon Charles George, Indi- in full immediately tions of Sale: Poten- ing Heather Herauf Tuesday, December that Deborrah JackMjor; Lester W. Roe; and/or vidually and as Con- upon the close of cashier' s ial b i dders m u s t at 541-385-6677. 1, 2015 at 10:00 AM, s on Brewer h as Amick Equipment Co., checks made payable tarrive structive Trustee of the sale. For more 15 minutes prior in the main lobby of been appointed as the Estate of Sandra information on this Inc.; The Ridge at to Deschutes County to the auction to allow Date of Public Notice: the Deschutes County Eagle Crest Owners Sheriff's Office will be the Deschutes County the personal repreS. George; Unknown sale go to: http: //orOctober 7, 2015 Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 of the Heirs of Sandra S. egonsheriffssales.or Association; US Bank accepted. Payment Sheriff's Office to reW. Highway 20, Bend, sentative National Association must be made in full view bidder's funds. LEGAL NOTICE a bove estate. A l l George; Mo u ntain g/ sell, at public ND; and Persons or immediately upon the Only U.S. currency CP-SRMOF 11 2012-A Oregon, ersons hav i ng View Park Homeownral auction to t he p Parties unknown close of the sale. For and/or Trust, U.S. Bank Trust o claims against the ers Association, Inc.; LEGAL NOTICE cashier' s ighest bidder, f o r claiming any r i ght, more information on checks made payable National Association, h are required Parties in possession IN T H E CI R CUIT cash o r ca s hier' s estate title, lien, or interest in this s al e not in it s I ndividual to present them to D efendant/s. C a s e COURT OF THE g o to: to Deschutes County check, the real propt he p r operty d e - http: //oregonsheriffcapacity but solely as erty commonly known the un d e rsigned No.: 1 5 C V0232FC. STATE OF OREGON, Sheriff's Office will be scribed in the com- ssale.org/ represenN OTICE OF S A L E FOR THE COUNTY accepted. Payment Trustee, Plaintiff/s, v. as 2447 NE Moon- personal U NDER WRIT O F OF DE S CHUTES. plaint herein, DefenThe rese A. M eyer; light Drive, Bend, Or- tative in the care of must be made in full d ant/s. Case N o .: LEGAL NOTICE Kevin P. O' Rourke; egon 97701. Condi- the undersigned atEXECUTION - REAL KATHLEEN CHEVAimmediately upon the 1 4CV0977FC. N O - CIRCUIT COURT OF close of the sale. For State of Oregon; Vol- tions at : K r istin PROPERTY. Notice is LIER, P l aintiff v . of Sale: torney TICE OF SALE UNOREGON FOR DESunteers in Medicine Potential bidders Larson, OSB hereby given that the THOMAS O'KELLEY information on must ¹023639, DER WRIT OF EX- CHUTES COUNTY. more Clinic of t h e C a sHansen & Deschutes C o unty and CLE M ENCE s al e go to: c ades; arrive 15 minutes prior Larson, LLC, ECUTION - REAL W ELLS FARG O this Cany o n 698 Sheriff's Office will, on HAIDER, Defendant. http://oregonsheriffsthe auction to allow NW Y or k PROPERTY. Notice is BANK, Breeze Homeowners to D r i ve, Tuesday, November Case No. N.A., sales.org/ Deschutes County B end, hereby given that the P LAINTIFF, V. JU Association; Capital the Oreg o n 10, 2015 at 10:00 AM, 1 5CV18602. S UMSheriff's Office to rein the main lobby of MONS. To: Thomas Deschutes C o unty DITH J. MANN; BENOne Bank (USA), Na- view bidder's funds. 97703 within four Sheriff's Office will, on JAMIN N . P EETZ; tional As s ociation; Only U.S. currency m onths after t h e the Deschutes County O'Kelley, 11002 SE Tuesday, November RUSS ELLIOTT; AAA United S t ates of of first publicaSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 60th Ave., Milwaukie, cashier' s date Sell an Item 24, 2015 at 10:00 AM, CONTRACTING, America, other Per- and/or tion of this notice, as W. Highway 20, Bend, OR 97222-2720. YOU checks made payable in the main lobby of LLC; AND PERSONS s tated below, o r sons or Parties, in- to Deschutes County Oregon, sell, at public ARE HEREBY R Ethe Deschutes County O R PARTIES U N cluding O c cupants, Sheriff's Office will be such claimsmay be o ral auction to t h e QUIRED to a ppear Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 KNOWN CLAIMING unknown clai ming any barred. All persons h ighest bidder, f or and defend the comaccepted. Payment W. Highway 20, Bend, ANY RIGHT, TITLE, right, title, lien, or in- must be made in full whose rights may cash o r ca s hier' s plaint filed against you Oregon, sell, at public LIEN, OR INTEREST terest in the Property immediately upon the be affected by the check, the real prop- in the above-entitled If it's under$500 o ral auction to t h e IN THE PROPERTY described in the com- close of the sale. For proceedings in this erty commonly known cause within t h irty h ighest bidder, f o r DESCRIBED IN THE as 2631 NE Winter- (30) days from the plaint herein, Defen- more information on estate may obtain you can place it in cash o r ca s hier' s COMPLAINT d ant/s. Case N o . : this s al e additional informareen Drive, Bend, date of service of this go to: H EREIN, DEF E N The Bulletin 12CV0128. NOTICE tion fr o m the check, the real propregon 97701. Con- summons upon you, http: //oregonsherifferty commonly known DANTS. NO. OF SALE U N DER records of the Court, ditions of Sale: P oand in case of your Classifieds for: as 7 9 9 Wi d geon 15CV0268FC. WRIT OF E X ECU- ssale.org/ the personal repretential bidders must failure to do so, for Road, Redmond, Or- P LAINTIFF'S S U MTION - REAL PROPsentative or the atarrive 15 minutes prior want thereof, Plaintiff ERTY. N o tice is torney for the perto the auction to allow will apply to the court egon 97756. Condi- MONS BY PUBLICA- $1 0 - 3 lines, 7 days tions of Sale: Poten- TION. TO:BENJAMIN f16 • 3 lines, 14 days hereby given that the Find It in sonal the Deschutes County f or th e r e l ief r e t ial b i dders m u s t N . P EETZ, A N D Deschutes C o unty The Bulletin Classifieds! representative. Date Sheriff's Office to re- quested in the comarrive 15 minutes prior PERSONS OR PAR- (Private Party ads only) Sheriff's Office will, on of First Publication: view bidder's funds. plaint. NOTICE TO 541-385-5809 to the auction to allow TIES UNK N OWN October 7, 2015. Only U.S. currency DEFENDANT: READ Tuesday, November LEGAL NOTICE Bank of A merica, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Darleen Dillon; U nites States o f America; State of Oregon; Occupants of th e P r emises; and the Real Property located at 4040 W Antler Ave, Redm ond, Ore g o n 97756, Defendant/s. Case No.:

the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier' s checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: http: //oregonsheriffssales.org/

CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, O R I NTEREST I N THE PRO P ERTY DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN. IN THE NAME O F THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby required to appear and defend against the allegations contained in the Complaint filed a gainst you in t h e above entitled proceeding within thirty

FAST!

T HESE PAP E RS C AREFULLY! Y o u m ay be b a ble f o r attorney's fees in this case. Should plaintiff prevail in this case, a judgment for attorney's fees will be entered against you as provided by the agreement or statute to which plaintiff all eges against y ou herein. You must "appear" in this case or the other side will win automatically. To "appear" you must file


THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 7 2015 E7

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

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goods. Purchases must be paid for at t he time o f p u r The following units will be sold at Public chase in cash only. All purchased items Auction October 16, sold are as is where 2015 at 1:00 PM at NWSS form e rly is and must be reknown as Redmond moved at the time of Mini Storage, 1401 N. sale. Sale subject to Hwy. 97, Redmond, cancellation in the O R 9 7 7 56 . Uni t event of settlement ¹270-John K a l ista/ between owner and par t y . Kelly Westbrook, Unit o bligated ¹939-Jeff Campbell/ Dated this 2nd and Kiersten Wilson, Unit 7th day of October ¹466-Suzy Hemm and 2015. Unit ¹ 6 6 3 -Michelle LEGAL NOTICE Glenn. NOTICE OF PUBLIC Publication Dates: HEARING

t ial b i dders m u s t and may reject for Deed was recorded arrive 15 minutes prior good cause all bids as follows: Date Reto the auction to allow upon a finding of the corded: December 5, the Deschutes County agency that it is in 2013. Recording No. 2013-049566. Official RIED MAN, AS TO Sheriff's Office to re- the public interest to view bidder's funds. do so. The College R ecords o f De s - AN UNDIVIDED 1/2 Only U.S. currency reserves the right to chutes County, OrINTEREST as and/or cashier' s waive any and all egon. 4.DEFAULT. Grantor to WELLS checks made payable minor info rmalities The Grantor or any F ARGO FIN A Nto Deschutes County or clerical errors as other person o bli- CIAL N A T IONAL Sheriff's Office will be described in OAR gated on the Trust BANK, C/0 S P Eaccepted. P ayment 1 37-049-0350. N o Deed and Promissory C IALIZED SER must be made in full bidder may w ithNote secured thereby VICES as Trustee, immediately upon the draw his bid after is in default and the in favor of WELLS close of the sale. For t he hour se t f o r Beneficiary seeks to FARGO BANK, N.A. more information on opening until after a foreclose the T rust as Beneficiary, rethis s al e g o to: lapse of thirty (30) Deed for failure to corded December http://oregonsheriffsdays from the bid pay: M o nthly pay- 24, 2007 as Instrusales.org/ opening. This ments in the amount ment No. project is subject to of $623.84 each, due 2007-65518 of offiSeptember 30 and LEGAL NOTICE p revailing wa g e t he f irst o f ea c h cial records in the October 7, 201 5 Notice i s h e r eby REGULAR MONTHLY laws and is subject month, for the months Office of th e R eBOARD MEETING given that a public to Oregon Revised of September 2014 c order o f Des ARNOLD IRRIGATION hearing before the LEGAL NOTICE Statutes through June 2015; chutes, (ORS) Or e gon, DISTRICT City Nationstar Mortgage, Redmond 279C.800-870 plus late charges and covering the followCouncil has been L LC, P laintiff/s, v . with payadvances; plus any ing described real The Board of Direc- dealing Julie M. Gagnon; scheduled for Tuesment of prevailing unpaid real property property situated in tors of Arnold Irriga- wages. Kevin W. G a gnon; day, October 13, No bid will taxes or liens, plus the abo v e-mention District will hold and Persons or Par- 2015, at 6:30 p.m. in be received or coninterest. 5.AMOUNT tioned county and their regular monthly Redm o n d ties unknown claim- t he sidered by the ColDUE. T h e a mount state, to wit: LOT 58 b oard meeting o n ing any right, title, lien, Council Chambers, lege unless the bid due on the Note which OF D E SCHUTES Tuesday, October 13, 777 SW Deschutes o r interest i n t h e contains a s t ate- i s secured by t h e RIVER CROSSING, 2015 at 3:00 pm. The property described in Avenue. ment by the bidder Trust Deed referred to PHASE I, CITY OF meeting will be held at that the complaint herein, ORS 279C.838 herein is: P r incipal BEND, DESthe District offices lo- or 279C.840 D efendant/s. C a s e The purpose of the will be balance in the amount CHUTES COUNTY, cated at 19604 Buck complied with. No.: 13CV0568. NO- hearing is to conThis of $78,441.19; plus O REGON. C o m Canyon Rd., Bend, project is subject to sider the sale of a TICE OF SALE UNinterest at the rate of monly known as: City-owned parcel OR. DER WRIT OF EXORS 279 C . 370 6.000% per annum 61020 H O NKERS ECUTION - REAL located at 654 SW LEGAL NOTICE dealing with disclofrom August 1, 2014; LANE, BEND, OR 25th Street, RedPROPERTY. Notice is sure of first-tier subplus late charges of 97702 SECTION 001113 APN: hereby given that the mond, Oregon, leADVERTISEMENT contractors, $ 440.11; plus a d - 206901/1 81218ACO Deschutes C o u nty gally described as R 2 79A 120 giv i n g vances and foreclo- 0106 Both the BenFOR BIDS Sheriff's Office will, on 2-001 preference to resisure attorney fees and e ficiary an d t h e Tuesday, November 151317AC02400. d ent bidde r s costs. 6.SALE OF Trustee Sealed bids for conhave 24, 2015 at 10:00 AM, struction o f the 2 79A 125 giv i n g PROPERTY. The elected to sell the in the main lobby of Interested persons p reference to r eTrustee hereby states said real property to C entral Ore g on the Deschutes County are encouraged to Community College cycled materials and that the property will satisfy the obligaSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 appear or submit a be sold to satisfy the tions secured by Mazama R o o ms 279A.110 discrimiW. Highway 20, Bend, written report on or 101/1 02 Remodel nation in s ubconobligations secured by said Trust Deed and Oregon, sell, at public before October 13, tracting. t he Trust Deed. A notice has been rewill be received by 2015 at 4:00 PM to o ral auction to t h e Joe Viola, Director Central Oregon Trustee's Notice of corded pursuant to the City Recorder's h ighest bidder, f o r Community College Default and Election Section 86.735(3) of of Campus Sercash o r ca s hier' s office, City of Redvices, at the Coats Matthew J. McCoy, to Sell Under Terms Oregon R e v ised check, the real prop- mond, 716 SW Evof Trust Deed has Statutes. The deCampus C e n ter, Vice President for ergreen A v enue, erty commonly known R oom 116, 2 6 00 Administration been recorded in the fault for which the as 19953 Antler Point Redmond, Oregon PUBLICATION AND Official Records of NW College Way, foreclosure is made Any o n e Drive, Bend, Oregon 9 7756. Bend, OR 9 7 7 01 DATES: Deschutes C o unty, is the Grantor's fail97702. Conditions of needing accommoBend Bulletin, Oregon. 7. TIME OF until 2:00pm local ure to pay: THE INSale: Potential bid- dation to participate time, October 27, Bend, OR SALE. Date: DecemS TALLMENT O F ders must arrive 15 in the meeting must Daily Journal of ber 3, 2015. Time: 2015 and then pubP RINCIPAL A N D minutes prior to the notify the ADA Colicly opened a nd Commerce, 11:00 a.m. Place:DeINTEREST WHICH auction to allow the ordinator at least 48 Portland, OR s chutes Coun t y BECAME DUE ON read aloud. Bids rehours in advance of Deschutes C o u nty ceived after t h us First Advertisement Courthouse, 1164 NW December 20, 2009 Sheriff's Office to re- t he m e eting a t OCTOBER 7, 2015 Bond Street, Bend, AND ALL SUBSEtime will not be acview bidder's funds. 541-504-3036. cepted. Mandatory Site Walk Oregon.8.RIGHT TO QUENT INSTALLOnly U.S. currency 1:00pm, REINSTATE. Any M ENTS, A L O N G Briefly, the Work is and/or cashier' s Publish: Bend Bulled escribed as f o l - OCTOBER 14, 2015 person named in ORS WITH LATE checks made payable tin, Wednesday, 86.778 has the right, CHARGES, PLUS lows: LEGAL NOTICE to Deschutes County October 7, 2015 at any time that is not FORECLOSURE Select demolition of T he Bank of N e w Sheriff's Office will be than five days C OSTS AND L E two [2] classrooms LEGAL NOTICE York Mellon fka The later accepted. P ayment totaling ap p roxibefore the T r ustee GAL FEES, IN ADPennyMac Holdings, Bank of New York, as must be made in full LLC, its successors the sale, to DITION TO ALL OF mately 1,113 sf and Trustee for the Certifi- conducts immediately upon the have this foreclosure THE TERMS AND conversion to one interest and/or c ateholdere of t h e close of the sale. For in and t he CONDITIONS AS [1] large f itness CWABS, Inc., dismissed more information on assigns, Plaintiff/s, Trust Deed reinstated PER THE DEED OF M ar k S t anley room. Asset-Backed Certifithis s al e go to: v. by payment t he A MA N D ATORY TRUST, PROMISTroutman aka Mark cates, Series 2006-7, Beneficiary of to http: //oregonsheriffthe en- SORY NOTE AND pre-bid conference S. Troutman; NunPlaintiff/s, v. Melody ssale.org/ tire amount then due, and project site-visit LL RELA T E D zia Troutman; Kent Douglass; S t ephen other than such por- A w ill b e h e l d o n L OAN DOCU Cramer; Bob Douglass; T o l lgate of the principal as MENTS. 1:00pm, WednesM o nthly LEGAL NOTICE W ellen; Kath y Water Company; Toll- tion not then be due Payment $331.64 d ay October 1 4, Nationstar Mortgage, Wellen; Occupants gate Property Own- would had no default oc- Monthly 2016, at the project Late LLC, its successors of the premises; and ers Association; and location: Mazama curred, by curing any Charge $16.58 By and/or assigns, Plain- the Real Property Persons or P a rties other default that is Hall, lower l e vel this reason of said tiff/s, v. Glade P. Fri- located a t 102 unknown clai ming any apable o f be i n g default the Benefiton, Jr.; Susan Friton; Northwest J e ffer- center hall, 2600 right, title, lien, or in- c cured by tendering the NW College Way, has declared National City Bank; son Place, Bend, terest in t h e c o m- performance required ciary all obligations seBend, OR 9 7 701. and all other Persons Oregon 97701, Deplaint herein, Defenthe obligation or cured by said Trust The purpose will be or Parties unknown fendant/s. Case No.: d ant/s. Case N o . : under Trust Deed and by t o a n swer a n y Deed immediately claiming any r i ght, 14CV0775FC. NO1 4CV0819FC. N O paying all costs and due and payable, questions b idders title, lien, or interest in T ICE O F SA L E TICE OF SALE UNmay have, review actually in- said sums being the the Real P r operty UNDER WRIT OF DER WRIT OF EX- expenses in enforcing the following, to-wit: The the scope of work, commonly known as EXECUTION ECUTION - REAL curred tour the site, and to obligation and Trust sum of $50,000.00 16120 Burgess Road, REAL PROPERTY. PROPERTY. Notice is Deed, together with together with interLa P i ne , O r egon Notice is h e reby consider any sughereby given that the the t rustee's and est thereon at the gestions B i d ders Deschutes C o unty 97739, Defendant/s. given that the Dess fees not rate of 4 . 49000% Case No.: c hutes Cou n t y wish to make. Any Sheriff's Office will, on attorney' the amount per annum from Nostatements made by 1 3CV1190FC. N O - Sheriff's Office will, Thursday, November exceeding provided i n ORS v ember 20, 2 0 09 the College's repreTICE OF SALE UN- on Tuesday, De5, 2015 at 10:00 AM, s entatives at t h e 86.778. NOTICE RE- until paid; plus all DER WRIT OF EX- cember 8, 2015 at in the main lobby of GARDING P O TENvisit will not be conlate ECUTION - REAL 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e the Deschutes County TIAL HAZARDS: (This accrued sidered bin d ing Sheriff t h ereon; PROPERTY. Notice is main lobby of the 's O ff ice,63333 notice is required for charges upon the College and al l T r ustee's hereby given that the Deschutes County W. Highway 20, Bend, notices of sale sent on f o r eclosure Deschutes C o u nty S heriff's Offi c e, unless confirmed by Oregon, sell, at public or after January 1, fees, written addendum. costs and any sums Sheriff's Office will, on 63333 W. Highway o ral auction to t h e 2015.) Without limit- a dvanced by t h e The conference is Tuesday, November 20, Bend, Oregon, highest bidder, f or ing the trustee's dis- Beneficiary pursuheld for the benefit 17, 2015 at 10:00 AM, sell, at public oral cash o r ca s hier' s of the bidders. claimer of representa- ant to the terms of in the main lobby of auction to the highcheck, the real propor w arranties, said Trust D eed. For the project, lump the Deschutes County est bidder, for cash erty commonly known tions Oregon law requires Wherefore, notice is sum bid will be reSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 or cashier's check, as 69347 Silver Spur, trustee to state in hereby given that, W. Highway 20, Bend, the real p roperty c eived o n f o r ms S isters, Oreg o n the this notice that some the un d ersigned provided in t hese Oregon, sell, at public commonly known as 97759. Conditions of residential p r operty Trustee w i l l specifications. on o ral auction to t he 102 NW Jefferson Sale: P o tential bidBidding documents sold at a trustee's sale January 25, 2016 at h ighest bidder, f o r P lace, Bend, O r ders must arrive 15 may have been used the hour of 1 1:00 f or the w ork a r e cash o r ca s hier' s egon 97701. Condiminutes prior to the those prepared by in manufacturing A M, Standard o f check, the real prop- tions of Sale: Poauction to allow the BLRB A r c hitects, Deschutes C o u nty methamphetamines, Time, a s es t a berty commonly known tential bidders must 404 SW Columbia the chemical compo- lished by S ection as 16120 B urgess arrive 15 m inutes Sheriff's Office to re- nents of which are Street, Suite 120, 187.110, O r e gon Road, La Pine, Or- prior to the auction view bidder's funds. B end, Ore g o n Only U.S. currency known to b e t o xic. Revised Statues, at egon 97739. Condi- to allow the Despurchas- the Bond Street entions of Sale: Poten- c hutes Cou n t y 97702. Prime Bidand/or cashier' s Prospective ers o f re s i dential trance steps to the der/General Cont ial b i dders m u s t S heriff's Office to checks made payable should be Deschutes County arrive 15 minutes prior review bid d er's tractors may purto Deschutes County property chase sets for the aware of this poten- Courthouse, 1164 to the auction to allow funds. Only U . S. Sheriff's Office will be tial danger before deNW Bond St, Bend, the Deschutes County currency an d / or cost of reproduction accepted. P ayment ciding to place a bid OR 97701 County of Sheriff's Office to re- cashier's c h e cks and delivery from must be made in full for this property at the Deschutes, C entral Ore g o n sell at view bidder's funds. made payable to immediately upon the Builders Exchange trustee's sale. You public auction to the Only U.S. currency Deschutes County close of the sale. For (COBE), located at reach the Or- highest bidder for and/or cashier' s Sheriff's Office will more information on may 1902 NE 4th Street egon S tate B a r 's cash the interest in checks made payable be accepted. Paythis s al e g o to: Lawyer Referral Ser- the said described Bend, OR 97701. to Deschutes County ment must be made http: //oregonsheriffsBidding Documents vice at 503-684-3763 real property which Sheriff's Office will be in full immediately sales.org/ or toll-free in Oregon the Grantor had or will also be availaccepted. Payment upon the close of at 800-452-7636 or able for examinahad power to conmust be made in full the sale. For more you may visit its web- vey at the time of tion during the bidimmediately upon the information on this ding period at the site at: the execution by close of the sale. For sale go to: http: //orwww.osbar.org. Le- him of the said Trust following more information on egonsheriffssales.or Builders Exchanges LEGAL NOTICE galassistance may be Deed, together with this s al e go to: g/ and Plan Centers: TRUSTEE'S NOTICE available if you have a any interest which http: //oregonsheriffLEGAL NOTICE D aily Journal o f OF SA L E . The low income and meet the Grantor or his ssale.org/ Provident F u n ding C ommerce P l a n T rustee under t h e federal poverty guide- successors in interterms of th e T rust lines. For more in- est acquired after A ssociates, L.P . , Center, 921 S.W. LEGAL NOTICE Plaintiff/s, v . E l i za- W ashington St. , Deed desc r ibed formation and a dit he execution o f NOTICE IS beth R Westlake; The Suite 210, Portland, herein, at the direc- rectory of legal aid said Trust Deed, to H EREBY G I V E N E state o f to satisfy the foregoRob e rt OR 97205 tion of the Beneficiary, programs, g o t hat t h e und e rWestlake, Deceased; Central Ore g on ing obli g ations hereby elects to sell http: //www.oregonsigned intends to Any thereby secured and Unknown Heirs and Builders A s sociat he p r operty d e - lawhelp.org. sell the p e rsonal Devisees of Robert tion, 1051 NE 4th scribed in the Trust questions regarding the costs and exproperty described Westlake, Deceased; St., B e n d , OR Deed to satisfy the this matter should be penses of sale, inbelow to enforce a Main Street Acquisi- 97701 obligations secured directed to Lisa Sum- cluding a r easonlien imposed on said tion Corp.; and Per- No bid will considthereby. Pursuant to mers, Paralegal, (541) able charge by the property under the sons or Parties un- ered unless f ully ORS 86.771, the fol- 686-0344 (TS Trustee. Notice is Oregon Self-Storknown claiming any completed in manlowing information is ¹40453.25). DATED: further given t hat age Facilities Act. right, title, lien, or in- ner provided in the provided: 1. PARTIES: July 2, 20'l5. Nancy any person named The u n d ersigned terest in the property Bid form provided in Grantor:LORI R. K. Cary, Successor in Section 86.753 of will sell a t p u blic described in the com- these specifications HENRY AND BRUCE Trustee, He r shner Oregon R e v ised auction on the 9th plaint herein, Defen- and a ccompanied D. HENRY. Trustee: Hunter, LLP, P.O. Box S tatutes has t h e da o f Oc t ober DESCHUTES 1475, Eugene, OR right to have t he dant/s. Case No .: by certified check or 2015 at 10:00am 1 4CV0820FC. N O - bid bond executed C OUNTY TITL E . 97440. f oreclosure pro on th e p r emises TICE OF SALE UN- in favor of Owner in Successor T rustee: ceeding dismissed where said property DER WRIT OF EXa mount not l e s s N ANCY K . C A R Y. and the Trust Deed has been stored and ECUTION - REAL than ten (10) perRreinstated by payB ene f i c i a r y: O which are located at PROPERTY. Notice is cent of total amount EGON HOU S ING ment to the BenefiNORTH E M PIRE hereby given that the of bid. Said certified AND C O M M U NITY LEGAL NOTICE ciary of the entire S TORAGE C E N Deschutes C o u nty check or Bid Bond SERVICES DE- TS No. a mount then d u e T ER 6 3 04 8 N E Sheriff's Office will, on shall be forfeited as PARTMENT, STATE OR01000023-15 (other than s uch Lower Meadow Dr. Tuesday, November fixed and liquidated OF O R E G ON, As- APN portion of said prinB end Ore o n s h o uld signee of FURTHER 2 206901/1 81218ACO cipal as would not 17, 2015 at 10:00 AM, damages C ount o f De s in the main lobby of bidder neglect or DEVELOPMENT, 0106 TO No then be due had no the Deschutes County refuse to enter into LLC. 2.DESCRIP8571775 c hutes State o f default o ccurred), Orecron the followSheriff's Office, 63333 Contract and proT ION O F PR O P - T RUSTEE'S N O t ogether with t h e ing: Sonna Linder W. Highway 20, Bend, vide suitable bond E RTY: T he re a l T ICE O F SA L E costs, Trustee's or ¹257; Rodney TayOregon, sell, at public for faithful perforproperty is described Reference is made attorney's fees and lor ¹449; 2 A d d ito that certain Trust curing any o t her o ral auction to t he mance of Work in as follows: Lot 33, tional Units; 1 Veh ighest bidder, f o r event Contract is Block 2 6, TALL D eed made b y , default complained hicle. Items to be cash o r ca s hier' s awarded to him. PINES FIFTH ADDI- ROBERT P. of in the Notice of auction are but not check, the real prop- The College may TION, recorded Sep- HELFER, A M A RDefault by tenderlimited to the f olRIED MAN, AS TO ing t h e pe r forerty commonly known reject any bid not in tember 22, 1977, in lowing: Tools, furas 2446 NW Canyon compliance with all Cabinet B, Page 279, AN UNDIVIDED 1/2 mance required unniture, electronics, Drive, Redmond, Or- prescribed p u blic Deschutes C o unty, I NTEREST A N D der the obligation or toys, sporting, comegon 97756. Condi- contract procedures Oregon. 3. REJ OHN A . LA N D Trust Deed, at any tions of Sale: PotenCORDING. The Trust F ORCE, A M A R time prior to f i ve puters & household and r equirements PUBLIC NOTICE

Public Auction

days before the date prior to the auction last set for sale. In to allow the Desconstruing this noc hutes Cou n t y tice, the masculine Sheriff's Office to gender includes the review bid d er's f eminine and t h e f unds. Only U . S. neuter, the singular currency an d / or includes plural, the cashier's c h e cks word "Grantor" inmade payable to cludes any succesDeschutes County sor in interest to the Sheriff's Office will Grantor as well as be accepted. Payany other persons ment must be made owing an obligation, in full immediately the performance of upon the close of which is secured by the sale. For more said Trust Deed, the information on this words "Trustee" and sale go to: http: //or"Beneficiary" inegonsheriffssales.or cludes their respecg/ tive successors in interest if any BULLETINCU(SSIFIEDS Dated: 09-18-2015 Search the area's most First American Title comprehensive listing of I nsurance C o m - classified advertising... pany By: Laurie P. real estate to automotive, Estrada Authorized merchandise to sporting S ignatory Firs t goods. Bulletin Classifieds American Title Inappear every day in the surance Company print or on line. c/o Special Default Call 541-385-5809 Services, Inc. 17100 www.bendbulletin.corn Gillette Ave Irvine, CA 92614 ( 8 44) The Bulletin 706-4182 SALE INServing Cenfral Dragonsince HtB FORMATION CAN BE OBTAINED ON LEGAL NOTICE LINE AT w w w.inWells Fargo Bank, sourcelogic.corn N.A., its successors FOR AUTOMATED in interest and/or SALES INFORMAassigns, Plaintiff/s, T ION PLEA S E v. Timothy J. UnCALL: In S o urce derwood aka TimoLogic at thy Jay Underwood; 702-659-7766, OrTillicum Village Hoder no. meowners AssociaOR15-000100-1, tion; an d O c c udates: pub pants of the 10/07/2015, premises, D efen10/1 4/2015, dant/s. Case No.: 10/21/2015, 14CV0913FC. NO10/28/2015 T ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF LEGAL NOTICE EXECUTION U.S. Bank National REAL PROPERTY. Association, as Notice i s h e r eby Trustee, successor given that the Desin in t e rest to c hutes Coun t y W achovia Ba n k , Sheriff's Office will, N.A., as Trustee for on Tuesday, NoPark Place Securivember 10, 2015 at Inc., ties, 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e Asset-Backed main lobby of the Pass-Through CerDeschutes County t ificates, Ser i e s Sheriff's Off i c e, 2004-WWF1, its 63333 W. Highway successors in inter20, Bend, Oregon, est and/or assigns, sell, at public oral Plaintiff/s, v. David auction to the highL. Johnson; Kathy L. est bidder for cash Johnson; Cascade or cashier's check, Lane, LLC; Capital the real p roperty One Bank (USA), commonly known as N.A.; Occupants of 20393 Ahha Lane, the Premises; and B end, Ore g o n the Real Property C onditions located at 1 6 021 97702. of Sale: P otential Cascade Lane, La bidders must arrive P ine, Oreg o n 15 minutes prior to 97739, Defendant/s. the auction to allow Case No.: the Desc h utes 14CV0368FC. NOCounty Sheriff's OfT ICE O F SAL E f ice to rev i e w UNDER WRIT OF bidder's funds. Only EXECUTION U.S. currency REAL PROPERTY. ca s h ier' s Notice i s h e r eby and/or checks made paygiven that the Desable to Deschutes c hutes Coun t y County Sheriff's OfSheriff's Office will, f ice will b e ac on Thursday, Nocepted. P a yment vember 19, 2015 at must be made in full 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e immediately upon main lobby of the t he close o f t h e Deschutes County sale. For more inS heriff's Of fi c e , f ormation on t h i s 63333 W. Highway sale go to: http: //or20, Bend, Oregon, egonsheriffssales.or sell, at public oral g/ auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, Say "goodbuy" the real p roperty to that unused commonly known as 16021 Cas c ade item by placing it in Lane, La Pine, Oregon 97739. Condi- The Bulletin Classifieds tions of Sale: Potential bidders must 541-385-5809 arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the DesLEGAL NOTICE c hutes Coun t y Wells Fargo Bank, Sheriff's Office to N.A., its successors review bi d d er's in interest and/or funds. Only U . S. assigns, Plaintiff/s, c urrency an d / or v. James ScottMccashier's c h ecks Kee; The Sunriver made payable to Owners Association; Deschutes County O ccupants of t h e Sheriff's Office will Premises; and the be accepted. PayReal Property loment must be made c ated a t 574 8 4 in full immediately Eagle Cap L ane, upon the close of Sunriver, O r egon the sale. For more 97707, Defendant/s. information on this Case No.: sale go to: http: //or14CV0551FC. NOegonsheriffssales.or T ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION LEGAL NOTICE REAL PROPERTY. Wells Fargo Bank, Notice is h e reby NA, its successors given that the Desin interest and/or c hutes Cou n t y assigns, Plaintiff/s, Sheriff's Office will, v. Albert Vanderhoon Thursday, Noeven; Ros a nna vember 5, 2015 at Vanderhoeven; 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e Bank of A merica, main lobby of the N.A., successor by Deschutes County m erger t o BA C S heriff's Offi c e, Home Loans Ser63333 W. Highway vicing, L P fka 20, Bend, Oregon, Countrywide Home sell, at public oral Loans S e rvicing, auction to the highLP; River Canyon est bidder, for cash Estates or cashier's check, Homeowners' Assothe real p roperty c iation, Inc.; a n d commonly known as O ccupants of t h e 57484 Eagle Cap premises, D e fenLane, Sunriver, Ordant/s. Case No.: egon 97707. Condi13CV0754. NOtions of Sale: PoT ICE O F SAL E tential bidders must UNDER WRIT OF arrive 15 m inutes EXECUTION prior to the auction REAL PROPERTY. to allow the DesNotice i s h e r eby c hutes Cou n t y given that the DesSheriff's Office to c hutes Coun t y review bid d er's Sheriff's Office will, f unds. Only U . S. on Tuesday, Nocurrency an d / or vember 10, 2015 at cashier's c h e cks 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e made payable to main lobby of the Deschutes County Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will S heriff's Of fi c e , be accepted. Pay63333 W. Highway ment must be made 20, Bend, Oregon, in full immediately sell, at public oral upon the close of auction to the highthe sale. For more est bidder, for cash information on this or cashier's check, sale go to: http: //orthe real p roperty egonsheriffssales.or commonly known as g/ 19795 Dry Canyon Avenue, Bend, OrFind exactly what egon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Poyou are looking for in the tential bidders must CLASSIFIEDS arrive 15 minutes

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LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N A, P l aintiff/s, v . Hope Galan a /k/a Hope A. Galan; and O ccupants o f th e premises, D efendant/s. C a se No.: 12CV0129. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, December 3, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff 's Office,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier' s check, the real property commonly known as 815 NW 9th Street, Redmond, O r egon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier' s checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: http: //oregonsheriffssale.org/

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don


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