Bulletin Daily Paper 10-11-15

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After an FBIinvestigation, video of Kitzhaber and Hayes'visit to Knott Landfill is released Vegas duskers — The city thinks its time for the men in diapers hustling for tips to back off.A7

medicine reignite a debateover Chinese treatments.A3 Svetlana Alexievich is worth a read.

and his fiancee, Cylvia Hayes,

The Bulletin

went to Knott Landfill outside

SALEM — The public sighting of former Gov. John

that led to an FBI inquiry.

Bend and made a drop-off

Q» See the full video atbendbnlletin.cern/kitzbaberviden

F5

By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin

SeeLandfill /A4

Two months shy of a deadline for the Deschutes County Commission to sign off on funding for an upgrade to the radio system used by law enforcement, fire and other agencies for

new r>nc> a w ere ' earnin isur en '

Insidethe fabulous world of Donald Trump, wheremoneyis no problem. bendbnlletin.cern/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Too many electric cars, too

up ra e: pay or it

ernor in February, Kitzhaber

WARM SPRINGS K-8ACADEMY

And a Wed exclusive-

or ra 'o

The visit raised red flags Bend not long after he left office with landfill employees, who under federal investigation ap- recognized the couple and pears to have been just a trip to alerted authorities. The counthe dump, after all. ty at the time withheld footage Within days of resigning from the landfill, citing the from office weeks into his FBI inquiry, before releasing it fourth term as Oregon's gov- to The Bulletin on Friday. Kitzhaber at Knott Landfill in

Medal prlxeS — Winners in

Plus: Literature — why

By Taylor W.Anderson

By Abby SpegmaneThe Bulletin

WARM SPRINGS — Ken Parshall's office at Warm Springs K-8 Academy is not the principal's office by design. It is in the middle of the building, unmarked, with mostly bare walls. He's still working on getting a conference table; for now there are four smaller tables pushed together.

emergency communications, the De-

schutes County 911 Service District and some of its users are still at odds over how to pay for it.

The service district wants to secure permanent funding with a levy, which must have the commission's OK by

Dec. 9 before it can be put to voters in the spring. But officials from the city of Bend and a rural fire protection dis-

trict want to explore other funding options. A board made up of users of the proposed countywide radio system met last week to discuss what other funding might look like. The executive director of the 911

Service District, Steve Reinke, has proposed a permanent levy, which would pay for maintenance and operation of the radio system and other functions of the service district. Under this plan, the estimated $6.4 mil-

few plugs

lion cost of capital expenses for the radio system upgrade would be paid out of the district's reserve fund.

SeeRadio/A5 By Matt Richtel New Yorh Times News Service

SAN FRANCISCO — Of

all the states, California

A patchworkof preparation for campusattacks

has set the most ambitious

targets for cutting emissions in coming decades, and an important pillar

of its plan to reach those goals is encouraging the spread of electric vehicles. But the push to make the

state greener is creating an unintended side effect:

It is making some people meaner.

By Lisa Leffand RyanJ.Foley The Associated Press

from the challenges drivers face finding recharging

Eight years after the Virginia Tech massacre led to tighter security at colleges across the U.S., some

spots for their battery-pow-

schools make "active shooter" train-

ered cars. Unlike gas stations, charging stations are not yet in great supply, and that has led to sharp-el-

ing mandatory for incoming students, while others offer little more

The bad moods stem

than brief online guidance on what to

do if there's a gunman on the loose.

bowed competition. Electric-vehicle owners are

An

unplugging one another' s

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

cars, trading insults, and

Ken Parshall, Warm Springs K-8 Academy's new principal, sits in during a kindergarten class and watches as the stu-

creating black markets and side deals to trade spots in corporate parking lots.

dents practice pronunciation last week.

SeeElectric /A4

But Parshall wanted to be closer to students. He plans to spend two to three hours each

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 68, Low 38

Milestones C2 Obituaries B4-5 Opinion Ff-6 Puzzles C6 Sports Df-6 'IV/Movies C7

An Independent Newspaper

vol. 113, No. 284, 46 pages, 7sections

opened last year in a shiny new 10-year plan, have a two-year plan, building, replacing the old Warm have a three-year plan, have a one- Springs Elementary School and addyear plan, have a six-month plan," ing middle school grades. The $21.4 Parshall, who became principal million school was funded evenly by "Make it urgent, because in the lives of our children, their learning is urgent. They' re only here this year, they only have third grade once." Parshall arrives at a crucial time for the school. Warm Springs K-8

the school district and the Confeder-

ated Tribes of Warm Springs. Even before it opened, the school

10 percent of students met the new

kansas State University, training on

standards in reading and math, the

how to respond to an armed intruder

lowest rate of any school in the Jefferson County School District and

has become as muchapart of fall orientation as lessons on alcohol abuse.

one of the lowest in the state.

Students hear presentations covering

students to the level they need to be,"

their options, such as running, hiding or fighting back. See Preparation /A5

"It's really a good year to focus on the instructional aspects to get our

was awarded a three-year, $1.64 mil- said Superintendent Rick Molitor, lion federal grant targeting low-in- calling Parshall well suited for the come, low-achieving schools. On job. state tests this spring, fewer than SeePrincipal/A4

Inside • Shooting opens old wounds for 2006 victim in Roseburg,B3

Inside forsenator and forpresident. scene alongside front-runner HilBut it is also well-suited to • How the 2 candiVermont Sen. Bernie Sanders his rallies across the country. lary Clinton. Sanders, say according to his dates difhas been one of the biggest surOn Tuesday, with the lead-off of For the former secretary of aides and those who have seen fer on key prises of the early presidential six scheduled Democratic debates, state, the debate stage is a familiar him square off against opponents issues, campaign season, as he steadily voters will have their first chance setting and one where she has per- in Vermont. A6 rises in the Democratic primary to take the measure of the pas- formed well in her previous races SeeDebate /A6 By Karen Tumulty

The Washington Post

Q I/I/e userecyc/ed newsprint

: 'IIIIIIIIIII I 8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0

person killed and three wounded at

Sanders facesnational debate debut with seasonedfoe

The Bulletin

o

another shooting rampage, the killing of nine people at Umpqua Community College on Oct. 1. On Friday, there was more bloodshed, with one

Colorado School of Mines and Ar"What I' ve learned is don't have a

in July, said in a recent interview.

INDEX

sities in more than 40 states after yet

an Arizona university. At some institutions, such as the

day in the classroom, watching teachers teach.

Business Ef-6 Calendar B2 Classified Gf-6 Com. Life Cf-8 CrosswordC6,G2 Local/State Bf-6

A s sociated P r ess r e v iew

looked at public colleges and univer-

7

polls and draws adoring throngs numbering tens of thousands to

sionate newcomer to the national


A2

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EnCrypted data —The Obamaadministration has backed down in its dispute with Silicon Valley over the encryption of data on iPhones and other digital devices, concluding that it is not possible to give law enforcement and intelligence agencies access to that information without creating an opening that China, Russia, cybercriminals and terrorists could also exploit. The administration essentially determined that millions of Americans would be vulnerable to hacking if technology firms and smartphone manufacturers were required to provide the government with "back doors," or access to their source code andencryption keys. Thedecision angered the FBI and other law enforcement agencies.

New York Times News Service

election, but nothing to this extent," said Sedat K artal, an Ankara resident reached

toglu canceled campaign events and called an emer-

Bergdahl COurt martial —AnArmyofficer is recommending

gency meetingin Ankara. Erdogan, in a short state-

that Sgt. BoweBergdahl face alower-level court martial and be spared the possibility of jail time for leaving his post in Afghanistan, his lawyer said Saturday. Bergdahl wascaptured by the Taliban after leaving his post on June30, 2009, and held until last year, whenhe was exchangedfor five Taliban commanders. His commanding officers in Afghanistan say a 45-day search for Bergdahl put soldiers in danger. Military prosecutors charged Bergdahl in March with desertion and misbehavior before the enemy, charge a that could carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

by phone, who rushed to the tating explosions struck Sat- scene after hearing the first ment posted to the presidenurday morning in the heart of explosion from a d i s tance. cy's website, said, "I strongly "There's so much hate and Ankara, the Turkish capital, condemn this heinous attack killing at least 95 people who polarization, nothing is sur- on our unity and our country's peace." had gathered for a peace rally prising anymore." and heightening tensions just Turkey is facing a number Images on social media three weeks before snap par- of destabilizing forces: vi- showed bodies covered i n liamentary elections. olence, political i n stability, the yellow, purple and green The blasts, which officials economic uncertainty and banners of the Kurdish politcalled the deadliest terrorist a growing flow of refugees ical party, the Peoples' Demoattack in modern Turkey's his- from the civil war in Syria. cratic Party, or HDP. A video tory, occurred near Ankara's Altogether, the currents buf- that was shared on social memain train station just as Kurds feting Turkey have evoked dia and by the Turkish press and leftists planned to march the memories of the 1990s, showed a group of young to protest the recent resump- when the country was also demonstrators holding hands tion of armed conflict between gripped by violence and polit- and chanting just before the the Turkish state and Kurdish ical uncertainty. first blast is seen in the backmilitants. It is a conflict that After Saturday's attack, ground. The explosion sent has been waged for nearly emergency medical work- the crowd r u nning t oward ISTANBUL — Two devas-

three decades, but in recent times the two sides had seemed

ers tended to the dead and

the nearby train station.

wounded, calls went out in

Turkish authorities were investigating claims t h at the attacks were the work of suicide bombers. No group claimed responsibility f or

to be on the path to peace. The Ankara for blood donations prime minister's office said late and political leaders, includSaturday that 246 were wound- ing President Recep Tayyed in addition to those who had ip Erdogan, canceled their been killed. scheduled events for the day "We were expecting an and rushed to the capital. attack in Ankara before the

Prime Minister Ahmet Davu-

that attack, but the Turkish authorities blamed the Islamic State.

ANOTHER MILLION MAN MARCH

PreSCriptiOn aduoe —Oneyear after the DrugEnforcement Administration announced that pharmacies nationwide could accept and destroy customers' unwanted prescription drugs, the response has beeninsignificant, dismaying optimists and leaving communities searching for other strategies. Only about 1 percent of U.S. pharmacies haveset up disposal programs, with none of those belonging to the two largest chains, CVSand Walgreens, which have balked at the cost and security risks. Participation is voluntary and leaves pharmacies with the costs of collecting, safeguarding and incinerating the pills. Furthermore, at least eight states have laws that forbid pharmacies from taking back controlled substances.

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Palestinian, Israeli violence —Palestinians carried outtwo stabbing attacks in Jerusalem onSaturday before being shot dead by police, while another two Palestinians were killed during a violent demonstration near the Gazaborder fence, as aweeklong bout of violence showed nosigns of slowing. Jerusalem hasseen awave of stabbing attacks linked to tensions over asensitive holy site in the Old City that is sacred to Jewsand Muslims. In recent days the attacks by Palestinian assailants have spread to the rest of Israel, while violent protests have erupted in theWest Bank and along the Gaza border, where sevenPalestinians were killed Friday. Theviolence has unnerved a jittery Israel, and prompted the U.S. onSaturday to issue a fresh call for restraint by all sides.

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of Representatives want to alter the fundamental power structure of the House by reducing the power of the speaker in favor of greater authority for the rank and file. The changes would include stripping the speaker of his outsize power over the Republican steering committee, which appoints the chairmen for all committees as well as for Appropriations subcommittees. The changes would also reduce the leadership's tight control over what bills and amendments reach the House floor. Their demands are made clear in a revealing questionnaire that they drew up for candidates seeking the position. Trump lOOkS tO SOuth —Donald Trump is a brash NewYorker who knows the path to the Republican presidential nomination runs through a swath of Southern states where residents pride themselves on graciousness and gentility. He leads many state polls in the region just as he doesnationally. In the last few weeks he's hired aides in Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee,TexasandVirginia to go along with staff in South Carolina, which hosts the South's first primary. Trump and his top advisers cite the expansion as they push back against notions — fueled in part by his own remarks — that the he's reconsidering his bid as somepolls suggest his momentum has stalled.

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Eliz abethC.McCool ..........541-383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541-383-0356

A weaker Speaker? —Hard-line conservatives in the House

Kim JOug Uu SpeakS —North Korea's leader, Kim Jong Un, celebrated the 70th anniversary of his ruling Workers' Party on Saturday with what appeared to beone of the largest military parades the North had ever organized. In a25-minute speech before the parade, Kim spoke of his "love" and "dedication to the people," whom he thanked for staying with his party through decades of U.S.-led sanctions. "Our revolutionary armed forces are ready to fight any form of war the American imperialists want," he said. The highlight of the parade appeared to be anew version of KN-08 missiles, the North's first intercontinental ballistic missile.

Evan Vucci/The AssociatedPress

Neal Blair, of Augusta, Georgia, wears ahoodie which reads, "Black Lives Matter" as hestands on the lawn of the Capitol building during a rally to mark the 20th anniversary of the Million ManMarch on Saturday in Washington, D.c. Black menand womenjoyously returned to the National Mall on Saturday for the 20th anniversary of the Million Man March, calling for changes in policing and in black communities amid an atmosphere almost like a family reunion. Waving flags, carrying signs and listening to speechesandsongs,peoplemingledastheywove their way through security barricades andaround loudspeakers andsouvenir vendors at the U.S. Capitol anddown theMallonasunny,breezyday. For some, it was areturn to Washington after the Million Man March onOct. 16, 1995, and achance to expose their children to the samepositive experience

the first march represented to them. "This is a very special moment for me.Twenty years ago, I was bymyself," said Joey Davis, 47,of Detroit, who wassetting up chairs for his family near the Capitol's reflecting pool. "And 20years later, I come back with my wife andfive children. And so I like to think that over the last 20 years I' vebeendoing my part in keeping the promise of the spirit of the original Million Man March." Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, whospearheaded the original march, called the anniversary gathering the "Justice or Else" march. Manyspeakers asked the crowd to chant that slogan during the day. Farrakhan, in awide-ranging speech, called for more responsibility in the black community for inner-city killings and for the government to investigate recent high-profile killings of unarmedAfrican-American men andwomen.

PluS: ChineSe I'elatiuuS —Relations between China andNorth Korea showed somesigns Saturday of thawing after a deep chill, as President Xi Jinping of China sent awarm note to the North's leader, Kim Jong Un, andsent one of his most senior officials to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of Kim's ruling party. In the message, Xi said henot only extended the congratulations of the Chinese Communist Party but sent his own personal good wishes. He hailed Kim for having achieved "positive progress in developing the economy, improving livelihoods, and so on." — From wire reports

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Fired investigator: Inquiry on Benghazi ispartisan New York TimesNewsService WASHINGTON — The Re-

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server for her State Department

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correspondence, the commit-

publican leaders of a House tee became preoccupied with

tee's former staff members. investigation. A former investigator for the The committee firmly disRepublicans on the House Se- puted Podliska's allegations, lect Committee on Benghazi saying Saturday that he had plans to file a complaint in fed- been "terminated for cause." eral court next month alleging In a statement, the committhat he was fired unlawfully tee cited Podliska's "repeated in part because his superiors efforts, of his own volition, to opposed his efforts to conduct develop and direct commita comprehensive investigation teeresourcesto a PowerPoint into the 2012 attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in the Lib-

'hit piece' on members of the

Obama administration, includ-

yan city rather than focus pri- ing Secretary Clinton, that bore marily on the role of the State no relationship whatsoever to Department and former Secre- the committee's current investary of State Hillary Clinton. tigative tone, focus or investiga-

Bradley Podliska, a major in the Air Force Reserve who

tive plan." "Thus, directly contrary to

is on active duty in Germany, his brand-new assertion, the also claims the committee's employee actually was termimajority staff retaliated against nated, in part, because he himhim for taking leave for several selfmanifested improper parweeks to go on active duty. revelations that Clinton relied

tiality and animus in his investigative work," the statement said. "The committee vigorous-

exclusively on a private email

ly denies all of his allegations."

Podliska alleges that after

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committee who have been in a the State Department's role in bitter partisan battle with Dem- the controversy surrounding ocrats are enmeshed in a new the Benghazi attack and less fight with one of the commit- interested in a comprehensive

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Sunday, Oct. 11, the 284th

day of 2015. Thereare 81days left in the year.

SCIENCE

HAPPENINGS EIOCtiOllS —Presidential elections take place in Belarus and Guinea.

HISTORY Highlight:In1890, the Daughters of the American Revolution was founded in Washington, D.C. In1779,Polish nobleman Casimir Pulaski, fighting for American independence,died two days after being wounded during the Revolutionary War Battle of Savannah,Georgia. In1905,the Juilliard School was founded asthe Institute of Musical Art in NewYork. In1910,Theodore Roosevelt became the first former U.S. president to fly in anairplane during a visit to St. Louis. In1932,the first American political telecast took placeas the Democratic National Committee sponsored aprogram from a CBS television studio in New York. In1958, the lunar probe Pioneer 1 was launched; it failed to go as far out as planned, fell back to Earth, and burned upin the atmosphere. In1968,Apollo 7, the first manned Apollo mission, was launched with astronauts Wally Schirra, DormFulton Eisele and R. Walter Cunningham aboard. Thegovernment of Panamawas overthrown in a military coup. In1975, Bill Clinton and Hillary Diane Rodhamwere married in Fayetteville, Arkansas. "NBC Saturday Night" (later "Saturday Night Live" ) madeits debut with guest host George Carlin. In1984,Challenger astronaut Kathryn D. Sullivan became the first American womanto walk in space assheandfellow Mission Specialist David C. Leestma spent3~/~hours outside the shuttle.

In1991, testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Anita Hill accused Supreme Court nomineeClarence Thomas of sexually harassing her; Thomas re-appeared before the panel to denouncethe proceedings as a"high-tech lynching." In2002, former President Jimmy Carter wasawarded the Nobel PeacePrize. Ten years ago: The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said it had finished pumping out the New Orleans metropolitan area, which was flooded by Hurricane Katrina six weeks earlier and thenwas swamped again by Hurricane Rita. A Russian spacecraft carrying U.S. millionaire Gregory Olsen and a two-man crew landed in Kazakhstan after a seven-day space sojourn. Five years ago:Rescuers in Chile finished reinforcing a hole drilled to bring 33 trapped miners to safety and sent a rescue capsule nearly all the way to where themenwere trapped, proving the escape route worked. Peter Diamond, Dale Mortensen andChristopher Pissarides won theNobel Prize in economics for their work in explaining why unemployment can remain high despite large numbers of job openings. One year ago:TheInternational Monetary Fund's policy-setting committee promised "bold and ambitious" action to boost a global recovery that was showing signs of weakness. Customs and health officials began taking the temperatures of passengers arriving at New York's Kennedy International Airport from three WestAfrican countries in a stepped-up screening effort meant to prevent the spread of theEbola virus.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Earle Hyman is89. Country singer Gene Watson is 72. Singer Daryl Hall (Hall and Dates) is 69. Actress-writer-comedian DawnFrench is 58. Actress JoanCusack is 53. Rapper MCLyte is 44. Figure skater Kyoko Ina is 43. Actress Emily Deschanel is 39. Actor Matt Bomer is 38. Golfer Michelle Wie is 26. — From wire reports

o e renews e a eon inese me icine China received its first Nobel Prize in science this week for the work of Tu Youyou, who extracted a malaria-fighting compound from a plant after learning techniques from classical text. But the committee specified the award was not intended to honor Chinese medicine, raising questions of the value of the country's traditional practices in modern times. By lan Johnson

lutionaries began jettisoning almost everything from the B EIJING — A s Ch i n a country's long past: its politibasks in its first Nobel Prize cal and religious systems; its in science, few places seem as architecture and urban planelated, or bewildered, by the ning; its national dress and honor as the China Academy its lunar calendar. of Chinese Medical Sciences. Traditional medicine came Located on a shady street in for especially harsh critiin the Old City, the academy cism. Some of the country' s is spread over a city block most famous writers, like Lu New York Times News Service

and welcomes visitors with

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Xun, Lao She, and Ba Jin,

an incongruous juxtaposi- pilloried it as exemplifying tion: a 6-foot high quotation everything wrong with the from Chairman Mao facing country. Its theories were obbronze statues of g o w ned scure, itsoutcomes unproven, doctors from antiquity who and most of all it was "unscidevised esoteric theories to entific" in a country that was heal the human body. beginning to worship science These contrasts are part as the cure to all ills. " Everyone a t t h a t t i m e of a bigger, centurylong debate in China that has been agreed that Chinese medirenewed by the award Mon- cine had no future," said Paul day to one of the academy's retired researchers, Tu Youy-

Unschuld, a historian of Chi-

nese medicine at the Chariteou, for extracting the malar- Hospital in Berlin. "Ideas like ia-fighting compound Arte- yin-yang, the Five Elements Gilles Sabrie/The New York Times misinin from the plant Arte- — all of that was considered At the laboratory of the ChinaAcademy of Chinese Medical Sciences, a researcher works at isolating misia annua. It was the first backwards." components of Chinese medicine in Beijing. When Tu Youyou, a retired researcher of a Chinese medtime China had won a Nobel Prize in a scientific discipline.

When

t h e Co m m unists icine academy, won China's first Nobel Prize in science, it raised old questions on tradition because

took over China in 1949, T raditionalists say t h e however, the country had award, in the physiology or few Western hospitals. A few medicine category, shows the years later, Mao Zedong devalue of Chinese medicine, clared that "Chinese medieven if it is based on a very cine and pharmacology are narrow part of this tradition. a great treasure house." The "I feel happiness and sor- praise, though, came with a row," said Liu Changhua, a caveat: It m ust m odernize. professor of history at the That meant setting up traacademy. "I'm happy that the ditional C h inese h ospitals, drug has saved lives, but if schools and research facilities this is the path that Chinese like the academy in Beijing. medicine has to take in the But m oney h a s f l o w ed future, I am sad." o verwhelmingly t owa r d The reason, he said, is that Western medicine. In the Mao Tu's methods were little dif- era, rural health care workers - "barefoot doctors" ferent from t hose used by Western drug companies that were often traditional pracexamine traditional phar- t itioners, which r a ised t h e macopoeia around the world profile of Chinese medicine. looking for new drugs. After Mao's death and with In fact, in it s award, the growing prosperity, the govNobel committee specifically ernment doubled down on said it was not honoring Chi- Western medicine. nese medicine, even though Today, China has 1.1 milArtemisia has been in contin- lion certified doctors of Westuous use for centuries to fight ern medicine, versus 186,947

the award wasnot for her work in Chinese medicine. Sitting in his small consulta-

tion room at the end of a long morning, Hu had just treated 14 patients with serious ailments like intestinal inflam-

at bay. "In the future, how can But despite the successes he and his patients report, people say that Chinese medbronchitis.

he worried about the attacks

icine isn't scientific?" Hu said.

on Chinese medicine. Now, mation, ovarian cysts, men- he said excitedly, the Nobel strual cramps and c hronic Prize would help keep critics

on Chinese medical texts and

"You can't deny that it's based clinical experience."

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teract with the body, he said. reporters had been badgering Instead, the government has the institute for days for inpoured money into finding formation on Tu. Finally, late another Artemisinin — with Thursday night, officials anno luck. nounced the briefing. "Are we truly respecting For an hour, Chinese jourthis cultural heritage?" Liu nalists asked two officials said. "When we think Chi- f rom the i n stitute for a n y nese medicine needs to be

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to 20 herbs or minerals that The conundrum was on a practitioner adjusts week- display Friday at a hastily ly after a consultation with a callednews conference hostpatient. And yet almost no re- ed by the academy's Institute search has been done on how of Chinese Materia Medica, t hese formulas actually in -

0

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gredient and create a chemi- science," said Volker Scheid, cal drug. an anthropologist at the Unipart of Chinese medicine, Liu

to new heights with a fixed annuity.

00

even though Tu said she fig- has 23,095 hospitals, 2,889 of ured out the extraction tech- which specialize in Chinese niques by reading classical medicine. "It's part of the nation, but works. Instead, it said it was rewarding Tu for the specif- the nation of China defines ic scientific procedures she used to extract the active in-

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modernized and the path it what was she like (blunt and shall go down must be like Tu hard-working), how many Youyou's path, I think it is a were on her team (50), why disrespect." was she asked to head the But many Chinese think project (no one could say). it should not be respected at Mostly, they asked what she all. Scientists like He Zuoxiu, had done in the 40 years since a member of the prestigious her discovery. After a bit of Chinese Academy of Scienc- shuffling an d g r i macing, es, say the ancient pharma- the answer: She had tried to copoeia should be mined, but find other herbs but had not the underlying theories that succeeded. In a nearby clinic attached identified these herbs should have been discarded long to the academy, doctors say they know why. Chinese ago. "I think for the future de- medicine almost never uses velopment of Chinese medi-

individual plants or minerals.

cine, people should abandon its medical theory and focus

Instead, it relies on diagnoses based solely on the doc-

tor's questions, observations ue of herbs with a modern and the skillful taking of the scientific approach," He said pulse. One senior practitioner is in an interview. These radically different Hu Xin, 61, who began learnviews on Chinese medicine ing herbalmedicine 50 years go back at least a century and ago from his father. He later get to the heart of how mod- went to university, earning advanced degrees, but said ern China sees itself. any good herbalist has to After a series of lost wars and national humiliations, study the classics, some of Chinese reformers and revo- which date back 2,000 years.

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Landfill

unload what appears to be the box spring. The video shows

Electric

Continued from A1

the trip lasted just over three

Continued from A1

minutes before the two drove off. A second, longer video shows law enforcement officials combing through the pile, flipping through the yard records law that allowed the signs and mattress. "In February (the FBI) procounty to withhold the records pending an ongoing criminal vided us with direction to not investigation. release it," Doyle said Friday. Deschutes County Legal "When you renewed (the reCounsel David Doyle at the quest) recently I got a hold of time cited a portion of the law them and said, 'Is there still an When The Bulletin in Feb-

ruary requested all photos and video of the incident under Oregon's public records laws, the county declined the request, citing an exemption in open

that allows the state to with-

investigation or am I able to rehold "investigatory informa- lease it to them'?'" "That led to (the FBI saytion compiled for criminal law

purposes. The record of an arrest orthe reportofa crim e shall be disclosed unless and

ing) 'Yeah, you can release it,'" Doyle added. The release of the video is

only for so long as there is a an indication that the landclear need to delay disclosure fill drop-off has nothing to in the course of a s pecific do with the investigation into Hayes' work as an environinvestigation." Darryl N akahira, l egal mental consultant while simulcounsel for t h e D e schutes taneously advising Kitzhaber County Sheriff's Office, also on state energy policy. The confirmed at the time the videos were withheld for a crimi-

F BI d oesn't

c o mment o n

investigations.

nal investigation. Federal investigators are Doyle referred all questions looking at whether Kitzhaber at the time to the FBI.

and Hayes benefited fr om

The 4 - minute, 4 2-sec- Hayes' access to the goverond video shows a couple nor's office and state policies that appear to be Hayes and while she was also a paid enviKitzhaber back up a pickup ronmental consultant. and a Ford Explorer at the landfill.

Hayes begins unloading the truck, including dozens of

The state was initially in-

vestigating Kitzhaber before putting its inquiry on hold in February.

yard signs that appear to be K ristina E d m u nson, a from her unsuccessful run for spokeswoman for Attorney election to Bend's House dis- General Ellen Rosenblum, trict in 2002.

Hayes owns a house in Bend. No one answered the

said Friday the state is still not

investigating and is "waiting until the federal investigation

door last week when a Bulle- is complete." tin reporter knocked to ask for A spokeswoman for the comment on a pending federal U.S. Attorney's Office in Portinvestigation. land declined to comment on In thevideo, a man who ap- the investigation. pears to beKitzhaber tosses

a mattress pad before the two

Principal

— Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.corn

hour to 8:55 a.m. to give teach-

ers time for these meetings. Students are also seeing Parshall, 52, was most re- more reading and math. Midcently assistant superinten- dle-schoolers may take an dent for Salem-Keizer School extra literacy or math class District, the second largest in instead of an elective, while the state. Before that he was in the elementary grades, principal at two high schools teachers are devoting more there. One, McKay High class time. The school is also S chool, wa s a w a rded t h e hiring more support staff ussame federal grant as Warm ing the grant funds to give Springs K-8 and saw major students m o r e in d i v idual Continued from A1

improvements in just a few

attention.

"There's so much, and such years. Parshall has never worked a deep level to go with kids in an elementary school and and their u n derstanding, said he was not looking for a we' ve got to adjust our system job as principaL He was ac- to meet those new standards," tually a finalist for superin- Parshall said, referring to the tendent in St. Helens earlier more rigorous Common Core this year. But in the spring standards the state adopted he took a vacation day and in 2010 and the new Smarter came to visit Warm Springs Balanced test, given for the K-8. It wasn't a job interview, first time this spring. "If they he said; he just came to see have gaps, let's give them adanother school in the federal ditional time and support now grant program, to talk with so that we' re getting them staff about his experience at there and they' re not getting McKay. to high school behind." "Sometimes when y ou' re One possibility Parshall away from kids for a while is considering: extending you don'trealize how much the school year by four to six they mean to you,and what weeks. He knows that is a big drives us to do the work, right? deal — it has the potential Sometimes they can surprise to "rock the world," he halfus, and I got surprised," he joked — but it's something he sard. plans to start asking about to He has moved into the gauge interest. It would also h ousing down t h e r o a d be a costly endeavor and may t he district owns — i t ' s a require outside funding, he four-minute commute to work sard. — and is still trying to learn Laurie Danzuka is the only everyone's name. He attended member of the five-member his first tribal council meet- school board who l i ves on ing last week. Warm Springs. She has two "I know that I still have a daughters at the school and lot to learn, and every school admits some of the changes, and community is unique and like pushing the start time different, but I do really be- back, made her nervous at lieve there are certain things first. But it's a matter of comthat are powerful in improv- municating with parents and ing learning," he said. "If it' s staff, she said, something Parthe right thing for kids, I'm shall has done. "I think he's been really going to do this." great about saying, 'This is

'Meetthosenew standards'

what I want to do and this is

The year before Parshall a rrived at M c Kay H i g h School, 50 percent of juniors met the state's reading stan-

how we' re going to get there,'" ways been this feeling that Warm Springs is a little bit how to push us forward."

reading and 84 percent met in math. "It's hard work to t urn a school around," Parshall said. "It's very rare that that ever

Four of the district's seven

pose, it was strategic and it

fendorf and said he wants to

schools have new principals this year, including Mark Neffendorf at Madras High School. Parshall used to teach happens, but it was on pur- at the same school as Nefwas a lot of hard work." Now he is taking what worked and trying to apply it to Warm Springs K-8. Beginning this year, teachers

ports, where people want

to charge their phones or laptops. But the need can be more acute with cars — will

their owners have enough juice to make it home?and manners often go out the window. In the moments after Don

Han plugged in his Nissan Leaf at a public charging station near his Silicon Valley office one day this summer, he noticed another Leaf pull up as he was walking away. The driver got out and pulled the char-

Jason Henry /The New York Times

Electric vehicles charge at Intuit in Mountain View, California. The state, where half of the country's electric cars are registered, is

pushing for more charging stations, but as it is, too-few stations lead to fierce competition for available spots.

ger out of Han's car and started to plug it into his

own. Han stormed back. "I said, 'Hey, buddy, what do you think you' re doing?' And he said, 'Well, your car is done charging,'" Han re-

charging power. Some take half an hour for a charge and others four hours or more; many are free or subsidized,

unable to get home to Palo Alto. She found a charging station, but a Tesla was parked in it and not charging. She ordered a

and others cost $1 an hour or

coffee, waited for the driver to

more. Public charging stations return and, when he did, asked not the case, put the charger and lights on many vehicles why he was taking a spot when back in his own car and left indicate when a car battery is he was not charging. She said "after saying a couple of full. the man had told her that he curse words, of course." Most people charge at home was going to run one more erSuch incidents are not (using an electrical outlet) but rand and walked off. "I seriously considered keyuncommon, accordingto also want to use public charinterviews with drivers and gers in part because the cars ing his car," she said. electric vehicle advocates have a limited range — typiAmong its own customers, and posts from peopleshar- cally 80 miles. On top of this Tesla has faced similar issues. ing frustrations on social "range anxiety," as it is called, In fact, some Tesla drivers remedia. Rising tensions over drivers like the idea of getting ported having received a letter getting a spot are "growing a freeor low-costcharge at a in August from the company and growing," said Mau- public station. saying that they were overus"Imagine going to a gas sta- ing its network of superfast reen Blanc, the director of Charge Across Town, a San tion that says, 'Here's free gas.' charging stations — meant to Francisco nonprofit that Who wouldn't want to muscle aid long-distance travel — and works to spread the adop- in and say, 'I' ll take some free that they should unplug once tion of electric vehicles. She gas'?" said Ollie Danner, the charged. called. He told him that was

owns an electric BMW and recently had a testy run-in

founder of EVPerks, a California company that works with

over a charging station with

local and national business- where electric vehicles out-

a Tesla driver.

es to offer coupons and other

12,

Car dealers predictably steered clear of Volkswagen's dirty diesels after the company admitted to equipping its cars to cheat emissions tests. At auction, values for the 500,000 or so affected cars in the United States fell between 8 percent and 14.5 percent after the Volkswagen announcement in mid-September, according to new data from Kelley BlueBook. Values for gas-powered versions of the samecars dipped by1.8 percent, evidence that the scandal could weigh onVolkswagen's reputation at large. The price drop isn't surprising. The risk of being stuck with a bunch of toxic assets isn't worth the reward to the average car dealer. Drivers, however, see things differently. Volkswagen's diesels don't appear to havebeendented nearly as much onsecondary markets, where owners sell used cars directly. At CarGurus, an online car shopping platform, the average price of the affected cars has only dipped by.06 percent since the scandal broke. Carlypso, a California basedcar-shopping startup, reported a price drop of.3 percent. That's right — all the hue and cry about a sinister plot to cheat emissions tests sent prices plunging by about $30. "So far, it looks pretty much like awash," said Carlypso co-founder Chris Coleman. Propping prices up are the people whoexpect Volkswagen to somehow make good after the scandal. The company is exploring a range of options, from a software fix to completely replacing the cars. Considering the flurry of lawsuits, financial settlements also seem likely. Many TDI owners are taking a wait-and-see approach. Heidi Johnson, a fashion-apparel buyer in Charleston, South Carolina, doesn't feel like shehasa lot of options for the 2014 Volkswagen Beetle she bought afew monthsago for $19,000. "I owe money on it," she said, "and at this point who's going to want

said the scramble for chargers leads to curious behavior. The electric-vehicle e t i q uette The rudeness is not j u st company does have a sign-up problem." among driversofelectric cars. sheet for reserving charging By many accounts, owners time. But it is not uncommon Public chargers of gas-powered cars often for people to leave their cars Some people are working take up desirable parking and too long, or for members of the on short-term fixes. A Goo- charging spots that companies public to take the spots or even, gle computer manager said and cities reserve for electric Hull said, for people to work he had sold 9,000 of the EV cars. This habit has inspired outside deals. "There's an entire black marEtiquette Survival Packs the spread of an acronym: ICE that he created. For $15.99, Holes.(ICE stands for internal ket for trading spots," she said. a pack includes hang tags combustion engine.) For example, employees will "Some people say, 'I just give their spots to friends or for vehicles that urge fellow drivers not to unplug others' wish I could key their cars,'" managers as favors, Hull said. cars while charging. said Jack Brown, who creatAt some other Silicon ValMore public char gers ed the EV Etiquette Survival ley companies where workers are the obvious long-term Packs and a Facebook page de- own a lot of electric vehicles, solution. About half the voted to complaining about the employees will get a note from 330,000 electric vehicles in interlopers. someone in their department this country are registered when someone is about to unin California, and Gov. Jer- Order of precedence plug and open up a spot. The ry Brown wants to increase T he competition has l e d legal department might band to buy it?" that number to 1.5 million people to judge one another' s together, for instance, or the What's more, Johnson by 2025. He has pledged a cars and which ones deserve communications department, really loves the chamsharp increase in charging charging priority. Owners creating little sharing fiefs. pagne-colored bug: "It' s stations. of all-electric cars see themTo Hull, the culture stems such a great car. Theonly Right now, there is rough- selves as most entitled to the in part from the way electric problem is I'm embarly one public charger for chargers, since they have no car owners have grown used rassed to drive it now." every 10 electric vehicles- Plan B. One rung down are to perks, like getting state and — Bloomberg News about 15,000 in California "plug-in hybrids," which use federal subsidies for buying and 33,000 across the coun- electricity but also can use green cars, or permission to try, according to Charge- gas, followed by hybrids, and use the car pool lane. So when Point, one of the biggest then two groups for which the it comes to unplugging somecharging-station c ompa- owners of pure electriccars one, well, they feel deservnies. (There are thousands reserve particular disdain: gas ing. "They' re not bad people, Iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN of other, unofficial charging cars and, perhaps surprisingly, necessarily," she said. "They managesyour lovedone's medications spots, essentially wall out- Teslas. (The $100,000 Teslas, as may have some amount of lets businesses or home- much as three times the cost of entitlement." owners have made available other plug-ins, have a range of for public plug-in). several hundred miles and so, Sun SPot Reduction T he l a r ger pu b l ic theoretically, do not need the IPL PhotoFacral charging stations tend to charge spots.) $135 (rr 15 savings) look like high-tech g as Jamie Hull, who drives an Cannotcombinewith anyotheroffer.Bpirrs 11/30/15. EVERGREEN pumps and often are in electric Fiat, grew apoplectic In-Home Care Services Schedule Online ~. th e nnalefrects.net parking lots. But they can recently when she discovered 541-389-0006 vary widely in cost and herself nearly out of a charge, www.evergreeninhome.corn 541-788-5246

ASSURANCE

"Having a four-year university in Bend is a completegame-changer." Christy McLeod Chief Operating Officer, Bend Memorial Clinic

students for the transition to

aspegman@bendbulleti n.corn

Hull, an executive at Evernote, a s o ftware c ompany n umber chargers 60 t o

"It's high time," she said, incentives to electric vehicle "for somebody to tackle the drivers.

work with high school staff to better prepare Warm Springs

high school. "Ninth grade can knock the are meeting each Wednes- heck out of kids. They realday for professional develop- ly stumble," Parshall said. "I ment and each Tuesday and think the big gift that I have is Thursday in small groupsI know where they' re headed, all the third-grade teachers, and I know how much is gofor instance, or all the middle ing to be asked of them in the school math teachers. high school." The start of the school day — Reporter: 541-617-7837,

was pushed back about an

too- f ew-outlets

problem is a familiar one in crowded cafes and air-

Danzuka said. "There's al-

dards, while 48 percent met behind the curve, and he defithe math standards. Three nitely has some ideas about

years, later, 85 percent met in

The

Diesel VWs still sell — on used market

-

. •

.

-


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A5

Preparation

Radio

rent radio system heaves its last breaths in the next couple of

while, the sheriffs office would use nearly half of the system's

Continued fromA1 Other schools have purely voluntary training. Or they put

Continued from A1 City and rural fire officials have called for more "due diligence" and research on different funding strategies. They' ve suggested forgoing a levy in favor of taking out a loan to pay for the upgrade. Rather than maintaining the sys-

years. "If you' re doing this for 15 years, we' ve got these reserves we' re going to (use to) pay for not only this (new) system, but the following one," Chudowsky countered. "It just seems to me

total radios. Sheriff Shane Nel-

information on what to do in an

emergency on websites, where it can easily be overlooked by students and staff members. Many public college and university systems leave it up to their individual campuses to draw up emergency plans and decide what level of training, if any, to give employees and

tem with levy funds, main-

students. In the wake of the recent

tenance could be paid for by user fees, and rather than building the system with reserve funds, it could be paid for by debt service, with

Michael sullivan / The (Roseburg) News-Review via The Associated Press file

violence, some professors, stu- Authorities respond to the shooting Oct. 1 et Umpque Community dents and administrators are College in Roseburg. Despite a federal lew requiring them tohave asking whether schools need detailed emergency plans, colleges end universities across the to do more to deliver potentially country vary widely in howthey prepare for campus shootings end life-saving messages to those inform their staff and students. on campus.

the capital costs spread out

over time. The district has estimated it would cost about $1.23

million in financing costs to bond the $4.7 million necessary for the radio projectwhich is less than the $6.4 million figure because it does not account for old system debt or the development

Community colleges

Campussafety law I&A

The challenges are particularly acute at two-year community colleges, which often do not have their own police forces to conduct training exercises also tend to have lots of older, working students who can be hard to reach.

Q • Why was the laworiginally passed?

"That it's actually happened recently with the frequency

• Connie and Howard Glary pushed for the law following the • 1986 rape and slaying of their 19-year-old daughter in her Lehigh University dorm room. The Clerys and other supporters of the law argued that college administrators were not doing enough to warn and inform students and their families about crimes that occurred on campuses.

and danger it has, I think ev-

eryone is frightened and asking a lot of questions about how well-prepared we would be as a campus," said David Morse, an English instructor who is president of the Academic Senate

nance similar to the process

the city is using to explore funding options for about $80 million in deferred road maintenance costs. The city has appointed a

Q • What does the lawdo?

for California's 113 community colleges. The 2007 slaughter of 32

people by a student at Virginia Tech prompted Congress to requirecolleges and universities to adopt procedures for notifying the campus of an immediate threat. Under the

law, schools also must publicize their emergency response plans "in a manner designed to reach students and staff."

• Signed into law in1990, the law requires colleges and • universities to publish and distribute annual reports that disclose their security policies and statistics about how often different kinds of crimes, from murder to burglary, occur on campus. Colleges also are required to warn students andemployees about crimes that might pose a threat and maintain a daily, written log of crimes that are reported to police or security officials.

committee to present two

most schools have set up sophisticated alert systems that use text messages, social media

or technology that can remotely take over computers tied to campus servers. Many also have added armed offic ers, conducted drills with law en-

• Lawmakers have added additional requirements over the • years. How was the law changed in 2008 after the Virginia Tech shooting? Congress amendedthe law to require colleges to immedi• ately warn the campus community about any "significant emergency or dangerous situation," which often is donethrough text messagesand email alerts. The changes also required colleges to publicize their emergency responseandevacuation plans, and to test them at least once ayear.

ommendations to voters,"

C hudowsky added. H e said that while the estimated $1.23 million figure incurred to finance the sys-

tem might induce "heartburn," financing could help spread out the large costs of the system out over time. City officials have also taken issue with the fact

that money raised with the proposed levy would also set aside funds for the inevitable replacement of

The instructions can vary ated threat-assessment teams er's question prompted him from campus to campus. Many that try to determine whether to do some digging. He found schools have adopted the run, an overheard remark or vio- a P ower Point p r esentation hide or fight-back training delence-tinged essay is a genuine and videos on the university's veloped by the city of Houston danger sign. web site. and promoted by the FBI. Oth"I would suspect many fac- ers have embraced the proceSome of these measures are credited with saving lives. ulty who are very busy would dures developed by the I Love When a gunman shot students tend to not look at those things U Guys Foundation, which urgat a Florida State University unless they' re sort of prompted es students to lock themselves library a year ago, campus po- several times," Turton said. in classrooms if possible.

Knowing what to do Matt Barnes, 30, a civil en-

him. Less than two weeks be- gineering student who just

the new system in about 15 years. Last month, Bend

orientation that outlined the

questioned whether it is ap-

propriate to have the current generation of taxpayers pay for system that future gener-

ations would use.

"We' re fortunate in that we have reserve funds that built up over time," Rein-

At A r k ansas State U n i-

versity in Jonesboro, the ac-

ke said during Tuesday's meeting. "We have money to build (the) system ...

t ive-shooter training that i s

mandatory for new students is

How do we deal with the replacement of that system, 15

years into the future?" C hudowsky and R

trainings? Unfortunately, the

ay

Umpqua Community College also did many things right to prepare, and experts said its efforts may well have saved

school's emergency notifica- answer is not many," said Greg tion procedures. He realized it Phillips, chairman of the Facdidn't mention anything about ulty Senate, which will take up an active-shooter situation. the issue during the coming lives. Barnes said he gets emails week. A s m a ll , r u r a l s c h ool, any time there is a crime on Ron Hackenberg, a security Umpqua didn't have its own campus with details about the consultant and former police police force, but administra-

incident. But he said he's not

tors brought in local officers so they would be familiar with

Miao, a director of the De-

schutes County Rural Fire Protection District 2, have voiced concerns that the

current funding structure means the district will set

aside more than it needs for the next generation of radi-

chief at California State University-San Marcos, said the

sure what he's supposed to do if something happens in a build- slayings in Roseburg should the layout. Professors and staff ing where he happens tobe. spur more schools to go beyond regularly discussed how they University spokesman Steve voluntary training. "In real life, unless you are should respond if someone Henneberry confirmed the started shooting, and where booklet doesn't specifically a combat veteran, most people in their buildings would be the mention active-shooter situa- will freeze if they are not presafest place to hunker down. tions and said it was written pared," he said. The school also had emergency from an "all-hazards planning notification and lockdown pro- point of view." cedures in place. On some campuses, some of But in general, educating the advice itself isn't detailed or students and employees about even particularly helpful. what to do in the event of an at-

os. If that impression carries

over to the levy proposed to voters, they point out, voters may reject the permanent

levy, leaving the district to scramble for a "Plan B" funding option as the cur-

S

S

Richard Turton, chairman of West Virginia University's Faculty Senate, said he wasn' t familiar with his school's ac-

authorities such as whether

to remain inside or to evacuate." Campus security director Melissa Jensen said more spe-

cific training videos also are available.

OCTOBER 20, 2015 EDUCATION MEETING

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ficials did not want to overesti- the need to "build trust" with mate revenue, Anderson said. the voters in seeking a levy, as According to Reinke, the levy the sheriffs office did when it

City Manager Eric King

fore, the police had participated transferred to the University of voluntary for the faculty. "How many facultyhave in active-shooter training that Minnesota's 'Dvin Cities camincluded a scenario with a gun- pus, received a booklet during availed themselves of these man at the library.

need to move forward," Bend The levy rate will be based City Councilor Barb Campbell on assessed property value, said at the meeting. "How are which Deschutes County Ad- we going to get public support ministrator To m A n d erson behind this?" pointed out during the meetBend Fire Department Chief ing would likely fluctuate with Larry Langston suggested the the "cyclical" economy of the service district do a survey to region. gauge citizen support for perCurrent projections for the manent funding. Reinke said levy have been calculated Friday he was beginning to get based on conservative esti- such a survey underway. mates of assessed value growth Deschutes County Commisevery year because county of- sioner Alan Unger mentioned

"By approving (the levy) we' re making rec-

— The Associated Press

barrage of bullets that killed

that this new system is what we

like a bit of a stretch."

without such a tax.

forcement authorities and cre- tive-shooter plan until a report-

lice responded within minutes of the first 911 call and fired a

"I don't think you need to convinceanyone in this room

funding options for road improvements to councilone option supported by a citywide gas tax, the other

A•

The AP review found that

the permanent levy.

rates will be adjusted annually. sought and won a levy for perFor the levy to move forward, manent funding. the district requires approval A smaller work group, conof a new site on the Santiam from two-thirds of the users by sisting of some members of the Pass — for 15 years at 3 per- servicearea population. The user board, will bring a fundcent interest. Bend Polic e Department, over- ing recommendation back to Bend City Councilor Vic- seen by the city, has 202 radios, the full board Oct. 20. tor Chudowsky said he' d accounting for about a quarter — Reporter: 541-383-0376, like to see a more robust of the system's users. Meancwithycombelbendbulletin.corn vetting process for raising funds for the radio system's construction and mainte-

The federal law known asthe Clery Act is credited with bringing improvements to campussafety, even assexual assault and gun violence remain major concerns. Supporters of the law plan to mark its 25th anniversary next month. Hereare some questions and answers about the law, at atime when manyare debating safety as campusshootings becomemorefrequent:

for staff and students. They

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton: Where they stand By Lesley Clark McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — On the

siabegan abombing campaign in the country to support President Bashar Assad.

"I personally would be adcampaign trail, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders shy vocating now for a no-fly zone away from direct mentions of and humanitarian corridors to each other, focusing instead on

try to stop the carnage on the

the Republicans. ground and from the air, to try But when the two top-polling to provide some way to take candidatesfor the 2016 Demostock of what's happening, to cratic presidential nomination try to stem the flow of refuface off for the first time Tues- gees," Clinton told a Boston raday in the first Democratic de- dio show. bate, it will be hard to escape Sanders opposes a "unilatthe fact that they have had very eral American no-fly zone in different approaches to major Syria which could get us more issues from war to paychecks. deeply involved in that horriHere's a preview of the areas ble civil war and lead to a nevwhere they differ. er-ending U.S. entanglement in that region."

Super PAQ

Sanders pledges not to accept

Keystone pipeline

support from any of the politiSanders opposes the pipecal action committees that can line, which would carry oil

Debate Continued from A1 "He speaks from a certain kind of c ertainty, a

declarative voice, steeped in a certain amount of out-

rage," said Greg Guma, a liberal activist and journalist in Vermont whom then-

Gov. MadeleineKunin recruited to play Sanders in debate rehearsals when the

mayor of Burlington challenged her as an independent in 1986 (Sanders came in a distant third). Kunin's impulse was to dig deep into her policies and trace her rationale, which made her appear less resolute in their prac-

tice sessions. "One of the

takeaways was: Don't ex-

plain so much. The parallels are there" for Clinton, RickScuteri /The Associated Press Nati Harhik/The Associated Press said Guma, who supports Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Hillary Clinton are the top contendSanders' presidential bid. ers in Tuesday's debate. While the former secretary of state has plenty of experience on the national "There is nobody better stage, supporters tout Sanders' fiery style — which could than Bernie at delivering

be an asset and a liability. Meanwhile, former Maryland

a message," said Richard Tarrant, the businessman

governor Martin O' Malley, from left, former Virginia senator

whom V ermont

Jim Webb and former Rhode Island senator and governor Lincoln Chafee will be looking for a way to stand out.

R epub-

licans nominated to go up against Sanders for

debates. The leading Dem-

with policy experts. The camtenders, all of whom are mak- paign has declined to name ing barely a mark in the polls. who is offering advice — in That means that f o rmer part, advisers acknowledge, in Maryland governor Martin respect for the sensitivities of O' Malley, former V irginia those who do not want to get senator Jim Webb and for- on the wrong side of the formimer Rhode Island senator dable Clinton operation. and governor Lincoln Chafee Sanders planned to arrive will be looking for a breakout overnight in Las Vegas and to moment — and the best way buckle down for debate prep to do that is to set off some sessions today and Monday. fireworks. He and his advisers are tryO' Malley i n pa r t icular ing to figure out what quesseems eager to capitalize on tions are likely to come up, an opportunity that he de- and how his opponents will scribed as "make or break" for probably respond. There were no plans, however, for the kind his struggling campaign. For Sanders, preparation of formal rehearsals that Clinbegan in earnest at an Oct. 2 ton reportedly is doing, with meeting in Burlington with advisers playing the roles of Devine and campaign man- the other candidates. "He just doesn't want to do ager Jeff Weaver, who served

Clinton has not ruled out su- mate change." per PAC money and is benefiting from at least two working Minimum wage primarily on her behalf, PrioriSanders introduced legislaties USA Action and American tion in July to hike the federal Bridge 21st Century. minimum wage to $15 an hour. Clinton has said she would He called the current federappoint Supreme Court justices al minimum wage — $7.25 an

ocratic c andidates have

as Sanders' House and Sen-

"who value the right to vote

Devine, a veteran political consultant who is working

raise unlimited sums of mon-

from Canada into the U.S. He

an open Senate seat in 2006. "I happen to hate the

ey from corporations, unions, helped "lead the effort in the associations and individuals. Senate against the Keystone

message."

He's introduced a constitution- pipeline," he told "Face the Naal amendment to overturn the tion" in June, "because I think,

ence, he said, suggests that Clinton's best strategy is to get under Sanders' skin in the hope of provoking an unpresidential outburst. "Oh, yes. You' ve got to accuse him of something. You point at his face, you accuse him, and he goes

Supreme Court's Citizens Unit- if we' re serious about reversing ed decision, which allowed the climatechange,you don'texcacommittees to proliferate, and vate and transport some of the says one of his criteria for pick- dirtiest fossil fuel in the world." ing Supreme Court justices will He said Clinton "has been very be a willingness to overturn the quiet on this issue." decision. Indeed, Clinton, who as sec"That nominee will say that

retaryof state oversaw the de-

we are going to overturn this disastrous Supreme Court

partment's yet-to-be-completed review, refused for months decision on Citizens United. to say where she stood, saying Because that decision is under- she was waiting for the White mining American democracy. House to make its decision. I do not believe that billion- She announced her opposition aires should be able to buy pol- on Sept. 22, saying the project

iticians," Sanders said on "Face the Nation" in May.

is a "distraction from important work we have to do on cli-

hour -

"a starvation wage,"

over the right of billionaires to and said employees who work buy elections" and would push 40 hours a week "have a right for a constitutional amendment not to be living in poverty." to overturn Citizens United. Clinton has stopped short of endorsinga federal $15-an-

Guns

hour measure. She has sup-

Sanders opposed the 1993 Brady bill, which established federal background checks and a waiting period for potential gun owners.

ported legislation to raise the federal minimum wage to $12

He's explained that he rep-

resents a largely rural state where guns "mean different things to people" than in urban states. As a result, he's argued that he could play a role in bringing opposing sides

and backs local efforts in Los

Angeles and New York to raise the minimum wage to $15. But

nuts," Tarrant said. Then again, Tarrant lost to Sanders by more than 30 per-

centage points. Both Clinton's and Sand-

ers' camps are predicting a far more sedate — and substantive — forum than the past two Republican

studiously avoided directly attacking each other thus far. T hat i s

n o t l i k ely t o

change when the klieg lights go on Tuesday night in Las Vegas, said Tad

he calls Obama's "disastrous"

closing the so-called gun show loophole and tightening backgroundchecks. Clinton, in the wake of the Umpqua Community College shooting, called for steps on gun control and said she'd act unilaterally if Congress failed to tighten gun show and Internet sales loopholes. She also backs legislation to prevent domestic abusers from buying and possessing firearms and

Trans-Pacific Partnership, an ambitious trade pact involving the United States and 11 other nations, and vows to "do all that I can" to thwart the agreement in the Senate.

"This agreement follows failed trade deals with Mexico, China and other low-wage

ator Barack Obama, who

opposed it. Sanders has put a bigger

the high bar I have set." "The risks are too high that,

interests. Nor has she succeeded in drawing a clear picture of how her administration would distinguish

college in their state," but it re-

Clinton called for a no-fly quires that students would have zone in Syria the day after Rus- to work 10 hours a week.

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itself from that of her husband, Bill Clinton, or Presi-

Clinton also has struggled with a controversy

Syria

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face ofthe Democratic es-

ment far too much power to

to pay for tuition, books and fees to attend a four-year public

Look to a U.S. Bank HOme Equity Line Of Credit fOr yOur neXt majOr project. You' ll be greeted with competitive rates, flexible payment options and PeOPleWho genuinely Care.

tablishment, with its ties to corporate and Wall Street

dent Obama, for whom she

collect ion ofphonerecords.

If you call a contractor yourself, that still counts as DIY.

of issues,she remains the

even more convinced today ition at all four-year public colthat the law gave the govern- leges and universities.

would "never have to borrow

his stride, because his stride hasn't changed," said Sanders spokesman Michael Briggs.

and

ton voted against it.

to end the government's bulk

left. "It's hard to throw him off

later said she regretted-

pected when he announced his candidacy in late May. His populist message and unapologetic embrace of bigger government has brought an outpouring of support from the left. Meanwhile, though Clinton has shifted to more liberal positions on a number

ensure "that every qualified American in this country who disclosure." has the ability and desire to go Clinton voted for the Patriot to college is able to g oto college, Act in 2001 as a U.S. senator. regardless of the income of his She, however, voiced support or her family." in May for legislation that Pres- Clinton's "New College ComidentBarack Obama endorsed pact" promises that students

is the decadeslong consistency of his positions: on trade, the Keystone XL pipeline, gay marriage and other areas where she has shifted to the

Clinton's support of the

7, saying the pact doesn't "meet

spy on Americans and that it provided too little oversight or

has an advantage over Clinton

invasion — a decision she

voted for the law in 2005; Clin-

Sanders says the U.S. should

Sanders and his team believe that one area where he

9, 2002, laying out the reasons that he opposed the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

dent in Clinton's armor of inevitability than most ex-

of the 9/11 terrorist attacks and has voted against its reauthori- College zation since. Sanders proposes a "College He wrote in Time last May for All Act" that would make that he "believed then and am college a right, eliminating tu-

licenses.

on the House floor on Oct.

a key point of distinction between her and then-sen-

despite our best efforts, (trade

favors giving them driver' s

speech that Sanders made

o cratic n o mination

Sanders has championed pacts) will end up doing more single-payer, universal health harm than good for hard-workcareforallA mericans. ing American families whose Clinton has said she would paychecks have barely budged expand coverage through the in years," she said. existing Affordable Care Act. Sanders dedined to criticize Clinton's hesitance on the issue, Patriot Act saying he was "glad that she Sanders voted ~ the reached that conclusion, this surveillance law passed by is a conclusion that I reached Congress in 2001 in the wake from Day One."

drew fire from the other candidates. Clinton now says she

It did not mention Clinton directly, but it recalled a

ufacturers and dealersin some saying how she stood, Clinton cases from being sued. Sanders came out in opposition on Oct.

Health care

posal by then-New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer to grant driver' s licenses to illegal immigrants. Her equivocal answers

eign Policy Experience."

the United States," he said of the agreement. state, but after months of not

whether she backed a pro-

lease titled "Sanders' For-

of thousandsoffactories across

of Lawful Commerce in Arms tradedeal as his secretary of

During that earlier race, for

example, she appeared unprepared when she was asked

came down in favor. The campaign sent a different signal Saturday when it issued a news re-

lions of jobs and shuttered tens

Clinton supported Obama's

tions on the spot on issues that are politically fraught."

he can say 'Iraq war es to

became a major obstacle in her 2008 quest for the Dem-

countries that have cost mil-

has to make political calcula-

While the two will not

remind liberal Democrats

Trade

Devine said the senator re- ed. "She's a very good debater. quested briefing materials on She is firm. She is fluent. She, issues that are likely to arise by and large, did very well during the debate and has in those debates" during the been having conversations Democratic primary of 2008,

Obama's chief campaign strategist. "Where she sometimes has difficulties is where she

shy from talking about their policy differences, Devine added, "this could be a civil exchange. Bernie's not headhunting. I don't see him out there trying to see how many times that he voted against it while then-senator Clinton

may not work in other places."

that stuff. It's just not him," ate chief of staff and has been Devine said. "He knows what working on his election efforts he needs." Clinton's skills are well-testgoing back to 1986.

said David Axelrod, who was

for Sanders.

can do in L.A. or in New York

on semi-automatic weapons,

Act, which prevents gun man-

e x p eri-

she noted in July that "what you

Sanders has voted against U.S. trade pacts, saying they' re together. He notes that he lat- bad for American workers. He er voted and supports a ban has been a sharp critic of what

would seek to repeal a 2005 law known as the Protection

Tarrant's ow n

involving the other three con-

served assecretary ofstate. over her use of a private

email system, which has stirred public misgivings about her trustworthiness.

The leading contenders will not be the only ones on the stage Tuesday. Clinton

advisers say they are preparing for what, in effect, could be two separate de-

bates going on at the same time — one between her and Sanders and the other

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O


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A7

Investigation into espionage issaid to falter New York TimesNewsService

-*

r' r. !

John M.Glionna/ LosAngeles Times viaTribuneNews Service

Gerald Morrissen, who bills himself as the Lost Baby of Las Vegas, poses with Clarice Berg, of Minnesota, on Fremont Street in Las

Vegas.

Anything goeswith Vegasstreet performers, but not for muchlonger

to see it dissipate under fur- classified information.

and are loath t o

a bandon

the case entirely. Even if the fall, federal agents raided JusticeDepartment dropped began last year when U.S. of- government cannot mount the home and office of Rob- charges against a Temple ficials, while eavesdropping a case for outright spying, in Raphel in search of proof University physicist w ho on a Pakistani government they are pushing for a felthat she, a seasoned mem- had been accused of sharing official, intercepted a conver- ony charge related to the ber of America's diplomatic s ensitive information w i t h sation that seemed to suggest classified information in her corps, was spying for Paki- China. In May, prosecutors that Raphel, an adviser at home. Several officials acstan. But officials now say dropped all charges against the State Department, was knowledged, however, that the spying investigation has a government hydrologist passing U.S. secrets to Pa- the case would be difficult to all but fizzled, leaving the who had been under investi- kistan. The reason for the prosecute because it would Justice Department to decide gation for espionage. eavesdropping is u nclear, require intelligence agencies whether to prosecute Raphel Raphel, in n egotiations but the government routinely to declassify information and forthefarlessseriouscharge with th e g overnment, has listens to the phone calls and would probably reveal seof keeping classified infor- rejected plea deals and has reads the emails of foreign crets about U.S. surveillance mation in her home. been adamant that she face officials. After months of se- of foreign officials. If th e J ustice Depart- no charges, according to cret surveillance, the invesFelony charges for imment declines to file spying current and former govern- tigation into Raphel spilled properly taking and storing charges, as several officials ment officials, particularly into the public when agents classified information, while said they expected, it will be because the Justice Depart- searched her home and her not espionage in the common the latest example of U.S. law ment has been criticized in State Department office last sense of the word, would be enforcement agencies bring- recent years for handing out October. filed under the Espionage ing an espionage investiga- inconsistent punishments to Some U.S. investigators Act and could expose Raphel tion into the public eye, only U.S. officials who mishandle remain suspicious of Raphel to years in prison. W ASHINGTON —

L a s t ther scrutiny. Last month, the

The federal investigation

11 years in prison for voluntary manslaughter.

By JohnM.Glionna Los Ange(es Times

LAS VEGAS — The Lost

Baby is having a slow night. G erald M o rrissen, 4 4 , stands in the crowded down-

But such violence is rare.

Mostly, the performers irritate more than threaten. In New York, city officials

. US. Cellular.

town Las Vegas pedestrian

recently unveiled a proposal to control performers in Times Square, including its white diapers, baby bib, sneak- most infamous denizens — the ers and an umbrella hat, a red desnudas, bare-breasted womplastic tip cup dangling sug- en who wear little more than gestively at his waist. His face body paint. contorts like he's teething. In Vegas, performers say the mall known as the Fremont StreetExperience, dressed in

The self-proclaimed Lost

Baby of LasVegas reliesonthe kindness of strangers, making goo-goo eyes at passing tourists hoping they' ll fork over a few bucks to have their photo taken with a bit of Sin City out-

rageousness. He brandishes a $1 bill like a sour pacifier. "This," he sighs, cigarette in hand, "is five hours' work." But the night is still young

new regulations violate their First Amendment rights. This

is a public place, they reason, and therefore anything goes, especially in a city specializing in round-the-clock titillation.

to beat

Some plan to picket the day the rules take effect. Michael Troy Moore, an at-

torneyforthe Sonic Laborers and Visual Entertainers Union, which represents the perform-

on the downtown drag that

ers,mailed a cease-and-desist could be known as the Fre- letter to the city and says he mont Street freak show, a will file for an injunction. "We' re not stifling anyone' s rogue's gallery of in-your-face provocateurs whose exhi- free speech," says City Coun-

PLLIS, YOLI'LL GET A $150 PROMO CARD INSTANTLY.

bitionism rivals th e r a ciest cilman Bob Coffin, who wrote show on the Strip, or worst the regulations. "We' re bring-

of casuall y dressed Walmart shopping. Imagine a c ollection of out-of-work Far Side cartoon characters competing foryour attention, and you get the idea of what it's like to walk this

ing order to the chaos." Rules passed in 2011 des-

ignated certain no-go areas. Now, instead of telling performers where they can't be,

regulations lay out specifically where they can. The rules will

goofy gantlet, and this being Vegas, most likely with a drink in your hand. Regulars include a 77-yearold man in a skimpy slingshot leotard (camera click!);

be enforced between 3 p.m.

a 265-pound man in a

help assess where performers crossed the line. "We looked to define and protect people' s rights to be themselves and express themselves," said Tod

red

stretch bikini who bats false eyelashes at passing old ladies and poses with young bachelors (click!); and a 54-yearold woman with straggly gray hair and a rotund belly creased by an angry scar, dressed in a see-through blue hula skirt, her breasts slath-

ered with gray electrical tape (double click!). Tips follow. But now the performers (and we use that term loosely) are unhappy because city officials enacted new rules designed to dampen the debauchery. Due to take effect in November, the

and la.m.

Coffin solicited input from the American C ivi l L i b erties Union, which for months conducted walking tours to

Story, executive director for the ACLU of Nevada. He drew the line, however, at officials collecting data on

performersas part ofthe lottery for public circles. "They

Just bring in your bill and we guarantee we' ll beat the price on your current Verizon or ATILT plan. If we can' t, you' ll get a $50 Promo Card. Plus, you' ll get a $150 Promo Card instantly to make that switch even sweeter.

can't just collect personal in-

formation on people just because they' re curious," Story said. "None of that is constitu-

tional." The city scrapped the idea. Coffin says the rules tar-

regulations will confine per- get behaviors he described as formers, panhandlers, busk- jaw-dropping. ers and other tip-seekers to

"We can'tapprove the lev-

6-foot-diameter circles so they el of taste, but we can stop can't hound passers-by like these people from bothering petulant children.

tourists," he says. "I'm talking

The city also is launching a daily lottery for two-hour

about the guys in jock straps with their butts hanging out, time slots in 38 small public 'nuns' in pasties flopping their cirdes scattered along the cov- breasts around. They have no ered mall littered with dime- talent, and we' re hoping they storeIndians, bar ads for the won't earn any tips if they "world's largest pint glass" and don't have any talent." signs touting 99-cent shrimp There are rifts, too, on Frecocktails.

mont Street. Performers say

On a recent weeknight, the fly-by-night photo seekers included an adult-sized yellow Minion, a black-whip-wielding dominatrix, zombies and trolls, all trying to make eye contact with tourists as cus-

panhandlers give the cos-

tomers of a zip-line business

zinged past overhead like sloshed superheroes.

snessws Gala~ S '6

tumed crowd abad name: the homeless vet with his tin cup; the woman with the sign that

says, "Single mom. Stage 3 cancer"; and the bedraggled fellow with the placard: "Need food and diapers. Huggies. Size 5."

Near the Four Queens ca-

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Pushy street performers ar- sino, a festooned pirate queen en't unique to Sin City. On Hol- scoffs at Bunny Vegas and his

lywood Boulevard in Los An- crowd of near-naked photo geles, competition for tips has hustlers."Those naked things touched off brawls between get on my nerves," says Recostumed characters. This nea LeRoux. "I make my own year Mr. Incredible was con-

victed of battery for punching and body-slamming Batgirl in front of the TCL Chinese Theatre. The most violent incident was in 2013, when Christine

Calderon, 23, came across panhandlers near Hollywood and Highland who held a sign decorated with a four-letter in-

sult. She snapped pictures but declined to tip. Dustin James

Kinnear,27, fatally stabbed her and last year was sentenced to

clothes. I'm an artist, not some frozen statue." But the Lost Baby doesn' t care what anyone thinks. He' s

on one knee, offering a bogus marriage proposal to Clarice Berg, an 82-year-old tourist from Winnebago, Minnesota. "I think he looks great," said Berg, as the man-child kisses her hand. "We don't have anything like this back in Winnebago." Berg's son hands the baby a tip.

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" ow o

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Dr. Ha-Sheng Li-Korotky AuD PhD MD Dr. Ryan O'Clair AuD Dr. Elizabeth Eden AuD We will present the latestinformation on Tinnitus and the mental decline associated with untreated hearing loss. We will demonstrate the next generation of hearing aids and wireless innovations, and show you how to live as connected and asactively as you wish. Todd Taylor, CEO of Taylor NW will discussthe Shevlin Health and Wellness Center, a visionary healthcare complex being developed in Northwest Crossing.

On October 14, at the Hampton Inn Bend 730 SW Columbia St, Bend, OR 97702 Choose a morning or afternoon session: 9 am-Noon or Noon-3 pm

This meeting is free to the public but we have limited seating Please RSVP to reserve a seat

Call Today at (541) 678-5698 Visit Us Online at

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4-5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

arreste o owin s ots ire

er oursatBen mi esc oo

BENDFILM WINNERS BendFilmannounced its 2015award winners Saturday night.Theyare: • Best in Show:"Petting Zoo," directed byMicah Magee • Best Directing: "Birth of Sake,"directed byEric Shirai • Best Narrative Feature: "Petting Zoo,"directed by MicahMagee • Best Documentary Feature: "Birth ofSake," directed byEricShirai • Best Narrative Short: "Hole," directed byMartin Edralin • Best Documentary Short: "TheManySad Fates ofMr.Toledano," directed byJoshuaSeftel

By Kailey Fisicaro

of a weapon or conspiracy

ments on Mountaineer Way

to police.

The Bulletin

to commit unlawful use of

reported hearing shots and seeing a suspect with what

Detectives and officers continued investigating the incident Saturday. They canvassed the school most of Saturday morning, finding

mer Cascade Middle School

a weapon, among other charges, according to a news

students, were arrested Sat-

release from Bend Police. The

urday afternoon following an investigation into shots fired at the school Friday night.

Brookses are twins. Shotswere reported fired

Three Bend men, all for-

they believed to be a firearm,

near both the school and apartment complex.

Sisters

weighing changesto temporary vendors

at the school in southwest

At that time, officers could not find the suspect, but

saw damage from a firearm

to identifying the three men, according to the news re-

By Scott Hammers

Bend at 8:57 p.m. Friday,

Samuel Dominic Brooks

while two maintenance em-

round to at least two separate

lease. Detectives also learned

and Alexander Thomas

ployees were inside. Residents in The Village

areas of the school. No student activities were going on

at Southern Crossing Apart-

at the school then, according

Morris had purchased a handgun earlier Friday. See Shooting /B5

The Sisters City Council is weighing a variety of code changes that could make it harder for food

James Vincent Morris,

Brooks, all 27, were arrested on suspicion of unlawful use

additional evidence which led The Bulletin

carts and similar transient

vendors to do business in the city. Lynn Fujita-Conrads, the city's finance director, said transient vendors have been an issue for

the city for years, often in connection with large citywide events like the

• Best Student Short:

Sisters Quilt Show. In 2014, the city granted permits for

"TakeWith Water," directed by TaraO'Sullivan

an "Artists Marketplace"

• Best Animated Short:

featuring dozens of individual vendors on a privately

"TatuapeMahalTower," directed byCarolina Markowitz andFernanda Salloum • Best Cinematography: "Songs MyBrothers Taught Me,"shot byJoshua JamesRichards

owned vacant lot on the

west end of Cascade Avenue during the quilt show, prompting some to raise concerns about the appearance of the temporary marketplace. Fujita-Conrads said the council is considering how many days a vendor should be allowed to use a

• Best of the Northwest:

"Mothering Inside,"directed by BrianLindstrom • AudienceAward: "Omo Child:The Riverand the Bush" • Today is thefestival's last day,whenthefull line-up ofwinning films and Best ofthe Bestwil be shownatthe Tower Theatre andRegal Cinemas, according to anews releasefrom BendFilm. See BendFilm.orgfor

temporary location, how

many vendors should be allowed to cluster on a single property, and whether tem-

porary vendors should be allowed to operate during citywide events.

gpss

details. — Bulletin s@ffreport

Proposed changes to the city code would require transient vendors to locate

on improved properties with sidewalks parking water and electrical service

and access to permanent restrooms. The council will host a

WASHINGTON

public hearing on the issue as part of its meeting Oct.

WEEK

22, and intends to have

U.S. SENATEVOTE • The U.S. Senate voted 70-27 Wednesday to send President Barack Obama amilitary spending bill he has threatened to veto. Oregon Sens. RonWyden and Jeff Merkley were among those —mainly Democrats — who voted against the $612 billion defense spending measure. Republican presidential candidates Ted Cruz, R-Texas,and Rand Paul, R-Ky., also voted against the measure. Obama andsome Democrats oppose the measure because it was a work-around of a compromise to cut defense spending anddomestic spending equally, according to TheAssociated Press.

any changes to the code in place by Jan. l. NO

PAIIKsG IIHY

'IIII\

Richard Esterman, a

Sisters resident and events promoter who helped organize the Artists Market-

photos by JarodOpperman/The Bulletin

Bend Deputy Fire Marshal Dan Derlacki, left, shows Brandon Polizzi, 4, how to use a hose while Brandon's brother, Tyler Polizzi, 8, right, watches during an open house at the north station Saturday. Brandon hopes to be a firefighter someday.

By Kailey Fisicaro The Bulletin

Kids took the driver's seat in

a Bend Fire engine Saturday at the department's annual open

J

"I didn't think there was

anything wrong with the old guidelines, but they would do a favor for one person, and not do a favor

lessen the excitement for the

Esterman said he doesn't expect any code

them touch and see things they' ve just read about," I

rary vendors necessarily needs to be changed, just applied consistently.

for another," Esterman

have the kids come out, have

l

the city's code on tempo-

house. The vehide, of course, was parked, but that didn' t children climbing aboard. "It's fun to kick back and 10

place, said he doesn't think

said. changes would substantially affect the events he organizes in Sisters, which include the Wild

George Fox, a volunteer fire-

West Show and Sisters

fighter, said. The open house is a day for

Art in the Park.

kids to interact with firefighters

council's attention to the issue is in part the result

(and get free Eberhard's ice cream) from the department at

Fujita-Conrads said the of recent beautification work completed along

Merfkley (D)....... Wyden (D).........

the north station, just off High-

U.S. HOUSE VOTE

Deputy Fire Marshal Dan Der-

whether temporary vendors enhance or detract

lacki showed two young brothers the dials and gauges where firefighters operate the hoses.

from the look of Sisters' main street. — Reporter: 541-383-0387,

• The U.S. House on Friday approved a measure that lifts a ban on domestic oil exports that is nearly four decades old. TwoOregon Democrats opposed the measure, which passed 261-159. Rep.Greg Walden, R-Hood River, voted alongside 234 other Republicans who support the measure, which the Wall Street Journal reports is a priority for oil companies. Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Canby, also voted for the bill. The measure faces uncertainty in the Senate, which has a higher threshold for passing measures. Blumenauer (D).................N Bonamici (0)......................N OeFazio (D) ........ Didn't vote

Schrader(D) .....................Y Walden (R)......................... Y See Week IB5

way 20. On the side of a fire engine,

Ezra Howitt, 1, excitedly grabs the wheel of a fire engine with help from Isaiah Howitt, left. The event was in connection with National Fire Prevention Week.

SeeFirefighters /B5

Cascade Avenue, and

shammers@bendbulletin.corn

YESTERYEAR

Central Oregonhashigh-grade horsestock for military use in 1915 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies of The Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.

100 YEARSAGO For the week ending Oct. 10, 1915

Oregonto be horse market

rope, if the struggle continues through another year, is the opinion of A.J. Evans, a prominent horse buyer of St. Joseph, Missouri, who has been

high grade of stock that has been purchased so far and

in animals which buyers have

for war uses. According to Mr.

been compelled to accept in

Evans' statement, more than

sent to Europe.

a half million dollars in cash

in this part of the state for sev-

for St. Joseph with 100 head of

some parts of the country. Any fears that the supply of horses in this part of Oregon would be exhausted or even

eralmonths buying horsesfor the French government.

horses. These, he believes, are probably as high grade animals as have gone to the front since buying began in the

threatened with exhaustion

were dispelled by Mr. Evans

when the horses are brought to this amount there will be no

when he stated that there were

dearth in the state.

northwest. He is particularly interested in the Central Or-

this part of the state than any

This fact, says Mr. Evans,

is not due to any scarcity of horses in the United States,

Mr. Evans and several horse men left Monday night

more available animals in

be one of the biggest sources of supply for horses going to

of the horses available for military purposes have been

egon animals owing to their

other where he has traveled. Up to this time more than

soundness and freedom from

2,200head of horses have left

the armies of belligerent Eu-

bought up, but is due to the

many of the blemishes found

Central Oregon through Bend

That Central Oregon will

because only three percent

will be left with Central Oregon stockmen before the close

of the European war and even

Indications are that bidding

for Oregon horse flesh will be more active in the coming six months than it has at any time

this year. See Yesteryear IB2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

E VENT

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.

541-350-7222.

TODAY BENDFILMFESTIVAL:BendFilm celebrates the voice of independent cinema through films, lectures and education; 10 a.m.; $250 full festival pass, $150 film pass, $12 individual tickets; various locations, 1000 NW Wall St., Suite 260, Bend; www. bendfilm.org or 541-388-3378. DD RANCHPUMPKIN PATCH& MARKETPLACE: Featuring a farmers market, crafts, live music, a pumpkin patch, apetting zoo,ahaymaze and more; 10a.m.to5 p.m.;DD Ranch, 3836 NE Smith RockW ay, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. "BOLSHOIBALLET: GISELLE":A ballet about a young peasant girl Giselle, who dies when shelearns that the man she loves, Albrecht, has betrayed her; 12:55 p.m.; $18, $15 for seniors and children; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents. corn or844-462-7342. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS SUNDAYJAM:All ages welcome, listen and dance; 1 p.m. free, donations accepted; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SWReif Road, Powell Butte; 541-410-5146. SECONDSUNDAY:ELIZABETH WOODY:Warm Spring tribal member and critically praised poet, lecturer, and educator Elizabeth Woody will speak; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; 541-312-1032. REDMOND COMMUNITYCONCERT ASSOCIATION: QUATTRO SOUND: Quattro Sound is an ensemble blending Latin, pop, jazz, and classical; season tickets only; 6:30 p.m.; $25 for students, $60 adults, $125 families for five concerts; Ridgeview High School's Performing Arts Theater, 4555 SWElkhorn Ave.,

MONDAY "THE OUTLIST":A showingof the film that highlights voices of Americans who identify as lesbian,

gay, bisexualandtransgender; 12 p.m.; Coats Campus Center, Central Oregon Community College, Room 116, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7412. MARTYN JOSEPHHOUSE CONCERT: The Welsh folk singersongwriter performs; 7 p.m., potluck donation; House Concerts in the Glen, 1019 NWStannium Road, Submitted photo Bend; www.houseconcertsintheglen. Portland band Yak Attack, which played one of the Phish after-parcorn or 541-480-8830. ty shows at the Volcanic Theatre Pub in July, will return to the

venue at 9 p.m.Wednesday.

TUESDAY

Redmond;www.redmondcca.org or

Yesteryear

ning of the raid was marked by heavy antiaircraft fire in

Continued from B1

central London.

Famous railroad builder has an engineering party now at work in country south of

Bend and is getting definite facts as to costs to determine future action in this field. Robert E. Strahorn, builder

Shakespeare's renownedplay,

6 p.m.; $20 to$25suggested

"WHO OWNS THEPAST":A showing of the film, followed by a discussion with Michel Wailer, assistant professor of anthropology at COCC;noon; Jungers Culinary Center, Central Oregon Community College, Room 118, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7701, ext. 2619. LADIESBACKWARDS BINGO: Bingo with a twist to benefit foster and adoptive families in our community, ladies only; 6 p.m.; $5 entry; Deschutes Children' s Foundation EastCampus, 2125 NE Daggett Lane, Bend; www.facebook. corn/ladiesbackwardsbingo or 541-385-4741. MAKE-A-BAND2015: Musicians will be asked to perform at spotlight events being held at Silver Moon Brewery, during these events producers will pick musicians to come together to form bands; 6 p.m.; $5; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-815-0574. EDGARALLANPOEDINNER

Strahorn enters Central Oregon

541-312-1032. OREGON HISTORICRAILROADS PROJECT:A presentation on the historical surveying of Oregon's private, public and interurban railroads by Edward J. Kamholz; 6:30 p.m.; A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum, 246 N. Main St., Prineville; www.crookcountyhistorycenter.org or 541-447-3715. NATIONALTHEATRELIVE: "HAMLET":A showing of

541-382-4754. "IN MY LIFE — AMUSICAL THEATRETRIBUTE TOTHE BEATLES":The award-winning musical retelling of the Beatles story featuring the live music of Abbey Road; 7:30 p.m.; $35 to $55 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "THE HOBBIT:THEBATTLEOFTHE FIVEARMIES EXTENDED EDITION": Featuring an extended edition of the film, with an exclusive introduction from director Peter Jackson; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342.

WEDNESDAY SENIOR DAY: Seniors 65 years and older are invited to enjoy the museum for free on this day of special programs; 9 a.m. free for seniors; High Desert Museum,

da, 5, Lynette, 3, and Stephen, 1.

The new chamber managFor several minutes during er is no stranger to the comthe early part of the raid, roof- munity he is to serve. The top watchers cheered as they

son of the Rev. R.H. Austin,

potted away at a single Ger- stationed in Bend for a time man raiderwhich kept hop- as pastor of the First Baptist ping fromcloud to cloud. Church, the ne w c h amber manager spent most of his British claimbig submarine boyhood in Bend, leaving in

toll

1955.

S even German an d

two

of the North Coast road and Italian submarines have been of the Portland, Eugene 8t sunk by British warships and Eastern,from the presidency airplanes during the last few of which he recently resigned, weeks, the admiralty said has started an engineering today and others have been party at work in Central Or- damaged. egon. Careful surveys are The admiralty also reportbeing made ofthe more ex- ed that the British submarine pensive portions of the routes, Osiris had torpedoed and which Mr. Strahorn has been sunk an Italian destroyer of considering for the develop- the Curatone class (there are ment of Central Oregon, for four of the class,each of 966 the purpose of obtaining ex- tons and carrying 105 men).

W hile

a t tending h i g h

school, Austin was a top football player and went on to the

festival recorded live from London's Royal Albert Hall; 7 p.m.; $15; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX,680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.corn or 844-462-7342. YAK ATTACK: The electronica band from Portland performs;

9p.m.;$8plusfeesinadvance, $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY KNOW OUT WEST:ROMANTIC NOTIONS OF THE WEST IN ART:Join Faith Powell, Curator of Exhibitions and Collections at the High Desert Museum for a presentation about how the American West is romanticized in art and the consequences of such images; 6 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road, Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.corn or

25 YEARS AGO

captured live from the Barbican theatre in London; 7 p.m.; $20; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend;www.fathomevents.corn or 844-462-7342. "A NIGHTOF ONE ACTS": An

when no announcements are

King George n arrowly escaped a German "whis-

made."

and their moms, dads, sisters site when winds gusted more and brothers — can relive the For the week ending than 40 mph. dreams of the past century Oct. 10, 1990 L eaks in t h e r o o f h a v e during the center's antique caused serious water dam- doll show. Developer eyes age, including the collapse The doll show, the center's athletic club this summer of a 10-by-10-foot first such event, features the A Eugene developer with section of interior ceiling. privatecollection of Zona Ford "In our judgment, if the of Bend and the center's Doran interest in historic preservation is examining the Bend building goes through one othy Vandervert First Lady Amateur Athletic Club build- more winter without being Collection. ing, once the hub of the com- waterproofed, 1 think it would The Vandervert collection munity's social activities. be very difficult to continue to is a complete series ofdolls deRob Bennett, the owner of try to save the building," Ben- picting the wives or hostesses the Bennett Management Of-

recommended evacuatingthe

nett said.

Heaviest raid of war raiders dived through cloudy hits Berlin

tle bomb" today as Nazi air

skies in steady attacks on many British objectives, including London. Not a minute before the king arrived at a hall in central London, a great bomb hurtled from the clouds and sent hundreds scurrying to shelters. Almost before the sound

In its heyday, the Bend Am-

ateur Athletic Club building

Hudson said maps show was a jeweL The 1,200 seat this area could provide great- auditorium featured a stage, er storage capacity in a lower dressing room and box seats

of the nation's presidents, from

Martha Washington to Nancy Reagan. Thedolls are dressed in gownsthat are replicas of those on display at the Smithsonian Institution and were

handmade by Va nderv crt, who donated thecollection to the center before her death.

Other dolls on display includeone from 1889 and apair depicting the Campbell Soup twins. The center is in Bend at the corner of Wall Street and Idaho Avenue across from the De-

schutes County Library.

Historical center's doll exhibit brings little girls' dreams to life

A room full of nothing but dolls. It's every l i t tle g i r l's

dream. included a four lane bowlThanks to the Des Chutes on Berlin early today and last The ponded area behind ing alley, Bend's first indoor Historical Center, little girlsnight killed at least 20 per- the proposed Shevlin Park swimming pool, club rooms sons and for nearly five hours dam, Hudson said, would lie with f i r eplaces, r eading packed air raid shelters with over a major fault in the area. rooms, a small library and a thousands of persons caught This is a negative factor, he padded wrestling room. as they were leaving theaters pointed out, because it could The Bend school district and movie houses. make retaining water dif- bought the property in 1925 The Reich capital was at- ficult. The ponded area for and used it as a gym and a of the bomb had died out the tacked by s even waves of Hudson's suggested upstream site for high school plays and king arrived on schedule and British planes flying so low site would not lie over the commencement ceremonies. entered the building. that they could be seen plain- fault. The d i strict cl o sed t h e Following the king were ly. They dropped parachute Field studies would be nec- building in 1978. Since then, it two flustered stenographers, flares to light their targets essary to determine the feasi- has been vandalized and neone of whom suddenly rec- and then high explosive and bility of his suggestion, Hud- glected to the point that refurognizedthe king and clapped incendiary bombs crashed in son said. bishingthe 40,000 square-foot her hands to her mouth in the most violent attack of the Cost of obtaining the land facility would cost far more amazement.

"Cor!" she exclaimed, "I could collapse.And he comes out during air raids too!"

The king was making an investigation of the shelter

Britain's longest and most

University of Oregon to gain regional grid recognition.

Creek. This is upstream from Shevlin Park.

Oregon PlaceNames:Volume III:

Deschutes County"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina SpringsBooks,422 SW Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. ACOUSTIC EIDOLON: The Celtic, flamenco and classical duo perform, evening of sixone-act plays,as featuring Joe Scott on a doublenecked guitar, and Hannah Alkire part of the Black Box series by Cascades Theatrical; 7:30 p.m.; on cel lo;7 p.m .;$15-$20 suggested donation; Unitarian Universalist $15 for adults and seniors, $12 for students; Cascades Theatre, Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend; 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-385-3908. www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "BIG EYES":A film about the 1950s MCCOYTYLERBAND:The band and early '60s, artist Walter Keane and his wife, Margaret; 7:30 p.m.; from Santa Cruz performs; 9 Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County p.m.; $5plusfeesinadvance, Library,134 SE ESt., Madras; $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre 541-475-3351. Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or "A NIGHTOF ONE ACTS": An 541-323-1881. evening of 6 one act plays, as COTA MOVIENIGHT:DOUBLE part of the Black Box series by Cascades Theatrical; 7:30 p.m.; FEATURE:Featuring the two biking films "Builder" and "Ashes to $15 for adults and seniors, $12 for students; Cascades Theatre, Agassiz"; 9 p.m.; $5; McMenamins 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. corn or 541-382-5174. "EVILDEAD, THE MUSICAL": A play about five college students who visit FRIDAY an old abandoned cabin inthewoods THE PERFECT PAIR: Featuring a and unleash an evil force; 7:30 p.m.; pairing of Deschutes Brewery's beers $22, $19 for students and seniors, and culinary delights created by local $28 for the Splatter Zone; 2nd Street chefs, including Chi, Deschutes Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Brewery, Ginger's Kitchenware, Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.corn or Hola! and Spork, to benefit the 541-312-9626.

fice, confirmed that his group During the past 15 years, has done some "very prelimi- community l eaders h ave This past weekend, Austin nary" studies of the 72-year- mulled a number of suggestattendeda conference ofstate old structure. ed uses for the site, including chamber secretaries in KlamThe Bend-La Pine School a community theater, a perath Falls. District declared the building forming arts center and a lisurplus, the initial step toward brary, although none has gone TumaloCreek dam site selling the dilapidated three beyond the tentative planning discussedatmeeting story brick building on Wall stage. Possibility of a dam site on Street. Note to readers: The buildTumalo Creek other than one Bennett is also president of ing fell into disrepair and was act information as to costs, The admiralty's commu- which would flood Shevlin Downtown Athletic Club Inc., renovated between 1995 and etc. Assisted by the informa- nique was intended to allay P ark w a s me n t ioned a t which has operated the Eu- 1998 and reopened in 1999 tion so obtained, Mr. Strahorn some of the fears over the Wednesday night's meeting gene Downtown Athletic Club as the center for the Boys & will decide whether he will sharp rise in British merchant of Bend's city commissioners. since 1985. Bennett's firm ren- Girls Clubs. Jim Crowell led proceed with the enterprise. ship losses due to German Commissioner Bill Hudson ovated a downtown depart- the fundraising effort along U-boat attacks. Pointing out said preliminary studies of ment store built in the early with Fred Hornback, Butch that it was not the admiralty new topographical maps sug- 1900s to create the club. Holdon and many other vol75 YEARS AGO "Our interest would be a unteers and it t ook several practice to announce the de- gest an alternative site might For the week ending struction of enemy U-boats, be in the area just below step-by-step process to deter- years to raise the $2 million Oct. 10, 1940 the communique said, "It where the 'Ittmalo Irrigation mine if that building would be dollars needed to renovate the should not be assumed we District's Columbia Southern feasible for athletic club use," building. "Whistle bomb" hits are not sc o ring s u ccesses canal takes out of Tumalo he added.

near king

BethlehemInn;5 p.m .;$45; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-3228768, ext. 21. PINK PALOOZA PARTY: Featuring giveaways, raffles and more, to benefit the Integrative Therapies Department at St. Charles; 6 p.m.; $10 includes two raffle tickets; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Steve Lent will present a talk and slideshow based on his new book, "Central

intensive air raid of the war

war.

in the balcony. Other features

• s • •

50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Oct. 10, 1965

L

• • •

tilthas brought a restorative look to my skin attd I feel

really good. I have achieved that youthful glow that z was hoping to get, and1'ttt rea/ly

happy. >> RUTH, FRACTORA CLIENT

r~~

would also be a factor, Hud- than $1 million.

situation in central London,

accompanied by

dam than at the Shevlin Park location.

son said, and this would need One report — when the to be determined. building was still in use-

ALL UooD REsT oRATloN

A d m iral Austin takes over reins of

FRACTORA'"

Sir Edward Evens, the newly appointed "shelter dictator," when the bomb fell near the

chamber

building they were about to

taken over today by Chuck

< 4~ >< 9 < 7 ~ 4

enter.

Austin, named earlier in the

The explosion came as anti-aircraft guns resumed a heavy barrage after a comparative lull of an hour or longer. The crack of guns reminded strolling Londoners and office workers that the air alarm sounded several hours ago was still on. The begin-

year to succeed Marion Cady. Austin, who comes here f rom Salem, was on t h e job early today. At noon he attended his first general conference. Austin will be joined on Saturday by his wife, Bea, and their three children, Lin-

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

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tormente

AROUND THE STATE

ose ur s ootin atestcasua ties

Steel mill fined —A McMinnville steel mill has been fined more than $7,000 for violating its water pollution permit. CascadeSteel Rolling Mills is being fined because it stopped performing required monthly water sampling for lead andzinc. The state Department of Environmental Quality said the monitoring has beenrequired since 2002 under the facility's National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit. A spokesmanfor Schnitzer Steel in Portland, the McMinnville facility's parent company, said the mill is now monitoring as required. Colin Kelly said CascadeSteel discovering a monitoring oversight as part of its internal review and immediately notified the Department of Environmental Quality and fixed the program. The company hasuntil Oct. 22 to appeal the penalty.

By T. Rees Shapiro The Washington Post

ROSEBURG Joseph Dominic Monti was 16 when

a friend jealous of his popularity with girls approached him from behind at Roseburg High School and shot him four times. One hollow-point bullet severed the nerves in his left leg. Another left fragments embedded at the base of his spine.

BrOadWay bridge —Portland's Broadway Bridge will be closed to motor vehicles from 7 a.m. today through Oct. 27 during a repainting project. Sidewalks on the bridge will remain open to pedestrians and bicyclists. Streetcars, buses andother motor vehicles will not be able to usethe bridge during the closure. Alternative river crossings open to motor vehicles include the Burnside, Fremont and Steel bridges.

SOda Fire rehab —TheBureauof LandManagement hasre-

Now 25, Monti walks with

a limp, can't hold a steady job, lives on food stamps and was

leased a rehabplan for the land burned in the SodaFire. The more than 450-square-mile fire burned parts of OwyheeCounty, Idaho and Jordan Valley, Oregon. Therehabilitation plan includes ground and aerial seeding, as well as planting of sage brush, and erosion control work. Erosion is a big concern becausefall and winter rain and snow canwashaway the soil the fire exposed. Jessica Gardetto with the National Interagency Fire Center said they will be planting grass and trying to stabilize soil as soon aspossible. Growing more sage brush is particularly important because somekeygreater sage grouse habitat was lost to the SodaFire. Gardetto said the work is being done not just to help the wildlife but for the people whodepend on this land for their livelihood.

overcome last week when he

heard that another gunman had killed nine people at another school nearby, the local

community college where Monti once considered taking classes.

"When you' re a victim of something like this and you hear about it happening to other people, it affects you deeper than people understand," Monti said over beers at Mc-

Menamins, a bar in Roseburg. my own family died." Plagued by anxiety and

ical Center with tubes down

"It's almost like somebody in

constant pain, Monti leads an

existenceforever altered by the shooting. His journey to recovery provides a glimpse into the challenges many of last week's survivors may face as they return to their lives with

new scars, both physical and emotional. But when President Obama

visited Roseburg on Friday to meet privately with families who lost loved ones at

Ump qua Community College, he entered a community where mourning is tempered by an enthusiasm for firearms. Many residents question how the most recent shooter, Chris-

— From wire reports

The Allison-Monti family via The WashingtonPost

Joseph Monti was shot multiple times by a friend and fellow student at Roseburg High School in February 2006. His half-brother Eric Allison is seen comforting him in the hospital. Monti said the recent shooting at a nearby community college deeply affects him.

a welding company, but the

his throat. The bullets hit hard labor hurt his back. him below his right shoulder Now he is seeking disability blade, at the base of his spine, payments from Social Secuin his buttocks and in his left rity, but his lawyers say his forearm. claim has yet to be approved. "I'm trying to get jobs ... but He was in surgery for 15 hours while doctors recon- I'm getting looked at like I'm a structed his i n testines, his crippled nobody," Monti said. mother said. When he woke "I'm not getting the fair run. up, he moaned, "Why me, I'm getting no run." Mom? Why me'?" M onti's family ha d n o After the shooting, Leodoro m edical i n surance a t th e ran off campus. He was quick- time of the shooting, and his ly surrounded by police in the bills amounted to more than parking lot of a nearby barbe- $ 145,000. Eventually, t h e cue joint. He placed the pistol hospital wrote off much of to his head and threatened the debt as uncollectible, his to commit suicide but police mother said. persuaded him to surrender. In 2008, Monti filed a law-

topher Harper-Mercer, 26, was He laterexpressed regret to able to amass a small arsenal detectives. "I screwed up," L eodoro of weapons without raising suspicions. Others see nothing said in a recorded interview unusual about keeping multi- shown at his trial in juvenile ple guns in the home. court. "I shouldn't have done Monti's views on firearms it s are colored by his experience. Monti said he still doesn' t He said schools should be know why Leodoro shot him. "He had no reason," Monti gun-free but that the rights of upstanding citizens should not said, though assumes Leodoro be infringed. thought "maybe if he took me "Crazy people shouldn' t out of the picture he could have guns. I think good people have a girlfriend." should have guns," Monti said. Leodoro told Roseburg po"Because they could be there lice detectives that girls were to save people from bad people i nfatuated wit h M o n ti, a c with guns." cording to news accounts of When Monti's family moved the court proceedings. "Every to Roseburg from Northern time they see Joe, they follow California in 2004, he hoped him," Leodoro told police at for a better life. His childhood the time. "When he's there, had been shattered in grade we' re like nothing." school by the loss of his faP olice said L e odoro o b ther, who died of cirrhosis. tained the 10 mm handgun

suit against Leodoro, his fam-

said in a brief interview. He declined to discuss last week' s

Get A Taste For Food. Home & Garden

massacre at Umpqua Community College — or the day he

Every Tuesday In ATHOME

shot his friend in the back.

Leodoro said he has been "laying low" since he got out of

The Bulletin

juvenile detention.

"I' ve changed," he said. "Back then I was young and dumb and not thinking right." Monti said he hasn't tried to

talk to Leodoro since his release. But it's not because he' s

angry. "I don't hate him," Monti

said, his eyes growing misty.

Find It All Online

WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066 ~e<"'6 \

bendbulletjn. Com

"But I don't think he under-

I58'TREss

stands the full consequences and outcomes of what he' s

sl((CS

G allery-Be n d

The Bulletin

done."

ily, his alleged accomplice and Roseburg schools to cover medical expenses, lost wages and to compensate for his pain. The case was settled two

541-330-5084

years later, when Leodoro and

the alleged accomplice were ordered to pay Monti more than $598,000. Monti's lawyer in that case, Dennis Black, said Monti received only a minute fraction

•I

of the award because the boys had no money. "If the shooter and his ac-

complice win th e l ottery," Black said, "then Joseph could collect." Monti estimates that he' s

gotten about $3,500 from the settlement, which he has used

to pay for repairs to his dilapidated Acura Integra. Otherwise, his sole monthly income

from his home and that it was is $200 in food stamps and a ship with a neighbor, Vincent owned by his stepfather. In $50 check from Leodoro for Wayne Leodoro, who lived on court documents, Leodoro's restitution. a ranch 2 miles away over a family denied owning the gun. Leodoro is able to write ridge. In any case, Leodoro was or- those checks because he does Monti said Leodoro often deredtobedetained bytheOr- have a job. After serving just visited his house to jump on egon Youth Authority until his five years in juvenile prison, his trampoline and rock out 25th birthday, in 2016. he was released in 2011. He in his room to the heavy metal Monti recovered from his now lives in a quaint seaside band Korn. But Monti noticed wounds, but emotionally, he village about 95 miles north of a fissure in their relationship was devastated. He dropped Roseburg with his wife and a in February 2006 when it be- out of school because he lon- new baby. came clear that the boys had ger felt safe on school grounds, The manager of a nearby a crush on the same girl. On and he never graduated. Safeway said Leodoro works Valentine's Day, Monti said, As an unskilled worker there at night. He also serves they both bought her gifts. with no high school diploma as a volunteer firefighter. ColNine days later on Feb. 23, or GED, Monti's options were leagues said he eagerly learns Leodoro, then 14, brought a limited. He tried working on a new skills so he can save lives. backpack filled with ammu- tree farm and shuttling acetBeing a firefighter is "a way nition to school and hid a sil- ylene bottles on dollies for for me to give back," Leodoro ver and black handgun under his gray hooded sweatshirt. Police never charged another teenagerwho allegedly served as an accomplice — a person Monti claimed actually goadMonti found relief in a friend-

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L

e d Leodoro to c ommit t h e

shooting. Monti was walking through a high s chool courtyard

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a round 7:30 a.m. w it h h i s

arms around two girls — "all laughing and having fun," he said — when he heard a loud crack. "I felt a hot pressure, like a

hot poker being jabbed into my body," Monti said. Leodoro paused before firing the next three shots in quick succession. Monti said he fell to the concrete and saw

the students around him begin screaming and running. "When I did get shot I looked

off to the side at the clouds and at the trees. And I said, 'God, I'm too young. I don't want to

die,'" Monti recalled. He woke up in Mercy Med-

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Carolyn irene Palm,of

Daniel Steele, of Bend Nov. 28, 1915-Oct. 6, 2015 Services: A military honor service will be held, October 23, 2015, with burial at Willamette National Cemetery in Portland,

Redmond Nov. 27, 1938 - Oct. 5, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net

Services:

Oregon.

No services will be held at this time. Contributionsmay be made

Contributions may be made to:

Hospice Partners In Care,

to:

2075 NW Wyatt Ct., Bend OR, 97701

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, 97701.

Norma Glenn Wiemer

Carol Lee Alexander

June 11, 1924 - October 8, 2015

Norma Glenn Wiemer, of Redmond, Oregon, died on Feb. 28, 1938- Oct. 3, 2015 October 8, 2015, at the age of 91. She was born in St . C harles, Illinois, o n J u n e 11, 1924 to Robert R. and Myrtle M a e ( T e r w i l l iger) Glenn. She grew up in St. C harles and m a r r ie d h e r high s c h oo l s w e e t heart, LaVerne ( V erne) W i e m er on January 1, 1944. Verne served as a p i l o t i n th e A rmy A i r Co r p s d u r i n g W orld Wa r I I . T h ey l i v ed in the St. Charles area until 1953, when they moved t o a f a r m ne a r E l b u r n , IL. The couple was blessed C arol Lee w a s b o r n o n with t h r ee dau g h t e r s, February 28, 1938, to Rus- L ynn, P a tt i a n d Na n c y , s ell and W i l m a J o nes i n and a son, Joel. Rose Lodge, Oregon. She In 1970, the family moved p assed away at he r h o m e t o C res well, O R , w h e r e o n October 3, 2015. S h e t hey lived u n ti l 1 9 77. A t married T o m A l e x a n d er t hat t i me , w i t h t h e c h i l on Jul y 2 7 , 1 9 63 . T o- d ren al l m a r r i ed , N o r m a g ether, they a d opted t w o and Verne moved to Cenchildren, son, B r u ce, an d tral Oregon. Norma volundaughter, Linda. teered at t h e C o m m unity Prior to her marriage, she K itchen a n d S t . F r a n c i s w as employe d b y Fi r s t thrift shop in Bend, and St. N ational a s s e c r etary t o V incent's i n Redm o n d . Rudy Mollner, President of She wa s a h om e m a k er t he bank. F ro m h i m , s h e m ost of h e r l i f e , an d e n learned how to be a perfec- joyed sewing, knitting and tionist, which followed her crocheting, a s w ell as a ll o f h e r l i f e . In l at e r cooking and b aking, travyears, she was the r ecep- eling, c a m p i ng , r e a d i ng, tionist and b o okkeeper at playing cards and spendPioneer M e m orial H o s p i- ing time with her family.. tal in Prineville. She i s su r v i v e d by She loved h o rses, dogs, V erne, her husband of 7 1 c ats, b i r ds , f l o w er s a n d years, of Redmond; daughpeople. She is a member of ters, Lynn W o lf e (Ted) of the Powell Butte Christian B end an d N a n c y Ho u l e Church. (Ed) of Colorado Springs; She was pre-deceased by son, Joel Wiemer (Julie), of her parents, he r b r o t h er, Kooskia, I D ; so n - i n -law, Norns; and her son, Bruce, Gary Hellwege, of Tigard; in January 2015. sister, J u l i e B e e b e , of S urvivors ar e h e r H u s - G eneva, IL ; e i gh t g r a n d b and, T om A l ex a n d e r ; c hildren a n d 15 gr e a t d aughter, L i nd a J o A l e x - grandchildren. S h e w as ander; sister, Marlene; and p receded in d eath b y h e r her hu sb a n d M ar vi n daughter, Patti H e l l w ege, A rmes; n u m e r ou s n e p h - a nd he r s i s t er , D o r o t hy e ws and n i eces, and h e r Salnave. t wo g r a n d sons, T h o m a s Funeral Mass to be h eld and Foster Doss. a t St . T h o m a s C a t h o l i c Memorials may be m ade Church, 1 0 :3 0 a . m . on to the Project Love Mi nis- Tuesday, October 13, lunt ry o f t h e P o w e l l B u t t e c heon f o l l o w i ng . C o n t r i Christian Ch ur c h or b utions t o St . T h o m a s Hospice of Redmond. Academy, Redmond, OR. R edmond M emor i a l R edmond M em or i a l Chapel is honored to serve Chapel is honored to serve the family. Please visit our the family. Please sign our online gu es t b oo k at online gu e s t b o ok at www.redmondmemorial.c www.redmondmemorial.c Onl. om

Robert "Bob" R. Parkinson, of Eagle Crest I Redmond

Aug. 23, 1920- Sept. 25, 2015

Sept. 23, 1928 - Oct. 2, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A family celebration of life will be held at a later date in California. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, 97701.

Nancy Anne Holder April 22, 1930 - Sept. 29, 2015 N ancy A nn e H ol de r passed a w a y S e p t ember 29, 2015, in Bend. She was b orn A p r i l 2 2 , 1 9 30 , t o Ernest and M ary D o r othy Z eh, an d w a s r a i se d i n Grafton, North Dakota. Nancy received teaching degrees from Miss Woods Academy, Minnesota, and Oregon S t at e U n i v ersity. S he taught for 3 1 y e a r s 21 of them in Corvallis as a classroom teacher, l i brarian, and resource teacher. Nancy m e t Jo s ep h B . H older an d t h e y m a r r i ed on June 27, 1954. They retired to Black Butte, where N ancy v o l u n teered w i t h t he S i s t er s H a b i ta t fo r Humanity an d w a s a ctive i n many g r o ups at B l a ck Butte, as well as PEO. N ancy's family w a s t h e m ost i m p o rtant t h i n g i n her l i f e . S he w as an a mazing c o o k a n d g r a c ious h o stess an d m a d e everything look e f f ortless. She was a s m a rt , a c t ive, e legant an d b eaut i f u l w oman. W e w i l l a l w a y s r emember he r s m i l e a n d her sense of humor. Nancy is survived by her husband of 6 1 y e a rs, Jos eph, o f Bl a c k Butt e ; daughter Mary Kay of Sea ttle; son C h r i stopher o f Sisters; an d g r a n ddaught er Kaitlin ( T r avis) of S e attle. A Catholic M ass wil l b e c elebrated fo r N a n c y o n O ctober 23 at 3 PM a t S t . Edwards Catholic C h urch in Sisters. A Celebration of Life will be held on Octob er 2 4 f r o m 2 - 4 P M at Touchmark in Bend. N ancy's fa m i l y gr a t e fully t h a nk s th e a m a zing caregivers a t T o u c h mark for their loving care, kindness and compassion. She w as treated w i t h d i g n i t y and r e s pect; y o u gav e Nancy the ability to be her best self. R emembrances ma y b e made to Circle of Friends, 353 W. Hood Street, Suite 109, Sisters, OR 97759, or Habitat for H u manity, 141 W. Maine Avenue, Sisters, OR 97759.

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paidadvertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information onany of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Email: obits@bendbulletin.corn Fax: 541-322-7254

Milbert 'Bert' J. Bertsch

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

'

M are, J anis, a n d B r u c e , lived in California starting in 1953. He graduated from Palos Verdes High School in 1 9 6 9 a n d gr a d u a ted from t h e Un i v e r sit y o f California-Berkeley with a BA degree in Ar chitecture in 1976. Most of his worki ng life w a s i n t h e B e n d %L area, either in food service Bert Bertsch passed away or the building trades. He in his sleep at th e age of s ecialized i n b ui l d i n g 95, on September 25th. d'e cks, f e nces, h o t t u b s , Bert was the fifth child of n ine b o r n t o J.J. a nd trellises, and gazebos. Eric Katherine (Dewald) d ied suddenly o f c a r d i ac B ertsch in M c I n t osh, SD , arrest on J u n e 2 5 , 2 0 15, w hile on his way t o w o r k m oving with hi s f amily i n at the Bend Country Club. the late 1930s to Paul, ID w here h e w or k e d on A "get-together" of f a m i ly and friends will be at the D farms. and D Bar and Grill,927 In Oct. 1942, he went into N W Bond St . i n do w n the Army and was shipped o verseas N o v . 1 9 4 3 , t o t own B e nd, a t 4 P M o n s everal of t h e S o ut h P a - Sunday, Oct. 18, 2015. Stop c ific i s l ands. H e s e r v e d b y, raise a g l ass t o E r i c and swap "Eric" stories. with the 15th anti-aircraft a rtillery. H e r e t u r ned t o the U.S., December 1945. He moved to Central Oregon in 1948 and married Geraldine Merchant Feb. 1952. They had three children together plus the two G eraldine br ought t o t h e marriage. H e w o r k e d for Deschutes Valley Potatoes bef ore g o in g t o w o r k fo r Babler Brothers Const. for m any years u n ti l h i s r e tirement in 1982. Bert and G eraldine sp e n t m any years t r aveling, c a m p ing a nd f i shing o n t h e v e r y roads he helped establish w hile w o r k in g a t B a b l e r : (~ " B rothers. H e l ov e d h is family very much and enj oyed t e l hn g h i s s t o r i e s f rom his life to u s a ll . H e b elonged t o t he V .F . W . Post Jt4108, Redmond, Operating Engineers ¹701 for 30 years. He is sur v i v e d by ."J

Gerald Liddell

known as "Koopsta Knicca" and founding member of Three 6 Mafia. Died Friday in a Memphis, Tennessee, hospital after having a stroke. Jerry Parr, 85: Secret Service agent credited with saving President Ronald Reagan's life on the day he was shot outside

a Washington, D.C., hotel. Died Friday in Washington, D.C. Larry Rouen, 75: One of the most influential and tech-sav-

vy modern jazz producers who co-founded GRP Records

with pianist Dave Grusin. Died Friday in New Jersey. Ravindra Juin, 71: Man who overcame lifelong blindness to achieve renown in his native

India and beyond as a singer and composer, scoring more than 200 Bollywood films. Died Friday in Mumbai. — From wire reports

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'

••

Cl a SSifle S

Hen Xl. 'Ilodpke g~., 83'

Michael (Joelyn), Merlin (Cristy), Susan, and Kathy

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dren, three step-grandchildren; five great-grandchild ren; e i gh t s t e p gr a n d c hildren a n d s e v e n s t e p great-great-grandchildren; two brothers, three sisters; and numerous nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents, one brother and two s i sters, one step

daughter, one great-grandson, and two sons-in-law.

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Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

Arty. 25, 1944 — Oct. 5, 2015

Jan. 9, 1960-Oct. 2, 2015 "Jerry" Mic h a el Gerald Liddell, 55, passed away in Good Samaritan Hospital in Corvallis, OR., on Frid a y , Oct o ber 2nd, 2 0 15 , d u e t o ca r d iac complications. Jerry was born o n J a nuary, 9th, 1960, in Corvallis and grew up in Hillsboro. He graduated from OSU with two bachelor's degrees in Pre-Medicine and Industrial Hygiene. In 1986, h e c o-founded an i ndustrial hygiene service company, Hazcon, Inc., based in Portland, OR. Later, he worked as an Industrial Hygienist for Kaiser Permanente and OHSU and as a Safety Consultant. Most recently, he attained his Oregon real estate license and worked as a Realtor in Albany. Jerry is survived by his parents, Richard and Janice, his wife of 27 years, Melanic; and his daughter, Lindsay, who is a student at his alma mater. Please share your thoughts and memories for the family at www.demossdurdan.corn.

ELSEWHERE

Oec. 27, 1950- June25, 2015

Jane, and siblings Don,

Mavyavet /Cine

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DEATHS

Eric John L o r enzen was b orn in E n g l and o n D e c . Deaths of note from around 27, 1950. His f amily, p ar- the world: e nts R i c har d a n d B e t t y Robert Phillips, 40: Rapper

Get A Taste For Food, Home Sr Garden -

Eric John Lorenzen

Margaret Ellen (Hardenbrook) King, 71, passed away in her home on Saturday,Oct.3, 2015. Margaret was born in Emmet, Idaho, to Schuyler k Cynthia

Hardenbrook. Her childhood was spent in Prineville, Oregon, where she met, and later married, Michael King. They were married for 54 years. Margaretloved children and family, and her home was the hub of holiday celebrations and gatherings. She had a deep connection with her extended family and friends. Margaret made a lifelong career in retail. She had an eye for detail and design, and her home was evidence of that gift. She waspreceded in death by herson, R ichard F. King. Margaret is survived by her husband, Michael, of Bend, Oregon; her son, Mark King (and daughter-in-law, Wendi) of Bend;and a daughter-in-law, Terri King of Bend. She was blessed with four grandchildren, Doug King of Bend,

BriaunnaKing of Nampa, Idaho, Anne Thorn of Bend, and Ty King ofBend. She also had four great-grandchildren, Oakley, Sterling, Stuart, and Olivia. Margaret is also survived by her sister, Lucille Lyte, of Richland, WA. A graveside service will be held on Sunday, October 25, at 2:00 pm at the Pilot Butte Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donationsmay be made to Partners In Care ofB end.

On M onday, October 5, 2015, Ben R. Rolphe Jr. was awarded his 'second set of wings' and left t his world to be with h is L o rd a nd Savior. Ben was born June 19, 1932, in Los Angeles, California to Ben R . a n d LaVerne Bronson Rolphe. Ben enlisted in the U.S. Air Force in 1949 and graduated from flight training school as a Second Lieutenant in June 1950 after earning his 'first set of wings.'He then piloted a Douglas A-26 Invader in the Korean War and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for heroism

and extraordinary achievement during aerial flight combat missions.

(However, Ben always said the real heroes were those who didn' t make it home.) In April 1951, Ben married Shirley G. Foote of Silverton, Oregon. Following Ben's honorable discharge from the Air Force,they moved to California. It was there that Ben's natural abilities and spirit as an entrepreneur took root. In the early mornings, he delivered milk door-to-door in the Santa Cruz Mountains, and then later changed to a more lucrative job delivering bread to stores throughout the San Jose/Los Gatos area. At the same time, he attended night classes at the University of Santa Clara, Law School. He never took the Bar, but instead applied his knowledge of "the law" in his many future businessesand endeavors yet to come. In 1964, Ben and Shirley moved to Bend, Oregon where they resided until 1971 when they relocated to Kalispell, Montana. During Ben's marriage to Shirley, they had three children, Hope, Randy and Pennie. Shirley p Ben in death in August 1976. Following Shirley's death, Ben, his son Randy, and close family friends/business partners, Dick and Charlie Staples,relocated their company, Century Publishing Company,to Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.

reced ed

On February14,1980, he married Anna Marie Swan. Together, they shared a love of nature, Rowers, and beautiful landscape. Ben had a knack for envisioning what was possible before it was euen created. They created the beautiful estate in Hayden Lake, Idaho known today as Villa desFleurs. He and Anna have spent many'years together traveling the world via land, sea and air along with visiting children, grandchildren and great grandchildren whenever they coulit. Over Ben'si lifetime, he started, operated and sold severlsuccessful companies 'jn~ varying industries, the latest being Century Publishing Company which is still operating in PostFels, Idaho under de'erent ownership. Ben was passionate ' about community service. %roughout the years, he served on the Boards of the Coeur d'Alene Chamber of Commerce, the North Idaho College Foundation, the Boy Scouts of America- Kootenai County, the Panhandle Council for the Aged, the University of Idaho Business School, was a founding Director of bankcda, and the Founding President of the Post Falls Rotary. Because he and Anna were so dedicated to community service and involvement, they were jointly awarded "Citizens of the Year" in 1996 by the Coeur d'Alene Chamber of Commerce.

Ben'sfirst love, excluding family, was flying. Since he was a very young boy, he always enjoyed flying. He usedto say that some of his best ideas came to him while he was boring holes in the sky. Some of his other hobbies included restoring antique cars with his son and fly-fishing locally and around the world. He and Anna's favorite placeto escape and relax was attheir log cabin on the St. Joe River. In his most recent years, Benwrote and became a published and accomplished author of his auto-biography and a series of four Christian, fiction books. Ben was preceded in death by his parents, Ben and LaVerne Rolphe; brother, Roily, who died as an infant; and his first wife, Shirley. He is survived by his wife, Anna; two sisters,Bonnie Wendt and Melody

'Ihomasson; daughters, Hope Anderson (married to Craig) and Pennie Sanders (married to Mark); son, Randy Rolphe (married to Sandie); step-daughter, Lori Frey Butler (marriedto Chris); andstepson, Jeff Frey (married to Kristi); seventeen grandchildren, fifteen great grandchildren and one great-great grandchild. A celebration of his life will be held 1:00 P.M. Friday, October 16, 2015, at the First Presbyterian Church, 521 E. Lakeside Ave, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho with Yates Funeral Homes, Coeur d'Alene chapel in care of the arrangements. Ben believed strongly in giving to worthy organizations that help the lessfortunate and help spread the saving grace of his Lord and Savior. The family requests that in-place of flowers, donations be made to International Teams, a world-wide Christian outreach organization, at http: //www.iteams.us/action/give "for the benefit of Craig Anderson" (son-in-law), or pleaseconsider giving to your own favorite charity. You may visit Ben's online memorial and sign his guestbook at wwwyatesfuneralhomes.corn.


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B5

BITUARIES FEATUREDOBITUARY

ConservativehastenedMargaret Thatcher'sfall By Robert D. McFadden Lord Geoffrey Howe, a

ernment, quit the Cabinet on Nov. 1, 1990. Two weeks later, he at-

Conservative British Cabinet minister who advanced Prime

tacked Thatcher's European policies in Parliament.

New Yorft Times News Service

"I have done what I believed

Minister Margaret Thatcher's tough economic and foreign

to be right to my party and my country," he said with uncharacteristic passion, and urged fellow Conservatives to join him in abandoning her. "The

policies in the 1980s, but who

resigned and hastened her downfall with a stinging attack on her government in its

final days, died Friday at his home in Warwickshire, England. He was 88. The cause appeared to be PA via The Associated Press file photo a heart attack, his family told Geoffrey Howe, pauses, during the Conservative Party Confert

British media outlets.

ence in1981. Knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in1970, Howe died At the heart of Howe's dra- Friday at his home. He was 88.

matic dissent in the House of Commons was a burning issue in 1990: How much sovereign- 1979 to 1990. Knighted by ty should Britain surrender to Queen Elizabeth II in 1970, he join Europe's burgeoning eco- was a member of the House of nomic, monetary and political Commons for nearly 25 years, union'? Thatcher, who opposed and concluded his career with Europeanfederalism in gener- decades in the House of Lords al, drew the line at a common as a life peer. currency, saying the value of Unlike the confrontationthe pound sterling should not al and imperious Thatcher, be set by a European central Howe had little charisma or bank. flair for public speaking. In Howe argued that only full Parliament, he droned through participation with the Euro- budget and policy speeches, pean community couldre- a roly-poly avuncular man store Britain's declining influ- with shaggy white hair. Critics ence in the world. His dissent calledhim "Mogadon Man," capped growing discontent after a popular tranquilizer, with Thatcher and was widely and a Labour Party leader regardedas the crucialevent once mocked his docile debatt hat precipitated her w i t h- ing style by likening it to being drawal as prime minister. But "savaged by a dead sheep." she, too, had a point. Britain But Howe was a deft lawnever adopted the euro and yer and negotiator, valued by retains the pound sterling, the leaders he served. After Conworld's oldest currency still in servatives won power in 1970, use. he wrote a law banning strikes In a half-century in public without union leadership aplife, Howe was one of Britain' s proval and providing 60-day best-known leaders — an owl- cooling-off periods in strikes ish, low-key Tory who came of involving national interests. age in a postwar era of strikes, His inability to head off a coal unemployment and inflation. miners' strike forced a nationHe devoted much of his career al three-day workweek in 1974 to reforming a stagnant econo- to conserve electricity, and the my, restraining unions and re- Conservatives were replaced juvenating Britain's status as a by a Labour government. world power. His efforts were

only partly successful, and he never achieved his ambition to be prime minister. But he was solicitor gener-

Howe returned to the Cab-

inet after Thatcher assumed power in 1979. Reversing a postwar British consensus on a welfare state, she and her

al and minister for trade and economy chief cut i n come c onsumer affairs i n P r i m e taxes, especially for the rich; Minister Edward Heath's Cab- doubled levies on goods and

— "with which I have myself wrestled for perhaps too long." Thatcher

listened

stony-faced. Public opinion ran heavily challengers dosed in. Two

weeks after Howe's speech,

mist said. "And horribly hard. Thatcher was replaced by It involves the abandonment John Major. Nicknamed the of the public sector as the "Iron Lady," she had been Britprime engine of Britain's eco- ain's first female prime minisnomic growth and its replace- ter, and the longest-serving of the century.

Richard Edward Geoffrey Painful as the measures were for Britons generally, Howe was born in Port Talbot, the economy improvedover Wales, on Dec. 20, 1926, to B. d ecade. Inflation Edward and E.F. Thomson

was slashed, unemployment Howe. His parents were lawremained high, but the reces- yers and he grew up in relasion eased. The government tive affluence in a depressed undercut unions, whose mem- coal-mining district. He atberships and strikes declined. tended Winchester College, a T hatcher n a med H o w e prep school, where he took up foreign secretary in 1983. By politics and spoke for womthen, her government had en's rights. After graduating aligned itself with the Cold in 1945, he served three years War policies of President Ron- as a British army officer, then ald Reagan. It tripled Britain' s studied law at Cambridge Uninuclear strength by buying versity. He graduated in 1952 submarine missile systems and practiced law in Wales. from America, and negotiated In 1953, he married Elspeth a deal with China to surrender Rosa mund Morton Shand. They had a son and two Hong Kong in 1997. But Thatcher 's antipathy daughters. After two losing to a European union finally tries, he won a seat in Parliadiate sticking point was a European mechanism to set

ment in 1964 and for decades represented c o n stituencies

near Liverpool and London.

exchange rates as a prewar He retired from the House of to a common currency. She be- Commons in 1992 and was lieved it would harm Britain' s made a lifepeer as Baron economy, but Howe said she Howe of Aberavon. In his memoir, "Conflict of was jeopardizing Britain's fuLoyalty" (1994), he expressed ture in Europe. Tensions led to a 1989 Cab- admiration for Thatcher, but inet shuffle. Thatcher named regret for hardships imposed John Major foreign secretary on ordinary Britons. "Our principal mistake," he a nd demoted Howe to t h e largely ceremonial post of wrote, "was to give less symdeputy prime minister. Howe, pathy and understanding than

inet in the early 1970s, and services; cut spending for chancellor of the Exchequer housing, education and social and foreign secretary in the programs;created tax-freeen- the last holdover from the we should have done to those Thatcher government from terprisezones; and deregulat- original 1979 Thatcher gov- who faced the upheaval."

Dr. Frederick H. Boyle April 23, 1928 — September 26, 2015

Marvin Edward

King • Ar

April 15, 1919- Sept. 23, 2015

Dr. Frederick H.Bogle died on september se, sots, after fL long battle titrii;h congestive heart failure. He was sv years old. Fred was bo~ on April 28, 1928, in the town of Lincoln situated in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. The son of Frederick Boyle tLnd Grace Merrill Bogle Field, Fred :I learned to love skiing, hunting, and Qshing as tL young boy and continued to be s sportsman throughout his life. Fred attended Mount Herman School for Boys located in Northfleld, Massachusetts. While at Mount He~ a n , F r ed played baseball,ran on the cross-country team, was captain of the ski team, and treasurer of the senior class. F r ed graduated from Mount Herman in te4e and joined the U.s. Marines under the G.I. Bill ss a navigator. In t e es, Fred attended western state college in Gunnison, CO, tLnd was s member of the ski team as a four-event skier, competing in jumping, cross-cotmi;~, downhill, and slalom. Fred met his future titrife, Retta Mae Haddock, from Pueblo, Colorado, during his senior year tLnd they married soon after graduation. Fred and Retta were blessed with four children, Kathleen, Kevin, Keenan, and Megan. The next io years found the Bogle family zigzagging across the country so that Fred could fLdvsnce in his profession. In t ess, Fred attended Harvard on a National science Fotmdstion Scholarship, earning tL Master's Degree in teaching mathematics. The family then lived in AlfLsks and FloxidtL, where Fred earned additional degrees tLnd held Progressively higher positions, eventually culminating in a doctorate in Junior college Administration in 1965. In iee'r, at 39 years of age, Dr. Fred Bogle accepted what mould be his last professional Position fLs the President of Central Oregon Community College (COCC). While Fred hfLd many accomplishments and made many contributions to the college and the community, perhaps his greatest and most enduring contribution was his vision for higher education in Central Oregon. This vision is alive today through Oregon State University — Cascades. Throughout his life, Fred always found a way to nourish his adventurous and sportsman side. As a titrfLy to pay for college, Fred ment to AlsskfL during the summers tLnd worked in coal and gold mines. Later, when the family lived in Fairbanks, he worked ss a big game guide, hunting for dali sheep, grizzly, and caribou. Later in life, Fred spent time in Canada, the Bahaxmm, and Belize fly Qshing. After retiring from COCC, Fred spent more time doing what he loved, which included spending time with his family, traveling, flshing, hunting, tLnd gardening. Retta died in 1 ees after a long battle with cancer. Fred met the second love in his life, patricia "pai;" Elliott, whom he married in 1998. Fred will be remembered by his family ss a man who lived life to the fullest and who overcame adversity to ultimately live a life of meaning, courage, tLnd love. Fred was a voracious reader who tyPically read multiPle books at one time. He had fL great love for music tLnd for li t e rsi;ure, and he often found it am u sing to e xhibit his otitrn acuity by quizzing his family with quotes from famous poems or books. Fred loved to tell stories and to engage in discussions with his family. One of his favorite pastimes was to discuss psst hunting trips with hi s son and grandchildren. Fred never forgot any adversity he experienced or his blue collar roots, and made a commitment early on to make some kind of contribution to the betterment of the human condition. He did this through his love of exploration, learning, and education, and drove us tL11 to do the same. Fred was preceded in death by his first wife, RetttL Mse Haddock Bogle; children Kevin Bogle and KtLthleen Lowe; mother, Grace Fifleld; steP father, Stanley Fifleld; sister, Ann BfLssett; tLnd stepson, Grant Elliott. Fred is survived by his wife, Patricia Elliott Bogle of Bend; children Keenan (Rebecca) Boyle of Portland, OR, and Megan Boyle of Po&ltLnd, OR; stepchildren Michael (Kristen) Elliott and Tim (Jennifer) Elliott; son-in-law Doug Lowe; daughter-in-law Pam Elliott; grandchildren TrtLvis (Sandy) Lowe, Trenton Lowe, Csitlin (LogtLn) Oestman, Grace Bogle, Michael Ellioi;i;, Annie Elliott, tLnd Cotitrboy Elliott; tLnd great-grandsons Dalton Oestman tLnd Keller Lowe (effectedin April). A celebration of Fred's life will be held at 11 tLm on saturday, october s4, sois, ai; the Coats Campus Center ai; Central Oregon Community College, reception to follow. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the COCC Foundation, Boyle Education

center, 2600 Nw college way, Bend, QR evvoa.

sj l s

— to Thatcher and to Europe

"Mr. Howe's route is simple and ambitious," The Econo-

alienated Howe. The imme-

essays".u p%ltmsallae'

consider their own response to the tragic conflict of loyalties"

against her, and Conservative

the next

jr

time has come for others to

ed businesses.

ment by private initiative."

. res

Photos JarodOpperman/The Bulletin

TOP: Jack Barr, 3, of Bend, gets behind the wheel of a fire engine. BOTTOM: Bend Fire Captain Karl Findling puts out a fire during

a demonstration of the advantages of having a homesprinkler systemduring Saturday's open house.

Firefighting

spond. Informational booths

Continued from B1 "What grade are you in?" Derlacki asked the olderboy.

ican Red Cross were on site, along with a craft station by

"Third," said Tyler Polizzi, 8, of Bend.

together wooden cars. The open house in Bend

from St. Charles and Amer-

" Do you d o m a t h i n school' ?" Derlacki a sked. "This is a big math problem: How much water is going in and how much water is going

Home Depot for kids to put w as a c u l mination of N a tional Fire Prevention Week,

which began Oct. 4. This year's National Fire Preven-

tion Week theme was "Hear the beep where you sleep," to remind families every beddon, 4, stood in his child-size room needs a working smoke out." Tyler's little brother, Branturnouts, hi s

f a c e s t ained alarm.

with chocolate ice cream, lisLater on in the day, firetening intently. fighters did a demonstration D erlacki went o n t o t e l l outdoors showing staged the boys and their parents, rooms, one with a sprinkler Shawn and Jennifer Polizzi, system, and one without, that a lot of the people work- catch on fire. Like a life-size ing for Bend Fire wanted to doll house, each of the rooms be a firefighter since they had only three walls. were young, like Brandon. Bend Fire staff said resiAs the family walked to the dential sprinkler systems are rescue vehicle parked next to becoming more common. A the engine, they ran into their

small subdivision in North-

neighbors. "You found him at his day job," Shawn Polizzi said of Brandon, as he joked with the other family. Just a few feet away, Derlacki let children take turns pulling the lever on one of the station's smaller hoses. It still gave quite a powerful

West Crossing, for example, has them installed. After that, more firefight-

ers showed how the Jaws of Life work to pry open cars if someone is trapped inside. "Fire is actually a small part of what we do," Derlacki said. "Most of our calls are

medical."

kick, but the kids weren't shy

When a real alarm went

about stepping up to take a turn at spraying it. Parents and grandparents whipped out their phones to get video.

off, Derlacki began quickly shutting doors on the engine, and families took that as a

Juniper Bar n h a rt , grabbed onto the hose.

it to leave on an emergency call. Kids asked moms

2,

"Whoa, Junie!" said her grandma Jennifer Barnhart, of Bend, laughing. When it was Juniper's sister, Olive's turn, their grandma cheered again. " Olive, you' re a g o o d firewoman!"

cue to get out of the way for w hether t h i s

m e an t t h e y

couldn't climb the engine, and waited patiently to watch it drive away. But Derlacki knew with the demonstration

that had just been going on, it would be smarter for another unit, from a different station,

While kids participated in to head out. The engine rethe fun with the hose and en- mained parked, and the firegine, parents had time to chat fighters stayed. w ith firefighters about fi r e For a few hours Saturday, safety. Derlacki said he had t hey were f ocused on t h e a few parents say where they kids. live and ask him how long it — Reporter: 541-383-0325, would take Bend Fire to reItfisicaro@bendbulletirt.corn Marvin Edward King was born i n C l a r k sburg, California o n A p r i l 1 5 , 1 9 19, and passed away in Bend, Oregon, on September 23, 2015, at the age of 96. His p arents were Art hur K i n g a nd M a r y E m i l y A n n e n King. He married Marilyn Eason Morgan on June 7, 1953. He is survived by his wife, his children, Kn sten Garland and Julie Deocampo, both of Redmond O regon, d a u g hters, J a c uelyn I Fitch of Napa Caliornta, and L i nd a C o oper of S a u s ilito , Ca l i f o r nia; and numerous g r a ndchildren, great-grandchildren, and other relatives. Marvin studied aeronaut ical engineering a t S a c r amento S t at e a n d l a t e r s tudied c o n t r acting, a n d then was a c o n crete cont ractor i n C a l i f ornia u n t i l retirement. Marvin and his wife retired for 21 years in

Oregon, living happily in

Shooting

Police recovered the firearm believed to be used in the

Continued from B1 The men allegedly shot out

shooting, along with other evi-

security cameras, windows

dence, the release said. Morris and Samuel Brooks

next to doors and windows of were each arrested on suspian employee's vehicle. cion of second-degree attemptThe suspects left in a vehicle ed assault, unlawful use of a and drove to the area around weapon, first-degree criminal Shevlin Park Road and continued to shoot out of their vehi-

mischief and criminal trespass

at his residence at about 4 p.m.

— Reporter: 541-383-0325, ktt'sicaro@bendbulletift.corn

with a firearm, and conspircle, police said. More commu- acy. Alexander Brooks was nity members reported hear- arrested on suspicion of coning shots fired. spiracy to commit first-degree Police found Morris around criminal mischief and conspir2 p.m. Saturday on S W acy to commit unlawful use of Brookswood Boulevard near a weapon. Charges for firing Amber Meadow Drive; Samu- from the vehicle near Shevlin el Brooks in a vehicle near NE Park Road are "forthcoming," First Street and Greenwood according to police. Avenue just after 4 p.m. SatThe men were taken to Deurday; and Alexander Brooks schutes County jail. Saturday.

the country near Oakland,

Oregon, enjoying

l i v i ng

a djacent t o t h e U m p q u a River. They later moved to Redmond, a n d th e n t o B end. Th r o u g h ou t h is a dult l i fe , M a r vi n w a s a devout Christian. A memorial w il l b e h e l d in th e Redmo nd Seventh-Day Adventist church at 4 PM on October 17. In l ieu of f l o w ers, contributions may be given to Hospice House of Bend, Oregon, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct. in Bend.

Week Continued from B1 • The House on Thursday passed a bill that would allow more resource development on land owned byNative American tribes. The bill would shorten the timeline for lawsuits challenging plans for natural gas exploration. Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Canby,was

one of 11 Democrats whovoted in support of the bill, which passed 254 to 173. Rep.GregWalden, R-Hood River, joined 243Republicans who supported the measure. Blumenauer (D) ................................... N Bonamici (D)........................................N OeFazio (D)..........................................N

Schrader(D) .......................................Y Illa/den (R)...........................................Y — Taylor W Anderson, The Bulletin


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

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

i

I

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 88' Mostly sunny

I /' I

LOW

MONDAY ' ' 74'

38'

+) -

Mainly clear

ALMANAC

TUESDAY ' ' 76'

38'

39'

+p Tq+

+) T q+

Pleasantly warm with plenty of sunshine

Mostly sunnyand nice

WED NESDAY ' ' 79'

40'

Oct 12 Oct 20

d

O ct 27 N o v 3

Tonight's ultfffAquarius the Water Bearer appears low in the southeast at sunset and is visible throughout the night.

Bandon

at Rome Low: SS' at Burns

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

~ 4

2

The highertheAccuWsslher.rxrm liv Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyesudskin protscguu.0-2 Low 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems.

POLLEN COUNT G rasses T r ee s Lo~wg L o~ w

Wee ds Abs e nt

76/46

Gra a Gold ach 75 o

0'

Rro ings

UV INDEX TODAY 2 5~ 4

Ro seburg

65/49

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

10 a.m. Noon

• Fort Rock Greece t • 67/33

67 9

• Silver Lake 66/32 70/35 Chile quin MedfO d 'rf/34 79/5

Yesterday Today Monday

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 65/61/0.60 66/47/pc 65/51/c 85/37/0.00 68/31/s 74/33/s 61/61/0.30 66/51/s 68/53/pc 82/33/0.00 68/33/s 79/34/s 81/59/0.16 74/44/s 76/45/pc 79/35/0.00 75/34/s 78/35/s 79/36/0.00 73/36/s 78/35/s

~ fgs ~ o s As uf 7 s.m. yesterday Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL C rane Prairie 266 2 0 46% EXTREMES

~ os

(for the Wickiup 20116 10% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 4 9 3 76 57% 46 contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 10158 23vo National high: 106 Prineville 44567 30vo at Death Valley,CA River flow St a tion Cu. ft./aec. National low:2a Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 124 at Angel Fire, NM Deschutes R.below Wickiup 154 Precipitation: 2.20" Deschutes R.below Bend 6S1 at Newberry, SC Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 739 Little Deschutes near LaPine 50 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 29 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 50 Anchorage Crooked R. near Terrebonne 106 ~ %9 (3 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 2

Not available Not available Not available Not available Not available

Source: USDA Forest Service

Ch ristmas alley

72/41

66/38

Fields • 73/31

• Burns Jun tion • 71/39 Rome 73/35 McDermi

• Paisley

• Lakeview

75/34

Jordan V gey

Frenchglen

73/36

71/40

C i ty L sGrande Ls Pine M edford Ne wport N o rth Bend O n tario Pe ndleton

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

City 86/ 43/0.00 67/37/s 74/39/pc Portland 73/34/0.00 67/35/s 73/36/s Prinevige 80/5 0/0.00 81/47/s 84/49/s Redmond 61/5 7 /0.43 63/49/pc 62/50/pc Roseburg 6 6 / 63/0.00 66/49/s 66/50/pc Salem 87/43/0.00 72/36/pc 75/41/s Sisters 86/ 4 9/0.00 69/45/s 74/49/pc The Doges

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

Bend/Sunriuer Redmond/Madras Sisters Prineuige La Pine/Gilchrist

Riley 68/33 67/34

Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 72/6 0/0.2769/49/pc72/54/ pc 80/ 39/0.0070/34/s 73/38/p c Brookings 81 / 41/0.0072/32/s 76/33/pc Gums 82 / 56/0.00 78/48/s 80/49/pc Eugene 74/51/0.15 71/45/s 73/48/pc Klsmsth Falls 75/38/0.00 69/35/s 75/36/p c Lskeview 7 8 / 51/0.00 72/45/s 75/49/pc Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-psrffycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thundsrstorms,r-rsin, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data ssof 5 p.m. yesterday City Asturis Baker City

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

FIRE INDEX

,61/er Klamath • Ashl nd Falls

66/51

67/36

Beaver Marsh

~ foe ~ 208 ~ s os ~ 5

Ss/51

dos~ ees ~ecs ~ yes

59/3

• i nipee 7d 2 Bism rck 77/4

i

~ e ga

eggs ~TOOs

~f fcs

Que 63/

Tlrunder uay 74

Yesterday Today Monday City Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 86/57/0.00 94/69/s 89/55/pc Akron 63/42/0.00 71/51/s 74/52/pc Albany 61/42/Tr 69/48/s 74/53/s Albuquerque 77/50/0.00 81/56/s 80/54/s Anchorage 50/42/0.04 49/37/sh 47/38/c Atlanta 71 /64/0.76 74/57/pc 76/61/pc Atlantic City 63/56/0.11 68/53/s 71/61/s Austin 89/65/0.00 95/66/s 95/65/pc Baltimore 64/53/0.00 69/47/s 74/57/s Billings 87/64/0.00 69/41/c 73/49/s Birmingham 73/62/0.42 78/55/s 82/60/pc Bismarck 90/46/0.00 77/49/pc 63/41/s Boise 90/59/0.00 70/46/s 77/49/s Boston 61/48/Tr 68/53/s 74/56/s Bridgeport, CT 65/49/0.00 68/53/s 70/57/s Buffalo 59/41/0.00 65/54/s 72/53/pc Burlington, VT 53/43/0.00 67/51/pc 73/54/s Caribou, ME 46/36/0.03 53/44/c 67/48/pc Charleston, SC 79/66/0.23 72/61/c 77/61/r Charlotte 65/64/0.79 70/52/pc 76/57/pc Chattanooga 68/62/0.93 76/55/s 79/57/pc Cheyenne 83/47/0.00 79/41/s 71/47/s Chicago 65/42/0.00 76/59/s 71/46/pc Cincinnati 67/51/0.00 72/51/s 75/51/pc Cleveland 63/44/0.00 72/54/s 74/53/pc ColoradoSprings 81 /48/0.00 83/45/s 69/45/s Columbia, Mo 70/40/0.00 82/60/s 76/47/pc Columbia, SC 75/68/1.56 70/57/pc 78/60/c Columbus,GA 79/65/0.21 77/57/pc 78/61/pc Columbus,OH 66/44/0.00 71/50/s 75/51/pc Concord, NH 57/41/0.01 67/44/pc 75/46/s Corpus Christi 89/68/0.00 91/69/s 92/72/pc Dallas 84/59/0.00 95/73/s 93/60/pc Dayton 67/44/0.00 73/52/s 76/49/pc Denver 85/49/0.00 84/45/s 74/45/s Des Moines 72/43/0.00 85/60/s 72/47/pc Detroit 65/44/0.00 72/54/s 75/51/pc Duluth 67/41 /0.00 78/52/s 55/33/c El Paso 82/60/0.00 86/63/pc 86/62/pc Fairbanks 38/28/Tr 43/25/pc 36/25/pc Fargo 83/50/0.00 87/51/pc 59/37/pc Flagstaff 69/39/0.00 74/39/s 75/42/s Grand Rapids 63/39/0.00 72/56/s 71/49/c Green Bsy 63/39/Tr 75/60/s 69/44/c Greensboro 63/62/0.13 70/52/pc 76/57/pc Harrisburg 66/52/0.00 71/45/s 75/56/s Hsrffurd, CT 63/44/0.00 70/46/s 76/52/s Helena 87/46/0.00 63/37/pc 72/44/s Honolulu eonwo.oo 90/77/sh 89/75/pc Houston 90/68/0.00 90/68/s 92/70/pc Huntsville 76/61/0.95 79/52/s 83/56/pc Indianapolis 68/44/0.00 74/55/s 77/49/pc Jackson, MS 71 /65/0.00 81/54/s 88/63/pc Jacksonville 83n1 /0.03 77/62/c 79/60/pc

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ronto /5 uffalo

Amsterdam Athens

Boston

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51/36/s 82/68/1 61/55/pc 94/67/pc 88/73/sh 70/43/s 88/78/pc 49/32/s 68/48/pc 51/38/r 59/46/ah 87/74/1 90/71/s 59/39/pc 88/71/pc 58/45/pc 56/43/pc 60/44/pc 91/62/s 75/68/r 74/67/r 85/65/pc 89/59/pc 71/62/pc 71/62/1 59/43/pc 69/56/1 90/78/1

Yesterday Today Monday

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegas Lexington Lincoln Liule Rock Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

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

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Rene Richmond Rochester, NY

Wichita

Yskims Yums I

Mecca Mexico City

47/31/pc 68/49/c 48/33/r 62/48/pc

Osaka Oslo

Srns/pc 93/72/s 64/39/c

srnwpc 55/42/pc 54/37/sh 64/46/pc 88/63/s 75/69/r 75/57/r 85/62/pc 87/61/s

72/63/pc 70/61/t 58/43/pc 69/53/1

eemn

64/38/0.00 71/55/s 93/71/0.00 92no/s 68/50/0.00 73/50/s 80/43/0.00 91/54/s 77/55/0.00 84/63/s 100/72/0.00 92/68/s 70/51/0.00 75/54/s 63/40/0.00 76/57/s 73/55/0.00 81/61/s 90/75/0.01 87n2/pc 65/45/0.00 74/58/s 74/42/0.00 82/56/s 71/58/0.14 75/52/s 79/69/0.00 81/61/pc 65/50/0.00 70/56/s 66/50/0.00 70/52/s 67/64/Tr 68/58/c 79/48/0.00 91/62/s 78/45/0.00 90/57/s 91/72/0.05 87/66/c

71/49/pc

93n1/s

77/51/pc 74/41/s 91/54/pc

91n2/pc 80/54/pc 68/41/c 88/56/pc

86n1/pc 70/45/c 60/41/c 82/52/pc

85/67/pc 74/61/s 74/58/s 74/62/pc 83/50/s 73/44/s 85/65/pc gens/0.00 100n8/s 100nr/pc 68/43/0.00 80/61/s 76/47/pc 66/52/0.00 70/51/s 74/59/s 95n5/0'.00 99ft5/pc 101nr/pc 64/49/0.00 70/50/s 74/54/pc 56/40/0.00 66/47/pc 70/49/s 63/47/Tr 68/51/s 74/56/s 65/64/0.18 71/54/c 77/59/pc 88/44/0.00 88/50/0.00 62/56/0.29 60/40/0.00 88/55/0.00 71/50/0.00

80/45/pc 69/45/s 84/50/s 86/52/s

71/51/pc 76/59/s 70/52/s 74/53/pc 88/56/s 92/58/s 81/63/s 78/51/pc

73/48/s 94ft1/s 85n3/pc 74/57/pc 80/57/s 79/47/s 73/61/c 65/51/pc 83/54/s 64/42/pc

77/52/s

95no/pc 85n4/pc 78/62/s 85/62/s 77/44/pc 77/61/pc 64/54/r

66/41/s

67/47/pc 82/61/s 78/47/s

84/68/pc 83/67/pc 93/69/pc 94/69/pc 89/63/s 82/48/s

71/53/s 75/60/s 77/48/0.00 89/60/s 79/47/s 80/46/Tr 71/39/pc 74/43/pc

gens/0.00 99fts/pc 100n9/pc

I

50/37/pc 80/66/pc 64/54/pc 95/68/s 84n5/c 75/46/s

Sen5/pc

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 54/48/0.29 51/45/r 51/43/r 72/40/0.00 84/59/s 77/46/s

Sacramento Si. Louis Salt Lake City 85/53/Tr Ssn Antonio 92/69/0.00 Ssn Diego esnr/0'.00 Ssu Francisco 71/60/0.00 Ssn Joss 77/57/0.00 Santa re 75/41/0.00 Savannah 80/67/0.10 Seattle 70/59/0.90 Sioux Falls 80/49/0.00 Spokane 74/52/0.00 Springfield, Mo 73/42/0.00 Tampa 87/74/0.11 Tucson 91/71/0.00 Tulsa 77/48/0.00 Washington, DC 65/56/0.00

i

57/52/0.00 75/63/0.04 Auckland 56/50/0.02 7 /6 w York Baghdad 93/70/0.00 v ol 0/66 Che n .Av Bangkok 90/79/0.19 85/eo 79/4 gadelphis Beijing 59/35/0.00 Col mb C icsg 0/51 Beirut 82n1/0.00 71 ssli Lsk City Omah ouiv 7 /Sy 74/57 Berlin 51 /36/0.00 73/48 v 84/ 81 Lo isvil .%wwwwwv.v.v.t Bogota 66/43/0.08 7 5 vvs Kansas City Budapest 54/50/0.12 3 d • 2/7 84/59 Na lie d d d 8 %%% Buenos Ai r es 57/45/0.02 Chsrlo 4 d d d d d +W't Los An les ' +'e Cubo Ssn Loess 81/71/0.30 d ~ i d d dd dd dd dd d • / • L' Cairo 86/68/0.00 Phoen Albuque ue klshoma Ci Calgary 73/50/0.00 • ee/76 8 es 9 II 0 81/se Csncun 90n5/0.11 Bir inuhs 8 /73 x+.'A x > • Oaua ul Ps Dublin 57/50/0.00 78/ 5 % % v.v.v. X X v. v. X ' + 95/7 e/e Edinburgh 57/48/0.00 . pf Geneva 55/45/0.00 7/6 , Honolulu ' o', Hsrsre 88/62/0.00 w Orleans 0/es Hong Kong 80/73/0.18 o~ Chihuahua 81/61 O ~.f Istanbul 73/61 /0.00 83/58 Miami Jerusalem 83/61/0.00 Monte y X'e Sr/75I ss/64 Johannesburg 85/60/0.00 s Lima 74/63/0.00 Lisbon 66/61/1.73 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 61/46/0.00 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 73/46/0.00 Manila 90/80/0.00

• re/4d

Mostly sunnyand pleasantly warm

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. EAST:Seasonable na 4 today with abundant Umatiaa Seasid TEMPERATURE Hood 72/40 sunshine. Remaining 64/51 Yesterday Normal Record RiVer Rufus • ermiston clear tonight. Warmer Cannon /46 High 77 65 SS' i n 1934 lington 72/39 Portland Meac am Losti ne 46' 34' 11' in 19S5 with more sunshine 63/61 Low /45 9 • 66/3 Monday. • • di Nn • he Oaa • 66/30 Tigamo • PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Plenty of alidy u 66/46 Mc u Heppner „ ., • Grande 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" sunshine todaywith • Condon / 3 7 67 37 Record 0.29" in 1955 seasonable temUnion Lincoln 62/ Month to date (normal) 0.0 7" (0.14") peratures. Mostly Sale 62/61 pray Granite Year to date(normal) 6.99 " (7.31 ") clear tonight. Turning 71/4 • 1/60 a 'Baker C Newpo 61/35 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 6 4" warmer Monday. 1/45 • 36 63/49 • Mitch ll 68/31 Camp Sh man Red WEST:Abundant sun69/40 n R SUN ANDMOON eu Yach 66/36 • John shine will be featured 62/49 73/44 • Prineville Day 6/33 Today Mon. tario today with seasonable 70/34 • Pa line 70/ 4 7 7:14 a.m. 7: 1 6 a.m. 7 36 temperatures. GenerFloren e • Eugene ' Re d Brothers 6:29 p.m. 6: 2 7 p.m. ally clear tonight. Valee 65/48 Su lucre 66/36 5:56 a.m. 6 : 5 4 a.m. 71/35 Nyssa e 67/ Ham on 6:04 p.m. 6 : 3 2 p.m. • La pine 71/33 Juntura Grove Oakridge Co • Burns OREGON EXTREMES First Fu l l Last 69/31 73/45 43

YESTERDAY High: ee'

40'

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Nice and warmwith sunshine

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

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THU RSDAY ' ' 71 '

Montreal

Moscow Nairobi Nassau

New Delhi

105/83/0.00 102/75/1 75/56/0.05 76/52/pc 50/37/0.00 65/52/c 39/22/0.14 38/30/sn 84/61/0.06 82/60/pc 91/75/0.12 87/77/pc

104/77/s 77/50/pc 72/54/pc 41/28/sn 79/60/r 85/77/pc

74/55/r 51/43/pc 66/51/pc 61/43/pc 85/72/pc 70/50/pc 73/49/s 77/65/c 64/53/r 61/44/sh 71/53/s

72/53/sh

ceno/0.00 etn4/s esn5/s 74/57/0.28 46/41/0.15 52/32/0.00 64/46/0.00

Ottawa Paris Riu de Janeiro eonr/0.00 Rome 63/58/1.22 Santiago 70/39/0.00 Ssu Paulo 81/68/0.14 Sap pore 66/53/0.03 Seoul 64/46/0.02 Shanghai 75/54/0.00 Singapore eonwo.oogone/s Stockholm 45/25/0.00 47/30/pc Sydney 75/60/0.00 81/64/1 Taipei 79/71/0.30 r5no/c Tel Aviv 84/69/0.01 91n6/pc Tokyo 70/61/0.65 72/61/r Toronto 59/41/0.00 70/53/s Vancouver 63/59/0.41 60/50/c Vienna 50/45/0.11 47/35/c Warsaw 48/27/0.00 45/31/pc

49/42/pc 71/54/pc 59/38/pc 87/72/s 71/54/s 67/49/pc 81/64/r 61/48/sh 63/46/s 73/55/s 90/78/pc 48/33/pc 85/62/pc 79/69/pc 90/71/pc 75/60/pc 70/51/pc 57/48/r 47/32/c 41/34/pc

NORTHWEST NEWS

U.S. ForestServicewants more controlled burns inWashington The Associated Press

policy changes but is not en- has seen smaller mishaps thusiastic about leading the in Washington state when est Service wants more con- charge. weather changes unexpected"We have to be conserva- ly funneled smoke into poputrolled burns in Washington forests to help make them tive, heaven onl y k n o ws," lated areas. more resistant to summer Goldmark said. "Of course we I n S eptember o f 20 0 9 , wildfires. want to be helpful in terms of smoke from 800-acre preBut The Seattle Times re- prescribed burns, but we have scribed burn blew from the ports rules administered by the responsibility that com- Naches Ranger District into the state Department of Nat- munities don't get smoked the Yakima Valley, and the reural Resources are a road- out, and that's not an easy sulting pollution reached unblock to this fire prevention task." healthy levels for five hours. approach in Washington. Currently, DNR conducts That triggered a f i erce Controlled burns are en- limited burning of slash piles round of complaints to DNR dorsed by scientists as an in meadows, but does no pre- for approving the burn. The important tool for keeping scribed burns on the lands it Yakima Regional Clean Air forests healthier and less manages — a departure from Agency initially fined the Forsusceptible to d evastating agency practicein previous est Service $12,000; the penalwildfires. decades. ty was later rescinded. "It's a very low-risk kind "Unfortunately it was the Goldmark is also wary of of policy where they' re very giving the green light to large time of year that the Central averse to putting fire on the burns on Washington's 9 mil- Washington State Fair was landscape. C o nsequently, lion acres ofForest Service going on, and we got calls it's been very hard to get the lands. He questions wheth- from those folks, and from burning done," said Rick er burns can be safely con- county commissioners and Graw, a ForestService air ducted in forests that have the general public," said Gary quality manager for the Pa- not been first been logged or Pruitt, the clean-air agency's cific Northwest region. thinned. executive director. "We got The state rules that keep Forest Service officials say dozens of calls, some of them this firefighting tool from be- some heavily wooded areas being highly politically coning used more often in Wash- do require thinning before a nected. It got my attention." ington include rules aimed at controlled burn. But they say DNR reacted with new rekeeping smoke from driving other areas can be treated strictions that effectively haltinto communities. with fire alone — a less ex- ed all controlled burns in the That is why the Forest Ser- pensive option. Naches District for more than vice has carried out burns on Forest scientists have con- a year. far fewer acres in Washing- cluded prescribedfires can In 2011, a DNR official acton than in Oregon, Montana, make forests less prone to knowledged the agency had Idaho and California. disease and benefit wildlife. gone too far and removed During a 13-year period And when wildfires erupt, the some of the restrictions. But ending in 2014, the Forest stands treated with fire are it left in place rules requiring Service completed controlled likely to burn with less inten- burns to be smaller and conburns on 4.7 percent of Or- sity, offering a placeforcrews ducted over only one day. egon's 15.7 million acres of to set defensive lines. There are trade-offsthe national forests. In WashingDNR and other govern- public needs to come to grips ton,theForestServiceburned ment agencies that approve with, said Michael Medler, 1.4 percent of its 9.3 million controlled burns worry about chair of t h e environmental acres. the consequences when they studies at Western WashingDNR and its burn rules are don't go according to plan. ton University, who studies the responsibility of elected In 2000, a National Park wildfires. "You don't stop these fires. state Public Lands Commis- Service prescribed fire in sioner Peter Goldmark, a New Mexico, intended to burn You just put them off," said longtime Okanogan High- 900 acres, whipped out of con- Medler, a f o rmer w i l dland lands rancher an d f o r mer trol, scorching 40,000 acres firefighter. "Would you like wildland volunteer firefighter. and destroying hundreds of us to pick a day and dump X G oldmark v i e w s c h a i n homes. The damage toll came amount of smoke? Or would saws and other equipment as to $1 billion, according to a you like to gamble and say in the tools of choice for thin- Government A c countability two or three years you' ll get ning the woodlands. He says Office report. something that brings two or he is open to considering The U.S. Forest Service three times as much?" SEATTLE — The U.S. For-

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IN THE BACI4 ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/community

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Photos courtesy of Puerto Vallarta Tourism Board

A zip-liner rides a wire high above the Rio Cuale during an adventure tour at the Canopy River complex. This activity includes a mule ride and tequila tasting; Canopy River visitors may also rappel down a cliff wall and drive all-terrain jungle vehicles.

A tourist vessel lowers its sails beside the islands of Los Arcos de Mismaloya, a national marine preserve south of Puerto Vallarta in

Pedestrians linger on Puerto Vallarta's broad El Malecon pedestrian promenade, which extends along its Pacific shore

Banderas Bay. Like the Islas Marietas near

for nearly a mile. Remodeled

PuntaMita, Los Arcos thrill scuba divers with their array of undersea life.

in 2011, the historic walkway is lined with galleries, cafes and

NORTHWESTTRAVEL Next week: A Black Butte Ranch staycation

bars that face a row ofsculptures beside the ocean.

By John Gottberg AndersoneFor The Bulletin S ulita

• en

PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexicohis Pacific resort city rides on an undercurrent of edginess, one that may not be readily discovered by those who remain within the safe confines of their hotel compounds.

unt

'

This is not the United States. There are a variety of issues — safety and security among them — that should remind American tourists they' re not going to a beach resort in Hawaii or Florida. Now, I like to travel just outside my comfort zone. I thrive on this tension.

And I love this city on the coast of Mexico's Jalisco

state. I love broad Banderas Bay, 26 miles across, its gentle surf washing Pacific beaches from Punta Mita to

Yelapa. Every sort of vessel,

from cruise liners and navy broad Malecon promenade; ships to re-created pirate gal- where the '60s romance beleons, plies its waters. tween Elizabeth Taylor and I love the Old Town area, Richard Burton blossomed where colorful fishing boats beside the Rio Cuale. cast off each morning within I love the outlying resort sight of the historic Church areas, especially vibrant of OurLady ofGuadalupe; Sayulita, home of the 2015 where visitors parade beworld stand-up paddling side local families down the championships. Here, palm-

fringed cobblestone lanes, flanked by shops selling handmade beachwear and

,Pue',oVal rta

Nusvo Vali ta

Banderas Bay Puerto Vallarta

Huichol folk crafts, turn

to golden sand as they approach the beach, where

Mismaloya

MEXICO

fresh ceviche is served in

shaded palapa huts to scores of surf watchers. SeePuerto Vallarta /C4

Yelapa Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Newserviceso ere oranxiousco e estu ents By Carla Rivers

has entered her fourth year on

Los Angeles Times

campus. But the questions she

LOS ANGELES — Ye

Seong Kim's freshman year at UCLA was so stressful that she considered dropping out and attending a community college until she was better prepared. "After struggling and studying so hard, it seemed like it wasn't paying off and I wasn' t getting the grades," said Kim, 21. "I wasn't enjoying the subjects, and I was thinking maybe this isn't what I want. It made me wonder why I was

here." The biochemistry major overcame those anxieties and

hears now as an advisor for new students resonate deeply:

Will I be homesick? How will

cidal thoughts have increased among students seeking mental health services at colleges.

One out of three has seriously consideredsuicide,and oneout

I make new friends? What if I

of 10 have made a suicide at-

ask a dumb question in dass? Those uncertainties are why UCLA and colleges and

tempt, according to the report. Almost half of the students

universities around the country

increasingly look to boost not

formance was a main cause of mental distress.

just academics, but the mind,

Information about mental

reported that academic per-

are adding amenities to lift spirits. At UCLA, specially designed nap pods are positioned around campus, students can sign up for the happiness challenge — sleeping well, performing a good deed, among other things, for a week at least — and organic vegetables, lean proteins and whole grains dominate the menu at its popular new health-

body and soul of students who report unprecedented levels of

health and counseling is a focus at many new student

themed dining hall. California

stress and depression.

orientations, and more faculty

A report last year by the Center for Collegiate Mental

and staff are being trained to

Health at Penn State showed

Beyond professional counseling, colleges increasingly

opened a new wellness center this fall, offering acupuncture, massage therapy and drop-in yoga.

that rates of self-harm and sui-

identify students in crisis.

State University, Northridge,

SeeStudents /C6

Ricardo oeAratanha/LosAngeles Times

First-year students receive information about the wellness center and other services available to students at California State University, Northridge.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

M II ESTON~ + ~

L7

Formsforengogementw,eddinga, nniversary or birthday announcements are available at bendbuiietin convmiiestones F.orms and photos must b e submitted within one month of the celebration. Questions: milestonesCmbendbulletin.corn, 541-633-2117.

BIRTHDAYS

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• a • •

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• •

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Dorothy Sears

Sears

whall, Cahfornta, and daughter Barbara Lacasella, of RedDorothy Sears, of Red- mond; six grandchildren; 14

mond, will celebrate her 105th birthday with a party

at Brookdale Redmond assisted living facility Oct. 21. Mrs. Sears was born Oct. 21, 1910, in Butte City, Cali-

fornia. She married Lawrence Clayton Sears. He Tom Bloom /The New York Times

Themed weddings have become a popular option for younger generations with officiants ranging from Elvis all the way to Mr. Spock from

great-grandchildren; and nine great-great grandchildren. Mrs. Sears worked as a turkey plucker during the holidays and picked fruit in California. She enjoys playing bingo and collecting teddy bears and enjoyed bowling in her younger years. She has lived in Oregon

died in 1993. She has three children, son Wayne (deceased), son Carrol, of ¹ since 2013.

"Star Trek."

Evisremainsa o uar ixture ort erne we in ceremonies By Alix Strauss«New York Times News Service

grown over the last decade.

ent like a themed wedding grabs people's attention," said Alex Choi, 27, who lives

Trek,'" he s aid. "It makes

the Rings" theme. "It was

sense they'd want to carry

fun, theatrical and they got married the way they wanted

have become an extension of

the nerd culture, which has

lvis Presley is dead, but he's still extremely busy. Elvis is king of a growing cast of celebrity wedding officiants dressed in character. With millennials and Gen Xers now in their prime marriage years, the days of trotting out a fake Elvis to officiate at Las Vegas wedding chapel would seemingly be long gone. Not so, said Ron DeCar, a performer and owner of Viva Las Vegas Weddings. "When I started this business in 1999, we did 13 weddings a month," said DeCar, 58, whose company specializes in themed weddings featuring Elvis and other celebrity impersonators as officiants, and traditional weddings. "Now we do over 500. Half of those are Elvis requests and 100 are themed." GigMasters, an event mar-

ketplace based in Norwalk, Connecticut, can also attest to the latest popularity of El-

vis for couples. From January 2013 to December 2014, it had 184 requests for i mperson-

ators to officiate weddings across the United States and fully 94 percent of them wanted an Elvis.

With a rotating staff of performers, DeCar's compa-

ny also offers officiants who come dressed as Austin Powers, James Bond, Batman,

the Blues Brothers and members of the band Kiss. Characters from "Star Trek" are

also popular. Almost anyone can go online and obtain a near-instant "ordination" that

allows them to legally officiate in most states.

The promise of a " Star Trek" theme wedding recently attracted Nicolas Berthier, 33, and Gilles Henisse, 48, to

Las Vegas from their native France.

"France is too serious and

ceremonial — we didn't want t hat," s ai d B e r t hier, w h o

MARRIAGES

"People are c onnecting in California and has been romance to nerd stories like to more than 10 weddings, 'Lord of the Rings' or 'Star include one with a "Lord of that over into real life, which

is why they' re gravitating to- to, and it was still very beauward weddings where you tiful and special," he said. become a participatory part "Some don't want to make it of the story." religious. They don't want the For the couple, a connec- traditional route." tion to the subject is very apThe prevalence of Youpealing. For others, it offers Tube and other online media affordability, less planning is heavily influencing the and afairly stress-free expe- wedding choices others in rience, experts said. his generation are making. Robert Thompson, a pro- "Social media lets you share fessor of pop culture at Syra- an experience with as many cuse University, said, "It's so people as possible while havdeeply rooted in our minds ing the loudest voice as you that this is what we to want

do it," he said.

to have: the opulent event, the big white dress, the large party." But each generation beginning with the baby boomers

Starting in January, "Zumanity," the most sexually charged show of the Cirque du Soleil portfolio, will offer wedding packages in Las

has moved away from tradi-

Vegas at the New York New York Hotel. "People want to

tional ceremonies, he added. "Even though the boomers chipped away at traditional weddings, and Xers chipped away at it a little more," he

be part of something unique that still has meaning," said Pierre Parisien, the show's senior artistic director. The show's M i stress of

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Claire Turpel and Andrew Chase

Turpel — Chase C laire Turpel and A n -

Bend. He is a 2002 graduate of Mountain View High School, and a 2011 graduate of the Uni-

drew Chase, both of Se- versity of Oregon, where he attle, were married April earned a master's degree in ed11 at The Hall at Fauntle-

ucation. He is a history teacher

roy in Seattle. A reception followed. The bride is the daughter of Mark and Lisa Turpel, of Portland. She is a 2006 graduate of Grant High School, in Portland, and a 2012 graduate of the Universityof Oregon, where she earned a master's degree in conflict and dispute resolu-

for Seattle Public Schools. The couple honeymooned in Tofino, British Columbia, Can-

ada, and then spent two weeks traveling down the Oregon Coast and through the California redwoods. They will settle in Seattle.

said. "Millennials are chipping away at it the most." Sensuality, the drag queen When Hawaii blends into Christopher Kenney, can room. The curtain lifted as Mexico, and Mexico morphs marry couples midday and at tion. She works as a consulSUN FoREsT DeCar, in a Spock costume, into Miami, themed weddings that evening's performance; tant for Triangle Associates. CoNSTRUCTION stepped forward. become extremely memora- the wedding couple and their The groom is the son of "Marriage is highly illogi- ble, not to mention personaL friends will attend the show Bill and Nancy Chase, of cal," the Spock character said Lia Batkin, a founder of In and be introduced to the audibefore asking the couple: "Do the Know Experiences, a Vir- ence as newlyweds. DESIGN 0 BUILD 0 REMODEL "Now that everyone can you promise to let your heart tuoso travel agency in New PAINT be strong, to let it overcome York, said millennials and marry," Parisien said, "we 803 SW Industrial Way, Bend, OR life's obstacles'? To boldly love Xers are "trying to find ways want to offer a way for peoas no two have loved before?" to express themselves and ple to celebrate their love, beBoth men a greed. Vows make weddings their own." cause that's what 'Zumanity' • s "They don't want to please is about." were exchanged in French. Tears were shed. "Being mar- their parents," she s aid. ried in Vegas is simple and "When they do, they realize funny," said Berthier, a writ- they aren't getting the weder who was clearly overjoyed dings they wanted." with this Las Vegas expeA key element at work, rience even as he acknowl- these specialists say, is that edged that they are not legal- the couples, some in their late ly married under French law. 20s and early 30s, are paying "Here you can do anything so they can make the deciyou can imagine." sions. They recognize, BatThe grand total for this ex- kin said, that whoever pays If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or perience was $6,000, which for the event gets to make anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, included two plane tickets, the decisions about how the pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) hotel, food and entertainment wedding will look, sound and or from any of these valued advertisers: for eight, cake, Champagne feel. AAA Travel Meadow Lakes and the 30-minute ceremony. And the cost can be reaNicole Michelle Awbrey Glen Golf Club (Guests paid for their own sonable. Renting an Elvis Northwest Medi Spa travel and housing.) officiant from Viva Las VeBad Boys Barbecue phoenix picture Framing Are these ceremonies be- gas comes with nine differBend park 6z ing played for laughs? Per- ent packages. For $350, for professional Airbrush Tanning Recreation District haps. For most, however, they instance, you get an Elvis Revive Skin Services Bend Wedding S. Formal are the real thing disguised who sings two songs and Salon Je' Danae

stood by Henisse's side in the small chapel in Las Vegas, as entertainment. w here their best man w a s Dustin Kidd, an associdressed as a Minion and their ate professor of sociology at maid ofhonor appeared in a Temple University in Philapurple bunny suit. Smoke bil- delphia, and author of "Pop lowed from machines cloud- Culture Freaks: I dentity, ing the air while the theme Mass Media, and Society," from "Star Trek" f i lled the said these kinds of weddings

TG' •

The Bulletin

MI LESTONES

GUIDELINE

performs the ceremony, rose

bouquets photos of the event, video, music, an Elvis certificate, a wedding coordinator, sedan transportation for the

couple and your names lit up on the company's marquee. "Something that's d i ffer-

Cordially Invited Bridal Deschutes County Fair S. Expo Center Faith HoPe 6b Charity Vineyard Illuminate YourNight

SHARC Aquatic S. Recreation Center The Bend Trolley The Bridal Suite S. Special Occasion The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

m racin as vi e e on coun r music By J. Patrick Cooiican

mer, do what we did: Drive to

(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

Vanderbilt Dyer Observatory We came in search of Nash- for "Opera on the Mountain," ville, Tennessee, beyond the featuring some of the finest, twang and the bro-country, lesser known opera singers and it didn't take us long to in a casual, outdoor venue. find it. There's something great about A drag performer named hearing Artistic Director John China, in a fuchsia dress, belts Hoomes tell you about the finout "I Will Always Love You"

— lip-syncing the Whitney Houston version of this Dolly Parton original — to applause and tips, including from little old ladies. It's our first morning in town, and we' ve landed at Suzy Wong's House of Yum. The restaurant's chef and owner, Arnold Myint, was a "Top Chef" contestant. Suzy

Wong is the main character of a 1957 novel and a campy 1960 movie, a Chinese lady of the night who takes up with a U.S. diplomat — and Myint's drag persona. It's only midmorning, but women sit around giant fishbowls of booze and let out

high-pitched screams at some hazy memory of weekend hijinks. We feast on the "Hong Kong Millionaire" — french fries topped with an egg and pulledpork scramble helped along by

er points of "'Ilrrandot" in his

Southern lilt. And the singing? Superb. We sought to avoid country

of the "I'm-drunk-and-got-mygirl-and-my-truck" variety. But we would be foolish to come to

Nashville and skip out on the singer-songwriters, bluegrass and rootsmusic that are under

country's big tent, music often born of joyous and sometimes angry defiance, and so central to American history. What's the difference between a fiddle and a violin? I

learned the answer in Nashville: You don't spill beer on a violin.

Bluebird Cafe Although well known to locals and music aficionados

for years, the Bluebird Cafe now draws massive crowds due in part to "Nashville." The

TV show is a guilty pleasure for my wife, Leila, so we head and Sriracha. there for Monday open-mic In walk Brian Copeland and night, which features more Greg Bullard. They are white. singer-songwriters than counTheir adorabletoddlers are try-star wannabes. The music black-American. venue shares a strip mall with "It's a welcoming, loving a bridal shop and a laundry, place," says Bullard of Nash- and by the time we get there in ville, where he's a pastor at a driving rainstorm two hours Covenant of the Cross Church. before the doors even open, Did you know it's a power- about 100 people wait in line, house in book publishing? Or all huddled under the awning, that it has the largest Kurd- stepping aside for dry cleaning ish population in the United customers. By showtime, the States? head count reaches 400. We did not. (Just as CopeUnless you really need to land and Bullard didn't realize see the Bluebird, I suggest you it was Sunday drag brunch at check out any number of other Suzy Wong's.) killer open-mic nights around cheese, tomato confit, scallions

here, like seemingly every- where we resided in a lovely where we go in Nashville, is Airbnb hosted by Emily and always well curated. We drink Marshall, who spoke enthucraft cocktails and share rice siastically about their changcakes with pimento cheese, ing city and the rebirth of old and shrimp and grits with a country. wonderful earthiness by way The neighborhood was in of'shrooms Ihaveto guessare a bad way not too long ago, local. but now is a hotbed of restauBut we enjoy "meat plus rants, bars, coffee shops and 3" at Arnold's just as much. boutiques. That's roast beef or fried chickOn our final night, a Monen plus three choices from day, we had a perfectly greasy the list of sides: green beans, burger, fries and shake at the corn, mashed potatoes, collard Pharmacy. Music on the stegreens and banana pudding. reo: "Belong" from Washed "Is mac 'n' cheese a Out, which Rolling Stone Leila NavidiI (Minneapolis) Star Tribune vegetable' ?" once accurately described "At Arnold's, it is." as "zonked out electropop." Onlookers enjoy Opera on the Mountain at the Vanderbilt Dyer Observatory in Nashville, Tennessee, where lesser knownopera We start every day at one (What did I tell you about great singers perform in anoutdoor setting. of the fine coffee shops like music everywhere'?) Frothy Monkey or Crema, On good advice, we hit the where we enjoy our coffee or dance party at the 5 Spot in country) staffing the stoves in Nash- espresso without alterations East Nashville. The space was We sit in the balcony, sip ville know what they' re doing s uch as sweetener or m i l k hot, dank and dark, and the DJ RC Cola and rum and listen because their great-grand- because it's not needed (and was spinning oldies and rockto Haas Kowert Tice, a talent- mothers did it and passed it on. a barista lets us know with a abilly, with classic Ed Sullivan We' ll start at t h e h i gh look). ed young trio. Later the main performancesprojected on a event takes the stage: The end, Husk, where the wines Outside of town, we find the screen. Lonesome Trio — an acoustic are categorized not by red somewhat mysterious Prince' s Dancers cut up the floor band featuring Ed Helms and or white but by soil type. Hot ChickenShack in another fiercely to the Drifters' "Drip two pals — hits the stage with The ratio of hipster beard to crummy strip mall. A bleak Drip Drippity Drop," swinging mandolin, guitar, banjo and clean-shaven here among green hue colors the walls, each other around with pracbass. staff and clientele is roughly and flies buzz around our ticed exuberance. Helms sings: "I can't hard- I to 1. The Bob Woods Mur- plates. The ordering process By the looks of it, the crowd, ly move/There's a picture on freesboro ham sits out on the is opaque, borderline hostile, the young and the hungry, the wall/It's just you and me/It bar, looking medieval. The and all the cooking takes place had come from every boring looks about to fall." bartender shaves a thin slice, out of view in some shady back hamlet in America to find that The actor and comedian and my memories of child- area. thing they couldn't name but may be rich and famous, but hood ham s andwiches are And then we bite into the sure could feel. Helms has had his heart bro- obliterated as I savor this new fried chicken. What follows E very city o n t h e m a k e ken, too. thing — great ham. is a fiery crunch of juicy fla- has that bar with a good The best Pappy Van Winkle vor and the experience of ad- soundtrack and your crowd, Food and drink bourbons — that's the good dictive heat, a pleasure-pain the place where you were sure Grub. The South's pre-emi- stuff selling on the secondary (this, on the "medium" spicy you would change the world nence of the prandial has lately market for $700 per bottle — is chicken). and fall in love, maybe on the been threatened by the Amer- in a case for all to see, behind To cool off, we hit up Las same night. ican food revolution: You can lock and key. P aletas popsicles in th e 1 2 The 5 Spot, in all its sweaty now go to almost any U.S. city On the stereo, Lefty Frizzell South neighborhood. sexiness, is one of those places. and get a great meal. But for sings "Always late with your In fact, you' ll want to spend A nd Nashville is on e o f flavor and simplicity, people kisses," because the music some time in 12 South. That' s those cities.

the city, many in out-of-the-

Preconceived thoughts

Just witnessing the devotion to creativity and craft, watch-

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that's fine, but just put a time up country star, there's a sing- stamp on it so my parole offier-songwriter waiting for her cer knows I was here." turn on stage. Urbanism and new residents are transform- Third and Lindsley ing the city, even as it upholds Another strip mall in an great culinary and roots mu- industrial area, and another sic traditions. There's no place great music venue: Third and quite like it. Lindsley. (Are you detecting a Let's start with music. In

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ing humans chase their bliss, brings me joy. They are trying p reconceived notions of t h e to fill a hole in their souls (plenSouth seeped into our percep- ty evidenced by the lyrics), in tions like a misty pollutant. part by filling the hole in ours. "My in-laws are outlaws Tennessee is the birthplace of the Ku Klux Klan. Nashville, and they' re m akin'homemade Bullard and Copeland remind booze," sings one. The city is also the home

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Winding lanes, rooftops and swimming pools that reflect a Medi-

terranean sensibility are typical of Conchas Chinas, a hillside enclave on Puerto Vallarta's south side. It is popular among expatriate residents, said to comprise 15 percent of the city's population.

r

A thatch-roofed palapa, sometimes used for weddings, stands beside the Pacific surf at the Fiesta Americana Puerto Vallarta beach resort. Many visitors to the city prefer to stay in hotel compounds, where all-inclusive packages may include meals and local tours.

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Sand sweeps across the cobbled, palm-fringed lanes of Sayulita, a small beach town 25miles north of

Fresh ceviche de pulpo (octopus), served on atostada with avocado, red onion and other vegetables,

Puerto Vallarta. Once enveloped by thick jungle, Sayulita began drawing surfers in the late 1960s, and

is a popular dish at beachside cafes in Sayulita. Home to about 5,000 people, Sayulita has budget lodging, an English-speaking doctor and several Internet cafes.

since has become amagnet for arts lovers andyoung adventurers.

Puerto Vallarta

1963 movie, "The Night of the Iguana"; or north to the Riv-

Continued from C1 iera Nayarit, another modern Mostly, I love the people of beach resort strip. Vallarta, their friendly smiles Those of a more adventuraccenting each sunny day. I ous bent can join Vallarta Adlove their restaurants, their shops, their willingness to at-

tempt to speak English even when their language ability is no better than that of Ameri-

ventures, truly a n

e xcellent

tour company, to swim with dolphins, dive in the offshore Islas M arietas o r

z i p - line

through the jungles at Canopy River. There are also sunset

designed after a tiara worn by Estero el Salado, a nature preCarlota, royal consort of Em- serve nearthe airport on the nicipal, a m a rket w hose peror Maximilian, in the mid- city's north side — Banderas m erchants sell b o t h f o o d 1860s. On weekends, when Bay served Spanish navigaand crafts. Near the Puente English-language s e rvices tors of the 16th, 17th and 18th (Bridge) de la Iguana, at its are offered along with Span- centuries as a safe haven to eastern end, you might spy a ish in the church, municipal replenish their fresh water and stylized statue of Taylor and bandsperform concertsin the food. Burton in a n e m brace. In- square. No permanent settlement deed, the pair appears to be M indful o f t o u r ist t r a f - was established until 1851, more idolized in Vallarta, 50 fic, many galleries, bars and when an enterprising salt tradyears after their famous ro- restaurants are concentrat- er began using the site, then m ance, than they ever were in ed along the east side of the called Las Penas, as a supply Hollywood. Malecon. Among them are junction. Silver mines in the El Malecon (literally "the the insipid Senor Frog's, SierraMadre required large its namesake river, is home to the colorful Mercado Mu-

On Dec. 12, 1851, the feast

day of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Torres brought his family to join him. Other families followed and began farming or cattle ranching. A maritime customs office was established in 1885; the first post

office opened in 1914; and in 1918, the community was for-

mally incorporated as Puerto Vallarta, honoring a past gov-

cans struggling with Spanish. But there is an unease here, sails, a tequila-tasting trip and ernor of Jalisco. one that is underscored by the an impressive folkloric musicContinued next page constant presence of armed and-dance production called militia. Earlier t his y ear, "Rhythms of the Night." breakwater") extends north whose K e r mit-like t r a d e- amounts of salt in the refining See us for retractable Mayor JavierPelayo MenOf course, that's not the along the Pacific shore for mark can be seen at souvenir process, so Don Guadalupe awnings, exterior solar dez announced, in a letter to real Mexico. It never is. It's the nearly a mile. Lined with stat- shops throughout the city. I Sanchez Torres collected it up screens, shade structures. the North A merican Travel Mexico that has been mold- ues and modern sculptures recommend against this and the coast, unloaded it from his Sun when yorJ wantif, Journalists Association, that ed and reinvented to the de- — most notably, the evocative any other establishment that boat here and transferred the shade when yorJneedit. he was implementing "an in- light of gringos, who frankly "The Boy on the Seahorse" serves umbrella drinks. In- salt to donkeys. tense safety and security cam- wouldn't have to leave the Es- ("El Cab allito") by R afael stead, head for places like the paign," and that Puerto Val- tados Unidos (United States) to Zamarripa — the pedestri- rustic La Bodeguita del Medio, www.AgateBeachMotel.som larta had "recently completed enjoy most of these activities. an promenade,remodeled in a cafe whose original Havana, Private,vintage,ogeanfront getaway a city-wide tourism security And it supports the local econ- 2011, draws tourists and locals Cuba, tables were once freN wport, O~R O >N DEMA N D training program for our po- omy with muchos pesos turis- alike. Fork-tailed frigate birds quented by Ernest Heming1 0' ' 755-- 7 4 lice force and tourism industry ticos (many tourist pesos). soaroverhead. way, or La Dolce Vita, an au541-389-9983 partners." Indeed, pesos are one of the At the w alkway's widest thentic Italian restaurant. If there's nothing to worry best reasons to visit Mexico: point, the Plaza de Armas www.shadeondemand.corn about, one might indeed ask: With a current exchange rate extends two blocks east to Then and now Why is this necessary? of 16.8 pesos to the U.S. dol- the city's landmark church, Puerto Vallarta is a young lar, up about 25 percent from dedicated to Our Lady of Gua- community by Mexican stanResort life this time a year ago, travelers' dalupe. Although the church dards. Once inhabited mainly A majority of tourists who money goes a lot further than was built in th e early 20th by crocodiles — which can come to this city of 300,000 it would in Southern Califor- century, the crown atop its still be found amid the man(it is properly pronounced nia or H awaii. A 3 5 0-peso steeple is said to have been grove-throttled waterways of "PWAYR-toe-vah-YAR-tah") dinner of duck with octopus stay in hotel zones, where they risotto from chef A lfonso need never experience the Cadena at La Leche, one of the seedier parts of town. Security city's finest restaurants, would guards allow taxis, tour buses cost you only about $21 in U.S. and airport shuttles to pass currency, far less than you through the gates that defend would pay in a major Amerihotel grounds, but precious can restaurant. You could enfew others may approach. joy the catch of the day at the The Fiesta Americana Puer- more Rivercafe, on Isla Cuale, to Vallarta is one of t hese. for pennies on your dollar. Located midway between SH

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downtown and the i nternational airport in the Zona Ho-

El Centro

The Rio Cuale, which flows

telera Norte, its 291 ocean-side from theSierra Madre delSur rooms overlook a tropical gar- into the Pacific Ocean in the den theater and a large fresh-

heart of Puerto Vallarta, di-

water swimming pool with a

vides Vallarta Centro (downtown) from the Zona Romantica, a favored address for many bars; a full-service spa; special of the 40,000 Americans and programs for kids and teens, Europeans who make their and a full slate of ocean ac- homes in and around this city. tivities from its beach center, In fact, a lot of the romance in including jet-skiing and para- the latter neighborhood is of sailing. The English-speaking the gay and lesbian variety, staff is well-trained in luxury as this subculture is widely hospitality and service. accepted here. Budget cafes

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swim-up bar. In all, the resort hotel has 10 restaurants and

Guests who don't want to

OCT 16 NOON-7PM Please join us! Hors d'oeuvres, Beverages, information, Prize Drawings, Take a Tour of Our New Building ~de

leave the hotel grounds really

through downtown Vallarta;

known as "Restaurant Row." south along the coast to MisWooded Isla Cuale, which

maloya, where Burton starred may be approached by swayin d i rector J oh n H u ston's ing suspension bridges across

I

L ocal Ent e r t a i n m e n t , L o cal A r t i s t s

are so tightly stacked with

small hotels along the sands have no reason to do so. Oth- of Playa los Muertos (" Beach ers may book a package sight- of the Dead" ) that the main seeing tour to take them safely street here, Olas Altas, is often

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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The Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe towers above downtown Puerto Vallarta, known locally as El Centro. The church's crown is said to have been designed after a tiara worn by Carlota, consort to Mexican Emperor Maximilian, in the 1860s.

Expenses Flight, Redmond to Puerto Val-

larta (round trip): $496.63 Lodging (four nights, Playa los Arcos): $304 Meals: $120 TOTAL: $920.63

If yougo (Telephonecodefor Mexico is 52)

INFORMATION Puerto Vallarta Tourism Board. Hotel Canto del Sol 18,Zona Hotelera a lasGlorias, Puerto Vallarta; www.visitpuertovallarta.corn, 322-224-1175, 855281-3816

LODGING Fiesta Americana Puerto Vallarta. Blvd. Francisco Medina

Ascencio Km 2.5, Puerto Vallarta; www.fiestaamericana.corn,

322-222-0480. Lunch and dinner every day. Budget to 322-226-2100, 800-343-7821. moderate Rates from $245 La Bodeguit adelMedio.Paseo Hotel Catedral. Av. Hidalgo 166, Diaz Ordaz858, Malecon, Puerto Vallarta; www.labodeguitadelCentro, Puerto Vallarta. www. hotelcatedralvallarta.corn, 322- medio.corn.mx, 322-223-1585. Lunch and dinner every day. 222-9033. Rates from $35 Hotel Playa los Arcos. Dias Altas Budget 380, Col. Emiliano Zapata, Puer- La Dolce Vita. PaseoDiaz to Vallarta; www.playalosarcos. Ordaz 674, Malecon, Puerto Vallarta; www.dolcevita.corn. corn, 322-226-7100, 800-648mx, 322-222-3852. Also Paseo 2403. Rates from $69 de las Palmas 2,NuevoVallarta, Villa Premiere Hotel 8 Spa.Av. 322-297-0403. Lunch San Salvador117, Col. 5 deDic- Nayarit. Monday to Saturday, dinner eviembre, Puerto Vallarta; www. ery day. Moderate premiereonline.corn.mx, 322La Leche. Blvd. Francisco Me226-7040, Rates from $168 dina Ascencio Km2.5, Puerto DINING Vallarta; www.lalecherestaurant. Gaby's Restaurant Bar.Av. Mina corn, 322-293-0900. Moderate 252, Centro, Puerto Vallarta; to expensive

A modern painting of the exalted Virgin of Guadalupe is the centerpiece of the gold-plated altar in the Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Puerto Vallarta's landmark church. Built over 50 years, between 1915 and 1965, the church celebrates its annual festival for 12 days beginning Dec. 1.

RiverCafe Puerto Vallarta. Calle Isla Rio CualeL4, Centro, Puerto Vallarta; 322-223-0788. Three meals every day. Moderate Vista Grill. Av. Pulpito 377,Col. Altavista, Puerto Vallarta; www. vistagrill.corn, 322-222-3570. Moderate to expensive ACTIVITIES Canopy River. Av. Insurgentes 379, Col. Emiliano Zapata, Puerto Vallarta; www.canopyriver. corn/en/, 322-222-0560. Estero el Salada. Morelos 570, Col. Centro, Puerto Vallarta; www.esterodelsalado.org, 322222-7194

Vallarta Adventures. Paseo las Palmas 39, NuevoVallarta; www.vallarta-adventures.corn, 322-226-8413, 888-526-2238

Puerto Vallarta families enjoy an afternoon swim in the mouth of the freshwater Rio Cuale. Ad-

jacent is Isla Cuale, a wooded island most notably home to the Mercado Municipal foodand-crafts market. 1000 Watts

From previous page Tourism grew slowly beginning in the 1930s, picking up substantially after a Guada-

high in the Sierra Madre, and convoys of the Policia Feder-

past, but he didn't know me complex. A towering classi- from a drug runner.

al established checkpoints at key highway locations such

cal statue at the heart of the circle was now adorned with

$199

as the hub of a luxury resort

I left the scene with much

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Weekly Arts &

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Limited suanrrses

less bravado than I had musInside M AG A ZBilm lajara-to-Puerto Vallarta air as on the bridge that separates spray paint and pink linge- tered for my arrival. 541-382-6223 jbbend.corn route was established in 1954. Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, from rie. Behind it, the shell of an — Reporter: janderson@ • • The Bulletin J0HNSON BROTHERS Pan American began flying suburban Nuevo Vallarta, unfinished high-rise hotel, its bendbulletin.corn from Los Angeles to Vallarta Nayarit. construction long ago abanand Mazatlan eight years latMexican gun-control laws, doned, was a magnet for er. Soon, Huston arrived with while guaranteeing individ- homeless squatters who made Burton, Ava Gardner and Deb- uals' rights to bear arms, are their entry through breaches orah Kerr to film "The Night much stricter than those in in a chain-link fence. Nearby, of the Iguana," and Puerto the United States. Still, auto- tattered sheets of plastic sufVallarta went Hollywood. matic weapons are important ficed as roofs above the mud Since that time, and espe- elements of police arsenals. floors of a colony of residencially since the mid-l980s, Nothing brought this more to tial hovels. tourism has exploded. The my attention than one early In t h e he a r t of th is local tourism board estimates evening, when I found myself post-apocalyptic scene, a skyannual visitor numbers at 1.5 face-to-face with a machine diving company's shuttle van million. Most new hotel con- gun. was parked to the side of the struction has been north of I was returning to Puerto rutted lane, along with a comthe city, especially around the Vallarta, after a visit to Sayu- pany of Federales. No fewer R EII ~ I I I t beautiful marina and planned lita, when I heard a radio alert than nine heavy-duty police community of Nuevo Vallar- about the crash of a small air- vehicles, including several ta, in adjacent Nayarit state. craft. A skydiving plane had SUVs, were lined up from the A few more intimate modern gone down over Banderas circle to the beach, a distance hotels are on the south side of Bay, within sight of many of only a couple of hundred Banderas Bay, beneath such leading resort hotels, after a yards. hillside enclaves as Conchas parachute became tangled At the rear, beside the trafChinas, where many of the in the undercarriage. Two of fic circle, what appeared Through December23,2015 experience exceptional lodging city's expatriate community the five passengers died. As a to be an M2 Browning (a at Oregon's only resort hotel built right on the beach, and live. travel journalist, I sped to the .50-caliber machine gun) was take advantage of our "Second Night Free" discount on Still more head to charm- crash site, or as near as could mounted in the bed of a pickstays Sunday through Thursday. All guest rooms are ing Sayulita, 25 miles north be reached along the urban up truck. I identified myself to oceanfront with floor-to-ceiling windows that frame of Vallarta. Once enveloped coastline. It turned out that the officer in charge as interglorious sunsets,spectacular doud formations and the ocean by thick jungle, the town of this was not in the best part of national press, but he was not waves. And, somesay you can actually seethe curve of the about 5,000 was discovered town. impressed. I confess to having Inn At panish Head by surfers in the late 1960s. I ventured down a neglect- been intimidated by the weapearth as you enjoy breakfast, lunch, dinner or a drink at I lt t e l l r H O T E L Its eclectic nature has made it ed road to a scene straight on upon which he leaned, unFathoms, our penthouse restaurant and bar. a magnet for adventuresome out of a "Mad Max" movie. smiling — especially as the 4009 sw Highway 101,Lincoln city, OR younger people and gallery Beside a putrid open sewage barrel of the gun was aimed For more information or to make your reservation phone 800-452-8127 lovers. Besides surfing and canal was a traffic circle that directly at my head. Local 800-452-8127. Some restrictions apply. SpanishHead.corn stand-up paddling, visitors may once have been intended media mayhave been allowed enjoy snorkeling, fishing and horseback riding; although it remains small, the community has budget lodging, an English-speaking doctor and A P P L I A N C E S

OUR SECOND N IGHT IS FREE!

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several Internet cafes.

Mad Max But part of the recent histo-

ry ofMexico's coastalresorts also involves the drug culture

and the power of its cartels, trafficking syndicates that have long dominated the illegal export of cocaine, heroin, marijuana and methamphetamines to the United States.

Beginning in 2006, the Mexican government launched an offensive to stop drug-relat-

Partners In Care let me be a daughter again.

ed violence, which had taken more than 100,000 lives

through 2013, according to The Washington Post. In April and May of this year, the emerging Jalisco New Generation Cartel staged

They understood how important it was for our family to be there for each other, and their expert, caring support made that special time possible.

violent attacks in 40 communities in Jalisco state, from

Central Oregon's choice for hospice care.

the metropolis of Guadalajara all the way to Puerto Vallar-

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(541) 382-5882

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Hospice I Home Health I Hospice House I Transitions I Palliative Care

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But, they add, the "Freshman 15n weight gain is more myth

than reality. "What science reveals is

RicardoDeAratanha/ LosAngeles Times

that the average college stu- A presentation to freshmen describes the services at California dent may gain somewhere State University, Northridge's new wellness center. Rates of f rom 2 or 3 p o unds in t h e self-harm and suicidal thoughts have increased among students first year, but I' ve had stu- seeking mental health services at colleges, a report says. dents who actually gain 30 to 40 pounds; it's all over the map,n said Ellen Bauersfeld, a dietitian at the Northridge student health center. "Why?

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ular, focused on learning and healthy outcomes and emotional intelligence," Soni said. "In college, there's a lot of emphasis placed on one's IQ but less on one's EQ, meaning there has been more empha- purposefulness, h appiness sis on outreach and taking BIld success.n on a public policy health At Caltech, classes in the approach," said Eells, past first two terms are offered on a chairman of mental health at pass/fail basis — a more practhe American College Health tical relief for anxious freshAssn. "Colleges are doing men, said Barbara Green, inmore prevention, promoting terim dean of undergraduate resilience, coping skills and students. "All of them are really brilteachingyoung people how to manage." liant obviously, but it's not That may be why "mindful- easy for everybody to realness" is the new catchword on ize they can't all be in the top many college campuses, said half,"Green said."We encourVarun Soni, dean of religious age collaboration rather than life at USC, which last year a competitive approach. For launched a program that in- most freshmen, they' re just cludes free meditation cours- happy to be with people who es, training faculty in the use share their interest in math of more reflective teaching and science." techniques to help students Finding your interest inside focus attention on the present and outside of the classroom is moment, and research, funded key to successfully negotiating by federal and private grants, the rocky first year, said Kim. studying the impact of such She said she initially suffered methods on insomnia, sub- from trying to meet what she stance abuse, anxiety and oth- thought were her parents' exer ills. pectations, only to discover Some critics say the benefits that they wanted her to follow of the practice are overstat- her own path. Her stress level ed and that practitioners lack diminished, and she enjoyed a training. Those leading mind- more active social life.

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They' re in a completely new

Sunday, OCtOber 11e 2015

environment, and for some of our students it's the first time on their own, with no-

Time for thought

body helping them to prepare meals, nobody guiding them,

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

"You often write about logical thought processes," a reader writes. "When's the best time to think? A deal may take eight minutes or less. When do I ht in my thinking?" Capable players don't huddle at every trick. Do your thinking before a crucialtrick arrives. Against South's three diamonds, West leads the k ing o f s p ades, winning. When he seesdummy, he knows that at some point declarer will lead a club, and West will have to judge whether to grab his ace or play low. If West hesitates, he may as well take the ace. (To hesitate without the ace — with nothing to think aboutwould be unethical.) Suppose South ruffs the t hird spade, leads a trump to the ace and returns a trump: jack, queen, king. West can shift safely to the jack of hearts, but f i rst h e d o e s s ome thinking. South had two spades and six diamonds. East had a four-card spade suit. But if East had four hearts, he would have responded one heart, showing his four-card majors "up the line." South's pattern is 2-4-6-1. When South takes the ace of hearts and leads a club, West can take his ace. South can pitch one heart on the king of clubs but still loses a heart for down one. In fact, West could think along the same lines at Trick Two. If East had

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five cards in spades, he might have competed to three spades. South would not have overcalled at the level of two with a shaky five-card suit; with 2-4-5-2 pattern, he might have doubled instead. Don't wait for trouble. Do your thinking in advance. East dealer Neither side vulnerable

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There are mixed signs about students' mental health.

On the one hand, students enrolling in four-year colleges and universities had the lowest self-reported rates of alcohol and tobacco use in more

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dentsare more discontented with college and struggle to feel like they belong. Counseling centers are reporting record numbers of vis-

professional, certified instrucdentservice budgets hamper tors, Soni said. efforts at many public univerLast year classes filled up sities in California and else- quickly with hundreds of stuwhere to deal with the influx. dents, faculty and staff on Nonetheless, colleges have waiting lists. R taken on more responsibiliWe are aggressively sec-

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out what works for you.

(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD ted by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols LeWIS "BRINGINGYOUR 98 The Snake R. 'A' GAME" ByPAM runs throughII AMICK KLAWRTER100 Pleasure trip 102 Oliver Stone's ACROSS alma mater I nlvy Mike" test 104 Quick question at the building weapon site? e Bush trip I 2 University of 108 Catalog giant Idaho city II2 Supermarket letters 18 Group at 113 Bangkokbread Asgard Ie Listen Io I I4 Quakers in the completely forest? I te Anago orunagI 20 Working I te One whoputs parents' BId 2I What you Io sleep echolocation is 121 Cosmetics counter Used for? freebie? 23 SPice UP 125 Seat of 24 Hound Washington's 25 HayWOith'S Snohomtsh second County husband 12e portuguese 2e Shfsk, notably WIne 28 Unaffiliated: 127 Beethoven Abbr. dedIcatee 29 Strikes down 31 BII of theatrical 128 FIxes, as a seam thievery? 3e Dessert table 129 Stretchable, in product names vessel 37 Acted indolently 130 Collaborative 2012 StreIsand 38 Liberal side? album 39 First nameIn

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C7

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Ma eeineA ri t v isits'Ma am Secreta TV SPOTLIGHT

You go through all that. Then

ceremony and high-level summits. 'I have come a long way, so I While McCord has three must be frank.' kids in the house, "my kids "But you have to remind were grown up and they took yourself that you' re not just charge of my life," recalls Alrepresenting yourself," Al- bright. "One of my daughters bright cautions, "and if you paid my bills, and she'd call blow it, you' ve blown it for an me up and say,'M om, did you awful lot of people. I would REALLY need another pair of sometimes dig my nails into shoes'?'" the palms of my hand. Just In July, Albright, who had getting angry doesn't get you previously tackled a cting very far." roles on "The Gilmore Girls" In April, A l bright and and "Parks and Recreation," I would get to the serious part:

"Madam Secretary" 8 tonight, CBS

By Frazier Moore The Associated Press

NEW YORK — On any episode of"Madam Secretary," U.S. Secretary of State Eliza-

beth McCord must negotiate with world leaders, Beltway power brokers and, some-

times, her own family on the home front. As played by Tea Leoni, Secretary McCord is measured, whip-smart, ethical

L eoni attended th e W h i t e House Correspondents' As-

and strong. And as a woman

holding what for two centuries was a man's job, she never Sarah Shatz/ CBS via The Associated Press forgets who paved her way: Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, left, appears in a Madeleine Albright, the re- scene with actress Tea Leoni, who portrays U.S. Secretary of State al-life first woman to serve as Elizabeth McCord in an episode of "Madam Secretary." Albright, secretary of state. Who better, then, than the former secretary to give McCord a little sisterly advice?

This summer Albright, 78,

78, took a break from teaching duties at Georgetown University to film a guest spot on the show, airing tonight on CBS.

when they' re not."

with the dismissive new man

sistant briefing her: 'You' ve

But Leoni had a lready sity and other worldly chores s ought counsel from A l to film a guest spot on "Mad- bright for reaL Last year, she am Secretary," airing tonight reached out for a briefing on on CBS. how to portray someone in "The scene takes place at a that weighty position. Plans ceremony for veterans," Al- were made for them to meet bright explains during a re- for breakfast. cent phone conversation. Cast On the appointed day, says as herself ,she commiserates Leoni in a separate interview, with McCord about working "I had this image of her asbrought in by the president got a meeting today with — "what it's like for the sec- Tea Leoni.' And her rolling retary of state to relate to men her eyes and saying, 'Who is

sociation Dinner, "which was tary" shoots — and she had really fun," says Albright. alreadylearned her lines,"un"But whenever anybody said, like many actors," Leoni says. 'Madam Secretary,' we didn' t As rehearsals began, "I had know which of us should turn a healthy number of butterflies around." in my stomach," Leoni says. "I'm in awe of her, and now

I t was t ha t n i ght w h en she was invited to appear on

she's on my turf, and I wanted her to experience my prowess as anactorplaying asecretary

"Madam Secretary," a show she says she likes.

Dear Abby:My dear friend "Iris" is having her annual Halloween party. Each year I wear a costume I pull together without spending extra money. This year I' ll be dressing as a cowgirl, and I have arranged to borrow a few items for the costume.

drama with very good actors," But Leoni didn't figure on e x t remely Albright says. "But I also ap- Albright's prowess. "After a few run-throughs, generous, and also bothered preciate how they raise gerto say, 'You' re making foreign mane and important issues. I she's really getting a feel for it. policy accessible.' I don't take think it's a good way to help And by the time we shot it, oh, that lightly." educate the American pub- my God, she's on a tear! She Now hear something she lic on what the job is about owns the set! I was schooled might have learned from Al- — how you' re not just deal- in theater by Madeleine Albright, who served four years ing with foreigners, but also bright. She was fantastic!" under President Bill Clinton, with your own staff, with the Meanwhile, Albright came on how to deal with powerful, White House and members of away apparently satisfied sometimes difficult, officials Congress, and the press. w ithherwork — and game for "And it's interesting," she around the globe. an encore. "When you get into the marvels, "how much the show Asked if she'd consider m eeting, you begin w i t h really is like life." another TV guest shot with pleasantries: the weather, or That is, life for any secre- Leoni, she replies, "Absolute'I like your tie,' or whatever. tary of state isn't all pomp, ly! That's OK with me."

sure?" to which he replies, "Of I think you did the right thing by be- course!" Is he lying? Should I coning up-front. front him about the journal entry Dear Abby: I have been with my even though I invaded his privacy? her husband's costume. Personally,

husband, "Elliot," for six years, mar-

— Pregnant Goddess

ried for two. We' re financially stable in Philadelphia and have great, supportive families. Dear Pregnant Goddess: RecogOne of our biggest nize that Elliot is less emotionally issues is that Elliot mature than you are, which is why

DFP,R

needs to be emotion-

ABBY

give in to it. It's tax-

you have been stuck in the role of

fun" anymore or that I'm a "prude." boy costume. I considered changing my cosNow that I'm pregnant, things

being "the strong one." Once the baby comes, you will have less time to coddle him, which may make him jealous. People have good days and bad ones. Your husband may have been having a bad one when he wrote what you read. This may seem like blasphemy,

tume, but then I started wondering

have gotten worse. I expected to

but not all fathers-to-be are excited

why I should, when I had already

be treated like a pregnant goddess, when faced with the reality of imbut Elliot feels no emotional attach- pendingparenthood. Some are inment to our baby and is afraid of timidated, which what Elliot becoming a father. I find it hard to is feeling. You may find that once deal with because we planned this the baby arrives he will bond with pregnancy. him/her. However, if it doesn't hapWe have been fighting a lot late- pen, or if you continue to feel emoly, and while he was out, I read his tionally isolated, you both should journal. It stated that he knows start marriage counseling. Then he he doesn't love his wife anymore. can explain to you and a counselSince that day I have been a wreck, or why he would tell you one thing but I have been unable to talk to him and be writing the opposite in his about it. journal. Every morning he tells me he — Write to Dear Abby at dearabbycom loves me. Now I ask him, "Are you or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

and I ran errands to-

ally coddled, and I ing to be the strong

gether and she want-

one all the time, and the result is I don't feel as attracted while we were out. She chose a cow- to him. He complains that I'm "not

ed to pickup her husband's costume

made arrangements. Before Iris paid for the costume, I told her

about mine. She put her husband' s costume back and said she'd select

something else later. There was no argument, but I wonder if I was obligated to tell her. Would it have been bad if I had just

gone ahead and shown up as a cowgirl without saying anything? — Wondering in the Wild West

Dear Wondering: It would only have been "bad" if Iris had planned to dress as a cowgirl to complement

of state on television."

SHE?' "But she w a s

uic t in in avoi sconusion

wear. By chance, Iris

dio where "Madam Secre-

"I think it works as a good

who think they' re superior

took a break from teaching duties at Georgetown Univer-

As a rule, I keep my costume a surprise and don't ask others

arrived at the New York stu-

maybe

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-O and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l

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OCT. 11, 2015: This yearmanypossi-

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOUR HOROSCOPE

bilities appear, perhaps as a result of your By Jacqueline Bigar surging creativity. In fact, you might want to keep a notebook handy to write down mood, you are unlikely to find out what ideas as they hit. Your magnetism also soars. Be careful, as it will be easy to be- is ailing him or her. Tonight: Add spice to come me-oriented. If you are single, you your life. have nothing to complain about. Enjoy CANCER (June 21-July 22) dating, but don' t ** * Return calls and catch up others' Btsrs showtbe kjntf commit unless you news on the phone. For various reasons, are 100 Percent of dsyyou'0have you will want to remain close to home. ** * * * D ynamic sure. If you are at- You have a quirkysense ofhum or,which ** * * Positive ta c hed, share morea family member orroommateseemsto ** * Average wit h your sweetie. enjoy. Get together with this person soon. ** So-so A relationship conTonight: Make a favorite meal. * Difficult sists of two people, not one. Your LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) sensitivity will be necessary here. A fellow ** * * You understand what is expectLIBRA has similar traits, but might not be ed of you in a matter involving close relatives or neighbors. You will hear your very sensitive. share of gossip. Until you have some solARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * A partner has a lot to share and id facts, don't jump to conclusions. You know what you want; continue to make much more to say. You will need to be a plans with that goal in mind. Tonight: receptive audience — that is, if you want peaceinyourhome.A discussionabouta Out late. certain out-of-town event could cause you VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) to rethink your plans. Tonight: Go along ** * You might feel as if you are stepwith an associate's choice. ping off a stage and finally have the freedom you crave and need. You had a great TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * You could be in a position where time when the spotlight was on you, but you also will enjoy being spontaneous you might want to go in a new direction. Staying close to home and choosing a re- and following through on personal matters. Tonight: Go for what you want. laxing activity will feel right to you. Allow a friend to have the space he or she needs. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Tonight: Get a good night's sleep. ** * * A conversation will start your day off on a very positive note. Someone GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * * You might feel as if you have is likely to reveal his or her true feelings, made a sufficient effort to draw out a which you will need to handle with sensitivity, especially if the feelings are not lovedonewho seems intenton having things work out his or her way. Whether mutual. A surprise awaits you later in the this person is upset with you or just in a day. Tonight: On a roll.

** * * Take some time for yourself. Make it OK to read the Sunday paper with a good cup of java. Some of you might want to watch your favorite show, while others will opt to sit outside with a favorite book. Do whatever you want! Tonight: Play it as low-key as possible.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * Friends seem to be reaching out to you with invitations to go here, there

and everywhere.Becauseyou are so popular right now, the only unacceptable

responseistosaynoandstayhome. Your moodchangeswhenyou get out and about. Tonight: You are the party!

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * You see past what an older person presents. This individual might not want to reveal the raw facts, as he or she could feel as though that discussion would be too much of a turn-off. Clearly, this person does not want to offend you. Tonight: A force to be dealt with.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * I f you could, you would hop on the nearest train and get out of town. You

• MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE — ROGUENATION(PG-13) 5:30 • TRAINWRECK (R) 9 • Younger than 2t may attend all screenings if accompanied by alegal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271

Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA2 (PG) 1145 a m., 2, 415, 6 30, 8:45 • THEINTERN(PG-13) 8:45 • THE MARTIAN (PG-13) I2:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 • PAN (PG) 11:15 a.m., 1, 1:45, 3:30, 4:15, 6:15, 6:45, 9:15

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * Your ability to home in on what a loved one wants will allow for a nearly perfect day. You know that this person might be in a less-than-great mood, but your ability to draw this person out and help him or her relax is one of the plusses of this bond. Tonight: Be more available. © King Features Syndicate

7:30 p.m. on10, "Bob's Burgers" — The prospect of increased business excites Bob (voice of H. Jon Benjamin) in the newepisode "The Land Ship," until he learns that during the related parade, portable restrooms will be set up right in front of the restaurant. Tina (voice of DanMintz) tries to change her allegedly dull image by teaming with a school vandaland the two plots come together when Tina has to decide whether to help disrupt the parade. Kristen Schaal also is in the voice cast. 8 p.m.on 8,"M adam Secretary" — A real Secretary of State meets a fictional one, asformer officeholder Madeleine Albright appears as herself in the newepisode "The Doability Doctrine." Sheadvises Elizabeth (TeaLeoni) on retrieving a State Department worker who's been kidnapped inAfghanistan, resulting in Elizabeth clashing with President Dalton (Keith Carradine) on how to proceed. Henry (Tim Daly) wants to makeoneof his students (guest star Chris Petrovski) a spy for the U.S. 9:30 p.m. on10, "The Last Man on Earth" — If it's tough to dial back from telling a lie, it's that much harder whenyou' reone of the last people onthe planet. Carol

(Kristen Schaalfi)nds herself in

that spot in the newepisode "Dead Man Walki ng,"and eventhough Phil (Will Forte) usually is the one who stretches the truth, she's not sure what his reaction will be when she cops to her fib. As it ends up, her worry is well-placed. 9:30 p.m. on BRAVO, "Manzo'd With Children" — In the new episode "A Tale ofTwoFamilies," theManzo and Scaliaclanspack their bags and head to Italy for some last-minute bonding before the wedding. Al's struggles with the gravity of losing his little girl threaten the mood during a trip that's supposed to becarefree, however, andChris makes astartling announcement that breaks Caroline's heart. © Zap2it

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Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • EVEREST (PG-13) 1:40, 4:20, 7 • HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA (PG) noon, 2:10, 4:20, 7:05 • THE MARTIAN (PG-13) l2:25, 3:30, 6:30 • MAZE RUNNER: THESCORCHTRIALS (PG-l3) 1:10, 4, 6:40 • PAN (PG) noon, 4:50, 7:20 • PAN 3-0 (PG) 2:25

crave achangeof scenery, andyouwant to be around people who are different from your usual circle of friends. This desire could be fed by a simple drive in the country. Tonight: Enjoy the moment!

7 p.m.on2,9,"Am erica'sFunniest Home Videos" — One of the longest-running shows currently on broadcast television, this program launches its 26th season with a very significant change — a new host. "Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" alum Alfonso Ribeiro takes over the duty of introducing amusing videos sent in by viewers, and the line of succession is appropriate: Ribeiro won Season 19 of "Dancing with the Stars," still hosted by TomBergeron, who also presided over this series for 15 of its rounds.

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562

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• HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA(Upstairs 2 — PG) 1:10, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30 • THEMARTIAN(PG-13) l,4,7 • The upstairsscreening room has limited accessibility.

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Scoreboard, D2 M LB, D3 Sports in brief, D2 Soccer, D3 NHL, D3 Golf, D3

© www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

PREP VOLLEYBALL

NBA PRESEASON

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Blazers again blow lead toKings SACRAMENTO,Calif. — Darren Collison

scored 18 points and DeMarcus Cousins had 16 to lead theSacramento Kings to as9490 preseason victory over the Portland Trail Blazers on Saturday night. The Kings ran off 12 straight points in the fourth quarter and held Portland scoreless for more than 5 minutes in taking a 91-84 lead. C.J. McCollum hit five 3-pointers and scored 19 of the team's 30 points in the third quarter for Portland, which has lost to Sacramento twice in six days. McCollum finished with a team-high 30 points. Allen Crabbefouled out midway through the fourth quarter and had 13 points and Al-Farouq Aminu had 12.Pat Connaughton collected 11 rebounds andstarting center Mason Plumlee went scoreless in 22 minutes. A sore left hip has prevented veteran guard Gerald Henderson from playing any preseason games. Portland played without all-star point guard Damian Lillard, who sprained his left ankle Thursday in awin over Golden State. Lillard has never missed aregular season game inthree seasons. The Blazers visit Utah on Monday.

Ryan Kang / The Associated Press

Washington State's DomWilliams (80) celebrates after scoring a touchdown against Oregon on Saturday night in Eugene. The Ducks lost 45-38 in double overtime.

Ducks must improve upon'a hundred things' • Oregon should have put away Washington Statebeforethey could comebackandwin indoubleovertime Inside

MARK MORICAL UGENE — A horde of media surrounded a solemn Scott Frost in Or-

E

— The Associated Press

egon's Football Performance Center

as he answered questions about the double-overtime debacle that never should have extended beyond regulation. "There's a hundred things ..." the Oregon offensive coordinator said quietly. "But that game should have been overlong before

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

that."

PAC-12 No. 5 Utah

The Ducks gave one away at Autzen Stadium on Saturday evening, somehow falling to Washington State 45-38 in double overtime after holding a 10-point lead midway

30

No. 23 California 2 4 rizona Oregon St.

4 7

through the fourth quarter.

For Oregon (3-3), it was missed opportunity after missed opportunity.

ashington St. Oregon 38 ( 20T) rizona St. Colorado TOP 25

8 23

Maryland

28 45

No. 3 Baylor Kansas

6 7

N o.4Mic i an St. 3 1 Rutgers 24

quarterback Jeff Lockie despite a gritty 246 yards and two touchdowns on 27 carries

• Bend High loses in championship to 6A No. 2 Central Catholic Bulletin staff report In the eight previous seasons Kristin Cooper has coached at Bend High, the

Lava Bears had never qualified for the gold bracket at the

24 14

21 3

No. 12 Florida St. Miami

24

No. 18 Michigan 8 No. 13 Northwestern 0 3

No. 15 Notre Dame 41 Navy 24 8

31

West Virginia 26 (OT) No. 2lowa illinois

in the Clearwater Classic on Saturday at Bend High School. The Lava Bears reached the gold bracket final, which they lost 2-0 to Central Catholic.

vious 31 years of this tourney, according to Cooper, Bend had never advanced to the gold bracket championship.

No. 11 Florida Missouri

ennessee N o. 19 Georgia

offense, which choked and sputtered with

24

exas 2 No. 10 Oklahoma 17

No. 14 Mississippi New Mexico St.

You canblame thepatchwork Oregon

Bend High's Cambree Scott (12) and KaciCox(10) go for a block during a match against Southridge

Clearwater Classic volleyball tournament. And in the pre-

No. 7 LSU

Arkansas

back LukeFalk,who completed 50 of 74 passesfor505 yards and five touchdowns.

from Royce Freeman.

Kansas St.

S outh Carolina

ary that was torched by Cougars quarterJoe Kline /The Bulletin

No. 2 TCU

N . Clemson Georgia Tech

You canblame the overmatched second-

20

Both of those droughts are

now over. Riding its best serving and defenseofthe season Satur-

day, Bend cruised through pool play at Bend High and defeated Southridge (27-25, 25-14) and Crook County (2518, 25-23) in the gold bracket

See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.cern/sperts

Inside

at the same site. The Lava Bears, ranked No. 5 in Class 5A, then faced Central Catholic, the No. 2 team in 6A, in the

damage.'"

championship, where they fell

But there was no taking away

25-10, 25-18.

from what the Lava Bears accomplished Saturday. "They' re fighters," Cooper said of her players. "We' re not

O

"We' re starting to peak at

the right time," Cooper said,

noting how reaching the championship bracket has always been a target for her program since she has been theBend coach."Coming out of pool play first, that was the first goal. Then it was like, 'OK, we can do some

They will be out there

throughout the baseball playoffs, on the pitching mound each day, though they will not be easy to see. They range

Inside

throttles

FCS North Texas with

recordbreaking win,D4 • Utah

holds off Cal. Pac-12 roundup, D4

• Michigan wins with its third

straight shutout. Top 25 roundup, DS

SeeDucks /D4

Falling short of the 24-team

the biggest team, but these

girls keep chugging along. They' re not intimidated by anybody. Whoever's on the other side (of the net), they just play their hardest. I love it." SeeVolleyball /D5

Rick Scuteri / The Associated Press

Oregon State cornerback Kendall Hill dives for the ball during the second half Saturday at Arizona. The Beavers lost 44-7.

Beaverswither in the desert heat vs.Wildcats By Bob Baum The Associated Press

TUCSON, Ariz. — Ore-

The scar is the physical

lutely did not." Solomon, who sat out last

week's 55-17 loss at Stanford because of a concussion,

• Cubs, Dodgers win in NLDS games.MLB playoffroundup,D3

mark of both the epidemic

and an individual player's history. Each scar, like rings

gon State truly believed it had a chance to knock off Arizona on Saturday. They didn't even come

had elbow surgery to repair a damaged ulnar collateral ligament, or UCL. Some

on a tree stump, reveals the

close.

Anu Solomon returned from a one-game absence to

tle bit rusty at times but I thought he saw the field

ignite the Wildcats offense in a 44-7 rout of the Beavers.

pretty well," Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez said. The Wildcats (4-2, 1-2 Pac-12) amassed 645 yards to 249 for the Beavers (2-3, 0-2). SeeBeavers/D4

from about 7 to 9 centimeters

have had it multiple times.

The operation — known as Tommy John surgery, after

past: which doctor performed the operation, how long ago the player had it and whether he had it more than once. "The funny thing is," said

No. 24 Toled

8

in length. Some are thick, others thin and faded. They

Kent St.

7

tell the story of the modern

the first pitcher to undergo

David Altchek, the New York

pitcher. About a quarter of active major league pitchers have

it — leaves players with a crescent-shaped scar inside

sees it except the batter."

No. 25 Boise S . 4 1 Colorado St. 10

• Portland State

Clearwater title was a tad disappointing, Cooper admitted.

For players,TommyJohn scarstell a story By Tim Rohan

2002,D4

• Madras girls win water polo invitational. Prep roundup,D5

MAjOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

New York Times News Service

• Oregon loses 2nd straight at home for 1st time since

the elbow.

Mets' doctor, "nobody ever

SeeScars/D6

"I expected these kids to play well today, and I truly thought we would," Oregon State first-year coach Gary Andersen said. "We abso-

completed 17of 30 passes

for276 yards,beforesitting out the fourth quarter.

"He was probably a lit-


D2 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREB DARD

TODAY TENNIS

WTA, ChinaOpen,final ATP, ChinaOpen,final ATP, RolexMasters ATP, RolexMasters

Time T V /Radio 1 a.m. Ten n is ON DECK 4:30 a.m. Tennis Monday 10:30 p.m. Tennis Boys soccer:Central Christianat Umpq ua Valley Christian,4p.m. 3 a.m. (Mon) Tennis

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Golf Golf

9 a.m. 9 a.m. 10 a.m.

FS1 FS2

Big Ten

11:30 a.m.

11:30 a.m. 11:30 a.m. 1 p.m. 3 p.m.

ESPN FS1 FS2

Pac-12 Pac-12

FOOTBALL

NFL, Buffalo at Tennessee NFL, Seattle at Cincinnati

10 a.m. 10 a.m.

CBS Fox;

KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM

NFL, NewEngland at Dallas NFL, SanFrancisco at N.Y.Giants

1:25 p.m. 5:20 p.m.

CBS NB C

HOCKEY

Women's college, OhioSt. at Wisconsin EQUESTRIAN Rolex Spruce MeadowsGrand Prix

noon

Big Ten

12:30 p.m. NBCSN

BASEBALL

MLB playoffs, KansasCity at Houston MLB playoffs, Toronto at Texas

1 p.m. 5 p.m.

MLB FS1

BASKETBALL

WNBA finals, Minnesota at Indiana

5:30 p.m. E S PN

MONDAY SOCCER Euro 2016 qualifier, Swedenvs. Moldova Euro 2016 qualifier, Russia vs. Montenegro Euro 2016 qualifier, Ukraine vs. Spain Euro 2016 qualifier, Lithuania vs. England College, SanDiego St. at UCLA

8:45 a.m. FS2 8:50 a.m. ESPN2 11:30 a.m. ESPN2

1 1:30 a.m. FS2 7 p.m. Pac - 12

BASEBALL

MLB playoffs, KansasCity at Houston MLB playoffs, ALDS,Toronto at Texas MLB pla yoffs,NLDS,TBD MLB pla yoffs,NLDS,TBD

10 a.m. 1 p.m.

FS1 FS1 TBS

TBD TBD

TBS

FOOTBALL

NFL, Pittsburgh at SanDiego TENNis My)an WTT Smash Hits,LasVegas ATP, Shanghai Masters, early round ATP, Shanghai Masters, early round

5:15 p.m.

E S PN

7 p.m. Ten n is 10:30 p.m. Tennis 3 a.m. (Tue.) Tennis

Listingsarethe most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER U.S. in danger Of miSSingOlymPiCS —TheUnited States is in danger of missing its second straight men's Olympic soccer tournament. A(berth Elis scored in the24th and 77th minutes, and Honduras beat the United States 2-0 onSaturday to qualify for next year's Rio de Janeiro Games. Toreach the Olympics for the first time since 2008, the Americans must beatCanada onTuesday in the third-place game of North andCentral American and Caribbeanqualifying, then defeat Colombia in aone-game playoff, to be held in Rio sometime between March 21and29. Mexico beat Canada2-0 in the other semifinal to qualify for the Olympics.

MOTOR SPORTS Rain POStPOROS SPrint CiiP raCe to tOday — Theopening race of the second round of NASCAR'splayoffs was washed out by persistent rain Saturday atCharlotte Motor Speedway. Theraceis rescheduled for noon local time (9 a.m.Pacific). It is the first of three races in the second round of theChaseplayoffs. A victory in a Chase race earns a driver anautomatic berth into the next round. Matt Kenseth and KyleBuschwill start on the front row.

ROSberg takeS POle far RuSSian GP —Mercedesdriver Nico Rosberg took pole position Saturday for today's Russian Grand Prix ahead of his teammateand title rival Lewis Hamilton. Rosberg set an time of 1 minute, 37113 seconds midway through the final qualifying session in Sochi to beat Hamilton by more than three tenths of a second.

TRIATHLON German, SWiSS Win Ironman —Germany's JanFrodeno won the IronmanWorld Championship on Saturday in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, pulling away in the bike leg in scorching conditions for his first victory in the event. The34-year-old Frodeno completed the 2.4-mile ocean swim, 112-mile bike leg andmarathon run in 8 hours, 14 minutes, 40 seconds. Germany's Andreas Raelert was second, and American Timothy O'Donnell finished third. Danie(aRyf of Switzerland won the women's race for her first Ironman title. Ryf was among the first women out of the water and finished in 8:57:57, more than 12 minutes ahead of second-place Rachel Joyce of Britain.

FOOTBALL 49erS releaSe CB Wright — TheSanFrancisco 49ers havecornerback ShareeceWright on Saturday. Hedid not appear in agameafter a short stint with the team that beganwith him competing for astarting job. SanFrancisco (1-3) madethe moveahead of Sunday night's road game against theNewYork Giants. Wright hadyet to be active on the game-day roster. The 49ers also promoted guardAndrew Tiller to the active roster from thepractice squad to boost the offensive line.

BASEBALL Oakland PitChing PrOSPeCtdieS —A23-year-old baseball prospect who wasshot last month in a fast-food parking lot in New York has died. Aspokeswoman for the NewYork City medical examiner's office says MikeNolan's death was reported to the office on Friday. Nolan wasdeclared brain dead on Thursday. Nolan was shot Sept. 18 in the parking lot of a Burger King in Yonkers. Police have made no arrests. — From wire reports

LPGA Tour

LPGAMalaysia Saturdayat Kuala LumpurGolf andCountry Club, KualaLumpur, Malaysia Yardage:9,299; Par71 Third round leaders Tuesday a-amateur Boys soccer:RidgeviewatBend,4:30p.m.;Redmond JessicaKorda 69-67-65 —201 at Summit4:30 , p.m.; Molala at CrookCounty, 4 Lewis 72-66-65 —203 p,mcCorbettat Madras,4p.m.;Sisters atElmira, 6 Stacy Ha NaJang 67-65-71 —203 p.m.;Culverat Umatila, 4p.m. Ko 71-65-68 —204 Girls soccer:RidgeviewatBend,3p.m.;Redmond Lydia S hanshan F en g 66-69-69 —204 at Summit, 3 p.mcCrookCountyat Molaffa, Xi YuLin 65-68-71 —204 4 p.mc Madrasat Corbett, 4:15 p.mcElmiraat Mike Miyazato 68-69-68 —205 Sisters, 4p.m. Kim 68-68-69 —205 Volleyball:Summitat Ridgeview,6:30p.m.; Moun- I.K. A my Yan g 67-68-70 —205 tain Viea wt Redmond,630pm.; Gladstoneat Crook InbeePark 68-66-71 —205 County,6 p.m.;Madrasat Molala, 6p.m.; Elmiraat YaniTseng 66-68-71 —205 Sisters,6:30p.mcCreswegat LaPine, 6p.m. 7 2-66-68 —206 yannO'Toole Girls water polo:MountainViewatBend,6:30p.m.; R 71-65-70 —206 H aru Nom u ra MadrasatRidgeview, 3:30p.m. 71-73-63 —207 organPressel Boys waterpolo:MountainViewatBend,7:30p.m.; M 71-69-67 —207 CarolineMasson MadrasatRidgeview,4;30p.m. 69-71-67 —207 JayeMarieGreen 71-67-69 —207 Ariya Jutanuga rn Wednesday 70-68-69 —207 Mathew Cross-country:Bend, MountainView,Redm ond, Catriona 66-72-69 —207 MichelleWie Ridgeview, Summit, CrookCounty, Madras,Sisters, 66-69-72 —207 Choi La Pine,Culverat Central OregonRelaysat Pine Chella AlisonLee 65-69-73 —207 NurseryPark, 3 p.m.; Bend, Culver at Country Fair AnnaNordqvist 71-67-70 —208 Classic inVeneta,5p.m. Mirim Lee 73-71-65 —209 GerinaPiler 73-69-67 —209 Thursday Eun-Hee Ji 70-68-71 —209 Boys soccer:MountainViewatRedmond,4:30p.m.; PornanongPhatlum 69-69-71 —209 Summit atRidgeview,4:30 p.m.; CrookCounty at Wei-LingHsu 73-68-69 —210 Gladstone,4:15p.m.; Madras at Molaga,4 p.m.; Mi HyangLee 69-71-70 —210 JunctionCityatSisters, 4 p.m.;LaPineat Santiam CandieKung 69-68-73 —210 Christian,4:30p.m.; Central Christian at Crosshil HeeYoungPark 71-72-68 —211 Christian,4:30p.m. a-Aditi Ashok 70-73-68 —211 Girls soccer: Mountain Viewat Redmond, 3 p.m.; KarineIcher 70-72-69 —211 Summitat Ridgeview, 3 p.m.; Gladstoneat Crook CharleyHull 74-66-71 —211 County,4p.ms MolallaatMadras,4p.ms Sistersat AzaharaMunoz 71-67-73 —211 JunctionCity,4p.m.; LaPineatSantiamChristian, So YeonRyu 68-69-74 —211 6:30 p.m. 70-72-70 —212 JulietaGranada Volleyball:Summitat Bend, 6:30p.mcRidgeviewat Daniege 72-68-72 —212 Kang MountainView,6:30p.m.; Estacadaat Madras,6 Lexi Thomso 71-69-72 —212 pn p.mcSistersat JunctionCity,6:30p.mcLaPineat BrittanyLang 73-66-73 —212 Coquige,5p.m.;Irrigonat Culver, 6:15p.m. 68-71-73 —212 SandraGal Girls water polo:MountainViewat Summit, 6:30p.m. MinjeeLee 69-66-77 —212 Boys waterpolo: MountainViewat Summit,7:30p.m. AustinErnst 75-70-68 —213 Kris Tamulis 72-72-69 —213 Friday PaulaCreamer 73-70-70 —213 Football: Libertyat Bend,7 p.m.; Mountain Viewat Mo Martin 74-68-71 —213 Redmond,7 p.m.;Summit at Ridgeview,7 p.m.; MariajoUribe 74-68-71 —213 CrookCountyatRidgefield (Wash.)r 7p.m.;Molaga 0 Back 68-72-73 —213 at Madras,7p.m.; Sistersat Junction City, 7p.m.; SakuraYokomine 67-70-76 —213 CoquigeatLaPine,7p.m.; Culverat Pilot Rock, 7 pm 4Gilchrist at HosannaChristian, 7pm. Champions Tour Volleyball:CrookCounty at Corbett, 5 p.m.;Gilchrist at CentralChristian,5p.m. SASChampionship Girls waterpolo:Redmondat Bend,6:30p.m.;SumSaturdayatPrestonwood, Cary, N.C. mit atSouthSalemInvitational yardage:7,240; Par:72 Boys waterpolo:RedmondatBend,7:30p.m.;SumSecondRoundleade mit atSouthSalemInvitational KennyPerry 68-68 — 136 Joe Duran t 69-68 — 137 LeeJanzen 70-68—138 BernhardLanger 65-73—138 FOOTBALL TomLehman 68-71—139 JohnRiegger 67-72—139 NFL Jeff Maggert 73-67—140 KevinSutherland 68-72—140 NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE Scott Dunl a p 67-73—140 AN TimesPDT JohnCook 72-69—141 71-70—141 MichaelAllen AMERICAN CONFERENCE 70-71—141 PaulGoydos East 70-71—141 Loren Ro be rt s W L T P ct PF PA 74-67—141 Billy Andrade NewEngland 3 0 0 1.000119 70 DavidFrost 69-72—141 N.Y.Jets 3 1 0 . 7 5095 55 FredFunk 71-71—142 Buffalo 2 2 0 . 500 110 92 Jeff Hart 71-71—142 Miami 1 3 0 . 250 65 101 Woody 72-70—142 Austin South 73-69—142 GrantWaite W L T Pct PF PA Ste 71-71—142 ve Jone s Indianapolis 3 2 0 . 600 99 113 Colin Montgom erie 70-72—142 Tennessee 1 2 0 . 3 3389 7 7 ChienSoonLu 73-69 — 142 Jacksonvile 1 3 0 . 250 62 107 MikeGoodes 74-68 — 142 Houston 1 4 0 . 200 97 135 BradFaxon 69-73 — 142 North Olin Browne 68-74 — 142 W L T Pct PF PA Stephen Ames 72-71 — 143 Cincinnati 4 0 0 1.000121 77 SandyLyte 73-70 — 143 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 . 5 0096 75 TomByrum 74-69 — 143 Baltimore 1 3 0 . 250 93 104 WesShort,Jr. 70-73 — 143 Cleveland 1 3 0 . 250 85 102 JoeySindelar 70-73 — 143 West DuffyWaldorf 68-75—143 72-72 — 144 W L T Pct PF PA GaryHallberg 71-73 — 144 Denver 4 0 0 1.000 97 69 RussCochran 73-71 — 144 Oakland 2 2 0 . 500 97 108 CoreyPavm 73-71 — 144 SanDiego 2 2 0 . 500 96 110 PeterSenior 75-69 — 144 Kansas Ciiy 13 0 . 250 100 125 ScottMccarron 69-75 — 144 NealLanca ster NATIONAL CONFERENCE 67-77 — 144 GeneSauers East 72-73 — 145 W L T P ct PF PA BrianHenninger 71-74 — 145 Scott Verpl a nk Dallas 2 2 0 . 500 95 101 73-72 — 145 N.Y.Giants 2 2 0 . 500 102 82 MarkWiebe 74-71 — 145 Washington 2 2 0 . 5 0078 79 Skip Kendag PH. Horgan ff l 74-71 — 145 Philadelphia 1 3 0 . 25078 86 Greg Kraft 68-77 — 145 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 4 0 0 1.000108 71 HOCKEY Atlanta 4 0 0 1 .000137 93 TampaBay 1 3 0 . 250 72 117 NHL NewOrleans 1 3 0 . 250 86 104 North NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGU W L T Pct PF PA AN TimesPDT 4 0 0 1.000113 71 2 2 0 . 5 0080 73 EasternConference 1 3 0 . 250 68 125 AtlanticDivision 0 4 0 . 0 0066 96 GP W L OT Pt s GF GA West Detroit 2 2 0 0 4 8 3 W L T P ct PF PA Montreal 2 2 0 0 4 7 3 Arizona 3 1 0 . 750 148 73 TampaBay 2 2 0 0 4 7 3 St. Louis 2 2 0 . 500 74 89 Ottawa 2 2 0 0 4 8 5 1 1 0 0 2 7 1 Seattle 2 2 0 . 500 87 71 Florida SanFrancisco 1 3 0 .2 5 0 48 110 Toronto 3 0 2 1 1 5 12 Buffalo 2 0 2 0 0 2 7 Today'sGames Boston 2 0 2 0 0 4 10 Chicagoat KansasCity, 10a.m. MetropolitanDivision St. LouisatGreenBay,10 a.m. GP W L OT Pt s GF GA Buffaloat Tennessee,10a.m. N.Y.Rangers 3 3 0 0 6 12 6 Washington 1 1 0 0 2 5 3 Seattle at Cincinnati,10 a.m. N.Y. Islanders 2 0 1 1 1 3 7 WashingtonatAtlanta, 10a.m. Philadelphia 2 0 1 1 1 3 10 Jacksonville atTampaBay,10a.m. Carolina 2 0 2 0 0 4 6 NewOrleansatPhiladelphia, 10a.m. NewJersey 2 0 2 0 0 4 8 Cleveland atBaltimore,10am. Pittsburgh 2 0 2 0 0 1 5 Arizonaat Detroit, 1:05p.m. Columbus 2 0 2 0 0 4 9 Denver at Oakland,1:25 p.m. WesternConference NewEnglandatDallas,1:25 p.m. Central Division SanFranciscoat N.Y. Giants,5:30p.m. GP W L OT Pt s GF GA Open:Carolina,Miami, Minnesota,N.Y.Jets Winni p eg 2 2 0 0 4 9 3 Monday'sGame Nashville 2 2 0 0 4 4 1 PittsburghatSanDiego, 5:30p.m. Minnesota 2 2 0 0 4 8 6 Chicago 3 2 1 0 4 9 6 America's Line Colorado 2 1 1 0 2 10 8 St. Loui s 2 1 1 0 2 5 4 HOME TEAMINCAPS Dallas 2 1 1 0 2 6 6 NFL PacificDivision Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog GP W L OT Pt s GF GA Today SanJose 2 2 0 0 4 7 1 BUCCAN EERS 3 3 4 2 1/2 Arizona 2 2 0 0 4 6 2 Bills 3 I I/2 421/2 Vancouver 2 1 0 1 3 7 4 RAVENS 61/2 7 4 3 1/2 C algary 2 1 1 0 2 4 7 FALCONS Bt/2 7 48 A naheim 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 C HIEFS 1 0 9 451 / 2 Edmonton 2 0 2 0 0 1 5 EAGLES 41/2 5 49 Los Angeles 2 0 2 0 0 2 9 PACKERS gt/2 gt/2461/2 Saturday'sGames BENGALS 3 3 43 Ottawa 5, T oronto 4, SO C ardinals 3 3 441 / 2 Tampa Bay4, Buffalo 1 Patriots 8 Bt/2 491/2 Montreal4, Boston2 Broncos 51/2 41/2 431/2 Florida 7,Philadelphia1 GIANTS 7 7 43 N.Y.Rangers 5,Columbus2 Monday 5,NewJersey3 CHARG ERS 3 3 45 1/ 2 St eelersWashington Detroit 4,Carolina3 Nashville 2,Edmonton0 Minnesota3,St. Louis2 GOLF Chicago4,N.Y.Islanders1 Colorado 6, Dallas3 Calgary3, Vancouver2, DT Presidents Cup Arizona 2, Pittsburgh1 SaturdayatJackNicklaus Golf ClubKorea, SanJose2, Anaheim0 Incheon,SouthKorea Today'sGame Yardage:7,380; Par:72 MontrealatOttawa,4p.m. Monday'sGames TampaBayatBoston,10a.m. UnitedStates91/2, Int'I St/2 WinnipegatN.Y.Islanders,10 a.m. Columbus atBuff alo,noon FOURSOME S Florida atPhiladelphia,4 p.m. unitedStates2, International2 V ancouver at A na heim,7p.m. LouisDosthuizenandBrandenGrace(I) def.Patrick ReedandRickie Fowler (USA)3and2. Bubba WatsonandJ.B. Holmes(USA) halvedwith AdamScottandMareLeishman(I). BASKETBALL Bill Haas andMatt Kuchar(USA) halvedwith SangmoonBaeand Hideki Matsuyama(I). WNBA playoffs DustinJohnsonandJordanSpieth (USA) def. Jason Day andChart Schwartzel (I) 1up. WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOFOURBA LLS CIATION UnitedStates2, International2 AN TimesPDT Louis Dosthuizen and BrandenGrace (I) def. J.B. HolmesandBubbaWatson(USA)1up. FINALS Phil Mickelson andZachJohnson(USA) def. Adam (Best-of-5;x-if necessary) Today'sGame ScottandAnirbanLahiri (I) 3and2. Sang-moonBaeand Hideki Matsuyama(I) def. Minnesotaat Indiana, 5:30 p.m., Minnesotaleads JimmyWalkerand Chris Kirk(USA) 6and5. series2-1 PatrickReedandJordanSpieth (USA) def. Jason Wednesday'sGame DayandCharlSchwarlzel (I)3and2. x-Indiana at Minnesota 5 pm

NBA preseason

WTA Tour

NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

ChinaOpen Saturday at Bailing Semifinals GarbineMuguruza(5), Spain, def.AgnieszkaRadwanska (4), Poland,4-6,6-3, 6-4. TimeaBacsinszky (12), Switzerland,def. AnaIvanovic (6),Serbia,5-7, 6-4,6-1.

AN TimesPDT

Saturday'sGames

Philadelphia 97, Brooklyn95 Chicago114,Minnesota105 Detroit117,Milwaukee88 Sacramento 94, Portland90 L.A. Clippersvs.Charlotte atShenzhen,China, late

Today'sGame Orlandovs.Houstonat Hidalgo,Texas,5 p.m. Monday'sGames Memphisys.Clevelandat Columbus,Ohio, 4p.m. Philadelphiaat NewYork, 4:30p.m. Minnesota atToronto, 4:30p.m. SanAntonioatMiami, 4:30p.m. NewOrleansatChicago,5p.m. Portlandat Utah,6p.m. Saturday'ssummary

Kings94, Trail Blazers90 PORTLAND (99) Aminu5-120-0 12,Leonard3-6 1-3 9, Plumlee 0-1 0-2 0,Mccollum11-203-4 30,Crabbe6-110-0 13, Connaughton 2-6 0-06,Vonleh3-6 0-06, Pressey 1-8 2-2 4,Davis 1-74-66, Montero1-1 0-02, Johnson1-40-02.Totals34-8210-1790. SACRAMNT EO(94) Butler 1-4 1-2 4, Cousins6-164-6 16, Cauley-Stein2-5 3-47, Rondo1-31-4 4, Collison 5-10 6-618, Belinelli 4-81-211,Acy2-50-04, McLemore 1-3 5-6 8, Koufos3-5 0-0 6, Casspi4-11 2-210, Curry 2-62-36, Stockton 0-00-0 0. Totals81-79 25-35 94. Portland 22 29 39 18 — 90 Sacramento 20 8 1 22 21 — 94 3-PointGoals—Portland 12-34(Mccollum 5-10, Leonard2-4, Aminu2-6, Connaughton 2-6, Crabbe 1-3, Pressey 0-2, Johnson0-3), Sacram ento 7-22 (Belinelli 2-3, Collison2-4, Rondo1-2, McLem ore 1-2, Butler1-3,Casspi 0-1,Acy0-2, Curry0-2, Cousins 0-3). FouledDut—Crabbe. Rebounds—Portland 60 (Connaugh ton 11), Sacramento 50 (Cauley-Stein 9). Assists —Portland19(Pressey5), Sacramento 20 (Rondo4). TotalFouls—Portland 30, Sacramento16. Technical— s Cousins.A—14,172(17,317).

BASEBALL MLB playoffs MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

AN TimesPDT

DIVISIONSERIES (Best-of-5;x-if necessary) Saturday'sGames Chicago 6, St.Louis 3,series tied1-1 Los Angele5, s NewYork2, seriestied 1-1 Today'sGam es Kansas City (Volquez13-9) at Houston (Keuchel 208), 1:10p.m., seriestied 1-1 Toronto(Estrada13-8) at Texas(Lewis 17-9), 5:10 p.m.,Texasleadsseries2-0 Monday'sGames KansasCityatHouston(Mccullers 6-7), 10:07a.m. x-Toronto(Dickey11-11) at Texas(Hoffand4-3), 1:07 p.m. St. Louis(Wacha17-7) atChicagoCubs (Arrieta226),1:37 or3;07p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Anderson 10-9) at N.Y.Mets(Harvey 13-8), 5:07or5:37p.m. Tuesday'sGames x-St. Louis(Lynn12-11) at ChicagoCubs(Hammel 10-7), 1;37or5;07p.m. x-L.A .DodgersatN.Y.Mets,8:07p.m. Wednesday'sGames x-TexasatToronto,1:07 or5:07p.m. x-Hous tonatKansasCity,5:07p.m. Thursday'sGames x-ChicagoCubsatSt.Louis, 1:37or5:07 p.m. x-N.Y.Metsat LA. Dodgers, 8:07 p.m.

Saturday'sboxscores

Cuds 6,Cardinals3 Chicago

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AN TimesPDT

Eastern Conference W L T Pls GF GA x -New York 16 9 6 54 5 5 3 9 x -D.C. United 1 4 1 2 6 4 8 39 40 New England 1 3 1 1 8 47 4 5 4 5 Columbus 13 11 8 47 51 53 TorontoFC 14 13 4 46 55 53 Montreal 1 3 13 6 4 5 45 4 3 O rlando Cit y 11 1 3 8 4 1 4 4 5 4

NewYorkcityFC 10 15 7 37 47 53 P hiladelphia 9 16 7 34 4 0 5 1 Chicago 8 18 6 3 0 4 2 5 2 WesternConference W L T Pls GF GA x -FC Dalla s 15 1 0 6 5 1 4 7 3 8 x -Los Angele s 1 4 9 9 51 5 3 3 9 x -Vancouver 15 1 2 5 5 0 4 2 34 S porting KansasCity 13 9 9 4 8 46 41 Seattle 14 13 5 47 40 34 SanJose 12 12 8 44 39 37 Portland 1 2 11 8 4 4 3 1 3 6 Houston 1 1 13 8 4 1 4 1 4 5 Real SaltLake 1 1 1 2 8 4 1 37 4 3 Colorado 8 14 10 34 30 39 x- clinched playoffberth

Saturday'sGame

Montreal1, Colorado0

Wednesday'sGames NewYorkatToronto FC,4p.m. Vancouverat FCDallas, 6p.m. Portlandat RealSalt Lake,6:30p.m. FridayrsGames NewYorkCity FCat OrlandoCity, 4 p.m. SportingKansasCity atSanJose, 8p.m. Saturday,Oct.17 Columbus atToronto FC,11 a.m. Montrealat Ne wEngland,4:30p.m. FC DallasatReal Salt Lake,6:30p.m. Sunday,Oct.18 ChicagoatD.C.United, 11a.m. PhiladelphiaatNewYork, noon Seattleat Houston, 2p.m. Portlandat LosAngeles, 4p.m.

MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Charlottelineup After Thursday qualifying; racetodayat CharlotteMotorSpeedway, Concord, N.C. Lap length:1.5 miles (Car num berin parentheses) 1. 20) MattKenseth,Toyota,194.532mph. 2. 18) KyleBusch,Toyota,193.154. 3. 22) Joey Logano,Ford,193.023. 4. 16) Greg Biffle, Ford,192.947. 5. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,192.912. 6. (41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,192.61. 7.48JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,192.507. 8. (19)CarlEdwards,Toyota,192.438. 9.(43) AricAlmirola, Ford,192.226. 10.31) RyanNewman,Chevrolet, 192.041. 11.I4) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,191.415. 12.BB)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 190.624. 13.I2) BradKeselowski, Ford,191.618. 14. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet, 191.605. 15.78MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,191.056. 16.I21I Ryan Blaney, Ford,191.056. 17. (47)AJAllmendinger, Chevrolet, 190.907. 18. (9)SamHomishJr., Ford,190.819. 19.55) DavidRagan,Toyota,190.483. 20.I5) Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet,190.436. 21. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,190.382. 22. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet, 189.947. 23. (15)Clint Bowyer,Toyota, 189.64. 24. (10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,188.607. 25.(17RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,189.9. 26. 27I PaulMenard, Chevrolet,189.813. 27. (7)AlexBowman, Chevrolet, 189.221. 28.51) JustinAggaier,Chevrolet,188.64. 29.I38)DavidGigiland, Ford,188.521. 30. (1)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet, 188.501. 31. (42)KyleLarson, Chevrolet,187.833. 32. 95) MichaelMcDowel, Ford,187.337. 33. 6) TrevorBayne,Ford, 187.246. 34. 40) Landon Cassig, Chevrolet,187.22. 35. 23) J.J.Yeley,Toyota,187.214. 36. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,186.754. 37. (34)BrettMoffitt, Ford,ownerpoints. 38.(46MichaelAnnett,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 39. 35)Cole Whitt, Ford,owner points. 40. (83)MattDiBenedetto, Toyota, owner points. 41.26Jeb Burton,Toyota, ownerpoints. 42.I98I Reed Sorenson,Ford, owner points. 43. (33)AlexKennedy,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. Failed toQualify 44. (32)JoshWise,Ford, 185.236. 45. (62)TimmyHil, Chevrolet,183.411.

St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi Fowlercf 5 1 2 1 Mcrpnt3b 4 1 1 1 Solerrf 2 1 2 2 Piscttyrf 4 0 1 0 Denorfirf 1 0 0 0 Hollidylf 4 0 0 0 Bryant3b 4 0 0 0 Heywrdcf 4 0 1 0 Rizzo1b 3 1 0 0 JhPerltss 4 0 0 0 Stcastr2b 4 0 2 0 Moss1b 2 0 0 0 AJcksnlf 4 1 0 0 MrRynlph-1b 2 0 0 0 MMntrc 3 1 0 1 Molinac 3 0 1 0 Hndrckp 1 1 0 1 Wong2b 3 1 1 1 TWoodp 1 0 0 0 JaiGrcp 0 0 0 0 S chwrrph 1 0 0 0 Lynnp 0 0 0 0 C ahillp 0 0 0 0 Jayph 1 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 Villanvp 0 0 0 0 ARussllss 3 0 0 1 Grichkph 1 1 1 1 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Wnwrgp 0 0 0 0 GGarci ph 1 0 0 0 JBrxtnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 6 6 6 Totals 3 33 6 3 Chicago 0 51 099 000 — 6 S t. Louis 199 0 2 9 000 — 3 E—Jai.Garcia(1), Wong(1). LOB—Chicago5,St. Louis 3.28—Fowler(1), Soler (1). HR —Soler(1), M. Carpenter(1), Wong(1), Grichuk (1). SB—A.Jackson (1). S —Hendricks, A.Russell. Formula One IP H R E R BBSO RussianGrandPrix lineup Chicago After Saturday qualifying; racetodayat 42-3 4 3 3 0 7 Hendricks SocbiAutodrom,Sochi, Russia TWoodW1-0 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 Lap length:3.634 miles Cahill H,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 Third Session H.RandanS,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1. Nico Rosberg,Germany, Mercedes, 1 minute, St. Louis 37.113 secon ds. Jai.GarciaL,0-1 2 4 5 0 1 2 2. LewisHamilton, England,Mercedes,1:37.433. Lynn 1 1 1 1 1 2 Viffanueva 2 0 0 0 1 0 3. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,1:37.912. Vetel, Germany, Ferrari,1:37.965. Maness 11-3 1 0 0 1 1 4. Sebastian Wainwright 12-3 0 0 0 0 3 5. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Ferrari,1:38.348. 6. Nico Hul k enbe rg,Germany, ForceIndia,1:38.659. J.Broxton 1 0 0 0 0 1 7. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia,1:38.691. T—2:57.A—47,859 (45,399). 8. Romain Gros)can,France,Lotus, 1:38.787. 9. MaxVerstappen,Netherlands, Toro Rosso,1:38.924. Dodgers 5, Nets2 10. DanieRi l cciardo,Australia, RedBull,1:39.728. Eliminatedaftersecondsession NewYork LosAngeles 11. DaniilKvyat,Russia, RedBull,1:39.214. ab r bbi ab r hbi 12. FelipeNasr, Brazil, Sauber,1:39.323. Grndrsrf 3 0 2 0 HKndrc2b 4 1 1 1 13. JensonButton, England, McLaren,1:39.763. DWrght3b 4 0 0 0 CSeagrss 4 0 0 0 14. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus,1:39.811. DnMrp2b 4 0 1 0 AGnzlz1b 4 1 1 2 15. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Wiliams,1:39.895. Cespdscf 3 1 1 1 JuTrnr3b 4 1 2 1 EliminatedaNerfirst session D uda1b 3 0 0 0 Ethierrf 1 0 1 1 16. MarcusEricsson,Sweden, Sauber,1:40.660. TdArndc 3 0 0 0 Rugginph-If 1 0 0 0 17. WillStevens,England, Marussia,1:43.693. Confortlf 3 1 1 1 Jansenp 0 0 0 0 18. RobertoMerhi, Spain,Marussia,1:43.804. T ejadass 2 0 0 0 Crwfrdlf 3 0 0 0 19. Fernando Alonso,Spain, McLaren,1:40.144. W Florsss 1 0 0 0 Puigrf 1 0 0 0 20. CarlosSainzJr., Spain, ToroRosso, DNS. Syndrgp 2 0 0 0 Grandlc 4 0 0 0 B.colon p 0 0 0 0 KHrndzcf-If 2 1 1 0 DEALS A.Reedp 0 0 0 0 Greinkp 2 0 0 0 Niesep 0 0 0 0 Utleyph 1 1 1 0 Roblesp 0 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 Transactions KJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Pedrsncf 0 0 0 0 BASEBAL L Totals 29 2 5 2 Totals 3 1 5 7 5 AmericanLeague N ew York 09 2 0 9 9 000 — 2 TORONT OBLUEJAYS—AddedRHPRyanTepera Los Angeles 09 9 199 40x— 5 replacingLHPBrett Cecil. DP — NewYork1, LosAngeles 3. LDB—NewYork to thepostseasonrosFter OOTBA LL 1, Los Angeles6.28—AGonzalez(1),Ju Turner2(3), NationalFootballLeague Ethier(1). HR —Cespedes(1), Conforto (1). SB—C. DALLASCOWBOYS — PlacedRB LanceDunbar Crawford (1), K.Hernandez(1). CS—Dan.Murphy(1). injured reserve.SignedWRVince Mayle fromthe IP H R E R BBSO practicesquad. NewYork DENVERBRONCOS— ReleasedFBJamesCasey. SyndergaardL,0-1 61-3 5 3 3 4 9 OAKLANDRAIDERS— SignedSTevinMcDonald. B.colonBS,1-1 0 0 1 1 0 0 ReleasedSTaylor Mays. A.Reed 1-3 2 1 1 0 0 SAN FRA NCISCO49ERS— Released CBShaNiese 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 reeceWright. SignedGAndrewTiller fromthe practice Robics 1 0 0 0 0 2 squad. LosAngeles HOCKEY GreinkeW,1-0 7 5 2 2 0 8 NationalHockeyLeague HatcherH,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 BUFFALOSABRES — Placed G Robin Lehner Jansen S,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 1 on injuredreserve.Recaled GNathanLieuwenfrom B.colonpitchedto 1batterin the7th. Rochester(AHL).ActivatedGLinus Ullmark from inT—3:23.A—54,455 (56,000). jured reserve andloanedhimto Rochester. LoanedD JakeMccabeto Rochester.

TENNIS ATP World Tour ChinaOpen SaturdayatBailing Semifinals RafaelNadal(3), Spain,def.FabioFognini, Italy,

7-5, 6-3.

NovakDjokovic(1),Serbia, def. DavidFerrer (4), Spain,6-2,6-3.

JapanOpen SaturdayatTokyo Semifinals StanWawrinka(1), Switzerland, def. GilesMuller, Luxembourg, 6-4, 7-6(5). BenoitPaire,France,def. KeiNishikori (2),Japan, 1-6, 6-4,6-2.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updated Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlbd Wstlhd Bonneville 6,929 710 8 8 0 252 T he Daffes 3,599 947 1 ,160 3 4 7 J ohn Day 4,945 81 9 1 ,626 7 3 2 M c Nary 5,661 4 0 8 1 , 800 57 2 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedFriday. Chnk Jchnk Sllbd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,292,901 108,894 258,039 93,896 TheDaffes 900,706 106,662 199,509 69,416 John Day 760,570 77,526 161,098 55,974 McNary 692,230 62,154 154,031 49,985


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D3

MLB PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP

NHL ROUNDUP

Do erstieserieswit Mets, Te'a a urt

Defense belps lead Coyotes to victory

The Associated Press

New York Meta shortstop Ruben

L OS ANGELES — N e w Y ork M et s s h o rtstop R u -

ben Tejada broke his right leg when a

Tejada goes over the top of Los Angeles Dodgers'

t a k eout s l i de

by Chase Utley flipped the shortstop during a four-run rally in the seventh inning, and the Los Angeles Dodgers

Chase Utley, who broke

went on to beat New York 5-2 Saturday night to tie their NL

up a double play during

I~It') PItI

Division Series at one game apiece.

the seventh inning of Sat-

ing to hurt anybody," he said. "He's just playing the game the way he plays it. He plays it hard, he's aggressive." Collins said Wilmer Flores will replace Tejada at short-

stopfortherestoftheseries. The Dodgers' Zack Greinke (1-0) allowed two runs and five hits in seven innings. He struck out eight and walked none a night after teammate

Clayton Kershaw fanned 11 urday night' s while losing his fifth straight game in Los postseason game. Angeles. Kenley Jansen pitched the ninth for the save, completing

The Mets were leading 2-1

when the Dodgers put runners at the corners with one out against Noah Syndergaard. Bartolo Colon relieved, and Howie Kendrick hit a grounder up the middle. Second baseman Daniel Murphy flipped to Tejada, who

Gregory Bull/The Associated Press

a five-hitter.

Also on Saturday: Cuba 6, Cardinals 3: ST.

The Associated Press G LENDALE, A r i z . M ike Smith shook off a hard collision to stop 27

shots, Jordan Martinook scored his first career NHL

goal and the Arizona Coyotes withstood a late flurry to beat the Pittsburgh

Penguins 2-1 on Saturday night. S mith was i n jured i n

and Addison Russell had suc-

the first period after being run into by teammate

took the throw awkwardly for

cessful squeeze bunts and

Brad Richardson, who was

an apparent force as Utley slid past the bag and slammed into

Jorge Soler capped a five-run second with a two-run homer, and the Chicago Cubs held off St. Louis to even

shoved from behind by Pittsburgh's Patrie Horn-

LOUIS —

him with Tejada's back turned

to the play, causing him to flip over as the tying run scored base. tagged, so they have no other game against Philadelphia in from third. Mets manager Terry Col- call," he said, "so they handled September 2010. "Yeah, they' re angry," ColTejada was put on a flatbed lins wouldn't say whether it right." vehicle after an air cast was he saw the slide was clean or Adrian Gonzalez followed lins said of his players. "You placed on his leg. The Mets not. He said the umpires were with a two-run double off Ad- lose in a playoff series to that said Tejada sustained a frac- "great" in how they handled dison Reed and scored on Jus- serious of an injury, yeah, they' re not very happy about tured right fibula. Utley was the review. tin Turner's double. "They thought that it's pretruled safe on a video review, There was some history be- it." which determined Tej ada's ty hard to rule that he didn' t tween Utley and Tejada. The Dodgers manager Don Matfoot missed the bag. Utley touch the bag when he hit the Mets were angered during a tingly defended Utley. "I know Chase is not tryalso appeared not to touch the shortstop and nobody was takeout slide by Utley during a

K y l e H e ndricks

their NL Division series at a

game apiece. Manager Joe Maddon made all the right moves a night after the Cubs lost the opener 4-0. Now the

qvist. Smith lay on the ice

for a couple minutes, but stayed in and made some big saves down the stretch,

g iving him 6 7 i n t w o games. T obias

R i e de r al s o

series shifts to Wrigley Field for Game 3 Monday, where

scored for the Coyotes,

Chicago's 22-game winner

two games for the first time since 2009-10.

Jake Arrieta faces St. Louis' Michael Wacha in the best-offive series.

who have won their first Phil Kessel scored his first goal with Pittsburgh

and Mare-Andre Fleury stopped 37 shots forthe

Penguins (0-2). Also on Saturday: Lightning 4, Sabras 1:

SOCCER: CONCACAF CUP

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Ste-

exico scoresae oa over a rns e i n on e cia iOnS •

Rf

ven Stamkos scored his first goal of the season for Tampa Bay, beating Buffalo backup Chad Johnson, who filled in for injured starter Robin Lehner.

Red Wings 4, Hurricanes 3 : R A L EIGH, N . C . Teemu Pulkkinen scored

two goals in the third period to lift Detroit, which was outshot by Carolina 46-19.

The Associated Press

Capitals 5, Devils 2:

PASADENA, Calif. — Paul

Aguilar ripped his volley into the farcorner of Brad Guzan's net in an instant, setting off a delirious celebration for t he

IM I"=yg'slier

i'll%®

P

After four winless years in

the rivalry, Mexico had finally beaten the United States with

ning go-ahead goal early in the third period, set up

IQ

majority of the Rose Bowl crowd.

W ASHINGTON — A l e x Ovechkin scored a stun-

another and Washington opened the season with a

IN

victory over New Jersey.

Rangers 5, Blue Jackets 2: NEW YORK — Henrik Lundqvist made 37 saves

a goal they will remember on bothsides oftheborder. Aguilar scored Mexico's

and Oscar Lindberg scored twice to help New York

second goal of extra time on

beat Columbus for the sec-

a stunning volley in the 118th minute, and Mexico earned

ond straight night. Panthers 7, Flyers 1:

a berth in the 2017 Confeder-

SUNRISE, Fla. — Jaromir

ations Cup with a 3-2 victory

Jagr and Reilly Smith each scored twice and Vincent Trocheck had a goal and three assists in Florida's season-opening v i c tory over Philadelphia. Canadiens 4, Bruins 2:

over the United States on Sat-

urday night. Aguilar beat Guzan with incredible speed after Raul Jimenez chipped the ball over his head and into the penalty area, putting a thrilling finish

AC t

on the latest chapter of this ri-

BOSTON — L a r s E l l er scored twice and Alex Gal-

valry at a sold-out American

chenyuk had three assists

stadium dominated by Mexican fans. Javier Hernandez

for Montreal.

scoredan early goal for Me x-

NASHVILLE, T e nn. P ekka R i nne m ad e 3 1 saves to help Nashville beat Edmonton.

Predators 2, Oilers 0:

ico, which beat the U.S. for the first time since the 2011 CON-

CACAF Gold Cup final. "A loss is always difficult to swallow, especially when Jae C. Hong / The Associated Press there is a lot at stake," U.S. Teammates celebrate with Mexico's Paul Aguilar, bottom, after he scored the winning goal against the United States in the CONCACAF coach Jurgen K l insmann Cup playoff at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, on Saturday. Mexico won 3-2 and qualified to the 2017 Confederations Cup. said. "It means that you have to work even harder than you ever did before to turn the re-

time for Mexico, but Bobby Bowl erupted. It's a feeling sults around and make things Wood dramatically evened it that I' ll never forget. I think we happen." 12 minutes later for the Amer- had eight minutes left. I knew Both teams appeared to be icans, who lost to Mexico for we were going to get a couexhausted heading into extra the first time in seven games ple more chances, and on the time on a hot night in South- under Klinsmann. other end, I was confident we "Everybody was very con- weren't going to allow Mexico ern California, but they were just getting started. Oribe Per- fident after Bobby scored to score. Unfortunately that alta scored a tiebreaking goal that goal," U.S. defender Matt didn't work out." in the sixth minute of extra Besler said. "The entire Rose Instead, El Tri won the one-

game playoff between the last two Gold Cup winners to

Senators 5, Maple Leafs 4 : TORONTO —

Mi k e

Hoffman had the decisive goal in the first shootout of the NHL season, giving Ottawa a victory over

earn that third goaL" A crowd of 93,723 created earn CONCACAF's berth in a crackling atmosphere unthe eight-team Confederations der the lights at the 93-yearCup tournament in Russia, a old stadium. It was the sec-

Toronto.

prelude to the 2018 World Cup. o nd-largest a t tendance t o "It's a r esult t h a t w a s watch the U.S. team at home,

seconds after John Mitchell's tiebreaking goal, and

earned," Mexico interim coach barely surpassed by the 1994

Colorado rallied to

Ricardo Perretti said. "Over 120 minutes, we did more to

Dallas. Blackhawks 4, Islanders

Rose Bowl turnout for a World

Cup game against Romania.

A valanche 6, 3: DENVER —

St a rs G a b riel

Landeskog scored twice in the third period, one 47 b eat

1: CHICAGO — P atrick Kane and rookie Artemi

Panarin each had a goal and two assists, and Chi-

GOLF ROUNDUP

cago beat the New York Islanders.

AmericansLipbyjust 1 beading into the final dayat PresidentsCLjp The Associated Press INCHEON, South KoreaWhether it was the South Af-

can duo went 4-0 in team m atches. Bae a n d H i d ek i

Matsuyama teamed for nine rican juggernaut of Branden birdies in 11 holes for the bigGrace and Louis Oosthuizen,

gest rout of the week. And

the inspired play of Bae Sang- the International team played moon in front of his home the Americans to a draw in crowd or a f o r mat change a double session Saturday to that reduced the number of stay just one point behind. matches, the Presidents Cup Considering how lopsided is truly up for grabs for the the Presidents Cup has been, first time in 10 years. it felt like a lead.

play golf, and play to the very clutch putts in morning four- best of their ability. That's all somes to cap off the biggest we can do." comeback at theJack NickAlso on Saturday: laus Golf Club Korea, and he Bogey-free Korda takes Mamade eight birdies in 14 holes laysia lead: KUALA LUMin a fourballs victory in the PUR, Malaysia — Jessica afternoon. Korda took a two-stroke lead Not since the matches were in the LPGA Malaysia, shoottied going into Sunday in ing a bogey-free 6-under 65 2005 has the Presidents Cup in sweltering conditions. The featured a final day of drama. 22-year-old American is at in the world. He made two

"We need to w i n t h i s ," "This is what we all came Oosthuizen said. " This i s here for — for it to be excithuge for us. We believe we ing tomorrow," International sorely needed. can do it." captain Nick Price said. "I'm Grace delivered two big The Americans had a 9~/2- going to ask my team to go shots in the gathering dark- 8~/2 lead. They also have Jor- and play golf tomorrow. Each

That's all the International team ever wanted. And it is what this event

ness, and the South Afri- dan Spieth, the No. 1 player

12-under 201 at Kuala Lum-

wood Country Club. Joe Du-

Coyle scored twice, including 21 seconds after a power-play goal by Zach Parise late in the second period, and Minnesota picked up where it left off last spring against St Louis with a

rant was second after a 68,

victory over the Blues.

and first-round leader Bernhard Langer (73) was another

2 : V A N COUVER,

in the Champions Tour's SAS Championship. Perry had an 8-under 136 total at Preston-

stroke back along with Lee

Janzen (68). Fitzpatrick, Aphibarnrat tied at Woburn: WOBURN, En-

gland — England's Matthew Fitzpatrick shot a 3-under

pur Golf and Country Club. 68 to maintain a share of the Perry leads by 1 in Cham- lead with T h ailand's Kirapions Tour: CARY, N.C. dech Aphibarnrat after the -

Kenny Perry shot a 4-under 68 in the rain to take a one-

and every one of them has to stroke lead after two rounds

Wild 3, Blues 2: S T . PAUL, Minn. — Charlie

third round o f

t h e B r i t ish

MastersWoburn's Marquess Course.

Flames 3,

C a nucks B rit-

ish Columbia — Johnny Gaudreau scored 3:03 into a 3-on-3 overtime and CalgarybeatVancouver. Sharks 2, Ducks 0:SAN JOSE, Calif. — M artin Jones earned the shutout in his first home start with San Jose and Patrick Marleau scored twice to lead

the Sharks to a victory over Anaheim.


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

OLLEGE FooTBALL COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD Pac-12

FBS Saturday'sGames

AH TimesPDT

North Cont W 3 2 1 1 1 0

Stanford California Washington St. Washington Oregon Oregon St.

L 0 1 1 1 2 2

South Cont W 2 2 1 1 1 0

Utah ArizonaSt. UCLA Arizona SouthernCal Colorado

L 0 1 1 2 2 3

W 4 5 3 3 3 2 W 5 4 4 4 3 3

Overall

L PF PA 1 175 95 1 241 147 2 158 144 2 134 75 3 249 232 3 99 149

Overall

L PF PA 0 185 99 2 186 157 1 174 110 2 254 183 2 199 87 3 190 155

Saturday'sGames Arizona 44, OregonSt. 7 Washin gtonSt.45,Oregon38,2OT Utah30,California24 ArizonaSt.48,Colorado23 Thursday'sGame UCLA atStanford, 7:30p.m. Saturday,Osb17 Oregon St. atWashington St.,1 p.m. SouthernCalatNotre Dame, 4:30p.m. Arizona at Colorado, 6p.m. ArizonaSt.atUtah,7p.m. Oregon atWashington, 7:30 p.m.

Washington Sl. 45, Oregon38(20T) Washingt onSt.7 7 7 10 7 7 — 46 Oregon 1 0 7 7 7 7 0 — 38 First Quarter WSU —Marks 7 passfrom Falk(E.Powell kick), 11:42.

Ore —FGSchneider 26,8:22. Ore —Alie 8run(Schneider kick), 6:06.

SecondQuarter Ore —Freeman2run(Schneider kick),1:44. WSU —Marks 4 passfrom Falk(E.Powell kick), :09. Third Quarter WSU —Martin Jr. 27 passfromFalk (E.Powell kick), 12:39. Ore —Freeman 17 pass from Lockie (Schneider kick), 3:55. Fourth Quarter Ore —Freeman1run(Schneider kick), 8:20. WSU —FGE.Powell 22, 3:53. WSU —D.Williams 8 pass from Falk (E.Powell kick),:01. First Overtime Ore —Addison 9 passfrom Lockie(Schneider kick). WSU —Falk1run (E.Powell kick). SecondOvertime WSU —Lewis4 passfromFalk (E.Powell kick).

First downs

Rushes-yards Passing Comp-Att-Int ReturnYards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Timeof Possession

TOP 26 No. 1OhioSt. 49,Maryland28 No. 2TCU52,KansasSt. 45 No. 3Baylor 66,Kansas7 No. 4MichiganSt. 31,Rutgers24 No. 5Utah30,No.23 California 24 No.6Clemson42,GeorgiaTech24 No. 7LSU45, SouthCarolina 24 No. BAlabama27, Arkansas14 Texas24,No.10Oklahoma17 No. 11Florida21, Missouri21-3 No.12 FloridaSt.29, Miami24 No. 18Michigan38, No.13Northwestern 0 No. 14Mississippi 52,NewMexico St.3 No. 15NotreDame41, Navy24 Tennessee 38, No.19Georgia31 No. 21OklahomaSt. 33,WestVirginia 26, OT No. 22iowa29,ilinois 20 No. 24Toledo38, Kent St.7 No. 25BoiseSt.41, ColoradoSt. 10 EAST Duke44,Army3 MichiganSt.31, Rutgers24 Oklahoma St.33,WestVirginia 26,OT PennSt.29, Indiana7 Pittsburgh 26, Virginia19 Temple49,Tulane10 WakeForest3, Boston College 0 SOUTH Alabama27,Arkansas14 AppalachiaSt. n 37,GeorgiaSt.3 Clemson 43,GeorgiaTech24 Connecticut40,UCF13 FIU 52,UTEP12 FloridaSt.29, Miami24

Saturday'sGames

A—57,775.

LSU45,SouthCarolina 24 Louisiana-Lafayette 49,TexasSt. 27 Marist13,Cam pbel10 Mississippi52,NewMexico St.3 MississippiSt.45, Troy17 Rice27,FAU26 SouthFlorida45, Syracuse24 MIDWEST Akron47,E.Michigan21 Baylor66,Kansas7

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

1-3.

Arizona 44, OregonSt. 7 OregonSt Arizona

0 7 0 0 — 7 13 21 10 0 — 44 First Quarter Ari — Wilson 3run(Skowron kick),13:02. Ari — FGSkowron 37,5:19. Ari — FGSkowron 27,:52. SecondQuarter OrSt —Collins17 run(Owenskick),1059. Ari — Wilson 7run(Skowron kick),10:17. Ari — Bradford 1run(Skowronkick), 9:06. Ari — Bradford 2 run(Skowronkick), 3:44. Third Quarter Ari — FGSkowron 20,9:25. Ari — Bradford 6run(Skowron kick), 4:37. A—52,987.

O rSt

FCS BIG SKY

Saturday'sGames IdahoSt.37,North Dakota,31 E. Washington 42, CalPoly41 PortlandSt.66, NorthTexas7 WeberSt. 24,Montana21 UC Davis38, N.Arizona24 MontanaSt.35, SacramentoSt.13 Saturday,Oct. 17 MontanaSt.at Portland St., 12:30p.m. UC Davisat N.Colorado,12:30 p.m. E. Washington at IdahoSt., 1:30p.m. Sacramento St. atS.Utah,5p.m. NorthDakotaatWeber St., 5 p.m.

Division II GREATNORTHWEST

Saturday'sGames SouthDakotaMines49, Cent. Washington 44 DixieSt.38,SimonFraser 35 W.Oregon24,North Alabama22 HumboldSt. t 34,AsuzaPacific16 Saturday,Oct. 17 SimonFraseratSouth DakotaMines,11a.m. Cent.Washingtonat W.Oregon, 1p.m. HumboldSt, t atMidwestern St.,5 p.m. DixieSt.atAzusaPacific, 6:30p.m.

Division I I I

Ari

15 27 31-151 58-368 98 27 6 12-35-1 17-30-0 0 6 9-46.4 3-53.7 0-0 1-0 5-59 75 -6 24:14 35:46

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING —Oregon St.: Barrs-Woods9-60, Collins10-56, Nail 8-30, PLucas 3-13, McMaryion 1-(minus8). Arizona: Baker10-123, Bradford 1983, Wilson12-78,Randall 6-49, Haden5-31, Dawkins 2-17,Johnson1-8,Solomon1-(minus 3), Team 2-(minus 18). PASSING —Oregon St.: Collins8-24-1-56, McMaryion4-10-0-42, VanderVeen0-1-0-0. Arizona: Solomon 17-30-0-276. RECEIVING —Oregon St.: Bolden3-34, Villamin 3-21, Jarmon2-17, VanderVeen 1-14, Guyton 1-6, Hawkins1-5, Barrs-Woods1-1. Arizona: C.Jone s4-29,Phillips4-26,J.Jackson3-92,Grant 3-42, Richards 2-61,Wilson1-22, Solomon0-4.

NORTHWE ST

Saturday'sGames

Willamette10,Pacific Lutheran9 Whitworth24,PugetSound7 Linfield77,Pacific (Ore.)10 George Fox49,Lewis & Clark35 Saturday, Oct.17 Linfield atWilamette,1p.m. Pacific LutheranatWhitworth, 1p.m. George FoxatPugetSound,1p.m. Pacific (Ore.)at Lewis&Clark, 2p.m.

NAIA FRONTIER

Saturday'sGames Collegeof Idaho48,MontanaSt.-Northern17 Montan aTech38,RockyMountain33 S. Oregon37,MontanaWestern 30PO) E. Oregon 28, Carroll 21 Saturday, Oet.17 RockyMountainat College of Idaho,noon MontanaSt.-Northernat MontanaTech,noon Carroll atS.Oregon, 1p.m. Montana WesternatE. Oregon,1 p.m.

Viks throttle NorthTexas, which then firesits coach The Associated Press 9DENTON, Texas — Alex Kuresa threw three touchdown passes and Portland State rout-

down pass two plays after the second-half kickoff. Nate Tago ran for two touchdowns, and Steven Long ran

ed FBS school North Texas for one. Darnell Adams and 66-7 on Saturday night. Thomas Carter III had touchPortland State (4-1), the 25th- down catches. ranked team in FCS, had 670 yards of total offense,set a re-

About an hour the game,

North Texas (0-5) fired coach cord for the largest margin of Dan McCarney. "This is a really tough devictory by an FBS over an FCS team. cision, but after a complete The previous record be- evaluation of the University of longed to Penn, which beat Le- North Texas football program high 58-0 in 1981. we have decided to make a Kuresa threw for 269 yards change at head coach," athletic and had scoring strikes of 34, director Rick Villareal said in a 56 and 60 yards. David Jones

statement.

ran for two touchdowns, inMcCarney was 22-32 in fourcluding a 70-yarder, and fin- plus seasons with North Texas, ished with 134 yards on nine induding a victory in the Heart carries. Kuresa connected with of Dallas Bowl against UNLV Jones on the 60-yard touch-

By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

Next up

underdog. "Their offense just came

Oregon EUGENE — Oregon run- at Washington ning back Royce Freeman had the game of his career, When:7:30 p.m. but it was not enough to keep Oct. 17 Ducks f ro m

t h e s e ason' s TV:ESPN/ESPN2

third loss. F reeman ran for a c a reer-high 246 yards and two touchdowns and also caught a touchdown pass, but Oregon fell to Washington State

45-38 in double overtime on Saturday. Cougars quarterback Luke Falk passed for 505 yards and five touchdowns as Washington State snapped an eight-game losing streak to the Ducks. O regon, wit h

l o sses t o

Michigan State and Utah this season, has lost consecutive games at home for the first time since 2002. Knotted at 38-38, an un-

necessary roughness foul on the Ducks helped the Cou-

gars in the second overtime. Falk threw to River Cracraft

who was tackled at the goal line and the ball popped into

ed with a 26-yard field goal by Aidan Schneider.

on stronger than we antic-

The Ducks sw itched to

ipated, and they just made plays," said Charles Nelson, who played at safety, wide recei ver and on special teams against the Cougars.

Taylor Alie at quarterback midway through its second series, and he ran 8 yards for a touchdown to give Oregon

Washington State q uar-

a 10-3 lead.

After Freeman's 2-yard

terback Luke Falk held his

t ouchdown r u n , F a l k h i t breath on hi s f i nal t ouch- Gabe Marks with a 4-yard

down pass against Oregon. scoring pass just before the Falk had marched Wash- break to cut Oregon's margin for a 4-yard touchdown. ington State (3-2, 1-1 Pac-12) to 17-14 at halftime. "I thought (Cracraft) was d ownfield in the f inal t w o Falk gave the Cougars in (the end zone) because I minutes of regulation, cap- a 21-17 lead early i n t h e thought he broke the plane," ping the drive with an 8-yard third quarter with a 27-yard Falk said. "And then I saw it pass to tie the game at 31 and touchdown pass to Tavares bounce up and thought 'Oh send it to overtime. Martin. crap.' But Robert was right Lockie shouldered most But Freeman caught a there." of the load at quarterback, 17-yard scoring pass from Oregon's subsequent drive passing for 123 yards and Lockie that put the Ducks ended when Jeff Lockie's two touchdowns. back in front 24-21. Freeman desperation heave on fourth Oregon was ranked 114th added a 1-yard scoring run down was intercepted in the nation for passing early in the fourth quarter. sending the Cougars rush- yards allowed going into the Erik Powell kicked a 22ing onto the field in celebra- game, allowing anaverage yard field goal for the Coution. Washington State en- of 287.2 yards a game. gars before Falk's game-tytered the game as a 17-point Oregon's initial drive end- ing drive. the hands of Robert Lewis

Tennessee 38, Georgia31 W.Kentucky58, MiddleTennessee28

Bowlin gGreen62,UMass38 Florida21,Missouri3 iowa29,illinois 20 Michigan38, Northwestern 0 Minnesota41,Purdue13 N. Illinois59,Ball St.41 NotreDam e41, Navy24 Ohio34,Miami(Ohio) 3 OhioSt.49,Maryland28 TCU52, KansasSt. 45 Toledo38, KentSt.7 W. Michigan 41, Cent. Michigan39 Wisconsin23,Nebraska21 SOUTHWE ST LouisianaTech34, UTSA31 PortlandSt.66, NorthTexas7 Texas24,Oklahoma17 TexasTech66, iowaSt. 31 Tulsa 34,Louisiana-Monroe24 FARWES T Air Force 31, Wyoming17 W SU O r e Arizona 44, OregonSt.7 31 18 ArizonaSt.48, Colorado23 30-136 50-410 BYU45, East Carolina38 5 05 12 3 BoiseSt.41, ColoradoSt. 10 50-75-0 13-24-1 Nevada35,NewMexico 17 33 2 SanJoseSt. 33,UNLV27 6-36.8 7-39.9 Utah30,California 24 3-2 1-1 UtahSt.56, FresnoSt.14 7 -45 5 - 4 4 Washin gtonSt.45,Oregon38,20T 47:52 42:08 SanDiegoSt. (2-3)at Hawaii (2-3), late

RUSHING —Washington St.: Morrow8-68, Wicks 7-64,Harrington3-44, Martin Jr. 1-9, Falk 11-(minus49). Oregon: Freeman 27-246, Ta.Griffin 11-96, Locki8-52, e Alie 2-8,Benoit2-8. PASSING —Washington St.: Falk 50-74-0505, Team 0-1-0-0. Oregon: Lockie13-22-1-123, Alie 0-2-0-0. RECEIVING —Washington St.: R.cracraft 9-85, Marks8-111, D.Wiliams7-82, Lewis5-48, Morrow5-43, Harrington5-40, Wicks5-30, Priester 4-30, Martin Jr. 1-27,J.Thompson 1-9. Oregon: Addison8-62,Freeman3-46, Allen 1-12, J.Brown

First downs Rushes-yards Passing Comp-Att-Int ReturnYards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Timeof Possession

Duc sose2n strai tatAutzen

after the 2013 season.

Ducks ContInued from 01 Like Frost said, there's a

w

hundred things. Even before the Ducks somehow blew a 31-21 lead,

they had a chance to put the game away on a third-and-2

fw

play with two minutes left in

the game. But Freeman was stuffed

— the Cougars (3-2) knew where the ball was going on that play, as Freeman accounted for nearly half of the

Ducks' total offense — and Oregon punted. "We need to be able to get

a first down on third and 2, that was our chance to run out the clock and end the game," Frost said. "That' s

one of many things we can fix, but that definitely turned

:.I,-

the game. We had them where we wanted them with five minutes left in the game

and we didn't finish." It is no secret that Oregon cannot throw the ball down-

Ryan Kang / The Associated Press

Oregon's Royce Freeman scores a touchdown during the first half against Washington State on

Saturday evening in Eugene.

field effectively with Lockie, who took most of the snaps

"We made some big plays a great response (from the at quarterback Saturday, fensive coordinator Don Pelor Taylor Alie, who played lum. "We just need to finish. today, but they (the Cougars) players). The naysaysers will sparingly, as Vernon Adams Everyone needs to dig down made more," said Ducks de- be out again." Jr. remains sidelined by that and find some energy to f e nsive end DeForest Buck- Gone are the days of Marbroken index finger on his close it out." ner, who had two cus Mariota's magic and big throwing hand. After Lockie hit sacks and two tack- play after big play, spreading "I think everybody's aware Bralon A ddison Af : 3-3, Ptla les for l o s s."We opponents out and sprintof that, considering how forag-yardtouch DuCkS are a could have taken ing past them. Instead, with many times we run the ball down pass to take over the game. We Lockie or Alie at the helm, 500 ~<>m per game," a visibly frustrat- a 38-31 lead in just have to learn the Ducks will need to simto fi n ish. Just com- ply be smart and make clutch ed Freeman said. "It's some- the first overtime, maybe juSt thing we' ve got to work on." the Ducks had a yyjflg gp municating is a big plays, and hope their defense Oregon finished with an c hance to win i t thing." can play like it did for the ~ impressive 410 rushing yards with Falk and the When Lockie's first three quarters against — but just 123 passing yards. Cougars f acing g a m e — a n y pa s s was intercept-the Cougars. Because in this As the Cougars marched fourth-and-1 on Q DM71 gpmp ed by S h alom Lu- deep Pac-12 Conference, down the field on the final the 2-yard line. ani in the second Oregon is sure to face more drive of regulation, down J amal Mor r o w overtime to end the nail-biter games like the one 31-24, the Ducks defenders rushed for 1 yard and was game after a holding pen- they just lost. looked tired. They had played smackedbylinebacker John- alty stalled the Ducks, the And now, at 3-3, the Ducks better than they had much of ny Ragin III, who then began Cougars stormed the field in are a.500 team maybe just the season through the first celebrating as if the Ducks j u b l iation. Arain-soakedAu- vying toreach a bowl game three quarters, but the final had just won. tzen crowd that had reached — any bowl game. "We' ve got two choices, we drive was like a father letting Problem was, Morrow's some of its highest decibels a son come back to win just gain was good for a first o f the season in the fourth can go downhill from now to keep things exciting. down for Washington State quarter was eerily silent. and just give up, or we can Oregon allowed Wash- on the Oregon 1-yard line. It Ore gon coach Mark Hel- get things together and get ington State to convert first was another classic example frich was the picture of dejec- focused," said Freeman, who downs on th ir d - and-21, of the Ducks "not finishing," tion at the postgame podium. was as direct with his words t hird-and-11 an d fo u r t h - as so many of them uttered Y o u could tell that this loss as he was with his bashing and-3. Finally, Falk found in their quiet postgame inter- stung worse than the thrash- running style. "We' ll see on Dom Williams on an 8-yard views. The Cougars scored ing by Utah two weeks earli- Monday when we get back to touchdown pass for the ty- on that drive to tie the game, e r , because this one they sim- work." ing score, and a game that then scored another touch- plyletslipaway. Just what will they work "We had some opportuni- on? should have been long over down on their possession of was headed to overtime. the second overtime to take t i e s in every phase to close it Well, there's a hundred "We just d idn't m ake the 45-38 lead, putting the o ut," said Helfrich, his eyes things ... some plays that we needed onus on Lockie and the Ore- hidden under the low bill of — Reporter: 541-383-0318, to make," said Oregon de- gon offense. his Oregon hat. "I anticipate mmorical®bendbuttetirt.corn.

Beavers ContInued from 01 "The team we just played had two very bad losses, and they bounced back and did a nice job," Andersen said. "We will all get questioned with our toughness and our

Next up Oregon St. at Washington St. When:1 p.m. Oct.17 TV:Pac-12

played against today." Beavers freshman S eth

Collins was 8 for 24 for 56 yards with one interception,

hit from Arizona safety Will Parks in the second quarter.

ran for 56 yards and scored

An official threw a flag on the play but it was picked up and replays showed Parks' hit was legaL Rodriguez called the play

the Oregon State touchdown. "We were pretty confident third-stringer Bradford said. going into the game, and we "Coach called my number thought we matched up pretand I just wanted to do this ty evenly against them," Ore-

care factors. When you get knocked down, you decide for my team." where you' re at and whether After giving up 111 points or not you come back." the two previous weeks in

Villamin had to be helped off the field after a crushing

gon State linebacker Jaswha

James said. "We just had to play harder than them and

"the tone setter" for the game.

Oregon State was down only 13-7 after Collins burst up the middle 17 yards for a

A rizona rushed for 3 6 8 b lowout l osses t o U C L A not let the heat affect us. Ob- touchdown with 10:59 left in yards. Jared Baker led the and Stanford, Arizona al- viously we didn't do that." the first half, and it looked way with 123, 70 on one play. lowed a season-low seven on Collins and his top receiv- like the Beavers might make Freshman Orlando Bradford Saturday. er Jordan Villamin left the it competitive in their bid to "Whatever th e y di d game with injuries in the give Andersen his first Pacgained 83 yards and scored three t ouchdowns. Nick against the other teams," first half, Collins limping into 12 win. Wilson, the Pac-12's leading Andersen said, "and we all the locker room before the But the Wildcats, the derusher entering the weekend, know what the scores were second quarter ended. Both fending Pac-12 South chamran for 78 and scored twice. and what h ave y ou, t h at returned to start the second p ions, scored the next 3 1 "I w as e x c ited," t h e was a good defense that we half. points.


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

PAC-12 ROUNDUP

D5

PREP ROUNDUP

Utah holdsoff California White Buffaloes girls win water polo invite to remain undefeated PREP SCOREBOARD

Bulletin staff report

The Associated Press

Goff threw for 340 yards

SALT LAKE CITY — Utah and tw o t o uchdown s. The spent the l ast t w o w e e ks Heisman contender couldn' t

Football

ic Center Invite water polo tournament, in pool play,

Special Oistrict2

Madras fell to Sunset by

downplaying its rise to No. 5 in the polls. The Utes sent a message Saturday night that they have no plans on going anywhere but up.

overcome the ball-control is-

one goal. On Saturday, the

sues that put the Golden Bears

White Buffaloes returned the favor.

The team picked to finish fifth in the Pac-12 South is

yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.

now the lone undefeated team remaining in the conference after a 30-24 victory over No. 23 California. Utah had a season-high six takeaways, picking off five of Jared Goff's passes. Cal had

The first half took nearly two hours as the two teams

(5-1) in a hole. Utah quarterback Tr avis Wilson finished with 170

combinedforseven turnovers. The five interceptions were

the most for Cal it had five against Arizona State in 1998. Also on Saturday:

one last possession and drove Arizona State 48, Colorato the 21, but Boobie Hobbs do 23: TEMPE, Ariz. — Mike knocked down Goff's fourth- Bercovici tied a career high down pass with 26 seconds left. Devontae Booker ran f or

with five touchdown passes, and Tim White caught two

scores to lead Arizona State a season-high 222 yards and (4-2), which won its second two touchdowns and added a straight conference game. team-high45 receiving yards The Buffaloes (3-3) lost their for the Utes (5-0,). They sit 13th straight conference road alone atop to the conference game, stretching back to the and are firmly in the College 2012 season, and are 0-7 allFootball Playoffs discussion. time against the Sun Devils.

After Madras scored twice in the fourth quarter to force sudden-death over-

Class1A

Triad 86, Gilchrist22 Gilchrist 0 16 0 6 — 2 2 Triad 36 20 16 14 — 86 T— EliBuilta52run(runfailed) T — JamesHom feldt 20 interception return (run failed) T— JesseWolf 48passfromissac Franlin (Homfelt

run)

— Hom feldt 24run(run failed) time, Melissa Field scored T T— Team safety

to give the White Buffaloes

a 10-9 win and the girls c hampionship over t h e Apollos. "It's wonderful," Madras

coach Doug Calvin said. "The girls, they worked hard.... It was awesome. They played their hearts out." Field finished with six

match. David Gutierrez fin-

T— GcnnarPoster 5run(MichaelBarrett run) T— DeclanRiter 28run(recfailed) T— BlakeBay30run(Bcilta run) G— NateAlexander 39 passfromNathanHeitzman (Beau Spencer passfromHeitzman) T— Homfeld31 t run(passfailed) G— JustinMerrier24passfrom Heitzman (Metzler passfromHeitzman) T— MichaelBarrett18 run(Builta run) T— Barrett39passfrom Franklin (WiliamMitchell run) T— CalebFranklin 5 run(run failed) T— BlakeBay63punt return(Barrett run) G—Heitzman12passfromJacobNewton(runfailed)

goals for Madras, and Mikayla Madden added three. declared the boys champion Mya Hoaglin scored once with a perfect record during and made five saves in goal, the two-day tournament. and Jordan Patt was also Also on Saturday: credited with five saves. Earlier Saturday in girls Football

course at Willamette Mission State Park. Mountain View, Culver 3, Heppner 0; Culver which finished 11th, was led 3, Pilot Rock 0: HEPPNERby Adi Wolfenden's 32nd-place Culvergrabbed two Columbia finish, and L iam P ickhardt Basin conference wins on the took 49th for Crook County, road over Heppner 25-12, 25- which was 13th. In the silver di16, 25-17 and Pilot Rock 25-16. vision, Tony Hooks finished in 25-10. 25-16 at Heppner high 16:22 to win the individual race

Volleyball

school. The No. 4 Bulldogs and help Sisters place ninth. (6-0 CBC) were led by Lynze Treyson Conley was third and Schonneker with 25 kills, sev- Remington Williams placed en digs, andfouraces,Irm aRe- ninth for Redmond, which tano with 18 kills, 12 digs, and finished 13th in the 36-team four aces,and Margie Beeler standings. Albert Hesse took with seven aces, seven digs and 12th for Ridgeview, which was 60 assists. 14th as a team. Tnnity Lutheran 3, Gilchdst 0: In the girls gold race, Olivia REDMOND — Trinity Lutheran won the Mountain Valley match 25-14, 25-9, 25-14. The

Brooks won in 17:45.2 to lead the Storm to a second-place total of 77 points, finishing 31

Saints (5-0 MVL) were led by Mariah Murphy with 10 kills and five aces, and Emily Eidler added 13 kills. The Grizzlies (2-4) were led by Noemiama-

points behind Camas. Hannah

lia Bernabe with five kills and

four digs, Cassandra Blum

Triad 86, Gilchrist 22:KLAM- with four kills and six digs, and Ridgeview 8-6 and Moun- ATH FALLS — The Grizzlies Madison Bean with 15 assists. tain View 8-3. Bend High were limited to 4 3 r u shing North take 3, Central Chriswon 5-4 over Sunset and yards and dropped to 0-3 in tian 0: SILVER LAKE — Cen5-4 against Mountain View, league play with a Class 1A tral Christian (0-5 MVL) lost a action, Madras d efeated

Special District 2 setback. ¹ than Heitzman paced Gilchrist (2-4 overall) with 231 passing yards and two touchdowns,

Michigan shuts oLit

in the two-day tournament,

a nd Justin Metzler ran f o r

while Cassidy Evans and

3rd straight opponent

four. Bowen also had eight assistsand 38 blocks for

The Associated Press

In boys play, Madras beat Ridgeview 11-8 and

45 yards and had a receivStorm win gold at George ing score. The Grizzlies head Fox: GERVAIS — Paced by back to Klamath Falls on Fri- fifth-place finisher Alex Marday to take on No. 6 Hosanna tin and eighth-place Thomas Christian. Schoderbek, the Summit boys totaled 41 points to top the 17Boyssoccer team field of the gold division Culver 1, lrrigon 1:CULVER at the George Fox XC Classic, — Fabi Montes scored for Cul- defeating runner-up Camas ver on an assist from Victor (Washington) by 67 points. ErTorres in a Special District 4 ick Fykerud and Scott Kinkade

Catherine Bowen each had Mountain View.

Calvin Ridley caught an 81ANN A R BOR, M i ch. yard touchdown pass from Jehu Chesson returned the Jake Coker, and Alabama (5opening kickoff 96 y ards 0) and its swarming defense for a touchdown and 18th- held Arkansas running back ranked Michigan scored on Alex Collins to 26 rushing offense and defense to build a

which defeated Bend (11-9) and Ridgeview (10-5), was

N o r t h western ma 17: DALLAS — T yrone

on Saturday. Michigan became the first

Swoopes threw a touchdown pass and ran for a score to

FBS school to shut out three

lead Texas in the Red River

rivalry over the Sooners (4-1). Texas is now 6-2 since 1989 in Red River games in which it pulled off the feat for the first was unranked and the Soontime in program history since ers were ranked. 1980. No. 11 Florida 21, Missouri 3: New Michigan coach Jim COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — KelHarbaugh has tried to tem- vin Taylor ran for 99 yards

at Mountain View High, Sis-

ters, currently ranked No. 1 in

e n thusiasm about and two first-quarter touch-

Outlaws dropped a 26-24, 2520 semifinal match to Central "Never been prouder of the

13 on third down and opened the second half w it h t h r ee

"The fellas really came out ballin' right from the start,"

consecutive three-and-outs.

the se~ matc h . "It really came down to which team was

No. 12 Florida State 29, Miami 24:TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Dalvin Cook ran for 222 yards and three touchdowns, the last a 23-yarder with 6:44

going to blink and lose tempo. We blinked first and were just edged out." Hawley Harrer f inished with 13 kills, 13 digs and nine

remaining, to lead Florida State (5-0) to its sixth straight

assists for the Outlaws in gold

win over the Hurricanes, the

Seminoles' longest winning

Also on Saturday: streak i n t h e s e ries since No. 1 Ohio State 49, Mary- winning seven straight from 1963-72.

No. 14 Mississippi, New Mextouchdown passes, J.T. Bar- ico State 3: OXFORD, Miss. rett scored three times and — Chad Kelly threw for 384 Ohio State (6-0) remained yards and three touchdowns u nbeaten. E z e kiel El l i o t t to lead Mississippi (5-1). had two touchdowns for the No. 15 Notre Dame 41, Navy Buckeyes, who were tied 21- 24: SOUTH BEND, Ind. 21 in the third quarter. C.J. Prosise ran for 129 yards -

No. 2 TCU 52, KansasState

and three touchdowns, two

45: MANHATTAN, Kan. Trevone Boykin threw for 301

after Navy turnovers, to lead

yards and two touchdowns,

placed seventh in the 27-team eschen, who took 34th.

Schaffer paces Hawks:

Notre Dame (5-1). Tennessee 38, No. 19 Geor-

the second a 55-yard strike to Josh Doctson with 1:10 left

gia 31: KNOXVILLE, Tenn.

rallied from a 35-17 halftime deficit.

and accounted for five touch-

— Joshua Dobbs threw for in the game, and TCU (6-0) 312 yards, ran for 118 more downs and Tennessee overNo. 3 Baylor 66, Kansas 7: came a 21-point deficit to beat LAWRENCE, Kan. — Seth Georgia (4-2), which lost star Russell threw t h ree touch- running back Nick Chubb to down passes, Shock Linwood a left knee injury on the first ran for 135 yards and a score, play from scrimmage. and Baylor (5-0) got a touchNo. 21 Oklahoma State down reception from 6-foot-7, 33, West Virginia 26: MOR410-pound tight end LaQuan GANTOWN, WVa. — BackMcGowan. up quarterback J.W. Walsh No. 4 Michigan State 31, Rut- scored on a 2-yard run in

gers 24: PISCATAWAY, N.J. — Freshman LJ Scott scored

overtime

field of 68 runners, Mathew Smith was 19th, and the La

Pine boys finished seventh with 150 points at the Bristow Rock n River 5K at Elijah Bristow State Park. Skyler Lester took 15th in the girls race for La Pine, which did not record

a team score. Philomath swept the boys (24 points) and girls (58) team standings.

and

win.

IOWA CITY, Iowa — Jordan Canzeri ran fo r 25 6 y ards

team and the way they played their game," Sisters coach Jason Myhre said, referring to

Brooklyn Heinrick combined for 83 assists for the Cougars, while Karlee Duncan recorded 32 kills, 30 digs and four blocks. Also fo r

M o untain

Classic on Saturday at Bend

View, Chloe Collingwood had 31 digs and Hollie Kloos had Jennifer McCallister paced five blocks. Crook County with 44 kills, 16 Elsewhere in the bronze digs and four aces for the tour- bracket, Ridgeview, which

High School. The Cowgirls beat Roseburg in the champi-

nament. Also for the Cowgirls, Jen Roth had 35 kills, Laura

Joe Kline /The Bulletin

Crook County's Laura Fraser goes up for a block against Roseburg in the Clearwater

bracket play, and Allie Spear onship bracket before losing added 16 digs and 15 kills to go to Bend High in the semifinals. along with four aces. Also for Sisters, Ashlynn Cantwell had

"It was the best pool play they' ve played all year," Cowgirls coach Rosie Honl said. "I was just really proud. We served really well, and we passed great. All in all, it's a great tournament."

Medford 23-25, 25-22, 25-13. S etters Violet M i lls a n d

11 digs and seven kills, Alex

"This is a special team that

Hartford totaled 19 assists and

just seems to pull out the fight

Fraser chipped in with 27 kills and 15 digs while serving 98 percent, and Abby Smith finished with 30 digs and eight aces. Aspen Christianson was

35-for-38 serving with four six digs, and Jessie Brigham when they need to and earned aces to go along with 91 digs, finished with 27 digs. the respect of the Central and Meghan Wood recorded "We went into this tour- Catholic coaches. Nothing at 21 digs and was 44-49 serving nament really determined to all to hang their heads about." with 11 aces. see how we would be tested Crook County, ranked No. Summit also made its way against a bigger team from 4 in 4A, motored through pool to the gold bracket, going 5-1 bigger schools," Myhre said. play at Summit High, defeat- in pool play on its home court.

was at Mountain View for

pool play, beat South Medford25-8,25-14 before losing to No. 5 Ashland 25-21, 25-19.

Redmond High, which was fourth in its pool at Bend High,

was also in the bronze bracket. The Panthers, who fell to North Medford in the bracket's

firstround,wereled by Kenzie Jackson's 11 kills and 22 digs. Alyssa Fabbrini had 10 kills and four blocks for Redmond, and Leah Grim finished with 25 digs.

MOBILIZING

THE WORKPLACE

T

R ETE

oeeoRTUNiTiES

Okl a h o ma

State (6-0) held West Virginia on a 3-yard run with 43 sec- scoreless on its possession in onds to play to lift Michigan the extra period. State (6-0) to its 10th straight No. 22 Iowa 29, Illinois 20: No. 6Clemson 43,Georgia

Tech 24: C L EMSON, S.C. — Deshaun Watson threw two touchdown passes and

Wayne Gallman ran for two scores for Clemson (5-0). No. 7 LSU 45, South Carolina 24: BATON ROUGE, La. — Leonard Fournette had an 87-yard touchdown run,

on a school-record 43 carries and Iowa (6-0) remained unbeaten.

No. 24 Toledo 38, Kent State 7: TOLEDO, Ohio — Terry Swanson ran for 161 yards a nd a touchdown and K a -

reem Hunt had two scores for Toledo (5-0). Brandon Harris passed for No. 25 Boise State 41, Cola career-best 228 yards, and orado State 10: FORT COLLSU (5-0) beat South Caroli- LINS, Colo. — Thomas Sperna ina game moved to Tiger beck caught touchdown passStadium because of flooding es of 85 and 53 yards, and in South Carolina. Jeremy McNichols scored his No. 8 Alabama 27, Arkansas 13th and 14th TDs of the sea14: TUSCALOOSA, Ala. son to lead Boise State (5-1). -

H u n t-

er Schaffer placed sixth in a

Bend on the Bears' own floor in the semifinals.

Catholic.

After Michigan's latest win,

land 28: COLUMBUS, Ohio — Cardale Jones threw two

division for Redmond, which

ing Reynolds, 5A No. 10 Cra- The No. 4 Storm lost to Sisters ter and 6A eight-ranked West in straight sets, however, endLinn all in straight sets. The ing their tournament. Cowgirls then put away Rose- Mountain View, which was burg, No. 9 in 6A, 27-25, 25-19 fourth in pool play at Mounin the first round of the cham- tain View High, advanced as pionship bracket at Bend High. far as the semifinals of the But Crook County, which has bronze bracket at S u mmit defeated the Lava Bears twice High, defeating Crater 25-16, already this season, ran into 25-17 before falling to North

championship bracket. But the

though, the coach couldn' t help but heap praise.

4 Michigan State.

12th-place Sisters. Dana Wanamaker took 35th in the silver

PLEASANT HILL —

Cross-country

4A, defeated 5A Summit 25-16, 25-20 in the first round of the

downs to lead Florida (6-0), while held Missouri to 1 of

Harbaugh said. Michigan (5-1) has won five straight since its opening loss at Utah under Harbaugh, building momentum going into a showdown at home next week against No.

led the Tigers with five kills.

Continued from 01 After going 6-0 in pool play

Kansas State did it in 1995, a ccording t o S T A TS, a n d

his rapidly improving team.

25-11, 25-15, 25-8. Sarah Gibson

Volleyball

straight o pponents since

per th e

took fourth in the 14-team field, was paced by Kelsey Swenson's 10-place finish, and Ciara Jones was 39th to highlight

yards and added three sacks

four-touchdown lead by half- and an interception. time in a 38-0 victory over Texas 24, No. 10 Oklaho13th-ranked

Summit 11-3, and the Storm defeated Bend 8-6. Sunset,

Tobiason was seventh for Summit. Mountain View, which

standings, and 14th-place RidMountain Valley League match geview was led by Whitney Gi-

and Sunset edged Ridgeview 12-9. Chelsea Evans paced the Cougars with eight goals

TOP 25 ROUNDUP

were 12th and 13th for the

ished with 16 saves for the Bull- Storm„ an d J ett B a lantyne dogs (1-3-1 SD4, 2-6-2 overall). placed 15th on the 5,000-meter

MADRAS — On the first day of the Madras Aquat-

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Scars Continued from D1 The scar, of

c o urse, de-

pends partly on the surgeon. Even two members of the

can tear the one we' re going to

"The first time, it is such a beautiful and elegant operation. The second time, it's rough and tumble. There's no 'I'm going to give you a cosmetic, beautiful scar.' That's all out the window. Now it's all about getting a good ligament reconstruction.Wedon't care what it looks like on the outside."

give you." Daniel Hudson said he paid little attention to the statistics.

Through his rehabilitation, he had no setbacks and was

— New York Yankees doctor Christopher Ahmad

same pitching r otation, of

on a pace to return about 12

about the same age, can have very different scars. The New

months after the operation, as expected. Then, during his

York Mets' two aces, Matt

first official rehab start, his

Harvey and Jacob deGrom, w ere operated on by different surgeons who used different techniques.

elbow locked up in the second inning. He cried for an hour when he was told he needed

to have Tommy John surgery again. The second time a player has the operation, it can take

Dr. James Andrews, a re-

nowned orthopedic surgeon, performedHarvey'soperation using the Modified Jobe tech-

twice as long, and the incision

is longer because the surgeon needs room to navigate the

nique, a variation on the meth-

od used by Dr. Frank Jobe, the surgeon who pioneered

scar tissue and nerve again. If the tunnels drilled in the

the procedure and operated

on John. It requires a longer

bone from the first procedure are compromised, the surgeon also has to devise a new way of grafting the new ligament.

incision, about 9 centimeters,

because it involves moving the ulnar nerve to reach the damaged ligament and then drilling holes in the bone to graft the new ligament. The

For ballplayers, the anxiety

beautiful and elegant operation," said Christopher Ah-

surgeon needs extra room to maneuver around the tissue

over going throughTommy John surgery eventual-

mad, the New York Yankees' doctor. "The second time, it' s

ly disappears. But the

rough and tumble. There's no 'I'm going to give you a cosmetic, beautiful scar.' That' s

"The first time, it is such a

carefully. Altchek performed d eGrom's operation using the Docking technique, a meth-

procedure's telltale scars, a defining emblem of the trade, remain. Shown clockwise, from top right, are St. Louis Cardinals ouffielder Matt Hoiiiday;

od he developed in the ear-

ly 1990s as a less invasive, less complex alternative. He

all out the window. Now it' s

all about getting a good ligament reconstruction. We don' t

care what it looks like on the

former major league pitcher TommyJohn, after whom the procedurewas named; TexasRangers pitcher Colby Lewis, San

makes a shorter incision, only

about 7 centimeters, because he does not move the nerve. He drills fewer holes in the

bone to which the new ligament is docked.

outside."

Every pitcher seems to regard his scar differently b ecause experiences w i t h

the operation vary greatly. Joba Chamberlain,for one, has changed organizations three times since he had surgery in 2011. He had a smiley

Francisco Giants pitcher Hunter Strickiand, St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Adam Wainwright, San Diego Padres pitcher Josh Johnson, New York Mete pitcher Jacob deGrom and Los Angeles Dodgers ouffieider Carl Crawford.

Altchek can complete Tom-

my John surgery in about 30 minutes; Andrews takes about an hour. But the Modi-

fied Jobe technique is the only method Andrews will use. Like several other top sur-

geons, Andrews learned the operation from Jobe. Some of Jobe's disciples say they still hear his voice in their heads, guiding them through parts of

face tattooed on his scar as a

metaphor. "My scar can never frown,"

he said. Shawn Kelley proudly credits his two operations as the reason he is still in the ma-

The New York Times photos

jors. When doctors call asking him to participate in studies,

the procedure.

he happily obliges. When he went in for his second oper-

times," Andrews said. "You

ation, he requested that the

need to do what you' re used to, going through the learning

doctor not harm his scar. "Trace it perfectly," Kelley

curve, how you handle all the tissue. It doesn't matter how

told the nurse.

"I' ve done it 3,000, 4,000

When Tommy John himself cocks his arm as if he is going

you do it, as long as you do it the same way. Depends how you were trained." After those thousands of op-

to fire a fastball, the scar on

the inside of his left elbow is hardly visible. About 40 years

I

erations, Andrews has noticed

that the length of the scar has reflected the size of the player. As professional baseball players have gotten bigger and stronger, the scars have gotten longer. Andrews needs even more room to maneuver inside the elbow of a power pitcher

after the incision was made, the scar is a thin white line

r I,::

that curls neatly up his arm. It was the handiwork of

Jobe, who operated on John' s elbow, in the same spot, three times. He performed the sec-

ond operation in 1974, after John blew out his UCL. Jobe

like Harvey, who is about 6

gave John about a 3 percent

feet 4 inches and 215 pounds. "On the inside of the arm

chance of pitching again, but only if they tried experimen-

there, that skin doesn't scar

tal l igament r econstruction

very nicely," said Neal E1Attrache, the doctor for the Los Angeles Dodgers. "The skin is a little bit more thin and is under more tension. The scar is

surgery. John went on to pitch for 14

more years in the majors. Curious about his scar, John once asked Jobe why he had used the same incision. "It's kind of like taking a trip," Jobe told him, trying to explain as simply as possible. "If you find a good route and there's good food on the way, you tend to go the same way."

not a pretty fine line, no mat-

ter how you put the stitches in. It's just not that pretty of a scar

to begin with. The only saving grace is that it's on the inside of the elbow, which is not im-

mediately visible." After Jose Fernandez of the Miami Marlins had the opera-

"7

ligament. "Those are forces you just can't escape," ElAttrache said. "There is no ulnar collateral ligament that is strong enough to throw a ball over 90 miles per hour. So the shielding

tion, he looked at his long, unsightly scar and asked EIAttrache, in jest, "Hey, have you been drinking?" The bigger pitchers who require longer scars also tend of the ligament with perfect to throw harder, which may body mechanicsand perfect explain, in part, why the inju- muscle forces all have to be ry is so prevalent. As a pitch- working perfectly. If they' re er's velocity climbs, so does not, that sudden exposure to the amount of stress on the that kind of force will tear the

ligament." Some pitchers watch their

like what causes the injury,

and found that 13.2 percent of

how to prevent it and the best

them had to have it a second time.

peers throw and try to guess way to handle someone who which ones will tear the liga- has had it. When Josh Johnson, a San ment: maybe the one with the The success rate of the oper- Diego Padres starter, went in jerky delivery, or the one with ation is higher than Jobe first for his second operation, havthe 100-mph fastball. Even for expected in 1974 — roughly ing tom his UCL again about doctors, an exercise like that

80 percent now. But a recent

is futile. Major League Baseball has assembleda task force to study the issue, but there is

study, conducted by a group

still much that is not known,

6'/2 years after his first operation, he was told, "Well, that' s

a pretty good run for that one." tchek, examined 235 major EIAttrache warns his paleague pitchers who had the tients, "If you ruptured the operation from 1999 to 2014 ligament God gaveyou, you including EIAttrache and Al-

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o r n

RUNNING • •

Could eliminatingmarathonPacersslow down doping? By Philip Hersh Chicago 7/ibune

CHICAGO — For the first

time in more than a quarter century, the elite runners in

the Chicago Marathon will be on their own.

Today's race will be the first since Carey Pinkowski became racedirector in 1990 without "rabbits" paid to set a

pace calculated to help bring record times. Last year's runner-up, Sam-

my Kitwara of Kenya, is sure that means the 2015 race will b e relatively slow, with t h e

emphasison place ratherthan time killing any chance for a runner to claim the $75,000

course record bonus. His countryman, 2012 Boston Marathon champion Wes-

ley Korir, thinks that change in mentality could help combat

the urge to use banned performance-enhancing drugs that has scourged the sport, as ex-

emplified by the doping cases pic silver medal) in marathons area," Samuelson said. of the two women who won with no pacers. The women in today's race "Not having a pacer is huge still can latch onto a man runfive of the past six Chicago Marathons. for the sport because that is ning a certain pace, but it will "This is one step toward cur- how we all started, running for be an unofficial arrangement. ing the problem," Korir said. medals and victories in league, Deena Kastor, 2004 Olym"The issue of time, the issue of district, NCAA, nationals, ma- picbronze medalistand 2005 (trying for) the under two-hour jor marathons, Olympic trials Chicago winner, set the curmarathon, that is the problem. and Olympics," Keflezighi rent U.S. record with a pacer "Running 2:03, 2:02, 2:01 is said in an email. "All involve atthe 2006 London Marathon. superhuman (the men's world tactics, strategy and ferocious She felt the rabbit was more record is 2:02:57). We are very competition with one another valuable for company than few super humans who can insteadof the clock. Decades pace because he was not wearrun those times. later, that is what people will ing a watch, leaving Kastor to "When you have a kid just remember, not the time." check planned splits written starting to r a ce, and t h eir Pinkowski's motivation for on her arm against her watch. "If you are used to training mind is already thinking that eliminating the rabbits was to make it as a successful just that. with other people, there is a runner, you have to run those There were no pacers in all comfort in having camaradetimes, you are forcing them to of Joan Benoit Samuelson's rie," Kastor said. "That's the go overboard, to do something five major victories, including psychological advantage of that is not acceptable." the 1984 Olympics. In the 1985 having pacers with you." The top U.S. men's mara- Chicago Marathon, the comKastor also noted a group thoner of the past 35 years, petition was so fierce it drove of pacers is a disadvantage Meb Keflezighi, had his two her to win in a time that lasted from a TV standpoint. Viewbiggest triumphs (Boston and 18 years as the U.S. record. ers see them leading nearly all "If running is pure sport, it the way, yet none expects to New York) and most significant performance (2004 Olym- should be pure sport in every finish.

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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

© www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Toyota

Bra-maker's garments

The rise 0 the

makes big move

help all aspects of recovery

to Dallas suburbs

By Diane Mastrull

The Philadelphia inquirer

PHILADELPHIA-

Once Dana Donofree got over the breath-halting

By Terry Box

news that she had breast cancer, she went through

The Dallas Morning News

PLANO, Texas — Every

a double mastectomy, six

Toyota dealer in the area expects the company to cast a long, tall shadow

sessions of chemotherapy and reconstructive surgery. Finally, she thought,

across Texas with its mas-

it was time to return to the

sive move to this Dallas suburb in 2017.

land of the familiar.

But Rusty Gentry, general manager of Toyota of Piano, figures he' ll see it first, crawling across his parking lot daily. When Toyota of Pia-

no completes its new 100,000-square-foot dealership over the next 17 months, it will be next

"I was so excited to wear

By StephenHamwaye The Bulletin

n Oct. 15, 2004, a presenter for PV Powered overcame a bout of stage

Bendventurecapital prizesgrowing

a beautiful bra again," the Philadelphia resident

The Bend Venture Conference started alloting prize money in 2006. The funding venue has grown into the largest angel conference in the Pacific Northwest.

despair when she encoun-

recalled. Excitement turned to tered an underwear drawer

$996,800

full of disappointment. "There wasn't a single

fright to win the first Bend Venture

piece that fit me," she said.

Conferencefortherenewable energy company.

door to the automaker's

$800K-

-

A reference from a doc-

-

tor's office took her to a lingerie store that caters to

new North American

headquarters — something Gentry rarely loses sight of. Through coincidence mostly, the dealership purchased a 15-acre tract just west of the site of Toyota's headquarters about a

year before the automaker disclosed it was coming here. "We had outgrown our

site here and bought the land because we wanted to be near all that traffic

from the Nebraska Furniture Mart," Gentry said,

referringto am assive, 560,000-square-foot furniture store nearby. "We had

no idea how much traffic we will be near." Even Toyota stores that aren't next door to the au-

tomaker can expect longterm increases in sales as

the company completes its $300 million-plus campus-style headquarters, industry observers say. In fact, some dealers are already seeing sales growth from the construc-

PV Powered, which

has since been purchased by Advanced Energy In-

has changed dramatically in the past 11 years. The

given to the approximately 200 audience members at

event is now two days and features two categories of competing companies, early-stage and growthstage. Additionally, EDCO officials are anticipating

the Tower Theatre, who

that the 466-seat theater

could use them to vote on their favorite company. No real money was awarded at the one-day conference, according to Roger Lee,

will sell out.

dustries Inc., had won the

largest number of "bucks" — fake dollars that were

the fashion options were

grim and Donofree left in

--------------4265K-----$250K $250K $200K $200K------!-'-60-"------$100K $ 110K

tears.

$400K----

"Ugly, beige, utilitarian, matronly bras," Donofree, 33, a fashion designer, recalled of the dozen she had tried on. "It was pretty

devastating."

The investment levels

executive director for Eco-

have changed as well. The Bend Venture Conference's fund already has more than $500,000 in firm

nomic Development for Central Oregon, who was

investments and awards, and Erin Chaiet, opera-

inattendance.

"I think the original goal was to get maybe a couple

tions manager for EDCO, said more could be on the way in the days leading up

hundred people to come to

the Tower," Lee said. Beginning on Thursday, companies will once again gather at the Tower Theatre to present to investors for the Bend Venture Con-

est angel conference in the

ference, though the scale

mastectomy patients, but

$600K----

And then came an impe-

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

tus to do something about it.

Note: In 2009, the investment prize was notawardedfollowing the due diligence processand 2009funds were rolled into the 2010 prize. Source: Bend Venture Conference

In 2014, Donofree launched AnaOno, a line of

intimate apparel for women — particularly younger

Greg Cross i The Bulletin

women — who have under-

to the event. Last year, a

Early-stage finalists

Growth-stage Inalists

series of late investments

• Air Fit

pushed the overall invest-

• Outdoor Logic- Solutions • QuakeWarn • Radventure • SnoPlanks

• HoneyComb • NemaMetrix • Odysys • Perfect Company • Scratch-it

ment levels over $1 million, making the BVC the largPacific Northwest.

gonebreastreconstructive surgery and for whom recovery also means being able to feel sexy and whole again. With about 2,000 bras

sold so far at $48 to $54 each, most through AnaOno.corn, the company is not yet profitable, and it faces a growing field of

See BVC/E2

competitors. Most are offer-

ing one reconstruction-oriented bra style, not a line

or a "lifestyle approach" as Anaono promises.

iori-'

ivi I 5 ~ fN<*

tion work at Toyota's 100acre site.

gN

~v~5

4E

With most sales so far by

runes

word of mouth, Donofree said her focus was on getting more product placement in specialty stores. Brand awareness could

. Develop D don't clog

"It's a bit of a phenome-

non that always seems to

smaller diameter tub

happen," said Jesse Toprak, president of Toprak Consulting Group of Encino, California. "Sales increase. It happened when Toyota

z,s,~ua Go ' tllb ~ ~ g ~ n a /ATE ~

gardCn hOSe

rocketearlynextyearifthe

—Less Pa>n

company wins a national contest for an expenses-paid, 30-second com-

opened its factory in San Antonio and when Nissan

mercial to be aired during the Super Bowl on Feb.7.

moved its (U.S.) headquarters to Tennessee."

AnaOno is also one of 10 finalists m the Intuit

Toyota is consolidating all of its major U.S.

QuickBooks' Small Business Big Game competition, a group whittled down by a panel of judges

divisions at the new

headquarters, which is expected to open in the first quarter of 2017.

from 15,000 applicants. The winner will be

Much of the anticipated sales increases will come

decided by the public,

from "pure saturation,"

which can vote at small-

Toprak said — the fact that Toyota is frequently in the news, making consumers more aware of the brand. SeeToyota/E5

businessbiggame.corn. Two runners-up will receive $25,000 grants, with remaining finalists each receiving $10,000. See Bras /E5

The Bulletin filephoto

Ed Boyle speaks on the morning of Oct. 20, 2006, during the Bend Venture Conference at the Tower Theatre in Bend. The conference has grown dramatically over the past 11 years with companies presenting ideas to investors for potential funding.

Wi se -serve eerren el' arten erso soete'? By Andrew Khouri

array of Belgian quads, India

"It's about tasting all these

Los Angeles Times

pale ales or oatmeal stouts on

different beers and the fun of exploring."

LOS ANGELES — Your

next draft may be pulled not by a bartender — but by you. A small but growing number of gastropubs and fast-casual restaurants are going self-serve, installing systems that enable drinkers to draw their own taps, similar to the

soda fountain at McDonald's but far more sophisticated. Establishments in the noto-

riously low-margin restaurant industry say the technology not only cuts labor costs but

also boosts revenue by encouraging customers to sample what can be a bewildering

a menu. The technology has anoth-

cent yield on a keg," he said. Both establishments in-

' i~r

stalled systems from iPourIt,

Fast-casualsausagejoint a Santa Ana company that is Dog Haus is on board too. The one of the leading providers of and charge literally by the chain has a four-tap self-serve the technology. sip — something not lost on "Our goal is to really resystem at its Santa Ana store, Barrel Republic,a craftbeer and a six-tap one is coming define the concept of craft bar in Oceanside, California, soon to a location near Calibeer dispense," said company co-founder Joseph McCarthy. and San Diego's Pacific Beach fornia State, Fullerton. wheretherearedozens ofcraft Quasim Riaz, the chain's Its system, like others, rebeers on tap and no bartender. co-founder, said that with cus- quires drinkers to provide an Sean Hale, general mantomers charged by the 10th of ID to receive a wireless braceager of the recently opened an ounce, there is less waste. let or card that enables them Oceanside pub, said customCustomers tend to be more to operate the tap. Providers ers pay for what would be free careful than a bartender who sell table- and wall-mounted samples at traditional pubs might be prone to spill, oversystems, along with mobile while making it simpler to try pour or give away a beer "on units for fairs and sporting exotic brews. the house," he said. events. "They love it," he said. "In theory you get a 100 perSeeSelf-serve /E3

f

er attraction: It can measure

$i ~-

=

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' f l [(l:

Genaro Molinai Los Angeles Times

Zpizzafranchise owner Maurice Ehrencron, left, watches as Lainie Byerly and Mike Corley pour themselves a beer at Zpizza in Los Angeles. After providing an ID, patrons receive a wireless bracelet that lets them operate the taps.


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

BUSINESS MONDAY Swivel Digital+ Creative Marketing Conference: Atwo-day search, social media, creativeandmarketing conferencefeaturing speakers from around theworld; 8a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend, 541-350-0594, www.swivelnow. corn/. Dealing with Rentals: Learnabout restrictions, solutions andhowto deal with renters; $25for Community Association Institute members; $35 nonmembers;11:30a.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend,541-719-8224, www. caioregon.org/eventregistration/ core-october-12th-luncheon. Excel Level 2013Level II: Learnto managemultiple worksheets, apply advancefunctions,addgraphicsand use templates; throughWednesday; $89; 6 p.m.;Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend, 541-383-7270,www.cocc.edu/ continuinged/software/. Pinterest for Business: Learnto set up aPinterest business account, engage yourcustomers andimplement

E ND

analytics for measurement; through Oct. 26; $79; 6p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend,541-383-7270, www.cocc. edu/continuinged/ marketing--social-media/. Launch YourBusiness: Learnabout pricing andprofitability, cash flow management, financial stability and defining your marketing message; $199; 6 p.m.;Central Oregon Community CollegeRedmondCampus — Technology EducationCenter, SE Airport Way,Redmond,541-383-7290, www.cocc.edu/sbdc.

TUESDAY SCOREBusiness Counseling: Business counselors conduct freeone-on-one conferencesfor local entrepreneurs. 5:30 p.m.; DowntownBendPublic Library,601 NW Wall St., Bend, 541-706-1639. GuickBooks Pro2015Beginning:Learn to dobookkeepingusingQuickBooks 2015; throughThursday; $89; 6p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600NW CollegeW ay,Bend,541-3837270, www.cocc.edu/continuinged/ software/.

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: business@bendbulletin.corn,541-383-0323.

WEDNESDAY Foreign Exchange &International Trade Seminar: Topics include importing andexporting, using local currencies, trade riskmanagement, finance options and aChinaupdate; free; 7:30 a.m.;Central Oregon Association of Realtors building, 2112 NE Fourth St., Bend,541-388-8708.

THURSDAY Business Startup Class:Coverthe basics in this two-hour classanddecide if running abusiness isfor you. $29; 6 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College —Technology Education Center, 2030 SECollege Loop, Redmond, 541383-7290, www.cocc.edu/sbdc. Bend Venture Conference: Day 1of the largest angelconference inthe Pacific Northwest; hosted byEconomic Development for Central Oregon.8:30 a.m.; TowerTheater, 835 NWWall St., Bend; other locations; http://bendvc. edcoinfo.corn/.

Learn to select grant opportunities for nonprofit organizations andwriting successful applications, identify funding sources, especially in Oregon;through Oct. 23; $89; 9a.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NWCollege Way, Bend,541-383-7270,www.cocc.

QuickBooksPro2015; through Oct.23; $99; 9 a.m.;Central OregonCommunity College ChandlerLab, 1027NWTrenton Ave., Bend,541-383-7270, www.cocc. edu/continuinged/software/.

A two-evening workshopfor people developi ngabusiness;$89;6 p.m.; COCCChandler Lab,1027NWTrenton Ave., Bend,541-383-7290, www.cocc. edu.

Oct. 20

Oct. 22

Bookkeeping for Business: Learn entry-level accounting concepts to keeping bookselectronically using QuickBooksPro;through Dec.11;$199; 9a.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, ChandlerLab,1027NW Trenton Ave.,Bend,541-383-7270, www.cocc.edu/continuinged/business/. Bend Venture Conference: Day2; see above.

Online Marketing with Facebook: Learn to useFacebookto market and advertise yoursmall to medium business; musthavea Facebook account; throughOct.22; $79; 9 a.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, ChandlerLab,1027 NW Trenton Ave.,Bend,541-383-7270, www.cocc. edu/continuinged/ marketing--social-media/. Awesome BendPitch Night: Competitors make five-minute pitches and vie for a$1,000 prize onthe spot; free; 6 p.m.;Deschutes Brewery & Publi cHouse,1044 NW Bond St.,Bend, 541-389-5599. Jobs & Resumes: Learn toupdateyour resume togetthe job youwant; free; 6:30 p.m.; RedmondPublic Library, 827 SWDeschutesAve., Redmond, 541-617-7089.

How to Developa BusinessPlan:

Lunch andLearn — Monthly Market Overviews: JacobFain,financial adviser, providesmonthly market overviews atthe Morgan Stanley office; free; noon;MorganStanley, 705 SWBonnettW ay,No.1200,Bend, 541-617-60 I3. Nonprefits OpenLab: Searchfor grants using Foundation Directory Online with staff assistance; prerequisite: Introduction to FindingFunders; free; noon;RedmondPublic Library, 827 SWDeschutesAve., Redmond, 541-617-7089. DIY Marketing: Learn towrite effective email blasts, newsletters, press releases,fliers, blogs and more; geared tobusinesses without dedicated marketing personnel; through Nov.12; $79; 6p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeW ay,Bend,541-3837270, www.cocc.edu/continuinged/ marketing--social-media/.

edu/cont inuinged/nonprofi t/.

SATURDAY Excel 2013 Level I: Create,edit, format and save aspreadsheet usingExcel 2013; $89; 9a.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2030 SECollege Loop, Redmond,541-383-7270, www. cocc.edu/cont inuinged/software/.

Oct. 19

FRIDAY Nonprofit Grant Writing Workshop:

DuickBeeks Pro2015 Intermediate: Explore theadvancedfeatures of

Oct. 21

DEEDS O'Byrne toAndrewR. andEileen S. Holtvedt, ArrowheadAcresThird Addition, Lot 5,Block 4,$355,000 • Susan M. Myersto John Gibbon, Sun Meadow No.3, Lot 67,$320,000 • Nancy R. Harmon,whoacquired title as NancyR. Camreta, to Kelly A. Harrison, HaydenVilage, Phase6, Lot 6, Block11, $165,990 • Sherrie Lant, trustee ofthe Debra FergusonTrust, to JayS. andChristy A. White, FooteHills Subdivision, Lot 6, Block1, $377500 •DeschutesPinesLLCtoGeorgeF.and Bobbye J.Darcy, LazyRiver West, Lot 19, Block 3,$220,000 • Kathleen T.Hooglandto Cheryl L McDonald, DeschutesRiver Reacreation Homesites Unit 6,Lot18, $423,000 • Jacqueline Mullery to GregBouchard and Kimberly Anne-StoneBouchard, Riverrim PU.D.,Phase5, Lot378, $350,000 • DeLora L Pavelkato Richard R. and MarleneGlasgow, trustees of the GlasgowFamilyTrust, Summit Crest, Phase 1,Lot 5, $249,900 • Kip Kiplinger to DavidR.andMelissa A. Thompson,DeschutesRiverWoods, Lot 21, Block H,$285,000 • Sanders andDaniele Nycto Christopher andSaraGreen, BendView Addition, Lot1, Block 4,$187,000 • Leonard T.Haabyto GlenR.and Antoinette E.Van't Hoff,Partition Plat 2015-11,Parcel 2,$354,000 • Signature Homebuilders LLC to Kiboko LLC, AlpenglowEstates South, Lot10, $325,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Audrey J. Lashlea yndKacieA.Spalding,Gleneden II, Lot 2, $237,400 •JohnandMaryBremmertoJames Witowsky andKamalaKesavan, Township17, Range12,Section11, $340,000

• Thomas C.Riley to Lori A. Damoth and Billy T. Smith,SwalleyView, Lot1, Block 1, $299,500 • Sage Builders LLC to Dennis C.and Vicki L Fisher, Ridgeat EagleCrest 59, Lot 54, $419,900 • Maria D. Weymouth, also knownas Maria D.reed, toOlivio A. Medranoand LorenzaMedrano-Garcia, BendCascade View EstatesTract 2, Unit1, Lot 36, $185,000 • Theresa M.Hall to PamelaE.Hardy, Clear SkyEstates,Lot 8, Block5, $226,000 • Jared andTaraPrince to Wiliam T.and Eilee nJ.Fagan,W hitehorse,Phases2-5, Lot 57, $225,900 • William F. and Elizabeth A.Wentzek to Nicole B.and Marcus R. Dale,Majestic, Phase 2,Lot 21,$280,000 • Hayden Homes LLCto Brigitte H. Wright, trustee of theBrigitte H. Wright Living Trust, SummitCrest, Phase2, Lot 91, $255,780 • Patrick T. and Trudy L. Ravins to Matthew D.and Staci M. Fischer, Mountain VillageEast I, Lot1, Block 7, $269,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to ToddR.and Angela M.Horellou, Parkland, Lot 83, $235,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Adamand Tracey E.Nofziger, Stonegate P.U.D., Phase 3,Lot 98,$434,950 • Donna Nealtrustee , of the DonnaNeal Trust, to Shawnee Hammer,TheBluffs at River Bend,Phase1,Lot 22, $320,000 • Kelvin and CarolA.Ashurst to Carlos A. RiveraRosalesandAraceli T. Nunez, Heritage Ranch,Lot15, $220,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Justin E.and Heather A.Horlacher,Bridges at Shadow Glen, Phase2A, Lot108, $372,500 • John Melsheimer to Casey L. Rollins, East Villa SecondAddition, Lot 7, Block 3,$231,000

• Gregory Hinds andLynn Bussing to Melanic R.Dyerand Daniel Cooper, Tollgate Fifth Addition, Lot 243, $299,000 •HaydenHomesLLCtoJolantaA.Bik, Village Pointe,Phases4-7, Lot160, $202,285 • Jeff McAlister to April L. Cosnerand Kem R.Strickland, DeschutesRiver Recreation HomesitesUnit 8, Lot 8, Block 99,$158,500 •SFICascadeHighlandsLLCto TimberlineConstruction of BendLLC, Tetherow,Phase4, Lot221,$320,000 • Manuel P.Baptista to Devin Percell, BrooklandPark, Lot12, $250,000 • Franklin Brothers LLC to AmyG.and Russell R.Holcomb, Mirada,Phase1, Lot 64, $320,900 • Piper Smith, trustee of the Virginia Woodruff RevocableLivingTrust, to Denise Dent,CagleSubdivision, Lot 4, Block 6,$166,000 • SELCO Community Credit Unionto Blackwell DevelopmentLLC,Partition Plat 2000-18,Parcel 2,$1,365,000 • CE Land Acquisitions LLCto Timberline Construction ofBendLLC,Outrider Overlook, Lots7-8, $400,000 Crook County • Joseph andNancyJ. Palermo to Ross andClaudia Loveland, West Hils Subdivision, Lot18, $475,000 • G.F. LudwigConstruction to Randyand Rebecca Lynch-Wilmot,BrasadaRanch 4, Lot 436,$594,500 • Kimmel Rentals LLC to Jill Howard, Lorna VistaSubdivision, Lot 4, Block7, $172,500 • Todd W.Barrett to Thomas Stemmerman,OchocoRidge Subdivision, Lot37,$175,100 • Donald L andDeniseL.Jones to Trent G. and MaureenBoothe,Tyler's Subdivision Unit II, Lot 2,Block3, $169,900

• Erwin E. AshenbrennerJr. andLavonna G. Ashenbrenner,trustees of the AshenbrennerLivingTrust, to Dennis and Kristen Marshall, Partition Plat201106, Parcel1, $167500 • Deborah S.Hileren andDarrel D. Buttice, trustees ofthe Hileren Family Trust, andDarrel D.Buttice and Deborah S. Helleren, trustees ofthe Buttice Family Trust, to HopeVista LLC,BrasadaRanch 1, Lot 192,$950,000 • Richard W. andCatherine A. Bartels to ThomasE.and DarleneHensing,Sunrise Acres, Lot10, Block 4,$325,000 • FDIC 2011-C1 Tenth Street LLCto Fairmont CottagesLLC,Fifth Addition to Prineville, Lots1-12,Block11,$598,500 • Leonard andElisabeth Flynn, who acquired title asLeonard Flynn, and Elisabeth Close toJeff and Stephanie Lippencott, BrasadaRanch5, Lot 535, $380,000 • Brasada Ranch Development LLC, which acquired title asBrasadaRanch LLC, to Robert andElise Firth, Brasada Ranch 9, Lot622, $185,000 • Kyle A. Ontko to Mark S.Christopher, Prineville LakesAcres Unit 2, Lot12, Block 20, $170,000 • Steven L. and Laine Musil to Roy Ketzler, McDougall Subdivision, Lot17, $158,500 • Joan L Davis to Kurt A. Callies, Prineville Lake Acres Unit 2, Lot45, Block18, $279,900 • Richard C. Hunt to Stephen A. and deonna M.Piazza, BrasadaRanch 3, Lot 314, $159,000 • Prineville CowboyCorner LLCto Siva LLC, Partition Plat1999-29, Parcel1, $410,000 • Keith and TeresaJahnto Bradley J. and Amanda LGroves, Partition Plat 2005-35, Parcel 1,$245,000

fered a "package of services"

can turn the event into a des-

conference to select finalists

to one of the finalists. By com-

tination for investors. Vierra

that occupy a variety of different industries, from food pro-

advanceof the event, and even providing a speech coachwho

day. "That way, you have anangel conference and a venture conference sitting right next to

Deschutes County • Harold and Anne Sexton, trustees of the SextonFamily Trust, to James E. andConnie S.Mora, Awbrey Butte Homesit es,Phase3,Lot5,Block4, $495,900 • Max Garoutte to Kirby Nagelhout Construction Co.,North Brinson Business Park I,Lot11, $360,000 • Stephen R.Langeto Cynthia A.Van Lom, CanyonRimVilage, Phase6, Lot 132, $240,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Timothy B. and Dianna L Sanford, McCalLandi l ng, Phase1, Lot104, $272,500 • Dunlap FineHomesInc. to Blake E. Mills, HaydenVillage, Phase@,Lot 6, Block13, $179,000 • Douglas E.Downerto Stuart C. and Jacque A.Goss,Awbrey Meadows, Lot 41, $799,000 • Tennant Investors, which acquired title as Tennant Investors LLC to Charles J. Foxworth andLeslie A.Craig-Foxworth, Northwest Crossing, Phase5, Lot 243, $570,000 • Meissner Family Limited Partnership to Lucas A.and Riley K. Dodge, Deschutes RiverRecreation Homesites Inc., Lot17, Block23,$185,000 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership to Pahlisch HomesInc., McCallLanding, Phase 2A,Lots130-133, $176,000 • James P. Burton, who acquired title as JamesBurton, andJanet Burton to Kenneth R.and Christina I. Wise, Timber Ridge,Lot 4, Block 7,$375,000 • WD Enterprises Inc. to JasonE. Hamlin andMichaelWestmoreland, Clear SkyEstates, Lot16, Block 7, $187,500 • Knute C. and Patricia O. Buehler to Charles M.McGrath, Wyndemere, Lot 15, Block 2,$1,356,800 • PWD Associates LLC to Wiliam and Kimberly Swindells, Points West, Lot

32, $909,750 • Jason R. andNoel H.Felton, trustees of the JasonandNoel Felton Family Trust, to EricksonProperties LLC, Fairway CrestVillage, Phase3, Lot16 and the south half of Lot15, Block12, $600,000 • Logan Building & Design LLC to JamesP.andJanetM.Burton,Oregon Water WonderlandUnit 2, Lot 3, Block 27, $308,000 • Sebastian L and ShantelWilson to Toby Kinzinger,First Addition to Woodland ParkHomesites, Lot 3, Block 2, $200,000 • Jill L. Wagnerto Michael E.andAimee K. Burnham,BucknerAddition, Lot 7, Block1, $317,750 • Zach K. and Diana K.Sartin to Michelle Jensen, Taylor's Addition, Lots1-2, Block 15,$183,400 • John P. and Jennifer A. Renton to Kenneth M.SiegelandClarice M. Nolet, trustees of theSiegel-Nolet Living Trust, Shevli n ParkCommons P.U.D.,Phases 4-5, Lot 66, $525,000 • Shane L. andRondaL. Meyerto Richard W.and Kathleen M.Stevenson, Skyline Ridge,Phase3, Lot10, Block 5, $300,000 • Angela M. Freeman to Mariah L. Wilson andPatricia L. Beamish, Roberts Addition to theCity of Redmond,Lot11, Block 3, $161,000 • Alan Schneider, trustee ofthe Alanand Karen A.Schneider RevocableLiving Trust, to Barry L.Murray, Ridgeat Eagle Crest 8, Lot71,$205,000 • Bryan andSereneGribskov and Bryan N.Gribskov, trustee of theCraig Gribskov FamilyTrust, toAndrew C. and Jessica L.West, North Pilot Butte Addition, Lot 3,Block4, $227,000 • Diann S. Jennings to JessLarsen, HaydenView,Phase2, Lot 57,$172,890 • Bernard J. O'Byrne II andKaren E.

BVC

Continued from E1 parison, the 2015 Willamette invokedthe example of Davos, gave input on the presentation "We' ve come a long way," Angel Conference in Corvallis Switzerland, a city of around duction to blotechnology. That itself. He addedthat the feedback saidDan Hobin, founder of the gaveout a little over $400,000 10,000 in the Swiss Alps that could attract different invesBend-based software compa-

ny G5 andone of the original foundersof the BVC.

in investments.

"We've already surpassed what everyone else is doing,"

hosts the Wo rld E c onomic tors and distinguish them from helped the fo u nders better Forum. other conferences, which can understandthe strengths and "Bend could becomethe Da- gravitate too heavily toward weaknessesof their company.

"You're going to learn a lot technology companies. "The really cool stuff hap- of important stuff about your pens where tech intersects businessby doing this, and if with something," Vierra said. you're not really in a position "To be too tech-focused I think to be able to dothat work, then maybe it isn't such a great fit." would bea mistake." companies, in recent years The application processhas Carroll said. Going forward, Vierra said it has expanded to include value for companiesas well.

of options. So he and other co-founders envisioneda con-

Vierra said. vos of venture conferences, it Lee pointed to a co m bi- really could," Vierra said."It' s nation of factors, including that hot of a destination." identifying companies that While G-5 founder Hobin investors would be interested initially wantedthe conference in, attracting investors from to focus on Central Oregon

ference that could bring local

acrossthe region and building

companies into a room with potential investors,and allow

an event that functions well

networks to grow. "I think initially it was seen

"A flawless event without

Hobin said he w as lo ok-

ing for companiesto invest in when he moved to Bend in 2002, but there weren't a lot

for all parties.

high-quality companies is a asmore ofan economic devel- failure," Lee said. "But highopment opportunity than an quality companies without a investment opportunity," Ho- high level of sophistication on bin said. the logistics part of it is also The co nference began not a successful conference." awarding prize money to the On the logistics side, Chaiwinners in 2 0 0 6, w i th t h e et pointed to the conference's Bend-based Clear Catheter location at the Tower as a disSystems Inc. taking home tinguishing factor. Compared $100,000. Brian Vierra,, ven- with conferences held in hotel ture catalyst for EDCO, said

the prize money slowly increased over the years, reaching $200,000 in 2010 after the

award from2009 roll ed over when the conference could not come to terms with the 2009 winner. Vierra said the amount of

companies from elsewhere Adam Carroll, C SO at t h e

five growth-stage finalists,just one —Odysys Inc. — is head-

the restored theater adds an ference when the Oregon Anair of intimacy to the event. gelFund guided the company "They're almost sterile," toward it. The company proChaiet said of other confer- videselectronic scales forba kflavor to it." Tenure matters as welL The

ferenceby giving feedback in

541-548-2066

ture conference, with the early

stage eventually growing into its own angel-style investment

slNCl

IINTREss

G allery-Be n d 541-330-5084

quarteredin Bend.Three other

companiesarefrom elsewhere in Oregon, and one — Perfect Company —is based in Vancouver, Washington. Mike Wallace, co-founder of Perfect Company, said he convention centers, she said wasn't familiar with the con-

ences. "This onehas alot more

award in 2014, said EDCO prepared companies for the con-

9 ILSONSo f Redmond

he wants to see the growth-

in Oregon and Washington, Bend company AmplionInc., stage portion of the company providing a deeper pool of ap- which won the growth-stage evolve into moreof a true venplicants to draw from. Of the

each other," Vierra said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbuifet in.corn

ing and pouring mixed drinks that sync with a mobile app,

The Nancy R.Chandler Visiting Scholar Program of the COCC Foundation presents:

WomenSwimming Upstream: The GlobalEmpowerment of Nomen atWork in the DevelopingWorld

•8

allowing users to select a reci-

BVCis the second-oldest angel pe and have thescale measure money involved jumped sig- conference in Oregon, which ingredients. nificantly in 2014, thanks in Chaiet said gives it an advanWallace described the propart to c o n tributions fr o m tage over newer competitors. cess of getting to the final local investment funds such Vierra addedthat when com- eventas rigorous but valuable. as SevenPeaks Ventures and panies that passed through He and representativesfrom Cascade Angels Fund. Ju- the BVC sell, as 2007 winner the other eight semifinalists lie Harrelson, fund manager Elemental Technologies did for the growth stage traveled for Cascade Angels, saidthe in September,it further raises to Bend to make a 10-minute fund had invested more than the profile of the conference pitch to investors, who deter$121,000 at the conference in and provides incentivesfor mine which companies attend 2014, and wasplanning to in- investors. the BVC. "If you invested in Elemen"We were thrilled to make vest at least $100,000 in one of the five finalists for growth- tal, and you lost money at ev- thetop five," Wallace said. stageaward atthe conference ery other conferenceyou inHarrelson said it provides a in 2015. vestedin,you'dm ake money," chanceforinvestorsto exam All to l d, th e 2 0 14 Be nd Vierra said. ine the companies for factors Venture Conference raised Although having a venture like their ability to scale, and $1,063,300 in t h e f o r m o f conference outsideof the ma- whether the products fit well hard investment and awards jor population centers in the in an existing market segment. from groups like the Mandala state would seem to be a dis- Vierra added that the quality Agency,which Chaiet said of- advantage, Harrelson said it of companieshas allowed the

PHUggPPQ Tower Theatre 15 Pct-Obez 22 Tickets: www.towertheatre,org 6:39 P.m. 541.317.979|i Alison Wright 20 I 3 National Geographic Traveler of the Year

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

E3

La orruin s itsowners,wor ersonsma- usinessmo e By Daniel Moore

isn't for everyone, but it was

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette PITTSBURGH — Liz Sza-

perfect forme,"shesaid."W e're no different than any other

bo has spent many summers craving a healthy smoothie. Driving around Pittsburgh, the most common were sugary, cal-

small business." Bob Bell, owner of 10 Great

h

Clips locations in the Pittsburgh area, ventured into fran-

chising in 2005 after 25 years in corporate human resources. Because of his HR background, he said, he wrote his own employee manual.

orie-ridden concoctions sold at

gas stations and fast-food joints. In a burst of free-market inspiration, the lifelong Pittsbur-

gher decided to start her own business selling what she loves.

"Great Clips corporate has

than 600 locations across the

nothing to say about the business with my employees," Bell said. "That's completely up to m e. They have no say m itand

country. Szabo's story is similar to

they don't want to have a say in it."

Szabo, 29, inked a deal with a

Louisiana-based purveyor of fruit-blended drinks with more

those of the hundreds of thou-

Creating change

sands offranchise locations

The ruling did give heart to workers unions seeking access to the big companies that dictate underlying policies at fran-

nationwide. But just how in-

dependently she can make decisions in her new business was thrown into question in

August after federal labor regulatorsdetermined franchiseemployees could nego-

chise locations.

"McDonald's is the bossthat's true by any standard," said Kendall Fells, an organizing director for the "Fight for $15" minimum-wage battle.

tiate directly with the parent

company. Put another way, companies

that have expanded quickly through franchising stores and

"The company controls ev-

restaurants — think McDon-

drive-thru to the way workers fold customers' bags. It's com-

erytlmg from the speed of the

ald's or Burger King — can be held responsible for the condi-

mon sense that McDonald's should be held accountable for

tions that workers at those loca-

tions face on the job. Nate G uidry/ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Business groups have ar- Liz Szabo, 29, stands at the site of a future Smoothie King business she is opening in the Chartiers Valley Shopping Center in Bridgeville, gued the ruling threatens a Pennsylvania. After a vote by the National Labor Relations Board in August, companies now are to be considerd a "joint employer" along model that for decades has with a staffing agency that provides employers. promised a relatively quick

the rights of workers at its fran-

and simple entry into local

food workers and has funded

small-business o w n ershipthe sector has outpaced overall for middle-class Americans. employment growth across the Workers unions have praised it, broader economy. daiming employees now have ? a chancetobringworkplace issues to what they say is the true Federal regulators have employer. treatedlocalowners as generally independent from the parBusiness inabox ent company. But in a dedsion Generally speaking, fran- issued Aug. 27, the five-memchises emerge when a compa- ber National Labor Relations ny grants a license to a third Board voted 3-2 along partisan

the staffing agency "as well as and couldmake the opportuniBFI's reserved authority to con- ty less attractive. "I would view it as support trol such terms and conditions,"

party to run one or more of

Wide-ranging business groups denounced the merging of responsibilities.

Sup port or control

lines that Browning-Ferris In-

its businesses under its brand dustries, a waste management name. company, should be considered In return, franchisees are a "joint employer" along with a requiredto operate according staffing agency that provided to certain procedures and re- employees. strictions, which usually dic-

The board said that its previ-

tate the products or services ous joint employer standard, set offered, aswellaspricing and in the 1980s, had failed to keep geographic territory, according pace with the explosive growth to the International Franchise in employees working for such Association. agencies, contractors and fran-

the statement read.

a nd housekeepers at a

BFI

recyding plant in California who had petitioned for union representation.

The Asian American Hotel

Owners Association, whose members own 40 percent of all U.S. hotels, wrote, "It is dear to

vice Employees International

Union, which represents fast-

the "Fight for $15" movement, high-traffic areas. But she couldn't find any- declined to comment further. thing. She was about to stop looking when the real estate

But Vanessa Williamson,

a fellow in governance studfranchisors issue guidelines agent employed by Smoothie ies at Washington D.C.-based foroperation offranchise busi- King across the eastern United Brookings Institution, said the nesses, "the franchisor in my States called: He had found a ruling could help spur union opinion doesn't really have con- spot. membership. "What unions have failed to trol over the business." Smoothie King also providThe initial steps to becoming ed a Chicago-based public re- do is convert the general desire a franchisee seemed simple lations firm to assist with local for a union into a successful enoughto Szabo.Lastyear,she marketing. When she hires popular baddash against these called a number on Smoothie employees the corporate office measures," Williamson said. King's website, completed a will send someone to help train "This is the difference between standard application, visited them. diffuse support — the kind its New Orleans headquarters Szabo said it would be diffi- readily captured by polls — and and tasted a few products. For cult to speculate how the NLRB concentrated activism — the her three locations, she want- ruling would affect Smoothie thing that can actually create ed a drive-thru building in King. "The franchise model change." versus control," he said. While

The ruling overturned a regional decision that the staffing agency was the sole employer of sorters, screen deaners

chised stores." A spokeswoman for the Ser-

any honest observer that millions of small businesses would

have never been started if the owner had known he would have limited authority over his

The number of U.S. franchise chise owners. employees, and that his staff establishments has swelled to Though a franchisor may would be 'jointly employed' by 780,000, supporting 8.8 million not directly supervise workers a corporation with no involvejobs and supplying $890 million at its franchises, board mem- ment in the day-to-day operaof economic output, according bers considered the "indirect tions of the business," the stateto a January 2015 report by IHS

and direct control that BFI pos- ment read.

Global Insight prepared for the sessed over essential terms and Tubridy said the r u ling IFA. Employment growth in conditions of employment" of "clouded" the franchise model

Self-serve Continued from E1 But some labor is required to ensure that establishments

are not selling beer to inebriated customers, which can

pose a legal liability. After a customer drinks a certain a mount — usually two f u l l

beers — an employee has to determine whether they are sober enough for more. The technology runs about $25,000 for a wall-mounted, 20-tap system, plus a monthly maintenance fee. But if they prove profitable, the systems could

I

r

b e c om e u b i q uitous

+~

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GenaroMoiina/Los Angeles Times

across an industry in which While the self-serve technology cuts costs in employees, it still online ordering and reserva- requires an expensive wall-mounted system with monthly maintetions already are popular, said nancefees. Brandon Gersonofrestaurant data firm CHD Expert. "A system like this didn' t

Aaron Garisek, the pub's pour beer locations in Southeven exist 10 years ago," he director of operations, said its ern California by early next said. "I don't see why they PourMyBeertaps aregreatfor year. wouldn't have the potential to sports fans who don't want to Bright said the chain is eatbecome just as standard as a miss a play by ordering from ing the cost of bad pours, but booth." a server or going to the bar. the systems are still moneyIt's unclear how many self- But he doesn't foresee going makers because Zpizza can servebeer locations there are completelyself-serve because serve a lengthy beer menu, nationwide, bu t M c C a rthy p ersonal c onnections w i t h while not hiring an army of said iPourIt is in 42 locations bartenders and servers simply servers. And customers, he in 23 states and two Canadian are too popular. said, are more likely to order "I think it's really important provinces. Fourteen of those another beer if they don't have are exclusively self-serve with to have that smile," he said. to stand in line again and pay no bartender. Indeed, self-pour could attheregister. J osh Goodman o f r i v a l prove to have limited appeal. C ustomers l i k e Ch r i s PourMyBeer in Wheeling, IlNick Petrillo, a research Scales, who on a recent aflinois, which previously sold analyst at IBISWorld, said the ternoon sipped a pale ale he and installed iPourIt taps, said concept may seem cool, but poured at the location near his company has sold its own in practice might complicate airport, seem to bear that out. "I don't like interacting with self-poursystems to about 80 the experience for some cuslocations since 2013. tomers. For example, drinkers bartenders," he said. "They are "In a location with 50 taps, may make bad pours, or spill always too busy." you typically have to have more often than a trained barOne table over, Shaw n around 20 to 30 employees," tender, leaving the tap areas Herbst was enjoying a round Goodman said. "With us, you sticky and unsanitary. with two colleagues. In town "This technology seems like for a conference near LAX, can easily have 10 and not really be stretched." a total buzz kill," Petrillo said. the 44-year-old Floridian said But the traditional bartendChris Bright, president of he liked the self-pour concept, er isn't about to go the way of Zpizza International, said that in part because it seems easier the elevator operator, not just has not been his experience. to try a bunch of new beers by yet anyway. The franchise pizza chain tasting only a little. Tom's Urban, a gastropub in recently opened a "Tap Room" But to test that theory he downtown Los Angeles, offers

location with iPourIt technol-

first needs to break his habit: a

self-pour, but those taps are at ogy near Los Angeles Inter- full pint of King Harbor Calionly two tables out of roughly national Airport and w ants fornia Saison rested on the ta250 at the location. to signleases for 20 new self- ble in front of him.

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+0.8 e1.2 e1,5 e9,3

-0.2 e7.8 +3.4 +14.0 +12.6 +17.1 0.0 +5.6

+5.8 +16.9 +6.1 +15.7 +0.5 +12.5 +2.3 +10.0

NetApp -.50 +22.8 -.4 +2.04 -24.5 +.60 +3.2 +.68 -9.1 -.12 e64.6 +1.44 -8.8 +1.97 -8.4 +2.88 -61.4 e2.23 e31.7 +.82 -11.2 +2.16 +1 5.3 e1.23 -1 9.6 +1.05 -70.0 +.30 -53.3 +.08 -6.0 +.56 +1.2 +2.72 -23.5 +.41 -20.6 e1.59 -9.9 +1.87 -22.6 +2.98 +2.0 e.89 e1 8.5 -.06 +1.6 +2.34 +29.5 +6.11 -19.2 +1.45 -41.9 +1.39 -6.0 e.88 -10.5 e.46 -7.1 +1.06 -9.6 +.45 -66.8 +.62 -68.0 +.74 -13.6 +2.62 +5.0 +3.10 +6.6 +1.63 -5.4 +4.74 -71.6 +7.02 +20.2 +1.12

+.97 +.22 e1.44 +1.61 -.84 +.10 +.86 -.23 +2.93 e1.25 +1.54 +1.77 +3.55 +1.93 +1.71 e5.01 +.40 +1.21 e3.91 +2.42 +.78 +2.97 -1.09 -3.63 +1.47 +1.95

-25.1 +3.3 -.7 -12.8 -22.4 -81.1 -32.6 -41.5 -30.8 +1 0.0 -8.1 -11.5 -10.8 -4.3 +18.0 -2.0 -35.1 +21.3 e1 1.2 -27.8 +79.4 +9.7 -28.4 -1 7.2 +.6 -31.3

+1.0 +7.0

5.5 +4.4 4.6 +5.4 +2.4 +2.0 +2.2 +1.8 +5.1 +14.4 -1.7 +3.8 +1 1.7 +1 4.7 +9.2 +1 5.2 +0.7 +0.6 e5.7 e1 5.2

e5.2 e1 3.7

+1 2.4 +1 8.8 +3.1 +1 3.2 e2.1 e3.5 e2.1 e7.2 e3.1 e9.4 18.2

3.9

69+2.9 +17.4 +3.2 +17.8 +2.3 +2.9 4.1 +3.1 4.3 +2.8 +4.4 +0.7 +0.1 +1.0

+12.9 +1.8 +1.1 +2.0

e8.8 +3.2 +6.6 +6.9

e1 1.6 +7.9 +13.7 +13.9

e1.6 e2.9 +1.4 +2.7 +1.6 +2.9

3.2 e1.5 +4.3 +13.7 +5.1 +6.1 +2.4 +3.8 +3.1 +1.0

+9.2 +11.4 +14.9 +1 6.0

+2.3 +6.0 +7.0 +1 0.8 +3.2 +10.7

16.5 16.4 +6.5 +6.5 +6.7 +5.4 +4.5 +4.5 e6.5 e5.6 -0.6

-1.3 -1.1 +12.7 +8.6 +13.4

+1 1.2 +1 0.3 +1 0.4 e1 4.8 e1 3.9 e2.8

.72 33.16 +3.41 -20.0 Qualcom 1.92 57.78 +2.71 -22.3 113.33 +7.22 +132.2 QuantaSvc 26.51 +1.76 -6.6 Neurcrine 46.10 +2.03 +1 06.4 RPC 12.03 +2.57 -7.7 NwGold g 3.08 +.65 -28.4 RSP Perm 26.70 +3.48 +6.2 NY CmtyB 1.00 18.51 e.45 e1 5.7 Rackspace 27.07 +2.80 -42.2 NewfldExp 38.82 +3.30 +43.1 RangeRs .16 36.05 +3.29 -32.6 NewmlM .10 18.93 +1.86 +.2 Rltylnco 2.29f 47.77 e1.77 e.1 NewsopA .20 13.96 +.92 -11.0 RegionsFn .24 9.09 +.18 -13.9 NiSource s .62 u18.98 e.16 +1 6.9 RepubAir 5.83 -.18 -60.0 NikeB 1.12 u124.94 -.27 +29.9 RexEnergy 2.95 +. 4 7 -42.2 Noblegorp 1.50 13.03 +1.56 -21.4 ReynAm s 1.44f u46.47 e2.46 e44.6 -22.6 NobleEngy .72 36.72 +5.10 RioTinto 2.27e 39.74 +4.96 -13.7 Nokiaop .16e 6 . 98 +.07 -11.2 RiteAid 6.28 +.02 -16.5 -1.84 -1 3.8 Nordstrm 1.48a 68.43 RossStrs s .47 49.04 +.31 e4.1 NStarRlt 1.60 12.73 +.30 -27.6 Rovi Corp 11.16 +.28 -50.6 Novavax 8.04 +1.02 +35.6 Rowan .40 20.04 +2.55 -14.1 Nu Skin 1.40 d36.64 -7.48 -16.2 RoyDShHA 3.76 55.27 +5.44 -17.4 Nucor 1.49 41.47 e3.47 -1 5.5 Rubicon g (I.53 -.23 -46.2 Nvidia .39 u26.07 +1.27 +30.0 RuckusW 13.24 +1.24 +10.1 OasisPet 13.60 +2.87 -17.8 OcciPet 3.00 73.60 +4.81 -8.7 7.07 +.13 -30.6 OceanRig d2.23 +.10 -76.0 SLM Cp OcwenFn 7.95 +.68 -47.4 SpdrOJIA 3.83e 170.76 +6.18 -4.0 SpdrGold 110.87 e1.88 -2.4 OfficeOpt 6.68 +.28 -22.1 -2.0 Olin .80 18.07 +.61 -20.6 S & P500ETF4.13e 201.33 +6.33 -.72 +4.2 SpdrBiot s .44e 64.76 OnSm end 10.00 +.47 -1.3 OpkoHlth 8.90 -.20 -1 0.9 SpdrHome .15e 36.33 +1.55 +6.5 Oracle .60 38.10 +1.36 -15.3 SpdrShTHiy 1.55 27.26 +.57 -5.7 Orexigen 2.53 +.35 -58.3 SpdrLehHY 2.24 36.31 +.98 -6.0 SpdrS&P RB.74e 41.98 +1.51 +3.1 I SpdrRetl s .49e 46.23 e1.29 -3.7 PBF Engy 1.20 32.95 +2.26 +23.7 SpdrDGEx .73e 39.90 +4.65 -16.6 POL Bio . 60 5 . 24 e.13 -32.0 SpdrMetM .49e 19.77 +2.44 -35.9 PG&E Cp 1.82 52.50 -.50 -1.4 Salesforce 75.25 +1.32 +26.9 PMC Sra u10.29 +2.86 +12.3 Sally Bty d23.94 +.05 -22.1 PPL Corp 1.511 33.03 -.01 -2.0 SanchezEn 8.08 +1.96 -13.0 Paccar .96 55.28 +3.22 -1 8.7 SanOisk 1.20 62.36 +2.78 -36.4 PacBiosci 8.07 +1.94 +2.9 SandRdge .47 +.11 -74.2 PanASlv .20m 7 . 83 +1.05 -14.9 Schlmbrg 2.00 76.36 +6.04 -10.6 Pandora 20.90 -.63 +17.2 S chwab . 2 4 28.22 +.62 -6.5 7.72 +1.57 -35.3 ParsleyEn 18.09 +1.82 +13.3 SeadriHLtd PattUTI .40 16.98 +2.72 +2.4 SeagateT 2.16 49.03 +5.85 -26.3 Paychex 1.68f 50.06 +2.29 +8.4 SealAir .52 48.88 +.90 +15.2 PayPal n 32.06 -.77 -1 2.7 SilyWhtn g .21e 14.46 +1.69 -28.9 PengthEg . 04m 1 . 16 +.24 -62.7 SiriusXM 3.85 +.02 +1 0.0 Pennya 61.05 +.59 -84.3 SkywksSol 1.04 79.50 -4.56 +9.3 PennWstg 1.21 +.61 -41.8 Solaroity 48.94 +2.56 -8.5 Penney u9.79 -.13 e51.1 SouFun . 2 0e 7.24 -2.0 PeopUtdF .67 15.78 +.37 +4.0 Southnoo 2.17 44.96 +.27 -8.5 PepcoHold 1.08 26.49 e1.70 -1.6 S wstAirl . 3 0 39.94 +1.56 -5.6 Pepsioo 2.81 99.47 +5.31 +5.2 SwstnEngy 12.80 -.01 -53.1 PetrbrsA 4.68 +.74 -38.3 SpectraEn 1.48 29.85 +1.60 -17.8 Petrobras 5.67 +1.03 -22.3 SpiritRltC .68 9.82 +.40 -17.4 Pfizer 1.12 33.24 +.16 +6.7 Sprint 4.47 +.22 +7.7 PhilipMor 4.08f 84.07 e4.12 e3.2 SP Matls .96e 44.15 e2.79 -9.1 Nefflix s

Phillips66 2.24 u83.52 +4.04 Pier 1 . 28 7 . 5 3 e.52 PioNtrl 08 136 96 +4.73 PlainsAAP 2.80f 33.59 -.12 PlaffmSpc 14.15 +.39 PlugPowrh 2.32 +.31 Polycom 12.84 +2.19 Potash 1.52 21.74 +1.62 PS SrLoan .96 23.16 e.11 PwShs QQQ 1.52e 106.53 +2.52 PrecDriH . 28 5 . 0 9 +1.14 ProLogis 1.601 41.41 +1.54 ProShtS&P 21.40 -.74

+1 6.5 -51.1 -8.0 -34.5 -39.1 -22.7 -4.9 -38.4 -3.6 +3.2 -16.0 -3.8 -1.7

11.11 +.08 +0.4 +3.7 10.82 +.35 8.30 +.27 7.53 +.27 8.74 +.27 7.17 +.32 10.61 -.05 8.85 +.25 12.17 +.06 12.17 +.06 12.17 +.06 12.17 +.06 12.17 +.06 9.91 +.02 10.74 -.02 9.74 +.02 10.53 10.53 10.53 10.53 10.53

-8.5 11.9 26.2 10.4 18.3 +2.9 +1.0 +2.1 +1.8 +1.0 e1.9 +2.2 +0.3 -2.8 +0.4 e1.1

-0.5 -4.2 -17.0 -4.1 -8.3 +4.5 +4.3 +6.1 +5.8 e5.1 e5.9 e6.2 +0.7 -2.2 +1.0 e1.1 +1.2 +1.3 +1.5 +1.5 +1.2 +1.2 +1.3 +1.4

dyssey

32.76 +1.04 e1 3.5 e21.9 26.26 +.62 e11,3 e1 7.6 40.08 +1.15 +7.5 +1 5.4 11.39 +.29 +0.9 +7.0 13.01 +.30 +12.2 +1 6.0

vestmen

14.22 -.02 e1,8 +2.8 52.13 +1.64 e6.6 e1 4.1 31.96 +1.02 e6.6 e1 4.1

242.35 +2.22 +14.2 +15.7 71.18 +1.39 +12.9 +1 8.0 27.21 +.55 +10.4 +13.3 30.36 +1.56 -9.1 -1.2 54.23 +1.73 +6.4 +13.9 30.22 +1.33 -0.6 +9.6 55.43 +1.00 +14.1 +17.5 72.84 -.85 +20.6 +28.1 6.46 +.13 -1.8 +4.4 29.06 +.52 +1 3.6 +1 8.8 8.52 +.10 -7.8 -3.6 13.84 +.60 -0.4 +7.6 15.80 +.66 +2.6 +6.6 69.24 +1.75 e9.3 e1 5.6 45.68 +1.11 +17.7 +19.7 28.36 +1.13 +5.4 +13.3 79.70 +1.85 +1 6.9 +19.0 45.56 +1.43 +14.4 +1 8.4 9.47 -.02 +1.2 +1.5 9.51 +.40 +1.7 +7.6 14.48 +.32 +2.6 +7.3 15.75 +.42 +3.8 +9.4 16.72 +.52 +4.7 +1 0.8 20.75 +.51 +3.3 +8.4 23.09 +.67 e4.3 +1 0.2 24.00 +.77 e4.9 e11.2 16.05 +.51 e4.9 e11.1 38.42 +1.54 e8.2 e1 9.8 4.74 -.01 +0.6 +0.7 43.17 e1.71 +9.6 e1 3.9 45.83 e2.36 e7,8 e1 0.9 12.28 +.15 -0.9 +2.4 33.34 e1.19 e4.5 +1 5.0

SP HlthC .97e SP CnSt 1.26e

SP Consum1.09e SP Engy 1.98e SPDR Fncl .44e SP Inds 1.12e SP Tech .78e SP Util 1 . 55e S taples .4 8

Starbucks s .64 Statoil ASA .Bge StlOynam .55 StoneEngy

1 4.02 +.05

+ 6 .0

-4.4 Suncor g 1.16f 28.34 e1.48 -1 0.8 -4.1 SunEdison 9.25 +.98 -52.6 +2.4 S unTrst . 9 6 39.43 e1.14 -5.9 -8.9 SupEnrgy .32 17.01 +3.49 -15.6 -69.7 Supvalu 7.58 +.59 -21.9 -48.4 SwiftTrans 16.70 +1.16 -41.7 -32.5 Symantec .60 21.00 +1.35 -1 8.1 -7.0 6.32 +.22 +1 07.2 -18.2 SynrgyPh ysco 1. 2 0 40.93 +1.53 +3.1 e1 8.9 S T-MobileUS -1.09 +47.0 39.61 -4.6 -14.7 TD Ameritr .60 31.87 +.70 -10.9 .84 72.78 +1.40 +6.1 -23.8 TJX -9.1 TaiwSemi .73e 21.95 e1.19 -1.9 10.78 +.53 -48.0 +2.1 TalenEn n -6.2 Target 2 . 2 4f 78.88 -.65 e3.9 +3.7 TeckRes g .30m 7.46 +2.36 -45.3 -19.8 TeekayTnk .12 u7.69 +.46 +52.0 TelefBrasil 1.66e 10.45 +.86 -40.4 T enaris . 9 0 e 28.19 +2.49 -6.7 TenetHlth 37.29 e.97 -26.4 TerraFmP 1.34f 20.01 +2.75 -35.2 TeslaMot 220.69 -26.88 -.8 Tesoro 2 .00f 103.40 +1.86 +39.1 TevaPhrm 1.34e 58.96 -1.10 +2.5 Texlnst 1 . 52f 50.87 +2.10 -4.9 3D Sys 13.61 +2.40 -58.6 TimeWarn 1.40 73.09 +2.50 -14.4 TollBros 36.87 +2.02 +7.6 Total SA 2.93e 5 1.40 +4.20 + . 4 Transocn .60 16.98 +3.42 -7.4 Trinity .44 27.17 +4.19 -3.0 T ronox 1 . 00 7.41 +2.71 -69.0 TurqHiHRs 3.03 +.38 -2.3 21stCFoxA .30 28.68 e.64 -25.3 21stCFoxB .30 28.90 +.60 -21.7 Twitter 30.85 +4.54 -14.0 Tycolntl .82 36.36 +1.97 -17.1 Tyson .40 u46.33 +1.94 +15.6 u US Silica .50 17.95 +3.48 -30.1 UTiWrldwd 7.13 +2.68 -40.9 UltraPI g 7.33 +1.07 -44.3 UnionPac 2.20 97.04 +5.14 -1 8.5 Unit 17.87 +5.34 -47.6 Utdoontl 55.71 +3.95 -16.7 U PS 8 2 . 9 2 103.68 +4.30 -6.7 Utd Rentals 70.76 +11.11 -30.6 US Bancrp 1.02f 41.58 +.83 -7.5 US NGas 11.58 e.30 -21.6 US OilFd 15.99 +1.22 -21.5 U SSteel . 2 0 12.38 +1.83 -53.7 UtdTech 2.56 95.37 +5.60 -17.1 UtdhlthGp 2.00 119.27 +.44 +18.0

to places, events and activities taking place throughout Central Oregon during the year.

22.72 +1.42 -16.5 11.77 +.57 +2.4 19.64 +.88 +8.0 IntlSCol 17.84 +.65 +6.4 17.20 e1.17 -1.2 WK %RETURN IntlValul 32.70 e1.06 e13.1 NAV CHG 1YR 3YR RelEstScl FUND TAUSCrE21 13.87 e.53 e6.5 AMG USCorEq11 17.55 e,64 e6.9 YacktmanSvc d 23.63 +.75 +0.3 +1 0.2 USCorEq21 17.02 e,69 e6.4 AGR USLgCo 15.90 +.50 +6.6 M aFtStrl 10. 8 1 41 +13.0 +8.5 USLgVall 32.76 +1.36 +4.0 AmericanBeacon USSmVall 33.62 +1.93 +7.5 LgopVlls 27 . 89 +1.11+1.4 +1 3.2 USSmalll 30.84 +1.46 +12.1 AmericanCentury USTgtVallnst 21.76 +1.23 +7.6 I nvGrlnv 29. 1 4 +.61 +9.8 +13.0 Davis U ltralnv 36. 4 1 +.99 +11.8 +15.9 NyyentA m 33.67 +1.19 +8.0 AmericanFunds Delaware Inv est17.72 +.73 +4.5 AMCAPA m 27.12 e.74 e5.9 +1 6.0 Valuel AmBalA m 24.39 e.51 e4.7 +1 0.2 Dodge &Cox BondA m 1 2 . 76-.04 +1.7 +1.7 Bal 97.85 +2.46 +1.5 CaplncBuA m 57.44+1.85 +1.9 +6.9 GlbStock 11.25 +.54 -3.3 CapWldBdA m 19.45 +.13 -3.8 -0.9 Income 13.46 + .04 0 . 0 CpWldGrlA m 45.14+1.75 +2.3 +1 0.3 IntlStk 40.00 +2.20 -6.2 EurPacGrA m 47.74+1.56 +3.1 +7.8 Stock 170.99 +6.1 3 +1.9 FnlnvA m 5 1 .34 +1.67 +6.7 +1 3.8 DoubleLine GrthAmA m 43.70 +1.12 +8.4 +1 5.4 TotRetBdN b 10.93 -.04 +3.3 HilncA m 1 0 . 00+.22 -3.9 +2.3 EatonVance IncAmerA m 20.67 +.62 +1.9 +8.3 Fltg Rtl 8.69 +.02 +0.2 IntBdAmA m 13.59 -.05 +1.4 +0.8 FPA InvooAmA m 35.88+1.42 +3.8 +1 3.8 Ores d 33.09 +.88 +2.2 MutualA m 35.28 +1.19 +4.1 +11.7 Newlnc d 10.04 -.01 +0.6 NewEconA m 37.45 +.77 +7.0 +16.6 Fairholme Fu nds NewPerspA m 37.57+1.05 +9.0 +12.2 Fairhome d 35.96 +1.67 +12.0 NwWrldA m 50.98 +1.92 -6.3 +2.2 Federated SmopWldA m 46.62 +.81 +8.6 +11.8 StrVall 5.94 +.20 +5.9 TaxEBdAmA m 13.00 -.02 +2.4 +3.1 ToRetls 10.84 +.01 +1.1 WAMutlnvA m 39.59+1.40 +3.9 +12.7 Fidelity Artisan AstMgr50 x 16.80 +.24 +2.6 Intl d 28.23 +.76 -2.6 +7.4 Bal x 21.18 -.88 +4.3 Intll d 28.46 +.77 -2.4 +7.6 BalK x 21.17 -.89 e4.4 I ntlVal d 34. 4 4e1.25 e4.1 e11.8 BIChGrow 67.00 e1.22 e11.1 Mdopyal 2 3 . 54 +1.01 +0.2 e1 0.9 BIChGrowK 67.08 e1.23 e11.2 Baird CapApr 35.60 e.73 e5.8 Aggrlnst 10. 7 5 - .03 +2.0 +2.6 Caplnc d 9.43 e.18 e1.9 CrPIBlnst 11 . 0 4 - .02 +1.7 +2.4 Contra 100.57 e1,77 e9.4 Bernstein ContraK 100.56 e1,77 e9.4 OiversMui 1 4 .48 -.02 e1.5 e1.4 DivGrow 30.30 +1.05 +4.1 Blackaock Divrlntl d 35.50 +.92 +5.7 EqOivA m 2 4 .02+.79 +3.7 +9.5 DivrlntlK d 35.47 +.92 +5.9 EqOivl 24.08 +.79 +4.0 +9.8 Eqlnc 54.57 +2.24 +1.9 GlobAlcA m 19.66 +.49 +1.4 +5.7 FF2015 12.38 +.25 +3.1 GlobAlcC m 18.03 +.45 +0.6 +4.9 FF2035 12.95 +.41 +4.6 G lobAlcl 19. 7 8 +.50 +1.7 +6.0 FF2040 9.11 +.29 +4.6 H iyldBdls 7.5 8 +.19 -0.4 +5.3 FltRtHiln d 9.44 +.04 +0.1 StlnclnvA m 9.97 +.03 +0.6 +2.7 FrdmK201 5 13.35 +.26 +3.2 Strlnclns 9.9 7 +.03 +1.0 +3.0 FrdmK2020 14.01 +.30 +3.4 Causeway FrdmK2025 14.60 +.35 +4.0 IntlVllns d 1 4 .72+.57 -1.0 e7.1 FrdmK2030 14.85 +.42 +4.5 Cohen &Steers FrdmK2035 15.27 +.48 +4.7 Realty 71.55 +2.35 +14.9 +12.2 FrdmK2040 15.31 +.48 +4.7 Columbia FrdmK2045 15.73 +.49 +4.7 AcornlntZ 4 1 . 03 +1.29 -0.4 +6.6 Free2020 15.08 +.34 +3.5 A cornZ 30. 7 2e1.13 e8.7 e11.5 Free2025 12.89 +.32 +3.9 LgopGrowZ 36.22 +.69 +14.0 e1 5.7 Free2030 15.76 e.45 e4.4 Credit Suisse GNMA 11.58 -.04 +2.1 ComStrlnstl 5 . 2 2 +.18 23.6 -1 5.0 Growoo 135.63 +2.82 +12.8 DFA Growlnc 29.05 e1.17 e3.5 1yrFixlnl +0.4 +0.4 GrthompK 135.56 e2.82 e13.0 2yrGlbFII +0.6 +0.5 IntlDisc d 39.58 e,81 e7.3 5yrGlbFII +2.2 +1.6 InvGrdBd 7.76 +.02 +0.7

For the weekending Friday, October 9, 2015

027.42 -.31 -34.9 28.07 +2.60 +11.1 27.14 +.68 -3.5 56.61 e.43 e 6,2 32.95 +1.22 -5.6 5.41 +. 70 -3 6.4 1.79 +.35 -49.6

iSR1 KVal 2.35e

Available at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year-round and at The BuIletin.

+1.6 -37.2 -39.2 -76.1 -12.7 -36.9 +2.2 -5.0 +8.6 -82.2 -8.4 +2.1 -38.6 -14.1 +1 6.2 -55.9 -6.0

-27.5 -1 2.9 -.3 -25.8 -32.5 -29.2 -27.2 -7.4 -1 5.6 -71.3 -22.6 -11.4 -5.2

Gap .92 G enElec . 9 2 GenGrPrp .72f GenMigs 1.76 GenMotors 1.44f Genworlh Gerdau .08e

I

-38.7 -25.8

-20.2 -5.7 -23.8 -36.7 e.7 -43.3

Flextrn FlowrsFds .58 Ford M .60 FrankRes .60a FrptldcM .20a Frontierom .42 FuelgeHEh

7.23 +1.15 -35.5 31.56 e.61 -19.1 35.36 -1.94 +19.1 11.18 +.46 u26.03 e.93 e35.6 14.97 +.98 -3.4 38.85 +1.09 -29.8 13.49 +2.87 -42.3 5.18 +.30 -22.3 .93 +.19 -39.9

68.44 +.15 49.46 e1.62 77.72 +1.84 68.94 e5.09 23.24 +.54 53.38 +2.97 41.48 +1.40 43.79 +.44 12.37 e.22 u60.07 +1.99 17.58 +1.94 19.09 +1.29 8.61 +2.87

10.30 -.04 +2.2 10.85 -.04 +1.9 15.41 +.50 +7.1 17.82 +.81 +2.2 20.24 +1.05 +0.6 19.87 +.54 -1.9 29.01 +.51 +9.2 14.54 -.01 +1.3

ne

25.99 +.81 +1.0

186.00 e5.94 e6.7 186.00 e5.94 e6.5 29.28 e.53 e5.1 29.28 e.53 e5.1 10.77 -.05 e1.8 11.77 -.02 +2.3 51.77 +.74 +9.0 119.58 e1,72 e9.1 m 12.18 e,56 e2.2 stl 12.19 e,55 e2.2 22.70 e,74 e8.5 29.85 +1.74 -12.0 90.88 +7.82 -19.2 30.16 +1.05 +5.1 63.21+2.20 +5.2 84.41 +3.15 +7.5 65.29 +2.42 +8.6 65.29 +2.42 +8.6 10.72 -.05 +2.4 10.72 -.05 +2.5 54.13 +1.48 +9.4 54.13 +1 .48 +9.4 5.77 +.12 +1.7 91.78 -.80 +15.7 217.52 -1.90 +15.6 11.47 -.06 +2.9 9.77 -.03 +2.2 25.77 -.11 -1.4 10.50 -.05 -1.4 13.12 -.06 -1.5 184.19 +5.89 +6.7 184.20 +5.89 +6.7 45.71+1.51 +7.1 21.51+1.03 +0.8 68.45 +3.30 +1.0 m 25.38 +1.20 -1.5 101.48 +4.80 -1.5 101.49 +4.80 -1.5 33.40 +1.85 -3.4 10.09 -.08 +0.7 18.24 +.25 +3.2 28.41 +.86 +3.9 23.86 e.53 e3.6 151.79 +4.90 +9.9 33.53 +1.08 +9.9 81.74 +1.78 +12.0 11.18 -.02 +3.1 14.18 -.02 +2.1 11.63 -.03 +2.8 11.03 e1.1 15.82 +0.5 101.21 +2.64 +7.1 104.90 +2.74 +7.2 21.15 e,58 e7.3 111.97 e3,58 e12.0 17.33 +.55 +12.0

+.1

+2.0 +7.7

-12.9 -6.0 -5.7 +.3 -7.3 -31.7 +46.4 -.2 -3.3 -49.0


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

E5

Toyota Continued from E1

i TovoTF - AI4 5 I

Ripple effect

]

Toyota, for example, enjoys a strong 20 percent

>i

P «d

I

share of the new-car market

in the area around its current headquarters in Tor-

rance, California, compared with about a 12 percent share of U.S. sales in 2014.

"When an automaker moves into a community, there's a local feeling of ownership of the brand," Toprak said. "They feel their sales help the local '/7<

iL Ed Hills /The Philadelphia Inquirer

Following her double mastectomy, Dana Donofree created a lingerie business, which she named

percent increase in sales.

AnaOno, to help other cancer survivors feel sexy again. Donofree is one of 10 finalists in the intuit QuickBooks' Small Business Big Game competition.

Bras

standing of the needs of wom- her pay for a marketing firm. en who have undergone mas- A major sales boost followed

Continued from E1 "This is a cause that's near and dear to my heart," said

tectomies that makes Donof-

an exuberant Bill Rancic as

he surprised Donofree with a visit to her home on a recent Wednesday morning. The Chicago-based entrepreneur was the first winner of NBC's "The

Apprentice," and his w ife, Giuliana, a n

e n t ertainment

journalist, is a breast cancer survivor.

vivors in the U.S., said Jenna Glazer, chief development of-

an article about AnaOno fea-

ree's lingerie so "very special," tured in a "Today" show blog said Glazer, 44, who under- in April, which has Donofree went a double mastectomy af- planning to make her first hire. ter her diagnosis 11 years ago. The sales potential from "She understands the psy- a Super Bowl exposure "is chology of women as well as huge," not to mention the platthe physicality," Glazer said. form for communicating her All AnaOno bras — lounge- mission, she said. "Breast cancer is still taboo. wear and swimwear are also planned — are named after I want to change that," she the breast cancer survivors said. "We' re living our lives. modeling them on the firm's We' re living longer. I think that website, and are made with should be celebrated."

"You' ve got to mobilize the troops," Rancic, an Intuit part- features sensitive to postmasner and contest spokesman, tectomy breasts and chests, told a beaming Donofree. such as the absence of side He called breast cancer sur- seams, underwires and apexvivors "a sorority like I' ve nev- es.The manufacturing isdone er seen," adding that Donofree in Philadelphia. has "opportunities out there An Ohio native and gradushe hasn't even scratched the ate of the Savannah College of surface on." Art and Design, Donofree held In just the age group the design jobs in New York and support community consid- in Colorado, where her cancer ers "young" from a diagnosis was diagnosed, before movstandpoint — 40 and undering to Philadelphia four years there are about 250,000 sur- ago with her husband, Paul, a

And what about AnaOno as

her company name? "A clever friend of mine said, 'It's Dana Donofree. It's like

you lost your double D's,'" she recalled with a laugh. "I never had double D's, but it works."

warehouse systems administrator at Subaru.

ficer at Young Survival Coali-

Needing the income for

tion, or YSC. The New York-based sup-

startup capital, Donofree con-

economy." Toyota of Piano changed its design plans "radically" when it discovered that the headquarters would be right next door, said Gentry, who anticipates at least a 30

Andy Jacohsohn /The Dallas Morning News

Here's an exterior view of Toyota's new headquarters in Piano, Texas. to put 30 extra people on when we move," he said, a

they just increased their pur-

possible 17 percent increase in

tract for the project," said Pat

employees.

Lobb, who owns the McKin-

ney dealership. Lobb, who has been with effects now from vehicle sales Toyotafor most ofhis career Just to the north, Pat Lobb Toyota of McKinney feels the

related to the Toyota construc- in some capacity, thinks the tion project in Piano. benefits are just beginning.

The new d e alership, One of t h e c ontractors "Toyota associates will tell for instance, will be about working on the project in Pia- their hairdressers and their twice the size of Toyota of no, RPM xConstruction LLC, friends and people at the Piano's current facility. has bought 50 Toyota Tundras grocery store about where "We will see a monster over the last couple of years they work and the cars Toyinflux of vehicles coming from Lobb, some of them spe- ota sells," he said. "There is from Toyota employees, cifically for the Toyota project. a groundswell that is slowly "We had been selling them starting to ripple across North employees' families' cars and that sort of thing," he Toyota pickups all along and Texas and will continue." sard. Last year, Toyota of Piano sold 3,203 vehicles,

accordingto the Freeman Auto Report — more than any other Toyota dealer in

the county. "There are going to be 4 ,000 people next

d o or

to us at that facility, all of them in Toyota vehicles," Gentry said.

The dealership plans to include about 100 service bays at it s

ne w f a cility,

twice as many as at its current building. "We will probably need

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tinued to work remotely for a port group was created in 1998 children's wear company in to spotlight the issues that Colorado while tinkering with are more relevantto younger designs for her AnaOno line. breast cancer victims, indudAnaOno i s s e lf-funded, ing fertility, child-rearing and apart from a $10,000 Federal dating. Express business grant DonofIt is her personal under- ree recently won, which helped

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124.9

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0.73

0.39

112.8

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-170

-19.9

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70.2 5

-11.35

-13.9

-13.7

TSLA

22 0 . 69

-26.88

-10.9

-11.8

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147 . 77

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67.23

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37. 2 8

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115.5 Exact SciencesCorp -Z3 Tantech Hldgs Ltd -1 z6 Sientra Inc -14.0 Rubicon Minerals -10.7 Nobilis Health Cp 38.1 Biocryst Phar -13.8 LDR Holding Corp 8.5 Container Store Grp 47.6 Nivalis Therapeutics 51.8 Atricure Inc

s&P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo «ikkei 225

What's up with the auto market?

James Albertine Director of Equity Research, Stifel

The auto industry is enduring a volatile stretch. Volkswagen's shares plunged after last month's admission that it cheated on emissions tests. Tesla's share price neared an all-time high in July, then tumbled 23 percent when the company lowered its full-year sales forecast. Meanwhile, U.S. sales of new cars and trucks are on pace to hit their highest level in a decade. James Albertine, director of equity research at Stifel, watches the industry closely. Here's his take: Which automakers stand to benefit from Volkswagen's emissions crisis? W e think because VW's decision to Use defeat devices (to cheat on emissions tests) was likely driven more by cost, rather than performance, the fallout is less likely to impact peer diesel manufacturers. It

FRI. CHG +7.46 +703.53 +41.34 +103.89 +25.48 +297.50

FRI. CHG WK MO +0.07% L L +1 04'/ L +0 65% +Q 46% +0.54% +1.64%

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441.65

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6.76

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BCRX

8.80

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26.67

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does not appear to be a systematic use of defeat devices, at this point, across the induStry. That Said, VW'S denial Df the defeat devices for nearly 18 months is stunning in retrospect. We think regulators will focus on — and therefore settlement figures will hinge on — VW's attempt to cheat, which we do not believe they will be able to effectively explain away. That also puts VW in a unique position relative to diesel peers.

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+5.43% -10.90% -1 47'I 9 25% -1 59%

Quotable "I continue to feel that cumulative progress is consistent with liftoff relatively soon." — Dennis Lockhart, president of the Federal Resen/e's Atlanta regional bank, on whether the economy is strong enough to merit an increase in interest rates

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INCY

chases when they got the con-

fingers or cross-shop based on recalls, in our view. It would be hard for consumers to find an automaker that has not gone through a recall in the past three to four years. We study recall data and unit sales data very closely, and as of yet there is no direct connection to automaker recalls and significant shifts in brand market share.

its highway cruise function for existing vehicles.

When the Fed finally does raise interest rates, what will be the impact on the U.S. auto market? We think, to a degree, consumers have been using the lower rate environment to finance "mOre vehicle." In Other wOrdS, Tesla is facing a lot of competition ahead. consumers targeting a specific monthly How will it fare? paymenthave found thattheycan keep Volkswagen'scheating,Takata's We think Tesla is a formidable threat to that payment for the premium trim model. exploding air bags, General Motors' traditional automakers, not just because of The average age of vehicles in the U.S. is defective ignition switches. Can its proprietary advantages with respect to still well above 11 years and we think there investors trust the auto industry? battery cells and battery pack construction, is enough slack that consumers will still be Certainly there are public relations concerns but given the innovation in terms of the able to finance a new vehicle once interest among automakers, butthe broad scopebroader vehicle. As an example, we think rates rise. stretching across manufacturers, brands, Tesla will demonstrate why it is a leader makes, models, features and price points in autonomous drive technologies in the Interviewed by Oee-Ann Durbin. — makes it difficult for consumers to point nextfew weeks as management unveils Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Index closing andweekly net changes for the week ending Friday, October 9, 2015

+

+612.12

«ASOaa ~122 6g 4,830.47

S&P 500 2,01 4.89

RussELL2000 1,165.35

+

51 24

WILSHIRE5000

+

21,157.55

703 69


E6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

UNDAY D

's ou

R

The 'coffinnosedCord'

m o rei -ec

o

and its Electric Hand

By Terry Box The Dallas Morning News

The last Acura I brought home singed the walls of my old garage with a face that could peel paint. Its garish grille resembled a Jack Nicholson smirk twisted into a grimace — and then nickel-plated. The car's angry, glaring projector headlamps, meanwhile, looked like something

Tribune News Service

and it automatically shifted. • can address an issue You can find videos of the Elec• I don't know if y o u

that is more of a curiosity

•Qlss~~p

Av " , w'

©,

•t

chotic mercenary.

I don't remember much about the second Acura I got, other than it had a jumble of

indecipherable letters on its trunk and appeared to be a

But the Prius is almost as

exciting as watching a seniors square dance — and I can tell you, I fall asleep in my chair every Saturday afternoon waiting for my chance to dosi-do onto the rec center floor. Not only is the RLX more

complex, it offers vastly more smiles per gallon than the Hush-Puppy Prius. And best of all, I didn't have to park it i n a

A

The 2016 Acura RLX Sport Hybrid leans heavily on unusual engineering to lift It above other midsize luxury sedans.

2016 AcuraRlX Sport Hydrid Base price: $59,950 As tested: $66,870 Type: Five-passenger sport sedan with front- and allwheel-drive, depending on which motors are working Engine: 3.5-1! ter, V-6 engine, supplemented by three electric motors for a net output of 377 horsepower and 377 pound-feet of torque Mileage: 28 mpg city, 32 mpg highway

The Interior of the 2016 Acura RLXSport Hybrid features two display screens In the center stack.

Technically, t h e

I'm just not sure I could Honestly, I couldn't help but bring myself to pay $66,870 like this large, strange sedan for something so high-techwith i t s ul t r a-21st-century even if I had a real job. powertrain, admirable perBut, hey, you can't buy that formance and ample array of much technology anywhere eccentricities inside. else for less than 70 large. whatever.

and fell in love with the car

transmission's shift rails, and

along the way. The 1936-37 Cord 810 was an amazing car. It was developed during the Depression on a skimpy budget. In addition to being one of the most beautiful automobiles ever made, the

a shift cylinder, which pushed the selected shift linkage either forward or rearward. Pretty

eliminating the need for run- oped in the1930s, and GM's ningboards as an entry step. H ydra-Matic, introduced i n

Using just a fingertip, 1939, became the world's first while keeping both hands mass produced true automatic on the wheel, one could transmission.

e l e ctric

motors also assist handling, using torque from one or both rear motors topush the car

more cleanly through curves. But I never felt it. (I may not have thrown the X

a r ound

hard enough.) Though the car seemed pretty eager to play and powered into curves with modest body lean, it never felt as agile

'

to me as the BMW or Lexus

e

'

GS 350. Part of the problem was numb, thick steering, which gave the X a heavy feel. Still, it was competent in

curves and even better as Red Bull with Patron tequi- a firm, roomy, long-legged la. It kind of worked, though, cruiser. helped some by extremely silver 19-inch alloy wheels wear- Adventure inside ing sporty 24 5/40 tires. Fortunately, I suppose, Acu-

About those motors

I could find was a Hudson pub-

cool! But things did go occasionally wrong. Jay Leno says his Cord shifts like a champ, but vacuum leaksand linkage Cord, alongside its other issues causing it to not shift or ahead-oftheir-time feajump out of gear were reported tures, employed the Bendix tobe occasional gremlins. Electric Hand to semi-autoThe Terraplane's automatic matically shift its gears. clutch control was also a vacRather than having the uum driven system operated typical, floor-shifted three- by a switch on the accelerator speed transmission, the pedal assembly, which allowed Cord had four speeds and over travel beyond the idle poa stalk on the steering col- sition. When the pedal was not umn containing a teeny depressed, the dutch was disshift lever operated in a dog engaged. As one pressed the leg pattern. The transmis- accelerator pedal to either idle sion was mounted in front or higher throttle, a "cushion of the engine, driving the control" mechanism engaged independently sprung front the dutch with velvet-like prewheels, allowing a low, flat cision! Other semi-automatic and roomy frontfloor and transmissions were also devel-

d ar k corner

Although the sides were

formation on the Electric Hand

operated'? gine vacuum to a diaphragm • I enjoyed researching actuator on the transmission • this interesting system which toggled between the

Photoscourtesy Acura via Tribune News Service

somewhere, away from chil- up to. dren and small dogs. Big Blue, in fact, was about Rather than relying on as predictableas a 30-somemeat-cleaver styling, the new thing girlfriend from AusRLX leans heavily on unusu- tin with several mysterious al engineering to lift it above tattoos. other midsize luxury sedans. But step hard on the throttle How about a V- 6 engine and the X's seven-speed trancombined with three — yes, ny would drop down a couple three — electric motors? of gears — no awful CVTs That's a hybrid with a gun here — unleashing all 377 in every pocket, though the horsepower with a surprisingsilver-blue RLX I had recently ly strong surge to 6,500 rpm. didn't look very sinister. In fact, the big, torquey seThe big sedan kept Acu- dan can blast to 60 mph in a ra's basic, familiar-shaped highly respectable 5.3 secgrille but flashed a shiny, easy onds, according to Car and grin, bordered by wild, reptili- Driver, which is as fast as a an-looking headlamps. BMW 535 sedan. Japanese flat, a couple of high-stepping character lines gave the car some quirk. One fairly c onventional line above the door handles formed a s l ight shoulder, while a second whoop-de-do line zipped off the front fender, curving down below the first line and fading into the rear fender. Long doors and a high trunk added more visual substance to the car, which seemed to draw styling influences from Subaru, Toyota and BMW — the equivalent of mixing

control beginning in 1935. By far, the most comprehensive in-

its operational function. For way or more, and one or more instance, is it e lectrically electric solenoids delivered en-

Civic in a garage-sale suit. So when I heard I would be getting a 2016 Acura RLX

When Toyota spent billions to engineer the complex Prius gas-electric hybrid, it aimed for high economy and low emissions, both honorable goals.

featured an automatic clutch

ation of its pre-gear selector hudsonterraplane.corn. mechanism, the gear shift The Electric Hand was part module that hangs on the electric and part mechanical steering column. in operation. In addition to the The term "pre-gear se- driver flipping the control key lector" escapes my under- lever, a dutch switch indicated standing. I'd like to know the clutch was depressed half-

a slightly psy-

was. Think of the RLX as the anti-Prius.

1936-1937,often referred to

as the "coffin nosed Cord." I have learned a great deal about this vehide, but one aspect of the car that

still mystifies me is the oper- lication that can be found on

REVIEW were harboring

be, uh, unique — and boy, it

tric Hand in action online.

than a problem, but I am a The Electric Hand was also fan of the Cord automobile used on the Hudson Terrathat was produced from plane automobile, which also

ss

that had fallen off the Death Star. I felt as i f I

Sport Hybrid, I knew it would

"pre-select" the next desired gear, then step on the dutch,

By Brad Bergholdt

I

ra saved most of its outbursts for the interior, where you can

I I

But the car's most intrigu- at least keep them private. ing elements lie buried out of sight underneath the sheet metal. Like standard RLX models,

seemed conventionalenough at first, with a broad, deep

the hybrid gets a 3.5-liter V-6 engine, which is definitely a

sue hood over the instrument panel.

good start. Acura then bolted in two electric motors to drive the rear wheels and a third motor

The black interior in mine

dashboard and standard-isBut I got lost in the large

center stack protruding from mid-dash with not one but two display screens to look at. The

for extra assist through the bigger top screen provided front wheels, which provide most of the systems informamost of the propulsion.

tion, with cursed, distracting

The result was a hearty 377 horsepower and impressive 28 miles per gallon in a 4,300-pound sedan that can periodically b e al l -wheel

touchpads for tasks like tuning the audio system. A smaller screen below it

displayed a list of audio stations and the song currently

playing on the big screen. If that strikes you as a ve- Why, I wondered, do I need a hicle that speaks in multiple separatescreen forthat? tongues, I understand. Even more baffling Sometimes, the X stepped though far more amusing drive.

away from stops in total si-

— was the lack of a shifter.

lence, letting the rear elec- Instead, buttons c ontrolled tric motors do the work up to park, neutral and drive, while about 30 mph, when the V-6

would quietly step in. Other times, the V-6 would be strutting on deck, ready

a switch handled reverse. I don't know the why on that, either. But the seats were gor-

to run and then would shut

geous, with smooth, rich-lookdown as Ibacked offthethrot- ing bolstersand perforated, tle, again allowing the electric sectioned centers. In addition, motors to do the pushing. the back seat had more headI never really knew what room and legroom than most the front electric motor was

taxis — er, Uber-mobiles or

••

I f

I

i

I

I

I


INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© www.bendbulletin.corn/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

DAVID BROOKS

COMMENTARY

Cinton's opportunist solution ll presidential candidates face a core problem. To win their

party's nomination in an age of growing polarization they have to adopt base-pleasing, pseudo-extreme policy positions. But to win a general election and actually govern they have to adopt semi-centrist ma-

jority positions. How can one person do both? Nobody had figured this out until, brilliantly, Hillary Clinton. She is

vi

campaigning on a series of positions that she transparently does not be-

lieve in. She' ll say what she needs to say now to become Bernie Sanders in a pantsuit (wait, Bernie Sanders al-

ready wears a pantsuit!). Then, nomination in hand and White House won,

she will, it appears, transparently flip back and embrace whatever other positions she doesn't believe in that will

help her succeed in her new role. In other words, one of the causes of polarized gridlock and political dysfunction is that we have too many politicians with ideological convictions. Clinton seems to be eliding this

":/e '

problem. Her most impressive elision con-

vre

cerns trade, the Trans-Pacific Partnership. This was not only a substantive

flip-flop. It was so naked it amounted

to a bold and clarion statement of faith

v

on behalf of flip-flopping itself. In order to navigate her way through the wilds of politics and the

morass of an ungovernable nation, she' ll do whatever she needs to do, say whatever needs to be said and fight for

whatever constituency is most useful at the moment.

She' ll get things done. (Whatever thosethingshappentobe) This flexibility has become some-

Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin file photo

thing of a leitmotif. The most exhaus-

An employee with Bend Garbage & Recycling uses a front-end loader to move recyclable material to be compacted and bailed in 2011. The material

tively reported account of her various policy adjustments comes from Evan

is shipped to Clackamas to besorted. The rate of American recycling has plummeted, as have prices for recyclable materials.

Popp, a journalism student at Ithaca

By John TierneyeNew York Times News Service

College who documented Clinton's shifts while he interned at the Institute

for Public Accuracy. In 2000 she supported the Defense of Marriage Act, although now she is pro-gay marriage. In the 1990s she was for more incarceration. Now she' s

f you live in the United States, you probably do some form of recyding. It's likely that you

of evidence that recycling was costly and ineffectual,

.

but its defenders said that it was unfair to rush

J

against mass incarceration.

separate paper from plastic and glass and metal. t o j udgment. Noting that the modern recycling

In 2007 she was against allowing undocumented immigrants to have driver's licenses. Now she supports

You rinse the bottles and cans,and you might put m ovement had really just begun just a few years .L

food scraps in a container destined for a composting

earl i er, they predicted it would flourish as the industry

response to the facts, but each of these

facility. As you sort everything into the right bins,

matured and the public learned how to recycle

intellectual inquiries happens to have led her in a convenient direction. This deftness could, if used wisely,

you probably assume that recycling is helping your

prop erly.

them.

We all get to change our mind in

help Clinton placate the left in order to

get the nomination and then placate the powerful in order, as president, to

pass legislation. But there are downsides to the Opportunist Solution. First, politically.

The Clinton theory of the campaign seems tobe that people vote on the basis of what policy a candidate can

I

community and protecting the cavu onment. But is it v ) S o , what's happened since then? While it's true Are you in fact wasting your time? g l af gthat the rec clinpmessage has reached more people In 1996, I wrote a long article for ThePew York —

r

th a n ever, wh~ it comes to the bottom line, both

Times Magazine arguing that the recycling process

ec o nomically and environmentally, not much has

as we carried it out was wasteful. I presented plenty

cha n ged at all.

deliver or what interest group he or she kowtows to. But it could be that voters actually vote on the basis of authenticity and trustworthiness. In that

case, Clinton could be hurt by the fact that only 35 percent of, say, Floridians

think she is honest and trustworthy, according to a Quinnipiac poll, whereas, just to pick a random name, 71

percent think that of Joe Biden. Second, as a matter of practical

governing, it's hard to organize an administration around an uncertain trumpet. Administrations generally

work best when everybody on the team knows consistently what the president stands for. Third, there's the humanitarian

issue. Clinton once supported the Pacifi ctradedealforgoodreason.If Clinton's flip-flop ends up sinking the deal, she will have helped sentence millions of people to further poverty and destabilized the world's most dynamic region. Still, it would be interesting to see

how government by flip-flop might work. If we had a president hopping opportunistically from issue to issue,

that might disrupt our ossified landscape and tear down the old-fashioned partisan walls.

In an era of polarization and dysfunction, maybe authenticity, conviction, consistency and principle are the

hobgoblins of little minds! — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

Despite decades of exhortations and mandates, it' s

v

still typically more expensive for municipalities to recyde household waste than

ltd fS3

o

to send it to a landfill. Prices

for recyclable materials have plummeted because of loweroilpricesandreduced demandforthem overseas. The slump has forced some recycling companies to shut plants and cancel plans for new technologies. The mood is so gloomy that one industry veteran tried to cheer up her colleagues this

ve

'I

%RD

I '*

. e.„

summer with an article in a

I

trade journal titled, "Recycling Is Not Dead!" While politicians set

higher and higher goals, the national rate of recycling has stagnated in recent years. Yes, it's popular in affluent neighborhoods like Park Slope in Brooklyn, New York, and in cities like San Francisco, but residents of the Bronx, New York, and Houston don' t have the

same fervor forsortinggarbage in their spare time. SeeRecycling/F6

'..e

" ve

The Bulletin file photo

A Bend Garbage & Recycling collection driver sorts through recyclables to separate out glass and a pizza box. "It

makes sense torecyclecommercial cardboard andsome paper, aswell as selected metals andplastics," says EPA official J. Winston Porter.nBut other materials rarely make sense, including food waste and other compostables. The zero-waste goal makes no sense at all — it's very expensive with almost no real environmental benefit."


F2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

EDjTO

The Bulletin

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Ba neWS OF

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IllVcISIVe g eclt FLOSS IS OO IleWS OF LIS heatgrass has been called the invader that won the West, and that's not far off the mark. The annual grass covers nearly 12 million acres in Oregon alone, and can be found across the western United States and Canada, and as far north as Alaska. That causes problems. Cheat, an invasive plant that most likely arrived here from Asia via Europe, chokes out native plants. It blooms and dies early, leaving in its wake a tangled mat that makes rangefires in these partsfar worse than they otherwise would be. In a time of drought, that's especially troublesom. Moreover, after it's fueled a fire it chokes out native plants trying to re-establish themselves. Its effects don't stop there. Any desert hiker can tell you what it' s like to come home with socks full of cheatgrass, just as many dog owners have tales of trips to the veterinarianto have cheat removed from ears and noses. Cattle and horses, too, have problems with cheatgrass. Now comes word that a scientist with the Agricultural Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculturemay have found a way to finally begin to bring cheatgrass under control.

Ann Kennedy, a soil scientist, has teamed up with students from Washington State University and tested some 25,000 bacteria taken from nearby fields. Her goal was to find those that hinder the growth of cheat but do not hurt the growth of wheat. She's done just that. In fact, her bacteria not only reduce the amount of cheatgrass by half with a single application, they' re also useful against two other invasive plants, medusaheadand jointed goatgrass. At least one of her bacteria strains is likely to be ready for commercial sale in fall 2016. Kennedy's bacteria won't be the sole answer to the West's cheatgrass infestation, of course — with something like 100 million acres of cheat infestation in the West, nothing is — but it's a big step in the right direction. That's good for the High Desert, good for sage grouse, good for all sorts of things.

Punish state employees

who brokeagencyrules

O

regon's Department of En- of the state's rules governing the

ergy has its problems. It apparently will not abide by its own rules, tells lawmakers it has a legal opinion saying it need not obey them, and then refuses to produce that opinion when asked to do so. Lawmakers' response? Go after the beneficiaries of the department's misdeeds, as if they, and not the department, are somehow toblame. For those who followed the unhappy saga of the state's Business Energy Tax Credit program, the department's current problems sound like its old problems all over again. The state offers tax credits to companies and others with renewable energy orefficiency projects. Those companies or public agencies, which pay no taxes, can turn around and sell the credits to third parties if they wish. In theory, at least, the state sets the price for such sales. In reality, it may set a price, but it also knowingly ignores what's going on when buyer and seller agree on a price that's lower than the state thinks it should be. And that is a violation

credits. Lawmakers are, naturally, upset by the violation. They told the department in 2009 to develop a formula for the discounts and stick to it. But lawmakers,rather than going after the state agency that has turned a blind eye to state law and its own regulations, seem poised to go after those who bought the overly discounted tax credits. That's like punishing a car buyer because the dealer sold a vehicle at below market price. Instead, lawmakers should go after the real culprits here, the men and women at the Department of Energy who, knowing what the law said, decided to ignore it. They contend they got approval from the Department of Justice before doing so, but they refuse to turn proof that' s true over to lawmakers. The problem, then, is not with purchasers, but with a state agency that behaves as a law unto itself where tax credits are concerned. And it's the agency, not the tax credit purchasers, that should be punished for this latest mess.

Anot er mass s ootin, anot er anti- unc ara e ere's the cycle of poverty. There's the cycle of violence. And then there's the cycle of gun talk. It starts with a mass

shooting. Gun-control advocates blame the deaths on gun-control opponents, who argue, in turn, that

none of the proposed restrictions wouldhave had any effecton theincident in question. The debate goes

nowhere. The media move on. Until the next incident, when the

cycle begins again. So with the Roseburg massacre. Within hours, President Obama takes to the microphones to furious-

however, he had to kill before he could be locked up. The problem is t h a t t h ese CHARLES mass-murder cases are fairly unKRAUTHAMMER -,IN' usual. Take Roseburg. That young man had no criminal history, no psychiatric diagnosis beyond AsMere "common sense" regula- perger's, no involvement in public tion, like the assault weapons ban disturbances. How do you find, let of 1994 that was allowed to lapse alone lock up, someone like that? 10 years later, does little more than There are 320 million A merimake us feelgood. A Justice De- cans. Schizophrenia affects about partment study found "no discern- 1 percent of the population. That' s ible reduction in the lethality and about 3 million people. Only a tiny injuriousness of gun violence." fraction are ever violent — and preAs for the only remotely plausible dicting which ones will be is almost solution, Obama dare not speak its impossible. Loner, socially isolated, name. He made an oblique refer- often immersed in a fantasy world ence to Australia, never mention- of violent video games. There are ing its gun-control innovation was myriad such young men out there, confiscation, a mandatory buyback. but only a handful will ever harm There's a reason he didn't bring up anyone. What to do'? Forcibly appre-

ly denounce the NRA and its ilk for resisting "common-sense gun-safety laws." His harangue is totally sincere, totally knee-jerk and totally pointless. Nor does Obama propose any legislation. He knows none would pass. But the deeper truth is confiscation (apart from the debate that it would have made no differ- about its actual efficacy). In this ence. Does anyone really believe country, with its traditions, public the (alleged) gun-show loophole had sentiment and, most importantly, anything to do with Roseburg? Uni- Second Amendment, them's fightin' versal background checks sound words. wonderful. But Oregon already has Obama didn't say them. Nor did one. The Roseburg shooter and his he seriously address the other apmother obtained every one of their proach that could make a differguns legally. ence: more aggressive psychiatric The reason the debate is so mud- intervention. Yet even here, our

dled, indeed surreal — notice, by the reach is limited. In some cases, yes, way, how "gun control" has been i nvoluntary c o m mitment w o u l d cleverly rechristened "common- have made a difference.Jared sense gun-safety laws," as if we' re Loughner, the Tucson shooter, was talking about accident proofingso unstable, so menacing, that felis that both sides know that the only low students at his community colmeasure that might actually pre- lege feared, said one, that he would vent mass killings has absolutely no "come into class with an automatic chance of ever being enacted. weapon." Under our crazy laws,

hend them, treat them, put them on

perpetual preventive parole? By the tens of thousands? Committing the

Jared Loughners would have an effect. But even they are the exception among the shooters. Yet "common

sense" gun control would do even less. Unless you' re willing to go all the way. In the final quarter of his presidency, Obama can very well say what he wants. If he believes in

Australian-style confiscation i.e., abolishing the Second Amendment — why not spell it out'? Until

he does, he should stop demonizing people for not doing what he won' t even propose. — Charles Krauthammeris a columnist for The Washington Post.

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| OP'stopcan i atesaret e 3 eastquai ie he leading contenders for the Republican nomination for president tell us three interesting things about America. First, many Republican voters are so disenchanted they' re willing to

carries no stigma in America is corporate welfare. For all Trump's critidsms of government, his family wealth came from feeding at the government trough. His father, Fred Trump, leveraged government housing programs entrust the country to candidatesinto a construction business; the emDonald Trump, Ben Carson and Car- pire was founded on public money. ly Fiorina — with zero experience in My bet is that Trump, Fiorina and elective office or military command. Carson will fade and that voters will Only two men without previous time eventually turn to a more conventional in major elective office or the military candidate, perhaps Sen. Marco Rubio. have been president, Herbert Hoover From the Democrats' point of view, and William Howard Taft, and both the scariest Republican ticket might had held Cabinet posts. No president pair Rubio with John Kasich. Rubio has ever been as inexperienced as has natural political skills, projects any of these three leading Republican youth and change, and would signal candidates. that the Republican Party is ready to Second, the public feels an odd expand its demographic base. Rubio awe for CEOs and presumes they and Kasich would also have a decent

T

know how to run things, even if their

records suggest otherwise. This cultural reverence for CEOs perhaps also explains why pay packages have increased — and why Fiorina was allowed to take home a $21 million severancepackage aftershewa sfiredas Hewlett-Packard's chief executive for

incompetence. Third, the only kind of welfare that

"stupid" and "dumb"). This is a man rina's was exceptional. Exceptionally bad. Put aside the fact that she's the real estate, book writing, television CEO who fired thousands of workand now presidential politics. He's a ers while raking in more than $100 born showman, a master of branding million in compensation and pushing and marketing. But he doesn't seem a HP to acquire five corporate jets. Just who is near the top of diverse fields:

NICHOLAS KRISTOF

master of investing.

Back in 1976, Trump said he was into the American psyche — part of worth "more than $200 million." If he which is our adulation of the CEO. had simply put $200 million in an inThere's something to be said for dex fund and reinvested dividends, he CEOs' entering politics: In theory, would be worth $12 billion today, notes theyhave management expertise and Max Ehrenfreund of The Washington financial savvy. Then again, it didn' t Post. In fact, he's worth $4.5 billion, acwork so well with Dick Cheney. cording to Forbes. More broadly, the United States has In other words,Trump's business overdone the cult of the CEO, partly acumen seems less than half as imexplaining why at the largest compa- pressive as that of an ordinary Joe nies the ratio of CEO compensation to who parks his savings in an index typical worker pay rose from 20 to 1 in fund. chance of winning their home states, 1965 to 303 to 1 in 2014, according to An index fund might also have Florida and Ohio — and any ticket that the Economic Policy Institute. been less ethically problematic. In the could win Florida and Ohio would be a In any case, even if you were con- 1970s, the Justice Department accused strong contender. ducting a job search for a great CEO to Trump of refusing to rent to blacks. But instead, Republican primary lead the free world, you wouldn't turn And in 2013, New York state's attorney votersfornow are pursuing a bizarre to either Trump or Fiorina. general sued him, alleging "persistent flirtation with three candidates who My sense is that Trump isn't the idiot fraudulent, illegal and deceptive conTrump deniedthecharges. are the least qualified since, well, may- that critics often daim (the most com- duct"; be since Trump put his toe in the wa- mon words voters used to describe If Trump's performance as a busiters before the 2000 election. him in a recent poll were "idiot," "jerk," ness executive was problematic, FioIn that sense, they offer a window

looking at the bottom line, she earned

her place on those "worst CEO" lists she appeared on. As Steven Rattner wrote in The

Times, Hewlett-Packard's share price fell 52 percent in the nearly six years she was at the helm. HP did worse

than its peers: IBM fell 27.5 percent, and Dell, 3 percent.

Oh, and on the day she was fired, the stock market celebrated: HP shares soared 7 percent.

If I wanted a circus ringmaster, I'd hire Trump. If I wanted advice on

brain surgery or hospital management, I'd turn to Carson. Fiorina would

make an articulate television pundit. But for president? The fact that these tyros are the

three leading presidential contenders for a major political party is a sad window into our political dysfunction. — Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

eware u in an C

ontraryto the principles of

American foreign policy of the

last70 years, President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John

Kerry tacitly invited Russia to "help" monitor things in the Middle East.

VICTOR

DAVIS MAN SON

i s ' coa i ion'

on Sept. I, 1939. It was joined soon af- G erman casualties in W WI I a n d ter by Russian troops attacking from helped to wreck the Wehrmacht. Yet the east. With a now-friendly Rus- cynical and opportunistic Russia at sia at his rear, Hitler was then free to turn westward against the European

one time or another cut some sort

of friendship deal with every major democracies. combatant on both sides of WWII: Now they are learning that there Russia still seems embarrassed by America, Britain, Germany, Italy and are lots of Middle East scenarios far the Islamic State. But for now he is its 1939 sellout. Marshal Stalin would Japan. worse than the relatively quiet Iraq bombing moderate opponents of As- supply the Third Reich for 22 months Ironically, Stalin kept his word to that the Obama administration in- sad and bolstering the anti-Western with key resources that helped Hitler the Axis alliance of Germany, Italy herited in January 2009 — and soon terrorists of Hezbollah and perhaps to attack Belgium, Denmark, France, and Japan far better than he later did abandoned. Hamas as well. Great Britain, Greece, Holland, Lux- to the Allied partners, Britain and the Russian President Vladimir PuTwo, Putin is sending a warning to embourg, Norway and Yugoslavia. United States, who helped save him tin liked the American invitation the oil-exporting Sunni monarchies There is no reason to believe the The Western allies provided nearly so much that he now has decided of the Persian Gulf, who are as rich Soviet Union would ever have flipped 20 percent of all Russian wartime reto move in permanently. Putin now as they are militarily weak: Russia, to join Great Britain against Nazi Ger- sources. Without key Anglo-Amerwants the West to join his new Syr- not the United States, is the new cop many had Hitler not double-crossed ican resources like aluminum and ia-Iran-Hezbollah-Iraq axis against on the Middle Eastern beat. Stalin and invaded the Soviet Union heavy transport trucks, Russia might the Islamic State — or to at least sit If oil-rich and nuclear Russia and on June 22, 1941. After all, Stalin's well have been knocked out by Hitler. back and allow Russia to straighten a soon-to-be-nuclear Iran can bully communist regime had liquidated Yet after the war, Stalin renounced out the Middle East as it sees fit. To fight the Islamic State, Putin

the Sunni monarchies, Putin's new

more than 15 million of its own citi- all his prior commitments to hold cartel may control the spigot of some zens during 1920s and 1930s, and was free and fair elections in those counhas called for something similar to 75 percent of the world's daily ex- a kindred genocidal state to Hitler's tries liberated from Nazism by the the "anti-Hitler coalition" of World port of oil. National Socialist Third Reich. Red Army. Putin's sloppy historical War II that once saw the Soviet Putin's recall of history is as fishy That embarrassing deal with Hitler p erspective on World War II i s a Union and the West unite to defeat as his proposed coalition. Since he still haunts Russia. Poland has com- window into his soul. And we should Nazi Germany. has invoked the "anti-Hitler" alli- plained bitterly about absurd state- be as distrustful of him as our disilCertainly, the Islamic State, like ance of World War II, we would all ments made by a Russian ambassador lusioned forefathers finally were of Nazi Germany, is a savage regime. do well to remember the circum- who recently daimed that Poland was Stalin's Soviet Union. So far it has grown unchecked at stances that led to the totalitarian partly to blame for the outbreak of The way to end the murderous the very center of the Middle East. Soviet Union of Josef Stalin joining WWII because it blocked the forma- rampage of a savage, radical Islamic Yet under the cloak of fighting the with democracies to defeat Hitler. tion of a coalition against Germany. State is not by joining a Russian-IraIslamic State, Putin has two greater Stalin, remember, was originaHy Russia's dalliance with H itler nian cartel propping up Shiite terror-

visions. One, he is intervening to save his client in Syria, strongman Bashar al-Assad — and with him a new

a de facto ally of Adolf Hitler. Stalin signed a nonaggression pact with Nazi Germany on Aug. 23, 1939. That devil's agreement greenlighted the

Middle East Shiite axis of Iran, Iraq,

start of World War II just over a week later.

Syria and Russia. Putin says he wishes to destroy the terrorists of

proved nearly suicidal. Russia lost nearly 30 million soldiers and civilians on the Eastern Front during its four-year struggle against its onetime Nazi partner. True, the Red Army was respon-

Germany invaded neutral Poland sible for more than two-thirds of the

ists and lapdog dictatorships in the Middle East as it seeks to strong-arm moderate Sunni states and oil-export-

ing monarchies. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.

THOMAS

FRIEDMAN

Stay in the climate's sweet spot

w

ith both China and India

having just announced ma-

jor plans to curb their car-

bon emissions, the sound you hear is a tipping point tipping. Heading into the United Nations climate summit

meeting in Paris in December, all the world's largest industrial economies are now taking climate change more seriously. This includes the United States — except for some of the knuckleheads running to be our

next president, which is not a small problem. When, at CNN's GOP presidential

debate, moderator Jake Tapper read statements from Ronald Reagan's secretary of

s t ate George Shultz

(who drives an electric car powered by solar panels on his home's roof) about how Reagan urged industry to proactively address ozone depletion, and why Shultz believes we should be just as proactive today in dealing with climate change, he got the usual know-nothing responses. Sen. Marco Rubio said, "We' re not going to destroy our economy the way the left-wing government that we are under now wants to do,"

School ans on rough play hurt ki s Carlson, "is not the way they learn how to tag more gently. Continuing to tag is the way they learn to tag more gently." Good teachers will coach rather than punish kids who play rough. That may sometimes mean physically standing in for playmates

By Virginia Postrel Bloomberg View

N

o roughhousing. No superhero games. No turning your fingers — or your Pop-Tart — into amake-beli evegun.No tag.And certainly no dodgeball. Stories of zero-tolerance play-policing by schools are a well-established news genre. Most recently, parents in Washington state mounted a success-

to show a child when a tag is too hard

or a wrestling grip too tight. The law in Carlson's home state

of Georgia prohibits such good pedagogy, at least in child care centers. (School districts set their own policies.) This provision assumes ill effects contradicted by psychological

ful campaign to force the Mercer Island School District to reverse its ban

on playing tag during "unstructured playtime," or what used to be called

recess. In hisbackpedaling pressrelease, district superintendent Gary Piano puzzlingly insisted that "asking students to keep their hands and feet to themselves at all times, including deprive children of the very experirecess" wasn't a ban on tag. Perhaps ences they need to master peaceful he envisions tag by telepathy. social interactions. At any rate, Mercer Island isn't the Roughhousing is more than good first school district to prohibit tag and exercise. Psychological research it won't be the last. Bans on physical shows that it's essential to childhood contact and pretend violence are the development. Rowdy, physical play norm on U.S. school playgrounds. teaches kids to communicate verbal"The majority of school districts in ly and nonverbally; to take turns; to the U.S. have 'zero tolerance' policies

negotiate rules; and to understand

on 'any form of violence,"' says Jen- when they can use their full strength nifer Hart, who teaches early child- and when they need to hold back. It hood education at the University of may sometimes look like fighting but

the Sunshine Coast in Australia and

has published research on "playful aggression" among children. Kids who wrestle, pretend to fight, or play superheroesface punishment, as do

it isn' t. Kids smile and laugh, return voluntarily to the game, take turns in dominant roles, and wear distinctive

"play faces." In a chasing game like tag, children teacherswho tolerate such old-fash- "learn how their bodies move, how ioned antics. their playmates will respond when Behind these policies is the super- a changetothe game is made, how stitious belief that vigorous physical to negotiate these changes to games, contact and make-believe violence what to do when one of the chilwill beget immediate and future real dren falls, and how to express their physical harms — magical thinking thoughts to the others involved in the that fundamentally misunderstands game," writes Michelle Tannock in how children play and learn. Prohib- the Journal of Early Childhood Editing rough-and-tumble play doesn' t ucation, summarizing the developmake recess saferorkidsless aptto mental-psychology literature. When hurtothers.Tothecontrary,thebans she interviewed kids at two child care

Allison V. Smith /The New York Times file photo

centers in British Columbia, Tannock found that they all said rough-andtumble play was prohibited — yet they engaged in it anyway. "To simply forbid it is like telling children, 'We' re not going to let you

while Gov. Chris Christie opined of Shultz, "Listen, everybody makes a

mistake every once in a while." They sure do, and it's not Shultz, who has been wisely and courageously telling Republicans that the conservative thing to do now is to take out some insurance against cli-

mate change, because if it really gets rocking the results could be "catastrophic." Hurricane Sandy — likely amplified by warmer ocean waters — caused over $36 billion in damage to Christie's own state, New Jersey, in 2012.

But hey, "stuff happens." There was time when we could

research. And it often puts Carlson

tolerate this kind of dumb-as-wewanna-be thinking. But it's over. The next eight years will be critical for the world's climate and ecosystems, and if you vote for a climate skep-

in the peculiar position of giving

tic for president, you'd better talk to

training seminars that start with this warning: "What I'm about to teach

your kids first, because you will have

you to do today is illegal in the state of Georgia. However, I was asked by the

If you have time to read one book on this subject, I highly recommend

state of Georgia to present this train-

the new "Big World, Small Planet,"

ing to you." Educating teachers doesn't do any

by Johan Rockstrom, director of the Stockholm Resilience Center,

good, of course, if they can't use what

eat today, because the food might be

they learn.The zero-tolerance apcontaminated,'" said Frances Carlson, proach not only hampers children' s author of Big Body Play, a guide pub- education. It treats teachers not as lished by the National Association educational professionals but as pasfor the Education of Young Children. sive bystanders unable — or forbid"Children can't live without it, so they den — to make judgment calls, even do it in hiding." Over the past three in ridiculous cases. Take what hapdecades, as the research into its im- pened to Drew Johnson, now a high portance has mounted, the NAEYC school freshman, when he was a child has gone from hostile to supportive at Cumberland Elementary School in of full-body play. Unfortunately, laws Fishers, Indiana. One fall recess he and schools haven't kept up, hurting bent over and picked some dandelikids' development. ons.Forthatoffense,he served severSome kids are indeed prone to al days of lunchtime detention. When hurt others. "If you' ve ever watched a his shocked parents asked the pringroup of 4- or 5-year-olds play Duck, cipal what was wrong with such inDuck, Goose," says Carlson, "there' s nocuous behavior, she explained that always one child who, when it's his some kids had been throwing rocks turn or her turn, will not tag. They' ll atrecess.To make things easy on reslap." Socially and developmental- cess monitors, the school had simply ly behind their peers, the offending banned picking anything up from the childrenare those who most need ground — flowers induded. the lessons big-body play can teach. — VirginiaPostrel Keeping them from playing tag, says is a columnist for Bloomberg.

to answer to them later.

and Mattias Klum, whose stunning

photographs of ecosystem disruptions reinforce the urgency of the moment.

Rockstrom begins his argument with a reminder that for most of the Earth's 4.5-billion-year history its

climate was not very hospitable to human beings, as it oscillated between "punishing ice ages and lush warm periods" that locked humanity into seminomadic lifestyles. It's only been in the last 10,000

years that we have enjoyed the stable climate conditions allowing civilizations to develop based on agriculture that could support towns and cities. This period, known as the Holocene, was an "almost miracu-

lously stable and warm interglacial equilibrium, which is the only state of the planet we know for sure can

support the modern world as we know it." It finally gave us "a stable equilibrium of forests, savannahs,

coralreefs,grasslands, fish,mammals, bacteria, air quality, ice cover,

Rein in fantasy sports gambling websites Editor's note:The following editorial

Duel and DraftKings are encouragoriginally appeared in The New ing people to play daily and weekly York Times. fantasy games in which they comAnybody who has watched a foot- peteagainstdozens or hundreds of ball game on television recently has strangers on the Internet. seen adsforfantasy sports websites Players pay entry fees ranging that promisemultimillion-dollar con- from 25 cents to several thousand tests, cash prizes and testimonials dollars to win awards that go from a from people who claim to have won few dollars to more than $1 million. tens of thousands of dollars. The The most a player can lose is the entry companiesbehind these commer- fee; the player whose athletes collect cials say their games are harmless the most points, based on the athand perfectly legal. But it is hard to letes'performance, wins the top prize. believe that this is what Congress had There are also lesser payoffs. in mind when it exempted fantasy These companies have grown sports from a law that effectively out- rapidly with the help of aggressive lawed Internet gambling in 2006. advertising. Last year 41 million Fantasy sports have been around Americans and Canadians played for years. For most of their existence, fantasy sports, up from 27 million groups of friends played against in 2009, according to the Fantasy each otherover the course of several SportsTrade Association. Profesmonths. In fantasy sports, each play- sional leagues like the National

temperature, fresh water availability and productive soils." It "is our Eden," Rockstrom add-

ed, and now "we are threatening to push Earth out of this sweet spot,"

tive and result in the social problems

starting in the mid-1950s, when the Industrial Revolution reached most

ville Jaguars have set up cocktail

typically associated with gambling. One study published last year in the

tions and middle classes exploded.

lounges in their stadiums where fans

journal Addictive Behaviors found

Google. Football teams like the New England Patriots and the Jackson-

can play fantasy sports. that college students who played This boom has grown because fantasy sports were more likely to the Unlawful I n ternet Gambling have gambling-related problems Enforcement Act o f 2 006, which than other students. preventedpayment processors from What is worrisome is that some working with gambling websites, lawmakers, like Rep. Frank Pallone included an exemption for fantasy Jr., D-N.J., are using the growth of sports. At the time, however, most fantasy sports to push Congress to fantasy sports were the seasonlong, let states legalize conventional gamlow-stakes games friends played bling in sports. Late last year, the with each other, not the daily and commissioner of the NBA, Adam weekly games that companies are Silver, called for legalizing sports marketing now. betting. The companies argue that their The allure of profits from gamgames are legal under the laws of bling clouds otherwise rational most states because they are games minds. Giving people more ways to of skill, not chance, and they say they bet onthe outcomes of sports is sure don't allow people to play in the few to threaten the integrity of sports er assembles a hypothetical team of Basketball Association and Major states where the games are illegal. and create more gambling addicts, athletes. Points are calculated based League Baseball have invested in Because daily and weekly fantasy especially among young people who on how those athletes do in actual fantasy sports companies, as have games are so new, there are very few are already more likely to engage in games. Now companies like Fan- businesses like Comcast, Fox and studies on whether they are addic- risky behaviors.

of the rest of the globe and populaThat triggered "the great acceleration" of industrial and farming growth, which has put all of Earth' s

ecosystems under stress. The impacts now are obvious: "climate change, chemical pollution, air pollution, land and water degradation ... and the massive loss of species and habitats."

We' re sitting on these planetary boundaries right now, argues Rockstrom, and i f

t h ese systems flip

from one stable state to another, nature will be fine, but we will not be. "For the first time, we need to be

clever," says Rockstrom, "and rise to acrisisbefore ithappens,"before we cross nature's tipping points. Later will be too late. We elect a president who ignores this science at our peril. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


© www.bendbulletin.corn/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

BEST-SELLERS

Natural beauty and humanevil in 'Lost Canyon'

Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Oct.4. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "The Murder House" by Patterson/Ellis (Little, Brown,

$28)

2. "The Girl in the Spider' s Web" by David Lagercrantz (Knopf, $27.95) 3. "Come Rain orCome Shine" by JanKaron (Putnam, $27.95) 4. "After You" by Jojo Moyes Viking/Dorman ($26.95) 5."Make Me" byLeeChild (Delacorte, $28.99) 6. "Go Set aWatchman" by Harper Lee (Harper, $27.99) 7. "The Aeronaut's Windlass" by Jim Butcher (Roc, $27.95) 8. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead, $26.95) 9. "Pretty Girls" by Karin Slaughter (Morrow, $27.99) 10. "X" by SueGrafton (Putnam/Wood, $28.95) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "Killing Reagan" by O'Reilly/Dugard (Holt, $30) 2. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed,$16.99) 3. "Big Magic" by Elizabeth Gilbert (Riverhead, $24.95) 4. "Live Love Lead" by Brian Houston (Hachette/FaithWords, $24) 5. "Why Not Me?" by Mindy Kaling (Crown Archetype, $25) 6. "In This Together" by Ann Romney (St. Martin' s/Dunne, $27.99) 7. "The 20/20 Diet" by Phil

McGraw (Bird Street, $26) 8. "Furiously Happy" by Jenny Lawson (Flatiron, $26.99) 9. "Between theWorld and Me"byTa-NehisiCoates. (Random/Spiegel & Grau,$24) 10. "Rising Strong" by Brene Brown (Random/Spiegel 8 Grau, $27)

'Twilight' reimagined is a gender reversalfor vamp love By Tom Beer Newsday

" Twilight" f a n s a r e getting a surprise twist on the best-selling vampire romance. Last week, p ublisher L i t t le,

Brown

released a 10th anniversary edition of Stephenie

Meyer's novel with a special bonus: Meyer has w r i t-

Meyer

ten a n e arly 4 00- p a g e companion book, "Life and Death: Twilight Reimagined," which reverses the genders of the original book's lovers, Edward and

"Lost Canyon: ANovel" by Nina Revoyr (Akashic, 320 pages, $26.95) By Jim Higgins Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

In Nina Revoyr's novel

"Lost Canyon," three Angelenos join their mutual physical trainer for a backpacking trip through the Sierra Nevada mountains,

Kelly Blair / For The New York Times

o em n ar more an i ains

expecting (and privately fearing) to be pushed past their self-perceived limits. With hiking poles and bear spray, they' ve prepared for uncertain slopes and wildlife, but not for the least pre-

dictable of dangerous animals — man. Gwen, an African-Amer-

ican youth counselor in Watts, California, is worn

down from the daily struggle, including the suicide of a teen she helped. Oscar, a Latino real estate agent,

mulls a career switch that

By James ShapiroeNew York Times News Service

The Oregon Shakespeare Festival has decided that Shakespeare's language is too difficult for today' s audiences to understand. It recently announced that over the next three years, it will commission 36 playwrights to translate all of Shakespeare's plays into modern English. Many in the theater com-

COMMENTARY

they found in Shakespeare's advancement or p r omotion; language the clues to the per- Timon hates social climbers. day was coming, though it ly difficult; Shakespeare was sonalities of the characters. The wry sexual meaning of I' ve had a chance to look "erection," also present here, doesn't lessen the shock. The capturing a feverish mind at Oregon Shakespeare Festival work, tracing the turbulent over a prototype translation was secondary. But the new has been one of the stars in the arc ofa character's moralcri- of "Timon of A t hens" that translation ignores the social Shakespearefirmament since sis. Even if audiences strain to the O regon S hakespeare r esonance, turning the l i n e it was founded in 1935. While understand exactly what Mac- Festival has been sharing at into a sordid joke: Timon now the festival's organizers insist beth says, they grasp what workshops and readings for speaks of"the source of all that they also remain commit- Macbeth feels — but only if an the past five years. While the erections." ted to staging Shakespeare's actor knows what that charac- work of an accomplished playShakespeare borrowed alworks in his own words, they ter's words mean. wright, it is a hodgepodge, nei- most all his plots and wrote have set a disturbing preceTwo years ago I witnessed ther Elizabethan nor contem- for a theater that required only dent. Other venues, including a different kind of theatrical porary, and makes for dismal a handful of props, no scenthe Alabama Shakespeare experiment, in which Shake- reading. ery and no artificial lighting. F estival, th e U n iversity o f speare's "Much Ado About To u nderstand Shake- The only thing ShakespearUtah and O r l ando Shake- Nothing," in the original lan- speare's characters, actors ean about his plays is the speare Theater, have already guage, trimmed to 90 min- have long depended on the language. I' ll never undersigned on to produce some of utes, was performed before an hints of meaning and shad- stand why, when you attend these translations. audience largely unfamiliar ings of emphasis that he em- a Shakespeare production However well i n tended, with Shakespeare: inmates bedded in his verse. They will these days, you find listed in this experiment is likely to be at Rikers Island. The perfor- search for them in vain in the the program a fight director, a a waste of money and talent, mance was part of the Public translation: The music and dramaturge, a choreographer for it misdiagnoses the rea- Theater's Mobile Shakespeare rhythm of iambic pentameter and lighting, set and scenery son that Shakespeare's plays Unit initiative. are gone. Gone, too, are the designers — but rarely an excan be hard for playgoers to No inmates walked out on shifts — which allow actors to pert steeped in Shakespeare's follow. The problem is not the the performance, though they register subtle changes in in- language and culture. often knotty language; it' s were free to do so. They were timacy — between"you" and A t echnology entreprethat even the best directors deeply engrossed, many at the "thee." Even classical allusions neur's foundation is bankrolland actors — British as well edge oftheir seats,some cry- are scrapped. ing the Oregon Shakespeare as American — too frequently ing out at various moments Shakespeare's use of reso- Festival's new venture. I'd offer up Shakespeare's plays (much as Elizabethan audi- nance and ambiguity, defin- prefer to see it spend its monwithout themselves having a ences once did) and visibly ing features of his language, is ey hiring such experts and firm enough grasp of what his moved by what they saw. also lost in translation. For ex- enabling those 36 promising words mean. Did they understand every ample, in Shakespeare's orig- American playwrights to deClaims that Shakespeare's word? I doubt it. I'm not sure inal, when the misanthropic vote themselves to writing the language is u n i ntelligible anybody other than Shake- Timon addresses a pair of next Broadway hit like "Hamgo back to his own day. His speare, who invented quite a prostitutes and rails about how ilton," rather than waste their great rival, Ben Jonson, re- few words, ever has. But the money corrupts every aspect time stripping away what' s portedly complained about inmates, like any other audi- of social relations, he urges Shakespearean about "King "some bombast speechesof ence witnessing a good pro- them to "plague all, /That your Lear" or "Hamlet." 'Macbeth,' which are not to duction, didn't have to follow activity may defeat and quell / — James Shapiro, a professor be understood." Jonson failed the play line for line, because The source of all erection." A of English at Columbia,is the to see that Macbeth's dense the actors, and their director, primary meaning of "erection" author,most recently,of"TheYear soliloquies were intentional- knew what the words meant; for Elizabethans was social ofLear: Shakespearein 1606." munity have known that this

could mean more stable income but less status. Todd,

a white corporate attorney, feels trapped by his work and social obligations. Revoyr rotates through their points of view as they prepare for and commence the hike with Tracy, their buff and singularly intense guide. Being partly of Japanese ancestry, Tracy fills out this microcosm of Los

Angeles' diversity. Initially, each character eyes the others a bit skepti-

cally, sometimes through racial and ethnic lenses. They don't know what they don' t

know about each other. But being decent human beings, they revise early judgments as they see Gwen's skill with first aid, for example. At the ranger station, the

quartet learns the planned trailhas been dosed forfire

safety reasons. Suggesting other options, the ranger mentions "a real off-thebeaten-path kind of t rail"

with gorgeous alpine lakes. Apparently these four have not watched enough hor-

ror movies. Of course they take the trail less traveled,

which leads to spectacular views and unfortunately, some bad people who have a strong interest in keeping it less traveled. Revoyr's love for and detailed knowledge of the natural beauty of the canyons and mountains shines

through "Lost Canyon." In depicting the backpackers working together for survival, Revoyr may also be dramatizing the idea that

focusing together on shared dangers is one way to break out of straitjackets of racial and ethnic assumptions.

B ella.

In the new book, Bella becomes Beau, a human

boy who falls for a young female vampire, Edythe. "Life and Death" is packaged with e7wilight" as

a hardcover "flip book," which sells for $21.99. There are also e-book and audiobook editions for sale. In a statement released

A true-crime story, as told byone of the victims "The Valley ofthe Shadow of Death: A Tale ofTragedy and Redemption" by Kermit Alexander, Alex

Gerould and JeffSnipes (Atria, 331 pages, $26)

by Little, Brown, Meyer said that the new edition is

a "celebration of the fans, with all their incredible passion an d

d e dication.

I'm excited to get to spend time with them again." "Twilight" was the first

book in Meyer's wildly successful series, which has sold nearly 155 million combined copies worldwide and spawned the movie franchise starring Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson. It is cre d i te d w i t h

By Tony Perry Los Angeles Times

Three personalities are dominant in "The Valley of the Shadow of Death: A Tale

of Tragedy and Redemption" by former football star Kermit Alexander: Alexander himself;

his remarkable mother, Ebora "Madee" Alexander; and the

sociopathic gang member convicted of killing her and three other relatives. Written with San Francis-

launching the latest round of vampire mania in popu-

co State criminal justice professors Alex Gerould and Jeff Snipes, "Shadow" is a gripping story of a home-invasion mur-

lar culture.

der so senseless that it shocked

even crime-beset South Central able to provide much informa- was agonized by the idea that suit brought on by a nightdub Los Angeles in 1984. Alexan- tion to police. Kermit Alexan- members of his family sus- shooting. der's grief and then rage are der had been set to visit with p ectedthatsomehow,givenhis In "Shadow," Alexander and expressedin prosethatisspare his mother that morning to ce l ebrity status, he must have the professors have skillfully and direct. tell her about a new job — as a done something to provoke the woven the personal and painful True-crimestories abound, color commentator for football k i llers. with the public and political to but "Shadow" is a must-read games. Mayor Tom Bradley, a family deliver a compelling story of for anyone concerned with how The wantonness of friend, warned Alexan- the struggle of urban Ameridrugs and gangs ravaged Los the crime led to media; . . .-----"'- - d e r to let the police doca. Alexander's portrait of his E " Angeles, how the criminal jus- coverage. So too did their job. He called Po- mother is loving but nuanced. " tice system seemingly tortures the fact that Alexanlice Chief Daryl Gates She guided the family through the families of crime victims, der was among the into a meeting with the transition common to many oF n E„TH and how California's death city's most celebrated Alexander in the may- African American families ," ; . ,„„,.„ '-:" o r 's office. Alexander after World War II in the mirow is a world apart with its athletes: a local who hateful logic and propensity for rosefrom the projects k quotes Bradley telling gration from the South to Calviolence. in Watts to stardom at Gates at the end of ifornia. She and her husband On a warm morning in Au- UCLA and then with the meeting: "Find his divorced, but she kept their gust 1984, with Los Angeles the NFL's 49ers, Rams killers or I'm afraid children focused: "As my mothhe' ll turn into one." still pleased with itself for host- and Eagles. er matured she proved herself ing the Olympic Games, killers Weeks after the killings, Fin a lly, three local men were a natural leader, the head of stormed the Alexander home with the police stymied — and arrested. The motive remained the household who kept things and shot to death 59-year-old his own lack of trust in the o paque and, when explained, under control. But as was the Madee, Kermit's sister Dietra, LAPD rising — Alexander only brought more pain to the family way, when she ruled, 24, and his nephews Damon, scoured the streets for clues, family: Thekillershadgoneto she flashed a fierce temper. Dis8, and Damani, 13. Two other head-banging possible infor- t he wrong address when paid cipline had the feel of the Old relatives survived but were not mants when necessary. He t o k ill someone over a law- South."

®


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

COMMENTARY

F5

'Bac Fa s: I e Riseo I I 'is ri iant

io ra o a terrorist mastermin "Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS" by Joby Warrick (Doubleday, 368 pages, $28.95)

Sergei Grits /The AssociatedPress

Belarusian journalist and writer Svetlana Alexievich, the 2015 No-

bel Prize in Literature winner, was surrounded as she left a news conference in Minsk, Belarus, after her victory was announced last week. Prize judges called Alexievich's work "a monument to

suffering and courage."

Read Svetlana Alexievich; her

Nobel is deserved By Leonid Bershidsky Bloomberg View

prize of the Communist Youth Union. Her next effort, "Zinc

Political as the choice of

Boys," a harrowing study of

Svetlana Alexievich for t h e 2015 Nobel Prize in L itera-

what the Afghan war did to

ture may be, it doesn't make her excellent work any less

Soviet soldiers and those close to them, was nearly banned. "Chernobyl Prayer," too, is

valuable. It should be required reading for anyone

about death. It contains one

who wants to understand the

stories I have ever read, told by

of the most heart-rending love

plight of the hundreds of mil- the widow of a fireman who lions who still live in the shad- died of radiation sickness after ow of the Soviet Union. responding to the explosion at Alexievich, the first Rus- the nuclear plant. sian-speaking winner since I n th e 1 993 b oo k " B e Joseph Brodsky i n 1 987, witched by Death," one of her has long been a favorite for two attempts to understand the prize. That said, there' s the effect of the Soviet Union's a clear logic to choosing collapse on the minds and her now. Born i n w e stern souls of its people (the second Ukraine to a Ukrainian mother and a Belarusian father,

she is the closest thing to a strong Ukrainian author the Nobel committee could find,

one is "Second Hand Time," a

stronger, more mature book published in 2013), she explained the obsession: "What is our history? Look

though she considers herself Belarusian. She is also among the purest and fiercest critics of Russian President Vladi-

back, and we find ourselves

mir Putin. Her books docu-

w e are the people of w a r .

ic religious movement found- sued a video that showed him, ed by Zarqawi has eclipsed as the title explained, "slaughal-Qaida in influence, scale tering an American" named and ambition. It now threat- Nick Berg. The snuff video ens to remake the Middle shocked Americans. It also By Bob Drogin East. gave Zarqawithe confidence Los Angeles Times W arrick, a Pulitz e r to announce he would build Ahmad Fadil was a high Prize-winning reporter and a an Islamist super-group that school dropout, a video fluid writer, takes the tale back would erase international s tore clerk and a p e t t y to Zarqawi's early years. He borders, topple governments gangster who got tattoos, joined a warlord's militia in Af- and establish a c a l i phate. drank alcohol and sold ghanistan in 1989 and earned Even Bin Laden wasn't that drugs as a youth in Zarqa, his stripes as a mujahid — a audacious. U.S. authorities his hometown in northeast holy warrior. He then aligned increased the d ead-or-alive Jordan. himself with Osama bin Laden bounty for Zarqawi to $25 His m o ther w a s so and organized bombings and million — the same as for Bin alarmed she sent him to assassinations in Jordan that Laden. a Muslim self-help class, landed him in jail until an amBy 2005, Zarqawi had more and he soon found anoth- nesty in 1999. fighters, money and weapons er calling. By the time a Still, he was a minor figure than al-Qaida ever commandU.S. airstrike killed him in until then-U.S. Secretary of ed. Unlike Bin Laden and 2006, Abu Musab Zarqawi State Colin Powell addressed his aides, his followers were — Fadil's nom de guerre the United Nations in Febru- fighting and killing — had led the Sunni insur- ary 2003 to urge war against Americans every gency in Iraq that killed Iraq. In addition to other er- day in Iraq. And tens of thousands of peo- rors, Powell wrongly accused unlike Bin Laden's ple and humbled a global Saddam Hussein of harbor- ponderous video superpower by miring it in ing Zarqawi, showing his sermons, Zarqawi a vicious civil war. scowling bearded face on TV used the Internet Zarqawi - o r t h e screens around the world. The to bolster his rep"sheikh of t h e s laugh- speech "transformed Zarqawi utation as a fierce terers" as his admirers from an unknown jihadist to jihadist and outcalled him — also laid the an international celebrity and law warrior. He foundation for t h e S u n- the toast of the Islamist move- dressed in ninja n i extremist army n o w known as I slamic State,

ment," Warrick writes. After the U.S.-led 2003 in-

also called ISIS. Following his messianic beliefs and bloodlust, jihadis have beheaded captives, destroyed antiquities, reintroduced slavery and declared a

vasion, Zarqawi built a resistance network of embittered Iraqis and foreign jihadists. He sent suicide bombers to blow up embassies, hotels

a d h erents f r o m

Unfortunately, that's where the authoritative narrative in

"Black Flags" slows. Warrick has written a brilliant biog-

raphy of Zarqawi and a gripping account of the officials in Jordan, Washington and elsewhere who tracked his career and ultimately chased him down. It is less convinc-

ing at explaining the subsequent "rise of ISIS," as the title promises.

Zarqawi's death "changed everything," Warrick acknowledges. When not butch-

ering innocents, Islamic State officials now collect taxes, pump oil, fix potholes and run a quasi state, b ur e a u c r a t i c

tasks Z a rqawi never considered. More i m portant-

ly, Islamic State fighters have violated the first rule

of guerrilla warfare by holding and

and other Western targets, in-

ing robes, and posted g r i sly

American occupation. Then

his fighters began bombing and beheading Shiite Muslims and destroying their holy sites. As Zarqawi had hoped, it turned the anti-U.S. insurgency into a civil war between Shiites and Sunnis,

fighting for territory

— yet have stalemated the military might

images that attract-

ed thousands of young men who believed he was avenging Muslims for centuries of humiliation and defeat. To the surprise of U.S. in-

c a liphate cluding the U.N. headquarters in Iraq and Syria that has in Baghdad, to discredit the telligence officials, Zarqawi's

around the globe. Joby Warrick's "Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS" is invaluable for anyone struggling to understand

nearly a third of the country, including major cities, oil refineries, banks and military bases.

black, not flow-

strict I s lamist d rawn

bases and seized control of

death in June 2006 — thanks to a tip from Jordanian intel-

ligence — didn't destroy his movement. Eight years later, in the spring of 2014, Islamic State fighters surged back into the spotlight. Racing out

of scoresof countries, includ-

ing both the U.S. and Iran. Various reasons are offered

to explain the group's success — the multisided civil war in Syria, Sunni fury at the Shiite-led government in Baghdad, Iraqi army officers who switched sides, sophisticated

use of social media and so on. All are factors, but none is fully satisfying. Alas, there' s the g r uesome e xcesses time to search for an answer. and inexplicable appeal of of Syria into western Iraq, As this seminal book makes Islamic State. It has cycled a sectarian bloodletting that black-clad fighters routed alarmingly clear, Zarqawi's through several names still is playing out. four Iraqi army divisions, appalling legacy won't fade and leaders, but the fanatIn May 2004, Zarqawi is- overran a series of military any time soon

in a familiar realm of death.

A solemn and gloomy pantheon. Who are we'? — Well,

ment the woeful legacy of the We either fought or we preSoviet era, which Putin and pared to fight. We never lived Belarusian President Alexan- differently." der Lukashenko have tried to Alexievich sees this endrepaint in the gaudy colors of less war from a victim's perimperial glory. spective. There is an element Alexievich joins a v ery of a mournful wail to her small group of n onfiction prose, which strikes mew riters who have won t h e and I suspect many Russian p rize. A nother w a s A l e x - readers — as at once a little

ander Solzhenitsyn, whose

deranged and a little calcu-

victory told the Communist

lated. That said, it fits with a

leadership of the Soviet Union powerful Ukrainian tradition that the world knew the truth, of heroic victimhood. Alexo r would l ik e t o

k now it.

ievich's depiction of s uffer-

Alexievich's selection sends ing casts a big shadow that a similar message to Putin's makes her books disturbing Kremlin. and depressing. They' re a She doesn't see herself as a lot heavier than their brevity literary wizard — she has de- suggests. They' re also obligscribedherselfas "an ear,not atory reading to anyone who a pen." Her works are essen- wants to understand the criptially collections of interviews pling burdens of a post-Soviet with hundreds of ordinary identity. people. Reached by the SwedLike many people in the ish broadcaster SVT, she said

A hfagazine Highlighting the Vari ety of Organizations That Connect Your Community. 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

former Soviet Union, Alexiev-

being honored alongside such ich celebrated its fall, and she great Russian-language writ- hasn't welcomed Putin's aters as Ivan Bunin and Boris Pasternak was "a bit disturb-

tempts to revive it. In "Second Hand Time," she wrote:

more journalistic, a style that suits her Belarusian heritage

been brought back, there' s a Communist Youth Union,

as described in "Chernobyl

only under a different name,

ing." Alexievich's approach is

Prayer," her

"The old Soviet anthem has

s

-

s t ar k i n v esti- there's a party of power that

gation of the human conse- copies the Communist Party. quences of the world's worst The president has powers like nuclear disaster:

a general secretary.Absolute

ture is potatoes, we dig it, we plant it, and all the time we look down at the earth. Down!

dox Christianity." A month after Putin an-

ture. Then we take something

lent because it was no longer

from the Russian culture or

safe to protest. So the abnor-

the Polish one. Now when we

mal, Soviet Russia was on

"We are people of the earth, power. M a r xism-Leninism not of the sky. Our monocul- has been replaced with Orthonexed Crimea, Alexievich And if a person should raise condemned themove in an anhis head, it will be to look no gry column for the Frankfurthigher than a stork's nest. er Allgemeine. In it, she noted Even that is high for him, that glumly that "normal Russia" is his sky. There is no sky that — the one that didn't celebrate they call cosmos in our cul- the land grab — remained si-

of organizations and thousands Of volunteers

make up this nonprofit network. 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.

get a Tolstoy, a Pushkin, we' ll a rampage. "Will the West understand something about accept this Russia or push it away?" she wondered. ourselves." Alexievich's Nobel offers Instead, th e B e l arusians and all the post-Soviet Rus- an answer. The West has resian speakers — about 300

jected Putin's Russia, but not

million of us — got Alexiev- Russians — all of us for whom ich, who finds it hard to lift Russian is the mother tongue. her eyes from an earth dotted

with graves. She made hername with "War Doesn't Have a Wom-

an's Face," a collection of women's stories from World

H er voice is one f rom t h e

fringes of the former empire, which Moscow is again beginning to see as its own. It's a pessimistic but truthful voice. If the Nobel committee wants

War II. It squeaked by censor- to tell the Russian-speaking ship in 1985 in part because world that it will survive Puthe Soviet myth of victory tinism as it survived Commua llowed B e larusians, w h o nism, I get the message and I

barely survived the war as an appreciate it. So, I hope, will ethnic group, a voice as au- Western readers. thorities on the suffering that

went with the glory. It even won Alexievich the annual

— Leonid Bershidsky, a Bloomberg View contributor, is a Berlin-based writer.

ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS The Bulletin is in theprocess ofverifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon.Pleasefill out this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail backto: The Bulletin, Attn: Kari MaIISer, P.O.BOX6020, Bend, OR 97708. E-mail infarmatian IOCOIIIIeCtiOIIS©belldbillletin.COmOr Call 541-383-0379 Name of Nonprofit Group Contact Person

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F6 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015

Recycling Continued from F1 The future for recycling looks even worse. As cities move beyond recycling paper and metals, and into glass,

"If you believe recycling is good for the planet and that we need to do more of it, then there's a crisis to confront. Trying to turn garbage into gold costs a lot more than expected. We need to ask ourselves: What is the goal here?"

mating the sorting process, but they' ve been frustrated by politicians eager to increase recycling rates by adding new materials of little val-

ue. The more types of trash — David Steiner, CEO of Waste Management, the country's largest recycler of household trash that are recycled, the more

food scraps and assorted plastics, the costs rise sharply

lic officials keep vowing to do more of it'? Special-interest politics is one reasonpressure from green groups — but it's also because recycling intuitively appeals to many voters: It makes people

difficult it becomes to sort the feel virtuous, especially afvaluable from the worthless. fluent people who feel guilty

while the environmental ben-

In New York City, the net

efits decline and sometimes

cost of recycling a ton of

vanish.

trash is now $300 more than it would cost to bury the trash

"If you believe recycling is good for the planet and that we need to do more of it, then

instead. That adds up to millions of extra dollars per year — about half the budget of the parks department — that New Yorkers are spending for the privilege of recycling. That money could buy

there's a crisis to confront," said David Steiner, the chief

executive officer of Waste Management, the largest re-

cycler of household trash in the United States. "Trying to turn garbage into gold costs a lot more than expected. We

far more valuable benefits,

about their enormous environmental footprint. It is less an ethical activity than a reli-

gious ritual, like the ones performed by Catholics to obtain indulgences for their sins. Religious rituals don't need

any practical justification for the believers who perform them voluntarily. But many

recyclers want more than just the freedom to practice their

including more significant religion. They want to make reductions in g r eenhouse these rituals mandatory for

need to ask ourselves: What

emissions.

is the goal here?"

So what is a socially con- fines for sinners who don' t scious, sensible person to do? sort properly. Seattle has beIt would be much simpler come so aggressive that the and more effective to impose city is being sued by residents the equivalent of a carbon who maintain that the inspectax on garbage, as Thomas tors rooting t h rough t h eir C. Kinnaman has proposed trash are violating their cona fter conducting what i s stitutional right to privacy. probably the most thorough It would take legions of comparison of t h e s ocial garbage police to enforce a costs of recycling, landfilling zero-waste society, but true

How muchgood? Recycling has been relentlessly promoted as a goal in and of itself: an unalloyed public good and private vir-

r i

tue that is indoctrinated in

students from kindergarten through college. As a result, otherwise wel l -informed and educated people have no idea of the relative costs and

benefits. They probably don't know,

Thinsktock

next 1,000 years would fit on carbon emissions, you' ll ac- one-tenth of I percent of the

paper, cardboard and metals

complish a lot more by sorting paper and aluminum cans than by worrying about yogurt containers and half-eaten slices of pizza. Most people also assume that recycling

cans. That's because recycling I ton of metal or paper

for instance, that to reduce

plastic bottles must be doing lots for the planet. They' ve

land available for grazing. And that tiny amount of land

wouldn't be lost forever, because landfills are typically covered with grass and converted to parkland, like the Freshkills Park being created on New York City's Staten

like the aluminum in soda saves about 3 tons of carbon

dioxide, a much bigger payoff than the other materials

analyzed by the EPA. Recycling I ton of plastic saves only slightly more than I ton

ronmental Protection Agency, which assures the public that

food saves a little less than a ton. For glass, you have to increasing while the real cost recycle 3 tons in order to get of raw materials has been about I ton of greenhouse d eclining. That's why w e

carbon being released into the

ings and other environmental

atmosphere. safeguards required today. But how much difference Though most cities shun does it make'? Here's some landfills, they have been welperspective: To offset the comed in rural communities greenhouse impact of one that reap large economic passenger's round-trip flight benefits (and have plenty of between New York and Lon- greenery to buffer residents don, you'd have to recycle from the sights and smells). roughly 40,000 plastic bot- Consequently, the great landtles, assuming you fly coach. fill shortage has not arrived, If you sit in business, or first- and neither have the shortagclass, where each passenger es of raw materials that were takes up more space, it could supposed to make recycling be more like 100,000. profitable. Even those statistics might

be misleading. New York and other cities instruct people to

believers insist that's the fu-

an economist at Bucknell

ture. When de Blasio promised to eliminate garbage

U niversity, c onsidered e v -

erything from environmental damage to the pleasure that trimmings, textiles, rubber, some people take in recycling leather — is only two-tenths (the "warm glow" that makes of I percent of America's car- them willing to pay extra to bon footprint. do it). He concludes that the soW hy it' sso expensive cial good would be optimized As a business, recycling by subsidizing the recycling is on the wrong side of two of some metals, and by imlong-term global econom- posing a $15 tax on each ton ic trends. For centuries, the of trash that goes to the landreal cost of labor has been fill. That tax would offset the

of carbon dioxide. A ton of

recycling plastic results in less one that never had the lin-

and incineration. Kinnaman,

— plastics, glass, food, yard

been encouraged by the Envi- Island. The U.S. Open tennis tournament is played on the site of an old landfill — and

benefits. Worst of all is yard waste: it takes 20 tons of it to

" z ero w aste" ations have their own envipolicy, which would require ronmental costs, like extra

trucks on the road and pollution from recycling operations. Composting facilities

around the country have inspired complaints about nauseating odors, swarming rats and defecating sea gulls. After New York City start-

about 35 percent of the na- ed sending food waste to be tion's trash was worth recy- composted in Delaware, the cling, but some ignored him unhappy neighbors of the and set goals of 50 percent composting plant successand higher. Most o f t h o se fully campaigned to shut it goals were never met, and the down last year. national rate has been stuck The environmental benearound 34 percent in recent fits of recycling come chiefyears. ly from reducing the need to "It makes sense to recycle manufacture new productscommercial cardboard and less mining, drilling and logsome paper, as well as se- ging. But that's not so appeallected metals and plastics," ing to the workers in those he says. "But other materials industries and to the commurarely make sense, including nities that have accepted the food waste and other com- environmental trade-offs that postables. Th e z e r o-waste come with those jobs. goal makes no sense at all Nearly everyone, though, — it's very expensive with al- approves of one potential most no real environmental benefit of recycling: reduced benefit." emissions of greenhouse gas-

Landfills: a badrap

es. Its advocates often cite an estimate by the EPA that re-

One of the original goals of the recycling movement was

cycling municipal solid waste

to averta supposed crisisbe-

equivalent of 186 million met-

cause there was no room left in the nation's landfills. But

ric tons of carbon dioxide,

that media-inspired fear was

never realistic in a country with so much open space. In reporting the 1996 article I

years, and it's still the easi-

est and cheapest solution for trash. The recycling movement is floundering, and its

policing. How can you build a sustainable city with a strat-

can afford to buy so much

to make a guilt-free choice

save a single ton of carbon dioxide. Once you exclude paper products and metals, the total

more stuff than our ancestors could. As a labor-intensive activity, recycling is an increasinglyexpensive way to produce materials that are

based on local economics egy that can't even sustain and its citizens' wishes. The itself?

annual savings in the United

less and less valuable.

result, Ki nnaman p r edicts,

would be a lot less recycling than there is today.

States from recycling everyRecyclers have tried to im- Political pressure thing else in municipal trash prove the economics by autoThen why do so many pub-

— John Tierney is the writer of the Findings column for The New York Times Science section and co-author of the book "Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength."

PROVIDENCE Health Plan

that there are indeed such

ing toward a

ston Porter. He advised state officials that no more than

But cities have been burying garbage for thousands of

ual subsidies, sermons and

e c onomic r a -

single omission can make a benefits to recycling, but not big differ ence, according to in the way that many people Chris Goodall, the author of imagine. "How to Live a Low-Carbon Most of these benefits do Life." Goodall calculates that not come from reducing the if you wash plastic in water need for landfills and incinthat was heated by coal-de- erators. A modern well-lined r ived electricity, t hen t h e landfill in a rural area can net effect of your recycling have relatively little environcould be more carbon in the mental impact. Decomposing atmosphere. garbage releases methane, a To many public officials, re- potent greenhouse gas, but cycling is a question of moral- landfill operators have startity, not cost-benefit analysis. ed capturing it and using it to Mayor Bill de Blasio of New generate electricity. Modern York declared that by 2030 incinerators, while politicalthe city would no longer send ly unpopular in the United any garbage to landfills. States, release so few pollut"This is the way of the fu- ants that they' ve been widely ture if we' re going to save our acceptedin the eco-conscious Earth," he explained while countries of Northern Europe announcing that New York and Japan for generating would join San Francisco, Se- clean energy. attle and other cities in movMoreover, recycling operan unprecedented levelof re cycling. The national rate of recycling rose during the 1990s to 25 percent, meeting the goal set by an EPA official, J. Win-

sustainable city."

survival depends on contin-

tionale gone, advocates for ting them in the recycling recycling have switched to bin, but the EPA's life-cycle environmental a r guments. calculation doesn't take that Researchers have calculated a c c ount. T h a t

"ludicrous" and "outdated" to keep sending garbage to landfills. Recycling, he declared, was the only way for New York to become "a truly

ly the greenhouse impact, and allow each municipality

rinse the bottles before put-

w ater i nt o

in New York, he said it was

environmental costs, chief-

Environmental benefits W ith t h e

everyone else, too, with stiff

in the United States saves the

comparable to removing the emissions of 39 million cars. According t o

t h e E P A 's

estimates, virtually all the greenhouse benefits — more

found that all the trash gen- t han 9 0 p e rcent — c o m e erated by Americans for the from just a few materials:

i

r

r

Get a better view of your health insurance options. Learn about the plan that fits you best. Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend Wednesday, Oct. 14, 1:30 p.m. Wednesday,Oct. 28, 1:30 p.m. Best Western 16515 Reed Road, LaPine Thursday, Oct. 15, 1:30 p.m.

Redmond Senior Center 325 NW Dogwood Ave., Redmond Wednesday, Oct. 21, 1:30 p.m.

Sisters Parks and Recreation 1750 SW McKinney Butte Road, Sisters Thursday, Oct. 22, 10 a.m. Best Western 1475 NE Third St., Prineville Thursday, Oct. 29, 1:30 p.m.

Call us for information or a personal appointment at 855-21Q-1 588 (TTY:711) or visit us at

www. ProvidenceHealthPlan.corn/centraloregon. Service is available between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. seven days a week (Pacific time).

Better you. Better world.

Providence Health Plan is an HMO and HMO-POS plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in Providence Health Plan depends on contract renewal. A sales person will be present with information and applications. For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings call 1-855-210-1 588 (TTY: 711).

H9047 2016PHP33 ACCEPTED


The Bulletin

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 208

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325

Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Bicycles & Accessories

Health & Beauty Items

Misc.Items

Heating 8 Stoves

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Hay, Grain 8 Feed

e

Four padded card table NOTICE TO First Quality green grass $49 for a ll. ADVERTISER hay, no rain, barn stored, G iant Talon 1 2 9 e r Got Knee Pain? Back chairs, FREE horse manure, $250/ton. Since September 29, a ged, yo u hardtail, small, excel- Pain? Shoulder Pain? 541-382-3487 hau l Call 541-549-3831 1991, advertising for 541-704-5259 lent condition, $625. Get a pain-relieving How fo avoid scam Patterson Ranch, Sisters used woodstoves has 541-408-1676 brace -little or NO cost and fraudattempts been limited to modto you. Medicare PaFor newspaper German shepherd 242 els which have been Estate SaleTURN THE PAGE tients Call Health Hot- s/Be aware of internadelivery, call the puppies, AKC, our tional fraud. Deal locertified by the OrExercise Equipment 202 Cash only! line No w ! 1Circulation Dept. at For More Ads bloodlines make all cally whenever posegon Department of Bedroom set: double 800-285-4609 541-385-5800 Want to Buy or Rent the difference! The Bulletin sible. Environmental Qual- To place an ad, call Elliptical cross trainer, (PNDC) bed w/headboard & win dridgek9.corn sI Watch for buyers ity (DEQ) and the fedmattress, 3 drawer needs repaired, $20. 541-385-5809 Wanted: $cash paid for 249 who offer more than eral E n v ironmental Quality o rchard/grass dresser w / m irror, 541-382-9684 or email vintage costume jewyour asking price and Protection A g e n cy claeeified@bendbulletin.corn mix $225-$245 ton, Find exactly what nightstand, SOLD. Art, Jewelry elry. Top dollar paid for 245 who ask to have small bales, between (EPA) as having met table: 4' Gold/Silver. I buy by the you are looking for in the Breakfast & Furs Golf Equipment money wired or smoke emission stanThe Bulletin Bend Redmond, del. round oak, seats 4+ Serving Central Oregon since ata Estate, Honest Artist CLASSIFIEDS handed back to them. dards. A cer t ified avai. 541-280-7781 leaf seats 6, 4 upElizabeth,541-633-7006 Beautiful 1.50 c a rat CHECKYOUR AD Fake cashier checks woodstove may be holstered ch a i rs, r ing, r ecently a p - and money orders Wheat Straw for Sale. Havanese male,flu ff y SOLD. identified by its certifi205 praised at $15,400. Also, weaner pigs. w hite, 13 w k s o l d , Dining are common. cation label, which is room: Asking $10,400 obo. YNever give out per541-546-6171 Items for Free looking for a happy 76 nx18 n dark wood permanently attached + Peat Mixes 541-617-0846 family! D e wormed. buffet, $300. 72nx42n sonal financial inforto the stove. The Bul+ Juniper Ties FREE horse manure, $900. 503-516-2160. letin will not knowmation. beautiful glass din253 + Paver Discounts Looking for your a ged, yo u hau l thrust your instincts ingly accept advertising room table, 8 on the first day it runs + Sand + Gravel next employee? Jack Chi-Weenie Minis, upholstered chairs, TV, Stereo 8 Video 541-704-5259 ing for the sale of and be wary of + Bark to make sure it is corPlace a Bulletin 7 weeks old. o n e uncertified someone using an Instantlandscaptntt.corn I rect. nSpellcheckn and DIRECTV Starting at help wanted ad male, two f e males $400. 541-504-8228 woodstoves. escrow service or 541-389-9663 human errors do oc- $19.99/mo. FREE InNotice to our $ 300 Call o r t e x t today and agent to pick up your Q G ENERATE SOM E cur. If this happens to s tallation. FREE 3 360-932-4054 valued readers! reach over 267 merchandise. EXCITElllENT in your your ad, please con- months o f 270 HBO 60,000 readers Fuel & Wood Looking for a adult male neighborhood! Plan a tact us ASAP so that S HOWTIME CIN - The Bulletin For newspaper Lost & Found each week. golden retriever, prefgarage sale and don' t Serving Central Oregon since 190S corrections and any EMAX, STARZ. FREE delivery questions, Your classified ad erably to stud with my forget to advertise in adjustments can be HD/DVR U p grade! please call the FOUND mens jacketon WHEN BUYING will also female. Good natured classified! made to your ad. 2015 NF L S u nday Stillman R oa d in Circulation Dept. Tick, Tock appear on FIREWOOD... 541-385-5809. and papered. 541-385-5809 Ticket Included (Seat 541-385-5800 Powell Butte, call to bendbulletin.corn 541-410-1991 lect Packages) New To avoid fraud, identify. 541-420-2211 NEED TO CANCEL The Bulletin Classified Tick, Tock... which currently Onl y . The Bulletin To place an ad, call Maremma guard dog YOUR AD? "LIKE NEW" Adam' s C ustomers Found whitepet mouse receives over ...don't let time get CALL 1-800-410-2572 recommends pay541-385-5809 The Bulletin Idea Combo i rons. pup, purebred, $350 on Robinwood Place, 1.5 million page ment for Firewood (PNDC) or email Classifieds has an 3 -4-5 H . B . 6-P W away. Hire a 541-546-6171 541-350-2241 views every only upon delivery classified @bend"After Hours"Line GRPH S R sh a fts,D ish Network - G e t professional out month at no and inspection. LOST: Red prescripbulletin.corn Call 541-383-2371 $360 obo. M ORE fo r LE S S ! extra cost. of The Bulletin's • A cord is 128 cu. ft. tion glasses, square 24 hrs. to cancel 951-454-2561 Starting $19.99/month 4' x 4' x 8' Bulletin The Bulletin P eople g iving p e t s shaped, around NE your ad! "Call A Service Serving Cennel Oregon slnte ata (for 12 months.) PLUS 246 • Receipts should Purcell/Bilyeu on Sun. Classifieds away are advised to Sofa, custom construcBundle & SAVE (Fast Professional" include name, 13th. 541-410-9472 Get Results! Guns, Hunting selective about the tion, cream color, 86". Internet f o r $15 phone, price and NORDIC-TRAK Ski be Call 541-385-5809 Directory today! & Fishing new owners. For the $150. 541-318-1912 more/month.) CALL kind of wood machine (needs fix- protection of the anior place your ad Now 1-800-308-1563 New patio set, green, purchased. ing) n e a r Ja k e 's mal, a personal visit to WHIRLPOOL CABRIO Trigger Happy Guns on-line at (PNDC) REMEMBER: If you couch, 2 cha i rs, • Firewood ads Diner. 541-317-1196 and d r yer, bendbulletin.corn the home is recom- washer (Cash for guns) have lost an animal, never used, still in $100. 541-279-0591 MUST include mended. 541-526-0617, Bend 255 don't forget to check species & cost per FIND IT! boxes. $1000 for both. Computers The Humane Society 340 rounds of empty Antique wicker baby cord to better serve 383 BiIY f7' The Bulletin bassinet/buggy, $100. brass for .270 cal. Serving Centrel Cregen sinceteat Bend our customers. Produce & Food SELL ITfi T HE B U LLETIN r e 541-382-3537 Call 541-408-9813, or $55. 541-382-8462 POODLE pupa, The Bulletin Classifieds quires computer adRedmond 706-851-7881 CASH!! THOMAS ORCHARDS toy or mink vertisers with multiple SengngCentref Oregon sinte ala 541-923-0882 For Guns, Ammo & Kimberly,Oregon 541-475-3889 208 ad schedules or those Madras The Bulletin Reloading Supplies. Patio table bistroREADY-PICKED selling multiple sys541-475-6889 Pets & Supplies recommends extra ' 541-408-6900. QueenslandHeelers chairs, Aff year Dependable Apples from bin tems/ software, to dis- style, and 2 tallnx32n Prineville Standard 8 Mini, $150 I caution when pur- Colt .44-40 Frontier Six close the name of the table top is 32 Firewood: dry 65tt lb. 541-447-71 78 chasing products or s Lodgepole,split, del, & up. 541-280-1537 made of synthetic Granny Smith, Fuji, Shooter 1892, $3,400 business or the term The Bulletin recomor Craft Cats services from out of I 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . granite, legs are n B. German Luger "dealer" in their ads. JonaGold, Ambrosia, mends extra caution www.rightwayranch.wor l the area. Sending l 4aAe 541-389-8420 Multi-cord discounts! dpress.corn Pinata, Cameo, Red & P -08 9mm 1914 2 when purc hasPrivate party advertis- metal, stands 32" tall. cash, ' cash, checks, o r ' check, Visa, MC nB Good cond., $89 obo Golden Delicious. magazines, $800. 4 ing products or ser- Yorkie AKC pups, 1F, I credit i n f ormation ers are defined as 541-420-3484, Bend 541-419-6408 541-233-3'I 56. vices from out of the those who sell one BRING CONTAINERS! 3M, tiny, cute, UDT may be subjected to area. Sending cash, shots, health guar., pics, I FRAUD. For more computer. NEW FALLHOURS Ponderosa pine Take care of checks, or credit in- $850/up. 541-777-7743 information about an l IONII%%5 OPEN THURS.-MON., firewood split, 257 f ormation may be your investments you may l 10-4, closedTues. 8 $160 or trade. subjected to fraud. Yorkie pup, 9 wks. old, i advertiser, Musical Instruments call t h e Ore g oni with the help from 541-419-1871 Vyed.541-934-2870. For more i nforma- female, AKC, $850. ' State DO YOU HAVE Atto r ney ' tion about an adver- 541-241-0518 SOMETHING TO THE FRUIT BASS GUITAR The Bulletin's + I General's O f fi ce 269 SELL FOR $500 tiser, you may call SOUNDGEAR by WILL CLOSE FOR "Call A Service Consumer Protec• the O regon State OR LESS? Gardening Supplies 210 Ibanez 4-string, black THE SEASON, t ion ho t l in e at i 308 Attorney General' s Furniture & Appliances I 1-877-877-9392. exc. cond., with pre- Professional" Directory & Equipment + SAT. OCT. 31st Office C o n sumer Non-commercial mium padded case, Farm Equipment tye are st the Bend Protection hotline at may strap and amplifier. Pilates Power Gym Pro, i The Bulletin l advertisers & Machinery Farmer'sitfarket 1-877-877-9392. place an ad BarkTurfSeil.cern $285. Fender electric new, extras. $200 7 piece be droom Serving Central Oregon sincefgle on Wednesdays. with our guitar, Squire Strat & OBO. 541-408-0846 set, $350. 1 roll top Tractor Kubota diesel, The Bulletin "QUICK CASH us on Facebook case, $199. Vintage Reduce Your Past Tax PROMPT DELIVERY desk & chair, $300. 212 w/front loader, 18HP, Visitfor ServingCentral Oregen sinceage updates! SPECIAL" banjo, 5-string, new 1 hall tree, $200. 2 542-389-9663 4WD, $5800. Antiques 8 Bill by as much as 75 1 week3!ines 13 keys & strings, $150. Percent. Stop Levies, leather chair reclin541-385-4759 Collectibles ot' 541-385-4790. Adopt a great cat or e rs, $ 30 0 bo t h . Liens and Wage Gartwo! A ltered, vacci- 541-504-9945 ~ee eke e a nishments. Call The 22nd Annual Christmas Valley Community Church 260 11 Yolando Bello dolls Ad must nated, ID chip, tested, Tax DR Now to see if w/display case, exc. include price of more! CRAFT, 65480 Misc. Items Qualify you $95. 541-542-2891 n~nle iem ni tenn 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 1-800-791-2099. or less, or multiple 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 Beautiful ceiling fan w/ (PNDC) 4 0 pic. frames + 5 0 items whose total www.craftcats.org t/a barnwood. 4 swivel lights, $50. prints, does not exceed Sell your s t ructured 541-389-9377 $125/all 541-546-2891 Cans 8 bottles wanted! $500. settlement or annuity Pair antique l amps, Bernina 180, incls. all payments for CASH They make a big difembroidery accesso- NOW. 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Base is an old Lionel/American Flyer Free Private PartyAds oak dock capstan. trains, accessories. • 3 lines - 3 days Huge estate sale in La Very unique piece, 541-408-2191. Pine, Oct. 9th-11th, ** FREE ** reduced! Howa • Private Party Only could sell separately. Price 9-5, for Hope Lein- Garage Sale Kit 1500 300 Win. Mag. BUYING 8i SE LLING • Total of items adver$359. Also Vintage b ach at t h e b l u e Place an ad in The New, never f i red. gold jewelry, silver tised must equal $200 wash bowl 8 pitcher building behind the li- B ulletin fo r Wood stock, stainless Alland yo u r gold coins, bars, or Less set, white & light blue brary by the women of sale and receive a barrel an d a c t ion. rounds, wedding sets, FOR DETAILS or to with gold trim. $79. the Moose, La Pine G arage Sale K i t Great deer or elk gun, class rings, sterling silPLACE AN AD, See more pix at chapter 1851. bargain priced-wife ver, coin collect, vin- Call 541-385-5809 FREE! bendbulletin.corn says sell $599 Call tage watches, dental CARS & TRACTORS Fax 541-385-5802 541-419%408 KIT INCLUDES: 541-389-3694, leave gold. Bill Fl e ming, 284 (See website for details or call Tim, 541-419-8125) 263 • 6 Garage Sale message. 541-382-9419. Need help fixing stuff? Signs Sales Southwest Bend Tools Case LA Tractor ' john Deere Model A ' 1923 Fordson ' D7 3T Call A Service Professional Ruger SR-556c • $2.00 Off Coupon find the help you need. (AR-15), Folding Caterpillar ' Case Model C ' Misc Horse Drawn Implements ' Old Iron Moving sale! P lants, To Use Toward 14n Jet bandsaw, runs www.bendbulletin.corn battle sights, Picatpottery, and wine. Sat. Your Next Ad Farm Equipment ' 1954 Dodge Pickup Restored ' Polaris 500 Sportsman g ood, $ 30 0 o b o . inny Rails, 2 Magpul 10th & S u n . 1 1 t h, • 10 Tips For WANTED: Old Fishing 30-rd Pmags, Slide 541-504-4038 4x4, Winch, Snowplow, Toolbox ' 250TXC Husqvarna Dirt Bike "Garage Sale 10-5. 19940 Poplar Lures and/or Tackle Fire "Full Auto" Stock, C hicago pheumatic 4.5n Success!" St., corner of Granite Boxes. 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Call Rob dler Ave., Bend, OR Wheeled Wheelbarrow ' Butter Churn ' Hand Crank Wall Telephone ' Sales Northeast Bend 541-234-4644 66" dia. 20" high 97702 Private collector buying Tonka Toys ' Toy Tractors ' Antique Washing Machines ' Boat Motors ' 541-385-5809 New Smaller Cover postagestamp albums & Extension ladder, morWaffen Bennewitz collections, world-wide Wooden Anti ue Desk'Old Water Pum ' Guns tar mixer, assorted The Bulletin For Owner - $3000 classic mauser and U.S. 573-286-4343 tools, power washer, Serrrng Central Oregnn srnre r903 $1800 mountain rifle, as (local, cell phone). dog run, pickup rack, HOUSEHOLD R MISCELLANEOUS new, $600. 541-480-7823 MARK V SHOPtable saw, spider box, 240 Ithaca single barrel 288 Quilts ' Tables ' Mirrored Oak Buffet ' Yard Art ' Sea Eagle Raft Richard 70 In.ft.decorative iron SMITH Model 510 trap shotgun, very fence cement tools, Sales Southeast Bend • Crafts & Hobbies bandsaw, scrollsaw, ' Kitchen Hoosier Style Cabinet ' Coins ' Alfalfa Hay ' Iron Bed nice, $650. stakes, misc. 64350 Cowboy boots: Tony strip sander, thick541-548-3408 Frame n Aluminum Folding Loading Ramps ' Tripod n primitive Crafters Wanted Deschutes Mkt Road Garage/moving s a le. planer, dust colLama, black. sz 9, exc ness Final Open Jury 541-410-1390. lector, support table, 20615 Couples Ln. Wooden Cabinet ' Trunks $54. 541-330-9070 WANTED: Collector Mon. Oct. 19th, lathe chisel set, ringSunday, 11-? Sale is 6:00 p.m. seeks high quality fish- DID YOU KNOW that master, wall mount- And Much More!! 'Ihis is a partial list. Updated auction items in alley i n c o rner ing items 8 upscale fly not only does news- ing brackets for storHighland Baptist house garage. Have an item to Church, Redmond. rods. 541-678-5753, or and pictures added daily on website, or call for auction list. paper media reach a a ge, s et-up a n d sell quick? 503-351-2746 Moving Sale: Sat. and Jan 541-350-4888, HUGE Audience, they operation m a nuals. www.christmasvalleycommunitychurdt.corn Sun. 9-6. household Tina 541-447-1640 a lso reach an E N- $2,500. 541-383-7124 If it's under 247 items furniture.. 1043 www.snowflakebouGAGED AUDIENCE. '500you can place it in Sporting Goods 265 SE Valleywood Place tique.org Discover the Power of For more information call Andrea, - Misc. Newspaper Advertis- Building Materials The Bulletin 290 ing in five states - AK, 541-829-1159 or Janette, 541-420-2859. Classifieds for: Sales Redmond Area 1970 Pool table, like ID, MT, OR & WA. For Bend Habitat Poltshers • Saws new. Balls and 4 cue a free rate brochure RESTORE All proceeds go to the mission field. No outside booths. Cash or '13 - 3 lines, 7 days Garage Sale, Fri.- Sun., sticks included. Slate call 916-288-6019 or Building Supply Resale bankable checks day of sale please. Credit cards accepted with email 541-312-6709 g20 -3 lines 14 days 8 -? ,2335 NW 21st Ct. Repair &Supplies top, felt is in new Glassware, s heets, s condition. $750. elizabeth Ocnpa.corn 224 NE Thurston Ave. processing fee. Donations joyfully accepted. (priyatepartyadsonly) household 8 tools. 541-388-6910 Open to the public. (PNDC)

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Fall Festival Br Auction Saturday, October 17, 2015


G2 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

T HE N E W

YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D

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54 "A deal on Afro wrgs? 00Commercial lead-in to Balls or Caps 63"Couldn't be" 64 Not so awesome 65Court positions 66In need of a cracker, perhaps 6SListen to Christmas carolers? 72 Slipshod 73Overlook 74 Multiple-choice options 75Justice Kagan 77 Post-op locale 78 Cold War-era territory: Abbr. 80 'How actor Bill feels about houseguests? 86 Hershiser of the 1980s-'90s Dodgers 87 Cannabis (marijuana) SS Chicago suburb 82Removes from a can? 85**Find cake or Jell-0 in the back of the fridge' ? 87 Hunger SS Drawbridge locale 100The Spartans of the N.C.A.A. 101PBS benef actor 102And other stuff 105Misconstrue, as words 109Other side of a childish debate ... or a phonetic hint to the answers to the four double-starred clues 113*Fall colors? 117Talk down?

120Yawnfest 121**Questionfrom El Al security? 123Like lightning rounds 124Tear-stained, e.g. 125Investigate, as a cold case 126Pianist Gilels 127"Woo-hooI" 128 Half of a classic Mad magazine feature 129County of Salem, Mass. 130High DOWN

19French cheese 20 Miss 22 ESPN'sMcEachern aka. the Voice of Poker 23 Edible entry at a county fair 27 Social welfare grp. with a Peace Prize 29Neighbor of a " - " key 3230 Rock grp. 33Pro's position 35 Check 36Brunch spot 38 "Fire away!" 41Dress at the altar 42 PCpart of interest to audiophiles 43Author Seton 44 Kick back 45 First name in long jumps 46Open again, as a keg 48 Soundsoffall? 49 Odette's counterpart in "Swan Lake" 52QB Tony 55"Over my dead body i" 56 Prefix with realism 57London jazzduo? 58 Sudden turns 59Belgian river to the North Sea 60Playfor afool 61Restaurant chain founded by a celebrity chef 62Febreze target 67Goof 68Greeting on el telefono 70Supercharges, with

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I Small scrap 2 New Balance competitor 3 Employing strategy 4 Pyramid crosses 5 Rubbish 6 Cause of some impulsive behavior, for short 7 It might begin with a "What if ...'?" 8 Beach walkers 9 Mere vestige 10They may have you going the wrong way 11 Announcer's cry after a field goal 12 What knows the drill, for short? 13Ithas a variety of locks and pins 14Like buffalo meat visa-vis beef and pork 15Vegas casino with the ssupss mascot Lucky the Leprechaun 71Get one's hands on 17Show piece some dough?

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114Lumber-mill equipment 115Hover craft'? 116Brood 118Film character who says, "I'd just as soon kiss a Wookiee!" 118 Some pipe joints 122 King of old Rome

PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

541-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

o E' go to w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . cor n

Place aphoto in your private party ad for only$15.00 perweek.

OVER '500 in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 3 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 5 .00 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0 .00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 5 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 4 9 .00 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 7 9 .00

A Payment Drop Box i s available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 5.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFIEDTELEPHONE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since tgtB

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 476

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Add your web address D ID Y O U KNO W Driver Food8 Beverage CAUTION: EDUCATION Assistant Ci ty to your ad and readNewspaper-generServers needed, 21 & Oregon Outback Ads published in COORDINATOREngineer ers on The Bulletin's a ted content is s o over. Five days/week Freight Movers Inc. "Employment OpFull-time position. valuable it's taken and Line Haul Driver including weekends. web site, www.bend- position open at the Competitive wages, portunities" include bulletin.corn, will be City of Prineville. repeated, condensed, Requirements: Current Must have OLCC 8 PLACE' employee and indeexcellent benefits. broadcast, t weeted, Class A CDL with one food handlers cards. able to click through Please view comJoin our Head Start pendent positions. 421 automatically to your discussed, p o sted, year Apply in person wi replete job descripexp e rience; education program Ads for p ositions copied, edited, and sume to Los Agaves website. tion and pertinent Schools & Training The "New" MY PLACE that require a fee or medical card, doubles team pro v i ding HOTEL e mailed countless experience preferred. Mexican Grill, 291 E info. at www.cityofupfront investment m anagement o f times throughout the Cascade Ave., SisBEND, OREGON IITR Truck School prineville.corn. Must pass drug test, classroom staff. must be stated. With day by others? Disters, Oregon. Get your REDMOND CAMPUS You may apply on- cover the Power of background c h eck, any independent job To Apply: visit Now accepting Our Grads GetJobs! business line also. D e a d- Newspaper Advertis- and have clean drivopportunity, please www.ocdc.net applications 1-888-438-2235 ing record. Health inline: October 16, i nvestigate th o r Or mail resume/ Hairdresser ing in FIVE STATES surance Winliniif.DTR.EDU p r o vided. apply in person to: Full S Part-time oughly. Use extra 2015 5pm. City of Station for lease in upwith just one phone Night run, full time a ROWI N G positions caution when apPrineville i s an Oregon Child scale salon in downcall. For free Pacific and part time. Please Tutor needed for mediDevelopment plying for jobs onEqual Opportunity town Bend area wi Room Attendants Northwest Newspa- contact P e rr y at cal coding and billing line and never prowith an ad in Coalition Employer. parking. per Association Net- 541-420-9863. Maintenance course. Will pay reavide personal inforATTN: 541-385-1048 The Bulletin's work brochures call sonable fee. Must We offer competitive mation to any source Human Resources, 541-383-9345 916-288-6019 or haveex erience. "Call A Service wages and vacation ~ 659 NE "An St. you may not have email 541-280-0892 benefits. researched and Professional" Madras, OR 97741 elizabeth © cnpa.corn Just too many Need to get an deemed to be repuEqual Opportunity Applications can be Directory (PNDC) The Bulletin's 470 Employer picked up or emailed: table. Use extreme collectibles? ad in ASAP? "Call A Service Domestic & bend@legacymgmt.org c aution when r e You can place it Professional" Directory s ponding to A N Y Admin. Asst. In-Home Positions OPENING SOON! Sell them in online at: online employment GoodLife Brewing Co. is all about meeting People Look for Information 550 SW Bond Street Look at: ad from out-of-state. Part time, 25-30 hriwk The Bulletin Classifieds www.bendbulletin.corn Active female senior Bend, Oregon 97701 About Products and your needs. Bendhomea.corn We suggest you call 615ihr needs live-in care- MY PLACE Hotel is an Services EveryDaythrough the State of Oregon for Complete Listings of Call on one of the Submit resume to: taker. Prineville. Call 54 1 -385-5809 Equal Opportunity The Bulletin Clsssiffeds Consumer H otline info © goodlifebrewing. 541-385-5809 Scott at Area Real Estate for Sale professionals todayi Employer at 1-503-378-4320 503-961-5812. corn For Equal Opportunity Laws contact n Say agoodbuy Oregon Bureau of Good classified adstell Labor 8 I n dustry, the essential facts in an to that unused Civil Rights Division, interesting Manner.Write item by placing it in 971-6730764. from the readers view -not The Bulletin Classifieds the seller' s. Convert the The Bulletin Sen/na Central Oregon since Ssaa facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item wi l l 541-385-5809 54t -385-5809 help them insomeway. Alison's Resort House Keeping Service Offering resort, residential, and commercial cleaning.

This advertising tip brought to you by

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincetant

541-213-5288

SPOKESM~

Call The Bulletin At 544 -385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.corn

Og peat'.

Th e Bulletin

Redmond Spokesman

HUNTlNG TENT & GEAR iaxiO White Stag

Community/Sports Reporter

The successful candidate can expect to write a weekly front-page centerpiece for the paper, as well as report on local prep and community sports and recreation.

To apply,please email resume and any relevant writing samples to: spokesmaneditor@bendbulletin.corn

air mattress, 2 sleeping bags! Various other camping gear included. 81375 OBO 541-000-000

The Bulletin

serving central oregon since 1903

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541-385-5809

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CanVaSI PluS queenSiZe

Western Communications seeks a reporter to cover community news and local sports for the Redmond Spokesman, its 4,000 circulation weekly newspaper in Redmond, Oregon.

As a lead reporting position, it also entails a modest amount of editing of the paper's copy, and is responsible for coordinating coverage. Photography experience and skills a plus. This is a full time position.

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Item Priced at: Your Tofrrl Ad Cost on • $499 or less....................................................................... $39 • $500 to $999...................................................................$49 • $1000 IQ $2499.............................................................. $59 • $2500 and over............................................................... $69 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. (maximum up Io 3 itemsper ad.j

Your ad will a/so appear in:

• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads • bendbullefin.corn

'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, Rvs, molorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Somerestrictions app/y


TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 632

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Bus i ness OpportunitiesApt JMultlplex General

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Homes for Sale

Lots

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

T A T A R A I T T F I R J L O Ye Acre in Bend city recommends that you limits Flag lot in NE I VA N D O D D E R E T O B L U E S General Looking for your next i nvestigate ever y area of newer homes. RA J A H employee? phase of investment All underground utili- F I C K L E T H E R A P I S T Place a Bulletin help opportunities, espeties at street, view from F A T H O M D A N G I N G C U I S I N E wanted ad today and c ially t h ose f r o m building site. Downout-of-state or offered on the first day it runs reach over 60,000 town, outdoor recreI S N O T S E E T O N E S T E A readers each week. by a person doing to make sure it is coration, all necessities in NOTICE NOW HIRING A R C S O L I S S S Your classified ad business out of a lo- rect. "Spellcheck" and All real estate adver- minutes. $135 , 000 N Y C MULTIPLE will also appear on cal motel or hotel. In- human errors do oc- tised here in is sub- Owner terms availB E A A S A B E A V E R D E C K O U T OPENINGS! ben dbulletin.corn vestment o ff e rings If this happens to ject to th e F ederal able 541-385-4790 in Arlington, OR! G AL L O N I F E V E R T E E D which currently must be r egistered cur. Fair Housing A c t, your ad, please con775 receives over 1.5 with the Oregon De- tact which makes it illegal Requirements: us ASAP so that B UY O N E G E T O N E F R I Z Z Y Manufactured/ million page views partment of Finance. to advertise any prefSome Positions will corrections and any every month at We suggest you conS N O N A H L A M E R P L E A S Mobile Homes erence, limitation or Require a HAZMAT adjustments can be no extra cost. sult your attorney or discrimination based Pre-Employment to your ad. C O D E D H A R K P O O R L E D G E Bulletin Classifieds call CON S UMER made List your Home on race, color, reliPhysical 541-385-5809 Get Results! HOTLINE, JandMHomes.corn A B O R C E L E NA I C U S S R gion, sex, handicap, The Bulletin Classified 1-503-378-4320, Call 385-5609 Competitive Pay, We Have Buyers familial status or naM UR R A Y L 0 V E S C 0 M P A N Y or place 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. Senior ApartmentGreat Benefits! tional origin, or intenGet Top Dollar your ad on-line at Independent Living tion to make any such Financing Available. O R E L S A T I V A S K O K I E Call or apply online ben dbulletin.corn ALL-INCLUSIVE 541-548-5511 preferences, l i mitafor immediate P A R D O N S D I G U P D E S S E R T with 3 meals daily tions or discrimination. consideration! Kj(SijaRmlh 2 Bedrooms Available We will not knowingly Y E N MO A T N E A M S U 1-677-220-5627 NOW. Check it out! accept any advertis- : I. wmcareers.corn ÃIMjjjs Call 541-460-5323 ET A L I A T W I S T I S T O O ing for r eal e state Media Code: 6EN which is in violation of ® Rl@isKI 634 A U T U M N S P E C T R U M H A G G L E EOE MIFID/V this law. All persons Apt./Multiplex NE Bend are hereby informed S N O R E A R E Y O U F O R I S R A E L that all dwellings adHead Start ERSEA Only a few left! T I ME D W E T R E O P E N E M I L vertised are available Two 8 Three Bdrms Family& on an equal opportuY A Y S P Y E S S E X S E A S Community with Washer/Dryer nity basis. The Bulle• S torage Rentals and Patio or Deck. Services 850 tin Classified PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 SupervisorNeeded. 528 27'x1 3.5', 14' overhead (One Bdrms also avail.) Snowmobiles Bilingual Spanish/ Mountain Glen Apts 2 Loans & Mortgages Westside Bend door, thermostat 860 870 870 English Required. 541.383. 9313 bdrms., 1 bath, 950 heated, rec. & rest Full-Time position Professionally Motorcyclee 8 Accessories Boats 8 Accessories Boats & Accessories WARNING room. GarajMahal on sq. ft., new front porch Competitive wages, managed by The Bulletin recom& r o of , i r r igation. Crusher Ave. in Bend. Norris & Stevens, Inc. Ads published in the excellent benefits Fully insulated, vinyl mends you use cauAnnual rent neg. "Boats" classification To Apply:visit tion when you prowindows, hardwood Tenant pays utilities. 636 include: Speed, fishwww.ocdc.net vide personal 541-369-4111 floors, kitchen island/ Apt JMultiplex NW Bend laundry/storage clos- 4-place enclosed Intering, drift, canoe, Or mail resume/ information to compahouse and sail boats. apply in person to: state snowmobile trailer nies offering loans or ets, back yard deck, Quiet 2 bedroom, w/s/g/ For all other types of Oregon Child credit, especially desert land- w/ RockyMountain pkg, 16' Smoker Craft • R ooms for Rent c able p a id , di s h - mature watercraft, please go Development $7500. 541-379-3530 those asking for adscaping, 7 m i n ute Moto Guzzi Breva fishing boat, 50 HP microwave, to Class 875. Coalition vance loan fees or Room rental/Bend. Nice washer, 1 100 2007, o n l y 860 Yamaha ou t board laundry facilities, oak walk to town. off a 541-385-5809 ATTN: companies from out of dead end street. 1 1,600 miles . master bdrm, private motor w/electric tilt 8 cabinets, $735 mo./ P lease respond t o : Motorcycles & Accessories Human Resources, state. If you have full bath, $500 mo. + $5,500. electric trolling motor $ 700 deposit. N o 659 NE "A" St. 206-679-4745 concerns or quessec. dep/references. JOA, P O Box 513 dogs. 541-383-2430 w/remote control Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 Madras, OR 97741 tions, we suggest you 541-350-1281 Bend, OR, 97709 for mounted on bow, walk Equal Opportunity 875 consult your attorney additional information. Sport 1 5 0 Ta o T ao through w i ndshield, Employer or call CONSUMER Watercraft What are you S cooter, 2014 Al - exc. cond. $8,500. BAH HOTLINE, Check out the most New , $ 9 9 5. 541-233-6223 looking for? 1-877-877-9392. [(pop ~[]g ds published in "Wa classifieds online 541-548-0345 The Bulletin tercraft" include: Kay You' ll find it in www.bendbuffetin.corn BANK TURNED YOU BARON 2003 cusaks, rafts and motor caution when purUpdated daily DOWN? Private party The Bulletin Classifieds tom built on '03 vulIzed personal chasing products or I will loan on real escan chassis, 1600 waterc rafts. Fo services from out of ~ tate equity. Credit, no V-twin, 4600 miles, 750 "boats" please se f the area. Sending problem, good equity custom paint, fend541-385-5809 Class 870. Redmond Homes c ash, checks, o r 17' SunCraft, is all you need. Call ers, wheels, etc., 732 541-385-5809 / credit i n formation Oregon Land Mort2 motors. $1,200. comes with helmet, V-Max 2009 • may be subjected to gage 541-368-4200. Commercial/Investment Real Estate Auction 541-593-7257 windshield and Condo/Townho mes Nominal Opening Bid: I FRAUD. Yamaha Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 Properties for Sale more! Discounted for For more informa- I LOCAL MONEY:We buy $50,000 Lots of factory for Rent off-season. $8,495. • tion about an adver- • extras: windshield, secured trust deeds & Land for Sale - Invest541-280-9404 saddlebags, back f tiser, you may call note, some hard money Beautiful f u rn. spa- ment -= Property. •e the Oregon State loans. Call Pat Kelley rest, rear cargo cious 1bdrm, 2bath Sand-Gravel, 22mil+ Advertise your car! 541-382-3099 ext.13. rack, bike cover, f Attorney General's condo, FP, balcony, tons Geo-Tek report Add A Picturei Office C o n sumer e motorcycle hoist, pets ok. 7th Mtn Re- and drilling samples Reach thousands of readers! The Bulletin alarm system, also Protection hotline at I sort, Bend. A v a i l available, possible rail 18' CBII 541-385-5809 2003 S un 2113 NW 21st Ct., To Subscribe call set of new tires. I 1-877-877-9392. 10/1/1 5-4/30/1 6. The Bulletin Classifieds ) Cruiser - pontoon SeaDoo 2004 RXP access. Next to acRedmond, OR $1750 incl. all utils. tive pit. West of Spo$1 1,000 541-365-5800 or go to ~ boat, fully equipped. ~ 72 hours, very good gThe Bulletin g www.bendbulletin.corn Int-cable, etc. Use of kane W a . Call 4 Bdrm, 3 bath, 541-508-1554 Has only been used condition, stored in2,217sq.ft.+/amenities, pool, spa, 360-835-5947 doors, cover, trailer, ( a handful of times 8 Open: 1:00-4:00pm, etc. 541-815-7707 has been in covered e xtras, $7,1 0 0 . (PNDC) Warehouse Sun., Oct. 11, 18 and ( storage. Ask ing 206-963-4311 2 hrs before auction. Home DelIyery Advisor Auctions: Harley 2003, Dyna The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking 10AM Thu., Oct. 22 880 wide glide, 100th Ana Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time Visit Motorhomes n iversary mode l . position and consists of managing an adult williamsauction.corn 13,400 orig. mi., cus- Yamaha V Star 1100 carrier force to ensure our customers receive or call 600.982.0425 tom paint, new bat- Classic, year 2004, superior service. Must be able to create and Philip R. Heiliger tery, lots of extras, -Many extras. 17K perform strategic plans to meet department Re Lic 201211071 Distribution Center Worker $4800. show cond. H ealth miles. Buyer's premium objectives such as increasing market share f orces s ale. W a s 541-548-2109 and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a may apply. We have immediate openings in our Distribu$11,000 OBO, now self-starter who can work both in the office 870 tion Center. Work includes order filling, 19' C lassic 1 9 90 $8,000 firm. and in their assigned territory with minimal 32' 2007, like receiving and loading product for distribution to Mastercraft ski boat. Allegro Looking for your next 541-633-7656 or Boats & Accessories supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary only 12,600 miles. our tire centers. These are full-time positions Pro-star 190 conven- new, 360-815-6677 emp/oyee? with company vehicle provided. Strong Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 offering competitive pay, excellent benefits, 14' aluminum boat w/ tional in-board, cus- transmission, Place a Bulletin help customer service skills and management skills dual exretirement and cash bonus. Various shifts trailer. Trailer has 2 tom trailer, exc. cond. wanted ad today and are necessary. Computer experience is haust. Loaded! Auto-levavailable. brand new t ires & reach over 60,000 $8,995. 541-369-6562 eling system, Skw gen, required. You must pass a drug screening wheels. Trailer in exc. readers each week. be able to be insured by company to drive power mirrors w/defrost, Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent cus- and cond., guaranteed no Your classified ad 2 slide-outs with awvehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we FUN & FISH! tomer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 leaks. 2 upholstered will also appear on nings, rear c a mera, b elieve in p r omoting from w ithin, s o swivel seats, no moemployees in the western United States. bendbulletin.corn trailer hitch, driyer door advancement within company is available to Harley Road K i ng tor. Please goto www.lesschwab.corn to apply. $2,900. w/power window, cruise, which currently rethe right person. If you enjoy dealing with Classic 2003, 100th 541-410-4066 No phone calls please. exhaust brake, central ceives over people from diverse backgrounds and you are Anniversary Edition, vac, satellite sys. Re1.5 million page energetic, have great organizational skills and 16,360 mi., reduced Les Schwab is proud to be an duced price: $64,950. views every month interpersonal communication skills, please $9,999. 541-647-7078 equa/ opportunity employer. 503-781-8812 at no extra cost. send your resume to: 2006 Smokercraft K awaskai Vul c a n Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Sunchaser 820 Drifter 2005, 800cc, Get Results! c/o Kurt Muller model pontoon boat, Need to get an ad 1,150 mi., 1 owner, MarketingAssistant Call 385-5809 or PO Box 6020 75HP Mercury and i n new cond., n o place your ad on-line in ASAP? Bend, OR 97708-6020 16' Seaswirl Tahoe electric trolling mochips or scratches, at or e-mail resume to: tor, full canvas and with trailer, 50 HP always stored inbendbulletin.corn kmuffer@bendbulletin.corn Evinrude, bimini top, many extras. s ide, $3,4 0 0 . Fax lt to 541-322-7253 No phone calls, please. Stored inside excellent condition. 541-350-3886 The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE $19,900 $3,500 The Bulletin Classifieds Pre-employmentdrug screen required. 541-647-1918 541-350-5425 Finance Officer Responsible for supporting the Marketing The City of Sisters is looking for a dynamic Department by gathering information, provid- Credit g80uS !T!inuS, CO individual with strong analytic and communicaing administrative support, tracking results of tqt, tion skills to fill the position of Finance Officer. marketing campaigns, supporting annual This position is responsible for development media plans, tracking sponsorships and proand management of the City's budget; maintemotional activities, preparing monthly reports nance of the City's financial records and and other duties as assigned. generation of p e riodic financial reports; administration of accounting policies, controls, Requires a post-high school degree or miniWe have the following opportunities and procedures including utility billing and mum of 5 years related work experience, in our Credit Department: accounts receivable, accounts p ayable, excellent verbal and written communication payroll, contracts, and grant accounting; also skills, proficiency in standard Microsoft and/or P Credit Assistant human resource and risk management Google office applications, including spreadThe au<)etin iSSeeking to oin the SPeCial The Credit Assistant supports our Tire Centers functions. sheet, documents and presentation software, d raphiCdeSigner Ojo n an Or by assisting with customer credit account set a SSiStafft ~" g . ability to work without direct supervision and ~ tigt6 P05itioft oft6fiflg under pressure, set and meet multiple up and maintenance, invoice coding, credit re- The idealcandidate possesses a high degree I P ojeCt5 team. ThiS iS a P de V a riety ot SkillS, ro of initiative and a thorough knowledge of deadlines and have strong customer orienta- ports and credit reporting issues, fraud incini t0 eXCejin a Wi 6 dents and UCC3 renewals. accounting and financial analysis principles. tion. eXtenSiVe 0PPortuni I I phy W f i t ing, editing A degree in accounting, finance or a closely SI n, PhotograPtjy With the SPeCia Vt inCjuding pagedeSg,gorkingdireC Credit & CollectionsAssistant related field is required, plus five years of exLes Schwab has a reputation of excellent ill The Credit & Collections Assistant supports customer service, with over 450 stores and perience in accounting systems and o perar. ndprojeCtpjanning. SSfuj Candidate on's Wi an our Tire Centers by assisting with collection tions, financial reporting and audit, in c l ud7,000 employees in the western United States. n editor, the success central Oreg0 m„ activities, assigning accounts for legal or col- ing two years in a leadership and supervisory We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, pfgjeCtS managing m6 0f f0duC'tlOn 0I 5 lection agency action and resolution of various capacity in these areas. Municipal fi n ance retirement and cash bonus. Please go to Ver Contri butetotheP nCluding magaZin , credit account collection issues. experience desired. Compensation starts at w ww.lesschwab.corn to apply.No phone calls ui ubliCatioftS InC S $3,884.33/month depending on experience, please. IT!05t SuCCeSSt t' h p eCia) PubliCatiOn . Please go to www.lesschwab.corn for more plus benefits. 00fnmerCiaj pf0j 6CtSand Other Sp6 didate W!ji information and to apply for one of these Les Schwabis proud fo be an Please submit a City employment application, the successiul can equal opportunity employer. positions. ' t Work To jOin our tea!T!, hard. HaVe cover letter, resume, and three references to 63nd Willing o t Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Human ResourcesP.O. Box 39, Sisters, OR be Creatiue, inftovatiV erienC6 and SkillS, customer service, with over 450 stores and 97759. Closing date is October 30, 2015 at 5 General ritin and editing exPe a j d e , 7,000 employees in the western United States. p.m. or until filled. An application packet is Pl'0uenfeatureWf I gSt leandP055655&fteXCePtioft& I We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, available at City Hall, 520 E Cascade Ave or be prOfiCient ift Ap VWfttten langu3ge and grammar. q retirement and cash bonus. on the City's website www.ci.sisters. or.us. WARNING The Bulletin

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Les Schwab is proud fo be an equal opportunity employer. Catering Operations Coordinator/ BanquetCaptain (http: //hr.u oregon.edu/jobs Title: Food Service Coordinator) University of Oregon Catering is seeking a Catering Operations Coordinator/Banquet Captain to join our team. We cater events of all sizes, on and off campus and varying from simple deliveries to large scale VIP events. We will hire an individual that has experience working in high volume hospitality environments with a focus on banquet/FOH service. This person must also be able to show an aptitude for working directly with clients, supervising staff and coordinating events from set-up through tear down as directed by the Catering Director and management team. The work environment is very fast paced and with many different events, new opportunities to problem-solve are presented daily.

See job posting for complete list of requirements. $14.10 - $20.94 per hour; excellent benefits, including health and dental, employer-paid retirement, tuition benefits for employee or an eligible dependent, sick and vacation leave. Application information available: Human Resources, 677 East 12th, Suite 400, 5210 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-5210; online at http: //hr. u oregon.edu/jobs/; 541-346-3159. Application deadline 10/19/15. EO/AA/Veterans/Disability institution committed to cultural diversity.

The City of Sisters is an equal opportunity employer.

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the d kiljS be prOfiCient underStanding 0fneX erienCeaft S i HaVe ProuendeSign PStratof » d PhotoShoP. HaVethe ' Adpbe <nDeSign, jllu prioritiZing and in nnin,organizing, abijity ii y0 aSSiSt in Pla g d djine. Be auiSual f06CtSunder ea I hantglng multiple ph0toS j d d gnS COmplement and 65I Storyeiler, WhoSe P t rieS and feature S 0 haVe baSiC

has o penings l i sted b e low. G o to https:/ffobs.cocc.edu to view details 8 apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97703; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Director of Student and Campus Life Provide leadership for the Student Life team for campus events, activities, and other student engagement events on all four campuses. Serve as Title IX Coordinator and oversee Club Sports, student newspaper, and Residence Life. Bachelors + 3-yrs exp. required. $54,434 -$64,802/yr. Open Until Filled. Enrollment Specialist Provide students information about enrollment. Process payment services. Serve as first point of contact for prospective students, staff, and community members. 2yrs customer service exp.req.$2,300-$2,740/mo. Closes Oct 12. Part-Time instructor Positions Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.

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G4 SUNDAY OCTOBER 11 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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00 I Columbus by Thor 30' m otorhome, 1 9 94, Studded tires (4) on Chevy 454, B a nks rims 2 2 5/55R-17XL you sat behind me. p ower w / new e r Used one s eason Please call for transmission, w a lk$385. 541-312-9312 lunch.thanx R. around queen bed, 503.305.5191 FordF-350 XLT Crew Beaver Contessa 40'- 41K miles, full gas 932 Southwind 33' 1989 Unique R-Pod 2013 908 Cab 1993, 4x4 2008, four slide die- t ank! $ 9,500 o b o . on Chevy chassis, trailer-tent combo, Superhawk N7745G Antique 8 541-598-6978 VIN ¹A89363. $6,998. sel pusher. Loaded, Owners' Group LLC 64k mi., 454 motor, f ully l oaded, e x Aircraft, Parts Classic Autos Cessna 172/180 hp, (exp. 10/31/1 5) great condition. Warnew front brake pads, tended service con& Service full IFR, new avionics, DLR ¹366 ranty. Pictures/info at 6.5k Onan generator. tract and bike rack. Meet singles right now! www.fourstarbend.corn GTN 750, touch$9000. 541-389-7669 No paid o perators, $16,000. 54'I -647-1236 screen center stack, 541-595-3972 or just real people like exceptionally clean. 503-780-4487 you. Browse greetHealthy engine ~ a ings, exchange mesreserve fund. B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , Fleetwood D i scovery sages and connect Just bought a new boat? Hangared at KBDN. 541-548-1448 live. Try it free. Call one slide, low mile- 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Sell your old one in the One share Jeep CJ5 4x41967, smolichusedcar classifieds! Ask about our now: 8 77-955-5505. age, very clean, lots options - 3 slide outs, available. first year of the orig. 1/3 interest in of storage, $28,500. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Super Seller rates! center.corn Call 541-815-2144 Dauntless V-6, last (PNDC) 2500 T S 541-639-9411 Columbia 400, 541-385-5809 etc., 34,000 m iles. Sunseeker year of the "All metal" 2015 by Forest River Financing available. Wintered in h eated triple slide Class C. body! Engine overCAL LW 916 shop. $78,995 obo. Purchased $125,000 Looking for your hauled: new brakes, June TODAY% Trucks & 541-447-8664 (located © Bend) next employee? fuel pump, steering 2015, used twice (wife Chevy Pickup 1978, 541-288-3333 Heavy Equipment gear box, battery, al- long bed, 4x4, frame became ill) F ULLY Place a Bulletin help ad today and ternator, emergency Loaded with Platinum wanted up restoration. 500 reach over 60,000 1997 Utility 53'x1 02" dry brake pads, gauges, Cadillac Full Body paint, auto eng i ne, • • freight van. S l iding readers each week. warn hubs, dual exi level system, Arctic fresh R4 transmisaxles, leaf springs, Your classified ad haust, 5 wide traction sion w/overdrive, low Pkg, rear c amera, will also appear on good tires, body 8 tires, 5 new spoke, B luetooth. Also i n mi., no rust, custom Call 54 l -385-5809 bendbulletin.corn swing doors in exc. chrome wheels. NO cludes NEW Adco allinterior and carpet, Fleetwood Southto r o m ot e o u r service cond., has no dings, which currently rerust, garage stored. weather coach cover. n ew wheels a n d wind, F o rd, 3 2 ' , 1/5 share in very nice road ready! $7500 ceives over 1.5 mil$7,495 OBO! tires, You must see $74,900. Call Jim cell 150 HP Cessna 150; o bo. S isters, O R . 1994, 82,000 miles, page views ev(775) 513-0822 Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care queen bed & sleeper 209.401.7449 it! $25,000 invested. (can lion 1973 Cessna 150 with 541-719-1217 ery month at no email addt'I photos) Lycoming 0-320 150 $12,000 08 0 . sofa, TV, cooktop, extra cost. Bulletin NOTICE: Oregon state 541-536-3889 or oven, m i c rowave, hp engine conversion, 925 Classifieds Get ReWhere can you find a law requires anyone 541-420-6215. refrigerator & 4000 hours. TT airUtility Trailers sults! Call 385-5809 who con t racts for freezer, trailer hitch helping hand? frame. Approx. 400 or place your ad construction work to hours o n 0- t i med equipped, new tires, From contractors to on-line at be licensed with the SERVING CENTRAL OREGON 0-320. Hanga red in just serviced. Since 2003 bendbulletin.corn Construction Contracyard care, it's all here nice (electric door) tors Board (CCB). An Raaldentlal & Ccmmarclal $9,800. Mercedes 450 SL city-owned hangar at 503-459-1580. in The Bulletin's 1979 Roadster, soft active license 882 the Bend Airport. One "Call A Service means the contractor Sprinkler Blow-Out & hard tops, always of very few C-150's Fifth Wheels -;.'-.L '.:,N: ." . Iak'is bonded & insured. Sprinkler Repair Professional" Directory garaged, 122k mi., FOUNTAIN OF that has never been a Chevy S-10 1988 4.3L Verify the contractor's 2 013 7 f t .X18 f t . new tires, shock and YOUTH SPA t rainer. $4500 w i l l Carry-On open car Tow Dolly Roadmaster, CCB l i c ense at MAINTENANCE b reaks, $79 0 0 . V-6, sunroof, many RV Resort consider trades for custom features, suwww.hirealicensedm odel 3 4 77 , li k e hauler trailer. Used 541-548-5648 Is your WINTER whatever. Call Jim only contractor.corn • Fall Clean Up new-never used, per clean, always gathree times to DESTINATION for Frazee, 541-410-6007 raged. $3200 obo. or call 503-378-4621. electric breaks, maghaul my 1967 CaHealing Mineral 541-388-0811. The Bulletin recom- • Weekly Mowing netic lights w/wiring maro, and looks like Waters, Five-Star Take care of & Edging mends checking with harness, profession- 30' Alpenlite 1990 5th new. I had the front Facilities, Activities, the CCB prior to con- • Bark, Rock, Etc. ally w ired. $ 1 450. barrier made and inyour investments Entertainment, wheel i n e x cellent tracting with anyone. 541-419-5151 stalled and added Fitness, Friends, and with the help from cond., $4,800 obo. Some other trades the tool box. It also Youthful Fun! 541-410-6945 also req u ire addi- LANDSCAPING The Bulletin's has a mounted new $9.95/Day For New tional licenses and Sunbeam Tiger 1966 spare tire. $3995 • Landscape Customers. = "Call A Service certi fication s. , • % e Cameo LX1 2001, Very clean car. Al- Chevy Siiverado 2005, obo. 541-876-5375 Reservations: Construction 32 ft. 5th wheel, 2 svv cC Professional" Directory OI' ways garaged since fL cell: 1-888-800-0772 Xcab, 4x4. slides, A/C, micro, 503-701-2256. repaint 30 y e a rs • Water Feature foyspa.corn V IN ¹139752 Find It in DVD, CD p l ayer, ago. Original 260 Installation/Maint. $9,998 Winnebago 22' conv. and i n vert. V-8 engine totally The Bullet!R Classifleds! 929 (exp. 10/31/1 5) Itasca 2003 31' Class C 2002 - $26,900 New batteries, tires rebuilt 9,400 miles • Pavers DLR ¹366 541-385-5809 MH. Great cond., 31K Automotive Wanted Chevy 360, and shocks. Quad ago. Factory hard miles, slider, $32,000. heavy duty chassis, carrier. Quad avail. • Renovations top, good condition 541-508-9700 DONATE YOUR CAR, soft top, many LAT cab & roof A/C, $11,900 OBO. • Irrigation tow hitch w/brake, Handyman 541-390-7179 1947 Stinson 108-2, TRUCK OR BOAT TO dealer sold options 22k mi., more! Installation engine has been gone HERITAGE FOR THE so car is considered 541-280-3251 "stock" at car shows. t hrough, the m a gs BLIND. Free 3 Day CHECK YOUR AD 541-548-1448 I DO THAT! h ave b ee n g o n e V acation, Tax D e - I have owned the car Bonded & Insured ductible, Free Towing, smolichusedcar through, new c arb, f or 18 year s . center.corn 541%15%458 brakes rebuilt, new in- All Paperwork Taken $ 70,000. Tel 5 4 1 Winnebago O f. CALL 548 3458 Lcsas759 s trument panel & Care Lexington 2006 Journey gauges, new ELT, & 1-800-401-4106 283TS class B+mo- 2001 36' 2nd owner, much more. Fresh (PNDC) NOTICE: Oregon Landtor coach, full GTS 300 Cummins Turbo on the first day it runs annual. Signed offby Got an older car, boat scape Contractors Law pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 diesel, Allison 5 spd, Call a Pro to make sure it is corBend Ace mechanics, or RV? Do the huHandyman/Remodeli ng (ORS 671) requires all burner range, half 80k miles. D r iver rect. "Spellcheck" and Bend airport. $24,000. mane thing. Donate it Whether you need a businesses that adtime oven, 3 slides s ide s l ide, g a s Residential/Commercial human errors do oc- 541-385-5662 vertise t o p e r form w/awnings, Onan stove, oven, 2 flat to the Humane Soci- fence fixed, hedges Chevy Sil v e rado cur. If this happens to Small jobs Io Landscape Construc- gen., King Dome sat- screen TVs, refer, ety. Call 1- trimmed or a house 2 500HD 2002, 4 x 4 HANGAR FOR SALE. Earire Room Remodels your ad, please contion which includes: ellite system, Ford 800-205-0599 generator, inverter, Crew cab, canopy, 30x40 end unit T tact us ASAP so that built, you' ll find Garage Organisation l anting, deck s , V10 Triton, auto-levKing Dome, tow bar. (PNDC) 85K original miles, corrections and any hanger in Prineville. Home Inspection Repairs ences, arbors, professional help in eling system, new Non-smoker, no loaded. $17,500 OBO. Dry walled, insulated, W ANTED! I b u y o l d adjustments can be water-features, and in- tires, Falcon tow bar. Quality, Hoaest Work 541-647-0565 pets, no c hildren. made to your ad. and painted. $23,500. Porsches 911, 356. The Bulletin's "Call a stallation, repair of irNon-smoker, mainC lean, an d w e l l oeenis 541.317.9788 541-385-5809 Tom, 541.788.5546 1948-1973 only. Any Service Professional" rigation systems to be tained in dry storage. maintained, $43,000 The Bulletin Classified CCB¹151573 Bmskd/Insured c ondition. Top $ $ l icensed w it h th e Directory Can email additional 541-390-1472. Landscape Contracpaid. Finders Fee. pictures. $55,000. 541-385-5809 tors Board. This 4-digit Call 707-965-9546 or Laredo 31' 2006, 541-520-3407 email porschedclasBULLETINCLASSIFIEDS number is to be in5th wheel, fully S/C cluded in all adversics©yahoo.corn Search the area's most one slide-out. tisements which indi(PNDC) comprehensive listing of Dodge Big Horn Awning. Like new, cate the business has I classified advertising... Ram 2500, 2005, 6 hardly used. Save money. Learn 931 a bond, insurance and real estate to automotive, speed manual. ExMust sell $20,000 to fly or build hours Automotive Parts, merchandise to sporting workers compensawith your own airtra tires and rims, or refinance. Call W innebago Le goods. Bulletin Classifieds tion for their employc raft. 1 96 8 A e r o Service & Accessories VW Beetle c lassic canopy goes with. 541-410-5649 appear every day in the ees. For your protec- Monaco Monarch 31' Sharo 1985, condition, Commander, 4 seat, tion call 503-378-5909 2006, F ord V 10, $5,900. Good ConExc. shape, no Excellentmai print or on line. n tained, 150 HP, low time, 4 almost new Blizzak 1972, or use our website: 28,900 rust, very clean, fully well miles, dition. Renault Turbo 245/70R16 studless Call 541-385-5809 runs great. 1 6 0K full panel. $21,000 www.lcb.state. or.us to auto-level, 2 slides, Diesel restored, has had 2 RV (24 winter tires on basic www.bendbulletin.corn check license status obo. Contact Paul at miles. $28,500 owners. $4, 0 0 0. CONSIGNMENTS steel r im s. $ 2 0 0. b ed & miles/gal.). Includes 541-447-5184. 541-620-1212 before contracting with queen 541-815-8147 WANTED 541-280-1474. C Band radio. The Bulletin the business. Persons hide-a-bed sofa, 4k good serving centraloregon sinceaa 541-526-9534 We Do the Work, doing lan d scape gen, convection miYou Keep the Cash! maintenance do not crowave, 2 TVs, tow On-site credit r equire an LC B l i package. 881 LandscapingNard Care approval team, PRICE REDUCTION! cense. Travel Trailers web site presence. $59,000. We Take Trade-Ins! 541-815-6319 Painting/Wall Covering BIG COUNTRY RV 883 Bend: 541-330-2495 PE)I. I Za~<0e r,. PIE Redmond: 541-548-5254 Managing 19' Ampex. 2011. Slide Central Oregon 885 out and other extras. Landscapes Pace A rrow V i sion Tows well $12,500. Canopies & Campers European Since 2006 1997, Ford 460 en- 541.316.1367 w/Banks, solar, Professional gine walk-around q ueen Fall Clean Up bed, 2 door fridge, miDon't track it in all WInter Painter cro-convection oven, •Leaves •Cones WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, Repaint • Needles needs work, (photo Specialist! $ I • Debris Hauling similar to actual rig) $9,500. 541-280-0797 Northlander 1993 Oregon License 34' Winnebago One 17' camper, Polar Winter Prep II186147 LLC 990, good shape, •Pruning Want to impress the 2013 30RE. i Aerating 541-815-2888 relatives? Remodel $25,000.Two slides. new fridge, A/C, •Fertilizing queen bed, bathFully loaded. your home with the Full photos and info room, indoor/outhelp of a professional Personal Services door shower, lots of sent upon request. Compost from The Bulletin's Family illness storage, customApplications "Call A Service ized to fit newer requires sale. Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every Use Less Water 541-923-2593 pickups, $4500 obo Professional" Directory $$$ Save $$$ Errands 541-419-9859. attemPt to enSure that PrOduCtS SOld in our ClaSSifiedS are Improve Plant Health & RV RV from a valid source. CONSIGNMENTS Notary CONSIGNMENTS Garage Sales 2014 Maintenance WANTED WANTED Packages Available We Do The Work ... We Do The Work ... Garage Sales e~ s At Y o ur You Keep The Cash! You Keep The Cash! Weekly, Monthly & 4 Garage Sales On-site credit On-site credit 8 Se r vicd One Time Service approval team, approval team, Find them web site presence. web site presence. EXPERIENCED I stand in line We Take Trade-Ins! We Take Trade-Ins! in Commercial so you don' t & Residential The Bulletin BIG COUNTRY RV BIG COUNTRY RV have to! Bend: 541-330-2495 Bend: 541-330-2495 Classifieds Senior Discounts

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541-81 5-4731

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SAT. R SUN. 12PM - 3PM

Pahlisch Homes Model in NE Bend, Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel appliances 20802 NE Sierra Drive and aII the quality Pahlisch Directions:North on Boyd Acres, Homes is known for. Now r/ght on Sierra; OR north on 18th selling Phase Two —stop by from Empire, left on Sierra. Look for for more information. sigcr.

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Just completed full a renovation. I I Wood floors, customcabinetry, quartz countertops, new Samsumg SSgas range It microwave. 3bedroom,2.5 bath 3056 SW Cascade w/ master onthe main floor It a large bonusroom, 3 car garage, Vista Drive, Redmond possible RVparking It 1/2 acre DirariioILTISouth on 27th St., R on behind the house, giving you Srr Wickiup, i on 5WCascade Vista fantastic Cascade Mountain Dr. House is on the the right views.

Hosted 6 Listed by: GARY DIEFENDERFER Broker

541-480-2620

SAT. 8E SUN.

SUN., 1PM - 5PM • a'

$425,000

CENTRAL OREGON RRAL1Y GROUP, INC.

The Best of DRW! 5 bd, 2 bath, Largehome w/ attached 1bdrm , I bath apartment, attached double car garage, all one level. Open floor plan, Light and bright. Master with walk-in closet and its own bath. Both home and apartment have covered front and back patio to sit and 19276 Kiowa RIL, Bend enjoy this beautifully landscaped property year round! Paved Directions:Hey 97 to Baker Rd., circular driveway, fully fenced, left on Cinder Butte /rd., right onto large trees. 30X36 insulated Kiowa St., house is on/he right. shop, with a 12x30 finished insulated heated shop area and $420,000 covered 16x12 toy area.

Hosted & Listed by: CHRIS MCPHEETERS Principa/ Broker

541-588-21 1 1

AssistASell. Buyers and Sellers Realty Services

C7

12 — 5 PM This brand new construction single-level home is located tc SW Redmond. It offers 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 baths and 1814 sq. ft. of living space. The kitchen features stainless steel appliances, tiled countertops with backsplash,

large eating bar 8 dual

'RR

985 SW 23rd Place, Redmond Directions:Weston Highland, le/f

pantries. Vaulted ceilings throughout and wood laminate on Rimroc@23rd, right on Kalama flooring. Full front a rear Ave.Homeon corner of 23rd Place. yard landscaping w/ sprinkler system.

$258,900

Hosted 6Listed by:

GLYNIS LEACH Principal Broker

541-771-6623

~ OREGO N RRALTtrGROUP,INC


THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY OCTOBER 11 2015 G5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 933

935

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

975

Auto m obiles

FordF250 Crew Cab Super Duty2012, (exp. 10/31/1 5) Vin ¹C52424 Stock ¹83414

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, never been off road or accidents, tow $33,999 or $449/mo., pkg, brand new tires, $2000 down, 84 mo., very clean. $26,000. 4 .49% APR o n a p - Call or text Jeff at

Cadillac CTS 2010, V 6 I n j ection, 6 Speed A u tomatic.

975

975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Hyundai Santa Fe GLS 2012,

Mercedes-Benz SLK230 2003, exc. cond., auto, convertible retractable hard top. 54,250 miles, carfax available.$13,000.

(exp. 10/31/2015)

Vin ¹151185 Luxury series. ExteStock ¹45197A rior: Black Raven, Interior: Light Tita- $16,979 or $199/mo., $2900 down, 84 mo., nium/Ebony. 22,555 4 .49% APR o n ap miles. 4 door. Exproved credit. License cellent condition all and title included in around. Has A ripayment, plus dealer inzona plates. This is stalled options. car is a great mix of S UBA RU luxury, com f o rt, SUSSSUOSSSMD.ODM style, and workman- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ship. $24,000 877-266-3821 Call 541-408-3051 Dlr ¹0354

Subaru Impreza 2013, (exp. 10/31/1 5) Vin ¹027174

Stock ¹83205

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

$20,358 or $249/mo.,

flicts with federal law, LEGAL NOTICE persons having no The regular meeting record legal or equi- of the Board of Diproved credit. License O F SALE File N o . table interest in the rectors of the Des541-389-7571 proved credit. License 541-729-4552 and title i ncluded in 7236.23549 R e f erproperty will chutes County Rural and title i ncluded in payment, plus dealer ence is made to that subject only receive informaFire Protection Dispayment, plus dealer ininstalled options. c ertain t rust d e e d tion concerning the trict ¹2 will be held on stalled options. Vehicle? made by Rebeckah K lender's estimated or Tuesday, October 13, S US A R U . S UBA R U . Call The Bulletin Maxson, as grantor, to actual bid. Lender bid 2015 at 11:30 a.m. at and place an ad 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Amerititle, as trustee, i nformation is a l s o the conference room 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. today! 877-266-3821 in favor of Mortgage available a t the in the North Fire Sta877-266-3821 Ask about our Dlr ¹0354 web s ite, tion, 63377 Jamison Electronic R egistra- trustee's Dlr ¹0354 "Whee/ Deal" ! tion Systems, Inc. as www.northwestVolvo XC60 2014, St., Bend, OR. Items for private party nominee for Accred- trustee.corn. Notice is on the agenda inGMC Pickup 1983 w/ VIN ¹556164 DID YOU KNOW 7 IN Kia Forte SX 2012 advertisers ited Home Lenders, further given that any topper, 4 wheel drive, clude: t h e f ire de$33,997 10 Americans or 158 hatchback, $15,700, Inc., A California Cor- person named in ORS partment report, a r uns good, go o d /exp. 10/31/1 5) million U.S. A d ults 32,015 miles, still winter truck. $1,500 DLR ¹366 poration, its succes- 86.778 has the right, discussion of Capital read content f r om under 60k warranty, sors and assigns, as at any time prior to obo. 907-310-1877 Prolects, a discussion n ewspaper m e d ia exc. SMOLICH condition, see b eneficiary, da t e d five days before the on 9-1-1, a report on each week? Discover SubaruLegacy V OL V O craigslist for full dedate last set for the 10/23/06, r e c orded building maintenance LL Bean2006, the Power of the Pa- tails. 541-948-7687 541-749-2156 10/31/06, in the mort- s ale, to h a v e t h is projects and an upcific Northwest News(exp. 10/31/1 5) foreclosure proceedgage records of DEdate on the sale of smolichvolvo.corn Vin ¹203053 paper Advertising. For SCHUTES C o unty, ing dismissed and the surplus e q uipment. a free brochure call Stock ¹82770 975 as trust deed reinstated The meeting location 916-288-6019 or $16,977 or $199/mo., Oregon, 2006-72652 and sub- b y payment to t he is accessible to peremail $2600 down, 84 mo. at Automobiles T oyota Taco m a Nissan350Z 4 .49% APR o n a p - sequently assigned to beneficiary of the en- sons with disabilities. elizabeth@enpa.corn Convertible 2005, proved credit. License Deutsche Bank Na- tire amount then due A request for inter2006, reg. c ab, (PNDC) and title included in tional Trust, C o m- (other than such por- preter for the hearing VIN ¹752136 $14,988 4x4, 5 sp d s tanpayment, plus dealer pany, as Trustee for tion of the principal as impaired or for other (exp. 10/31/1 5) dard 4 cyl engine, Kia Soul2013, installed options. DLR ¹366 the holders of HSI As- would not then be due accommodations for (exp. 10/31/2015) 22+ mpg, one seset Sec uritization had no default oc- person with disabiliVin ¹768357 S US A R u nior owner, C orporation Tru s t curred) and by curing ties should be made SUSSSUOSSSMD.OOM Stock ¹45202A1 n on-smoker, w e l l Audi A4 Quattro 2010, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2007-HE1, Mortgage any o t her d e fault at least 48 hrs. before $13,779 or $215/mo., maintained, nearly Pass-Through Certifi- complained of herein the meeting to: Tom VIN ¹017492 877-266-3821 $2000 down, 66 mo., cates, Series that is capable of be- Fay 5 4 1 -318-0459. Dlr¹0354 new tires, original $19,997 4 .49% APR on a p El Camino 1987 2007-HE1 by Assign- ing cured by tender- TTY 800-735-2900. spare near n e w, /exp. 10/31/1 5) p roved credit. L i 541-548-1448 Classic. ment recorded as ing the performance DLR ¹366 cense and title i nruns exce l lent. smolichusedcar Small Block 327 2015-00714, covering required under the cluded in payment, Modified engine. center.corn $14,750. SMOLICH t he f o llowing d e - o bligation o r tr u s t plus dealer installed 541-633-9895 Large duration roller scribed real property deed, and in addition V OL V O options. Cam. Edlebrock situated in said county to paying said sums 541-749-2156 Alum Heads and 935 or tendering the perand state, to wit: Lot smolichvolvo.corn S UBA R U Toyota Corolla 2013, more. $9,000 Sport Utility Vehicles Four (4), Block Five formance necessary (exp. 10/31/1 5) Runs Great! 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. (5), Taylor's Addition to cure the default, by Vin ¹053527 541-977-2830 877-266-3821 to the City of Red- paying all costs and Stock ¹83072 Dlr ¹0354 Nissan Sentra2012, mond, Des c hutes expenses actually in$15,979 or $199 mo., County, (exp. 10/31/2015) Ore g on. curred in enforcing the $2000 down 84 mo. Vin ¹734544 A D- obligation and trust USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 4 .49% APR o n a p - PROPERTY Stock ¹44681C proved credit. License DRESS: 835 South- deed, together with BMW Z3 R o adster and Door-to-door selling with $11,979 or $199/mo., and title included in west 1 4 t h Str e et trustee's 1 997, $4500. C a l l Toyota FJ40 fast results! It's the easiest $2500 down, 72 mo., payment, plus dealer in- Redmond, OR 97756 attorney's fees not 541-548-0345 to see. 4 .49% APR o n a p stalled options. exceeding the Both the beneficiary Landcruiser 1977 way in the world to sell. Ford Focus2012, proved credit. License and the trustee have amounts provided by with winch, VIN ¹367736 and title i ncluded in S US A R u elected to sell the real said OR S 8 6 .778. $18,000 The Bulletin Classified payment, plus dealer in$1 1,997 541-389-7113, property to satisfy the Requests from per2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. stalled options. fexp. 10/31/15) 541-385-5809 obligations secured by sons named in ORS Michelle 877-266-3821 DLR ¹366 S US ARu the trust deed and a 86.778 for reinstateDlr ¹0354 SUSSSUOSSSMD.OOM of default has ment quotes received SMOLICH 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS notice been recorded pursu- less than six d ays 877-266-3821 BMW Z4 3.1 V OL V O ant to Oregon Re- prior to the date set Search the area's most Dlr ¹0354 Convertible 2003, 541-749-2156 vised Statutes for the trustee's sale comprehensive listing of VIN ¹U06112 smolichvolvo.corn 86.752(3); the default will be honored only at classified advertising... of ads daily $10,977 real estate to automotive, for which the foreclo- the discretion of the Thousands (exp. 10/31/1 5) Lexus ES350 2010, in print and online. merchandise to sporting s ure i s m a d e i s beneficiary or if r eDLR ¹366 Excellent Condition Ford Explorer 2007, goods. Bulletin Classifieds grantor's failure to pay quired by the terms of Eddie Bauer Edition, 32,000 miles, $20,000 SMOLICH when due the follow- the loan documents. appear every day in the 4x4. VIN ¹A97725 214-549-3627 (in ing sums: monthly In construing this noprint or on line. Sl V OL V O $12,998 Bend) payments of $732.72 tice, the singular inPorsche B o x ster Call 541-385-5809 541-749-2156 (exp10/31tt/1 5) beginning 07/01/12; cludes the plural, the Ford Fusion SEL2012, 2008, exc. c ond., www.bendbulletin.corn smolichvolvo.corn DLR ¹366 and monthly p a y- word "grantor" in(exp. 10/31/1 5) less than 18K mi., ments of $793.24 be- cludes any successor Vin ¹117015 black/black, s p o rt The Bulletin LEGAL NOTICE SUIV/llg CODOUI ODVDD SlllOS 1MB ginning 11/01/12; and i n interest t o t h e Notice Stock ¹44382A pkg., stored in winof Receipt of monthly payments of grantor as well as any $15,979 or $199/mo., t er. $25,0 0 0 . Ballot Title and One $ 709.19; plus a d - other person owing an Subject $2400 down, 84 mo., 224-558-1887, Determination vances of $7,829.61; obligation, the perfor4 .49% APR o n ap x Mercedes Benz E Bend. S 541-548-1448 proved credit. License together with title ex- mance of which is se- Notice is hereby given Class 2005, and title i ncluded in smolichusedcar pense, costs, trustee's cured by said trust (exp. 10/31/1 5) the fo l lowing Buick Lucerne 2008 payment, plus dealer incenter.corn fees and attorney's deed, and the words that Vin ¹688743 Very clean 6 cylinder, stalled options. "trustee" and sbenefi- Ballot Title for a profees incurred herein Stock ¹82316 initiative petiToyota Corolla S auto., leather interior, by reason of said de- ciary" include their re- posed Suaaau $11,979 or $155/mo., tion has been filed SUSSSUOSSSSD.OOM 2007, 93 k m i l es, 87k mi. $7450/OBO fault; any further sums spective successors down, 72 mo., automatic, s i l ver. advanced by the ben- i n interest, if a n y. with the D eschutes Will c onsider p a rt 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 4$2500 .49% APR o n a p Clerk on OcN ew brakes a nd 877-266-3821 trade. Call or text Ron eficiary for the protec- Without limiting the County proved credit. License Scion TCcoupe 2007, battery. Super clean, at 541-419-5060 Dlr ¹0354 trustee's disclaimer of t ober 1, 2015. T h e and title included in tion of the above de(exp. 10/31/1 5) Clerk has deno smoking. Cruise payment, plus dealer inscribed real property representation or war- County Vin ¹198120 that the proChevy Tahoe 1995 4x4 control, CD player, stalled options. and i ts inte r est ranties, Oregon law termined Stock ¹44193B posed initiative c loth s eats, A C . 4 dr. auto, tow pkg, therein; and prepay- requires the trustee to requirements ofmeets new brakes and roS UBA R U . $10,379 or $149/mo., Price: $6500. Call ment penalties/premi- state in this notice that egon Constitution,Or$2800 down, 60 mo., 541-480-2700 to tors, g r ea t ti r e s, residential ticle IV, Section 1, Arums, if applicable. By some 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 4 .49% APR o n a p - view. NO T E XTS releather, power, runs p roperty sold at a reason of said default 877-266-3821 proved credit. License PLEASE! quiring that a measure g reat, v ery g o o d the beneficiary has t rustee's sale m a y and title i ncluded in Dlr ¹0354 shall embrace one c ond., $4800 . VW Jetta U1999, 187K Honda Accord 2005, d eclared al l s u m s have been used in payment, plus dealer in- pattym51@q.corn mi., 17 wheels, V6, f ully l o aded, 541-385-4790 owing on the obliga- manufacturing meth- subject only and the stalled options. R aceland Ult i m o Nav, Moon roof, CD, proposed text is legBulletin recoml a mphetamines, t h e tion secured by the coilovers, Kenwood perfect leather inte- The S USA N Looking for your mends extra caution t trust deed i mmedi- chemicalcomponents islative in nature. stereo. New radiator rior, one owner, full next employee'? when p u rchasing ~ ately due and pay- of which are known to CAPTION: Future of hoses, motor mount maintained, always / products Hwy 20, Bend. Place a Bulletin help or services 2060 NE able, said sums being be toxic. Prospective Mirror Pond Dam 877-266-3821 and new CV a xle. garaged, never wanted ad today and out of the area. purchasers of r esithe following, to wit: Dlr ¹0354 $2500. 541-420-2016 wrecked, 143K road f from Shall the reach over 60,000 S ending c ash , prop e r ty QUESTION: $173,003.61 with in- dential or 541-279-8013 Bend Park and Recmiles, $7,999. Great readers each week. checks, or credit in- I should be aware of terest thereon at the Lincoln Nav i gator Have an item to r eation D istrict b e car ready to drive. Your classified ad formation may be I rate of 2 percent per this potential danger prohibited 2 003 A WD , or i g . Mike 541-499-5970 from acwill also appear on J subject to FRAUD. sell quick? annum beg i nning b efore deciding t o owner, local vehicle, quiring, renovating or bendbulletin.corn For more informa0 6/01/12; plus a d - place a bid for this If it's under always gar a ged, replacing the Mirror which currently reHUNTER SP E C IAL:l tion about an adverthe vances of $7,829.61; property a t auto., navigation, sunPond Dam? ceives over 1.5 milJeep Cherokee, 1990, tiser, you may call '500 you can place it in together with title extrustee's sale. T he roof, DV D p l ayer, The Mirlion page views 4x4, has 9 tires on I the Oregon State I pense, costs, trustee's trustee's rules of auc- SUMMARY: The Bulletin heated tk A/C seats, Toyota Camry Hybrid wheels. $2000 obo. Attorney General's t ror Pond Dam is a hyevery month at fees and attorneys tion may be accessed custom g r i ll , all no extra cost. BulleOffice C o nsumer Classifieds for: w w w .northwest-droelectric dam in the fees incurred herein at 1 51 k m i l es, 541-771-4732 records, new Michelin 2007, Deschutes River lotin Classifieds hotline at by reason of said de- trustee.corn and are cated I mpala E 4 0 0,f Protection t ires. $10,0 0 0 . one owner, garaged, '70 im m ediately Get Results! Call '13- 3 lines, 7 days fault; any further sums incorporated by this north of the cruise, non-smoker, $2,500. '76 Nova, 1-877-877-9392. 541-815-5000. Newport 385-5809 or place advanced by the benreference. You may fully l o a ded, all $1,800. '03 Honda '20 -3 lines, 14 days venue bridge i n your ad on-line at eficiary for the protec- also access sale sta- A r ecords, $850 0 . 700cc MC, $ 2 000. SerVing CeOMSI OregOn SiDDS19IB The presence (Private Party ads only) bendbulletin.corn tion of the above de- tus a t ww w .north- Bend. 541-350-9806 541-410-5349 this dam contribscribed real property westtrustee.corn and of utes to the formation and i ts inte r est www. USA-Foreclothe pond in downtherein; and prepay- sure.corn. For further of DM| Bend called Mirment penalties/premi- information, p l ease town 0 S1S ror Approval of ums, if a p plicable. contact: Nanci Lam- thisPond. Lincoln Navigator measure prohibW HEREFORE, n o bert Northwest Limited 2011, Trustee Services, Inc. its the Bend Park and tice hereby is given VIN ¹J04183 Recreation D i s trict that the undersigned P.O. Box 997 Belle- from acquiring, reno$31,998 vue, WA 98009-0997 trustee will on Janu(exp. 10/31/1 5) 586-1900 M a x son, vating or replacing the ary 11, 2016 at the DLR ¹366 Pond D a m. hour of 10:00 o' clock, R ebeckah K ( T S ¹ Mirror Rejection of this meaA.M. in accord with 7236.23549) sure maintains the the standard of time 1002.279371-File No. status quo in regard to established by ORS legal ability of the 187.110, at the fol- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! the Bend Park and Reclowing place: inside reation District to ac541-548-1448 the main lobby of the Door to door selling with smolichusedcar Deschutes C o u ntyfast results! It's the easiest quire, renovate or replace the Mirror Pond center.corn Courthouse, 1164 NW way in the world to sell. Dam. Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DE- The Bulletin Classified Per ORS 255.140 any SCHUTES, State of elector d i s satisfied 541-385-5809 Oregon, sell at public with this ballot title, )PP auction to the highest may file a petition for bidder for cash the LEGAL NOT(OF review of this ballot i nterest in t h e d e - The City of Madras Is title in the Deschutes brakes (jess than 100 g~ ~ NissanRogue 2014 scribed real property requesting proposals County Circuit Court VIN ¹799777 which the grantor had (RFP ) for iob classl - mi.) M jchejtn tires, no later than 5 :00 $20,997 or had power to con- fication and compen p .m., October AWD, leather interior, 19, /exp. 10/31/1 5) vey at the time of the sation consulting ser(the s eventh DLR ¹366 heated front seats, preexecution by grantor vices. For a complete 2015 day after the of the trust deed, toFP packet, visit the business SMOLICH mium factory sound, 6 title was filed). gether with any inter- City of Madras web CD in dash player and V OL V O est which the grantor site a t w w w .ci.ma- Nancy Blankenship 54'I -749-2156 or grantor's succes- dras.or.us under "City Deschutes County sub-woofer, heated smolichvolvo.corn I sors in interest ac- Business: Public NoClerk outside mirrors, dua quired after the ex- tices.U Please call ecution of the trust Sara Puddy, HR Ofmoonroof, tow pkg., FIND YOUR FUTURE FIND YOUR FUTURE deed, to satisfy the ficer, at HOME INTHE BULLETIN HOME INTHE BULLETIN roof rack, always gaforegoing obligations 541-325-0303; or raged, no smoke or thereby secured and email: Your future is just apage Your future is just apage t he costs and e x - spuddy@ci.madras. or away. Whetheryou're looking away. Whetheryou're looking dogs. Exc. cond. penses of sale, in- .us for more informa- for a hat or aplace to hangit, for a hat or aplace tohangit, cluding a reasonable tion. All sealed sub- The Bulletin Classified is The Bulletin Classified is charge by the trustee. mittals must be reyour best source. your best source. * Notice is further given ceived no later than 12-Week Package 1" ad Every daythousandsof Every daythousandsof that for reinstatement October 29 2015 b OR buyers andsellers ofgoods buyers andsellers of goods Vehicle Priced at: AdCo st: 12-MOnthpkg. 2n Ad With phOtO or payoff quotes re- 5 ~. m. and services dobusinessin and services do business in quested pursuant to Until SOLD, • under $4999 $50 these pages.Theyknow these pages.Theyknow 2" Ad with Photo, Border O RS 8 6 .786 a n d Sell an Item you can't beatThe Bulletin you can' t beat The Bulletin • $5000 fo $9999 86.789 must be timely $70 whichever comes 8 Bold Headline, Classified Section for Classified Section for communicated in a • $10,000 10 $14,999 4i85 selection andconvenience selection andconvenience written request that regardless of item price. first! - every item isjust a phone -every item isjust a phone th t h at • $15,000 fo $19,999 $9 5 corn pl i es wi call away. $149 flat rate call away. statute addressed to 'Photo o iional the trustee's "Urgent The Classified Section is The Classified Section is If it's under$500 Request Desk" either easy to use.Everyitem easy to use.Every item Your ad will appear in: by personal delivery is categorizedandevery i s categorized and every you can place it in to the trustee's physicartegory is indexed onthe cartegoIy is indexed on the • The Bulletin • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads The Bulletin cal offices (call for adsection's front page. section's front page. d ress) or b y fi r s t Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • Central Oregon Marketplace • bendbvlletin.corn Classifieds for: Whether youarelookingfor Whether youare lookingfor class, certified mail, a home orneeda service, a home orneeda service, r eturn r eceipt r e your future is inthe pagesof quested, addressed to $10 • 3 lines, 7 days your future is inthepagesof The Bulletin Classified. The Bulletin Classified. the trustee's post of- $16 • 3 lines, 14 days fice box address set ' P rivate party merchandise only. forth in this notice. (Private Party ads only) The Bulletin The Bulletin SerVingCSDOSI OSSSSD SMS tSSS SUMDS CentralOregonsince SMS Due to potential con-

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G6 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?

4

11 II I ')I

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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.corn

The Bulletin

To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) 'Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.


/

OCTOBER 10-11, 2015

CLASSIC PEANUTS®/ by Charles Schulz THAT'5

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