Bulletin Daily Paper 10-19-15

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Serving Central Oregon since 1903

MONDAY October 19,2015

EW FACES ON COMICS PAG The daily comic strip "Stone Soup" is ending. Starting in today's Bulletin, "The Duplex," by Glenn McCoy, will run in its place. Main character Eno Camino is a lovable loser who pals around with his dog and intellectual superior, Fang.

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bendbulletin.corn

Rescueof solo climber is 2nd in

TODAY' S READERBOARD

Half-marathon — Sunday's Down 8 Dirty Half Marathon could be one of the last races of the year.B1

BUT TEACHERS ARE TOO FEW

past month By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Knowing her daughter was hurt and alone on Mount Washington late Oct. 11, Leslie Ford went

Secretary of state

through the Sunday night

debate —Sunriver Resort played host to the first debate for the Democratic candidates Sunday.AS

without a moment of rest. "That was not a night

El Chape —Acostume of

forsleep,"Ford,61,ofPortland, said Friday. Climbing alone, Sarah Ford, 20, of Bend, had fallen. Nearly 12 hours later she was safe, after being

ro

thedrug kingpin hasbecome a surprising Halloween hit.A3

lifted off the mountain

by an Oregon Army National Guard Black Hawk

GOlf grOup — TheWest

helicopter. Sarah Ford's rescue

Ridge Men's Golf group, which started with 11 players, has grown to 106.B1

came just over two weeks

after the rescue of Gordon Kenyon, 45, of Salem, off North Sister. He was also

NASA record —scott Kelly

climbing alone and was also pulled out of danger

broke the U.S. record for most days spent in space.A3

by a Black Hawk. Both

were fortunate enough to have cell service to put out

their calls for help.

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Coming soon: Air Force One for the digital age By Peter Baker New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Pres-

ident Barack Obama has

Sarah Ford started her climb at 1 p.m. Oct. 11 and

had toppedMount Washington, a 7,795-foot volcano ABOVE: Hannah Keen teaches Spanish to her kindergarten students at Barnes Butte Elementary School in Prineville earlier this month.

from the summit.

SeeClimbers /A4 By Abby Spegman The Bulletin

PRINEVILLE — Hannah Keen has a

plan: English in the morning, Spanish

Ethiopia's

in the afternoon. But just a few weeks

into the school year, sometimes she has to deviate. On a recent Monday morning, her kindergarten class was practicing "S" words — sock, sun, spoon, straw. "Si, pero en ingles," she told a boy. To another squirming boy she said, in Spanish, to pay attention. On the board

dangerous drought '1lller

the date was written in English and

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"People sometimes ask

Spanish; on the walls were posters with colors and shapes identified in both languages. Keen teaches in the dual language program at Barnes Butte Elementary

me what the biggest perk of being president is," he

and Spanish. She estimates of her 28

told visitors at the White

students, about a dozen are native En-

House last week. "No. 1 is the plane."

glishspeakers,adozen arenativeSpan- Books in Spanish hang on the wall in Jasmin Nelson's second-grade class at Bear ish speakers and the rest are bilingual. Creek Elementary School. "Yes, there are going to be times when my English speakers are in the Spanish time and they' re not going to ing a shortage of bilingual teachers. half in English, but older students get "Staffing is a challenge," said Jim only about 45 minutes a day in Spanish. understand it so well," she said. Then she would use hand motions, visuals Bates, principal at Barnes Butte. "The Dual language is an umbrella term and repeat key vocabulary until it sinks goal is to have a rock-solid Span- for many different models that use two in. "Even though I'm speaking Spanish, i sh-skilled instructor in f r ont of t h e languages in one classroom. Some are they definitely catch on." kids." strictly for non-native English speakers Research shows these programs can His district lost three bilingual teach- and wean them off of instruction in their close the achievement gap between na- ers over the summer and has had to cut native language over time. Dual immertive and non-native English speakers. back how much Spanish instruction sion programs, however, expose stuLast year there were more than 80 dual older elementary students receive. In dents to two languages at once with the language programs in Oregon. But as kindergarten through third grade, bi- goal of developing proficiency in both. more districts add them, the state is fac- lingual teachers teach half in Spanish, See Dual language /A6

made clear what he will

miss the most when he leaves office in 15 months.

In September, he told

another audience that "the plane is nice" and that unfortunately for him "my

lease is running out," so he might soon have to "start

taking off my shoes again going through security." In Kenya in July, he noted that when he visited as a

young man his luggage was lost: "That doesn' t

happen on Air Force One." Let's face it: The plane

in the Cascades, in time to see the 6:30 p.m. sunset

4'

By Jacey Fortin

le

+ E» Ar

s

New York Times News Service

IS

School, where students learn in English

MIESO, Ethiopia — Ev-

ery day, Yasin Mohammed Aliye stakes out a spot on his small farm to chew khat

'•

leaves, a stimulant, and Photosby Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

guard against intruders. The khat, he explains, helps to dull the hunger. "We got just one day of rain each month during the rainy season," Yasin said, referring to the days from July through September. "It should have been raining every other day. Now my harvest has failed." The green hills and full fields around here belie an alarming fact: This is the worst drought Ethiopia has

experienced in more than a decade.

SeeEthiopia/A4

is, in fact, pretty nice, and

the president's luggage is indeed very rarely lost. But the plane is also getting old. And so after more than a million miles of flying while in office, its current

primary passenger is planning to bequeath his successor — or perhaps his successor's successor — a new-and-improved Air Force One spiffed up for the smartphone age. The Defense Depart-

ment hopes to sign an initial contract with Boeing in the coming weeks to begin the long process of assembling a new presidential aircraft capableofferrying the commander in chief around the world with the capacity to run a war from

midair if necessary. See Air Force One/A6

What happens toall the money weforget about? By Adam Getter and David Crary

control of the cash.

The Associated Press

swelling state coffers by more than $40 billion and lawmakers using some of it to patch budget holes, skirmishes are breaking out between states and companies with their own

When Americans lose track

of money — in neglected bank accounts, paychecks they forgot to cash and elsewherestategovernments areincreasingly aggressive in taking

Now, with those efforts

interest in holding on to the

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly cloudy High 59, Low 35 Page BS

undaimed property. Companies accuse states of

somebody's lost wallet. In Minnesota, anyway, we give peo-

overreaching. State officials

ple their wallets back. It's just

counter the businesses are m ore concerned with keeping

what we do here. But it's not

the assets themselves. But

critics say rightful owners too often get short shrift. "The analogy is to finding

what the state is doing," said Joe Atkins, a state representa-

tive from outside St. Paul who last year introduced a bill call-

ing for increased funding to

The Bulletin

INDEX Calendar A5 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope

An Independent

track down property owners. While other states, too, have increased efforts to reunite

owners with their property, many have changed laws to let them take control of more

unclaimedproperty more quickly. See Money/A4

Q l/i/e use recycled newsprint

C4 Local/State A 5-6 SportsMonday B1-7 A7 Nation/World A 2

T elevision

A7

ssections

0

88 26 7 02 32 9

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015

The

NATION Ee ORLD

Bulletin HOW to reaCh US

MigrantS faCe winter —Themigrants coming into Europe through the Western Balkans in recent months have been resourceful and adaptable enough to slip around unfriendly police, raging rivers, hostile borders and razor-wire fences. But there is one thing they cannot evade, and that is the looming winter. Perhaps as soon as late October and certainly by the end of November, the season will shift in the Balkans. Finger-numbing rain, a fall fixture, will descend into snow and freezing winds, complicating and even endangering the arduous journeys starting from Syria and other war-tom nations into the heart of Western Europe.

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ReplldliCalI dedate —In Boulder, Colorado, a mountainside city of yoga studios, tech startups and Buddhist-inflected cafes, it's likelier to spot a black bear than an elected Republican. But for one night, Boulder will briefly and improbably be the center of the conservative orbit as presidential candidates and hundreds of journalists gather at the University of Colorado's campus Oct. 28 for the third Republican primary debate. Residents and students are preparing an oh-so-Boulder welcome. Immigrant groups and anti-fracking activists are organizing a march. Labor unions will rally. There will be original artwork and maybe an installation on white privilege, organizers said. There will even be protest clowns to offer a "peaceful, out of the box, Boulder-style reception."

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Venezuela CurrenCy —Pity the bolivar, Venezuela's currency, named after its independence hero, Simon Bolivar. A year ago, one dollar bought about 100 bolivars on the black market. These days, it often fetches more than 700 bolivars. The International Monetary Fund has predicted that inflation in Venezuela will hit 159 percent this year, and that the economy will shrink 10 percent, the worst projected performance in the world. Yet the real story goes beyond numbers, revealed in the absurdities of life in a country where the government has refused for months to release basic economic data like the inflation rate or the gross domestic product.

Mahmoud rrrean / The Associated Press

Israeli border policemen walk by the wall being built between Palestinian and Jewish neighborhoods in Jerusalem on Sunday.

ra s acenewreai In IVI e erusa em By Karin Laub JERUSALEM — Palestin-

latest closures are bringing them to a boiling point and lead to more violence.

ians in Jerusalem, more than

"They want to humiliate us,"

The Associated Press prschrrs p p

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CORRECTIONS

have awoken to a new reality: Israeli troops are encircling Arab neighborhoods, blocking roads with concrete cubes the size of washing machines and ordering some of those leaving on foot to lift their shirts to show they are not carrying knives. The unprecedented clampdown is meant to halt a rash

of stabbings of Israelis. Many of the attacks were carried out by residentsof east Jerusaclaimed by Palestinians as a future capital. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government has

skirmishes that would likely prevail for years if there's no deal on setting up Palestine

any negotiated partition of Je-

growth of Israeli settlements, the land between the Med-

rusalem into two capitals — is effectively dividing the city along ethnic lines with his security measures.

ClilltOII FOIIIIdatiOII —In a resurgent Rwanda, the government has deputized a high-profile partner for an array of endeavors across this striving, haunted land: the Clinton Foundation. A review of the foundation's history shows that it has done vital, often path-breaking work in Rwanda, particularly in health and rural development. But with Hillary Clinton campaigning as Rwandan President Paul Kagame faces sharpening criticism about human rights, it also highlights the potential for conflict of interest, the outsize access to power and the delicate global politics that arise when such work is conducted by a former U.S. president whose wife is a two-time contender for the Democratic presidential nomination.

next to Israel. They say that due to the iterranean and

t h e J o rdan

River has effectively become a binational entity, with Isra-

"The great patriots ... who

ed, greater Jerusalem, are now

looks like," said Jerusalem ex-

proposing to dissect it, divide pert Daniel Seidemann. "It' s it and return it back 48 years the one-state reality."

— From wire reports

I

viding Jerusalem, something Netanyahu has said he would

I

never do. Arab residents, who have

long complained of discriminatory Israeli policies, say the

e

I

I I I

Voting begins in Egyptian elections By Kareem Fahim New York Times News Service

CAIRO — Voting began Sunday in Egypt's first parliamentary elections in four

years, to replace the legislature that was dissolved in 2012 and to add legitimacy to

the government of President A bdel-Fattah e l -Sissi. B u t Mona Ahmed, 20, said she

One month: $1 7.50 <Pdintonly: S16.50) By mail:Onemonth: $25 E-Editien Only:Onemonth: $13

balloting, felt much the same.

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taste of the constant hate-filled

drivers stuck at one of the new checkpoints vented their anger. Domestic critics say Netanyahu — long opposed to

rest. But some allege he is di-

cy here for decades. Other young people in the

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Some warn

said Taher Obeid, a 26-year- events — a rise in "lone wolf" old janitor at the Hebrew Uni- attacks by Palestinians and versity of Jerusalem. He spoke Israeli crackdowns — offer a

portrayed the measures as temporary, in line with what his advisers say any police de-

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el ruling over several million don't go to bed at night before Palestinians. "This is w hat th e f u ture annexed by Israel in 1967 and praying for a unified, undivid-

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in time," commentator Nehemiah Strassler wrote in the

lem, the sector captured and

was skipping the polls. "Everyone is lying to everyone," she said, wearily, echoing the apathy and cynicism

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BelIghaZi COmmittee —Partisan tensions between the leaders of the House committee investigating the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, erupted Sunday, just four days before Hillary Clinton is scheduled to testify at a public hearing of the panel. As committee Chairman Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., prepared to go on television to provide his latest defense of the investigation, the committee's top Democrat, Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, released information undercutting one of Gowdy's recent allegations about Clinton's use of her private email when she was secretary of state. Three hours later, Gowdy responded, saying Cummings had mischaracterized information. Gowdy and Cummings continued their argument in separate appearances on CBS' "Face the Nation."

Giza district of greater Cairo, interviewed on the eve of the

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Central Oregon ishometo approximately 17,000 veterans, including veteransfromWWII, the KoreanWar, Vietnam, Iraq andAfghanistan, andnumerous other military operations. OregonDepartment of VeteransAffairs documentsabout 15,000veterans jn DeschutesCounty and approximately 2,000veterans in CrookandJefferson counties respectively.Eachgeneration of veterans hasbeen uniquely impacted bycombatexperiencesbenefit from the expansiveservices available throughout Central Oregon.

SOME OFOUR FEATURE STORIESINCLUDE: VETERANSRANCH —Ayyoruingranchthatrestorespurpose and spirit of allages.

PROJECT HEALING WATERS —Providingbasicfly fishing skills toactivemilitary personalandveterans.

HELPINGHOOFS — Equineassistedpsychotherapy, specializing inhelpingmilitary personal, veteransandtheir family cope withuniqueproblems.

Yara Essam, 21, said she

felt "suffocated" by politics. She had voted only once,

LQQKFQRIT: Saturday, November 14 sALEsDEADLINE:Saturday, October 21

f or el-Sissi, and s ai d s h e regretted it. " He didn't do

anything," she said, citing the struggles of her family' s business. "Nothing is going right."

HEROES

The parliamentary contest, to elect 568 lawmakers, will

be held in two rounds of voting through November and is widely expected to deliver a legislature loyal to el-Sissi, a former general who led a military takeover of Egypt's government in the summer of

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2013.

The lines at several polling stations Sunday appeared to be short or nonexistent, forc-

ing the government to declare a half-day holiday for state workers today in an effort to increase participation.

The Bulletin 541-382-1811 www.bendbulletin.corn


MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015•THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Monday, Oct. 1 9, the 292nd

day of 2015. Thereare 73days left in the year.

RESEARCH

HAPPENINGS

e ans: mi

Canada eleCtiOn — Polls show the general election today could be aclose oneas Prime Minister StephenHarper takes on Justin Trudeau.

HISTORY Highlight:In1765, the Stamp Act Congress, meeting inNew York, adopted a declaration of rights and liberties which the British Parliament ignored. In1781,British troops under Gen. Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, Virginia, as the AmericanRevolution neared its end. In1789,John Jaywasswornin as the first Chief Justice of the United States. In1814, the first documented public performance of "The Star-SpangledBanner" took place at theHolliday Street Theater in Baltimore. In1864, Confederate Lt. Gen. Jubal Early's soldiers attacked Union forces atCedarCreek, Virginia; the Uniontroops were able to rally anddefeatthe Confederates. In1914,the U.S.Post Office began delivering mail with government-owned cars, asopposed to using contracted vehicles. The First Battle of Ypresbegan during World WarI. In1935,the Council of the League ofNations imposed sanctions against Italy for invading Abyssinia. In1944,the U.S. Navybegan accepting black womeninto WAVES(Women Accepted for Volunteer EmergencyService). In1951,President Harry Truman signed anact formally ending the state of warwith Germany. In1969, the United States be-

gan a limited embargoagainst Cuba covering all commodities except medical supplies and certain food products. In1977,the supersonic Concorde madeits first landing in New YorkCity. In1987, the stock market crashed asthe DowJones Industrial Averageplunged 508 points, or 22.6 percent in value, to close at 1,738.74.

In1999, Kevin Costner's Western epic "Danceswith Wolves" had its world premiere inWashington, D.C. Ten yearsago:Adefiant Saddam Hussei npleadedinnocent to charges of premeditated murder andtorture as his trial opened underheavysecurity in the former headquarters of his Baath Party in Baghdad. Five yearsagn:The Pentagon directed the military to accept openly gay recruits for the first time in the nation's history. HosamSmadi,aJordanianman caught in anFBIsting trying to blow up aDallasskyscraper, was sentenced to 24 years in prison after telling the court he was ashamed ofhisactionsand renouncing al-Qaida. One yearagn:PopeFrancis beatified PopePaulVl, concluding a remarkablemeeting of bishops debating family issues that drewparallels to the tumultuous reforms of the Second VaticanCouncil which Paul oversawand implemented. Peyton Manning brokeBrett Favre's NFLrecord of 508 touchdown careerpasses ashe threw four TDpasses in Denver's 42-17 victory over theSan Francisco 49ers.

BIRTHDAYS Author John leCarre is 84. Author and critic RenataAdler is 78. Actor MichaelGambonis 75. Actor John Lithgow is 70. Feminist activist Patricia Ireland is 70. Rock singer-musician Patrick Simmons (TheDoobie Brothers) is 67.Talk show host Charlie Chase is63. Former Republican National Committee Chairman MichaelSteele is 57. BoxerEvanderHolyfield is 53. Host TyPennington (TV: "Extreme Makeover: HomeEdition") is 51.Actor Jon Favreau is 49. AmyCarter is 48. "South Park" co-creator TreyParker is 46. ComedianChris Kattan is 45. Writer-director Jason Reitman is 38.Actor Benjamin Salisbury is 35.Actress Gillian Jacobs is 33. — From wire reports

NAME TO KNOW

OWn 0

Larger mammals with more cells should statistically be at higher risk for cancer because of cell division, but they aren' t. Elephants, especially, did not get cancer as much as scientists would think. Scientists are looking into the p53 gene, which they think is the reason these pachyderms beat the odds. By Carl Zimmer The New York Times News Service

In 1977, a University of Oxford statistician named Richard Peto pointed out a simple

The Associated Press

i~'

yet puzzling biological fact: We humans should have a lot

Scott I(elly breaks U.S. record for most days in space WASHINGTON

,t

Waking up hundreds of

more cancer than mice, but we don' t.

miles above the Himala-

yas, astronaut Scott Kelly broke the U.S. record

Peto's argument was beguilingly simple. Every time a cell divides, there's a small chance

Friday for the most time

spent in space with 383 days. Kelly is more than halfway through a yearlong

it will gain a mutation that speeds its growth. Cells that

accumulate several of these mutations may become cancerous.The bigger an animal is, the more cells it has, and the longer an animal lives, the

mission at the International Space Station and will

eventually set a r ecord for the longest single U.S. space mission. Kelly tweeted back to

more times its cells divide. We

humans undergo about 10,000 times as many cell divisions as mice — and thus should be far

Earth that he hopes that

his eventual 500-plus days in orbit will be exceeded by someone visiting Mars.

more likely to get cancer. Yet humans and micehave

roughly the same lifetime risk of cancer, a circumstance that

He tweeted that his day University of Utah HealthSciences via The New York Times

Using a special set of proteins, elephants appear to be exceptional cancer fighters, a new study reto's paradox. ports, but it's unclear how to apply that to humans. A number of scientists have speculated that large, longlived animals must evolve ex- tists investigated a gene that pair of functional p53, like of p53 than other animals. "All tra cancer-fighting weapons. is crucial for preventing can- other mammals. But as they in all, it's interesting, but the And if that's true, they reason, cer, called p53. The protein evolved to bigger sizes, they mechanism needs to be propthen the biggest, longest-lived encodedby the gene monitors steadily evolved extra copies erly investigated," she said. animals should have an es- cells for damage to the DNA of p53. Muller said it was especial"Whatever's going on is spe- ly important to understand pecially big arsenal. Other- they contain. In some cases, wise, these species would go it prompts the cells to repair cial to the elephant lineage," precisely how elephants fight extinct. the genes. In other cases, p53 Lynch said. cancer before trying to mim"Every b ab y e l e phant stops cells from dividing furTo see whether these extra ic their strategies with drugs should be dropping dead of ther. And in still other cases, copies of p53 made a differ- for humans. Experiments in colon cancer at age 3," said Dr. it even causes the cells to com- ence in fighting cancer, both which mice get extra amounts Joshua Schiffman, a pediatric mit suicide. teams ran experiments on el- of p53 have shown that the oncologist at the Huntsman One sign of how important ephant cells. Schiffman and molecule has a downside: It Cancer Institute at the Univer- p53 is for fighting cancer is his colleagues bombarded can accelerate aging. "It has sity of Utah. what happens to people born elephant cells with radiation to be kept under tight control," Writing in JA MA , Schiff- with a defective copy of the and DNA-damaging chemi- Muller said. man andhiscolleagues report gene. This condition, known cals, while Lynch's team used Schiffman is now i nvestias Li-Fraumeni syndrome, chemicals and ultraviolet rays. gating how to translate the that elephants appear to be exceptional cancer fighters, creates a lifetime risk of canIn all these cases, the ele- new findings on elephants into using a special set of proteins cer ofmore than 90 percent. phant cells responded in the cancer treatmentsfor people. to kill damaged cells. Many people with Li-Fraume- same way: Instead of trying to But he said it would be useful Working i n d ependently, ni syndrome get cancers as repair the damage, they sim- to look at other big or longVincent Lynch, an evolution- children and can have sever- ply committed suicide. Schiff- lived animals as well. Naked ary biologist at the University al types of cancer over their man saw this response as a mole rats, for example, live up of Chicago, and his colleagues lifetimes. unique — and very effective to 30 years without ever gethave come to the same concluSchiffman and hi s c ol- — way to block cancer. "It' s ting cancer. One weapon they sion. Those researchers post- leagues found that elephants almost as if they said, 'We' re use is a protein that arrests the ed a draft of their paper on the had evolved new copies of the elephants — we' ve got plenty growth of fast-dividing cells. It bioRxiv server. It is in review p53 gene. While humans have more cells where those came senses when these cells bump at the journal eLife. only one pair of p53 genes, the from,'" Schiffman said. into other cells and brings Schiffman and hi s c ol- scientists identified 20 pairs in Patricia Muller, an oncol- their division to a halt. That is an entirely differleagues found in their re- elephants. ogist at the MRC Toxicolosearch that elephants had a Lynch and his colleagues gy Unit at the University of ent solution from the one eleremarkably low rate of cancer. also found these extra genes. L eicester who wa s no t i n - phants appear to have evolved. They reviewed zoo records on To trace their evolution, the re- volved in the studies, said the And elephants are the only the deaths of 644 elephants searchers made a large-scale results, though compelling, animals yet found that fight and found that less than 5 per- comparison of elephants to didn't firmly establish exactly cancer with extra p53 genes. cent died of cancer. By conother mammal species — in- how elephants use p53 to fight So Schiffman speculates that trast, 11 percent to 25 percent cluding extinct relatives like cancer. One possibility is that parrots, tortoises and whales of humans die of cancer — de- woolly mammoths and mast- the extra copies don't actually may all have special longevity spite the fact that elephants odons whose DNA remains in cause cells to commit suicide. tactics of their own. "The war on cancer was gocan weigh a hundred times as their fossils. Instead, they may act as demuch as we do. The small ancestors of el- coys for enzymes that destroy ing onlong before there were T o understand t h e e l e - ephants, Lynch and his col- p53 proteins. As a result, ele- humans," he said. "So let' s phants' defenses, the scien- leagues found, had only one phants can have higher levels look at nature's strategies." has come to be known as Pe-

began with a strikingly beautiful view of the Hi-

malayas and vowed to visit them.

Kelly told The Washington Post in M arch as

he was preparing to arrive at the International Space Station, "(The weath-

er) never changes on the space station. Even though

it's a pretty nice environment, I guess it's like living in Southern California, people get sick of it ... after a while." But Kelly's mission at

the International Space Station is about more than breaking records. He and h is

e x - astronaut t wi n

Mark, on the ground, are part of an experiment on

the long-term physical and psychological effects of living in space. Russian co s monaut Gennady Padalka holds the record with 879 days

in space.

Weekly Arts Sr Entertainment In

IIQLGAZINE •

The Bulletin

Find Your

The world's mostnotoriousdrug lord has becomea hit Halloweencostume By Hugh Naylor The Washington Post

TRENDING

I f y o u' ve b ecome a prison. mass-marketed H alloween The incident boosted the costume,then you'reprobably legend of a c riminal who really scary. is accused of killing thouAnd you' re also probably sands of people as head of the really lucrative. The latter is Sinaloa Cartel — a position what a company in Mexico that helped him accumulate hopes will become of its cos- wealth estimated at a b out tume of the country's most $1 billion. And it may in turn infamous drug lord: Joa- boost profits for Grupo Rev, quin Guzman, known as "El

Chap o." Grupo Rev plans to rake in the pesos this Halloween season with its newest ensemble

of latex masks and prison attire that resembles the man who for years trafficked co-

caine to the United States, shipped methamphetamine s to Canada and distributed ec-

stasy to as far off as Europe. Guzman, considered by the U.S. Treasury D e partment

government after it arrested El Chapo and then watched

him escape only a few months later," Esponda said.

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as the world's most powerful drug trafficker, embarrassed Mexican officials in July by pulling off a stunning escape man was held in isolation and from a

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015

Money

g lg~g<s~

-f, flit+=-

Continued fromA1

-

-

-

State lost-and-found pro-

grams have been growing rapidly for more than a de-

-' ~ ! W~

28.5 million on its unclaimed property list.

)P

States stepped up pursuit

of unclaimed property in the late1990s,afterrestructuring by insurance companies exposed those firms' inability to locate many policy hold-

m edical r e searchers w h o recently sued Delaware offi-

cials highlights the stakes. Gilles Gosselin and Jean Louis Imbach,French chem-

ists who developed a drug for treating hepatitis B, became

shareholders of a company incorporated in Delaware to develop it. In 2009, without contacting them, D elaware

took control of their stock, deemed abandoned, and sold it for $1.7 million.

cently b y

Jim Mone I The Associated Press file photo

State Rep. Joe Atkins helps GeyleWyant, right, check her namein the Minnesota's Department of Commerce unclaimed property list at e booth et the Minnesota State Fair in Falcon Heights, Minnesota. Atkins said he stumbled on the issue in the fall of 2014 when a friend mentioned the state hed taken control of $700 belonging to his grandmother.

"You' re unknown when they have your property, but you' re known when it's time to tax you." — William Palmer, lawyer for claimants in e lawsuit against

California accusing the state of doing too little to return

unclaimed property mont State Treasurer Beth Pearce said. "We would like shares, the company was acto see more due diligence by quired by Merck 8 Co., in a claring their property aban- the holders, so it gets to the 2014 deal that valued the re-

doned. But that year, it began

individuals before it even be-

searchers' stock at $13.7 mil-

requiring only that shareholders have no contact with

comes unclaimed property." Consumers' right to claim missing money never expires, even as l egislators spend a portion of the funds.

their account for three years,

sale, but they took a $12 mil-

without attempting to reach

lion hit. "All of this could've been

them. • Minnesota used to send lettersdirectly to state res-

On average, states' net of un-

easily avoided if someone claimed property amounts to just sent a letter," said Ethan idents telling them when just a small part of their budMillar, a Los Angeles lawyer the state had their m oney. gets — about half a percent as representing the researchers. But l awmakers e l iminated of 2011, according to NAUPA. that provision in 2005, while ditching the requirement to

Delaware

publish the names of properBut states vary. Delaware claimed property lists don' t ty owners in newspapers. has turned unclaimed propeven realize they' re entitled Still, Minnesota is among erty into its third largest to missing money. It could be states that set up booths at source of revenue. Last year, an inheritance they weren' t state fairs to inform people it brought in $514 million, aware of or mutual funds of the missing money, efforts accounting for more than 13 entrusted to a broker with a that have helped boost its re- percent of the budget. That mistaken address. Most are turn rate to about 45 percent pursuit of that revenue — ofowed less than $100. of what it takes in. ten via audits delving back In all, state governments M ichael Roth man, M i n decades — has angered many h ave $41.7 billion in u n - nesota's commerce commis- companies. claimed property on their sioner, said he wants legislaSome complaints have fobooks, according to the Na- tors to double or triple fund- cused on Kelmar Associates, t ional A s sociation o f U n - ing to hire finders who will a Massachusetts-based auditclaimed Property Adminis- searchforpeople and to step ing firm which at times hantrators. Changes in law have up advertising and outreach. dled more than three-fourths "It's great to have a goal, of Delaware's business, earnaccelerated collections: • Last year, Pennsylvania but if you don't give the re- ing more than $100 million in lawmakers shortened from sources to do it, we can' t contingency fees and other five years to three the peri- achieve it," Rothman said. payments since 2013. M ost consumers on u n -

od before bank accounts and other property can be con-

sidered abandoned. Money claimed by the state jumped to $669 million from $265 million the year before. Until the change, Pennsylvania

A 'stealth tax'

Delaware legislators last

For those unaware the state

year embraced a law giving companies the right to enter

has claimed their property,

into a voluntary agreement

"it's a stealth tax," said Ferdi-

before an audit and shortnand Hogroian of the Coun- ening the period that audits cil on State Taxation, which

Hou s t on-based

Plains All American Pipeline even before a Kelmar audit was fully under way. It complained of "confiscation." Gregor and Kelmar's president, Mark McQuillen, defended the state's arrangements with the company and

the auditing procedures. "Delaware certainly feels the things they are doing are Until r e cent s e ttlements appropriate, and I feel they' re between states and large inappropriate," McQuillen said. surers, the companies did not California, me a nwhile, check for deaths that would continues to battle a lawsuit necessitate payments on old filed in 2001, accusing the life insurance policies, and state of doing too little to find some still do not do so. and notify owners. In 2007, "There is the potential for a federal court temporarily companies to do as little as shut down the state's properpossible to get the money ty claims process, forcing legback to t h e o w n ers," Ver- islators to pass a law to fix it.

worked to track down their

Efforts to return

Continued fromA1 The stream bordering Yasin's farm has run dry, and the trenches he dug to irrigate his land never filled. He has sown seeds three times this year, each time anticipating

audits. One lawsuit was filed re-

As Gosselin and Imbach

lion. Delaware turned over proceeds ofthe earlier stock

the return rate has risen to

taken Delaware to court over

ers. Many states have hired

auditing firms to scrutinize the books of insurers, retailers and others, paying them multimillion-dollar fees for unclaimed property t h ey brought in. T he experience of t w o

Ethiopia

about 20 percent. Gregor said the state has "prebeen evenhanded serving our ability to enforce things when companies really have a responsibility, but also being business friendly." Several companies have

' "ak

MAR@ c'INWIT

cade. California alone has

percent. The deputy finance secretary, David Gregor, said

can cover. And they limited

Since the process restart-

ed, property claimed by California has swelled from $4.1 billion to $7.6 billion. "In p articular, because property not reunited with

skips meals. He worries that his family until the next har-

governm ent's

in t e rnation-

vest season. If all else fails, al funding requests to $596 he will move west, where the million from $432 million. rains have been more reliable.

About 43 percent of that has

El Nino, a w ater-warming

so far," said David Del Conte,

phenomenon in the Pacific Ocean, has decimated rainfall levels across large stretches of Ethiopia and, in a cruel twist, may also bring flooding to some areas in the coming months, according to Ethiopian officials,

the deputy Ethiopia country

"Other farmers are already been supplied by internationleaving," he said. "When they al partners, but much of it has go, they ask me, 'Why are you already been spent. "The government has staying here to die?'" The strength of this year' s shown remarkable leadership

the United Nations and the

director for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. "They have contributed a lot of funding becausethey understand that

support from the international community will take time to kick in."

Famine Early Warning Sys-

"But we' re still in the early

tems Network, a crisis mon-

stages of what we believe will

owners.

and turned Ethiopia into a

tending that the government

poster child for humanitarian

is not doing enough to help

aid. But the country, Africa's

him. While the safety-net pro-

centive for the state to reunite

less property with owners," California's nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office con-

cluded earlier this year. In March, the U.S. Court

of Appeals in San Francisco ruled in the state's favor. The lawyer for c l aimants, William Palmer, has asked the

U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case. "You' re u nknown

w hen

they have your property, but you' re known when it's time to tax you," Palmer said.

Taryn Kinney, a spokeswoman for the state control-

Other states are trying to find more claimants.

Kentucky Treasurer Todd Hollenbach visited all 120 counties, recruiting v o lun-

teers to comb through the state's database. Among the r ecent bene-

ficiaries was Fred Meyer, a retired engineer from Louisville who lost track of Apple

Inc. stock years ago when it was valued at only $2 per

second most populous, has gram is on hiatus, Ethiopia been working for years to and international partners shed that reputation. are handing out emergenSince coming to power in cy aid. But limited resourc1991, the governing Ethiopi- es have forceddistributors an People's Revolutionary

to focus on the hardest-hit

Democratic Front has made strides in reducing poverty and building roads, schools and health clinics. The government has claimed double-digit economic growth rates over the past decade.

areas. In Mieso, Taha Ido, 45, watched as government

But the government has a poor record on civil liberties

workers unloaded sacks of

wheat not far from his home. But the food was not for him, even though his crops failed this year. "The government is trying its best, but they only have a

and multiparty democracy; limited amount, so that aid an election in May handed was for people nearby who were faring even worse than

the governing coalition and us," he said. "But it's OK. its allies. When the follow- We' re happy for them. They ing months brought a disap- are hungry just like we are." three members of the sheriff's

Continued fromA1 She was repelling down

ing her at 6:49 a.m. Oct. 12. Shortly before noon that

less than 100 feet from the

day, a Black Hawk hoisted

Black

posse searched for Ford, find-

Joe Larsen, search and res-

Medical Center at RiverBend

cue coordinator for the Linn County Sheriff's Office in Albany. Ford wore a helmet, but being hit by the rock caused her

in Springfield. She has since been treated and released, with her mom saying she' s

areV'-.' j ' .

I

Sist

" She's going to b e on crutches for a while," Leslie

County Sheriff's Office. Along with deputies, 14 members of shortly before a cliff. Hurt and the sheriff'soffice's search stuck, he first texted his wife, and rescue team, seven mem- potentially to say goodbye to bers of the volunteer Corvallis her and their five children, he M ountain Rescue Unit a n d said, and then called 911.

TOUCHMARK SlNCR 19d0

Climbing partners can help each otherafter falls,go for help and share the burden of carrying safety gear. Rescuers prefer p eople climb at least in pairs, said

Todd Shechter, mission coordinator for Corvallis Moun-

Ford said.

50 feet down the mountain, he was able to stop his fall

do not recommend people climb alone, said Linn County Sheriff Bruce Riley. "When you climb alone it just enhances the risk," he said.

OK.

H er daughter wa s n o stranger to the outdoors, being a w i ldland firefighter, snowboarder and whitewaable to work her way down ter river guide. She's also an the northwest ridge of the emergency medical t echmountain, into the trees at nician and an experienced about 6,200 feet, Larsen said. climber, having climbed for Having covered three-quar- four or five years. ters of a m i l e she couldn' t Also an experienced climbwalk any farther. She called er, Kenyon, the man who fell her mom and then 911 around on North Sister on Sept. 25 11:23 p.m. said he had made a habit out "Her phone was at 1 percent of climbing alone. He started when she called (911)," Larsen mountain climbing around said. 1990. While he said he preAfter gathering informa- fers to go with someone else, tion about her daughter's lo- it can be hard to find "people cation and predicament, and who are like-minded with the knowing that her daughter' s same schedule as you." cellphone was nearly out of K enyon came c l ose b ut juice, Leslie Ford had told Sar- did not reach North Sister' s ah Ford to call for help. 1 0,085-foot summit du e t o While 911 operators were icy conditions. He was tryable to capture information ing to skirt around the base about Sarah Ford's location of a rock pinnacle known as on the mountain from her the Camel's Hump when his cellphone, calls back to her feet slipped out from under throughout the night went him and he dislocated his left unanswered with the phone shoulder. After sliding about

climb alone anymore." Search and rescueofficials

-Def jiin =..:,

mountaintop when a falling Ford up. She was taken to rock hit her in the head, said PeaceHealth Sacred H e art

dead, according to the Linn

outside money is needed. The

the animals he has left to sell recentre-evaluation of food will not be enough to sustain assist ance needs raised the

ler's office, said it doesn' t have the budget to step up search effortsfor property

fund revenue, the unclaimed property law creates an in-

represents big companies in pushing for uniformity in unclaimed property laws.

Climbers

her rope and she dropped 15 feet, hurting her left knee, losing her headlamp and briefly losing consciousness. Once she came to, Ford was

Committee, said the government had been proactive, having allocated $192 million for

corn and sorghum stalks are food aid, water transport, anistunted and will yield no har- m al feed and otherassistance vest. He has sold four of his since July. "The response was quite eight cows at a steep discount in order to buy corn at near- fast because the early warnly double last year's market ing system is well developed prices. in Ethiopia," he said. Yasin, 50, now regularly Still, it is not enough, and

all 547 seats in parliament to

to releaseher break hand from

cflsls. But Mitiku Kassa, secretary of the National Disaster Prevention and Preparedness

itoring group created by the be a one-year crisis," Del ConU.S. Agency for International te added. A September report Development. from his organization proThis month, the Ethiopian jected that 15 million people government announced that could be in need of food aid in about 8.2 million people are 2016. in need of food assistance, up Since 2005, the governfrom the 4.55 million estimat- ment has been distributing ed in August. aid through a system that More than 80 percent of delivers food to citizens in exEthiopia's population works change for labor on developin agriculture, which makes ment projects like construcup about 40 percent of the na- tion, terracing or irrigation. tion's economic output. That Those who are not able to makes the country especial- work are also eligible for benly vulnerable to drought and efits. But the last round of the the effects of climate change. program ended in July, and After a drought in 2002, gross it will not start up again until domestic product shrank 2.2 January. percent, according to World Yasin participated in the Bank data. program in June, securing Such droughts bring back some cattle feed after he painful memories of 1984, helped build a fence for a when a devastating famine school. He has not received made international headlines anything since, he said, con-

owners becomes stategeneral

any single auditor to no more share. The stock eventually than half the state's business. was reported as unclaimed payouts rose only slightly. In 2011, Delaware p a id property and sold by the state • Before 2008, Delaware But state officials argue out less than 5 percent of the in 2012. A few weeks ago waited until mail sent to own- that businesses frequently do $427 million it received that Hollenbach called Meyer and ers of stock wa s r eturned not act in the best interest of year, a time when states were said he'd be getting a check as undeliverable before de- consumers. returning an average of 34 for $461,000. returned about 43percent of what it collected; afterward,

rains that never came. His

pointing rainy season, critics accused officials of playing down the severity of the

tain Rescue. If someone does

<S r'< Mount W shington Summit:l7795 Ieg .

climb alone, he suggested the climber share his or her planned route and when he

or she expects to be back with someone and have that person callfor help ifhe or she does not return on time.

Climbers should also be sure to carry the 10 essen-

0 Sarah Ford climbed aloneto the tials, including extra clothing, summit of Mount Washington emergency shelter and a comon Oct. 11 to watch the sunset. pass, said Lt. Bryan Husband, and rescue coordinator 8 She was hit in the temple by search for the Deschutes County Sherfalling rock about 100 feet iff's Office. Even if they are not below the summit, fell 15 feet planning on it, they should be and injured her knee. ready to spend the night outside, like Sarah Ford had to Q Ford managed to descend on Mount Washington in be1,500 feet along the north ridge of the mountain until she low-freezing temperatures. Husband and Shechter recreached the tree line. There she spent the night waiting for ommended solo climbers carry satellite messengers, which rescuers to arrive.

Com p l e m e n t s

H o m e I n t er i or 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

541-647-2956

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can sendouta request for help

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

even in an area without cell coverage. Still nursing his sore shoulHe said Sarah Ford was der, Kenyon said Friday that lucky to be in place with since his fall he has met with cell service and to have just search and rescue teams and e nough battery power t o mountaineering clubs. He is make her call to 911. "If that had been zero perthinking about volunteering to help with rescues and is cent, this would have been a looking for climbing partners. different story," Shechter said. "I' ve kind of learned my les— Reporter: 541-617-7812, son," he said. "I don't think I' ll ddarling@bendbuIIetin.corn

AUDIOLOGY 541-31 7-1265 1625 NE 2"' St. ( Bend, OR


MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015•THE BULLETIN

BRIEFING

Man arrested after crash Deschutes County Sheriff's deputies arrested a Redmond man late Saturday night following a single-vehicle accident that closed a portion of the Old Bend-Redmond Highway for two hours. Shawn Hallin, 40, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants and driving recklessly after rolling a 2004 Chevrolet Silverado. Hallin was traveling north before striking an embankment on the east side of the road. With Hallin trapped inside the truck, the Bend andRedmond fire departments responded to the sceneof the accident andwere able to remove him from the vehicle. Hewas taken to St. Charles Bend with nonlife-threatening injuries by paramedics.

emocra ic secre a o a e can i aess uareo in e ae By Beau Eastes

primary election is slated for May 17.

The Bulletin

Devlin,63 and a former Marine, served three terms in the Oregon House of Rep-

SUNRIVER — Oregon Democrats on Sunday held the first of three scheduled

resentatives before winning a seat in the

debates for what is expected to be a highly competitive race for the party's 2016 nom-

Avakian

Devlin

Hoyle

ination for Oregon secretary of state.

State senate in 2002. He was the Senate majority leader from 2007 to 2010 and

A5

CIVIC CALENDAR TODAY

RedmondUrban PlanningCommisSIOn:The commission will meet at 7 p.m.at Redmond City Hall, 716 SWEvergreen Ave. There will be apublic hearing on theObsidian Trails Master Development plan.

currently is the co-chair of the Joint

State Sen. Richard Devlin, D-Tualatin;

state Rep. Val Hoyle, D-Eugene; and Brad Avakian, the state's labor commissioner, spoke to a standing-room only crowd at Sunriver Resort during the final day of the Democratic Party of Oregon's 2015

Oregon Summit political conference. The three Democrats are among the

Ways and Means Committee, which is in charge of the state's budget.

"I want to make Oregon government party's most accomplished politicians at the state level, adding a heightened sense work for people at every level," Devlin of intrigue into the primary race for the said in his opening remarks. state's second-highest elected position. The SeeDebate/A6

TUESDAY

Deschutes County Hearings Officer pubHchearings: The county will hold a hearing on theThornburgh Destination Resort's final master plan at 2 p.m. in the Barnes and Sawyer rooms in the Deschutes Services Center, 1300 NW Wall

St., Bend.

Bend Park 5 Recreation District board meeting:

— Bulletin staff report

Board meets at 5:30 p.m. for a work session, followed by ameeting at 7 p.m., which will focus on the status of the planning, design and construction of multiple trail projects. Both the work session and the meeting will be at the district's offices, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend.

L'r

STATE NEWS

Salem

RedmondCommittee for Art in Public Places:Committee

will meet at 4:30 p.m. at Redmond City Hall, 716 SWEvergreen Ave., and discuss its local rockchuck project and locations for art in the new city hall at the old Evergreen School.

Elder abuse — Oregon is seeing anincrease in reports of abuse ofthe elderly as thepopulation of older Oregonians continues to growand people get better about reporting. A state report issued last weekfound a10-percent increasein the number of investigations conducted into the abuse andmistreatment of vulnerable people. That includes older adults and peoplewith disabilities. Some ofthe increase is due tomore reporting, researcher Joe Merrifield of the Oregon Office of Adult Abuse Prevention and Investigations told the StatesmanJournal. In 2014, more than38,000 cases of possible abuse were reported, up from 35,000 in 2013. Inboth years, themostcommon type of abuseswere financial exploitation and neglect. Thenumberof cases that wereinvestigated rose 10percent to 18,185. — From wire reports

i:-

WEDNESDAY - eo

*'

Councilors meet at 5 p.m. for a work session before a council meeting at 7 p.m. Highlights include a proposed ordinance amending city code in regards to rights-of-way and franchises. Meetings are both at BendCity Hall,

tia('ftr

Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

Kendall Knowles, center, leads a beginning aerial silks class at Central Oregon Aerial Arts in Bend

TODAY "INSPIRED":A showing of the film from TheSki Movie Tour; 6 p.m.; $10plus fees in advance, $15 atthe door; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. corn or 541-323-1881. TUESDAY MAKE-A-BAND2015: Musicians will perform In spotlight events at Silver Moon Brewery in October; 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; 541-81 5-0574. "CERROTORRE:A SNOWBALL'SCHANCEIN HELL":A showing of the movie about climbing the mountain in Patagonia; 6 p.m., doors openat 5 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 atthe door; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.corn or 541-382-5 I74. "CINEMALIVEPRESENTS: ANDRERIEij'S 2015 MAASTRICHTCONCERT": The "King of Waltz" performs a violin concert in his hometown; 7 p.m.; $15; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.corn or

THURSDAY

Deschutes County PlanningCommis-

Oregon Aerial Arts, which has more 20 years of experience and also offers advanced classes through

Slen:Planning commission meets at 5:30 p.m. at the Deschutes Services Center, 1300

tryouts.

NW Wall St., Bend. A

Riley RanchNature Reserveplan stumbles over permit officer, determined the proposed location of a new bridge

The Bulletin

CALENDAR

710 NW Wall St.

on Sunday. The beginner class meets Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays from 2:30-4 p.m. at Central

By Ted Shorack

EVENT

Bend City Council:

The Bend Park 8z Recreation District plan to create a

nature reserve northwest of Bend will be reviewed by the Deschutes County Planning Commission, but it might hit a speed bump this week. The park district plans to begin creating the 184-acre Riley Ranch Nature Reserve

next year if a conditional use permit and site plan is approved. A Deschutes County hearings officer, however, chose not to recommend approval of

thenecessary permitandplan after reviewing the project. Karen Green, the hearings

844-462-7342. THE SHOWPONIES:The band from LosAngeles performs, with Parlour; 8 p.m.; $5 plus fees in advance, $7 at thedoor; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanjctheatrepub. corn or 541-323-1881. WEDNESDAY "BACKTOTHEFUTURE TRILOGY:30TH ANNIVERSARY":A showing of all three "Back to the Future" films; 5 p.m.; $11, $8.50 for seniors and children; RegalOldMill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fandango.corn or 844-462-7342. "THE METLIVE: OTELLO":Ashowing of

plans to build the new one.

requirement within city limits

across the Deschutes River

But Green stated in a written review last week that the

becauseofthe differing definitions, Green concluded in

would conflict with minimum

bridge fell within the county

her review.

setback requirements. The park district plans to

code definition of a "struc-

Green decided the bridge should be excluded from the project if the planning commission agreesto approve the overall concept. The bridge would be constructed after surface mining activities cease on a private

create the reserve in different phases over a 10-year period. The total budget for the project is about $3.7 million. The site would include parking for 66 vehicl es,group gathering areas, restrooms and trails. The park would be accessible from Glen Vista Road.

The potential bridge would connectthe Deschutes River

ture," which requires minimum setbacks from property lines. The bridge doesn't meet that minimum for the urban

area reserve zone in which it would be located, Green wrote.

The definition of a structure is different in the county code

compared to city of Bend development code, according to Green.

Trail system with the proposed Footbridges, such as the park reserve, which is east of one south of the Bill Healy theri ver.A former bridgewas Memorial Bridge, were not located where the park district subject to the same setback

Shakespeare's tragic play; 6:30p.m.; $24, $22for seniors, $18 for children; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.corn or 844-462-7342. FENCESFORFIDO KARAOKEFUNDRAISER: Featuring karaoke, a raffle and more to benefit Fences for Fido; 7 p.m.; Soba Asian Bistro, 932 NW Bond St., Bend; 408-835-2192. "BACK TO THEFUTURE: PART II":Watch the second Back to the Future film, in honor of Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015, the dayMarty McFly and Doc Brownset the DeLorean to land in Hill Valley, California; 7 p.m.;

$8plusfees;TheTower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. SISTERSCLASSIC OLD-TIMERADIO EXPERIENCE: Agroup performance of scripted radio episodes; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents. corn or 541-815-9122. SONGCRAFTERS: Featuring David Von Schlegall, Bill Powers and Harley Bourbon; 8 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. THURSDAY WOMENSWIMMING UPSTREAM:SOCIAL

DOCUMENTARY PHOTOGRAPHERALISON WRIGHT: Alison Wright, National Geographic Traveler of the Yearand contributing photographer, will share her photographs of women at work in developing countries; 6:30 p.m.; $15; TowerTheatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 54 I-383-7257. THE MANYLIVES OF KLONDIKE KATE: Learn about Klondike Kateduring the gold rush in Alaska; 6:30 p.m.; A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum,246 N. Main St., Prineville; www. bowmanmuseum.org or 541-447-3715. "LINCOLN CENTERAT THE MOVIES: ALVIN AILEY AMERICANDANCE

property west of the river.

The planning commission will review the project and

public hearing will be held on the BendPark & Recreation District's proposed 184-acre regional park, Riley Ranch Nature Reserve. Contact: 541-383-0354, news@bendbulletin.corn. In emails, please write "Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and

number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.

Well shot! Readerphotos

Send us your best outdoor photos at

setbackrequirements at5:30

bendbulletin.corn/

p.m. Thursday at the Deschutes Services Center, 1300

reatlerphotos.Your entries will appear online, and we' llchoose the best for publication in the Outdoors section.

NW Wall St. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorackibendbujjetin.corn

THEATER": Featuring four performances from Alvin Alley'3 Revelations; 7 p.m.; $11, $8.50 for seniors and children; Regal OldMill Stadium 16andIMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents. corn or 844-462-7342. BOMBADIL:Thepop band from North Carolina performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamjns Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.corn or 541-382-5174. "ED SHEERAN:JUMPERS FOR GOALPOSTS": A showing of a concert documentary on the XTour at Wembley Stadium; 7:30 p.m.; $16; RegalOldMill Stadium 16andIMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive,

Bend; www.fathomevents. corn or 844-462-7342. "EVIL DEAD,THE MUSICAL":Aplay about five college students who visit an old abandoned cabin in the woodsand unleash anevil force; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19for students and seniors, $28 for the Splatter Zone; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. corn or 541-312-9626. FRIDAY AUTUMNFEST:Featuring hand-crafted items, baked goods, an auction and more; 8 a.m.; Prineville Presbyterian Church, 1771 NW Madras Highway, Prineville; 541-447-1017. HISTORICALHAUNTS

OF DOWNTOWN BEND: Take awalk through historic downtown Bend; 4 p.m.; $10, free for children 12 andyounger and members; Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave.,Bend; 541-389-18 I3. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Author Kjm Heacox will read from and sign his new novel "Jimmy Bluefeather"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252W. Hood Ave., Sisters;www. pauljnasprjngs.corn or 541-549-0866. 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: 541 483-0351, communitylifeobendbulletin.corn


A6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015

Air Force One

OREGON NEWS

Continued fromA1

Salem officers:Man

Built on the frame of a Boe-

ing 747-8, it will be bigger, more powerful, able to fly farther and

choked apolicedog

vastly more advanced tech-

nologically than the current customized Boeing 747-200B

jumbo jet. Obama himself will not benefit from the trade-in. By some

The Associated Press SALEM — Authorities in Salem said a man was ar-

estimates, the new plane might

not be available until 2023,

unconsciousness.

them might be close to finishing up a second term. And it

r

will not be cheap. The Air Force

tt

w

has asked for $102 million in the coming fiscal year and $3 not counting any further cost.

"It's way overdue," said Jo-

According to the U.S. Department of Education, Oregon has had a shortages of bilingual teachers and those who can teach English language learners for nearly a decade. The state is certainly aware of the problem. Its plan to help English language learners includes the goal of hiring more bilingual teachers, as does its plan for improving teacher diversity.

"People get really disappointed when they end up on the waitlist. People are really passionate about bilingual education and really want their

the Higher Education Coor-

districts poaching bilingual teachers from each other. "The districts that can afford to pay

more are doing that." In an ODE survey in December, 25 of 37 districts that

responded indicated they had bilingual teacher openings for the 2014-15 school year, and 22

Continued fromA5 The 51-year-old Hoyle, who this spring stepped down as the House majority leader, was first appointed

they travel to Mexico."

er licensure were particularly goes down to 70 percent in secchallenging for c andidates ond grade, 60 percent in third No silver bullet whose primary language is gradeand 50 percentin fourth ODE wants to see more of not English. and fifth grade. these dual i m mersion proThe program has about 300 grams. In 2013 it a w arded Closingthe gap students, or about half of Bear grants to seven districts — inThere are academic and Creek students overall. Enroll- cluding $120,000 to Bend-La social benefits to dual immer- ment is split evenly between Pine Schools — to help launch sion programs for both na- English speakers and Span- or scale up programs. It will tive and non-native English ish speakers (though most of award a second round next speakers. In one study, re- those enter with some English month to established prosearchers followed students skills, Martin said). Prefer- grams; some of that money in dual language programs in ence goes to students living in could go toward helping bilin23 districts across the country the boundaries of Bear Creek, gualteacher candidates move for nearly two decades. They Juniper and Silver Rail ele- through the certification profound English learners in im- mentary schools and there is a cess, according to Martinez. mersion programs with native lengthy waiting list. For now, the state is tak"People get really disap- ing a piecemeal approach to English speakers typically met grade-level standards in pointed when they end up on the teacher shortage. ODE is English by fifth or sixth grade, the waitlist. People are really working with the state's teachfaster than those learning just passionate about bilingual ed- er licensing agency to reduce English or those in immersion ucation and really want their barriers for non-native English programs without native En- kids to be bilingual," Martin speakers to earn teaching glish speakers. What's more, said. "The reason you really credentials. Earlier this year

tation that it'd be higher. We

were happy to see a few," Hinman said. "It is a big challenge, and we know that."

With so few candidates, some districts ar e

r e cruit-

ing would-beteachers before they graduate. The Redmond district is looking at its high school students interested in teaching that it could steer toward bilingual education, something ODE encourages districts to do.

As for hiring next year, Hinman is prepared for a challenge. "Our priority is to get the right candidate, not just a candidate to fill a position," she said. "If we don't find the right candidate, we may not start next year." — Reporter: 541-61 7-7837, aspegman@bendbulletin.corn

a seat in the Oregon House in 2002 and the state Senate in 2006. He made national

news this summer when he ordered a Gresham bakery to pay $135,000 in damages to a lesbian couple for

to the state Legislature in whom the bakery refused to 2009 and has since won two make a wedding cake. "It's not enough just to elections to represent House District 14, an area that in- have a 'D' by your name," cludes west Eugene and Avakian said in his closJunction City. ing comments. "We need a While Devlin and Avaki-

an are in the middle of fouryear terms — they can fall back on their current positions if they fail to win the

Democrat to make our val-

ues become a reality." The three politiciansall of whom live in the Wil-

nomination or the general

lamette Valley — agreed on multiple issues, including

election — Hoyle has no such security blanket. Her

the need for civics education at the middle and high

term in the House expires in

school levels and the contin-

November 2016.

ued effort to make it easier

"We have to reduce bar-

for people to vote, by using prepaid return envelopes for the voting-by-mail sys" We' ve taken th e f i r st tem, for example. Devlin step," she added, referenc- went even further, saying ing Oregon's "motor vot- the state should look at reer" law in which the state' s ducing the 20-day waiting citizens are automatically period between when peoregistered to vote if they ple register and when they have an Oregon driver' s are allowed to vote. l icense. D emocrats e s t iOn the fundraising front, mated Sunday that approx- Devlin has approximately imately 300,000 new voters $305,000 cash on hand, as have been registered since of Sunday night. Avakian the law went into effect in has $187,000 and Hoyle has March. $103,000. Republican Sid "Now we have to be able Leiken has also announced to answer the person that a run forsecretary of state; asks, 'How do I believe my he had raised $20,000 as of voice matters'?'" Hoyle said. last weekend. riers to voting," Hoyle said early in the debate.

in 2008 and 2014. A former

instruction is in Spanish; that

ment of Education's equity team. The shortage has led to

Debate

degree completion rather than — Kinsey Martin, dual immersion program coordinator enrollment that w ould g ive at Bear Creek Elementary School more money for programs in

kids to be bilingual."

testing requirements for teach-

the foot," said Martha Martinez from the Oregon Depart-

dog until three officers were

Avakian, 54,might have the most statewide name

reported difficulty filling those vacancies. Together, they had 172 openings, mostly at the elementary level. Among respondents with duallanguage programs, more than 80 percent indicated they had difficulty hiring bilingual teachers. They reported many candidates were eithernotproficient enough in the desired second language or accepted a teaching position in another state. Many reported the state' s

"If we don't have the teach-

treated for dog bites Satur-

dinating Commission, which directs funding for Oregon's public universities, approved a new funding model based on

high-demand fields, including bilingual education. they determined, dual immer- want to maintain that (ratio) is The state has also helped sion programs are the only for the interactions, to have a districts hire foreign language way to fully close the achieve- model andbe a model. Some- and bilingual teachers from ment gap between native and times you' re the expert, some- overseas, including 13 teachers non-native English speakers. times I'm the expert." from Spain and 11 from MexiBut implementation is key. For those who do get in, co this year. The study noted English learn- Martin sees benefits apart And just last week, the ers were more successful when from language skills. Students state launched a new w ebthey learned alongside native develop an appreciation for site for prospective teachers it English speakers, learning different cultures by being in hopes will appeal to bilingual the two languages separately class with students of different candidates. "The solution here is not with no translation or repeat- backgrounds. And Spanish ed lessons. The non-English speakers see their native lan- a silver bullet. It has to be a language must be taught at guage valued at school, letting handful of s t rategies workleast 50 percent of the instruc- parents who may not be profi- ing in tandem," said Kristin tional time and as much as 90 cient in English communicate Gimbel, spokeswoman for the percent in early grades, with a with teachers and be involved state's Chief Education Office. minimum of six years of bilin- intheirstudents'education. Redmond School District gual instruction. For these programs to work, plans to start a dual immersion Native English speakers however, teachers in these program next year with two benefit by learning a second programs need more than kindergarten classes taught in language at a young age, conversational Spanish. Mar- Spanish and English. It would which may improve critical tin said she looks for teachers then add a grade each year, thinking and problem-solving who have a more complex, ac- with first grade in 2017-18, secskills. ademic understanding of both ond grade in 2018-19 and so on, "Really it is a 21st century languages, with strong writing up to fifth grade and maybe skill that the rest of the world and translating skills. Of her beyond. takes for granted and we are teachers, about half are native It has yet to choose which elstarting to capitalize on," said Spanish speakers from Spain, ementary school will host the Kinsey Martin, the dual imCentral and South America. program. "If (students) only hear namersion program coordinaMartha Hinman, the distor at Bear Creek Elementary tive English speakers who trict's executive director of SchoolinBend. learned (Spanish) in school student services, said when That program started in and are teaching it, they aren' t the district was hiring for the 2010, adding a grade each able to get the same accent or current school year it looked year. It reached fifth grade this same culture piece," she said. for bilingual teachers and supyear and will add sixth grade "We want to be able to pre- port staff that could help start at High Desert Middle School pare our kids to be competent the program. It got one, maybe next year. For kindergarten in communicating with any two. "We didn't have an expecand firs t grade, 80 percent of Spanish speaker, not just if

ers to staff these (programs), we' re shooting ourselves in

fled and was chased by a police dog. The man fought the

Doug Mills /The New York Times file photo

seph Hagin, a White House Members of the Air ForceOne crewset the steps in place for President Barack Obama's return to deputy chief of staff under Andrews Air Force Base in January. The two 747-200B jumbo jets that often carry the Air Force One call President George W. Bush who sign are getting old, so Obama isplanning to have newpresidential aircraft assembled for asuccessor. initiated plans for a new plane only to see them shelved when the nation's finances grew pre- the Air Force often has to have communications, leading to up- both parties seem to be going carious. 'You can hang new them custom built. Inspections grades afterward. along with plans for a new engines on it, you can cram all and maintenance work are so The Air Force selected Boe- plane. After all, no one knows sorts of new technology on it, frequent that one or the other ing as the maker of the next which side will have the White but it's stillavery old airplane." of the two planes is often out of plane this year. The 747-8 that House when it becomes availAir Force One is actually not service. will serve as the frame is 250 able for use. "Air Force One gives us eva single plane; in fact, it is a raAir Force One, of course, feet long with a range of nearly dio call sign used for any plane is not just a plane. It is pow- 7,800 miles and 66,500 pounds erything that we want," said that happens to carry the pres- er. It is national identity. It is of engine thrust. Once modi- Robert Dorr, author of a book ident. There are two 747-200s, even a movie star. The large fied, it will be capable of midair about the plane. "It does convey designated VC-25As by the b lue-and-white aircraft w i t h refueling, hardened against power, but it also conveys class Air Force, that carry the presi- "United States of America" em- the electromagnetic pulse of a and style and purpose. It's just dent unless he travels to a place blazonedon the side hascome nuclear explosion and almost exciting to see it arrive. People where the runway is too short, to symbolize the country and certainly equipped with de- get excited. They do love it." in which case he switches to a has captured the imagination fenses to deflect heat-seeking Obama is not the only pressmaller plane. of even Americans who have missiles. ident to love the plane. "I miss Those 747-200s, with t a il not seen the namesake film This sort of project has a way Air Force One," the younger codes 28000 and 29000, were starring Harrison Ford as a of ballooning in cost. A project Bush said last year. "In eight commissioned by Ronald Rea- president fending off Russian to build a new Marine One heli- years, they never lost my luggan and delivered in 1990 un- hijackers. copter got so out of control that gage." This year, he repeated der the first President George The current plane is a fly- Obama's administration can- the sentiment. "I miss, for exBush, when the Soviet Union ing White House with 4,000 celed it after taking office and ample,the Air Force's accomwas still around and White squarefeetof space on three a new contract has been issued. modating me with a shower "We hope that doesn't hap- on the airplane that flew me House aides used beepers. The levels, induding an office, conbig communications innova- ference room, bedroom and pen with the plane, that they' ve around," he said. tion at the time was a fax ma- medical suite that can be used learned their l e sson," said When Obama campaigned chine that the president's staff as an operating room. While Thomas Schatz, president of with Bill Clinton in 2012, the incould use to keep in touch with impressive, it is not splashy in Citizens Against Government cumbent joked about Air Force the ground. the sense of Trump's private jet Waste, a group that criticized One. "Bill may not miss being Boeing stopped making 747- with its gold-plated fixtures. the Marine One project. president, but he misses that 200s more than two decades On the day of the Sept. 11, As it is, given the reported plane," Obama said. "Let's face ago, and only 20 of them are 2001, attacks, the second Presi- $180,000-an-hourfl ying cost, it, he does. It's a great plane. left flying in the world, mainly dent Bush was kept flying from presidents are often criticized And I' ll miss it, too." "But not yet!" a supporter as freight planes in developing airbase to airbase for fear of for using Air Force One for countries. Spare parts are no his being targeted, and he was their political or personal pur- called out. longer made for the plane, so deeply ~ a t e d with spottyposes. But so far, members of Not yet. But soon enough.

rin, Russian and Vietnamese.

Moore said that the man

Salem Police Sgt. Tony Moore said the man was

day, and the dog was taken able to subdue him. to a veterinary hospital. Officer Debbie Aguilar The i n c ident b e g an says the dog, Duke, received when officers responded no major injuries.

billion over the next five years,

Continued fromA1 Most programs in Oregon are English/Spanish, though some teach Japanese, Manda-

houses. Officers arrived and

rested for choking a police learned the man had an ardog nearly to the point of rest warrant.

when Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump or whoever beats

Dual language

to reports of a man acting strange and going up to

recognition, having been elected labor commissioner employment and civil rights attorney, Avakian also won

Find It All Online bendbulletin.corn

The Democrats' second

debate is scheduled for 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the

Oregon AFL-CIO convention in Seaside. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletin.corn

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••

g )


MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015• THE BULLETIN

A7

ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT

i n er eewi

TV TOOAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

e t a s ecia o i a

TV PIPELINE

Bp.m. on 6,8, "The Voice"The new episode "The Battles, Part 3" continues the rounds that

Were the ratings that bad'?

— Mike Adamkosky,

pit same-teammembersagainst

Columbus, Ohio

By Jay Bobbin

each other, with Missy Elliot, JohnFogerty,Selena Gomez and Brad Paisley still on board as guest mentors.Theycombine their musical expertise with that of the show's usual coachesAdam Lambert, Blake Shelton, Gwen Stefani and Pharrell Williams — to determine who stays in the contest, which may mean "stealing" hopefuls from another team.

the Fox revivA •• Though al's ratings admittedly

ZaP2it

is Ginger ZeesupQ ••When posed to have her baby?

weren't in the "blockbuster" category, it wasn't a m atter of that. A certain number of

— Joan Curtis, Boynton Beach, Florida • T he m e teorologist f o r

episodes was ordered for the

• ABC's "Good Morning A America" and her husband,

'

summer season, and those all aired. At this writing, it hadn' t

, ©Ness

Ben Aaron — a former reporter for New York's WNBC-TV

been determinedyet whether the show — for which original host Jeff Foxworthy came back — will resume in the future.

revealed that they' ll be welcom-

"Good Morning America" meteorologist Ginger Zee, left, is expecting a baby boy in December. The

ing a son.

latest bullet point on the extensive television resume of actor James Brolin, right, is a role on the CBS show "Life in Pieces."

• Why do we no longer • see the c heerleaders, and especially the bands, during the halftime shows of college games?

who's now a co-host of the syndicated program "Crazy Talk" — are expecting their child to arrive in December. It's been

Q

• It's nice to s ee James • Brolin back on television in "Life in Pieces." How many other series has he done'? — Mary Smart, Wheaton, Illinois • There have been sever-

A • al of varying durations, but among the major ones, the first was ABC's "Marcus Wel-

Photos via Newscom

search-and-rescue-team saga "Extreme," which also starred

see this, it's back. The drama NBC action-drama was an-

a pre-"Modern Family" Julie

'Ittesdays with a major new

B owen. Additionally, Brolin had a three-season run in the

has just started Season 2 on

cast addition in "CSI: Crime S cene Investigation" a l u m

syndicated "Pensacola: Wings William Petersen, playing a of Gold" ... and of his notable military officer brought in to guest roles, he played the Flori- oversee the scientists workda governor who was ing on the Manhattan Projopponent of President Bartlet ect. The show also returned (Martin Sheen) on "The West on the strength of a r ecent Wing." Emmy win, the first ever for its channel, for its opening title There was a series on sequence.

apol itical

the atomic bomb. Is it due to re-

the title site's manager on the turn anytime soon? ABC drama based on Arthur

— Cathy Grady, Southern Pines, North Carolina

Q •• do a TV "The Player" ?

networks largely have chosen to use the halftime period for

he co-starred in a very short-

other material as the years

lived (roughly one month) 1990 have gone on. It's a measure ABC show titled "H.E.L.P.," a of trying to hold viewers ... not fire-department drama whose in the cast were a couple of ac-

cording to the judge. Where can I get help if I want to live a rightful life and

DEAR ABBY

fix mine? With very little income, I only know how to

make money illegally, which is more thanmany people make in two or three years. I want to do

right this time. What's your advice'? — Stuck in Crime in Kansas

Dear Stuck: My advice is to finish your education. At the very minimum, get your GED. Fight the temptation to go for "easy money" and find a mentor who can steer you toward constructive activities and opportunities. A place to

look would be one of the prison ministries. You are still young and have

9 p.m. on 10, "Minority Report"

—WhenVega(MeaganGood)

of the audience wants game highlights, results of that given day's other contests and so forth during that time. Thus,

they' ve acted accordingly in deciding the programming.

A •

your whole life ahead of you. It will became irate, called me thoughtbe far smoother and more success- less and wouldn't let her daughful if you don't add to your criminal ter come! I don't know what I did record. wrong, but apparently I made some Dear Abby: M y 1 0-year-old faux pas because the same thing daughter and I e njoy hosting happened with a different girl who sleepoversfor her friends from wanted gluten-free everything. school. Over the last Abby, what should I do or say in few years, her cir- these situations'? I usually provide cle of friends has snacks and such that fit most diets, increased, as have but a lot of times the main course the dietary needs of contains gluten, dairy, etc., and I don't want to go broke buying sesaid friends. It went from simple meals lect types of food for one kid. like macaroni and cheese, pizza or —Sally in Washington, D.C. hamburgers to parents requesting Dear Sally: You did nothing gluten-free cookies, soy milk, al- wrong. Asking the mother to have mond milk and other demands that her daughter bring a quart of soy drive me crazy. milk with her was not rude, and the I'm willing to accommodate to same is true for the mother of the a point, providing vegetarian op- girl who has an intolerance for glutions and no nuts, but for parents to ten. The parents of children with demand that I spend (what seems food allergies should be used to like) hundreds of dollars on food the routine of providing allowable my family and I never eat is insane. foods for them to bring when they The last time this happened, I will be eating away from home, asked the parent — nicely — to pro-

and for you to have received the re-

vide a small container that I could store in my fridge for the girl to use for her soy milk. The woman

action you did was over the top. — Write to DearAbby at dearabby.corn or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

is revealed to be aforthcoming crime victim, she andDash (Stark Sands) seek questionable help from the past in the newepisode "The Present." Their possible ally was involved in the murder of Vega's father. Among the guest stars here is a real blast from the past: Stefan Arngrim, who played young Barry in the sci-fi series "Land of the Giants." Reed Diamond also guest stars. Nick Zano and Wilmer Valderrama also star.

tives evidently believe the bulk

pleased to see Q •• Ithewasreturn of "Are You

ucation is a oo irst ste to eavin e in a ieo crime one more chance, ac-

that the halftime entertain-

producers included "Law & ment necessarily wouldn' t, but Order" mentor Dick Wolf. Also many television sports execu-

s h ow b efore

— Mike Jeff ries, via email

• the case, it's true that the

series, it isn' t. Before he cemented his movie stardom,

• Though many p eople Smarter Than a 5th Grader?," • In case you haven't found — including some at the but after what seems like just • it already by the time you network — believed when the a few weeks, it's gone again.

A

Dear Abby: I am 21 and come from a family of crime involving drugs and violence. I was taken by the state as a child in need of care at 14. I' ve been in and out of juvie and did 18 months in juvenile prison. I'm now sitting in adult county jail. I'm going to get

• Though that isn't always

nounced that it was his first

tors who would go on to much greater series success, David Caruso ("NYPD Blue," "CSI: Miami") and John Mahoney Did Wesley Snipes ever ("Frasier").

Q•

Hailey's novel "Hotel" (198388), and he worked for that network briefly again in the 1995

Q

— Dean Paul, Grand Junction, Colorado

by, M.D.," (1969-76) — in which former 20th Century Fox contract player Brolin (who'd had several relatively minor roles on "Batman" ) won an Emmy and a couple of Golden Globe Awards as motorcycl e-riding • WGN America, "ManDr. Steven Kiley. hattan," about the making of He also had a healthy run as

8 p.m. on 6, "The Big BangTheory" — It's the old game of "I may not be with you, but I don't want anyone else to bewith you, either" for Sheldon (Jim Parsons) in the new episode "The Perspiration Implementation." He's not sure what to do whenex-girlfriend Amy (Mayim Bialik) draws the interest of Barry Kripke (John Ross Bowie). Stuart's efforts to bring more of a female clientele to the Comic Book Store gains the support of Amy, Penny (KaleyCuoco) and Bernadette (Melissa Rauch).

— Sendquestions ofgeneral interest via email to tvpipeline@ gracenote.corn. Wr itersmust include their names, cities and states.

10 p.m. on 5, 8, "Blindspot"Rarely are the FBIand the CIA seen in direct competition, but it happens in the newepisode "Split the Law." A hostage crisis with global reach puts both agencies on the trail of a felon. Carter and Mayfair (guest star Michael Gaston, Marianne Jean-Baptiste) clash over their takes on the reliability of Jane (Jaimie Alexander), who is overcome upon being introduced to Weller's (Sullivan Stapleton) family. Jordana Spiro and Jay 0. Sanders guest star.

MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-O and /MAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

I

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX,680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 99 HOMES (R) 10:40 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) 12:05, 3:25, 7:10, 10:20 • CRIMSON PEAK (R) 12:30, 3:30, 7:30, 10:30 • CRIMSON PEAK IMAX (R) 1:05, 4:30, 7:15, 10:05 • EVEREST (PG-13) 12:35, 6:40 • EVEREST 3-D (PG-13) 3:55, 9:30 • GOOSEBUMPS (PG) noon,2:30,5,7:40 • GOOSEBUMPS 3-D (PG)1:15, 3:40, 7, 9:45, 10:15 • HE NAMED MEMALALA (PG-13)1:25 • HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA2 (PG)l2:50,3:10,6,9 • HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 23-0 (PG) 1:20, 3:50 • THE INTERN (PG-13) 12:40, 3:45, 6:30, 9:20 • THE MARTIAN (PG-13)12:25, 3:35, 6:45, 10 • THE MARTIAN 3-D (PG-13)1, 4:10, 7:20, 10:30 • MAZE RUNNER: THE SCORCH TRIALS (PG-13)4:20, 7:25, 10:45 • PAN (PG) 12:20, 3, 6:20, 9:15 • PAN 3-D (PG) 1:30, 4:25, 8 • SICARIO (R) 1:10, 4:50, 7:45, 10:35 • THE VISIT (PG-13) 6:10, 9:10 • WOODLAWN (PG) 12:15, 3:15, 7:05, 10:10 Accessibility devices areavailable for some movies.

10 p.m. on FX, "Fargo" — In a new episode called "Before the Law," Floyd Gerhardt (Jean Smart) and her family get a surprising offer. Elsewhere, two highly unlikely murderers do everything they can to clean up the messy aftermath of their crime. Kirsten Dunst, Jesse Plemons, Ted Danson, Jeffrey Donovan, Patrick Wilson and Kieran Culkin also star. ©Zap2it

TG' •

I

I •

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 5:30 • TRAINWRECK (R) 9 Younger than 21may attend ail screeningsi f accompanied byalegal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NW Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, OCT. 19, 2015: This yearyou needto stay focused, as there are many distractions around you, especially at home or with family. Meditate to clear your mind; exercise to eliminate stress. Your ability to let go of issues enhances your life. If you are single, check out each potential sweetie with care. You are more likely to

meet a personwho

YOUR HOROSCOPE

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

misunderstandings. Feelings might be intensifying with a loved one. Tonight: A friend could surprise you.

** * * Your intensity speaks for itself. Someone's wordscouldsting and upset you. Rather than have aknee-jerk reaction, hold off for a little while — you might have misunderstood. A meeting or get-together with a friend becomes very important. Tonight: Get some exercise first.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dsc. 21)

By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * You might have a lot of anxiety Bfarsshowthe kind about a personal matter. Don't worry; available this year. you will discover other ways of resolving oftlsy yos'll hsvs ** * * * D ynamic If you are attached, or lessening your discomfort. A boss or ** * * p ositive the two of you love relative could be cantankerous. Listen *** Average togo on frequent carefully, but don't internalize this person' s ** So-so getaways. You' ll love being out and message. Tonight: Say "yes" to an offer. * Difficult about together. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * * You might want to consider CAPRICORNcan be so intense that you frequently need to your alternatives. You have so much to back away. do, yet you still will want to clear up a conversation. You know this talk could ARIES (March 21-April19) take a lot of time. You have the ability to ** * You will be unstoppable, no matter squeezein whatyouneedto do as well. which way you turn. You' ll hold your own Trust yourself. Tonight: An unexpected in a disagreement while still being kind development. to the other party. Take charge, but understand that many extra responsibilities VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) could descend on you as aresult. Tonight: ** * * * Y ou' ll structure your day with Out till the wee hours. care. You also understand that others won't always be in sync with your needs. TAURUS (April 20-May20) **** Be imagina tiveand spontaneous. Expect some uproar from a close friend. A child or new friend could be asource When confronted with an obstacle, you of good feelings. Don't allow a misundertend to clear it up quickly. Tonight: Let standing to get bigger. As you gain a more someone else makethe first move. complete perspective, you' ll recognize LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) how easily mistakes can happen. Tonight: *** You might bemorefocusedona Kick up your heels. personal matter than you realize. Attempt GEMINI (May 21-June20) to clear up the issue as quickly as possi** * * * Y ou' ll feel more relaxed at this ble. Some of you will opt to stay close to time with one person rather than several. home; some of you might be considering Schedule your day accordingly, especially a home-basedbusinessaswell.Tonight: if you notice a tendency to encounter Expect a little disruption.

** * Stay focused on the big picture, which could involve work aswell as friends. The people in your life might be unusually difficult. Remember the importance of what you' redoing, and stay on track. Don' t allow all the fussing to becomedominant. Tonight: The only answer is "yes."

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jsn. 19) ** * * * You unintentionally might challenge others. A boss or parent could feel intimidated. You know what you are going to do. Discuss it less, andlust act. You are likely to get a lot of feedback that you' d prefer not to hear. Tonight: Avoid someone who creates hassles for you.

AQUARIUS (Jsn. 20-Fsb. 18) ** * Don't be surprised if you decide to be reclusive. You might be replaying the

same scenarioover andover in your head.

• GRANDMA (R) 6 • MERU (R) 8 Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdem Medo Road, 541-548-8777 • CRIMSON PEAK (R) 5:30, 8 • GOOSEBUMPS (PG) 5:45,8 • THE MARTIAN (PG-13) 5:15, 8:15 • PAN (PG) 5:45, 8:15 Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) 4, 6:45 • THE INTERN (PG-13) 4:30 • THE MARTIAN (PG-I3) 4, 6:45 • PAN (PG) 7 • UNBRANDED (PG-13) 4:30 • THE WALK (PG) 6:30

happening, as it allows you to make better choices. Tonight: Get some R and R.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * Zero in on what you want, despite the fact that someone is giving you a lot of flak. You might wonder what would be best to do under the present circumstances. Don't overthink this issue. You still are going to do whatever you want. Tonight: Use caution when handling funds. O King Features Syndicate

-• •

• • •

•• -

I

t

Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CRIMSON PEAK (R) 4: l5, 7:20 • GOOSEBUMPS (PG) 4:45,7:05 • HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA (PG)5, 7:10 • THE MARTIAN (PGl3) 3:30, 6:30 • PAN (PG) 4:50, 7:20

You also could be exhausted. Surprising

news forcesyouto regroup. Knowwhat is

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • GOOSEBUMPS (PG) 6:30 • THE MARTIAN (Upstairs — PG-13) 6:15 The upstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.

• • •

•I I

loN

JBNEIE

LTD

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus •film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

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IX THE BACI4: WEATHER W Scoreboard, B2 MLB, B3

NHL, B4 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

The week ahea

A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports (all times Pacific):

Tuesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Saturday

Major League BaseballLeague Championship Series:ALCS Game 4, Kansas City at Toronto, noon, (FS1); NLCSGame 3,New YorkMetsatChicago Cubs, 4:30 p.m. (TBS):Kansas City and the NewYork Mets hold 2-0 leads in their respective series through Sunday night. Kansas City and Toronto will play Game 3tonight at 5 o' clock on FS1.

NFL football, Seattle at SanFrancisco, 5:25 p.m. (CBS,NFLNetwork): Onceone of the NFL'sbetter rivalries, this matchup has lost some of its luster, as neither the Seahawks nor the 49ers have a winning record. The game at Levi's Stadium will be the first of two regular-season meetings betweenNFCWest foes trying to keep pacewith the first-place Arizona Cardinals.

Prep cross-country, lntermountain Conference district championships in Bend, 1 p.m.:The race to the Class 5A state championship meet starts at Drake Park for runners from Bend, Mountain View, Redmond, Ridgeview and Summit high schools. The varsity girls start at1 o' clock, the varsity boys at1:30, followed by the junior varsity races.

College football, Colorado atOregon State, 7:30 p.m. (Pac-12Network): One team will get its first conference victory when the Buffaloes (0-3, 2-4) travel to Corvallis to take on the Beavers (0-3, 2-4). Oregon State fell to Washington State on Saturday, 52-31, while Colorado was outscored 21-7 in the fourth quarter in a 38-31 loss to Arizona.

Running,HappyGirls RunSisters, 9 a.m. (half marathon), 9:30 a.m.(SK):In just its fourth year, this designed-for-women event has already established itself as a popular stop on theCentral Oregon running circuit. The half marathon starts at the top of Peterson Ridge, the 5Kstarts at the Five PineLodgecampus in Sisters. For more information, go to happygirlsrunsisters.corn.

ROWING COMMENTARY

COMMUNITY SPORTS

Coach says U.S. has deep

NBA Blazers rally for win over Jazz

. I'

PORTLAND — Da-

mian Lillard scored 32 points, C.J. McCollum had 26 and the Portland

Trail Blazers rallied from a 21-point, second-half deficit to beat the Utah

talent pool

(

By Juliet Macur New York Times News Service

WEST WINDSOR, N.J. inutes after a

soupy fog had evaporated into a clear blue sky one recent

morning, members of the United States women' s rowing team climbed into

their sculling boats and went out for a post-world championships paddle. About two dozen wom-

en in either doubles or singles were here on Mercer Lake, one of the national team training centers. Each of their shells cut

through the water like a giant, delicate water bug,

Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

and the athletes barely

Runners take off from the starting line during Super Dave's Down & Dirty Half Marathon and 10k at Seventh Mountain Resort on Sunday.

broke a sweat in a train-

Jazz116-111 in overtime Sunday night in a preseason game. Lillard, who hit two free throws with 2.8 seconds left to tie the game at101 and force overtime, madesix 3-pointers. McCollum hit 11of 23 shots and scored 18 points during the fourth quarter and overtime for Portland (3-2). Trey Burke scored 22 points and Joe Ingles came off the bench to hit five 3-pointers and scored 16 points for Utah (2-3). Note:Maurice Harkless made his first preseason start for Portland, replacing Al Farouq Aminu (rest). The 6-9 forward, who had played just 44 minutes in two previous preseason games,had eight points and nine rebounds. — 7tre Associated Press

ing session that amounted

to rowing's version of a jog

MLB

There certainly did not

seem tobe any magic at work, no evidence why this rowing program, over the past decade, has become one of the great

• Runners take to the Dirty Half Marathon in whatis oneof the final events of the season

dynasties in the sport. Yet last month, at Lake Aigue-

belette in France, the U.S. women's eight won the

By Victoria Jacobsen •The Bulletin

world championship for its 10th consecutive victory in either the worlds or

~) I'

ny cross country coach will tell you about the importance of warming up before your

the Olympics, a phenomenal streak of superiority in any sport.

race, but Ryan Bak might have taken it a little far before Super Dave's Down 8 Dirty Half

i7: New York's Daniel

Murphy celebrates after hitting a two-run

home run during Sunday's NLCS.

Until this women's crew

Marathon on Sunday.

came around, no other national rowing team

"I did a bit of a long warm up — I ran from home up here," Bak, 33 and of Bend, said after winning the

had won 10 major titles in a row in any discipline, The team with the nextbest record was the East

13.1-mile race for the third time. "I was trying to use the race as a long run to work out." Inside "I'm on the Bak finished the race,

my wife and I

which started and finished

just had a sec-

German quadruple sculls

at Seventh Mountain Resort

of the 1970s and 1980s, with nine consecutive vic-

outside of Bend, in one hour, 16 minutes and 26.8 seconds,

tories in an era of rampant

about a minute off the course record he set in 2012. Like

much less the eight, the

sport's marquee event.

steroid abuse in that Eastern bloc nation.

SeeRowing/B4

• Community Sports Calendar, Scoreboard and Briefs,B6

marathon or shorter 10K race,

m any of thenearly 250run-

Bak said Sunday's race will likely be one of his last before

ners who completed the half

winter sets in.

fence about doing a big race in early December in California, the North Face 50 Miler," Bak

Mets go up2-0 over Cubs inNLCS Daniel Murphy hits a homerina4-1 NewYork victory,B3

ond child a few weeks ago, so that's been the

King

I rby

said. "The amount of training I' ve been doing lately is low;

NFL

focus, more so than fitting a

ikings Chiefs

1 10

SeeMarathon /B6

Dolphins Titans

3 10

run in."

ets

TEE TO GREEN

Eagle Crestmen'sgroup playsall overregion en retired high school principal David Gilbert-

son moved to Eagle Crest

KEVINDUKE

Resort near Redmond two years

ago, he went looking for new friends to play golf with in Central Oregon. It was a door-to-door search. Gilbertson literally knocked on his neighbors' doors in the resort

community trying to find new golf partners. "When I moved to Eagle Crest,

there was no one in my neighborhood that I knew," the 64-year-old Gilbertson recalled. "The easiest

Kevin Duke i The Bulletin

Members of the West Ridge Men's Golf group, from left, Jim Tier, Roger Rau and Nick Elardo on

the Meadows Course at Sunriver.

thing to do was just to walk to the neighbors and ask if anybody played golf." Two years later, the group that Gilbertson started with 11 players in 2013 has swelled to 106 Eagle

Inside • Rookie Emiliano Grillo wins his PGA Tour debut in Napa,B7 • Golf Scoreboard,B7

for example, but this may be the largest group in Central Oregon established strictly for the purpose

of playing other courses. While the members and residents enjoy the three courses at

Eagle Crest, the chance to play the wide variety of courses in the area was part of Gilbertson's motiva-

ent tracks in Central Oregon every Tuesday during the golf season. It

tion to start the group. "We have so many great golf courses in Central Oregon," Gilbertson said after the group finished its round at the Meadows

is known as the West Ridge Men' s

course in Sunriver on a recent

Golf group. The group is restricted to Eagle

Tuesday. "Playing a different course for 28 consecutive weeks ...

Crest residents, but members can

it's worked out really well."

Crest residents who play at differ-

bring guests to play that do not live in the community. Other clubs do

The round at Meadows marked the 15th different course the West

play at different courses, as part of home-and-home tournaments

Ridge group has played this year. SeeEagle Crest/B7

Redskins

3 20

Steelers Cardinals

2 13

engas Bills

21

Lions Bears

34 (OT)

Broncos Browns

23 ( OT)

3 2

exans Jaguars

31 20

Panthers Seahawks

2 23

9ers Ravens

2 20

ac ers Chargers

20

Patrio s Colts

3 27

NFL roundup, scoreboard,BS


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREB DARD

TODAY TEiiiOS

ATP, Erste BankOpen, early round SOCCER England, SwanseaCity vs Stoke City FIFA U-17World Cup, NewZealand vs France FIFA U-17World Cup, North Korea vs Russia Men's college, California at UCLA

Time TV/Radio 6 a.m. T e nnis noon N B CSN 12:55 p.m. FS2 3 :55 p.m. F S 2 6 p.m. P a c-12

BASEBALL

MLB playoffs, KansasCity at Toronto

5 p.m.

FS1

FOOTBALL

NFL, NewYork Giants at Philadelphia

5:15 p.m. ESPN

TUESDAY BASEBALL

MLB playoffs, NewYork Mets at ChicagoCubs MLB playoffs, KansasCity at Toronto

1 p.m. 1 p.m.

TBS FS1

BASKETBALL

NBA preseason, GoldenState at L.A. Clippers

5 p.m.

E SPN2

6 p.m.

Golf

HOCKEY

NHL, Dallas at Philadelphia SOCCER Champions League,BayerLeverkusen vs. Roma Champions League,Dynamo Kyivvs.Chelsea Champions League,BATEBorisovvs.Barcelona FIFA U-17World Cup, Chilevs. Nigeria Champions League,RealSalt Lakevs. Municipal

Today Boys soccer:CentralChristianat DamascusChristian, 4;30p.m. Volleyball: Cottage GroveatSisters, 6:30p.m.

4:30 p.m. NBCSN 11:30a.m. ESPN2 11:30 a.m. Root

SPORTS IN BRIEF

Saturday Boys soccer: CrescentValley atSummit, 11a.m. Volleyball: CulveratColumbiaBasin ConferencetournamentinCulver, noon;Trinity LutheranatMountain ValleyLeaguetournament at Trinity Lutheran,TBD Girls waterpolo: Madrasat MountainView,630p m. Boys waterpolo:MadrasatMountainView,7:30p.m.

6 a.m.

ATP, Erste BankOpen, early round

T e nnis

BASEBALL

FOOTBALL

MLB playoffs

AmeriCanuPriSing:MemPhiS,TemPle jOinTOP25Memphis andTemplejumped into The Associated Press college football poll for the first time this season, joining Houston to give the American Athletic Conference three ranked teams for the first time in the history of the three-year-old league.OhioState remained No. 1 in the APTop25 released Sunday. For thesecond straight week, six teams received first-place votes in the mediapoll, led by the Buckeyes with 28. No. 2Baylor has 12, No. 3 Utah received 16, No. 4TCUgot threeand No.5 LSU and No.6Clemsoneachhaveone.TheUtes and LSU Tigers eachedged aheadone spot after homevictories on Saturday. Michigan State stayed at No. 7after its miracle against Michigan andAlabama isNo. 8 after handing Texas A8 Mits first loss. Memphis (6-0) had the big upset of the weekendagainst Mississippi. The Tigers 37-24 victory vaulted them into the rankings at No18. Unbeaten Templemovedto6-0andwasrankedNo.22.No.21 Houston is also 6-0.

TENNIS NovakDjokovic captured the ninth title of his impressive season with a 6-2, 6-4 win over Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the final of the Shanghai Masters on Sunday.Thetop-seeded Serbian player extended his winning streak to 17straight matches dating back to his championship runattheU.S.Open.Hehasalsowon22consecutivesets.

JankOVic WinS HOngKOngOPen far 15th WTA titleJelenaJankovic of Serbia came backfrom the brink of defeat on Sunday to outpower Angelique Kerber in the HongKong Openfinal, putting on hold theGerman's hopes of playing in the season-ending WTA Finals in Singapore. Fourth-seededJankovic, who beatVenus Williams in the semifinals, was aset and 6-5 down before she rallied to beat second-seededKerber 3-6, 7-6 (4), 6-1 at Hong Kong's Victoria Park for her 15th WTA title.

PBVlyuchenkOVabeatS Friedsam in LinZfinal — Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova clinched her first title of the season bydefeating Anna-Lena Friedsam ofGermany6-4, 6-3 in the final of the Generali Ladies on Sunday in Linz, Austria. It was the eighth WTA title overall for the 29th-ranked Russian, who improved to 8-4 in career finals.

RadWanSka WinS Tianjin OPen —Agnieszka Radwanska defeated DankaKovinic 6-1, 6-2 in less than anhour to win the Tianjin Open title on Sunday inChinaand clinch a spot in the WTAFinals in Singapore. Thesecond-seeded Radwanska brokeKovinicfivetimes and saved all five break points she faced. — From wire reports

MLS

High-scoringTimbers get victory overGalaxy The Associated Press

Next up

CARSON, Calif. — Fanen- Colorado d o Ad i s c ored t w o s e c- at Portland ond-half goals in the Port-

land Timbers' 5-2 victory over the Los Angeles Galaxy on Sunday. The Timbers (14-11-8) scored all five goals in a 25-minute span in the second

When:4 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 25 TV:Root

half and moved into a thirdplace tie with the Vancouver Whitecaps in the West. The

the deficit in the 84th, but

the 74th minute. The Gal-

axy's Robbie Keane closed Darlington Nagbe answered with a breakaway goal 18

Galaxy (14-10-9) conceded seconds after the ensuing kickoff. Sept. 12, 2009, in a 6-3 loss to Keane gave the Galaxy

the most goals at home since FC Dallas. Adi tied it at 1 in the 65th

minute with a turnaround l eft-footed strike from t h e middle of th e b ox. T hree

minutes later, he converted

the early lead in the 36th

minute. The Galaxy would have clinched a berth in the conference semifinals with a win. M aximiliano Ur r uti

capped the scoring in the land the lead for good. 90th minute. It was the TimDiego Chara netted a leap- bers' first road win against ing header to make it 3-1 in the Galaxy. from the spot to give Port-

MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL All TimesPDT LEAGUECHAMPIONSHIP SERIES

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Sunday'sGame N.Y.Mets4,ChicagoCubs1, N.Y.Metsleadseries2-0 Today'sGame Kansas City (Cuetot t-t3) at Toronto(Stroman4-0), 5:07 p.m.

Tuesday'sGames KansasCity (Young1I-65 at Toronto (Dickey1f-tf),

1:07 p.m. NewYork(desrom14-8) atChicago(Hendricks 8-7), 5:07 p.m. Wednesday'sGames x-KansasCityat Toronto,1:07 p.m. N.Y. MetsatChicagoCubs,5:07p.m. Thursday'sGame x-N.Y .MetsatChicagoCubs,5:07p.m. Friday, Oct. 23 x-Torontoat KansasCity, 5:07p.m. Saturday,Oct. 24 x-Chi cagoCubsatN.Y.Mets,1:07or5;07p.m. x-Torontoat KansasCity, 5:07p.m.

Sunday'sboxscore

DjokOViCWinS9th title Of year at Shanghai MaSterS-

10/t O In the Bleachers © 2015 Steve Moore. Dist, by Universal Ucnck www.gocomics.corn/inthebleachers

Thursday Boyssoccer:BendatMountainView,4:30 p.m.; RedmondatRidgeview,4:30 p.mc Estacadaat CrookCounty,4p.mcMadrasatGladstone,4p.m.; Sistersat Sutherlin, 2:30p,mcLaPineat Pleasant Hill, 6:30p.m. Girls soccer: Bend at Mountain View,3 p.mcRedmond atRidgeview,3 p.mc CrookCounty at Estacada, 6pm.; Gladstoneat Madras, 4pmcSisters at Sutherlin,4 p.mc Creswell atLaPine,4p.m. Volleyball: MountainViewatSummit, 6:30p.m.;Bend at Redm ond,6;30p.m.;Pleasant Hil at LaPine,6p.m. Girls water polo:Summitat Ridgeview,3:30p.m. Boys waterpolo:Summit at Ridgeview,4:30p.m.

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

TEiiiOS

NATIONALHOT ROD ASSOCIATION Fall Nationals

Wednesday Crosscountry:SistersatSky-Em Leaguechampionships atLaneCommunity ColegeinEugene,TBD; Crook County,Madrasat Tri-VageyConference championshipsinEstacada, 12:30p.m.

Friday Football: Bendat Summit, 7 p.m.;Mountain View at Ridgeview,7 p.m.; Redmond at North Eugene, 7p.m.;CrookCountyatEstacada,7p.mcMadras at Corbett, 7p.m.;Elmiraat Sisters,7p.m.; LaPine at Harrisburg, 7p.m.; Weston-McEwenat Culver,7 p.m.; Gilchristat Prospect,7p.m. Crosscountry:Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit at Intermountain Conference championshipsat DrakePark, 1 p.m.; Culverat Class3A/2A/tASpecialDistrict 5 championships in Pendleton, 1p.m. Girls water polo:MadrasatBend, 6:30p.m. Boyswaterpolo:MadrasatBend,7;30p.m.

11:30 a.m. FS2 3 :55 p.m. F S 2 7 p.m. FS2

NHRA

IN THE BLEACHERS

Tuesday Boys soccer:Summit atBend,4:30pm.;Ridgeviewat Mountain View,4:30p.m.; CrookCounty atCorbet, 415p ms Estacadaat Madras,4p m.;SistersatcottageGrove,7p.ms CulveratCity Christian, 4pm. Girls soccer.Ridgeviewat MountainView,3 p.m.; SummitatBend,3p.msCorbettat CrookCounty,4 p.m.;Madrasat Estacada, 6p.m.; CottageGroveat Sisters, 4p.m.;LaPineatGlide, 4:30p.m. Volleyball: Redm ondatRidgeview,6:30 p,ms Bend at MountainView, 6:30p.m.; Estacadaat Crook County, 6p.mcMadras at Gladstone,6 p.m.; La Pine atGlide,6 p.m.;CulveratHeppner, 5p.m. Girls water polo:Bendat Redmond,3:30 p.m. Boyswaterpolo:BendatRedmond,4:30p.m.

7:30 p.m. ESPN

FOOTBALL

College, Louisiana-Lafayette at Arkansas St. GOLF World Long Drive Championship, semifinals

ON DECK

)I/

HOCKEY NHL

New York

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NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT

"I don't think coach is coming out to talk. He's going to remove you."

FOOTBALL College Schedule By TheAssociated Press All Times PDT

(Subject Iochange) Tuesday'sGame Louisiana-Lafayette atArkansasSt., 5 p.m. Thursday'sGames Templeat East Carolina, 4 p.m. GeorgiaSouthern atAppalachian St., 4:30p.m. CaliforniaatUCLA, 6p.m. Friday's Games MemphisatTulsa, 5p.m. UtahSt.atSanDiegoSt., 7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames East Pittsburghat Syracuse,9a.m. TulaneatNavy, 10a.m. Toledoat UMass, noon OhioSt.at Rutgers, 5p.m. SOUTH Clemsonat Miami,9a.m. HoustonatUCF,9a.m. Nc StateatWakeForest, 9a.m. BostonCollegeat Louisvile, 9:30a.m. Tenne sseeatAlabama,12:30p.m. NorthTe xasat Marshal,12:30 p.m. PennSt.vs,MarylandatBaltimore, 12:30p.m. Virginia atNorthCarolina,12:30 p.m. DukeatVirginiaTech,12:30p.m. SMU atSouthFlorida, 1p.m. Missouri atVanderbilt,1 p.m. FloridaSt.at GeorgiaTech, 4p.m. W.KentuckyatLSU,4p.m. TexasA&Mat Mississippi, 4 p.m. Kentuckyat Mississippi St.,4;30p.m. MIDWEST Northwestern at Nebraska, 9a.m. Wisconsin at lffinois,12:30 p.m. IndianaatMichiganSt., 12:30p.m.

UconnatCincinnati,1:30 p.m.

Mets 4,Clfbs1 Chicago

c

Sunday At Texas Motorplex Ennis,Texas Final Finish Order Top Fuel 1. RichieCram pton. 2. SteveTorrence. 3. ClayMillican. 4.AntronBrown.5. BrittanyForce.6. Shawn Langdon.7. Billy Torrence.8. DaveConnolly. 9. Larry Dixon.10.DougKalitta. 11.J.R.Todd. 12.Jenna Haddock.13.TonySchumacher.14. KebinKinsley.15. TerryMcMilen.16. TroyBuff. FunnyCar 1. DelWorsham.2. JackBeckman. 3. RonCapps. 4. TommyJohnsonJr..5.RobertHight.6.MattHagan.7. Alexis DeJoria8. . JohnForce.9. CruzPedregon. 10. CoryLee.11.TimWilkerson. 12.Courtney Force.13. John Hale14. . BlakeAlexander. 15. TonyPedregon. 16. ChadHead. Pro Stock 1. EricaEnders. 2. JonathanGray. 3. DrewSkilman. 4.AllenJohnson.5.JasonLine.6.LarryMorgan.7. Chris McG aha. 8. BoButner. 9. GregAnderson. 10. Shane Gray.11.V. Gaines.12. AlexLaughlin.13. Deric Kramer.14.Alan Prusiensky.15.Vincent Mobile. 16. JohnGaydoshJr. Pro StockMotorcycle 1. JerrySavoie.2. EddieKrawiec. 3. KarenStuffe. 4. Chip Ellis. 5.MattSmith.6. SteveJohnson. 7. Hector Arana. 8.HectorArenaJr. 9. Scotty Pollacheck.10. MichaelRay.11.Jim Underdahl. 12.LETonglet. 13. Shawn Gann. 14.Angie Smith. 15.AndrewHines. 16. MikeBerry.

SOUTHWE ST AuburnatArkansas, 9a.m. iowaSt.atBaylor,9a.m. ArmyatRice, 9a.m. KansasSt.at Texas, 9a.m. TexasTechatOklahoma,12:30p.m. Kansas atOklahomaSt.,12:30p.m. FAU atUTEP,4p.m. FARWEST FresnoSt.atAir Force,11a.m. Wagnerat BYU,noon WashingtonSt.atArizona, 1p.m. Hawaiat i Nevada, 1p.m. Louisiana-Monroe at Idaho,2 p.m. NewMexicoatSanJoseSt.,4p.m. Utah atSouthernCal, 4:30 p.m. PortlandSt.at CalPoly, 6:05p.m. WyomingatBoise St., 7:15p.m. ColoradoatOregonSt., 7:30 p.m. WashingtonatStanford, 7:30p.m.

Polls AssociatedPressTop25 The Top 25teamsin TheAssociated Presscollege 2 (2). IP H R E R BBSO football poll, withfirst-placevotes inparentheses, records through Oct. 17,total pointsbasedon25points Chicago votethrough onepoint fora25th-place ArrietaL,0-1 5 4 4 4 2 8 for a first-place TWood 2 0 0 0 0 4 vote, andpreviousranking: Richard 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Record Pls Pv 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1. OhioSt.(28) 7 -0 1,428 1 Strop New York 2. Baylo(12) r 6-0 1,416 2 6-0 1,362 4 Syndergaard W,1-0 52-3 3 1 1 1 9 3. Utah(16) 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 4. TCU (3) 7 -0 1,338 3 NieseH,1 5. LSU (t) 6-0 1,306 6 A.ReedH,1 1 0 0 0 0 0 ClippardH,1 1 1 0 0 0 0 6. Clemson (1) 6-0 1,252 5 FamiliaS,2-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 7. MichiganSt. 7-0 1,202 7 WP — Syndergaard. 8. Alabama 6-1 1,133 10 T—3:07.A—44,502(41,922). 9. FloridaSt. 6-0 1,041 11 10. Stanford 5 -1 91 7 1 5 6 -1 898 1 4 11. NotreDame BASKETBALL 12.iowa 7 -0 820 1 7 13. Florida 6-1 78 5 8 14. Oklahoma St. 6 -0 735 1 6 NBA preseason 5 -2 614 1 2 15. Michigan NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION 5-1 61 4 9 15. Texas A&M All TimesPDT 5 -1 56 5 1 9 17. Oklahoma 6 -0 554 N R 18. Memphi s Sunday'sGames 6 -0 346 2 2 19. Toledo Brooklyn92,Philadelphia 91 5 -1 337 2 3 20. California SanAntonio96, Detroit 92 6 -0 318 2 4 21. Houston Memphis 90,Minnesota68 6 -0 21 7 N R 22. Templ e Toronto87,Cleveland81 5 -1 21 1 2 5 23. Duke Oklahoma City111, Denver98 5 -2 158 1 3 24. Mississippi Miami101,Atlanta92 5-1 7 3 NR 25. Pittsburgh Portland116,Utah111, DT O thers recei v ing vot e s: Mi s si s sippiSt.63, BYU21, Today'sGames UCLA18, NorthCarolina17, TexasTech14, Georgia Chicago at Charlotte, 4 p.m. 12, W.Kentucky 11,ArizonaSt.10,Wisconsin 8, Utah DallasatCleveland,4 p.m. St. 7,Northwestern4. BrooklynatBoston, 4:30p.m. NewOrleansatHouston, 5 p.m. AmwayTop26 PortlandatL.A.Lakers, 7:30 p.m. TheAmwayTop25football coachespoll, withfirstTuesday'sGames placevotesin parentheses,records throughDct. 17, Indiana atChicago,5 p.m. total pointsbasedon25 points forfirst placethrough Minnesotavs. Milwaukeeat Madison,Wl,5p.m. one pointfor 25th,andpreviousranking: PhoenixatSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Record Pls Pvs OklahomaCity at Utah, 6p.m. 1. OhioState(45 ) 7-0 15 4 7 1 GoldenStateatLA. Clippers,7:30p.m. 6 -0 1488 2 2. Baylo(12) r 7 -0 1417 3 3. TCU (4) Sunday'sSummary 4. MichiganState 7 -0 1334 4 5. LSU (t) 6 -0 1324 5 Biazers116, Jazz111 (OT) 6. Clemson 6 -0 1271 6 7. Utah (I) 6 -0 1258 7 6 -1 1123 9 UTAH (111) 8. Alabama Hood4-66-715, Booker1-73-45, Pleiss 1-50-0 9. FloridaState 6 -0 1111 8 2, Burke 9-120-022, Burks5-90-110, Milsap1-53-4 10. NotreDame 6 -1 92 4 1 3 6, Lyles 3101-27, Withey5 70 010,Neto2 50 05, 11.Stanford 5 -1 898 1 6 Ingles5-71-216, C.Johnson4-100-1 8,Graham0-7 12. Oklahoma State 6 -0 839 1 5 0-0 0,Cotton1-93-35.Totals41-9917-24111. 13. iowa 7 -0 833 1 7 PORTLAND (116) 14. Florida 6 -1 75 1 1 1 Harkl ess3-50-08,Leonard2-60-06,Plumlee 15. Oklahom a 5 -1 665 1 9 3-4 0-1 6,Lilard12-272-232,Mccollum11-232-2 16. Texas A&M 5 -1 623 1 0 26, Crabbe 4-113-412, Connaughton1-3 0-02, Da- 17. Memphis 6 -0 54 4 2 2 vis 4-61-2 9,Vonleh5-80-210, Pressey1-12-25. 17. Michigan 5 -2 54 4 1 4 Totals46-9410-15116. 19. California 5 -1 370 2 3 6 -0 322 2 5 Utah 24 37 23 17 10 — 111 20. Toledo 5 -1 305 2 4 Portland 20 2 7 1 9 36 16 — 116 21. Duke 3-Point Goal— sutah 12-27 (logies 5-7, Burke 22. Houston 6 -0 289 N R 5 -2 20 1 1 2 4-5, Neto1-1, Hood1-1, Miffsap1-2, Graham0-1, 23. Mississippi Burks0-1,Pleiss0-1, Booker0-1, Lyles0-2, Cotton 24. Temple 6 -0 163 N R 0-2, C.Johnson0-3), Portland14-34 (Lilard 6-12, 25. Georgia 5-2 9 5 NR Harkl ess2-3,Leonard2-5,Mccollum 2-7,Pressey Othersreceivingvotes: Mississippi State38; Wis1-1, Crabbe1-4, Vonleh 0-1, Connaughton 0-1). consin37;Pittsburgh32;North Carolina30; UCLA30; Fouled Dut—None. Rebounds—Utah54(Witheytf), TexasTech14; BrighamYoung 9; Navy9; ilinois 5; Portland 64(Davis 13). Assists—Utah 20 (Booker, Oregon5; UtahState5; WashingtonState 5; Western Neto,Lyles,Burks3), Portland23 (Mccollum9). Total Kentucky5; Northwestern4; Marshall 3; Arizona2; Fouls—Utah14, Portland20.A—16,352 (19,980). BoiseState2; Bowling Green1.

EasternConference

America's Line Favorite EAGLE S

HOME TEAMINCAPS NFL

OpenCurrent 0/U Underdog Today 3 t/t 5

50

Giant s

TENNIS ATP Tour ShanghaiMasters Sunday,Shanghai Championship

NovakDjokovic (1),Serbia,def. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (16), France,6-2,6-4.

WTA Tour Generali LadiesLinz Sunday, Linz,Austria Championship AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova (7), Russia,def. An na-Len aFriedsam,Germany,6-4,6-3.

HongKong Sunday,HongKong Championship JelenaJankovic (4), Serbia,def. Angelique Kerber (2), Germ any, 3-6,7-6(4), 6-1. Tianjin Open Sunday, Tianjin, China Championship Agnieszka Radwanska(2), Poland,def. DankaKov inic, Montenegro, 6-1,6-2.

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup HollywoodCasino400 Sunday At KansasSpeedway KansasCity, Kan. Lap length: 1.5miles (Start position inparentheses) 1. (14j Joey Logano, Ford,269taps, 131.2rating, 47 pomts,$377,023. 2. (5) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 269,107.3, 42, $239,405. 3. (21) JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet, 269,118.2,42, $219,791. 4. (24) KaseyKahne, Chevrolet, 269, 95.8, 40, $163,655. 5. (3) KyleBusch,Toyota, 269, 107.2,39,$169,746. 6. (9)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,269,1084,38, $135,595. 7.8) RyanBlaney,Ford, 269, 96.4,0, $112,170. 8.(2) CarlEdw ards, Toyota, 269,91.3,37, $115,670. 9. If) Brad Keseloski w, Ford, 269, 101.8, 36, $161,611. 10. (6) Jeff Gordon,Chevrolet, 269, 83.5, 34, $153,681. 11. (10) RyanNewman, Chevrolet, 269, 93.8, 33, $141,460. 12. (16)BrianScott, Chevrolet,269,80.2,0, $125,283. 13. (18) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,269,79.8, 31, $114,125. 14. (ft) Matt Kenseth,Toyota,269, 134.1, 32, $152,886. 15. (7) Martin TruexJr., Chevrolet, 269,91.2, 29, $130,395. 16. (4) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,268, 107.6, 29, $157,975. 17. (12)GregBiffle, Ford,268, 73.1,27, $133,683. 18. (I 9)TrevorBayne,Ford, 268, 63.3,26, $142,525. 19. (13) Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 268, 73.4, 26, $109,350. 20. (28)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 268,63.5,24, $131,036. 21. (15)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,267,78.4, 23, $115,545. 22. (29) DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 267,54.7, 22, $107,245. 23. (38) CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 267, 52, 22, $122,678. 24. (23)AricAlmirola,Ford,267,64, 20,$134,756. 25. (22)DavidRagan,Toyota,266,54.4,19, $124334. 26. (30) Justin Allgaier,Chevrolet, 266,54.2, 18, $118,553. 27. (27) AJAgmendinger, Chevrolet, 265,59, 17, $122,153. 28. (31) SamHom ish Jr., Ford, 265,50.3, 16, $121,440. 29. (20) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 265, 60, 15, $122,703. 30. (34) Matt DiBenedetto,Toyota, 265, 41.5, 14, $106,992. 31. (32) AlexBowm an, Chevrolet, 264, 44.9, 13, $94,245. 32. (35)BrettMoffitt, Ford,264,396,12, $93545. 33. (39)ColeWhitt, Ford,264,39.5, 11, $90,845. 34. (37) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 263,36.2, 10, $90,645. 35. (17) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 263, 52.7, 9, $117,624. 36.33) DavidGilffand, Ford,262,33.7, 8,$98,220. 37.I40)JebBurton, Toyota, 260,31.4, 7,$89,953. 38. (42)ReedSorenson, Ford, 258, 29,6, $84,528. 39. (43)Wil Kimmel, Ford,255,26.8, 5, $80,465. 40. (26)Clint Bowyer, Toyota, accident, 170,59.5, 4, $110,623. 41. (25)AustinDilon, Chevrolet, accident,154, 74.4, 3, $109,401. 42. (36)J.J. Yeley,Toyota, 144,25.3,0, $68,465. 43. (41)LandonCassil, Chevrolet,engine,127,32.7, 0, $64,965. Race Statistics Average SpeedofRaceWinner:135.732mph. TimeofRace:2hours,58minutes,22seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.491 seconds. Caution Flags: 7 for39laps. Lead Changes:21among9 drivers. Leaders Summary(Driver, Times Led, Laps Led):M.Kenseth, 7 timesfor 153laps;J.Logano, 6 times for 42laps; B.Keselowski, 1 timefor 28laps; K.Harvick, 1 timefor 21 taps; PMenard, 1 timefor 7 taps;C.Edwards,2 timesfor 6 taps;J.Johnson,2 timesfor 5laps; R.Blaney,1timefor 5laps; C.Mears, 1timefor2taps. Wins: M.Kensethr5;J.Logano,5;Ky.Busch,4; J.Johnson, 4; K.Harvick,3; Ku.Busch,2; D.Earnhardt Jr., 2; C.Edw ards, 2; D.Ham lin, 2; B.Keselowski,1; M.Truex Jr., 1. Top16 inPoints:1.J.Logano,3,095; 2.D.Hamlin, 3,082; 3. Ku.Busch, 3,077; 4. C.Edwards, 3,076; 5. K.Harvick,3,071;6.J.Gordon,3,071; 7. B.Keselowski, 3,071; 8.M.TruexJr., 3,070;9. Ky.Busch,3,064; 10. R.New man, 3,062; 11. D.Earnhardt Jr., 3,039;12. MKenseth, 3035;13. JMcMurray 2154;14. JJohnson, 2,134;15.PMenard, 2,109; 16.C.Bowyer,2086.

Montreal Tampa Bay Ottawa Florida Detroit Boston Toronto Buffalo

Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA 6 6 0 0 12 2 0 7 6 4 2 0 8 19 15 6 3 2 1 7 19 17 5 3 2 0 6 16 9 5 3 2 0 6 15 13 5 2 3 0 4 18 21 5 1 3 1 3 12 17 5 1 4 0 2 9 14

Metropolitan Division L OT Pls GF GA 1 1 7 1 7 15 2 1 7 14 15 1 0 6 13 10 1 1 5 7 10 3 0 4 7 9 3 1 3 8 14 4 0 2 11 17 6 0 0 13 30 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA St. Louis 6 5 1 0 10 2 1 1 4 Dallas 5 4 1 0 8 19 13 Nashville 5 4 1 0 8 14 9 Winnipeg 6 4 2 0 8 20 13 Minnesota 5 3 1 1 7 14 15 Chicago 6 3 3 0 6 14 14 Colorado 5 2 3 0 4 16 16 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA San Jose 5 4 1 0 8 17 8 Vancouver 6 3 1 2 8 16 11 Arizona 5 3 2 0 6 16 11 Los Angeles 5 2 3 0 4 6 14 Edmonton 6 2 4 0 4 12 16 Anaheim 5 1 3 1 3 5 12 Calgary 5 1 4 0 2 10 19 Sunday'sGames NewJersey2, N.Y.Rangers 1,OT St. Louis4, Winnipeg2 Anaheim 4, Minnesota1 Edmonton2,Vancouver1, DT Los Angele2, s Colorado1 Today'sGame SanJoseat N.Y. Rangers,4 p.m. Tuesdays Games ArizonaatNewJersey, 4p.m. Florida atPittsburgh, 4p.m. N.Y.IslandersatColumbus,4 p.m. Dallas atPhiladelphia 430pm St. Louisat Montreal, 4.30p.m. Tampa Bayat Nashvile, 5p.m. Washingtonat Calgary,6 p.m. Wednesday'sGames Torontoat Buffalo,4p.m. PhiladelphiaatBoston, 5 p.m. Detroit atEdm onton, 6:30p.m. Carolinaat Colorado,7 p.m. GP W N .Y. Islanders 5 3 N.Y.Rangers 6 3 Washington 4 3 P hiladelphia 4 2 Pittsburgh 5 2 NewJersey 5 1 Carolina 5 1 Columbus 6 0

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCE All TimesPDT

EasternConference W L T Pfs GF GA x-New York 17 10 6 57 60 42 x-D.C.United 15 12 6 51 43 40 x-Columbus 14 11 8 50 53 53 x-TorontoFC 15 14 4 49 57 56 Montreal 14 13 6 48 46 43 NewEngland 13 12 8 47 45 46 OrlandoCity 12 13 8 44 46 55 NewYorkCity FC 10 16 7 37 48 55 Philadelphia 9 17 7 34 41 55 Chicago 8 19 6 30 42 56 WesternConference W L T Pts GF GA x-FCDallas 17 10 6 57 50 38 x -Los Angele s 1 4 1 0 9 51 55 44 x -Vancouver 15 1 3 5 50 42 36 Portland 14 11 8 50 37 38 Seattle 14 13 6 48 41 35 SportingKansasCity 13 10 9 48 46 42 SanJose 13 12 8 47 40 37 Houston 11 13 9 42 42 46 R eal SaltLake 1 1 1 4 8 41 37 45 Colorado 8 14 10 34 30 39 x- clinched playoff berth

Sunday'sGames

D.C.United4, Chicago0 NewYork4, Philadelphia1 Houston1, Seatle 1,tie Portland5, LosAngeles2 Wednesday'sGame ColoradoatSporting KansasCity, 5:30p.m. Sunday,Ocf.25 D.C.Unitedat Columbus, 2p.m. NewYorkatChicago,2 p.m. TorontoFCat Montreal, 2 p.m. OrlandoCityat Philadelphia,2 p.m. NewEnglandat NewYorkCity FC,2p.m. ColoradoatPortland, 4 p.m. RealSaltLakeat Seattle, 4p.m. SanJoseatFCDallas,4p.m. Los Angeleat s Sporting KansasCity,4 p.m. HoustonatVancouver, 4p.m.

DEALS Transactions FOOTBALL

National Football League NEWYORKGIANTS— SignedCBBrandonMcGee from the practice squad.Waived TEJerome Cunningham. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague CAROLINAHURRICANES— Reassigned D Bret Pesceto Charlotte (AHL). TAMPABA Y LIGHTNING— Reassigned DStater Koekkoek to Syracuse (AHL).

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedSaturday. Chnk Jchnk SBhd Wstlhd Bonneville 662 88 272 70 The Daffes 2,069 384 6 9 1 257 JohnDay 3,003 240 6 6 3 285 M c Nary 2,962 6 5 1 1 , 368 6 2 4 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedSaturday. Cbnk Jcbnk SBbd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,315,938 111,507 262,186 95,214 The Daffes 934,778 112,771 211,192 73,556 John Day 790,258 80,889 174,206 62,192 McNary 728,952 67,085 169,078 56,715


MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015• THE BULLETIN

B3

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Logano takes victory at Kansas oLi times oi t e The Associated Press

in the race and, more importantly, last among the 12 drivers in the title

Logano keptpeeking around Matt Kenseth as the laps ticked away

race.

at Kansas Speedway, the two of them in entirely different situations

gano said after hopping out of his No. 22 Ford. "I just felt like I raced hard. I got fenced twice. I wasn't going to put up with it."

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Joey

"I'm sure we' ll talk about it," Lo-

in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. Logano had nothing to lose. Kenseth had just about everything. So when Logano got under

Uh, Joey, you sure about that chat?

"I won't talk to Joey. I don't have

Kenseth entering Turn I with about

five laps remaining, and sent him spinning across the track, it l eft

many eyebrows raisedlong after the Penske Racing driver pulled

certainly not anymore."

really hard. I felt like I got fenced

Also on Sunday: Enders breaks NHRA season wins record for female drivers: EN-

twice.He raced me hard so I raced

NIS, Texas — Erica Enders raced

him back." Colin E. rBaley/TheAssociated Press to her eighth Pro Stock victory of Logano was already guaranteed Sprint Cup Series driver Joey Logano the year in the AAA Texas NHRA though. After a disastrous race a week ago, Kenseth's team arrived

at Kansas knowing a victory this weekend or next weekend at unpredictable Talladega might be the only way he could make it to the final eight in the "eliminator" round of the playoffs. That's why Kenseth was doing everything possible to block Logano. "I'm really disappointed," Kenseth said. "I was running the lane he

FallNationals to break the NHRA season record forfemale drivers.

Enders had a 6.467-second run at 214.48mph in her Chevrolet Camaro to beat Jonathan Gray for

wanted to run in, but my goodness, her 20th career victory and first isn't this racing? Strategically, I at Texas Motorplex. She broke think it wasn't the smartest move on

a tie with Pro Stock Motorcycle

his part. He' ll probably sleep good racer Angelic Sampey for the fetonight. I hope he enjoys that one. male record. Sampey set the mark It's not what I would have done."

Radio:KICE 940-AM;

nator Kalani Sitake said there might

ally been one of his biggest fans. I'm

winning Sunday's race at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas.

Colorado at OregonState When: 7:30 p.m. coach Gary Andersen had strong words for his players in the days fol- Saturday lowing last week's blowout loss at TV:Pac-12 PULLMAN, Wash. — Oregon State

guys that I think hasn't been into it yet with Joey, and I' ve always raced

second straight Chase race. "That's good, hard racing," Loga-

celebrates in Victory Lane after

Corvallis Gazette-Times

Arizona.

away on the final restart to win his

his spot in the next round of the Chase after his victory at Charlotte,

Next up

By Kevin Hampton

anything to t alk t o h i m a b out," Kenseth said. "I'm one of the only him with a ton of respect. I' ve actu-

no said. "We were racing each other

re on tate cense

in 2001. Richie Crampton won in

Kenseth wound up leading a race- Top Fuel, Del Worsham in Funny high 153 laps, but his wild ride with Car, and Jerry Savoie in Pro Stock a handful to go dropped him to 14th Motorcycle.

MLB PLAYOFFS

Andersen and defensive coordi-

KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM

be personnel movement on defense, along with more focus on the four"If you look at the first half, at the down alignment. They were true to their word. end ofthe day there were some great The Beavers used the four-down deep balls that were thrown, there extensively from the start. They start- were some contested balls that were ed some new faces and gave more thrown," Andersen said. "The young players plenty of playing time. men from Washington State made It didn't matter. some plays on those balls. "But our inability to tackle, more so The Beavers could not make a stop in the first half and dropped into a than anything else in the first half is deep hole at the half. our biggest issue." Sitake and Andersen threw a lot of Andersen said h e's e xperience looks at Washington State quarter- these levels of lows before. "The key thing is just to keep on back Luke Falk, but the plan to pressure him failed in the first half and he fighting and keep on battling," Andershreddedthe secondary. He finished sen said. "If you don't expect that to completing 39 of 50 passes for 407 happen at some point in this league, you' re crazy. This league, people are yards and six touchdowns. "He was very good, just like he' s going to score points and you better been all year, really," Andersen said. find a way to answer." "The games I sat down and studied Safety Justin Strong said the Beaand focused on were Pac-12 games verswere supposed to be disguising and last year he had some very good their coverages in the first half but did games. not do a good job. "He was on fire. We helped him at "The quarterback was just sitting times be on fire, but hey, that's foot- in the backfield reading our coverage ball. You get an opportunity to take and making plays off of it," Strong advantage of something and he did. said. "In the second half we came out In this offense, if they have the ability and we disguised more and we bought to throw the football on time and you into what the coaches were teaching can't disrupt routes or you can't have us in practice and started playing as a the ability to disrupt the quarterback, team." whether it's a four-man rush or a creRommel Mageo did stop a potential ative way to bring five or max blitzes, touchdown drive in the third with his we did them all in the first half."

The halftime statistics told the story.

second interception of the season. The Beavers wound up with two

Washington State went into the picks and played much better in the break with 323 passing yards and 76 second half. "They' re a very good team. They rushing. Falk completed28 of 33 passes for work together, they all read a defense," the six scores, and the Cougars had 23 Strong said. "We were in coverages first downs. where we had opportunities to make The score at the half? 45-17. plays and just execute like we pracThe Beavers were often burned in tice. We didn't execute today. We just spaceby WSU ball carriers and had came out in the second half and had to quite a few tackle attempts broken. change it."

Carringtonmakesmajor impact in return toDucks Next up

By Steve Nims The (Eugene) Register-Guard

Frank Franklin II / The AssociatedPress

Chicago's Stariin Castro is out at first as New York's Lucas Duds takes the throw during the ninth inning of Game 2 of the NLCS onSunday inNew York.The Mets beatthe Cubs 4-1.

uic sa By Ronald Bium The Associated Press

N EW YORK —

Say this for

Daniel Murphy and the New York Mets: They have their October for-

mula down and are sticking with it. Murphy homered off yet another ace to provide an early cushion for Noah Syndergaard, and the Mets breezed pastJake Arrieta and the

Chicago Cubs 4-1 Sunday night for a 2-0 lead in a surprisingly one-sided NL Championship Series. Power, pitching, plus some dazzling defense — just like the Amazin' Mets of 1969.

"We' ve beaten some of the best the game has to offer," Mets captain David Wright said. Baseball's most dominant pitcher since the All-Star break, Arrieta had not even settled in when

Murphy homered for the fourth straight game, a two-run drive just inside the right-field pole in a three-run first inning. "We' re having a whole bunch of fun right now," said Murphy, who homered in the first inning for the second straight game and seems to

have a reservedstar-of-the-game seat in the interview room.

Given the quick lead on a chilly night, Syndergaard kept the bats of Chicago's young sluggers on ice

I'O eS e S Basedall notebook CANADIAN CLUBBING Toronto tries to draw closer in the AL Championship Series, facing an 0-2 deficit vs. the vlslting Royals. Johnny Cueto starts for Kansas City against Marcus Stroman at 5:07 p.m. PDTin a matchup of pitchers who last threw in Game 5 of the Division Series. TheBlue Jays were the top-slugging team in the majors this season, but didn't hit a single homerun in their two losses at KC.They' re hoping that the ball will fly with the roof closed at RogersCentre. TAKE IT EASY The Mets and Cubsgetadayoff before playing Game3 of the NL Championship Series at Wrigley Field. Kyle Hendricks will start for Chicago — hemadehispostseason debut in the division round vs. St. Louis andgave upthree solo home runs in 4/s innings. Jacob deGromstarts for the Mets after going 2-0 with a1.38 ERA against the Dodgers in the NLDS, striking out 20 in 13 innings. — The Associated Press

with shutout ball into the sixth.

day night at Wrigley Field. Rookie

Curtis Granderson robbed Chris Coghlan of a likely home run with a leaping grab at the center-field wall, swiped a pair of bases and

left-hander Steven Matz is set for

scored two runs for the Mets. After beating Clayton Kershaw,

Zack Greinke, Jon Lester and Arrieta, the Mets are two wins from reaching their first World Series

since 2000. New York starts NL Rookie of the Year Jacob deGrom on Tues-

NLChampionshipSeies

METS 2, CijBS 0 Game 1: New York 4, Chicago 2 Game 2: New York 4, Chicago 1 Tue. a t Chicago 5:07 p.m. Wed. at Chicago 5:07p.m. x-Thu. at Chicago 5:07 p.m. x -Oct. 24 at New York TB D x-Oct. 25 atNew York 5:07p.m. (x-if necessary; alltimes PDT)

Al ChampionshipSeries

ROYALS 2, BLUEJAYS0 Game 1:KansasCity 5, Toronto 0 Game 2: KansasCity6,Toronto3 Today at Toronto 5:07 p.m. Tue. a t Toronto 1 :07 p.m. x-Wed. at Toronto 1:07 p.m. x-Oct. 23 at KansasCity 5:07 p.m. x-Oct. 24 at KansasCity 5:07 p.m. (x-if necessary; alltimes PDT)

dricks in Game 3. If the long-down-

ner Matt Harvey on Thursday, if

t rodden Cubs are t o

needed. "They don't have the creden-

World Series for the first time since

and Lester and Arrieta have, but they' re going to be good pitchers," Mets manager Terry Collins said. "We think we can stack up with anybody." Chicago goes with Kyle Hen-

r e ach t h e

1945, they must first force the bestof-seven NLCS back to Citi Field nextweekend. "We' re all about one-game win-

ning streaks," Chicago manager Joe Maddon said. "I know it' s psychobabble 101, but it actually works."

Oregon at ArizonaState When: 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29

it felt like the first time on Saturday TV:ESPN Radio:KBND 1110-AM night. Two minutes into his season debut, the Oregon sophomore wide receiver caught a 36-yard touchdown pass from Vernon Adams Jr. to start Ore-

gon's 26-20 Pac-12 win over Washington at Husky Stadium.

"I almost shed a tear, but it was just all smiles," Carrington said during his first public comments since being suspended by the NCAA for failing a drug test prior to the College Football Playoff championship game in January. "You never knowhow fast it could be gone, so it was just good to be back out there."

Game 4, followed by Game I win-

tials that Kershaw and Greinke

SEATTLE — The end zone had become a familiar spot for Darren Carrington, but after a 10-month absence,

C arrington finished with

f i ve

catches for 125 yards and two scores against the Huskies to lead the Ducks

in each category. S andwiched a r ound

the s ev-

Added defensive lineman Henry Mondeaux: "Darren was amazing.

It shows what kind of guy he is. He worked hard and he didn't take the

games off lightly. He didn't take it as a break, he worked the whole time."

Carrington said he was unsure just how much the Ducks would use him as he worked his way back into the

offense midway through the regular season. "It felt good to be playing that much and beback outthere,"hesaid."Ihave just been waiting, practicing hard every day and waiting to be cleared." The 6-foot-2, 195-pound Carrington played for the first time with Adams,

en-game suspension, Carrington has 19 catches for 416 yards and five but he quiddy became the favorite touchdowns in his last three games. target for the senior transfer quarterThat stitch started with the Pac-12 back. Carrington had more than onechampionshipgame when he had sev- third of Adams' 14 completions. "Over the summer, right when he en catches for 126 yards and a touchdown in a 51-13 win over Arizona. Car-

got up there, we'd go to the rec center

rington followed up that performance and after practice we work on stuff," with seven catches for 165 yards and Carrington said. "We got to be good two touchdowns in a 59-20 win over Florida State in the Rose Bowl. Then came the shocking news that

friends during the summer, so there was a little chemistry there."

Carrington had to sit out Oregon's 4220 loss to Ohio State in the championship game. "Peoplehad to make plays and we just didn't win as a team," Carrington

night was the first touchdown pass

said. "It felt sad to sit out, but I got over that pretty fast."

The suspension carried over to the

Adams' second completion of the to Carrington and Adams later found him againfor a 9-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter that put the

Ducks ahead 23-6. "He's a playmaker and it helps us to get him out there to make plays," Adams said.

Carrington also had catches of 24, rington waited to hear when he could 29 and 27 yards. Four of his catches return. came on third down and each resulted "It's been pretty tough just not being in a first down. "I told Vernon, whenever he is in able to be on the field with my team, but I was able to overcome," he said. "I trouble, he might want to look my thank God for helping me get through way," Carrington said. that and my parents and family, too." Adams did that and Carrington Carrington was able to practice had the performance he wanted in his during his suspension, but did not suit long-awaited return to the Ducks. "I always appreciated college footup for games. "There was no drop-off," running ball, it is good to be out there," he said. back Royce Freeman said. "He's work- "Under the lights and in front of all the ing in practice and he doesn't take any TVs and fans watching, it was good to plays off. That showed out there. He' s be back. Whenever I came back, I just a blessed athlete." wanted to make an impact." first six games of this season as Car-


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015

FOOTBALL

Formercollegebasketball players making namefor themselvesin NFL By Sam Farmer Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Jon

Gruden wouldn't budge.

His Tampa Bay Buccaneers were weeks removed from winning the Lombardi Trophy in early 2003, and one of his players was asking for a favor. C ornerback Dw i g ht Smith wanted his child-

hood friend to get a tryMark Makela/The New York Times

Members of the U.S. women's rowing team at a morning practice in Princeton, New Jersey, in August. America's female rowers are on a run of dominance unmatched in the sport's history, a streak the

program's coaches attribute to the deep talent pool resulting from anexplosion of interest beyond traditional Ivy League circles.

out with the Super Bowl

champs, even though his pal had played basketball in college, not football. No dice. "I said, 'What do you think this is, Dwight, the YMCA?' " recalled Grud-

Rowing

tute in Tonawanda, New York. Then, all 142 pounds of him

era — Terhaar and his wife, former Olympic rower Jen

Continued from B1

ended up on the lightweight

Dore, have had four children

the rejected request now, a

squad at Rutgers. He went

since just before it began, and dozens of rowers have cycled in and out of the women's eight

dozen years later.

To find out why this row-

ing program has dominated, I on to coach Columbia's lightwent to see Tom Terhaar, the weight men, leading the varwomen's national team coach sity eight to its first victory in since 2001. the 55 years of the Eastern AsI wanted to k now i f h e sociation of Rowing Colleges could share his secrets. Then championship. "He really changed the apit dawned on me: Could Terhaar bethe secret? He is,after proach to training and used all, the common denominator: a much more scientific apOver the past decade, every proach," said Mike Zimmer, one of those winning crews who was the Columbia heavyhad a different lineup. weight coach and director of "Oh no, it's not me, it's the rowing at the time and who

and then on with their lives. But no matter the combination,

the Americans keep winning. "I showed up and was big and young and strong and saw a group of women who were so amazing, so much better than me, that I was like, 'I want to be like them,' so I

pushed myself farther than I ever thought was possible," said Eleanor Logan, who won a bronze in the pair last month

talent pool," Terhaar said, as

now works as the national

we sat in the coach's motorboat watching his rowers glide by. "The sport is exploding. It's just incredible how big it is now and how many great athletes we' re getting." Long gone are the days

team programs manager at U.S. Rowing. "Tom's atten- and is also a two-time Olymtion to detail was really, really pic champion and three-time high, and he was just so pro- world champion in the eight. fessional. Always reserved. When asked about T erNever yelled, unless it was at haar's role in this dynasty, me, but I'm sure I deserved it." Logan said his success was When Terhaar s t arted rooted in the fact that he is not coachingthe U.S. women in a micromanager.He realizes 2001, the improvement was his rowers are self-motivated, immediate. A new philoso- and has let the program evolve phy was in play: Sweep row- organically. In this Olympic ers (those who row with one cycle, though, the pressure to oar) were commingled with succeed is higher than usual scullers (who row with two because of the streak. oars). Smaller boats were not The team has had a brief constantly or suddenly raided break after winning worlds, to suit the needs of the high- but now Terhaar is evaluating er-profile eight. every rower, every day, as the Rowers felt validated, but Rio Olympics approach. He they also became interchange- will not name his team for the able: One day, a rower might eight until next summer. "He is patient and likes to train in a pair (two rowers, one oar each), the next, she might see how things play out before work in a double (two rowers, changing things," Logan said. two oars each). The goal was "He laid the foundation and to teach the athletes to become knows that he can now say comfortable rowing with any- whatever he wants, do whatone, in any boat. ever he wants, but that it's up That year, the eight finished to us to make it happen." fourth at the worlds. The next There is a system to winning year, it won. now. The success, though, is At Terhaar's first Olympics, clicking away with such pow-

when rowers came exclusive-

ly from the Ivy League or traditional rowing powers like the century-old programs at Washington and Cal. Now national team members hail from far and wide, including from relatively unheralded rowing programs like the one at Ithaca, whose women' s team — founded in 1975-

produced Meghan Musnicki, who has won four world titles

and an Olympic gold medal in Terhaar's women's eight. This weekend, about 11,000

rowers will clog the Charles River, which separates Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts, for the annual Head of the Charles Regatta — many of them benefiting from an explosion in opportunities created by universities seeking to satisfy Title IX requirements.

But winning the world championships and the Olympics in 2004 in Athens, the womfor 10 years in a row did not en's eight narrowly lost to a happen just because there are Romanian team that won its a lot more American rowers. third straight Olympic gold,

er that other nations cannot

keep up. With the Olympics less than a year away, a third straight Summer Games gold Deny it all he wants, it hap- and a year later, the U.S. wom- seems to hang just beyond the pened because of key contri- en lost again, at the world finish line, right there for the butions from Terhaar. championships. taking. Terhaar, 46, grew up in BufThe U.S. women's eight has No magic needed. Just a falo and rowed in high school not lost since. freight train at top speed, rollat St. Joseph's Collegiate InstiThe streak is now its own ing through.

NHL ROUNDUP

Oilers score inOTto overtake Canucks The Associated Press VANCOUVER, British Co-

lumbia — Lauri Korpikoski scored on a breakaway at 1:46 of overtime to lift the Edmon-

ton Oilers to a 2-1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on

Sunday night. Nail Yakupov scored in regulation and Anders Nilsson stopped 33 shots to help Edmonton win for the second

straight night after starting the season 0-4-0. Matt Bartkowski scored in regulation for Vancouver and

Oilers, including all five meetings last season.

Rangers.

Blues 4, Jets 2: W I NNITied 1-1 after two periods, PEG, Manitoba — Vladimir C anucks f o r w ar d Da n i e l Tarasenko scored twice and Sedin was left shaking his Brian Elliott made 26 saves head early in the third after in St. L o uis' v i ctory o v er

en, who can laugh about

buddy was Antonio Gates, a probable first-ballot Hall of Famer for the San Diego Chargers. With two visits

to the end zone last week, Gates joined Tony Gonzalez as the only tight ends in NFL history with 100 touchdown catches. "Gates caught his 50th

touchdown pass against me in 2008, the year I

got fired," Gruden said. "When I talked to Dwight I said, 'Hey, listen. Sorry,

man.'"

What was once incon-

ceivable — a college basketball player making the transition to the highest level of football — is now

not so bizarre. Arizona Cardinals tight e nd Darren F ells, w h o

caught his second touchdown of the season last week, was a 6-foot-7 forward at U C I r v ine w ho

hadn't played

High. Quentin Rollins, a Green Bay defensive back who last week intercepted two passes and returned one

for a touchdown, played point guard for four years at Miami (Ohio). He tacked on one season of football to his college basketball

onds earlier.

there."

YORK —

in Anaheim's victory over Minnesota.

L e e S t e mpniak

Kings 2, Avalanche 1:LOS

Ryan Miller finished with 22 scored at 3:07 of overtime and ANGELES — T y ler Toffoli saves. New Jersey finally gave new scored a breakaway goal late The Canucks had won eight coach John Hynes a victory in the second period, and Los of the previous 10 against the with a win over the New York Angeles beat Colorado.

Jacksonville tight end Julius Thomas, right, a former Portland State basketball and football player, was a fourth-round pick of the Denver Broncos in the 2011 NFL draft.

"They used to play basketball because some of them didn't like getting hit," said ESPN's Gruden, "Monday Night Football" color analyst. "But now, since the rules have

NFL record for tight ends and

GMs.

'Hey, we' ve got a guy from wherever. He's 6-6 and ran a 4.5 (-second 40-yard dash).' Very few of them pan out, but they' re out

It's a trend that appears to be on the uptick, in part because the rules designed to protect pass-catchers have made iteasier for players to transition from the court to the field.

' WinIsN Spike 20f+ QINGE IIBRERI @~

CREATIONS ~~ a f/ ~svi

s

BROUGHT TOYOU BY THE BULLETIN

I

how to use our body and our

strength for boxing out, rebounding and getting open.

"It's a mismatch every time. changed in the middle of the field, and people are looking It's like, 'Now a guard is going for jump-ball artists in the red to be on me? I'm just going zone in passing situations, to use my body, so if you' re why not? quicker and stronger — and "I think a lot of guys are most of the time you' re not becoming big mismatch wide — I'm just going to jump up receivers, and I'm sure be- and catch the ball over you cause they don't have to pass anyway." protect, they don't have to Fells has always had the block at the point of attack on hands to play tight end, but some of these old-fashioned it's the blocking where he's a power plays, they' re saying, work in progress. Cardinals 'This ain't a bad life. And, I coach Bruce Arians said the can't get whacked in the mid- third-year player has made dle of the field ... I don't have r emarkable strides i n t h a t to put the pads on two times a area. "If you' re a basketball playday like the old days, either.'" Gonzalez isn't a p erfect er, you' re so used to non-confit in the category of basket- tact and playing in space," ball players turned football Arians said. "Then, when a players, because he played guy is six inches away and both sports from childhood he's 290 and he's going to hit through college. He retired you right in the mouth, it's no after the 2013 season and his fun." 111 career touchdowns are an Rollins doesn't mind that

'II I

AlTRACTION S!

And now we' re going against people who are shorter than us, with us really knowing

part. He's the exception in

sixth overall for any position. this group because he plays He was an outstanding block- on defense — something he er, too, a rarity in an age of in- learned in his one season of career. creasingly specialized players. college football, because he "Basketball mentality ver- was a running back in high Seattle tight end J i mmy Graham was a college sus football mentality is vast- school. "First couple of days, everybasketball player at Miami ly different," Gonzalez said. (Fla.) with one season of "It's not even close. You have thing was seeming so fast," he Hurricanes football un- to be tough to play football. said, referring to his spring der his belt. Jacksonville's You have to block people. You football experience in his fiJulius Thomas - who have to be a real grunt and try nal year at Miami (Ohio). "I played four seasons for to find some joy in actually wasn't used to receivers being the Portland State basket- moving a man. Lot of people able to get away with some of ball team and one for its don't like that. Hitting people the things they' re able to get football team — made his with your head and all that, away with. That was the bigm uch-awaited debut f o r it's not comfortable, because gest adjustment. "By the time spring ball the Jaguars last week af- it's a dogfight, an absolute ter sitting out the first four wrestling match every time ended, I felt very confident." games because of a hand you block somebody." It showed. Despite playing injury. He has caught 24 By comparison, the re- just one year, on an unfamiltouchdown passes from ceiving stuff is easy, Gonza- iar side of the ball, he had Denver's Peyton Manning lez said. That's the fun part, seven interceptions and was the past two seasons. when those basketball skills named th e M i d - American "Every year leading up are truly put to use. Conference defensive play"We' re tweeners, t h at' s er of the year. The Packers to the draft, I get anywhere from five to 10 names of what tight ends are," he said. selected him in t h e second basketball players from "We' re power forwards from round of last spring's draft. scouts, basketball players college basketball who are Green Bay reaped big divyou' ve never heard of," used to using our bodies to idends against St. Louis last said Mike Mayock, draft get open. Because we' re not week, as Rollins intercepted expert for NFL Network. as tall as these 6-10 power two Nick Foles passes, run"They get worked out forwards, the NBA-type guys, ning one back 45 yards for a very quietly because guys we learn to use our body. touchdown. don't want anybody to know. I get the whispers f rom scouts an d

Also on Sunday: Devils 2, Rangers 1: NEW

f o otball

since his days at Fullerton

somehow chipping a puck Winnipeg. that was lying in the crease D ucks 4, W il d 1 : A N A over the Oilers' goal with HEIM, Calif. — Anton KhudoNilsson down and out fol- bin rebounded from a rough lowing a great stop on Hen- outing with 34 saves, and rik Sedin's breakaway sec- Cam Fowler, Rickard Rakell and Mike Santorelli scored

Phelan M. Ebenhack/The AssociatedPress

You see, that basketball

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The Bulletin

The Bulletin


MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015• THE BULLETIN

B5

NFL ROUNDUP

e a aw The Associated Press

iveu

Olil

the game, Dalton completed

Pittsburgh rallied for the win.

touchdown passes to Marvin

Vick left in the third quarter

Jones, Tyler Eifert and Jeremy Hill. Dalton finished 22 of 33

with a hamstring injury and Pittsburgh's offense took off

Francisco (2-4). Dolphins 38, Titans 10: NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Cameron Wake got his first four

for 243 yards for Cincinnati, which was also 6-0 to start the 1975 and '88 seasons.

when Jones took over. Jones

sacks this season and also

hitBryant foran 8-yard score to give the Steelers (4-2) the

forced two fumbles — all in

getting in the end zone when it mattered most.

Broncos 26, Browns 23: CLEVELAND Peyton This one meant a little more Manning shook off three in-

lead. The two hooked up later

for an 88-yard strike. Vikings 16, Chiefs 10:MIN-

as interim coach. Lamar Mill-

for th e

N EAPOLIS —

for Miami. The Titans (1-4)

SEATTLE — Cam Newton

sang and danced in celebration. And when he stopped, he gave Greg Olsen a hard time for twice being brought down at the 1-yard line before finally

C arolina Panthers, terceptions and drove Denver

winning on the home field of the two-time NFC champs. "This was one of the bigger victories we' ve had since I' ve been here," Carolina coach Ron Rivera said.

in range for Brandon McManus' 34-yard field goal with 4:56 left in

o vertime. Man-

ning took the Broncos from their own 12 to Cleveland's 16 before McManus kicked his

Newton capped Carolina's game-winner to make DenElaine Thompson / rhe Associated Press fourth-quarter rally with a 26- ver 6-0 for the seventh time in Carolina running back Jonathan Stewart, top, leaps over Seattle yard touchdown pass to Olsen franchise history. outside linebacker Mike Morgan (57) to score a touchdown inthe with 32 seconds left, and the Packers 27, Chargers 20: second half of Sunday's game in Seattle. Panthers improved to 5-0, ral- GREEN BAY, Wis. — Green lying for a stunning 27-23 win Bay stopped San Diego on over the Seattle Seahawks on fourth-and-goal from the 3 Prater kicked a 27-yard field down passes and ran for anSunday. with 15 seconds left and over- goal with 2:29 left in overtime, other score, and New York Also on Sunday: came a career day by Philip and Detroit won for the first overcame a sloppy first half. Bengals 34, Bills 21: OR- Rivers to hold off the Char- time this season. Matthew Chris Ivory ran for 146 yards CHARD PARK, N.Y. — Andy gers. Rivers set career highs Stafford heaved a 57-yard pass and a TD on 20 carries for the Dalton threw three touchdown

with 43 completions, 65 at-

to Calvin Johnson to set up the

passes and unbeaten Cincin- temptsand 503 yardspassing. kick for the Lions (1-5). Johnnati won its sixth straight to He threw for two touchdowns son finished with six recepmatch the team's best start to for the Chargers (2-4). But he tions for 166 yards. a season with a victory over needed one more completion. Jets 34, Redskins 20: EAST Buffalo. With s tar r e ceiver Lions 37, Bears 34: DE- RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Ryan A.J. Green covered much of

TROIT — A win, finally. Matt

Fitzpatrick threw two touch-

Jets, who improved to 4-1 for the first time since 2010.

D e spite an

the first half — and Miami won in Dan Campbell's debut er ran for 113 yards and a TD

erratic performance by Terry Bridgewater, Minnesota's tough defense and rookie wide receiver Stefon Diggs came through over mistake-prone

lost their fourth straight.

Kansas City. Alex Smith's 42-

two t o

Texans 31, Jaguars 20: JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Brian Hoyer threw three touch-

down passes on third down, D e A ndre H o pkins,

yard touchdown pass to Al- for Houston. The Jaguars (1bert Wilson midway through 5) lost their fourth in a row the fourth quarter pulled the

and raised more questions

Chiefs within three points, but the Vikings (3-2) played well enough early to survive their ragged finish. 49ers 25, Ravens 20:SAN-

about coach Gus Bradley's job security.

TA CLARA, Calif. — Col-

t ouchdown s and Ne w

in Kaepernick completed a 76-yard touchdown pass to

gland took advantage of a botched fake punt in the Patri-

ex-Ravens star Torrey Smith,

ots' victory over Indianapolis.

Patriots 34, Colts 27: INDIANAPOLIS — Tom Brady

threw for 312 yards and three En-

Joe Flacco threw two intercep- The Patriots improved to 5-0 Steelers 25, Cardinals 13: tions and San Francisco beat for the first time since 2007. It PITTSBURGH Landry Baltimore to snap a four-game was the first meeting between Jones threw two touchdown losing streak. Phil Dawson the rivals since the "Deflatepasses to Martavis Bryant kicked four field goals in the gate"storm erupted after the in relief of Michael Vick and first win since Week 1 for San AFC title game in January.

NFL SCOREBOARD Sleelers 25, Cardinals 13

East

Arizona Pittsburgh

7 3 0 3 — 13 0 3 12 10 — 25 First Quarter Ari — Floyd 3 passfromPalmer (Catanzaro kick),

8:1 7.

SecondQuarter Pit — FGBoswell 47, 6:06. Ari — FGCatanzaro 31,:47. Third Quarter Pit — 6ryant 8 passfromLJones(pass failed), 8;45. Pit — FGBoswell 51, 2:32. Fourth Quarter Ari — FGCatanzaro39, 14:56. Pit —FG6osweff28, 7:19. Pit — Bryant 88 passfrom LJones(Sosweffkick), 1:58. A—63,846.

Timeof Possession

Ari Pit 21 14 4 69 31 0 20-55 32-141 4 14 169 2-23 1-8 6-136 4 - 89 0-0 2-0 29-45-2 11-20-0 1-7 1-5 3-43.0 5-47.6 3-1 0-0 9 -111 6 - 48 31;09 28:51

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Arizona: C.Johnson14-40, D. Johnson3-9, Effington1-7, Palmer 2-(minus1). Pittsburgh:Bell 24-88,Vick5-47, Bryant1-8, L

Jones1-(minus1),D.Wiliams 1-(minus1). PASSING —Arizona: Palmer 29-45-2-421. Pittsburgh: Vick3-8-0-6, L.Jones8-12-0-168. RECEIVIMG —Arizona: Jo.Brown10-196, Fitzgerald8-93,Floyd5-50,Effington2-47, Niklas 1-13, Feffs1-9, D.Johnson1-8, C.Johnson1-5. Pittsburgh: Bryant6-137,Brown3-24,Wheaton1-8, Miffer1-5. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Arizona: Catanzaro 47 (WL).

Panthers 27, Seahawks23 Carolina Seattle

0 7 7 1 3 — 27 3 7 10 3 — 23

First Quarter Sea —FGHauschka30, 5:37. SecondQuarter Car—Newton2 run(Ganokick),13:30. Sea —Lynch1 run(Hauschkakick), 8:00. Third Quarter Sea —Lockette 40 passfromWilson (Hauschka kick, 11:27. ea — FGHauschka50, 8:49. Car—Stewart 1 run(Ganokick),3:34. Fourth Quarter Sea —FGHauschka43, 11:46. Car — Stewart 1 run(kick failed), 3:55. Car—Olsen26 passfromNewton(Gano kick),:32. A—69,020. First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

C ar S e a

25 14 3 83 33 4 33-135 26-115 2 48 21 9 2 -18 4 - 28 0 -0 2 - 27 0-0 2-6 20-36-2 18-30-0 3 -21 4 - 22 5-48.6 7-50.1 0-0 0-0 5 -25 7 - 48 32:12 27:48

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING —Carolina: Stewart 20-78, Newton 7-30, Brown 2-15, Tolbert3-10, Whittaker1-2. Seattle:Lynch17-54,Wilson8-53, Rawfs 1-8. PASSING —Carolina: Newton 20-36-2-269. Seattle: Wilson 18-30-0-241. RECEIVIMG —Carolina: Dlsen7-131, Dickson 3-24, Funchess 2-24, Brown2-22, Cotchery2-21, Whittaker 2-21, GinnJr. 1-18, Stewart 1-8. Seattle: Graham8-140,Baldwin 3-23,Lockette2-43,FJackson2-7,Wiffson1-16, Matthews1-12, Lynch1-0. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.

49ers 25, Ravens20 0 6 7 7 — 20 Baltimore S an Francisco 6 10 3 6 — 2 5 First Quarter SF — FGDawson53, 7:00. SF — FGDawson31, 1;56. SecondQuarter Gal —FGTucker 22, 13:16. SF — Smith 76 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 12:27. SF — FGDawson26, 8:04. Gal—FGTucker 36, 4:14. Third Quarter SF — FGDawson42, 7:34. Gal —Smith Sr.34passfromFlacco (Tuckerkick), 2:29. Fourth Quarter SF — Patton21passfromKaepernick (passfailed), 10:52.

Gal —Aiken2 passfromFlacco(Tucker kick), 5:14. A—70,799.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int

Bal

NewEngland N.Y.Jets Buffalo Miami

W L T 5 4 3 2

0 1 3 3

P c t PF PA

0 1. 000 183 103 0 .8 0 0 129 75 0 .5 0 0 145 139 0 .4 0 0 103 111

South

Pit — FGBoswell 48,11:14.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards

Fourth Quarter Chi — Jeffery 11passfromCutler (Gouldkick), 12:27. Chi — Forte 2run(Forte passfromCutler), 7:50. Det — FGPrater 32,2:46. H ome Away A FC MFC D i v Det — Joh nson6passfromStafford(Prater kick),:21. 2 - 0-0 3 - 0-0 4-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 Chi — FG Gould29,:00. 2- 1 - 0 2 - 0-0 3-0-0 1-1-0 1-0-0 Ove rtime 1 -3-0 2 -0-0 3-2-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 Det — FGPrater 27,2:29. 0 -2-0 2 -1-0 1-3-0 1-0-0 0-2-0 A—57,648.

American Conference

Summaries

SF

25 15 4 20 39 1 22-77 25-65 3 43 326 1-9 1-4 1-41 0-0 0 -0 2 - 45 33-53-2 16-27-0

Indianapolis Houston Tennessee Jacksonvile

Cincinnati Pittsburgh

Cle veland Baltimore

W L 3 2 1 1

3 4 4 5

T P et PF PA

W 6 4 2 1

L 0 2 4 5

T 0 0 0 0

W

L T

0 0 0 0

H ome Away A FC NFC D i v First downs 1 -2-0 2 -1-0 3-3-0 0-0-0 3-0-0 TotalNetYards 1 -2-0 1 -2-0 1-2-0 1-2-0 1-1-0 Rushes-yards 0 - 3-0 1 - 1-0 0-4-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 Passing 1 - 2-0 0 - 3-0 1-3-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 PuntReturns KickoffReturns North InterceptionsRet. Pc t PF PA H ome Away A FC MFC D i v Comp-Att-Int 1 . 000182 122 3 -0-0 3 -0-0 5-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 Sacked-YardsLost .6 6 7 145 108 2 - 1-0 2 -1-0 1-2-0 3-0-0 0-1-0 Punts .3 3 3 141 158 1 -2-0 1 -2-0 2-4-0 0-0-0 1-0-0 Fumbles-Lost .1 6 7 143 162 0 - 2-0 1 -3-0 1-4-0 0-1-0 1-2-0 Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession .5 0 0 .3 3 3 .2 0 0 .1 6 7

126 147 128 155 112 129 113 176

West Denver Oakland SanDiego Kansas City

6 0 2 3 2 4 1 5

Pct P F P A

H o m e Away AFC M F C

0 1. 000 139 102 0 .4 0 0 1 0 7 12 4 0 .3 3 3 1 3 6 16 1 0 .1 6 7 1 2 7 15 9

2 - 0- 0 1- 2- 0 2 - 1-0 0 - 2-0

4 - 0-0 1 - 1-0 0 - 3-0 1 - 3-0

4 - 0-0 2 - 2-0 1 -2-0 1 -2-0

2 -0-0 0 -1-0 1 -2-0 0 -3-0

D iv 2-0-0 0-1-0 0-0-0 0-1-0

NationalConference East N.Y.Giants Dallas Philadelphia Washington

W L 3 2 2 2

2 3 3 4

T P et PF PA 0 0 0 0

.6 0 0 .4 0 0 .4 0 0 .3 3 3

132 109 101 131 117 103 117 138

H ome Away N FC AFC D i v 2 - 1-0 1 -1-0 2-2-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 1 - 2-0 1 - 1-0 2-2-0 0-1-0 2-0-0 1 - 1-0 1 - 2-0 1-3-0 1-0-0 0-2-0 2 - 1-0 0 - 3-0 2-2-0 0-2-0 1-1-0

Bei)gals 34, Bills 21 Cincinnati Buffalo

7 10 14 3 — 34 7 7 0 7 — 21 First Quarter Guf—Manuel2 run(Carpenter kick), 9:21. C hi Det Cin — Hiff13passfrom Dalton(Nugentkick), 326. 24 26 SecondQuarter 4 44 546 Cin — Bernard17 run(Nugent kick),1019. 31-91 32-155 Cin — FG N ug ent 47, 7:12. 3 53 39 1 Guf—Watkins 22passfrom Manuel (Carpenter 4-27 3-0 2 -50 3 - 69 kick),:17. Third Quarter 1-0 1-0 Cin — M.Jones10 passfromDalton(Nugent kick), 26-41-1 27-42-1

1 -0 2 - 1 4 10:55. Din — Eifert 4passfromDalton(Nugent kick), 1:42. 5-44.4 4-55.3 Fourth Quarter 0-0 3-2 Din — FGNugent39, 10:40. 9-76 10-98 Guf—McCoy4 run(Carpenter kick), 6:50. 33;34 38:57 A—69,593. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS C in Buf RUSHING —Chicago: Forte 24-69, Cutler 2-12, downs 21 22 Langford 5-10.Detroit: Abduffah14-48, Stafford First 3 55 36 8 6-37, Abdul-Quddus1-30,Riddick7-28,Zenner3-15, TotalNetYards Rushes-yards 28-112 23-112 TJones1-(minus 3). ng 2 43 256 PASSING —Chicago: Cutler26-41-1-353. De- Passi PuntReturns 4-37 0-0 troit:Stafford27-42-1-405. 4 -84 4 - 72 RECEIVING —Chicago: Jeffery 8-147,Bennett KickoffReturns 1-10 0-0 onsRet. 6-59, Royal5-49, Forte3-20, Wilson2-54, Langford Intercepti 22-33-0 28-42-1 1-17, Meredith1-7. Detroit: Johnson6-166, Tate Comp-Att-Int 0-0 2-7 Lost 6-40,Moore5-106,Riddick3-50,Abduff ah 3-21, Sacked-Yards 3-40.3 5-48.6 Punts TWright3-17,Fuffer1-5. 1-0 0-0 Fumbles-Lost MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. 3 -20 8 - 93 Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession 30:00 30:00

Texans 31, Jaguars 20 Houston Jacksonville

2 1 — 31 0 7 7 6 — 20 First Quarter H ome Away M FC AFC W L T P e t PF PA Div Hou—Foster 14passfromHoyer (Novak kick), Carolina 5 0 0 1 . 000135 94 2- 0- 0 3 - 0-0 3-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 1:36. Atlanta 5 1 0 .8 3 3 183 143 3 - 0-0 2 -1-0 4-1-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 SecondQuarter TampaGay 2 3 0 .4 0 0 110 148 1 -2-0 1 -1-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 1-1-0 Jax — A.Robinson 2 passfrom Bortles (Myers NewOrleans 2 4 0 .3 3 3 134 164 2 - 1-0 0 - 3-0 2-4-0 0-0-0 1-2-0 kick), 9:41. Hou—FGNovak41, 6:38. North Third Quarter W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away M FC AFC D i v Jax—Thomas29passfromS ortles (Myerskick),:05. GreenBay 6 0 0 1 . 000164 101 4 - 0-0 2 - 0-0 4-0-0 2-0-0 1-0-0 Fourth Quarter Minnesota 3 2 0 .6 0 0 96 8 3 3- 0 - 0 0 - 2-0 1-1-0 2-1-0 1-0-0 Hou—Hopkins 9 passfrom Hoyer (Novak kick), Chicago 2 4 0 .3 3 3 120 179 1 -2-0 1 -2-0 0-4-0 2-0-0 0-2-0 11:20. Detroit 1 5 0 .1 6 7 120 172 1 -2-0 0 -3-0 1-3-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 Hou—Hopkins 26passfrom Hoyer (Novak kick), 8:07. West Hou—Haf31interception return(Novakkick), 7:55. Jax — Hornst 1passfrom8ortles(kickfailed), 432. W L T P et PF PA Home Away N FC AFC D i v A—58,085. 2-1-0 2-1-0 4-1-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 Arizona 4 2 0 .667 203 115 1-1-0 1-2-0 2-2-0 0-1-0 2-0-0 St. Louis 2 3 0 .40 0 84 113 H ou J a x 2-1-0 0-3-0 2-3-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 Seattle 2 4 0 .333 134 125 24 26 2-1-0 0-3-0 1-3-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 First downs S an Francisco 2 4 0 .3 3 3 100 160 TotalNetYards 3 82 39 4 Thursday'sGame Thursday,Oct. 22 Rushes-yards 31-95 21-83 NewOrleans31,Atlanta21 SeattleatSanFrancisco,5:25p.m. Passing 2 87 31 1 Sunday'sGames Sunday,Oct. 25 PuntReturns 2-25 1-7 Minnesota16,KansasCity10 Suffalovs.Jacksonvileat London, 6:30a.m, 1 -14 3 - 79 KickoffReturns Miami 38,Tennessee10 AtlantaatTennessee, 10a.m. 3 -34 0-0 InterceptionsRet. N.Y. Jets34,Washington20 Pittsburgh atKansasCity,10a.m. Comp-Att-Int 24-36-0 30-53-3 Pittsburgh 25,Arizona13 Cleveland at St. Louis,10 a.m. 1 -6 3 - 20 Sacked-YardsLost Cincinnati34,Buffalo 21 Tampa SayatWashington,10a.m. 4-38.8 5-46.8 Punts Detroit37,Chicago34,DT Minnesota at Detroit,10 a.m. 1 -0 1-0 Fumbles-Lost Denver26, Cleveland23, O T Houston atMiami,lga.m. 10-69 7- 6 4 Penalties-Yards Houston 31,Jacksonvile 20 New OrleansatIndianapolis,10a.m. Time ofPossession 30:02 29:58 Carolina27,Seattle23 N.Y.JetsatNewEngland,10aam SanFrancisco25, Baltimore20 OaklandatSanDiego,1:05p.m. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Green ff ay27,SanDiego20 DallasatN.Y.Giants,1:25 p.m. RUSHING —Houston: Foster18-53, Polk 8-37, NewEngland34,Indianapolis27 Philadelphia atCarolina, 5:30p.m. Hoyer5-5.Jacksonville: Godles4-37, Gerhart 9-26, Open:Dallas,Oakland,St. Louis, Tampaffay Open:Chicago,Cincinnati, Denver,GreenSay D.Robinson 7-19, Grant1-1. Today'sGame Monday,Oct. 26 PASSING —Houston: Hoyer 24-36-0-293. N.Y.Giantsat Philadelphia,5:30p.m. Baltimore atArizona,5:30p.m. Jacksonville: Sortles30-53-3-331. RECEIVING —Houston:Hopkins10-148,Foster 5-59, Shorts III 4-63, Mumph ery 2-8, Fiedorowicz All TimesPDT 1-8, Strong1-5, Polk1-2. Jacksonville: Walters 8-87, Thomas7-78,A.Robinson6-86,Gerhart3-23, D.Robinson 3-19, Hurns2-30, Lewis1-8. 0 -0 3 - 14 Sacked-YardsLost MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Punts 3-53.0 4-38.0 D en C l e 0-0 1-0 Fumbles-Lost First downs 21 20 Penalties-Yards 3 -15 4 - 2 5 TotalNetYards 4 42 29 8 Vikil)gS 16, ChiefS 10 Timeof Possession 33;07 26:53 Rushes-yards 33-152 33-109 0 0 0 1 0 — 10 Passing 2 90 18 9 KansasCity 3 7 3 3 — 16 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS PuntReturns 3 -19 3 - 34 Minnesota First Quarter RUSHING —Baltimore: Forsett 17-62, Al- KickoffReturns 6-110 4 - 85 Min — FG W alsh 24, 5: 4 0. len 4-13,Ross1-2. San Francisco: Hyde21-55, Interceptions 2 -62 3 4 8 Ret. SecondQuarter Comp-Att-Int 26-48-3 20-39-2 Kaepernick3-10,M.Davis 1-0. Min — Rudolph 4 passfrom Bridgewater (Walsh 0 -0 4 - 24 PASSING —Baltimore: Flacco 33-53-2-343. Sacked-Yards Lost kick), 4:43. 7-45.6 7-46.0 San Francisco:Kaepernick 16-2770-340. Punts Third Quarter 1-0 1-1 RECEIVING —Baltimore: Smith Sr. 7-137, For- Fumbles-Lost Min — FGWalsh45,8:51. sett 7-39,M,Wiff iams4-24,Ross3-34,Giff more3-30, Penalties-Yards 8 -81 6 - 30 Fourth Quarter Aiken3-22,Juszczyk2-22, Givens2-18, M.Grown1-9, Time ofPossession 36:44 33:20 KC — FGSantos48, 13:10. Affen1-8.SanFrancisco: Soldin5-102,Smith 3-96, KC — A. W i l s on 42 pass from A.Smith (Santos Miller 3-89,Patton2-38, Hyde2-5, McDonald1-10. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS MISSEO FIELDGOALS—Baltimore: Tucker RUSHING —Denver: Hilman20-111, Anderson kick), 8:46. Min — FGWalsh45,4:46. 45 (WR). 13-41.Cleveland: JohnsonJr. 9-38,Croweff11-32, A—52,480. Turbin10-27,McCown3-12. PASSING — Denver: Manning 26-48-3-290. Broncos 26, Browns 23(OTj KC Min Cleveland:fvfcCown 20-39-2-213. 16 16 R ECEIVING —Denver: Thomas10-111,Sanders First downs Denver 37 3 1 0 3 — 26 4-109, Anderson 3 28 32 1 4-25, Hillman3-4, Daniels2-24, TotalNetYards Cleveland 0 0 7 16 0 — 23 Caldwell 2-18,Norwood1-(minus 1). Cleveland: Rushes-yards 18-57 35-84 First Quarter ng 2 71 237 Benjamin9-117,Barnidge3-39, JohnsonJr. 3-18, Passi Den—FGMcManus29, 2;52. 2 -24 2 - 14 Croweff 2-9,Hawkins 1-25, Gabriel 1-5,Johnson1-0. PuntReturns SecondQuarter 2 -39 2 - 51 MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Denver: McManus KickoffReturns Den—Talib 63interceptionreturn(McManuskick), 2-5 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 51 (WL). 14:09. Comp-Att-Int 22-37-0 17-31-2 Third Quarter 2 -11 2 - 12 Sacked-YardsLost Cle — Barnidge 11 passfrom fvfcCown(Coons Lions 37, Bears 34(OT) 6-41.7 4-45.3 Punts kick), 11:07. 1-1 1-0 Fumbles-Lost Den—FGMcManus25, 2:06. Chicago 310 3 18 0 — 34 Penalties-Yards 8 -95 5 - 50 FourthQuarter Detroit 714 3 10 3 — 37 Time ofPossession 26:53 33:07 Den—FGMcManus39,13:33. First Quarter Cle — Barnidge 14 passfrom hfcCown(Coons Det —Moore20passfromStafford(Praterkick), 9:29. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Chi — FGGould27,4;48. kick), 9:16. RUSHING —Kansas City: West 9-33, Davis Cle — Danshy35 interception return(passfailed), SecondQuarter 5-13, A.Smit2-10, h Thomas1-1, Sherman1-0. MinChi — La ng f o rd 1 run (G oul d ki c k), 12: 4 8. 8:07. nesota:Peterson26-60,Asiata5-27, fyfcKinnon1-2, Den—Sanders 75 passfrom Manning (McManus Det —TWright8passfromStafford (Praterkick), 917. Bridgewa ter3-(minus5). Chi — FG Gould23,4:50. kick), 7:53. PASSING — KansasCity:A.Smith22-37-0-282. Cle — FGCoons26,1:30. Det—Tate2 passfromStafford(Prater kick),:53. Minnesota: Bridgewater17-31-2-249. Overtime Third Quarter RECEIVING —Kansas City: Kefce5-88,A.WilDen—FGMcManus34, 4:56. Chi — FGGould38,5;12. son3-57,Maclin3-48,Conley3-16,O'Shaughnessy A—67,431. Det — FGPrater 39,1:05. 2-23, Harris 2-15,Sherman1-13, Davis1-12, West

South

1-6, Avant1-4. Minnesota: Diggs7-129,Wright 2-69,Wallace2-23, Rudolph 2-9, Effison1-11, Asiata 1-8, Line1-3, Peterson1-(minus 3). MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.

7 3 0

TotalNetYards Rushes-yards

2 25 47 4 17-34 41-221 1 91 253 0 -0 3 - 34 5 -96 4 - 4 7 1-28 2-6 25-44-2 19-26-1 1-5 0-0 6-48.0 2-24.5 0-0 2-2 3-15 1-5 27:21 32:39

Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Washington: Morris 11-21, Thompson 5-12, Cousins 1-1. N.Y.Jets: Ivory 20146,Stacy13-46,Fitzpatrick4-31,Poweff4-(minus 2). PASSING — Washington: Cousins 25-43-2196, Crowder0-1-0-0. N.Y. Jets: Fitzpatrick 1926-1-253.

RECEIVIN G— Washington: Thompson 6-26, Garcon 5-28, Crowder 4-40, Carrier 4-39,Grant2-22, Ross1-16,Morris1-11,Young1-8, Roberts 1-6.M.Y. Jets:Marshall 7-111, Decker 4-59, Ivory3-50,Enunwa 2-17,Stacy2-15, Poweff1-1. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—M.Y. Jets: Folk 49

(SH).

Packers 27, Chargers 20 San Diego GreenBay

3 7 7 14 3 7

3 — 20 3 — 27

First Quarter GB — Starks5 passfromA.Rodgers(Crosbykick),

8:38. SD — FGLambo36, 3:17.

GB — Starks65run(Crosbykick), 1:51. SecondQuarter GB — FGCrosby23,6:48. SD — Inman1passfrom Rivers (Lamhokick),:00. Third Quarter SD — Green 19 passfrom Rivers(Lambokick), INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Cincinnati: Hiff 16-56, Bernard 9:24. GB — J.Jones 8 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby 8-50, Sanu1-8,Dalton3-(minus2). Buffalo: McCoy kick),:46. 17-90,Manuel6-22. Fourth Quarter PASSING —Cincinnati: Dalton 22-33-0-243. SD — FGLambo32,11:10. Buffa lo:Manuel28-42-1-263. GB — FGCrosby28,2:37. RECEIVING —Cincinnati: M.Jones9-95, Green A—78,434. 4-36, Eifert 4-30,Sanu2-30, Bernard1-23, Hewitt 1-16, Hiff 1-13.Buffalo: Clay9-62, Gragg5-54, SD GB Watkins4-48,Woods4-47, Hogan2-31,Herren2-17, First downs 32 17 McCoy2-4. TotalNetYards 5 48 370 MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. Rushes-yards 21-60 17-133 Passing 4 88 23 7 Dolphins 38, Titans10 PuntReturns 2-(-7) 2 - 18 KickoffReturns 3 -55 3 - 59 Miami 107 7 1 4 — 38 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 3 0 7 0 — 1 0 Comp-Att-Int Tennessee 43-65-0 16-29-0 First Quarter Sacked-YardsLost 3 -15 3 - 18 Mia — Landry 22run(Franks kick), 10:39. Punts 3-39.0 4-40.5 Ten—FGSuccop37, 5:28. Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-0 Mia — FGFranks30,:06. Penalties-Yards 9 -76 6 - 50 SecondQuarter Time ofPossession 38:00 22:00 Mia — Miler 7run(Frankskick), 5:07. Third Quarter INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Mia — Jones 30interception return(Frankskick), RUSHING —San Diego: Gordon7-29, Oliver 5:40. 7-23, Woodhead 7-8. Green Bay: Starks10-112, Ten —McCluster 3 passfrom Mariota (Succop A.Rodgers 2-14, Montgomery1-4, Lacy4-3. kick),:00. PASSING — San Diego:Rivers 43-65-0-503. Fourth Quarter GreenBay:A.Rodgers16-29-0-255. Mia — Sims 2 pass fromTannehiff (Frankskick), RECEIVING —SanDiego:K.Affen14-157, Gates 7:38. 9-95, Floyd5-95,Woodhead5-63,Oliver4-40,Green Mia — Cameron 12 passfromTannehiff (Franks 3-35, Inman3-18.Green Gay:Janis2-79,Cobb kick), 1:54. 2-38, R.Rogders 2-34, J.Jones2-30, Kuhn2-20, Lacy A—62,342. 2-17, Montgom ery2-11, Periffo1-21,Starks1-5. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. M ia Ten First downs 26 22 TotalNetYards 4 34 2 9 9 Patriots 34, Colts 27 32-180 18-63 Rushes-yards 7 13 7 7 — 3 4 Passing 2 54 23 6 N ew England 7 14 0 6 — 2 7 1 -6 1 - 1 4 Indianapolis PuntReturns First Quarter 2 -45 3 - 79 KickoffReturns Ind — M onc ri e f 5 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 2 -30 2 4 5 InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int 22-29-2 26-41-2 7:16. NE — Edelman 12 passfromBrady (Gostkowski 2 -12 6 - 46 Sacked-Yards Lost Punts 3-43.7 3- 41.7 kick), 2:50. SecondQuarter 0-0 2-2 Fumbles-Lost NE— FGGostkowski40,13:48. Penalties-Yards 9 -97 7 - 50 Ind — Adams14 interception return (Vinafferi kick), Timeof Possession 31;53 28:07 11:30.

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Miami: Miler 19-113, Gray7-24, Landry2-24,Tannehiff 2-14, Wiliams2-5. Tennessee:Andrews9-23, McCfuster 5-23, Sankey3-13, Mettenberger1-4. PASSING —Miami: Tannehiff 22-29-2-266. Tennessee:Mettenhe rger5-8-0-63, Mariota21-33-2-219. RECEIVING —Miami: Matthews6-85, Sims 4-33, Landry 3-42, Cameron 3-30, Stills 2-46, Miler 2-5, Jennings1-13,Gray1-12.Tennessee: Walker 8-97, Wright 4-34, Green-G eckham 3-57, Hunter 3-54, McCluster3-19, Fasano2-1, Douglas1-11, Sankey1-7,Andrews1-2. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.

Jets 34, Redskins 20 Washington N.Y.Jets

7 6 0 7 — 20 7 3 17 7 — 34

First Quarter Was —Garcon2passfromCousins(Hopkinskick), 9:29. NYJ —Ivory1 run(Folk kick), 3:28. SecondQuarter NYJ —FGFolk35,11:35. Was —FGHopkins54, 2:17. Was —FGHopkins30,:02. Third Quarter NYJ —FGFolk39,11:00. NYJ —Fitzpatrick18 run(Folkkick), 10:02. NYJ —Marshall 35 pass from Fitzpatrick (Folk kick), 5:53. Fourth Quarter NYJ —Decker 2 passfrom Fitzpatrick (Folkkick), 14:18.

Was — Rossblocked puntrecoveryinend zone (Hopkinskick), 3:59. A—78,160. First downs

W as N Y J 14

22

NE — Blount38 run(Gostkowski kick), 9:33. Ind — Hilton 3passfromLuck(Vinatieri kick),2:38. NE— FGGostkowski35,:02. Third Quarter NE — Gronkowski 25passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), 10:56. Fourth Quarter NE — Blount11passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), 12:48.

Ind — Whalen 18 pass from Luck(kick blocked),

1:19. A—66,726.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards

Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

ME

In d

22 24 417 409 25-116 22-120 3 01 289 2 -8 3 - 15 2 -5 1 - 19 0 -0 1 - 14 23-37-1 30-50-0 2 -11 3 - 23 5-47.8 6-47.8 0-0 0-0 8-72 11-103 27:28 32:32

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —MewEngland: Blount16-93, Lewis 4-21, Edelman 1-2, Brady4-0. Indianapolis: Gore 13-78, Luck4-35, Bradshaw4-8, C.Anderson 1-(mi-

nus 1).

PASSING —NewEngland: Brady23-37-1-312. Indianapolis: Luck 30-50-0-312. RECEIVING —Mete England: Amendola 7-105, Edelma n6-50,Gronkowski3-50,Lewis3-18,Chandler 2-39,Martin1-39, Blount1-11. Indianapolis: Hilton6-74,Moncrief6-69,Johnson3-35, Allen 3-23, Fleener3-20, Dorsett2-30, Whalen2-30, Gore2-16, Doyle2-7, Sradshaw1-8. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.


B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015

O M M U N IT Y

PORTS

CENTRALOREGONBASKETBALL OFFICIALSASSOCIATION MEETING: Nov. 4; the first meeting for new referees with BEND HIGHGIRLS COBO BASKETBALL the Central Oregon Basketball Officials OPEN GYMS:Dct. 22 and 29; open to girls in Association will be held in the Mountain fifth through eighth grade; 6 p.m.; Bend High View High School Library. No previous School, 230 NESixth St., Bend. experience is required; 6:30 p.m.; Mountain COBO PRE-SEASON BASKETBALL ViewHighSchool,2755 NE 27th St.,Bend; CLINICS:Sunday and Oct. 25; Three two541-382-3180 or541-593-6222. hour basketball clinics for boys and girls in the fifth through eighth grades. Seventh and CLIMBING eighth graders will meet from 4 to 6 p.m. and fifth and sixth graders will meet from 6 BEA WEDNESDAYCLIMBING INDOORS: to 8 p.m.; 4 p.m.; $49, $59 for out of district Wednesdaysin November and December; residents; Mountain View High School, 2755 for ages 9 to12; this program introduces NE 27th St., Bend; www.bendparksandrec. young climbers to the basics of climbing org or 541-389-7275. at the Bend Rock Gym. This program is for MOUNTAIN VIEWJR. COBOTRYOUTS: Dct. Miller and High Lakes Elementary students 28 and Nov. 1; fifth and sixth graders will only; 1 p.m.; $140; Bend Endurance meet in the West Gym from 6 to 7:30 p.m. on Academy, 500 SW Bond St.,Suite 142, the first day and 3 to 5 p.m. on the second. Bend; www.bendenduranceacademy.org/ Tryouts for seventh and eighth graders will enrollment/or 541-419-5071. immediately follow on both days; 6 p.m.; BEND BOULDER BASH: Nov. 14, Dec. Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th 19 and Jan. 23; A climbing competition St., Bend. series; climbers throughout the Northwest MOUNTAINVIEW GIRLS COBO are invited to compete for cash prizes at BASKETBALL TRYOUTS: Nov. 2 and3; the final event; 5 p.m.; $20 in advance, girls interested in trying out should be in $40 for January final; Bend Rock Gym, grades 5-8 and live within the Mountain 1182 SE Centennial Court, Bend; http: // View boundaries. Players will practice twice bendrockgym.corn or 541-388-6764.

BASKETBALL

aweekandplay12weekendgamesaswell as a tournament; 6 p.m.; cost of season is $180; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend; www.mvgirlsbasketball.

corn.

SUMMIT GIRLSCOBO TRYOUTS: Nov.2 and 3; Tryouts for fifth and sixth grade girls will be held on Nov. 2 while seventh and eighth graders will tryout the following day; 7:00pm; Cascade Middle School,19619 Mountaineer Way, Bend. BEND HIGHGIRLS COBO BASKETBALL TRYOUTS:Nov. 3 and5; tryouts for girls in the fifth and sixth grades will be held on Nov. 3, followed by tryouts for seventh and eighth graders on Nov. 5; 6 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St., Bend.

CYCLING HALLOWEEN THUNDERCROSS: Dct.31; 1,000 cyclocross racers donning costumes and competing for Cross Crusade points; 8 a.m.; free for spectators; Deschutes Brewery, 901 SW Simpson Ave., Bend; www.crosscrusade.corn or 503-806-6943.

RUNNING PUB RUN TOFRESH TRACKS BREWING: Monday; A family, dog and stroller friendly pub run to Fresh Tracks Brewing; 5:30 p.m.; free, registration required; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.

To submit your own event, visit www.bendbulletin.corn/events/and click the "Add Event" button.

E

corn/event or 541-317-3568. TUESDAY PERFORMANCE RUNNING GROUP:Tuesdays; an interval-based workout to help you get the most out of your running; distance and effort vary according to what works for you; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend. corn/happenings or 541-317-3568. NOON TACORUN: W ednesdays;order a Taco Stand burrito when you leave and we will have it when you return. Meet at FootZone a few minutes before noon;FootZone,842 NW WallSt.,Bend; www.footzonebend. corn/happenings or 541-317-3568. WEDNESDAY GROUPRUN:Wednesdays; a 3- to 5-mile group run; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; http: //fleetfeetbend.corn or 541-389-1 601. MONS RUNNINGGROUP:Thursdays; all moms welcome with or without strollers; 3- to 4.5-mile run at 8- to 12-minute mile paces; meet at FootZone at 9:15 a.m., rain or shine; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.corn or 541-317-3568. HAPPY GIRLSHALF:Saturday; as the trail version of the Happy Girls Run in Bend, the half marathon course takes racers through single-track trails of the Peterson Ridge Trail System. The 5K race winds through downtown Sisters; 9 a.m.; $40 for 5K, $90 for half marathon; Five Pine Lodge, 1021 E Desperado Trail, Sisters; happygirlsrun.corn or 541-323-0964. PINE NURSERYPACERSK: Dct. 24; A fun 5K run and kid-friendly 1K run to benefit Ponderosa Elementary PTAand the students and community of Ponderosa Elementary school; 9:30 a.m.;$15-$25 plusfees,$5 for kids 1k; Pine Nursery Park, 3750 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend; www.bendticket.corn or 503-267-021 0. LAST THURSDAYGROWLER RUN:Dct.29; Featuring live music, local artwork and a 3-5 mile group run with beer from Growler Phils/Primal Cuts, music at 5:30 p.m., run

starts at 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www.fleetfeetbend. corn or 541-389-1601. HUSKY HEROSKHALLOWEEN FUN RUN: Dct. 31: 5K fundraiser for Elton Gregory Middle School. Runners will run into the Dry Canyon up to the Maple Bridge and then work their way back to Sam Johnson Park. The costumecontestbeginsat9:45a.m .; 10 a.m.; $15; Sam Johnson Park, SW15th Street and SWEvergreen Avenue, Redmond; https://runsignup.corn. CENTRAL OREGONRUNNING KLUB (CORK) MONTHLY RUN: Nov. 2; Join the Central Oregon Running Klub for a free monthly run beginning and ending at Crow' s Feet Commons every first Monday of the Month; 5:30 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; 214-763-9985. LORD'SACRE10KAND 5K RUN: Nov. 7; race course runs on back roads in Powell Butte. Aid stations are available on both courses. The 5K course is out and back and kid friendly. The 10K course is a loop; 9 a.m.; $20, $25 on race day; Powell Butte Christ Church, Bend or 541-977-3493. GOOD FORM RUNNING: Nov. 19; Learn the four points of Good Form Running, do drills, and take video; 5:30 p.m.; free, registration required; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.corn or 541-317-3568. BEND THANKSGIVINGCLASSIC:Nov.26; a 5K and 10K holiday race through the Old Mill District. Proceeds support the Boys & Girls Clubs of Bend and Girls on the Run of Central Oregon; 9 a.m.; $20-$40; Old Mill District, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 422, Bend; http: //bendthanksgivingclassic. corn or 541-617-2877.

LEFT: Ashley Heller

Bowling

finishes first in the women's division of the half marathon

during Sunday's Super Dave's Down & Dirty Half Marathon and 10k at 7th Mountain Resort in

CASINO FUN— Shots4Shots;RayCamacho235/666;Tayachide201/488 GUYS ANDGALS—Sharon'sBoys;A.J. MacLaren236/603;SaraThomas 192/519 lAVA ULNEC SLASSIC—Team6;Rian Hilier 236p04; RachelleSmith173/514 TEATIMERS —BottomsUp; Lois Larsen168/475 UtTECO MERS—We'reRolling Now;JaneSupnet 203/552 FREEBRBtTHERS — MixedNuts;PhilLee254/682;SandiDavis193/508 THEREG ULARS—Sethchilcutt 234/584;MaddieMartin 160/450 HIS AND HERS—I Can't Believeits not Gutter; JakeMcClennen265/717; AriMayers226/616 REJECTS — PinSweepers;FredVanTassell240/664;HazelKeeton203/483 WEDNE SDAYINC—NAPAMachineShop; Kelley earner 179/750; Dieryel Wade279/718 TNT —ThreesACrowd;JefFox217/609;ShaunaLarsen191/499 PROGR ESSIVE—Beaver Coach; DanThompson244/598 TJLLF. — IDon'tKnowYet;JesseWhitson247/647;DawnEverman189/549

Bend Sunday. BELOW: Ryan Bak finishes first in the men's division of the half marathon. Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

Rimrock Lanes,Prineville Week 6 RimrockHollers Team highs — Scratchseries: Spinners,2062;Scratchgame:Crazy4, 656; Handicap series:BabesNBalls, 2668;Handicap game:Lucky Strikes, 888. Men's highs— scratchseries:colbyHawes,668;scratchgame:MarkDramen,224;Handicapseries:TomKrelj, 683;Handicapgame: KenAmburn, 248. Women's highs— Scratchseries:FeinaHodges,570;Scratchgame:DonnaNickelsen, 200. Handicapseries: KathySmith-RUester, ee3;Handicapgame: TabyBeardsley, 25a Week 6 Grizzly MountainMen'sLeague Team highs —Scratchseries: NoBoundaries, 3038; Scratchgame: Prinevile Reservoir Resort,1012;Handicapseries: TheUdder Guys,3255;Handicapgame: Associates Real Estate, 1120.

Men'shighs—Scratchseries:RoyFuller,665;Scratchgame: RickyMayers,254; Handicap seri es:CodyWaetjen,752;Handicapgame:AlanAnderson,275. Week 3 FridayNightSpecials Teamhighs—scratchseries: TheGray Mayers, 2120; scratchgame:Aa AEnterprises, 737;Handicapseries:AlleyKajz,2757;Handicapgame:TobIe'sBadDogs,935. Men's highs— Scratchseries:BuckBuck,614;Scratchgame:DougGray,237;Handicap series:PaulAsman,745; Handicapgame: RickBeebe, 290. Women'shighs—Scratchseries:BrendaAsman,516; Scratchgame: Chris Gray,197; Handicap series:SylviaAker,705; Handicapgame:Julie Mayers,240.

Equestrian CENTRALOREGON DRESSAGE SOCIETY FALLFLING

Sunday atStonePonyDressageCenter,Redmond (horse,rider,score) USDFOpportunity Class Intro TestA 1, FavorySabadillo III Abiqua"Chopin," Kimry Jelen, 69.688. 2,JaffaGold, Audrey Groom, 66.563. 3, Thor, LeahBishop, 65.313. 4, StarboardLights, SusanWagner, 60.000. 5,Blackrock'sAli, MaggieHenry,59.688. 6, ThereGoesMyHeart, Ashlyn Radatti, 58.750. 7,Docchex, Louannastacy, 55.625. USDFOpportunity ClassIntroTest B 1, "Chopin," Jelen, 68.750. 2 (tie) Blackrock'sAll, Henry, andJaffa Gold, Groom, 65.313. 4,Thor,Bishop,62.500.5,Falco,KatyBecky,61.563.6,DocChex,Stacy, 59.375. 7,ThereGoesMyHeart, Radatti, 58.438. USBFOpportunity Class Intro Test C 1, Charlie, Lauren Martin, 60.500.2, Starboard Lights, Wagner, 60.000. 3, ThereGoes My Heart,Radarji, 55.500. 4,Falco, Becky,55.200. USEFTrainingLevel, Test1

1,Dubhlainn,GwenNewell,69.34a 2,LuceroDelAlba,ReneeLauby,64.783.3,Echo, JaniceOrtman,63.261. 4, BoromIr of Gandor, AriannRamsey, 62.391. 5, AnthymDelite, EmmeshaWarner,60.870.6,HannahSynnove,Kyleigh Cuevas,60.217.7,Lady'sDIvidend,CathiZak,60.000. 8 (tie), Osti, TigerWalther-singold, andFalada,ThomasRobbins, 59.34a 10,Justfor Me,AmberWat, 57.609.t t, Charlie, Martin,55.870. USEFTrainingLevel, Test2 1,LuceroDelAlba,Lauby,68.269.2,DeeJayJohnson,JessieDaniels,67.115.3, Dubhlainn, Newell, 65.385. 4, Boromir of Gandor,Ram sey,64.423. 5, Echo,Ortman, 63.462. 6, AnthymDelite, Warner,63.077. 7, Falada,Robbins, 61.154. 8, Lady'sDividend, Zak,59.615. 9, Osti, Walther-Gingold,58.269.10,Just for Me,Watt, 57.115. USEFFirst Level, Test1 1, SjoerdVandeCrump, Samantha Fairfield, 68.333. 2, Skipper MMidas, Mari Valceschini, 64.259.3 (tie), pik sureperfect, valceschini, andDigbee, Fixott, 63.889.5, sir Eleazar,Shonka,59.444.6, OliverTwist, Ure,59.259. USEFFirst Level, Test2 1, SjoerdVande Crump,Fairfield, 70.313.2, Marathon,MichelleAnderson, 66.719.3, Sir Eleazar,Shonka,65.7rn. 4, pacific Sterling, LaurenBaker, 64.68a 5, SkipperMMidas, valceschini,63.43a6,piksure perfect, valceschini, 6a281. 7, Logan'sRun, Barbara Schulz,62.344. USEFFourthLevel, TOC 1, Neapolitano SlatanaIV, Mary Cuevas, 5&889.

Running Super Dave'sDowna Dirly Half Marathonand10K Sunday atSeventhMountain Resort Half Marathon Women (Top10) 1, AshierHeller,Caldwell, Id.,1:39:rn.a 2, DeniseBourassa, Bend, u41:25.1. 3,EricaJohnson, portland,1:41:25.1.4, MichaelaFreeby,Milwaukie, u42:52.9.5, ErynnRebol, Cotonwood, calif.,1:42:53.2. 6,Jessica rsmanna,Ashland, u43:07.9. 7,AmyThorson, Boise,Id.,1:45:14.4. 8, KathyFecteau,Bend,1:4tza0. 9, KariStrang,1:4t3&Z DarraghHildreth, Bend,1:50:16.3. Men

(Top10)

1,RyanBak,Bend,1:16:26.a 2,JayMeservy,Bend,1:24:Oa6.3,Ryanwilson,Redmond, 125090.4, lansharman,Bend,125172.5,BrandonHoff man,Bend,1;25580.6,GraySkinner, Bend,1:2721.1. 7,KeithWilson, KlamathFalls, 1:29246. 8,JermyHurl, McMlnnvile, 1:29265. 9, PeterCurran,Bend,1:31:348. 10,MichaelWolber,Bend,1:3t:54a 10K Women (Top10) 1,SuzanneKing,Bend,46:3aa 2,EllenKramer,Bend,47:56.0.3,MichelleJackson,Bend, 51:01.9. 4,SaraKelly, Portland,51:02.9. 5, Katie Prank, Bend, 53:52.7. 6, CrispinFievet, Bend, 54:36 .4.7,AmyMcdonald,Bend,54:37.7.8,JayneRodosevich,Bend,56:05.9.9,sueschumacher,Bend,56:185.10, SamanthaJenson, Bend,56;274. Half Marathon Men (Top10) 1, JasonIrby, Bend, 37:30.t.2,JuanMart inez,37:49.9.3,RonCarpenter,40:55.5.4,Curt Gibson ,Prineville,43046.5,RigoRamirez,Redmond,45498.6,JohnSwenson,Bend,48033. 7,Mikespencer,Bend,4t0aa 8,ThomasRobinson,Bend,49:08.4.9,scottAbrams,Bend, 5II14 a 10,RodThompson,51:433.

for ages 7andup.Season begins onNov. 10 and runs through March; 3 p.m.; $195 - $1750; Mount Bachelor Nordic Center, 13000 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. mbsef.org or 541-388-0002. MBSEF FREERIDESKIAND SNOWBOARD DEVELOPMENT ANDCOMPETITION PROGRAMS:beginsNov.25;one-tofiveday-a-week training for freeride skiers ages 8 and up. Full time program begins Nov. 25, while competition team starts on Dec. 5 and developmentprogram beginsDec.9;$650 - $3,270; MBSEFJunior Race Center, Bend; www.mbsef.org or 541-388-0002.

TABLE TENNIS BEND TABLETENNIS: Mondays;play is informal and open to everyone; 6 p.m.; seniors and students 18 and under $2, adults $3; Boys 8 Girls Club of Bend, 500 NW Wall St., Bend; www.bendtabletennis. corn or 541-318-0890.

VOLLEYBALL

PARENT INFOMEETING — OREGON VOLLEYBALLACADEMY: Dct.26;Parent info meeting for all fourth through eighth grade players interested in club volleyball with the Oregon Volleyball Academy. Info on tryouts ,costs,coachesand schedules, SNOW SPORTS plus questions and answers. More info at "INSPIRED":Monday; A showing of the film OVA website; 7 p.m.; Cascade Indoor Sports from The Ski Movie Tour; 6 p.m.; $10 plus fees Center, 20775 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend; in advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic Theatre www.oregonvolleyballacademy.corn or 541-419-1187. Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.

COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD Leagueleadersand highscores Lava Lanes,Bend Sept. 28-Oct 4

volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. "CHASINGSHADOWS": Dct.24;A showing of the 2015 Warren Miller ski film; first100 attendees receive a lift ticket to Mt. Bachelor; 6 p.m.; $20 plus fees; The Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend or 541-317-0700. MBSEF WINTERNORDIC SKIRACE TRAINING PROGRAMS:Nov. 10; One through six day a week training programs

Marathon Continued from B1

COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL COBOTryoutS aPPraaCh-

Illg —Several local Central Oregon Basketball Organization teams will be holding tryouts in coming weeks. Mountain View Jr. Cougar tryouts will be held onOct. 28 and Nov. 1 at the Mountain View High WestGym. Fifth and sixth grade boys will meet from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 28 and from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Nov. 1.Thesessions for seventh and eighth graders will immediately follow on both days. The Mountain View girls COBO teams will hold tryouts from 6 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. on Nov. 2and 3. Girls in grades five through eight will all try out at the sametime. Players selected for the team should expect to participate in twice-weekly practices, 12 weekend gamesand a season-ending tournament. The season, which runs from mid-November until February, costs $180. More information is available at www.mvgirlsbasketball.corn. Girls living within the Summit boundaries will try out at CascadeMiddle School. Fifth and sixth graders will meet from 7 p.m. to 8:45 p.m.on Nov.2,whileseventh and eighth graders will meet at

the same time onNov. 3.For more information about the Summit girls CDBO teams, contact Ryan Cruz at ryan.cruz©bend.k12. or.us.

RUGBY COCCrolls against Oregon TSCll —The Bobcats opened league play with a 28-5 victory over visiting OregonTech on Saturday. Michael Hagemanled COCCwith two tries while Alex Esselstrom andDalton Chambers each scored one.Cameron Weaver kicked two penalty kicks and one conversion kick. TheBobcats next play Southern Oregon inAshland on Saturday. — Bulletin staff reports

Find It All Online bendbullefin.corn

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The men's 10K winner, 42-year-

541-389-9690

old Jason Irby of Bend, was also competing in his last local race of the year. "I do the 10K because it's a nice, end of theseason,short,fast,feelgood type race," Irby said. "And this is a good trail, and it's the last one (of the season)." Irby has shown remarkable consistency in the Down & Dirty 10K over the past four years, winning the race each year and

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hitting times of 37:30 in 2013 and

37:31 in 2014 and finishing in 37:30 again this year. "Today felt much faster, but it didn't work out," Irby said.

541-330-50$4

, BATTERIES, Limit one percustomer. I

S uzanne King, on t h e o t h -

er hand, had not run a race in about four years before winning

4

'F

the women's 10K in 46:38.3. Al-

though she ran the full Down 5 Dirty Half five years ago, King, enters fewer races because she no

build up for next spring. "This is my opener," Heller said.

longer has the same competitive drive that she used to — at least

runner on the track, but I figure if

51 and of Bend, explained that she

"I'm predominantly a 1,500-meter

until she gets to the starting line. I can run a half marathon in a de"Well, I put a bib on, and I get cent amount of time then a 1,500 driven," King said. "It's maybe a should be easy — sort of." little more enjoyable (now), beLike many of the other runners, cause there's a fresh feeling, of Heller said she was eager to finish 'Oh yeah, I haven't done this in a the first half of the course, which while, and it's fun.' It's rewarding is almost entirely uphill. to renew that interest."

" About mile five to six I w a s

While many other runners really over the uphill, which was were concluding their seasons on unfortunate because there were Sunday, Ashley Heller, the wom- two more miles of it," Heller said. en's half marathon winner, is just "It was really, really challenging, beginninghers.Heller,a 27-year- but now that it's over I wouldn' t old track runner living in Cald- mind doing it again — in a week well, Idaho, said she trains with 01" SO. the Idaho Track Club and uses fall — Reporter:541-383-0305, cross country and trail races to

vjacobsenibendbulletin.corn

Broken Top Club would like to thank all of our members for a wonderful seasont

We appreciate your partnership in making Broken Top Club one of the best clubs in all of Central Oregon.

Thank you from the entire sta8 at Broken Top Club!



BS

W EAT H E R

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015

Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,lnc. ©2015 i

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TONIGHT

HIGH 59'

ALMANAC

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LOW 35'

Mostly cloudy

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TUESDAY

WED NESDAY

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80' 35'

Partly sunny

Mainly clear

THURSDAY

88' 38'

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Partly sunny andpleasant

Yesterday Today Tuesday

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

Long

NATIONAL WEATHER

s

Wickiup 29896 15% Crescent Lake 4 9 3 41 57% Ochoco Reservoir 10109 23Vo Prineville 43858 30yo River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 123 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 21 Deschutes R.below Bend 3S1 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 45s Little Deschutes near LaPine 51 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 29 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 54

Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.

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

Not available Not available Not available Not available Not available

Source: USDA Forest Service

s

48 contiguousstates) National high: 94 at El Centro, CA National low: 18 at SaranacLake, NY Precipitation: 1.25" at Visalia, CA

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83/62/pc 69/48/pc

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vsgas Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis

62/44/c 72/52/c 45/35/c 68/49/s 67/51/s 86/65/pc 67/43/s 62/39/eh 73/51/s 64/38/c 66/42/s 63/49/c 66/52/pc 62/50/c 59/37/c 50/27/c 69/56/s 69/40/s 70/45/s 66/39/c 72/55/pc 69/46/pc 68/50/pc 73/44/c 79/55/pc 70/48/s 72/52/s 69/46/s 59/38/c SN73/pc 83/67/s 71/46/pc 72/42/c 75/59/ah 71/51/c 50/40/c 82/60/c 39/19/c 64/45/sh 58/35/1 68/52/c 62/48/c 69/42/s 69/44/pc 65/45/pc 58/33/c 89/77/pc 82/69/pc 74/47/pc 72/49/pc 81/56/s 74/62/eh

Miami

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

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix

86/78/t

56/43/pc 53/42/pc 55/39/pc 86/53/s 86/75/pc 70/61/c 85/65/pc 83/58/s 75/65/pc

56/50/pc 54/47/pc 53/38/pc 86/53/s 86//5/pc 72/60/c 79/61/s 83/55/c 74/65/pc

71/62/t

69/45/0.00 79/69/Tr 61/32/0.00 58/28/0.00 69/44/0.00 85/73/0.00 54/33/0.00 63/35/0.00 63/38/0.00 75/60/0.00 50/38/0.00 52/35/0.00 56/46/0.00 76/51/0.00 74/46/0.00 83/68/0.00 91/73/0.00 63/32/0.00

53/38/Tr 92/71/0.02

45/32/Tr 46/27/0.00 47/32/0.00 58/33/0.00 Rapid City 86/37/0.00 Rsno 65/48/Tr Richmond 56/33/0.00 Rochester, NY 43/32/Tr Sacramento 75/54/0.00 St. Louis 63/36/0.00 Salt Lake City 76/56/0.10 San Antonio 84/59/0.00 San Diego 76/71/0.02 Ssn Francisco 69/60/0.00 Ssn Jose 71/57/0.00 Santa re 72/52/Tr Savannah 67/49/0.00 Seattle 59/55/0.08 Sioux Fags 68/42/0.00 Spokane 60/52/0.01 Springfield, Mo 67/47/0.00 Tampa 83/68/0.00 Tucson 87/65/0.25 Tulsa 74/45/0.00 Washington, DC 54/38/Tr Wichita 78/49/Tr Yskima 65/57/0.22 Yuma 92/76/0.00

Providence Raleigh

55/46/eh 55/47/sh 75/65/s 77/65/pc 63/55/pc 62/56/c 96/71/pc 96/71/pc 91/78/pc 91/77/c 69/48/s 59/50/c 87/73/c 83/71/s 49/45/ah 50/44/sb 68/46/pc 69/46/pc 55/46/r 51/40/pc 67/54/1 69/50/pc 93/74/s 91/69/s 89/67/s 89/70/s 62/41/pc 55/36/s 85/77/t

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 51/48/0.52 52/40/sh 46/41/r 71/47/0.00 77/58/pc 78/60/pc 52/29/Tr 63/51/pc 70/51/c 78/68/0.14 75/60/pc 76/61/pc 58/30/0.00 65/43/s 69/45/pc 77/42/0.00 83/59/pc 84/55/s

Pittsburgh Portland, ME

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Amsterdam Athens

Yesterday Today Tuesday

Hi/Lo/W

slifsx 5/35

54/38/0.24 Boston 7 /51 77/59/0.00 uke 74/ /42 Auckland 61/52/0.05 e /5 w York Baghdad 95/70/0'.00 s ol s 2/45 Che n Bangkok 91 /78/0.00 4 79/59 70/4 ilsdelphis Beijing 66/53/0.00 C icag 'eCof mb 4/43 Beirut 82P4/0.00 au u c iico Omah . ou is 7 /52 cease% e X > • Deu Berlin 53/43/0.00 72/58 ington 77/ 75/ usV ~ V . X X X'e u ff u 66 Bogota 68/52/0.05 59/47 75/4 Kansas Budapest 59/41/0.04 77/58 BuenosAires 68/48/0.00 * * . L o s Au luu Csbo SsnLoess 93/74/0.00 * 5/de • L' Cairo 90/71 /0.00 Pboeu kluhoma Ci • At Anch ored Calgary 61/45/0.00 • ae/Str Afbuque ue 7 48 48/3 II 0 72/52 8 53/41 Cancun 82P3/2.10 uir iuuhu 7 /ea • usus ~ ~ guueuu ul Ps Dublin 54/46/0.38 70/ 83/5 4/6 Edinburgh 55/48/0.01 32/40 Geneva 54/41/0.00 • dsudu Harare 84/56/0.00 w Orleans 1/61 Hong Kong 87/72/0.00 Honolulu Chihuahua 75/54 ~ t 'nd Istanbul 68/61 /0.00 89/77 82/54 Jerusalem 90/67/0.00 Monte y 81 84/de Johannesburg 78/54/0.00 e+>Whv h h h h ' + '+'+v'4'+'+%%> Lima 74/64/0.00 Lisbon 68/61/0.33 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 59/52/0.02 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 66/57/0.47 Manila 84/81/0.92 55/49

Intervals of cloudsand sunshine

Mostly sunny

Oily Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Abilene 84/58/0.00 84/60/pc Akron 49/32/0.00 59/46/s Albany 46/31/Tr 51/39/s Albuquerque 76/55/Tr 72/52/pc Anchorage 44/41/0.19 48/38/c Atlanta 66/44/0.00 63/41/s Atlantic City 52/37/0.02 52/44/s Austin 84/47/0.00 84/54/pc Baltimore 52/33/Tr 55/37/s Billings 81 /44/0.00 65/49/c Birmingham 69/39/0.00 70/45/s Bismarck 75/36/0.00 67/42/pc Boise 66/54/0.17 60/44/t Boston 47/33/0.00 49/42/s Bridgeport, CT 49/33/0.00 51/44/s Buffalo 45/34/0.01 54/48/pc Burlington, VT 42/27/Tr 48/41/pc Caribou, ME 37/24/Tr 39/31/s Charleston, SC 64/48/0.00 63/46/s Charlotte 61/41/0.00 61/34/s Chattanooga 63/44/0.00 65/40/s Cheyenne 74/45/0.00 70/45/c 55/33 Chicago 60/33/0.00 70/52/s High: 75 Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 59/28/0.00 65/45/s Jordan Vgey Oct 20 Oct 27 N ov 3 N o v 11 at The Dalles 61/52 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 66/50 Cleveland 49/36/Tr 61/49/s Low: 33' 55/41 Marsh Lake 61/42 ColoradoSprings 75/45/Tr 75/47/pc Tonight's ulty:Antares the Scorpion is quite 55/31 at Crater Lake 58/34 Gra • Burns Juntion Columbia, MO 67/39/0.00 77/54/s • Paisley 61/ low in the southwest as twilight fades this a Columbia, SC 65/48/0.00 63/37/s • 60/43 • Chile quin 60/35 Columbus,GA 69/47/0.00 66/44/s Medfo evening. Gold ach 58/34 Horne 0' Columbus,OH 54/28/0.00 62/45/s 66/46 60/ 61/42 Klamath Concord, NH 45/24/0.00 48/32/s Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashl nd 'Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 83/67/0.00 85/67/pc Bro ings 60/41 63/ 61/51 59/30 59/34 59/40 Dallas 79/54/0.00 83/58/s Dayton 57/25/0.00 65/46/s Denver 80/46/0.00 77/46/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Des Moines 66/39/0.00 79/59/pc 1 g~ S ~ Z i City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 52/33/Tr 63/49/pc The highertheAccuWeafrer.rxrmiiy Index number, Astoris 62/59/0.21 62/49/sh64/45/c La Grande 63/52/0.14 62/46/pc 63/29/s Portland 65/5 9/0.0463/53/sh65/46/ pc Duluth 54/25/0.00 64/41/pc the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low, Baker City 67/48/0.1 5 62/36/pc 63/27/s L a Pine 63/45/0.04 55/37/c 59/33/pc Prinevige 64/ 49/0.0962/37/c 59/33/s El Paso 80/61/0.02 84/60/pc 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 65/55/0.09 61/51/sh 67/51/pc M edford 73/5 1/0.00 66/46/sh 73/41/s Redmond 65/ 5 1/0.0960/31/c 62/27/pc Fairbanks 48/30/0.09 37/24/sf Gums 65/40/0.03 62/33/pc 63/26/s N e wport 63/5 4 /0.00 59/48/sh 60/46/c Roseburg 73/ 5 7/0.0066/50/sh 69/44/pc Fargo 70/39/0.00 68/43/pc Eugene 72/52/Tr 63/46/sh 65/41/pc NorthBend 66/50/0.00 61/49/sh 64/47/pc Salem 72/57/Tr 63/48/sh 65/42/ s Flagstaff 60/43/0.11 58/38/pc Klamath Fags 61/42/0.11 59/30/sh 63/27/s O n tario 68/54/0.11 68/43/t 70/37/s Sisters 61/49/0.07 59/35/c 62/32/pc Grand Rapids 53/29/0.00 64/52/pc G rasses T r ee s Wee ds Lskeview 64/39/0.03 59/34/sh 58/25/s P e ndleton 70/ 5 5/0.03 67/49/pc 64/42/pc The Dages 7 5 / 62/0.00 68/49/c 69/43/s Green Bay 54/24/0.00 65/47/pc Greensboro 60/36/0.00 61/37/s Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday Lo~w Ab s ent Harrisburg 50/34/0.02 55/35/s Source: OregonAgsrgyAssociates 541-683-1577 Harfford, CT 47/27/Tr 51/37/s Helena 72/43/0.01 62/44/c Honolulu 90/78/0.14 89m/s ~ c s ~f ee ~ 20 s ~30 s ~de s ~ 5 0 s ~e c s ~70 8 ~ ac s ecs ~fccs ~f fOs Houston ~ 108 ~c s 82/52/0.00 81/61/s As of 7 s.m. yesterday Huntsville 69/40/0.00 71/42/s u d » ' Cufgu Indianapolis 60/30/0.00 68/48/pc Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL d uuipeg Que c ea/41 x >4 d d d 35 40/3 Jackson, MS 74/49/0.00 76/47/s EXTREMES C rane Prairie 270 4 7 49% Aft/52 Jacksonville 71 /56/0.00 70/57/pc YESTERDAY (for the

WATER REPORT

33.

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. Umatiaa Hood 72/47 RiVer Rufus • ermiston l49 lington 72/49 Portland 65/51 Mesc am Losti ne • W co7 l50 57/41 Enterprise dl t, 58/ he Oaa • 5 6/40

sunshine todayas Seasid a weak disturbance 62/53 approaches; there can Cannon High 63 61 83' in 1 903 be an afternoonor 61/53 Low 50' 32' 12' i n 1917 evening shower. Tigamo • • 67/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Clouds andy • Mc innviff 9/52 • 68 49 Joseph • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.23" will limit sunshine Gove nt • upi Condon /45 • Gs 6 46 Record 1.11" in 1914 today with a shower Lincoln Union 41 54/ Month to date (normal) 0.8 1 " (0.27") in the area mainly this 61/53 Sale • pray Granite u Year to date(normal) 7.73 " (7.44") afternoon. 63/ • /50 'Baker C Newpo 54/39 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9S" • ~ sa 1/49 59/48 • Mitch U 62/36 Camp Sh man Red n WEST: Cloudy today 60/41 R SUN ANDMOON eU Tach 58/36 • John with intermittent rain 59/51 63/45 • Prineville Day 8/39 Today Tue. tario as a weakstormsys62/37 • Pa line 63/49 Sunrise 7:24 a.m. 7: 2 6 a.m. 43 tem pushes through Floren e • Eugene • Re d Brothers 5 41 Sunset 6:15 p.m. 6: 1 4 p.m. the areas. Vates 61/51 63/46 36 Su Were 59/35 Moonrise 1 :23 p.m. 2:08 p.m. 66/45 Nyssa • 56/ Ham ton c e Moonset 11: 21 p.m. none • La Pine 65/46 Juntura Grove Oakridge Co • Burns OREGON EXTREMES First Fu l l Last New 63/39 62/50 /49 61 0 Fort Rock Riley 62/33 YESTERDAY Greecet • 57/33 d w' GO/35

TEMPERATURE

Yesterday Normal Record

-~

35

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

FRIDAY

76/60/t

58/43/pc 58/47/pc 69/55/1 67/44/sh 85/79/r 84/81/sb

I

77/48/s 81/55/s

76/60/pc 79/60/pc 69/47/s 72/49/pc 68/53/pc 70/53/c 74/50/s 77/56/s 8105/sh 84P5/pc

67/53/pc 70/54/c 75/51/pc 67/51/c 69/43/s 72/46/pc 75/64/s 79/67/pc 52/46/s 67/55/pc 53/42/s 69/51/pc 55/42/s 67/50/s 80/58/s 84/61/s

81/59/pc 80/56/pc 79/65/pc 83/67/pc 83/65/pc 86/67/pc 74/54/s 78/56/pc 54/43/s 68/50/pc 86/69/pc 83/66/1 57/45/s 67/46/pc 46/36/s 59/41/c 49/38/s 64/48/pc 58/35/s 68/43/s 74/46/pc 67/40/c 64/42/pc 66/40/pc 57/36/s 68/43/s 55/47/pc 63/48/c 78/57/pc 75/55/s 66/49/I 85/63/pc 77/65/pc 72/58/s

78/56/pc 63/46/sh 86/70/pc 77/66/pc 74/57/s 73/55/pc 78/54/s 69/44/pc 70/44/c 66/47/s 71/57/s 61/52/sh 62/47/c 79/50/pc 76/52/ah 63/44/c 62/40/pc 76/54/s 79/55/pc 82/65/pc 87/68/s 85/62/pc 81/58/1 79/57/s 83/59/s 56/42/s 68/49/s 81/62/pc 84/62/s

72/43/c 71/38/pc 87/66/pc 83/65/1

I

Mecca Mexico City

103/79/0.14 101/76/t 61/54/Tr 69/50/1 Montreal 39/27/Tr 46/40/pc Moscow 48/39/0.03 43/26/pc Nairobi 79/62/0.12 79/58/c Nassau 61/76/0'.Tf 84/75/c New Delhi 93/75/0.00 96n4/s Osaka 79/57/0.00 79/56/s Oslo 50/30/0.00 49/40/pc Ottawa 36/23/0.01 48/44/pc Paris 52/46/0.00 54/42/pc Rio de Janeiro 77/65/0.08 78/69/pc Rome 70/48/0.48 70/54/c Santiago 77/50/0.00 58/41/r Sso Paulo 64/59/0.08 77/62/c Sap poro 68/50/0.02 54/43/pc Seoul 75/51/0.00 74/52/s Shanghai 76/56/0.00 76/61/pc Singapore 90/82/0.00 91 09/c Stockholm 50/28/0.00 51/38/pc Sydney 72/64/0.03 79/66/1 Taipei 81/69/0.02 83/75/sh Tel Aviv 87/66/0.00 89P4/pc Tokyo 73/59/0.00 72/62/s Toronto 43/28/0.00 57/47/s Vancouver 57/53/0.00 58/48/r Vienna 48/39/Tr 49/43/r Warsaw 50/48/0.70 51/42/c

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36/22/pc 81/57/pc 86/75/pc 95/69/s 79/57/pc 48/39/eh 57/32/pc 56/42/pc 88/74/s 70/50/c 67/44/pc 93/72/t 57/44/sh

74/51/pc 76/64/pc 91/79/c

49/36/ah 84/69/s 82/74/ah 85/73/s 73/60/pc 65/46/c 56/46/pc 48/44/sh 51/43/r


ON PAGES 3%4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin

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Hay, Grain & Feed

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(2) Amps - Rockford, How fo avoidscam NOTICE TO Precor Multi-staLooking for your Fosgate box, (2) 10" and fraud attempts ADVERTISER Resort House tion strength and next employee? Alison's JBL speakers. $300 YBe aware of internaSince September 29, REMEMBER: If you Keeping Service fitness unit,high Place a Bulletin OBO. 541-977-1354 1991, advertising for have lost an animal, Offering resort, residentional fraud. Deal loquality always inhelp wanted ad used woodstoves has don't forget to check tial, and commercial cally whenever posside, exc. cond., 255 been limited to modtoday and The Humane Society cleaning. sible. paid over $1500, sell Computers els which have been reach over Bend 541-213-5288 Dinette,seats 6, good Y Watch for buyers for $600. Must see! 202 certified by the Or60,000 readers 541-382-3537 cond., $400; Coffee who offer more than You move T HE B ULLETIN r e Department of Want to Buy or Rent each week. Redmond table, nic e w ood, Call The Bulletin At your asking price and egon 541-330-0733. Environmental Qualquires computer adYour classified ad 541-923-0882 $400; Queen b e d, who ask to have 541 -385-5809 vertisers with multiple ity (DEQ) and the fedWanted: $Cash paid for Serta mattress, headwill also Madras money wired or 245 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail eral E n v ironmental vintage costume jewad schedules or those 541-475-6889 appear on board, v e r y clean, handed back to them. Protection selling multiple sysA g e ncy elry. Top dollar paid for $1200. 805-720-3515 • G olf Equipment Prineville bendbulletin.corn At: www.bendbulletin.corn Fake cashier checks Gold/Silver. I buy by the IIIIMore Pix at Bendbulletin.et tems/ software, to dis(EPA) as having met 541-447-7178 and money orders which currently close the name of the smoke emission stanIN-HOME CARE Estate, Honest Artist CHECKYOUR AD or Craft Cats are common. receives over dards. A cer t ified Elizabeth,541-633-7006 business or the term PNever State of OR approved 541-389-8420 give out per1.5 million page "dealer" in their ads. w oodstove may b e personal/dementia sonal financial infor205 views every identified by its certifi- Still looking for Annie, Private party advertiscare/respite Call mation. month at no Items for Free ers are defined as gg'Trustyour instincts cation label, which is 22 lb. 3-yr-old black & Julie at 541-408-6626 extra cost. those who sell one permanently attached brown Mini Aussie, and be wary of Bulletin Free Kirby Tradition rug computer. to the stove. The Bul- last seen near Green 476 on the first day it runs someone using an renovator, used once, letin will not knowClassifieds Estate SaleLakes trailhead. Famto make sure it is corEmployment 257 escrow service or maybe never. ingly accept advertisGet Results! n ily misses her. ReCash only! rect. Spellcheck" and Musical Instruments agent to pick up your ing for the sale of 541-389-1130 Opportunities Bedroom set: double w ard! Call o r t e x t Call 541-385-5809 human errors do ocmerchandise. uncertified bed w/headboard 8 541-520-2481 or or place your ad FREE! Sony big screen cur. If this happens to BASS GUITAR 541-520-8528. on-line at TV w it h s u r round mattress, 3 drawer The Bulletin woodstoves. CAUTION: your ad, please conServing Central Oregon since t903 SOUNDGEAR by sound, s t an d in - dresser w / m irror, tact us ASAP so that bendbulletin.corn Ads published in 267 Ibanez 4-string, black 286 cluded, works great, nightstand, SOLD. "Employment Opcorrections and any Tupperware Stop & exc. cond., with preFuel 8 Wood will take two strong Breakfast table: 4' Sales Northeast Bend adjustments can be Shop & Bingo! portunities" include mium padded case, 358 p eople t o hau l . round oak, seats 4 + made to your ad. employee and indestrap and amplifier. Oct 24th, 11am - 5pm. 541-610-6609. leaf seats 6, 4 upFarmers Column 541-385-5809 Bingostarts at pendent positions. WHEN BUYING $285. Fender electric holstered c h a irs, The Bulletin ** FREE ** Classified Ads for p o sitions 6:30pm. Located at guitar, Squire Strat 8 FIREWOOD... SOLD. Free fenced pasture for that require a fee or Notice to our n Holiday Inn Express, Garage Sale Kit " LIKE N E W Adam' s case, SOLD. Vintage Dining room: cows. Good grass. upfront investment To avoid fraud, valued readers! 20615 Grandview Dr., Place an ad in The 76nx18 n dark wood Idea Combo irons. banjo, 5-string, new 541-480-9947 The Bulletin must be stated. With Bend. Call Tammy for B ulletin fo r yo u r 3 -4-5 H . B . 6-P W keys & strings, $150. buffet, $300. 72nx42n recommends payany independent job info. 541-408-5697 sale and receive a For newspaper 541-385-4790. GRPH S R s h a fts, beautiful glass dinment for Firewood opportunity, please G arage Sale K i t delivery questions, $360 obo. ing room table, 8 263 only upon delivery i nvestigate tho r FREE! please call the 951-454-2561 upholstered chairs, Take care of and inspection. oughly. Use extra g g Tools Circulation Dept. $400. 541-504-8228 • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 246 KIT INCLUDES: caution when apyour investments at 541-385-5800 4' x 4' x 8' • 6 Garage Sale plying for jobs onChicago pheumatic4.5n Guns, Hunting with the help from SOM E Signs line and never proTo place an ad, call G ENERATE angle ai r g r i nder, • Receipts should & Fishing EXCITEMENT in your include name, vide personal inforThe Bulletin's • $2.00 Off Coupon 541-385-5809 C P9110 12,00 0 neighborhood! Plan a phone, price and To Use Toward mation to any source or email RPM, used very little. "Call A Service Trigger Happy Guns kind of wood garage sale and don' t Your Next Ad you may not have $260. 503-936-1778 classified Obend(Cash for guns) forget to advertise in 541-526-0617, Bend Professional" Directory purchased. • 10 Tips For researched and bulletin.corn classified! • Firewood ads "Garage Sale deemed to be repu541-385-5809. 421 B rowning 12 ga . 3 " MUST include Success!" table. Use extreme 260 Serving Conical Oregon sincetggg species & cost per c aution when r e auto, in exc. cond., Schools & Training Queen mattress and Misc. Items with 6 boxes shells, cord to better serve PICK UP YOUR s ponding to A N Y box springs, Sim208 our customers. online employment $795. 541-977-5358 GARAGE SALE KIT IITR Truck School 7' live Ficus tree, in mons extra firm, exc at 1777 SW Chanad from out-of-state. Pets & Supplies REDMOND CAMPUS cond. always covered, CASH!! container. $25. MARK V SHOPWe suggest you call dler Ave., Bend, OR The Bulletin Our Grads GetJobs! For Guns, Ammo & $225. 541-330-0733 541-602-0989. SIIIIITH Model 510 gervfng Central Oregon sinceIgttg 97702 the State of Oregon 1-888<38-2235 Reloading Supplies. bandsaw, scrollsaw, The Bulletin recom- WHIRLPOOL CABRIO Consumer H otline 541-385-5809 WWW.DTR.EDU 541-408-6900. strip sander, thickmends extra caution Bernina 820 in exat 1-503-378-4320 All Year Dependable washer and d ryer, ness planer, dust col- Firewood: when purc h as- never used, still in The Bulletin cellentcondition. For Equal Opportudry Find exactly what Serving Central Oregon since fggg 470 lector, support table, Lodgepole, split, del, ing products or serPrice includes lot of nity Laws contact boxes. $1000 for both. you are looking for in the lathe chisel set, ringvices from out of the Antique wicker baby Domestic & bobbins, carrying Oregon Bureau of 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . master, wall mountarea. Sending cash, CLASSIFIEDS case, all sewing feet, In-Home Positions Labor & I n dustry, Multi-cord discounts! bassinet/buggy, $100. ing brackets for storchecks, or credit inBarbie case and all Civil Rights Division, Call 541-408-9813, or cash, check, Visa, MC a ge, s e t-up an d f ormation may be instruction books. 541-420-3484, Bend 706-851-7881 Active female senior 971-673- 0764. Colt .44-40 Frontier operation m anuals. subjected to fraud. $4700 cash. needs live-in care1892, $2000. 541-383-7124 The Bulletin For more informa- Wine cooler, Vino Temp Six Shooter 541-205-8525. Ponderosa pine taker. Prineville. Call tion about an adver9 bottle, 47 deg. $40 $3,400 44 n B. 4 n B firewood split, Scott at 541-233-3156. 541-385-5809 Need fixing stuff? tiser, you may call 541-408-4528 503-961-5812. Buying Diamonds ga !! Ahelp 8ervice Professions! $160 or trade. the O r egon State 541-419-1871 /Gold for Cash Attorney General' s the help you need. Bulletin ION'7%IIS TIIS Saxon's Fine Jewelers find Office C o n sumer The www.bendbulletin.corn recommends extra 269 541-389-6655 Home Delivery Advisor Protection hotline at ! ca ton ne n p r The Bulletin Circufation Department is seeking Gardening Supplies 308 1-877-877-9392. 265 BUYING chasing products or • a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time DO YOU HAVE & Equipment Farm Equipment Lionel/American Flyer services from out of I Building Materials position and consists of managing an adult SOMETHING TO The Bulletin trains, accessories. the area. Sending t & Machinery carrier force to ensure our customers receive Serving Central On gon sincetggg SELL FOR $500 541-408-2191. cash, checks, or • MADRAS Habitat superior service. Must be able to create and OR LESS? For newspaper RESTORE Tractor Kubota diesel, perform strategic plans to meet department Adopt a great cat or f credit i n f ormation delivery, call the BUYING &t SELLING may be subjected to Building Supply Resale w/front loader, 18HP, objectives such as increasing market share two! Altered, vacciNon-commercial Circulation Dept. at All gold jewelry, silver f FRAUD. For more Quality at and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a advertisers may 4WD, NOIN $4200! nated, ID chip, tested, 541-385-5800 and gold coins, bars, LOW PRICES 541-385-4759 self-starter who can work both in the office more! CRAFT, 65480 information about an t place an ad rounds, wedding sets, To place an ad, call 84 SW K St. and in their assigned territory with minimal with our 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, advertiser, you may > class rings, sterling sil541-385-5809 541-475-9722 "QUICK CASH 325 supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 / call t h e Or e gonI ver, coin collect, vinor email ' State Atto r ney ' Open to the public. classified et bendbtslletin.corn with company vehicle provided. Strong SPECIAL" www.craftcats.org tage watches, dental Hay, Grain & Feed customer service skills and management skills / General's O ff ice 1 week3 lines 13 gold. Bill Fl e ming, Prineville Habitat The Bulletin or 541-382-9419. USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI Consumer Protec- • gervfng Central Oregon sinceIgttg First Quality green grass are necessary. Computer experience is ReStore tion h o t line at I ~e e eke 2 N hay, no rain, barn stored, required. You must pass a drug screening Building Supply Resale Door-to-door selling with i 1-877-877-9392. Ad must and be able to be insured by company to drive $250/ton. 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 270 vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we include price of fast results! It's the easiest Call 541-549-3831 541-447-6934 The Bulletin > a~ale tem oi gaoo Lost & Found Patterson Ranch, Sisters b elieve in p r omoting from w i thin, s o way in the world to sell. > Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Open to the public. advancement within company is available to or less, or multiple items whose total FOUND motorized bi- Quality o rchard/grass the right person. If you enjoy dealing with The Bulletin Classified BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS 212 does not exceed cycle on east side of mix $225-$245 ton, people from diverse backgrounds and you are 541-385-5809 Search the area's most small bales, between energetic, have great organizational skills and $500. Copper Fire Pit Bend. 541-280-3659 Antiques & comprehensive listing of Bend Redmond, del. interpersonal communication skills, please Cover Boxer AKC male Collectibles classified advertising... FOUND: Set of Toyota avai. 541-280-7781 send your resume to: Call Classified at 12 wks, stunning estate to automotive, keys at Summit ten541-385-5809 The Bulletin sealed brindle, $1000. Restored & Patinaed real Antiques Wanted: merchandise to sporting nis courts on 10/14. Wheat Straw for Sale. bendbulletin.corn 541-754-9537 c/o Kurt Muller Wood furniture, old 66" dia. 20" high goods. Bulletin Classifieds Call to ID. Also, weaner pigs. PO Box 6020 Cans & bottles wanted! signs, pocket knives, 541-546-6171 New Smaller Cover appear every day in the 541-408-5590 Bend, OR 97708-6020 backpack, full They make a big dif- fishing gear, marbles, Jansport print or on line. or e-mail resume to: size, alum. f r ame. For Owner - $3000 L OST: REWARD f or ference in the lives of tools, weathervanes, Call 541-385-5809 kmullerobendbulletin.corn $50. 541-408-4528 $1800 of apple iPad, TURN THE PAGE abandoned animals. toys. 541-389-1578 www.bendbulletin.corn preturn No phone calls, please. 541-480-7823 ossibly lost in N E For More Ads Local nonprofit uses The Bulletin reserves The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE Bend on Tues., 10/13. for spay/neuter costs. the right to publish all KAHR pistols; P9 Richard The Bulletin The Bulletin Pre-employmenf drug screen required. Serving Central Oregonsince lggi 9mm, $ 525 o b o . 541-876-2021 www.craftcats.org or from The Bulletin P45 .45ACP, $495 call 541-389-8420 for ads newspaper onto The obo, with case, expickup or to learn lo- Bulletin Internet webcellent co n dition. cations of trailers. site. 541-389-9836 Chihuahua pups, AKC. $350. Parents on site. The Bulletin Serving Central On gon sincetggg

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Jack Chi-Weenie Minis, 7 weeks old. o n e male, two f e m ales $ 275 Call o r t e x t 360-932-4054 Lab Pups AKC,black & yellow, Master Hunter shred, gerformance pedigree, FA cert hips & elbows, 541-771-2330 www.kinnamanretrievere.cern

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Maremma ~uard do pup, pure red, $35 541-546-6171

Price reduced! Howa 1500 300 Win. Mag. New, never f i red. Wood stock, stainless barrel an d a c tion. Great deer or elk gun, bargain priced-wife says sell $599 Call 541-389-3694, leave message.

unique scalloped

table top: 35yen di-

ameter, has sailing ship design on the top. Base is an old oak dock capstan. Very unique piece, could sell separately. $329. Also Vintage wash bowl & pitcher set, white & light blue with gold trim.$65. See more pix at bendbulletin.corn

Waffen Bennewitz classic mauser mountain rifle, as new,$600. Ithaca single barrel trap shotgun, very nice,$650.

541-419-6408

Pitbullfemalep uppy, 11 weeks, 2nd shots, wormed, healthy, socialized. Parents are family pets, $250 adoption fee includes spay, micro-chip & last shots. 541-382-9891 POODLE pups, toy or mini, 541-475-3889 QueenslandHeelers Standard & Mini, $150 & up. 541-280-1537

WANTED: Old Fishing

Lures and/or Tackle Boxes. Call local ¹ 209-623-7174 215

541-548-3408

WANTED: Collector seeks high quality fish-

ing items & upscale fly

Coins & Stamps

rods. 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746

Private collector buying postagestamp albums & collections, world-wide and U.S. 573-286-4343 (local, cell phone).

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Art, Jewelry & Furs

Beautiful 1.50 c a rat r ing, recently a p praised at $ 15,400. Asking $10,400 obo. 541-617-0846

Bicycles & www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.corn Accessories Shih Tzu Poo teacup puppies, first shots, G iant Talon 1 2 9 e r Desperately Seeking dewormed, gorgeous. hardtail, small, excel- Missing 1940s dialent condition, $625. m ond ring sold a t $450. 541-771-2606 541-408-1676 Bend Pawn approx. Yorkie AKC pups, 1F, Sept.13-17, 2014 has 3M, tiny, cute, UDT 242 central diamond and 2 shots, health guar., pics, Exercise Equipment little side stones, one $850/up. 541-777-7743 is missing. Sz. 7.5. Yorkie pup, 12 wks. old, Pilates Power Gym Pro, 541-213-1221 Please female, AKC, $850. new, extras. $200 keep trying! Will pay 541-241-0518 OBO. 541-408-0846 any reasonable price.

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air mattress, 2 sleeping bags! Various other camping gear included. 81375 OBO 541-000-000

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

541-385-5809

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Item Priced at: Your Tofnl Ad Coston • $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 to 3 itemsper ad.j

Your ad will a/so appear in:

• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads • bendbulletin.corn

'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Somerestrictions app/y


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

C2 MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015•THE BULLETIN

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541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.corn

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PUBLISHER' S NOTICE

Monday... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 :00 pm Fri. Tuesday. • • ••. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N O OA MOA. Loans &528 Mortgages Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •Noon Tues. WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use cauThursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. tion when you pro-

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any

Harley Road K i ng Classic 2003, 100th Anniversary Edition, Homes for Sale 16,360 mi., reduced $9,999. 541-647-7078 NOTICE Vul c a n your ad, please conAll real estate adver- K awaskai tact us ASAP so that tised here in is sub- Drifter 2005, 800cc, 1,150 mi., 1 owner, corrections and any ject to th e Federal i n new cond., n o vide personal adjustments can be F air H ousing A c t , information to compamade to your ad. which makes it illegal chips or scratches, nies offering loans or 541-385-5809 to advertise any pref- always stored incredit, especially pre f erence, erence, limitation or s ide, $3,4 0 0 . The Bulletin Classified such those asking for adlimitation or discrimi- discrimination based 541-350-3886 vance loan fees or nation." Familial sta- on race, color, relicompanies from out of TiCk, TOCk tus includes children ion, sex, handicap, state. If you have under the age of 18 amilial status or naTick, Tock... concerns or quesliving with parents or tional origin, or intentions, we suggest you legal cus t odians, tion to make any such ...don't let time get consult your attorney pregnant women, and preferences, l i mitaor call CONSUMER away. Hire a people securing cus- tions or discrimination. Place aphoto in your private party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES HOTLINE, tody of children under We will not knowingly Moto Guzzi Breva professional out for only $15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines 1-877-877-9392. 18. This newspaper accept any adver!is- 1 100 2007, o n l y of The Bulletin's will not knowingly ac- ing for real estate miles. 11,600 *UNDER '500in total merchandise The Bulletin OVER'500 in total merchandise "Call A Service cept any advertising which is in violation of $5,500. To Subscribe call 7 days.................................................. $13.00 4 days.................................................. $25.00 for real estate which is this law. All persons 206-679-4745 Professional" 541-385-5800 or go to 14 days................................................ $20.00 in violation of the law. are hereby informed 7 days.................................................. $35.00 www.bendbulletin.corn Directory today! O ur r e aders a r e that all dwellings ad- Sport 1 5 0 *fllfust state prices in ad Ta o T ao 14 days .................................................$49.00 hereby informed that vertised are available S cooter, 2014 Al 26 days .................................................$79.00 BANK TURNED YOU Senior ApartmentGarage Sale Special all dwellings adver- on an equal opportu- m ost N ew , $ 9 9 5 . DOWN? Private party Independent Living 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $25.00 !call for commercial line ad rates) tised in this newspa- nity basis. The Bulle- 541-548-0345 will loan on real esALL-INCLUSIVE per are available on tin Classified tate equity. Credit, no with 3 meals daily an equal opportunity problem, good equity A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: 1 8 2 Bedrooms Avail. basis. To complain of Just bought a new boat? is all you need. Call NOW at StoneLodge. Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 8:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. d iscrimination ca l l Sell your old one in the Oregon Land MortCall 541-460-5323 HUD t o l l-free at classifieds! Ask about our gage 541-388-4200. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) Super Seller rates! 1-800-877-0246. The CLASSIFIED TELEPHONE HOURS: Check out the • 541-385-5809 LOCAL MONEY:Webuy REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well toll f re e t e lephone classifieds online MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. secured trust deeds 8 number for the hearV-Max 2009 750 as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin note, some hard money www.bondbulletin.corn ing i m p aired is Yamaha loans. Call Pat Kellev Redmond Homes reserves the right to reject any ad at Updated daily 1-800-927-9275. Lots of factory 541-382-3099 ext.13. any time. extras: windshield, bendhullefln.corn 834 Advertise your car! Looking for your next saddlebags, back is located at: AptiMultiplex NE Bend Add A Picture! rest, rear cargo emp/oyee? Reach thousands of readers! Place a Bulletin help 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. KcISnlh rack, bike cover, Call 541-385-5809 Copper Leaf Village motorcycle hoist, ad today and Bend, Oregon 97702 The Bulletin Classifieds wanted New C o n struction, reach over 60,000 alarm system, also t ownhouse style 2 set of new tires. readers each week. PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction m aster suites or 3 Your classified ad $1 1,000 is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right bdrm, 2.5 bath, ga541-508-1554 Houses for Rent will also appear on to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these rage, some fireplaces bendbulletin.corn SE Bend newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party and some wash ersi which currently reClassified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. dryers, spacious 604 ceives over kitchen, extra storage, $1950/4 Bdrm, 3 Bath, 1.5 million page Storage Rentals 2899 sq. ft. Larkspur gas heat, patio, no 476 476 476 476 views every month 61617 pets. Call Plus Prop- Neighborhood at no extra cost. Employment Employment Employment Employment 27'x13.5', 14' overhead K acf L a ne , B e n d. erty Man a gement Spacious Bulletin Classifieds Two Story door, thermostat Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities 541-389-2486. Get Results! Yamaha V Star 1100 heated, rec. 8 rest Home with stainless Call 385-5809 or room. GarajMahal on Steel appliances, LivClassic, year 2004, Add your web address Good classified sds tell The Bulletin Looking for your next ing Room, D i ning place your ad on-line -Many extras. 17K Crusher Ave. in Bend. to your ad and read- Assistant Professor the essential facts in an at Oregon State Uniemployee? Annual rent neg. Room, office,Huge miles. $4800. ers on The Bulletin's i n teresting Manner. Wdi t e bendbulletin.corn versity E x t ension caution when purPlace a Bulletin help 541-548-2109 Tenant pays utilities. from the readers view - not Den with vaulted ceilweb site, www.bendService and the 4-H chasing products or I wanted ad today and ing, gas fireplace, air 541-389-4111 bulletin.corn, will be the seller' s. Convert the 870 conditioning. central Youth Development services from out of reach over 60,000 771 able to click through 605 facts into benefits. Show Program is recruitreaders each week. heat, large f enced Boats & Accessories l the area. Sending automatically to your Lots the reader how the item will yard & triple car gaing for a f ull-time, c ash, checks, o r Your classified ad Roommate Wanted website. help them insomeway. rage RV and Boat tenure-track, Assis- l credit 14' 2006 Tracker fishi n formation will also appear on Acre in Bend city This parking. Great Value. Bigfoot Beverages is t ant Professor i n l may be subjected to bendbulletin.corn Cute 2 bdrm., 2 bath, ing boat, 15hp motor, One y ea r le a se. limits Flag lot in NE seeking a General Deschutes, Oregon. FRAUD. which currently advertising tip nice trailer. Like new. 1200 sq. ft . u nfurP lease c al l 54 1 area of newer homes. Manager. For details Salary is commenFor more informa- I receives over 1.5 nished house in NE brought to you by $4999. 541-719-0050 990-6899 for q uesAll underground utili& to apply, visit: surate with education about an adver- • million page views Bend near St. Charles 14' aluminum boat wl The Bulletin tions or viewing. ties at street, view from www.bigfootbevertion and experience. l tiser, you may call every month at M edical Center t o seninr central o cgonsince r9te building site. Down- trailer. Trailer has 2 ages.corn. Deadline To review posting the Oregon State no extra cost. house share. Utilities town, outdoor recre- brand new tires 8 11/2/1 5. EOE and a p ply, v i s it l Attorney General's Bulletin Classifieds included. $1 1 00/mo. Medical ation, all necessities in wheels. Trailer in exc. http: I/oregonstate.ed Office C o n sumer g Get Results! Call 541-215-5991. minutes. $13 5 ,000 cond., guaranteed no u /jobs. Apply t o Protection hotline at I Call 385-5809 630 MED SURG/EMERGENCY DEPT. Owner terms avail- leaks. 2 upholstered posting ¹ 16 0 8 6. I 1-877-877-9392. or place swivel seats, no moable 541-385-4790 Nurse Manager Rooms for Rent Closing: 11/f 0/2015. your ad on-line at tor. $2,900. Full-time OSU is an LThe Bulletin bendbulletin.corn Prime lot in SW Red541-410-4066 Daniel: on 10/4 @ Furnished room, no Wallowa Memorial Hospital AA/EOEfvets/Dismond. Cul-de-sac on St Francis Service abled. smoking/drugs. $550/mo Located in Enterprise, OR 43rd Ct., NW views, you sat behind me. + dep. 541-408-0846 Look at: People Look for Information 0.23 acre, $88,500. Please call for Current Oregon RN License About Products and Bendhomes.corn Room rental/Bend. Nice Sue Price, Broker lunch.thanx R. Current BLS, ACLS, PALS, TNCC, NRP master bdrm, private Services Every Daythrough for Complete Listings of Cascade Sofherby's 503.305.5191 Required Permanent h a l f-time The Bulletin Classifieds Ar ea Real Estate for Sale full bath, $500 mo. + Inf'i Realty LDRP Experience Preferred sec. dep/references. 541-408-7742 Crooked River Water541-350-1281 One Year Mgmt Experience Preferred 16' Seaswirl Tahoe shed Council position. Say "goodbuy" 775 Min. Three Years Supervisory Experience with trailer, 50 HP C ontact C hris f o r to that unused more information at Strong Communication, Interpersonal and Evinrude, bimini top, Illlanufacturedl 541-447-8567 or excellent condition. Organizational Skills item by placing it in Mobile Homes chris@crwc.info. Job $3,500 Excellent Benefit Package The Bulletin Classifieds opportunity c l osing 541-647-1918 List Your Home October 30th, 2015. Equal Opportunity Employer JandMHomes.corn Visit our website at www.wchcd.org We Have Buyers 541-385-5809 or contact Linda Childers © 541-426-5313 Get Top Dollar a e Financing Available. 541-548-5511 General 16' Smoker Craft • • 1 fishing boat, 50 HP :e. I In this position you will play a vital role Yam aha o u t board on our Sports Staff! motor w/electric tilt & Call 54 I -385-5809 / "Great Supplemental Income!! * electric trolling motor to r o m ot e o u r service The successful candidate will work w/remote control IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I mounted on bow, walk weeknight and Saturday shifts. • day night shift and other shifts as needed. We I Building/Contracting L a ndscaping/Yard Care through w i ndshield, • currently have openings all nights of the week.• exc. cond. $8,500. / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts 541-233-6223 NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land- To ttUUBlif: start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and 850 law requires anyone scape Contractors Law • Proven interpersonal skills / end between 2:00 a.m. an d 3: 30 a. m. Al l powho con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all Snowmobiles • Professional-level writing ability and • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• construction work to businesses that adsports background a must I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a I be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form • Working knowledge of traditional high Bminimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts I Construction Contrac- Landscape Construcschool sports • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: • Proven computer and proofreading skills / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackactive license p lanting, deck s , • Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadline17' SunCraft, ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and means the contractor fences, arbors, oriented environment 2 motors. $1,200. / other tasks. is bonded & insured. water-features, and in- • Must be able to successfully pass 541-593-7257 4-place enclosed InterVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of ira pre-employment drug screen IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl state snowmobile trailer COB l i c ense at rigation systems to be / including life insurance, short-term 8 long-term wl RockyMountain pkg, Find It in www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e If you are a sports-minded journalist and disability, 401 (k), paid vacation and sick time. contractor.corn Landscape Contrac$7500. 541-379-3530 The Bulletin Classifleds! have a positive "Can Do" attitude or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit WE WANT TO TALK TO YO!J! 541-385-5809 860 The Bulletin recom- number is to be in~ Please submit a completed application mends checking with cluded in all adverattention Kevin Eldred. Motorcycles & Accessories Please send your cover letter, resume, the CCB prior to con- tisements which indiApplications are available at The Bulletin and a work sample attention: tracting with anyone. cate the business has front desk (1 777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or sportsassistantObendbulletin.corn -.'= Some other t rades a bond, insurance and an electronic application may be obtained also req u ire addi- workers c ompensaupon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via I =tional licenses and tion for their employemail (keldred@bendbulletin.corn). No agencies or telephone ca/ls p/ease cert ifications. ees. For your protec18' 2 003 S u n tion call 503-378-5909 No phone calls please. or use our website: l Cruiser - pontoon Handyman BARON 2003 cuswww.lcblstate.or.us to * No resumes will be accepted * boat, fully equipped. tom built on '03 vul- I Has check license status only been used l I DO THAT! can chassis, 1600 before contracting with l a handful of times 5 Drug test is required prior to employment. Home/Rental repairs V-twin, 4600 miles, the business. Persons has been in covered EOE. Small jobs to remodels custom paint, fend- l storage. doing lan d scape A s k i ng Honest, guaranteed ers, wheels, etc., maintenance do not work. CCB¹151 573 comes with helmet, r equire an LC B l i The Bulletin Dennis 541-317-9768 servingcenrrar orecon since r903 windshield and cense. more! Discounted for e off-season. $8,495. Landscaping/Yard Care Find It in 541-280-9404 The Bulletin Classifleds! 541-385-5809 on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • ••11:00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

745

• 3:00 pm Fri. • 5:00 pm Fri.

The Bulletin

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ADVERTISING SALES EXECUTIVE

/~per'agua/iy Za~<0a ~r,. MANAGING

LANDSCAPES

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Res!dental/Commercial

Fall Clean Up

Sprinkler Blow-out Sprinkler Repair

Central Oregon Since 2006

Don't track it in all Winter

•Leaves •Cones • Needles • Debris Hauling

Winter Prep •Pruning .Aerating •Fertilizing

Compost Applications Use Less Water

$$$ SAVE $$$ Improve Plant Health

2015 Maintenance Package Available EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential Senior Discounts 541-390-1466 Same Day Response

Maintenance

•Fall Clean up eWeekly Mowing 8 Edging •Bark, Rock, Etc.

~LandlCa un •Landscape Construction Water Feature Installation/Maint. •Pave rs •Renovations •Irrigation Installation

Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759

Personal Services Af Your Service Errands & Notary I stand in line so you don't need to. errandsandnotary @ gmail.corn 541-815-1371

The Bulletin, Central Oregon's leading media company, is seeking a resourceful and performance driven person to sell print and online advertising to local businesses on behalf of The Bulletin daily newspaper, bendbulletin.corn website, and our suite of successful niche magazines.

To apply, respond with a resume and letter of interest to the attention of Jay Brandt, Advertising Director at jbrandt©bendbulletin.corn, or mail to: Advertising Director, The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708-6020. All hiring contingent upon passing a drug test. EOE

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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.

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.

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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.

To apply,please emailresume and any relevant writing samples to: spokesm aneditor © bendbulletin.corn

19' C lassic 1 9 90 Mastercraft ski boat.

Pro-star 190 conventional in-board custom trailer, exc. cond. $8,995. 541-389-6562

Qualified applicants will have print/online advertising experience. College degree preferred.

Candidates should have a proven track record of presenting solution sales strategies to local business prospects, as well as the ability to build and maintain strong relationships with clients. This full-time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting sales. Generous sales incentives can be earned by those who are able to move the revenue needle.

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2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and many extras. Stored inside $19,900 541-350-5425 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

derv>ng central oregon unre 1903


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCT 19, 2015

DAILY B R I D G E

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD willi'sbortz

C L U B M onday, October 19,2015

Heads or tails?

ACROSS 1 Hiking trail reference 4Sign in a radio studio 9 Massage 12Like most Jordanians 14Klum of "Project Runway" 1SLawyer's assignment 16Hockey team that plays at Staples Center 19"Same here!" 20 Chocolate wafer bar in a red wrapper 21 Super Bowl advertiser with Clydesdale horses 25 Don 2$ Sol o of "Star Wars" 29 Lab glasses 33 Pale-faced 34 What someone' s best at

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

Cy the Cynic says that the best way to resolve a hard decision is to flip a coin. When it's i n th e air, you' ll realize whether you' re hoping it will land heads or tails. Not every bridge-table decision a dmits t o th a t a p p r oach, b u t technique and card-reading will help. At today's four hearts, South ruffed the third club and drew t rumps, leaving him with none. He cashed four diamonds and led a spade, but East won the last two tricks with the ace of spades and a club. Down one. "I could have led a spade early," South shrugged, "but with my luck, I'd have guessed wrong."

What do you say? ANSWER: T o p a ss would b e timid. Partner could have as many as 18 points, and you might miss a game. But your hand is a bit too weak for a bid of 2NT, and your diamond support is inadequate for a raise to t hree diamonds. Take a "false preference" to two hearts to give partner another chance. West dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 45 K J95

QQ2 0 KQ92 4107 4

FOURTH CLUB South was right about waiting to draw trumps. He needed to lead a spade while dummy still had some trumps to protect against a fourth club lead. At Trick Four, South should lead a spade to the jack. West has shown the A-K of clubs but neither opened the bidding nor a c ted o ver S o uth's opening bid of one heart, so East is more likely to hold the ace of spades. This week: reading the cards. DAILY QUESTION

WEST 45 Q762

EAST 45 A108 9 765 4

Q83 0654

087 4Q986

A AK5 3

36 Online tech review site 37ABC a.m. show, for short 3$ Luxury watch

brand 39What a fawn might grow into 40 Food in a feedbag 42 "Don Giovanni" or "Don Pasquale" 43 Spanish miss: Abbr. 44 Golf shots off tees 46 Hip guy 4$ Donkeys 49 Lana Del singer with the 2014 ¹1 album "Ultraviolence" 52 Gets ready to strike, as a snake 53 Busy company around Mother' s Day and Valentine's Day 56 "S" on the dinner table

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

SOUTH

G A F F S

4o43

9 AK J109 0 A J103 4J2 W est P ass Pass Pass Pass

Nor t h Pas s 1 45 30 49

E ast Pass Pass Pass All Pass

Sou t h 19 20 39

A C M E

Youhold: 4 8 Q 7 6 2 9 8 3 () 6 5 4 A A K 5 3 . Your partner Opening lead — 4 K opens one heart, you respond one spade and he bids two diamonds. (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

C B E R

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

AL B A BA L L ERA L AU X F U T E P O N L U I CT O R HRI 5 T EE T H F F A C E T ER LA I R O AY O F P DE N E ES S

S C OT MA C A GH A L O L A B I C U R I O US R OT A LG I A E M O IL 5 EN D I NG S R OY A O U T I A N M I N G L E T S C H O P S S I D E E A j O B L O S S L S H E L LA C I GS A MI G O V I E RA V E R E L L S N A R E

57 Hersey's "A Bell for

1

58 Memorandum

12

60 1986 Nobel

16

Peace Prize winner Wiesel 81 Betray, as a naughty sibling 62 Frequent Arctic forecast 63 Suffix with Vietnam 64 Royal topper... or part of the logos of 16-, 21-, 38- and 53-Across 65 Lens of a camera, essentially DOWN 1 Niger's western neighbor 2 Yankee slugger with the most M.L.B. career grand slams, informally 3EI , Tex. 4 "Good heavens!" 5 Word before a maiden name 6 Have a bug 7 Suffix with cyan8 Insurers assume them 9 Captain or major 10Org. whose website has many links? 11Cream of the crop 13 Dugout figure 15 aci d (part of lemons and oranges) 17 Follower of "a" or "the," often 18 Ukraine's capital " ("Who 22 "Big cares?")

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PUZZLE BY ZHOUQIN BURNIKEL

23 Three-time Grammy winner Steve 24 Encrypt? 25Where Buddhists worship 26 Fed. fugitive hunters 27 "NOTtrue!" 30 Google smartphone released in 2014 31 "War and Peace" author

51 "Get what I mean?," informally

32Thieves 34 Bushy dos, informally 35 SAT, e.g. 41 Gracefully thin 43 Looks down on 45 course for many immigrants, for short 47 Vic t rola 49 Control tower device 50 Muse for Lord Byron

54 "WTF With

Maron" (popular podcast) 55 Harfford's state: Abbr. 56 "Get what I mean?" 59 Woolly mama

Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.corn/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.corn/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.corn/studentcrosswords.

DENNIS THE MENACE

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D IFFICULTY RATING: *4 4

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LOS ANGELESTIMES CROSSWORD

7+gr '4"

Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis

LIFE

STOP PCALINto My LIIVEA

SAFE HAVENS

ACROSS

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15 Humanlike machine of sci-fi 16 Edit menu option 17 Presidency's last

5 Pipe clog dissolver

19 '90$ TV title toon teen 20 Attaches with hIIP;1howw.oofohovonocomio.corn

E-moil: bholbrook1 @gmail.corn

ljMO 10ll 9 42015vwlllmargenthahr/ooL by Universal Ucllok wwwoocomicsAem

Why do you ca re? You' re still riding a ~ h orse, aren't y o u ?

string

21 Prefix with deed or lead 23 Quaint lodging 24 Six-pack muscles 25 Pre-cable reception aid 29 Stop for a moment 31 Abolish 32 Leading the field

33 Three: Pref. 34 Rapper Ki m ZITS AW.'TH&5E NG%5 ANPNiAF5 jNP

WOES Clyll.gbTlONS IS io:g.lN& NlF, HFCTOJZ!

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and 60-Across 41 Kit : c andy bar 42 "Bossypants" memoirist Tina 43 " y o u ready?" 44 Fire-setting crime

0Ã67813m2

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47 Boxing count 48 Gets a glimpse of

HERMAN

THAT SCRANIBLEo WORD GAME Oy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

NUMOD

Can voo take a break from the Jumble puns Io go to the bosch? What are we wodlno for2 ~,: )

m8 ooolo Tooune content Agency,LLc All RIOho Reeenred.

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length (including ads)

PELSEY

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Now arrange the circled letters

63 First chip in a pot 64 "inotherwords ..." 65 Cabinet dept. concerned with nukes

suggested by the above cartoon.

66 Leaning Tower

WHEN THE 'PLeINY'GUY WA5 ASKEt7 IF HE'P LIKE 7'O &O rO THE lÃACH HE 5AIP-

to form the surprise anows0 ao HERMAN

to laughingstock Licensing Int:, oust by Universal Uclick, 20Io

"lf I can't afford to buy a really expensive birthday gift, I don't buy anything at all. So I didn't buy you anything."

(Anoworo tomorrow) Saturday o

50 Commentator dissecting chips and putts 53 Bro or sis 54 Expected landing hr. 55 Wobbly walker 56 Green film on bronze 58 Clear liquors 60 Usual sitcom

Answer. When it came to training for races, the sprintor woo — STEADFAST

city 67 Stadium levels 68 b u c o: veal dish

disappearing

49 " H a ndmade fresh

all day" pizza chain 51 Like three Cy

beaches 40 Entourages 44 Issue in MayDecember romances 45 Spiral pasta 46 Slopes

Young games 52 Br i dge measures 57 "The Cosby Show" son 59 Bal t ic or Aegean 61 Sara whom

"nobody doesn' t 6 Scads of 47 Japanese floor mat centuries 4 8 Laurel of Laurel like " 7 Prez on a penny and Hardy 62 At a distance 8 Painter Rockwell 9 A red wine one is ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:

days, e.g.

2015 by King FeatureS yndi0816,100. WOrld rightS reSerVed

38 Reject as false 39 Causes of

hard to get out 10 Stick-in-theS CA R E T H E P A N T S 0 F F 11 Consecrate using L O V E T H E W A Y Y O U L I E oil UN I V E R S A L S T U D I O S 12 "Beats me" R I DE UT N E RO O S T 13 Steal a pup 18 Links warning C R I B S S L E E K 22 Vodka order, E LO H I M S C R U F F S familiarly O C A L A F A C E T S R I 0 26 Memorial L O D E D E N O V O J O L T column, for short A L E S E V E R E B E Z O S 27 Pita filling 28 Catch in a sting F A R GO N E E N T I R E 30 Bored with UL T R A A G E NT 34 Permit B U R RO B O H R M R E S 35 "Trainwreck" E N I GM A V A R I A T I 0 N S actress/ screenwriter B I O L O G I C A L WE A P O N Schumer E X T E N S I O N L A D D E RS 37 Attacked on foot 10/1 9/1 5 xwordeditore Iaol.corn 2

2

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By C C Burrdkel ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

68

10/19/15


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, OCTOBER 19 2015

875

880

881

885

925

933

935

Watercraft

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Canopies & Campers

Utility Trailers

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

ds published in eWa- Itasca 2003 31' Class C

tercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

( 2011 VERY cean ( 30+ mpg hwy (25+

541-508-9700

)I •

541-647-1236

on Chevy chassis, 64k mi., 454 motor,

new front brake pads, 6.5k Onan generator. $9000. 541-389-7669

B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , one slide, low mileage, very clean, lots of storage, $28,500. 541-639-9411 Sunseeker 2500 T S Columbus by Thor 30' 2015 by Forest River m otorhome, 1 9 9 4 , triple slide Class C. Chevy 454, B anks Purchased June p ower w / new e r 2015, used twice (wife transmission, w a lk- became ill) F ULLY around queen bed, Loaded with Platinum 41K miles, full gas Full Body paint, auto t ank! $ 9,500 o b o . level system, Arctic 541-598-6978 Pkg, rear camera, B luetooth. Also i n cludes NEW Adco allweather coach cover. $74,900. Call Jim cell 209.401.7449 (can email addt'I photos) Fleetwood D i scovery Tow Dolly Roadmaster, 40' 2003, diesel, w/all m odel 3 4 77 , li k e options - 3 slide outs, new-never used, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, electric breaks, magetc., 34,000 miles. netic lights w/wiring Wintered in h eated harness, professionshop. $78,995 obo. ally wired. $ 1450. 541-447-8664 541-419-5151

, • i% -

Unique R-Pod 2013 trailer-tent combo, f ully l oaded, e x tended service contract and bike rack. $16,000. 541-595-3972 or 503-780-4487

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.corn which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn 882

Northlander 1993 17' camper, Polar 990, good shape, new fridge, A/C, queen bed, bathroom, indoor/outdoor shower, lots of storage, customized to fit newer pickups, $4500 obo. 541-419-9859.

e

Chevrolet 2500 HD, interior, air, cruise, 2003, 4x4, 8.1L, Alli- ( tilt, single CD, rear son trans., 99,650 mi, defrost, factory winLS, AC, all p ower,( dow tint, power locks cruise ctrl., $1 6,500, & windows. N e w I Toyo AT tires (less I call 541-280-0707 than 6k miles and ~ siped). New AGM ~ GA L LW b attery. Alw a y s ~ maintained. Great ~ TODAY 5 winter Chevy Pickup 1978, [ commuter driver. $13 , 500 long bed, 4x4, frame I OBO Call or textI up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmis503-701-2256. sion w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom 931 interior and carpet, Automotive Parts, n ew wheels a n d Service & Accessories tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. Toyota FJ C ruiser OBO. 4.2L 6 cyl. engine from $12,000 2012, 64K miles. all or 2001 Chevy T r ail- 541-536-3889 hwy, original owner, blazer, complete with 541-420-621 5. never been off road computer, starter & or accidents, tow alternator. A p p rox. pkg, brand new tires, 15K mi., stored inside very clean. $26,000. for many years, $800 Call or text Jeff at obo. 541-617-0211 541-729-4552 Jeep Wrangler JK 4 d oor M opar s i d e 975 step/running board, Chevy Silverado Automobiles $200. 541-480-0008 2500HD 2002, 4x4 Crew cab, canopy, Studded tires (4) on 85K original miles, rims 2 2 5/55R-17XL LOADED! Used one s eason $16,250 OBO. $385. 541-312-9312 541-647-0565

908 Aircraft, Parts

& Service

1/3 interest in

Columbia400,

Financing available.

$125,000

(located Io Bend) 541-288-3333

541-385-5809 I I'

'illl

R

503-459-1580.

541-390-7179

Winnebago Journey

CHECKYOUR AD

2001 36' 2nd owner,

Lexington 2006 283TS class B+motor coach, full GTS pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 burner range, half time oven, 3 slides w/awnings, Onan gen., King Dome satellite system, Ford V10 Triton, auto-leveling system, new tires, Falcon tow bar. Non-smoker, maintained in dry storage. Can email additional pictures. $55,000. 541-520-3407

300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 80k miles. D r iver s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat screen TVs, refer, generator, inverter, King Dome, tow bar. Non-smoker, no pets, no c hildren. C lean, and w e ll maintained, $43,000 541-390-1472.

Monaco Monarch 31 ' 2006, Ford V 10 , 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides, queen b ed 8 hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, convection microwave, 2 TVs, tow

package.

PRICE REDUCTION! $59,000. 541-815-6319

541-385-5662

5af 1-385-5809

541-526-9534 881

Travel Trailers 83 Xe esc

19' Ampex. 2011. Slide out and other extras. Tows well $12,500. 541.316.1367

Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or refinance. Call 541-410-5649

Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available. Call 541-815-2144

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

Buick Lucerne 2008 Very clean 6 cylinder, auto., leather interior, 87k mi. $6950 Will consider part trade. Call or text Ron at 541-419-5060

Need to get an brake pads, gauges, ad in ASAP? warn hubs, dual ex- GMC Pickup 1983 w/ You can place it haust, 5 wide traction topper, 4 wheel drive, r uns good, go o d online at: tires, 5 new spoke, winter truck. $1,500 www.bendbulletin.corn chrome wheels. NO obo. 907-310-1877 rust, garage stored. $7,495 OBO! 541-385-5809 (775) 513-0822

Toyota Tacoma 2006, reg. cab, 4x4, 5 spd standard 4 cyl engine, 2 2+ mpg, one s e nior owner, non-smoker, well maintained, n e a rly new t ires, o r iginal spare near new, runs excellent. $ 1 4 ,750. 541-633-9895

Mercedes 450 SL 1979 Roadster, soft & hard tops, always garaged, 122k mi., new tires, shocks and brakes, $7900. 541-548-5648

1947 Stinson 108-2,

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T on the first day it runs hanger in Prineville. to make sure it is corDry walled, insulated, rect. nSpellcheck" and and painted. $23,500. human errors do ocTom, 541.788.5546 cur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. The Bulletin Classified

W innebago Le Sharo 1985, $5,900. Good Condition. Renault Turbo Diesel (24 miles/gal.). Includes good C Band radio.

Jeep CJ5 4x41967, first year of the orig. Dauntless V-6, last year of the nAII metal" body! Engine overhauled: new brakes, fuel pump, steering gear box, battery, alternator, emergency

32 ft. 5th wheel, 2

engine has been gone through, the m a gs h ave b ee n g one through, new carb, brakes rebuilt, new ins trument panel 8 gauges, new ELT, 8 much more. Fresh annual.Signed offby Bend Ace mechanics, Bend airport. $24,000.

Mercedes-Benz

SLK230 2003, exc. cond., auto, convertible retractable hard top. 54,250 miles, carfax available.$13,000. 541-389-7571

BMW Z3 R o adster 1 997, $4500. C a ll 541-548-0345 to see.

Dodge Big Horn Ram 2500, 2005, 6 speed manual. Extra tires and rims canopy goes with. Excellent condition, well mai n tained, runs great. 160K miles. $2 8 ,500 541-620-1212

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sunbeam Tiger 1966 Very clean car. Always garaged since repaint 30 y e a rs ago. Original 260 V-8 engine totally rebuilt 9,400 miles ago. Factory hard top, good condition soft top, many LAT dealer sold options so car is considered "stock" at car shows. I have owned the car f or 18 year s . $ 70,000. Te l 5 4 1 548 3458

Toyota FJ40 Landcruiser 1977 with winch, $18,000 541-389-7113, Michelle

Cadillac CTS 2010, V 6 I n j ection, 6 Speed A utomatic. Luxury series. Exterior: Black Raven, Interior: Light Titanium/Ebony. 22,555 miles. 4 door. Excellent condition all

Porsche B o x ster 2008, exc. c ond., less than 18K mi., black/black, s p o rt pkg., stored in wint er. $25,0 0 0 . 224-558-1887, Bend. PRIUS C3 2014 w/12,000 miles, as-

Small Block 327

Modified engine. Large duration roller Cam. Edlebrock Alum Heads and more. $9,000 Runs Great! 541-977-2830

F ord Explorer X LT 1991 r eliable w e l l cared for, clean, nonsmoking, incl. 4 studwinter tires, new VW Beetle c lassic ded H D b attery, 1 9 0 k 1972, Exc. shape, no miles, 20k towed berust, very clean, fully hind moto r homeFord Taurus 2007 88k restored, has had 2 4 studded tires $1500 obo Message miles, owners. $4, 0 0 0. 541-241-4896. i ncluded w/ri m s . 541-815-8147 $5300. 541-416-9566

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs.

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

C6 MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015•THE BULLETIN

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Legal Notices

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LEGAL NOTICE T RUSTEE'S N O TICE OF SALE T.S.

No.:

OR-15-669037-NH

Reference is made to that certain deed made by, C O NSIGLIA R. W H ITNEY AND KALVIN R. WHITNEY, AS TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY A ND CONSIGLIA M. DELEONE. as Grantor to PACIFIC NORTHWEST TITLE INS. CO., as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION S YSTEMS, I NC .

construed a s a waiver of any fees owing to the Benefic iary u nder t h e Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. W hereof, not i c e hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 1 2/28/2015

at the hour of 10:00 AM , S t andard of Time, a s e s t ablished by s e ction 187.110, O r e gon Revised S t a tues, I nside th e m ain lobby of the County C ourthouse 1 1 6 4 NW Bond S t reet ("MERS") AS B end, Ore g o n NOMINEE FO R 9 7701 County o f D ECISION O N E DESCHUTES MORTGAGE COMState of Oregon, sell PANY, LLC. , as at public auction to Beneficiary, dated the highest bidder 7/6/2007, recorded for cash the interest 7/13/2007, i n offii n th e s a i d d e cial records of DEscribed real propSCHUTES County, erty w h ic h the Oregon in grantor had or had book/reel/volume power to convey at No. a n d/or as the time of the exfee/file/instrument/ ecution by him of microfilm / r ecepthe said trust deed, tion number together with a ny 2007-38682 coverinterest which the ing the following degrantor or his sucscribed real propcessors in interest erty situated in said acquired after the County, and State, execution of s aid to-wit: APN: 160304 trust deed, to sat161202 D001900 isfy the foregoing LOT SIX OF NINE obligations thereby VIEW E S T ATES, s ecured and t h e DESCHUTES costs and expenses COUNTY, ORof sale, including a EGON Commonly reasonable charge known as: 6693 SW by the trustee. No67th Street, Redtice is further given that an y p e rson mond, OR 9 7756 The u n d ersigned named in Section 86.778 of Oregon hereby certifies that based upon busiRevised S t a tutes ness records there has the right to have are no known writthe foreclosure proten assignments of ceeding dismissed the trust deed by the and the trust deed t rustee or by t h e reinstated by paybeneficiary and no ment to the benefiappointments of a ciary of the entire successor t rustee amount then due have been made, (other than s u ch except as recorded portion of said prinin the records of the cipal as would not county or counties then be due had no in which the above default o c curred), described real propt ogether with t h e erty i s si t uated. costs, trustee's and Further, no action attorney's fees and has been instituted curing any o t her to recover the debt, default complained of in the Notice of or any part thereof, now remaining seDefault by tendercured by the trust ing t h e per f ordeed, or, if such acmance required untion has been instider the obligation or tuted, such action trust deed, at any has been dismissed time prior to f i ve except as permitted days before the date by ORS 86.752(7). last set for sale. Both the beneficiary Other t h a n as and the trustee have shown of r e cord, elected to sell the neither the beneficiary nor the trustee said real property to satisfy the obligahas any actual notions secured by tice of any person said trust deed and having or claiming notice has been reto have any l ien corded pursuant to upon or interest in Section 86.752 (3) the real p roperty of Oregon Revised h ereinabove d e Statutes. There is a scribed subsequent default by grantor or to the interest of the other person owing trustee in the trust an obligation, perdeed, or of any sucformance of which is cessor in interest to secured by the trust g rantor or of a ny lessee or other perdeed, or by the successor in interest, son in possession of with respect to proor occupying the v isions ther e i n property, e x c ept: which authorize sale N ame an d L a st in the event of such Known Address and Nature of R i g ht, provision. The default for which foreLien o r In t e rest closure is made is Consiglia Whitney grantor's failure to 6693 S W 67t h pay when due the Street R e dmond, following sums: DeOR 97756 Original linquent Payments: Borrower Ka l v in Payment InformaWhitney 6693 SW tion From Through 67th Street R edTotal Pay m ents mond, OR 9 7 756 7/1/2014 9/9/2015 Consiglia Deleone $ 21,931.49 Lat e 6693 S W 67t h Charges From Street R e dmond, Through Total Late OR 97756 For Sale Charges 7/1/2014 I nformation C a ll: 9/9/2015 $ 9 8 1.06 888-988-6736 or AdLogin to: Beneficiary's vances, Costs, And Salestrack.tdsf.corn Expenses Escrow In construing this Advances $2,239.34 notice, the singular Total Ad v ances: includes the plural, $2,239.34 T O TAL the word "grantor" FORECLOSURE includes any sucCOST: $ 4 ,696.00 cessor in interest to TOTAL REQUIRED this grantor as well TO RE I NSTATE: as any other person owing an obligation, $28,669.60 TOTAL REQUIRED TO the performance of PAYOFF: which is secured by $323,596.39 By the trust deed, and reason of the dethe words "trustee" fault, th e b e nefi- and "beneficiary" inciary has declared clude their respecall sums owing on tive successors in the obligation seinterest, if any. Purcured by the trust suant to O r egon deed i mmediately Law, this sale will due and payable, not be deemed final those sums being until the Trustee's the following, to- wit: deed has been isThe installments of sued b y Q u ality principal and interLoan Service Corest which became poration of Washdue o n 7 / 1/2014, ington . If any irand all subsequent regularities are installments of prindiscovered within 10 cipal and interest days of the date of through the date of this sale, the trustee this Notice, p l us will rescind the sale, a mounts that a r e return the buyer' s due for late charges, money and t a ke delinquent property f urther action a s taxes, i n s urance n ecessary. If t h e adpremiums, sale is set aside for v ances made o n any reason, includsenior liens, taxes ing if the Trustee is and/or insurance, unable to convey trustee's fees, and title, the Purchaser any attorney fees at the sale shall be and court c o sts e ntitled only to a arising from or asreturn of the mons ociated with t h e i es paid t o th e beneficiaries efforts Trustee. This shall to protect and prebe the Purchaser's serve its security, all sole and exclusive of which must be remedy. The purchaser shall have paid as a condition of reinstatement, inno further recourse cluding all sums that against the Trustor, shall accrue through t he T rustee, t h e r einstatement o r Beneficiary, the pay-off. Nothing in Beneficiaryls Agent, this notice shall be or the Beneficiary's

Attorney. I f you Note secured thereby have pr e v iously is in default and the been d i s charged Beneficiary seeks to through bankruptcy, foreclose the T rust you may have been Deed for failure to r eleased of p e r- pay: M onthly paysonal liability for this ments in the amount loan in which case of $745.75 each, due t his letter i s i n the twenty-sixth of tended to exercise each month, for the the note h o lders months of May 2013 through June 2015; right's against the real property only. plus late charges and As required by law, advances; plus any you are hereby notiunpaid real property fied that a negative taxes or liens, plus credit report reflectinterest. S.AMOUNT ing on your credit DUE. T h e a mount record may be subdue on the Note which mitted to a credit rei s secured by t h e port agency if you Trust Deed referred to fail to fulfill the terms herein is: P r incipal of your credit oblibalance in the amount gations. Wi t h out of $42,141.50; plus limiting the trustee's interest at the rate of disclaimer of repre1 1.990% per annum sentations or warfrom April 26, 2013; ranties, Oregon law plus late charges of requires the trustee $ 969.54; plus a d to state in this novances and foreclotice that some resisure attorney fees and dential property sold costs. 6.SALE OF at a trustee's sale PROPERTY. The m ay have b e en Trustee hereby states used in manufacthat the property will turing methamphetbe sold to satisfy the amines, the chemiobligations secured by cal components of t he Trust Deed. A which are known to Trustee's Notice of be toxic. ProspecDefault and Election tive purchasers of to Sell Under Terms residential property of Trust Deed has should be aware of been recorded in the this potential danOfficial Records of ger before deciding Deschutes C o unty, to place a bid for Oregon. 7. TIME OF this property at the SALE. Date: Decemtrustee's sale. NOber 17, 2015. Time: T ICE T O TEN 11:00 a.m. Place:DeANTS: T E NANTS s chutes Coun t y OF THE SUBJECT Courthouse, 1164 NW REAL PROPERTY Bond Street, Bend, HAVE C E R TAIN Oregon. 8.RIGHT TO PROTECTIONS REINSTATE. Any AFFORDED TO person named in ORS THEM UNDER ORS 86.778 has the right, 86.782 AND POSat any time that is not S IBLY UNDE R later than five days F EDERAL LAW . before the T r ustee ATTACHED TO conducts the sale, to THIS NOTICE OF have this foreclosure S ALE, A N D IN d ismissed and t h e CORPORATED Trust Deed reinstated HEREIN, IS A NOby payment to t he T ICE T O TEN Beneficiary of the enANTS THAT SETS tire amount then due, FORTH SOME OF other than such porTHE PRO T EC- tion of the principal as TIONS THAT ARE would not then be due AVAILABLE TO A had no default ocTENANT OF T HE curred, by curing any S UBJECT R E A L other default that is PROPERTY AND c apable o f be i n g WHICH SETS cured by tendering the FORTH CERTAIN performance required REQUIREMENTS under the obligation or T HAT MUST B E Trust Deed and by COMPLIED WITH paying all costs and BY ANY T ENANT expenses actually inIN ORDER TO OBcurred in enforcing the TAIN T H E AFobligation and Trust F ORDED PRO Deed, together with TECTION, AS t he t r ustee's a n d R EQUIRED U N a ttorney's fees n ot DER ORS 86.771 exceedingthe amount QUALITY MAY BE provided i n ORS CONSIDERED A 86.778. NOTICE REDEBT C O L LEC- GARDING P O TENTOR ATTEMPTING TIAL HAZARDS. (This TO COLLECT A notice is required for D EBT AN D A N Y notices of sale sent on INFORMATION or after January 1, O BTAINED W I LL 2015.) Without limitB E U S E D FO R ing the trustee's disTHAT P U RPOSE. claimer of representaTS No: tions or w arranties, OR-'I 5-669037-NH Oregon law requires Dated: 8/4 / 2015 the trustee to state in Quality Loan Serthis notice that some vice Corporation of residential p r operty Washington, as sold at a trustee's sale Trustee Signature may have been used By: Alma in manufacturing Clark, Ass i stant methamphetamines, Secretary Trustee's the chemical compoMailing A d d ress: nents of which are Quality Loan Serknown to b e t o xic. vice C o r p . of Prospective purchasW ashington C / 0 ers o f re s i dential Quality Loan Serproperty should be vice Co r poration aware of this poten411 Ivy Street San tial danger before deDiego, CA 9 2101 ciding to place a bid Trustee's Physical for this property at the Address: Q u a lity trustee's sale. You Loan Service Corp. may reach the Orof Washington 108 egon S tate B a r 's 1 st A v e S o uth, Lawyer Referral SerSuite 202, Seattle, vice at 503-684-3763 W A 9 8 10 4 To l l or toll-free in Oregon Free: (866) at 800-452-7636 or 925-0241 I DS Pub you may visit its web¹0089500 site at: 10/1 2/2015 www.osbar.org. Le10/1 9/2015 galassistance may be 10/26/2015 available if you have a 11/2/2015 low income and meet federal poverty guideLEGAL NOTICE lines. For more inTRUSTEE'S NOTICE formation and a diOF S A L E . The rectory of legal aid to T rustee under t h e programs, g o terms of th e T rust http: //www.oregonAny Deed desc r ibed lawhelp.org. herein, at the direc- questions regarding tion of the Beneficiary, this matter should be hereby elects to sell directed to Lisa Sumt he p r operty d e - mers, Paralegal, (541) 686-0344 scribed in the Trust (TS ¹31940.4). D ATED: Deed to satisfy the July 29, 2015. Nancy obligations secured thereby. Pursuant to K. Cary, Successor ORS 86.771, the fol- Trustee, He r shner Hunter, LLP, P.O. Box lowing information is provided: 1. PARTIES: 1475, Eugene, OR 97440. Grantor: INVESTOR'S PROPERTIES, LLC. Trustee:AMERITITLE. LEGAL NOTICE Successor Trustee: T RUSTEE'S N O N ANCY K . C A R Y. TICE OF SALE T.S. Beneficiary:YERN J. No.: JONES AND CONOR-14-641390-NH N IE C . JON E S , Reference is made TRUSTEES, UNDER to that certain deed THE JONES LOVING made by, MARK E. TRUST, DATED MORRIS AND FEBRUARY 18, 1997. SHANNON M O R2.DESCRIPTION OF RIS, HUS B AND PROPERTY: The AND W I F E as real property is deGrantor to F IRST scribed as follows: Lot AMERICAN TITLE 174, Block PP, DES- INSURANCE C HUTES RIVE R COMPANY, as WOODS, r e corded trustee, in favor of March 22, 1962, in MORTGAGE Plat Book 6 , D e s- ELECTRONIC chutes County, OrREGISTRATION egon. 3. RECORDS YSTEMS, I N C . , ING. The Trust Deed ("MERS") AS was recorded as fol- NOMINEE FO R lows: Date Recorded: H OME123 C O R November 26, 2008. PORATION, A Recording No. CALIFORNIA 2008-47227. Official CORPORATION R ecords o f Des - as Ben e ficiary, chutes County, Ordated 9/6/2005, reegon. 4.DEFAULT. corded 9/16/2005, The Grantor or any in official records of other person o bliDESCHUTES gated on the T rust County, Oregon in Deed and Promissory book/reel/volume

No. a n d/or

as

fee/filefinstrument/

microfilm / r eception number 2005-62671 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and State, to-wit: APN: 186039 171216DD00700 LOT TWENTY-ONE

(21),

WIS H ING I, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 6 3 268 W ISHING W E L L LN, B E ND , O R 97701 The undersigned hereby certifies that based upon business r e cords there are no known written assignments of the trust deed by the trustee or by the beneficiary and no appointments of a successor t rustee have been made, except as recorded in the records of the county or counties in which the above described real property i s si t u ated. Further, no action has been instituted to recover the debt, or any part thereof, now remaining secured by the trust deed, or, if such action has been instituted, such action has been dismissed except as permitted by ORS 86.752(7). Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.752 (3) of Oregon Revised Statutes. There is a default by grantor or other person owing an obligation, performance of which is secured by the trust deed, or by the successor in interest, with respect to prov isions ther e in which authorize sale in the event of such provision. The default for which foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: Delinquent Payments: Payment Information From Through Total Pay ments 2/1/2014 8/31/2015 $ 28,654.36 La t e Charges From Through Total Late Charges 2/1/2014 8/31/2015 $1,926.22 Beneficiary's Advances, Costs, And W ELL, PHASE

the highest bidder for cash the interest i n th e s a i d d e scribed real property w h ic h the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the e xecution of s a i d trust deed, to satisfy the f oregoing obligations thereby s ecured and t h e

costs and expenses

of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that an y p e rson named in Section 86.778 of O regon Revised S t atutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then d ue (other than s u ch portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default o c curred), t ogether with t h e costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any o t her default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering t h e per f ormance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to f i ve days before the date last set fo r s a le. Other t h a n as shown of r e cord, neither the beneficiary nor the trustee has any actual notice of any person having or claiming to have any l ien upon or interest in the real p roperty h ereinabove d e scribed subsequent to the interest of the trustee in the trust deed, or of any successor in interest to

grantor or of any lessee or other person in possession of or occupying the property, e x cept:

N ame an d L a s t Known Address and Nature o f Ri g ht, Lien o r In t erest M ARK M O R RI S 63268 W I SHING WELL L N B E N D, OR 97701 Original Borrower S H A NN ON MOR R I S 63268 W I SHING WELL L N B E N D, OR 97701 Original Borrower For Sale I nformation C a l l : Expenses Corpo8 88-988-6736 o r rate Adva n ces Login to: Salestrack.tdsf.corn $1,225.50 Hazard Insurance $1,531.89 In construing this notice, the singular Escrow Advances includes the plural, ($11,327.33) Total Advances: the word "grantor" includes any suc($8,569.94) TOTAL FORECLOSURE cessor in interest to COST: $ 4 ,529.75 this grantor as well TOTAL REQUIRED as any other person TO R E I NSTATE: owing an obligation, the performance of $35,110.33 TOTAL REQUIRED TO which is secured by PAYOFF: the trust deed, and $245,376.83 By the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" inreason of the default, th e b e n efi- clude their respecciary has declared tive successors in all sums owing on interest, if any. Purthe obligation sesuant to O r egon cured by the trust Law, this sale will deed i mmediately not be deemed final due and payable, until the Trustee's those sums being deed has been isthe following, to- wit: sued by QUALITY The installments of LOAN S E R VICE principal and interCORPORATION OF est which became WASHINGTON . If due o n 2 / 1/2014, any irregularities are and all subsequent discovered within 10 installments of prindays of the date of this sale, the trustee cipal and i nterest through the date of will rescind the sale, this Notice, p l us return the buyer' s a mounts that a r e m oney and t a ke f urther action a s due for late charges, delinquent property n ecessary. If t h e taxes, in s urance sale is set aside for adpremiums, any reason, including if the Trustee is vances made on senior liens, taxes unable to c onvey and/or i n surance, title, the Purchaser trustee's fees, and at the sale shall be any attorney fees e ntitled only to a and c o urt c o s ts return of the monarising from or asi es paid t o th e s ociated with t h e Trustee. This shall beneficiaries efforts be the Purchaser's to protect and presole and exclusive serve its security, all remedy. The purof which must be chaser shall have no further recourse paid as a condition of reinstatement, inagainst the Trustor, cluding all sums that t he T rustee, t h e shall accrue through Beneficiary, the r einstatement o r Beneficiary's Agent, pay-off. Nothing in or the Beneficiary's this notice shall be Attorney. I f you construed a s a have pre v iously waiver of any fees been d i scharged owing to the Benefithrough bankruptcy, c iary u nder t h e you may have been Deed of Trust purr eleased of p e r suant to the terms of sonal liability for this the loan documents. loan in which case W hereof, no t i ce t his letter i s i n hereby is given that tended to exercise the note h o lders Q UALITY LO A N SERVICE CORPOright's against the RATION OF real property only. WASHINGTON, the As required by law, undersigned trustee you are hereby notiwill on 1 2/23/2015 fied that a negative at the hour of 10:00 credit report reflectAM , S t andard of ing on your credit Time, a s e s t ab- record may be sublished by s e ction mitted to a credit re187.110, O r e gon port agency if you Revised S t a tues, fail to fulfill the terms I nside th e m a i n of your credit oblilobby of the County gations. Wi t h out C ourthouse 1 1 6 4 limiting the trustee's NW Bond S t reet disclaimer of repreB end, Ore g o n sentations or war9 7701 County o f ranties, Oregon law DESCHUTES requires the trustee State of Oregon, sell to state in this notice that some resiat public auction to

dential property sold at a trustee's sale m ay have b e e n used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to be toxic. Prospective purchasers of residential property should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at the trustee's sale. NOT ICE T O TEN ANTS: T E NANTS OF THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY HAVE CE R TAIN PROTECTIONS AFFORDED TO THEM UNDER ORS 86.782 AND POSS IBLY UNDE R F EDERAL L A W . ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE OF S ALE, AN D IN CORPORATED HEREIN, IS A NOT ICE T O TEN ANTS THAT SETS FORTH SOME OF THE PRO T ECTIONS THAT ARE AVAILABLE TO A TENANT OF THE S UBJECT R E A L P ROPERTY A N D WHICH SETS FORTH CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS T HAT MUST B E COMPLIED WITH BY ANY TENANT IN ORDER TO OBTAIN T H E AFF ORDED PRO -

T ECTION, AS R EQUIRED U N DER ORS 86.771 QUALITY MAY BE CONSIDERED A DEBT CO L LECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A D EBT AND A N Y INFORMATION O BTAINED W I L L B E U S E D FO R THAT PURPOSE. TS No: OR-14-641390-NH Dated: 8/7 / 2015 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as Trustee S ignature By: Alma Clark, Ass i stant Secretary Trustee's Mailing A d d ress: Quality Loan Service C o r p . of W ashington C / 0 Quality Loan Service Co r poration 411 Ivy Street San Diego, CA 9 2 101 Trustee's Physical Address: Q u a lity Loan Service Corp. of Washington 108 1 s t A v e S o uth, Suite 202, Seattle, W A 9 8 10 4 To l l

Free: (866) 925-0241 I DS Pub ¹0089352 10/'I 2/2015 10/1 9/2015 10/26/2015 11/2/2015

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7236.25659 R e f erence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d made by Richard J. Plestina, as grantor, to A m e rititle, as trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for American Br o kers Conduit, its succes-

sors and assigns, as

b eneficiary, da t e d 03/27/07, r e c orded 03/30/07, in the mort-

gage records of Des-

chutes County, Oregon, as 2007-18849 and subsequently assigned to U.S. Bank N.A., as trustee, on behalf of the holders of the J.P. Morgan Mortgage Trus t 2007-S2 M o r tgage Pass-Through Certificates by Assignment recorded as 2014-038365, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot 20 of the Bluffs at River Bend, Phases 3 8 4, Des c hutes County, Ore g o n. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 941 Southwest Vantage Point Way Bend, OR 97702 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.752(3); the default for which the foreclos ure i s m a d e i s grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: m onthly of payments $2,999.99 beginning 09/01/09; plus prior accrued late charges of $900.00; plus advances of $4,704.51; together with title expense, costs, trustee's

fees and

attorney's

fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and i ts inte r est therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared all s u ms

owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed i mmediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $575,994.75 with interest thereon at the

rate of 6.25 percent per annum beginning 08/01/09; plus prior accrued late charges of $900.00; plus advances of $4,704.51; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and i t s int e rest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if a p plicable. W HEREFORE, n o tice hereby is given

that the undersigned t rustee will o n D e cember 28, 2015 at the hour o f 1 0 : 00 o' clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the i nterest in t h e d e scribed real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor

or grantor's succes-

sors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and e xpenses of sale, mcluding a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a written request that c orn plies with t h a t statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or b y f i r st class, certified mail, r eturn r eceipt r e quested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee.corn. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to h ave t h is foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t her d e fault complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance r equired under t h e o bligation o r tr u st deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and t rust deed together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 . 778. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.778 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if r equired by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word " grantor" i n cludes any successor i n interest t o t h e grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors i n interest, if a n y . Without limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representation or warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in this notice that some residential

p roperty sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing metha mphetamines, t h e chemicalcomponents of which are kn


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