Bulletin Daily Paper 10-22-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since 1903$'i

THURSDAY October 22,2015 Ij;

? Picking ahealth plan SPORTS • C1

HEALTH• D1

bendbulletin.corn

• The Oregon Supreme Court agreesto hear few cases,however By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Opponents of OSU-Cascades' new west-side campus have appealed their case to

the Oregon Supreme Court,

the last remaining option for the group after a number of lower bodies sided with the university. Truth in Site, an organiza-

tion of neighbors who have

long opposed the campus, argues the university should be required to submit a plan for any future expansion beyond

underway. The school hopes to open its campus in a year, though it is also exploring the possibility of expanding onto two larger, adjacent properties.

the 10 acres it currently owns

One ofthose isa 46-acre

and on which construction is

pumice mine, while the oth-

landfill owned by Deschutes County. Rehabbing either property presents logistical challenges

might never buy. So far, that argument has been backed by city staff, an independent hearings officer, the Bend City Council, a state land use

and the university has ar-

board and the Oregon Court

gued it shouldn't be forced to account for any land it

of Appeals.

er is a 76-acre demolition

o

TODAY' S READERBOARD

t

4s

See Site /A5

2016 RACE

g~y

Biden's

Livestock and antidiotics — Backers of a banare hopeful one will pass in Oregon.D1

deasion

Also in Health —Predicting

is a boost for Clinton

•I

seizures with smartwatches.D4 Emeji —The secret origins of those silly smiling faces.A3

And a Wed exclusive-

By Jennifer Epstein Bloomberg News

Doesa Berkeley astronomer's downfall signal shift in attitudes over sexual harassment? bonribullotin.corn/oxtras

WASHINGTON-

Many people close to Hillary Clinton didn't think that Vice President Joe

Biden was going to decide torun forpresident— or

EDITOR'5CHOICE

More say they use marijuana than ever

• Application window for OregonPromisegrant opens Nov. 1 —though not all prospective communitycollege students will qualify YP By Abby Spegman The Bulletin

By Elaho Izadi The Washington Post

eginning next month, oregon students can apply for grants to cover their tuition at the state's community college.

The number of adults

using marijuana more than doubled in recent years, according to new research

culling data from two massive surveys. In 2001, just 4.1 percent

Some students, that is.

Senate Bill 81, known as Oregon Prom-

dents will be awarded grants of at least $1,000. To qual-

findings were published

ify for the 2016-17 school year, students must graduate from an Oregon high school in spring or summer 2016 with a 2.5 cumulative grade-point average or higher, or earn a GED in the same time. They must also have

during that 12-year time frame, likely because the

been an Oregon resident for at least 12 months prior to enrolling in community college and do so within six months of graduating or earning a GED. "It is very specific," said Endi Hartigan, communications and policy specialist for the state's Higher Education Coordinating Commission.

overall number of adults

"That's what we want people to understand, it starts next year and it' s

using increased so much. Increased marijuana

use came during roughly the same time frame that Americans' attitudes about

legalizing the drug shifted; less than one-third of Americans were in favor

of legalizing marijuana in 2002, while a majority favored legalization in 2013, according to the Pew

Research Center.

day when he announced

Who iseligidle?

geared largely to the class of 2016 and GED (completers).s

1 of 3 states In launching the program, Oregon joins Tennessee and Minnesota in offering free community college, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, and at least 11 additional states introduced legis-

lation to create programs in the 2015 session. The Tennessee Promise is similar to Oregon's, while Minnesota is running a pilot program designed for students entering high-demand fields. To apply for an Oregon Promise grant, a student must complete an application online at www.OregonPromise.corn between Nov. 1, 2015, and March 1, 2016, and complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA.

into the race was a victory for a campaign that's felt its momentum gaining in recent days. Biden's entry into the Democratic field would

have shifted dynamics, creating new challenges — and adding new costsfor the Clinton campaign. Instead, the Democratic front-runner's team can

stay the course it set months ago, with no other establishment opponents,

and needs to focus on only one major opponent in the primary, Bernie Sanders. The Vermont senator has

What kindofmoneyarewe talkingadout?

stituencies but is struggling to build support among

Amountlawmakers $1p iiiljjigll program for the first year.

Sanders' efforts to do so, and to solidify his support from union leaders — who like his populist rhetoric

$6.3 milion-$7.6milion Projected cost based onhowmany students

but have questions about

African-Americans and Latinos.

graduate high school andentered community college in 2014.

his electability — will be complicated by the sense of gathering momentum for the candidate he has been unable to dislodge as front-runner.

g QQQ Minimumamounteligible I >UUU students will receive.

After a tough July and August, Clinton got back on track in September and

For comparison ... Tuition pertermforanin-district I >a7Uat student taking 15 credits atCentral Oregon Community College ------. thisyear.

$g ggg

Source: Bulletin reporting

picked up more steam last week with a strong debate performance. SeeBidon/A4

More fromWashington • Paul Ryan nails down support from hard-liners in House speaker race,A4

Filephoto: Andy Tullis /The Bulletin

See Free /A5

Starting in 2012, states

that he wouldn't be getting

strength with certain con-

Commission

ise, passed the Legislature this session and

to 9.5 percent by 2013. The

dependence increased

Complete anapplication online at www.orogonPromiso.cornbetween Nov. 1 and March 1 andcomplete the FreeApplication for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA.

(corn pleters).'

was signed into law by Gov. Kate Brown over the summer. Under the program, eligible stu-

Psychiatry. Researchers also found that marijuana abuse or

at least hoped he wouldn' t. Still, the moment Wednes-

To receive anOregon Promise grant for 2016-17, students must: • Graduate from an Oregon high school in spring or summer 2016with a 2.5 cumuThat's what we want lative grade-point average or higher, or people to understand earn a GED in the sametime. — it starts next year and • Enroll in an Oregon community college within six months of graduating it S geared largelY to the high school or earning aGED. Class Of 2016 and GED • Have beenan Oregon resident for at least 12 months prior to enrolling. • Undocumented immigrants: Those — Endi Hartigan, with the Higher who fit the criteria can apply. Education Coordinating

of adults said they used marijuana. That increased Wednesday in JAMA

When toapply?

began legalizing small amounts of marijuana for adult recreational use; it' s

now legal in four states, including Oregon, and D.C. And medical marijuana is now legal in 23 states and D.C., according to the Na-

Allegations inU.N. corruption inquiry spanglobe

tional Conference of State

By Neil Weinberg

Legislatures. SeeMarijuana/A5

Bloomberg News

NEW YORK — When fed-

atthelargestpeacekeeping says there's more to investigate operation in Africa and a staff-

of some two dozen, was shut down seven years ago amid

three years of operation, the task force's work led to four

— and internal U.N. docu-

prosecutor behind the push

er's benefit fraud went unde-

pressure from member nations

convictionsfrom cases referred

eral prosecutors charged a senior United Nations official on Tuesday, it was the Justice

ments suggest he has a point. tectedfordecades.Thereports The documents contain alle- come from the U.N. Procure-

including Russia and Singapore. Critics accused those

gations that millions of dollars

ment Task Force, which inves-

countries of intervening to

Correction

Department's first foray into the activities of the internation-

tigated the sprawling global procurement agency.

protect targeted citizens. The countries argued thetask force

In a story headlined "Fedsto require users to register their drones," which ranTuesday, Oct. 20, on Page A1, the location given for the 2014Two Bulls Fire was incorrect. The fire occurred west of Bend. The Bulletin regrets the error.

al organization in years. The

went missing or were embezzled in Afghanistan, aircraft leasing contracts were rigged

toU.S.prosecutors,thebarring of 47 outside vendors and the uncovering of $630 million in contracts tainted by fraud and corruption, documents show. SeeInquiry/A5

TODAY'S WEATHER w<~~r

Partly cloudy High 62, Low 28 Pago B6

The task force, with a staff

lacked accountability. In its

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health D1-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 S oI E1-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B1-6 Tv/Movies

B5 C1-4 06

An Independent Newspaper

vol. 113, No. 295, 30 pages, 5 sections

Q i/ i/e use recited newsprint

': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

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ria's resi en ies o oscow, me By Andrew Roth and Erin Cunningham

Mon.-Fri., 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

The Washington Post

ONLINE

MOSCOW — Syrian Presi-

www.bendbulletin.corn

dent Bashar al-Assad ventured

EMAIL

outside his beleaguered nation

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for the first time in more than four years Wednesday to meet Russia's Vladimir Putin in a

surprise visit to Kremlin patrons now backing Syria's government with military might.

The landmark trip is a powerful signal of Russia's growing support for the embattled Syrian government as it fights an armed rebellion that in-

dudes factions backed by the West and many Middle East partners.

Russian warplanes have struck Syrian rebel targets across the country in recent

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weeks, allowing Assad's forces to go on the offensive and

giving the Damascus government a critical lifeline after near-constant battles s ince 2011.

Russia insists it is battling empsaii.ln.

the Islamic State, which con-

trols parts of Syria, but anti-government rebels and ac-

oeschafcs r+

tivists say few of the Russian strikes have hit the jihadists.

VA inqUIQ —The increasingly tense relationship between Congress and the Department of Veterans Affairs was ondisplay in a standoff Wednesday in which the department refused to allow five officials to appear before the HouseVeterans Affairs Committee for questioning. Thedepartment said allowing the officials to appear could jeopardize its ability to investigate allegations on misuseof authority and waste of government money.Thecommittee voted unanimously to subpoenathe officials to appear before it in November. Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., who hasgrown increasingly critical of the pace of reform, said the department hadtoo often failed to hold officials accountable.

Assad has painted his govern- c ontribution not only in t h e ment's military crackdown as course of military actions ... a fight against terrorism. but during the political proBut the Russian interven- cess," Putin said, according tionhas sharply deepened ten- to a transcript released by the sions with Washington, which Kremlin. is leading separate airstrikes But few specific details against the Islamic State and emerged from the meetings rejects a long-term role for As- with Assad. "Naturally, (Assad and Putin sad in Syria's future. The Pentagon and NATO al- discussed) issues of the fight lies have expressed worry over against terrorist and extremist possible inadvertent encoun- groups, issues of the continuters between Russian and U.S.- ation of the Russian operation led coalition aircraft in the supporting the offensive of the skies over Syria. Neighboring Syrian armed forces," Dmi'Itrrkey has accused Russia of try Peskov, Putin's personal twice violating its airspace and spokesman, said of the meetshot down a R u ssian-made ing between the leaders. drone last week. Putin thanked Assad for On Friday, Secretary of State visiting Moscow at Russia's reJohn Kerry is expected to meet quest, praised the Syrian peowith his counterparts from ple for fighting opponents for Russia and two main Assad several years "practically on foes — Turkey and Saudi Ara- their own" and said that "seribia — to discuss Syria, the Rus- ous results have been achieved sian Foreign Ministry said. in this battle," according to the Putin has made dear that Kremlin transcript. Russia seeks to have a key Putin said t hat a t l e a st role in any moves on Syria's 4,000 Islamist militants from political future, apparently to the former Soviet Union are ensure that Moscow does not now fighting in Syria, and he lose its main foothold in the

warned that they could not be

region. "We are ready to make our

allowed to foment instability in

Odama'S addiCtiOn effOrtS — President BarackObamaon Wednesday announced severalmodestmeasurestocombattheincrease in drug addiction, including further training for federal doctors and a request that federal health insurance plansaddress barriers to addiction treatment. After listening to the stories of the mother of an addict, a health officer and apolice chief in front of an audience of about 200 people at aWest Virginia drug treatment center, Obama rattled off a litany of sobering statistics. The president, a former smoker, said that the continued decline in smoking rates showedthat progress could bemadeagainst addiction. NYC OffiCer Siain —A manwith a lengthy arrest record got out of jail and into a drug treatment program months before hewas accused of gunning down apolice officer while wanted in another shooting, infuriating the police commissioner and prompting a judge to defend his decision. TyroneHoward, who's accused of stealing a bike and fatally shooting Officer Randolph Holder in the headafter a chaseTuesdaynight,wasarrestedWednesdayonrobberyand murder charges. A visibly angry Commissioner William Bratton described Howard, 30, as adangerous career criminal who never should have been on the streets, calling him a "poster boy for not being diverted" to a treatment-oriented drug court instead of to prison. But the judge who referred Howard to the diversion program said hehad noreason to believe Howardwas violent. ShOOtingS by paliCe —The Palm BeachGardens, Florida, police officer who shot and killed a stranded driver Sundayapparently failed to disclose on his job application that he hadbeen reprimanded at his last police job for neglecting to turn over morphine recovered from a suspect, records show. Theofficer, Nouman Raja, is on paid administrative leaveafter shooting a church drummer, Corey Jones, who had legally purchased agun three days earlier. Jones' death is the latest in a string of contentious police shootings of black men, and is gaining national attention because of the deadman's lack of a criminal record.

Russia.

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Netanyahu'S HOIOCauStCOmmentS —Israeli historians and

MIGRANTS STILLARRIVING ON EUROPE'S SHORES

opposition politicians on Wednesdayjoined Palestinians in denouncing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel for saying aPalestinian gave Hitler the idea ofannihilating EuropeanJews during World War II. Netanyahu said in aspeech to the Zionist Congress on Tuesday night that "Hitler didn't want to exterminate the Jews atthe time; he wanted to expel theJews." Netanyahu said that the grand mufti of Jerusalem, HajAmin al-Husseini, had protested to Hitler that "they' ll all come here," referring to Palestine. Meir Litvak, a historian at Tel Aviv University, called Netanyahu's speech "a lie" and "a disgrace."

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JetS fOr PakiStan —The Obamaadministration is preparing to sell eight newF-16fighter jets to Pakistan, senior U.S. officials said, an overture intended to bolster a tenuous partnership despite persistent concerns about Islamabad's ties to elements of theTaliban and quickly expanding nuclear arsenal. Thedecision comes ahead of President Barack Obama'smeeting today with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan. Themeeting is expected to address Obama's decision to extend the U.S.troop presence in Afghanistan and efforts to get Sharif to halt the deployment of a new generation of tactical nuclear weapons.

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A young girl whose shoehas comeoff cries after her arrival on a dinghy with her family from the Turkish coast to Skala Sikaminias, a village onthe northeastern Greekisland ofLesbos,onW ednesday. Greece is the mainentry point for those fleeing violence at homeandseeking a better life in the European Union. More than 500,000 people havearrived

so far this year onGreece's eastern islands, paying smugglers to ferry them across from nearbyTurkey. Elsewhere onWednesday, tensions with the migrants continued to rise in the Balkans asmigrants en route to the heart of Europeallegedly started fires in a refugee camp onSlovenia's border with Croatia, chanting "Let us go! Let us go!"

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Man confesses to killing 4-year-old in Albuquerque road-rageshooting The Associated Press The father quickly pulled the Police charged a man with truck into the median and tried murder Wednesday night and to administer first aid on his said he confessed in the road- daughter as a bystander called rage killing of a 4-year-old 911 to report "an adult holding girl, who was shot in the back- an unresponsive child." seatofher father'struck after Two nurses showed up he picked her up from school and tried to save the girl's life — a death that horrified the as ambulances arrived and public. rushed her to the hospital, Police said Tony Torrez, 32, where she died, Albuquerque was arrested Wednesday and Police Chief Gorden Eden said. also charged with a series Authorities quickly began of weapons violations in the pressing for t ips, offering death of Lilly Garcia. roughly $25,000 for informaThe announcement came tion that led to the arrest of the a few hoursafter police said shooter. a person ofinterest had been Police said an anonymous taken into custody in Tues- caller provided the name of a day's shooting on an Albu- possible suspect a day after the querque freeway. shooting. L illy was riding in t h e With that i nformation as backseat with her 7-year-old well as tips from the commub rother w hen s omeone i n nity, detectives were able to a Toyota opened fire on the find the suspect, detaining him family as they traveled down without incident. "This evening, Torrez conthe main east-west freeway in Albuquerque. fessed to investigators he was The father told authorities responsible for the murder," that he was trying to exit I-40 the police statement said. It's not clear what led the when a car forced him out of his lane, according to a police incident to escalate, but the fastatement. ther told officers the shooting "The two drivers exchanged was the result of road rage. words when Torrez pulled out Mayor Richard Berry said a gun and shot," the statement Wednesday that the slaying "cut to the core" of the continued. " Lilly was hit at least once in the head." community.

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, Oct. 22, the

295th day of 2015. Thereare 70 days left in the year.

PICTURETHIS

HAPPENINGS

Pakistan andthe U.S.PresidentBarack Obamahosts Prime Minister NawazSharif at the White Houseamid speculation that the nations are in talks to limit the scope of Pakistan's nuclear arms program.

Hillary Clinten —Thepresidential candidate andformer secretary of state appears for testimony before the House Select Committee onBenghazi.

Labeled a "mysterious" organization by some, the Unicode Consortium's

Highlight:In1962, in a nationally broadcast address, President John F.Kennedy revealed the presence of Soviet-built missile bases under construction in Cubaandannounced a quarantine of all offensive military equipment being shipped to the Communist island nation. In1746, Princeton University was first chartered as theCollege of NewJersey. In1797,French balloonist Andre-JacquesGarnerin made the first parachute descent, landing safely from a height of about 3,000 feet over Paris. In1836,Sam Houston was inaugurated as the first constitutionally elected president of the Republic of Texas. In1883, the original Metropolitan Opera House inNewYork held its grand opening with a performance of Gounod's "Faust." In1928, Republican presidential nominee Herbert Hoover spoke of the "American system of rugged individualism" in a speech at NewYork's Madison Square Garden. In1934, bank robber Charles "Pretty Boy" Floyd wasshot to death by federal agents and local police at a farm nearEast Liverpool, Ohio. In1953,the Franco-Lao Treaty of Amity and Association effectively madeLaos anindependent member of the French Union. In1979,the U.S. government allowed the deposedShahof Iran to travel to NewYork for medical treatment — adecision that precipitated the Iran hostage crisis. In1981, the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization was decertified by the federal government for its strike the previous August. In1991,the European Community and the EuropeanFree Trade Association concluded a landmark accord to create a free trade zoneof19 nations by1993.

Ten years age:Hurricane Wilma punished Mexico's Caribbean coastline for a second day. Meanwhile, a record 22nd tropical storm of the season formed about 125 miles off the Dominican Republic;because the annual list of storm names had already beenexhausted, forecasters called the newsystem Tropical Storm Alpha. Five years ago: WikiLeaks released 391,831 purported Iraq war logs that suggested more than 100,000 Iraqi civilians had died in the conflict. One year age:In Canada,a gunman shot to death asoldier standing guard at awar memorial then stormed Parliament in the heart of downtown Ottawa before he wasshot and killed by the usually ceremonial sergeant-at-arms.

BIRTHDAYS Black Panthers co-founder Bobby Scale is79. Actor Christopher Lloyd is 77. Actor Derek Jacobi is 77.Actor Tony Roberts is 76. ActressCatherine Deneuve is72. Actor Jeff Goldblum is 63.Rockmusician Greg Hawkes is63. Actor Luis Guzman is 58.Actor-writer-producer ToddGraff is 56. Rock musician Gris Kirkwood is 55. Actor-comedianBobOdenkirk is 53. Olympic gold medalfigure skater Brian Boitano is 52. Singer-songwriter JohnWesley Harding is 50. Reggaerapper Shaggy is 47.Movie director Spike Jonze is46. Actress Saffron Burrows is 43.Actor Jesse Tyler Ferguson is40. Actor Jonathan Lipnicki is 25. — From wire reports

By Gretchen Reynolds

runners were told, the drug

impact on popular culture is far-reaching. It has the power to create new

New York Times News Ser vice

emojis.

make you a faster runner?

"It's not a language, but conceivably, it could develop into one, like Chinese did," he said.

By Jonah Bromwich New York Times News Service

HISTORY

e ace o o c am ions

An obscure organization

"Pictures can acquire a partic-

t hat standardizes the w a y punctuation marks and other

ular meaning in a particular culture. I' ll mention the infamous eggplant emoji, which has gotten to have a particular meaning in American culture,

text are represented by computer systems has in recent years

found itself at the forefront of mobile pop culture, with its power to create new emojis.

A new batch is under review, a process that takes months. But don't call the pictorial sys-

tem a language, unless you want an argument from Mark Davis, 63, a co-founder and the

president of the Unicode Consortium, the group that serves as the midwife to new emojis.

Davis said there was no broadly shared way to inter-

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of cultures." (Some texters in the United States are using the fruit as a phallus emoji.) Tyler Schnoebelen, who has a doctorate from Stanford in linguistics and is something of an emoji specialist, says that while the symbols are not technically a language, they do function as a sort of written equivalent of body language. "In text, you' re less expres-

pret the symbols, despite their

widespread use on phones and

sive if you don't have emojis," he said. "And that's a very meaningful and emotional thing that they make you feel like you can express your personal style."

other devices.

"I can tell you, using lanApplevia The NewYorkTimes guage, I need to go get a haircut, but only if I can get there by Some believe emojis represent 3 p.m., and otherwise I have to the beginnings of a newlanpick up the kids," he said. "You guage. "We' ve had this vocabuofficial try to express that in emoji and lary kind of dropped onus, and Making emojis you get a series of symbols different kinds of people are Before the 67 new emojis that people could interpret in a finding different ways to use it," can be the building blocks of thousand different ways." says Colin Rothfels, who works language or personal style In an interview last week, as an "emoli grammarian" for a though, they will have to be Davis discussed the latest keyboard company. made official. group of 67 images, set for a Davis said that all but one of vote at the consortium's meetthe last group of emojis to be ing next spring. code takes every letter, num- subjected to a vote were inductT he p i ctures i n clude a ber, symbol and punctuation ed into the official hieroglyphic groom in a tuxedo (there is al- mark that it deems worthy and system. ready a bride), a Mother Christ- assigns each — induding emoIn deciding which emojis to mas figure (a counterpart to jis — a specific number that a add, the Unicode Consortium the existing Santa Claus), a computer will recognize. considers factors including pregnant woman, a drooling Some of these modern hi- compatibility (if a p i ctorial face, a clown, a shark, an avo- eroglyphics have prompted symbol in broad use has not cado and two strips of bacon. debate. Sets of default emojis been translated into Unicode), that included only white skin and frequency of use (whethA'mysterious'organization tones prompted Unicode to re- er people will be interested in The Unicode Consortium is leasemore diverse characters using a certain picture often sometimes labeled "mysteri- last year. And one image in the enough to justify its existence). ous" (as in a recent post from latest group has prompted proAfter the vote in May, a final New York magazine), but test: The Infer Trust, a British version including approved Davis said there was nothing gun control group, has spoken new emojis will come out in shadowy about it. Its work is out against a proposal for a ri- June. largely transparent, and infor- fle emoji. But that does not mean peomation about its history, memple will immediately be able to bers and processes are includ- Newlanguage? send texts depicting sharks, baed on its website.

Whatever D a vi s

t h i n k s, con and Mother Christmas.

The group indudes execu- some expertsare notquite as tives from Apple, Google, Face- sure that emojis do not reprebook and other technology gi- sent the beginnings of a new ants. Davis is chief internation- language. alization architect at Google. Take Colin Rothfels, who The group meets quarterly;ata works for a keyboard commeeting in May, they will vote pany. His job title'? "Emoji on whether to formally induct grammarian." "We' ve had this vocabulary

the 67 new emojis.

Unicode was started in the

kind of dropped on us, and differentkinds ofpeopleare finding different ways to use it," ters. It used to be that different Rothfels said. "Obviously it's a computers could not easily talk very limited language, if you to one another because they want to call it a language." used diff erent codes for the Davis concedes that emosame letters. jis could one day evolve into To solve that problem, Uni- something more. late 1980s to develop a standardizedcode for text charac-

"These don't magically appear once we approve them," Davis said. "Manufacturers have to put them on their

should improve athletic perCan a shot of saltwater formance because it would in-

lieve the saltwater contains

i n j ection, because past research

something that shouldmake had shown that the placebo efyou a faster runner, accord- feet tends to be stronger when a ing to a new study of the s u bstance is injected instead of power of placebos in athletic swallowed. performance. Before starting the "drug" Anyone who exer cises regimen, though, the volunteers knows from experiencethat competed in a 3-kilometer track our minds and mental atti- race to determine their baseline tudes affect physfinishing times. Then ical performance. SCIENCE some of the men conWho hasn't faced a tinued their normal moment when, tiring at the

t r a ining for a week, while oth-

end of a strenuous work- ers received injections of the out or race, we are about to "drug." quit before suddenly being Th e y all raced again. passed on the path or shown Fin a lly, for another week, the up in the gym by somcone m en switched, with those who we know we should outper-

h a d not received the shot before

form, and somehow wefind r eceiving the injections now, an extra, unexploited gear and vice versa. and spurt on? Then they all ran a final 3-kiThis phenomenon is l ometer race. familiar to p hysiologists, Thro u ghout, the s cientists many of whom believethat c o l lected data about how the our brains, to protect our men felt physically and psychob odies, send out s ignals logically during their workouts telling those bodies to quit and the races. before every single resource As i t turned out, almost all in our muscles and other tis- o f them thought that the "drug" sues is exhausted. We think had had real and substantial we are at the outer limi ts of effects. The runners told the our endurance or strength s c ientists that during the week

when, in reality, we may when they were receiving the still have a physical reserve injections, their workouts felt available to us, if we canfind

e a sier and they were more moti-

a way to tap it. vated to push themselves. Most Researchers at the Uni- of therunners also reported versity of Glasgow recruited t h at they recovered better when 15 male recreational run- receiving the injections. ners fora test of what the Mo s t i mportant, they alvolunteers were told w as a most all significantly improved legal form of erythr opoi- their 3-kilometer race times etin, or EPO, a substance by about 1.5 percent after takthat increases the number of ing the "drug," compared with red blood cells in the body. their times at the start of the In many sports, EPO has experiment. been used for doping, becausemore red blood cells means more oxygen is car- Visit Central Oregon's ried to laboring muscles and endurance p erformance improves.

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Are 'virgin births' really athing for somesnakes? By C. Claiborne Ray New York Times News Service

read that some wild Q ••Isnakes gave birth without mating. How does such a "virgin birth" work'?

Such births were document-

ed only in captive representatives of these species, like zoo specimens and domestic fowL Although these births have

not been seen in the wild, a 2012 study found strong suggestive evidence that they do in fact happen. The report, in the journal Biology Letters, inIt is common in many involved two closely related spevertebrate species that have cies of snakes, the copperhead two sexes for reproduction to and the cottonmouth. occur without input from a The offspring of two pregmale representative. Instead of nant females collected in the combining with a male germ wild showed genetic charac• The d evelopment of • o ffspring f r o m unfertilized egg cells is called parthenogenesis.

cell to form a gamete with half

ee.

teristics that were identical

of its DNA from each parent, to those of the mothers. The an egg cell gives rise to the likelihood of this happening gamete and embryo stages on if mating had occurred, addits own. ing paternal DNA identical Only since the late 1800s to the maternal contribution, has it become known that such is "infinitesimally small," the asexual reproduction also researchers said. They conoccurs in some vertebrates, cluded that their findings repincluding snakes, lizards like resentedthefirstcasesofsuch the endangered Komodo drag- parthenogenesis found in the on, birds and even sharks. wild.

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

Biden

Clinton's aides followed her

lead, answering questions with the same degree of def-

Continued fromA1 Her allies are so optimistic that she' ll do well during

erence to the vice president.

Her campaign stayed focused on the same game plan it started running months ago and leftsome preparati ons for a potential Biden entry to Cor-

her day of testimony today before the H ouse Select

Committee on Benghazi, that they have planned a Friday rally in Northern Virginia with Clinton loyalist and Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe. That night, she' ll appear on the Democratic-friendly M SNBC Manuel Bales Ceneta/The Associated Press

Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill

with Rachel Maddow be-

S he had to continue to do

fore heading Saturday to

what she was doing," Moore saidoftheeffectofBiden'sde-

dom Caucus members. The caucus voted overwhelmingly

ner, which her allies hope will be the culmination of a 10-day victory lap. For-

to back Ryan's speaker bid.

mer President Bill Clinton

Republican leaders and Free-

liberations on Clinton and her team.

The one exception was campaignchairman John Podesta, who said last week on

will speak at a pre-dinner rally for his wife, marking the first time this cycle

Hard-line

It's not as if the field is

By David M. Herszenhorn and Emmarie Huetteman

cleared for Clinton. In the days before withdrawing from the race he never for-

mally entered, Biden gave Clinton's opponents plenty of ammunition, including suggesting that her characterization of Republicans

as "enemies" was "naive." Clinton still faces challenges, for example, in solidifying union support, though Biden's decision to stay out of the race removes an im-

New York Times NewsService

WASHINGTON — A strong

an t i-establishthe

House Freedom Caucus voted Wednesday night to support Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin for House speaker, assuring that he will have the votes to secure the post next week and

portant obstacle. While Clinton has made commitments to eliminate

a tax on health plans opposed by unions and opposes th e

decision." Given his role in the campaign and his decades-

Bidee'S SpeeCh —President Barack Obamawatches as Vice President Joe Biden turns to his wife, Dr. Jill Biden, after announcing that he will not run for the presidential nomination Wednesday in the Rose Garden of theWhite House inWashington. In a hurriedly arranged speech in theWhite House RoseGardenwith Obamaat his side, Bidensaid that he and his family hadovercome their grief at the death of his elder son enough to commit themselves to the rigors of a campaign. But with just days until the first filing deadlines, hesaid hehadconcluded that it was simply too late. "Unfortunately, I believe we're out of time, the time necessary to mount a winning campaign for the nomination," Biden said. "But while I will not be acandidate, I will not be silent." Indeed, he usedthe rest of his 13-minute speech to outline the case hewould have madeasa candidate and eventake afew implicit jabs at Clinton over her hawkish foreign policy, hostility to Republicans and breaks with Obamaon certain issues. The end of Biden's three-month flirtation with another bid for the White Housecame inthe last few days as heand his advisers looked at the calendar andconcluded he did not have enoughtime to raise the necessary moneyand still campaign sufficiently in person in the first four primary states. Thespeechhegaveinthe RoseGardennonethelessresembledtheonehewouldhavegivenhad he run. He talked about fighting for college education, child care andimmigration and promoted "an absolute national commitment to endcancer as weknow it today." In typical folksy style, he talkedabout his upbringing, quoted his parents telling him, "Honey, it' s going to be OK,"and repeated one of his favorite nicknames, "Middle Class Joe." And hereflected on his late son, Beau,who died of brain cancer in May. "Beau is our inspiration," he said.

at a C l inton campaign event, and Katy Perry will perform.

clears path for Ryanto be speaker

MSNBC that if Biden wanted to run, "it is time he make that

Jacquelyn Martin / The Associated Press

that he's delivered a speech

caUcUs

m ent conservatives i n

Brock-founded super PAC coordinating with the campaign, which was conducting opposition research on him. "It didn't alter her course.

the Iowa Democratic Party's Jefferson- Jackson Din-

following meetings with House

majority o f

rect The Record, the David

long relationships with Biden

and with the Clintons, he was in a unique position. Still, Clintonites distanced themselves

and pointed to the candidate's insistence not to interfere with

thevicepresident' sprocess. On the stump in recent w eeks, Clinton t ested o u t some attack lines, but nev-

er directly mentioned Biden. Her comments at town halls

in New Hampshire and Iowa this month that she'd be able to make progress on tightening gun laws because she is "determined" to do it could be interpreted as a veiled criticism

of President Barack Obama — and his point man on guns, Biden — for failing to do so in the wake of a series of mass shootings. But Clinton never

— From wire reports

T r a ns-Pacific

came close to directly criticiz"I think that Secretary Clinter about a possible challenge from the vice president, ton was prepared one way Clinton stayed disciplined or the other," said Minyon and measured, keeping to a Moore, a longtime Clinton adscript that erred on the side viser. "She has always mainof generosi ty. Whenever re- tained that she has a great porters asked about the vice deal of respect for the vice

Partnership, she came to board: "I'm not inspired by the positions late and key the Clinton campaign," Dick unions, including AFSC- Harpootlian, a former South ME and the Communica- Carolina Democratic Party

averting a leadership crisis for Republicans. Ryan indicated he was prepared to seize the gavel and attempt to bring unity to his party, which has been riven over how House leaders exert authority over members. That

tion Workers of America,

source. And not all Biden back-

about how she might consoli-

mourn the death of his son

dateher recent gains:During

fight had become so bitter that

ers are ready to jump on

two months of intense chat-

Beau and time to figure out whether he should run.

chairman, said after Biden announced his decision. "I'm not

have held off on endorsing in the Democratic primary inspired by her." in part because of support Still, Clinton's method of for Sanders among union handling what could have members, said a l a bor been aBiden crisis saysmuch

ing Biden, which added sincerity to the call she made to him after is Rose Garden speech

and the statement she issued afterward, praising him as a "good man and a great vice president." "I admire his devotion to

president's flirtations with a

president. I think she was one

campaign, Clinton repeated thatBiden deserved space to

of the first out there to say, you know, this is a deeply personal decision and he needs to be able to have the space to make

family, his grace in grief, his grit and determination on behalf of the middle class, and

his unyielding faith in America's promise," she said.

that decision."

it forced the resignation of Speaker John Boehner, and derailed the candidacy of the

majority leader, Rep. Kevin McCarthy, to replace him. "I'm grateful for the support of a supermajority of the

s

s

i

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House Freedom Caucus," Ryan said in a statement, referring to the two-thirds vote he re-

ceived. The apparent coalescing of support behind Ryan, 45, comes at a critical moment for Congress with votes expected

S t

to begin as soon as next week over raising the government's

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several pressing fiscal matters. While the vote fell short

• •

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Caucussaidits members had disagreed with one another

about other conditions Ryan had set for serving as speaker. "While no consensus exists

among members of the House Freedom Caucus regarding Chairman Ryan's preconditions for serving," the group

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roughly two-thirds of the Freedom Caucus had pledged to vote for Ryan for speaker, and called the outcome an "offer of

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Marijuana

encing it." Researchers analyzed two

Continued from A1

rounds of the National Epide-

dency, representing approximately 6.8 million Americans. Hasin said it's important to

miologic Survey on Alcohol present information "in a balHasin, aprofessor of epide- and Related Conditions; in the anced way" about the risks miology in psychiatry at Co- 2001-2002 round, 43,093 people associated with marijuana use. "While many in the United lumbia University, said she' s participated, while 36,309 parbeen particularly interested in ticipated in the 2012-13 round. States think prohibition of rectracking usage trends "given In addition to marijuana use, reational marijuana should be all the changes in attitudes and participants answered other ended, this study and others changes in laws." questions that helped deter- suggest caution and the need But it's unclear what's be- mine whether they also experi- for public education about the hind such a dramatic increase enced use disorder, such as: did potential harms in marijuana in marijuana use. "We showed they continue using marijuana use, induding the risk for adthat it happened," Hasin said. despite it causing trouble with diction," the authors write. "As "Now, the thing that really friends and family, or physical is the case with alcohol, many needs to be researched is the or psychological problems; did individuals can use marijuawhy." they try and fail to cut down na without becoming addict"You can speculate that despite repeated attempts; and ed. However, the clear risk Americans are increasingly did they repeatedly drive un- for marijuanause disorders viewing marijuana as a harm- dertheinfluence. among users (approximately less substance ... or laws are According to the findings, 30 percent) suggests that as the changing," she added. "But use disorder among users did number of U.S. users grows, so we don't really know until you decrease slightly. About three will the numbers of those exdo good, empirical studies on out of every 10 marijuana users periencing problems related to what factors are really influ- experienced abuse or depen- such use." Lead study author Deborah

Free

The average tuition rate for fall 2016 has not been set.

Continued from A1 Every student who qual-

ifies and enrolls is guaranteed at least $1,000. Students must accept all state and

federal grants they qualify for; if tuition is covered entirely by other grants, students could use their $1,000 minimum grant for other expenses such as transportation or textbooks.

For some students, there may still be costs left over,

since Oregon Promise will provide funding up to the average tuition for full-time

students at Oregon community colleges. Those students would pay the difference between the average tuition cost and the cost at their school.

For the current school year, er if more students choose community college next year, said students taking 15 credits rang- Bob Brew at Office of Student es from $1,200 at Chemeketa Access and Completion, which Community College in Salem will administer the grants. to $1,492.50 at Lane CommuniIn Central Oregon, about 20 ty College in Eugene, plus fees. percent to 25 percent of high At Central Oregon Community school graduates enroll at College, the rate is $1,365 plus COCC within a year, said Ron fees, which is about the state Paradis, director of college reaverage. Under Oregon Prom- lations. Officials there got a few ise, all students will pay a $50 calls when Oregon Promise copayperterm. was signed into law from stuIt is undear how many stu- dents wondering if they qualidents will apply for the grants fied, but haven't had many calls and how far the $10 million since. When COCC recruiters lawmakers appropriated for visit high schools this fall, they the 2016-17 school year will go. will be talking about the grants. "We' re gearing up for it. It Based onthe number ofOr egon high schoolers who graduated will become part of our recruitin 2014 and immediately en- ing effort," Paradis said. tuition per term for in-district

tered community college, state

officials are projecting the cost

' County ~ ;. Demolition Landfill I

Site

PLUS• • •

Continued from A1

Gallup: Legal pot's support reaches high of 58 percent By Christopher lngraham The Washington Post

Support for legal marijuana still high

1935 and 1950 supported making marijuana legal. Today, 40 percent of that age groupwho are now older than 65support legal marijuana.

marijuana reform proponents are enjoying a strong tailwind the incoming Canadian prime

Oregon Judicial Branch, of the 949 filings received by

Similarly, in 1985 only 32

percent of Boomers born between 1951 and 1965 support-

ed legal marijuana. Today, 58 percent of them do. Support is highest among young adults born between 1981 and 1997,

minister Justin Trudeau has promised he would start work

ly exciting to see yet another poll showing majority support for legalizing marijuana, but 58 percent is very strong share of the American people calling for change, and elected officials should listen," said Tom Angell of the pro-legalization group Marijuana Majority. "We're seeing an increasing number of national politicians

on legalizing marijuana in that country "right away." Anti-legalization g r oups, including such government agencies as the Drug Enforce-

71 percent of whom support legalization, according to Gallup. "Americans' support for legalizing marijuana is the high- saying that it's time to at least est Gallup has measured to

date, at 58%," the survey concludes. "Given the patterns of support by age, that percentage should continue to grow in the future."

let states implement their own laws without federal interfer-

ment A d ministration, h ave

debate Bernie Sanders indicatAlaska and Oregon approved ed he would support a marijualegalization measures last fall. na legalization measure to be With Ohio voters considering put before Nevada voters next legalization in just a few weeks fall. Hillary Clinton recently reand a number of other states affirmed her support for letting

zero instances of Halloween-related pot poisonings. Another artide about pot candy published by anti-drug group

Continued from A1 Its findings, including at least 115 active investigations,

were turned over to the Office of Internal Oversight Services,

another watchdog agency within the U.N. That agency is a 350-person office with a $60 million budget. Its duties involve auditing, inspecting and investigating a U.N. operation that includes a $17.2 billion procurement budget, 44,000 employees and hundreds of outside contractors. J ohn Ashe, who was i n dicted on Tuesday, was am-

bassador from the Caribbean country of Antigua and Barbuda. He was president of the

U.N. General Assembly for a year until September 2014

when he is accused of having committed some of his crimes. Charges against him involve allegations of tax fraud in a bribery scheme. Since the procurement task

force was closed, the oversight office has completed a number ofsuccessful fraud investigations, although it h asn' t

erpetrator s,

The U.N. had no internal investigative body until 1994,

member of the Procurement

when the internal oversight officewas set up under the threat of losing U.S. funding.

multinational organizations at

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

The state Supreme Court

has discretion over whether to accept the appeal. According to a report from the

tw o

to review the case. The court

has no timeline by which it needs to decide whether to hear the case. Construction on the

campus would not have to stop if the Supreme Court decides to hear the appeal. "The court can take a long as did the State Court of Appeals, the Oregon Land Use time to decide whether to take Board of Appeals, the Bend a case," Firestone wrote in an City Council and hearings of- email. "However, sometimes ficer, "OSU-Cascades'Director they are able to decide pretty of Communications, Christine quiddy. If they do allow review, Coffin, wrote in a statement to there is a briefing schedule ... The Bulletin. "It's time to work

together as a community to exonly 84 were considered. pand higher education opporThat's just under 9 percent. tunity in Central Oregon." City of B end a ttorney Truth in Site says its opposithe Supreme Court in 2014,

While the practice used to be that the parties would rely on

their Court of Appeals briefs, now the standard practice is for another round of briefing. Then

Mary Winters has said it is

tion is motivated by a desire to

there is oral argument. Then, a

unlikely the Supreme Court

preservethe character of the

substantial amount of time lat-

would hear the case, noting

city's west side and a fear that

er, there is a decision."

last month, "(it has) not his- the campus is poorly planned. torically done so in land use Marie Matthews, one of Truth

Bring Your

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Task Force who now advises eral prosecutor who ran the Procurement Task Force until

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tremendous risk," says Robert Appleton, a former fed-

BDO Consulting, said corrup- its closure. "Serious, capable tion remains a problem at the and strong oversight is needLawmakers i n t h e U n i t ed U.N. But the attention it has re- ed or there's a significant risk States — whose 22 percent ceived in recent years and de- that there will be substantial contribution to U.N. funding clining budgets have reduced misuse."

OSU-Cascades ha s

weeks to respond to Truth in Site's petition asking the court

Oregon Supreme Court will rule in OSU-Cascades' favor

of satire.

wrote. "A lot of public money is at

Supreme Court does decide to

hear the case, the process could take "a year or more."

"We are confident that the

DARE turned out to be a piece

is by far the world's largest the magnitude, especially — have continued to criticize within the U.N.'s headquarters the U.N. for weak financial operations. oversight. He said the further away The Justice Department's from headquarters, the less probe of the U.N. comes at a oversight there is and the time when allegations of ram- greater theproblem. Speaking pant bribery of international of humanitarian crises in the soccer officials have focused field, he said: "Anything goes." public attention on corruption One such operation the task within multinational organi- force looked at involved a sezations. In a press conference nior UN official who was disannouncing charges against bursing more than $1 million Ashe and others earlier this a day in Afghanistan. Large month, Manhattan U.S. atamounts were used for "amtorney Preet Bharara indicat- biguous procurements," and ed that he believes the U.N.'s the official created false docoperations could prove an uments and coerced subordiabundant hunting ground for nates to conceal their use, the his prosecutors. Among his task force wrote. allegations are that as GenerIn the Congo, site of the al Assembly president, Ashe U.N.'s largest peacekeeping steered a Chinese tech execu- operation at the time, with an tive to a Kenyan official. annual budget of more than Although Bharara's com- $1 billion, procurement offiplaint stops short of asserting cials altered specifications that bribes were paid in that and steered aircraft leasing case, he asked rhetorically at a contracts to a company in press conference announcing which they had a financial inthe charges, "Is bribery busi- terest, increasing the cost to ness as usual at the U.N.'?" the U.N. by $4 million, the task James Margolin, a spokes- force found. Separately, a staff man for Bharara, declined to member defrauded it of huncomment. Robert Van Lierop, dreds of thousands of dollars an attorney for Ashe, didn' t in dependent benefits starting immediately respond to a re- in the 1980s in a case involvquest for comment. He has ing forged birth certificates, it

recovered any ill-gotten gains or prosecuted p David Kanja, a U.N. assistant secretary-general and acting said he expects his client to be head of the watchdog unit, exonerated. said in an email. Momar Ndiaye, a former

46 acres ~rg/ PhaSe 1

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open the "door for abuse" by other jurisdictions. And cases which are affirmed (by it suggests the Supreme the Court of Appeals) without Court should consider the opinion," as this case was last appealbecausetheCourtof month. ten opinion and didn't consider Truth in Site's appeal with its full panel, only with threejudges.

the best interests of the com-

ney Gary Firestone said if the

OSU-Cascades

car accidents.

last year, Colorado authorities admitted that they uncovered

Inquiry

Former pumice

of LUBA's decision would

Appeals didn't issue a writ-

many and believes that it is in

acre site plan." Assistant city of Bend attor-

and a failure. They have argued that looser laws will lead to more marijuana use among childrenand teens,and a rise in marijuana-related crime and

Indeed, at the recent Democratic presidential candidate

kets in 2014, and voters in D.C.,

up the case because the appeals court's affirmation

however, th e o r g a nization wrote it "has consulted with

munity to continue our legal challenge to the OSU-C 10-

legalization has been a mistake

But these efforts have occasionally backfired. After dire warnings about the dangers of "marijuana candy" showing up in kids' Halloween baskets

This comes after Colorado

m

tried to convince the public that

ence. And we' re also seeing a growing number of candidates endorsing legalization outright, which shows how mainstream this issue is now."

and Washington opened their recreational marijuana mar-

1

limited land use decisions

tion next year, it seems that 111support. "These days it's not especial-

-

dards of the Land Use Board of Appeals' review of

percent of those born between

on marijuana reform. And just across our border to the North,

7acres,

among them that the stan-

gests the court should take

.

to comment about the appeal. In an email to supporters,

Park services

the OregonSupreme Court should take up the appeal,

Percentage of Americans saying the use of marijuana should be legal: Nearly two y ears after Oct. 2015 the nation's first recreation- 60 ' 58% al marijuana shop opened in Colorado, American sup- 50: port for legal weed has tied 40 ~ an all-time high and is likely to increase,according to new 30numbers released Wednesday by Gallup. Fifty-eight percent 20: . of Americans say that the use of marijuana should be legal, IO a seven-point year-over-year 0 increase. 1969 1973 I977 1981 1985 1989 I993 1997 2001 2005 2009 2013 The poll finds steady inThe Washington Post creases in support of legal- Source: Gallup ization across all age cohorts. For instance, in 1969 only 20 planning to vote on legaliza- states chart their own course

— Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegmanibendbullet in.corn

in Site's co-founders, dedined

76 acres

In its petition, Truth in Site identifies 10 reasons

has not yet been considered by the court. It also sug-

for 2016-17 will be $6.3 million to $7.6 million. It could be high-

I

I

II

— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.corn


A6 T H E BULLETiN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

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© www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

BRIEFING

en a esona or a e ousin

Dog rescued from crevasse Armed with treats,

firefighters climbed into the Crooked River Canyon on Wednesday morning and rescued an Australian shepherd that had fallen into a

crevasse near the Peter Skene OgdenState Scenic Wayside. An Oregon State Park ranger told firefighters the dog' s owner was attempting to adjust the animal's leash around 10 a.m. when the dog got loose, ran toward the canyon and jumped over the wall, according to a news release from Crooked River Ranch Fire & Rescue. The wayside is along U.S. Highway 97 near the border of Deschutes and Jefferson counties. People at the scene could hear the dog barking, but they could not see it, the news release stated. Fire personnelone member each from Crooked River Ranch Fire & Rescueand Jefferson County Fire District No. 1 — trained in technical rope rescues located the dog in the crevasse, estimated at1 foot wide and 5 feet deep, about 10 feet below the wall. The dog was not injured, but it could not get out. One firefighter climbed into the crevasse, lifted the dog out and delivered it to its owner at the top of the canyon. The rescue took "about 30 minutes and a handful of dog treats to complete," the release stated. "It's not every day we get this kind of rescue," Capt. Sean Hartley, of Crooked River Ranch Fire & Rescue, said in the release. "We recognize pets are family members, and wewere as happy as the owner at the outcome of this call."

Wickiup ResewoIr burn planned Fire officials plan to ignite a 127-acre prescribed burn today in the Pringle Falls Experimental Forest in southern Deschutes County, according to a news release from the Deschutes National Forest. The fire is expected to reduce tree density and improve the health of the experimental forest, which is a research area about 25 miles southwest of Bend within the national forest. Officials do not expect to close any roads, but businesses and homes in the area should keep their windows and doors closed to avoid any effects of the smoke.

• City offers developmentfee exemptions to 5 projects

• Park & Recreation District will not

By Tyler Leeds

For the district that means

revisit affordablehousingproposal

The Bulletin

new parks, while the city' s funds go to roads, sewers and the drinking water system. The Bend City Council approved a program that will waive up to $1 million worth of SDCs this budget cycle, while the park district was considering a $500,000 exemption.

The city of Bend's Affordable Housing Committee awarded development fee

exemptions to five projects at a meeting Wednesday, one day after the Bend Park 5 Recreation District board

reaffirmed its decision to not help out with the program. The meeting began with committee members criticizing the park board's decision to not participate in the fee exemption program. The fees,

"Unfortunately, the park

district doesn't want to help out with what some would call

the city's biggest problem," said Andy High, the committee's board chairman and a

vice president for the Central Oregon Builders Association. Addressing a concern raised by park district board member Nathan Hovekamp,

known as system development

charges, or SDCs, are levied by both the city and park district to fund infrastructure

related to population growth.

High said, "Some seem to believe this is a big giveaway for the developers. Believe me, that's not the case. If it were, I'd know."

By Scott Hammers

other look at the issue after two new members joined the

The Bulletin

Other board members

The Bend Park & Recreation District does not plan

questioned whether the park

to revisit a proposal to boost

The approach considered by the board would have

district would feel more pressure to help if the public was

the construction of affordable

been similar to one adopted

housing by reducing or waiving fees levied against new

by the Bend City Council earlier this year. Developers of housing targeted to lowand middle-income residents would have been eligible for an exemption or discount on system development charges,

more aware it is governed as

a separate entity from the city of Bend. Councilor Barb Campbell, who attended the meeting as a liaison to the City Council, suggested the city look into increasing a small fee it levies on the park district for

collecting park SDCs from developers. SeeHousing/B6

development.

In an informal vote Tuesdaythatboardmember Nathan Hovekamp described as a "straw poll," the district

board decided against putting the issue on the agenda for its upcoming meetings. The district board rejected a similar proposal in the spring and considered taking an-

r ou near o n ui i n

board in the summer.

which are collected by the city and the park district to

offset the cost of building new roads, parks and sewer and

water systems. SeeParks/B5

Bend eyes

a

next move at Juniper

i e rai s

Ridge By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

The Bend City Council discussed the state of Ju-

niper Ridge at a meeting Wednesday night, signaling council support for city staff to begin looking into a new sewer line that

would increase capacity for development not only .~

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at the site but also across the entire city.

The largely vacant, city-owned Juniper Ridge is located in Bend's northeast corner, near NE 18th Street and Cooley Road.

The city earlier financed a conceptual plan for the 1,500-acre site containing

a business park, shopping areas, hundreds of homes, parks, trails and

a university. That plan was derailed during the recession, and only two businesses, Les Schwab Submitted photos

A mountain biker rides on the North Fork Malheur Trail southeast of John Day earlier this month. Enhancing the North Fork trail for mountain biking is one of the first projects for Central Oregon Trail Alliance's new Grant County chapter.

North Fork Trail

BAKER

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The Bulletin

city has seven lots across

Crane Creek

16 '-

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ALHEM

tel Q l4'AL 0 Rts

in Grant County

23 acres for sale at $7 a square foot. The reason

are getting a little

much of that land hasn' t

bit of love from their friends in

sold, Eagan said, is in part because of the city's lim-

Central Oregon.

MAL HE UR NATIONAL FOREST

Mountain bikers in the

North Fork Malheur iver

John Day area recently formed a chapter within the Central Oregon Trail

Alliance as they look to tap into Eastern Oregon's vast trail potential.

Pete Smith /The Bulletim

the 500 acres within the city. Much of the available

By Beau Eastes ingle-track trails

Nalheir

co'u Tv"'I '

Power have properties in land is intended for highend industrial uses. Carolyn Eagan, the city's economic development director, said the

• The Grant County chapter of COTA seeks to beautify and expand local trails Da

and Suterra, and Pacific

The Grant County chapter of COTA held its first

ited sewer capacity. Addi-

tionally, there are a number of similar,cheaper properties across not only

the region but also the nation, a key factor as many industrial firms look far

and wide for properties. To get land selling and to attract what Mayor Jim

work event earlier this

Clinton called "a critical

month, clearing debris and rebuilding trail out-

mass" of businesses, city staff recommended mov-

lines along the North Fork

ing ahead on design work

Health council hires director

Malheur Trail southeast of John Day.

for a new major sewer line on the city's north end.

The Central Oregon Health Council, the governing board that oversees the region's Medicaid population, hasnamed Donna Mills as its new executive director. Mills — the former CEO of Integrated Community Health Partners, a similar group based in Colorado — will take over the position Nov. 2. She replaces Lindsey Hopper, who left the health council to serve as vice president of Medicaid programs for PacificSource Community Solutions.

Andrea Mesple, the Grant County COTA chapter president, said about the 12-mile out-and-back trail

SeeLocal briefing/B2

"It's a beautiful trail,"

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construction on the north

quite a bit this summer,

the sewer interceptor,"

re-cutting bench, scraping fluff off," Mesple said.

said Councilor Victor

"There were parts of the trail that had moved over

extremely important." Eagan said she's also considering new ways to

Chudowsky. "I think that' s

market the site, which she

there and didn't have real

thinks could help match

good balance, you'd be in

the seven properties with

trouble." Trail builders in Grant

appropriate developers. Councilor Casey Roats noted "beggars can't be choosers," suggesting the city should loosen up the

County are currently working on four main projects, all of which are in different stages of development.

Membersof the Central Oregon Trail Alliance work on the North Fork Malheur Trail earlier this month.

but this may move up side. "I definitely want to get started on planning for

to the edge, near a cliff. If you got off your bike ;I

million sewer overhaul,

that follows the North Fork of the Malheur River.

"We' ve been out there

'

Such a sewer line is part of a massive citywide $140

SeeTrails /B6

kinds of businesses it is

looking to sell to. SeeJuniper Ridge/B6


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R

TERREBONNEGRANGEANNUAL FREE HAUNTED HOUSE: Featuring games and a haunted house; 6 p.m.; WOMEN SWIMMINGUPSTREAM Terrebonne Grange Hall, 828611th — SOCIALDOCUMENTARY St., Terrebonne; 541-788-0865. PHOTOGRAPHER ALISON AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Author WRIGHT:Alison Wright, National Kim Heacox will read from and sign Geographic Traveler of the Year his new novel, "Jimmy Bluefeather"; and contributing photographer, will share her photographs of women at 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs work in developing countries; 6:30-8 Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; www.paulinasprings.corn or p.m.; $15; Tower Theatre, 835 NW 541-549-0866. Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-383-7257. BIG BROTHERSBIG SISTERS THE MANYLIVES OF KLONDIKE COMEDY BENEFIT:Featuring KATE:Learn about Klondike Kate comediansSean McBride,Chase Brocket and Jake Woodmansee to during the Gold Rush in Alaska; 6:30-7:30 p.m.; A.R. Bowman benefit Big Brothers Big Sisters; 7 Memorial Museum, 246 N. Main St., p.m.; $50plusfees,$80percouple; Prineville; www.bowmanmuseum. The Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall org or 541-447-3715. St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "LINCOLNCENTER AT THE MOVIES — ALVINAILEY AMERICAN ALL AGESCOMEDY IMPROV:Two DANCETHEATER": Featuring improv groupsmakeup characters four performances from Alvin and stories based on your ideas, Ailey's Revelations; 7 p.m.; $11, all ages; 7 p.m.; $5; Cascades $8.50 for seniors and children; Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 Bend; www.bendimprov.corn or IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 541-771-3189. Bend;www.fathomevents.corn or "I LOVE A MYSTERY": Featuring 844-462-7342. episodes from "The Whistler," "Lux BOMBADIL: The pop band from Radio Theater" and "The Haunting North Carolina performs; 7 p.m.; Hour"; 7 p.m.; $15, $10 for 18 McMenamins Old St. Francis and under, $35-$40 for Saturday School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; dinner show; Sunriver Homeowners www.mcmenamins.corn or Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 541-382-5174. 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-588-221 2. "ED SHEERAN— JUMPERS FOR GOALPOSTS":A showing of a "WHAT WE DOINTHE concert documentary on the XTour SHADOWS":A showing of the New at Wembley Stadium; 7:30 p.m.; Zealand vampiremockumentary; $16; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E Bend;www.fathomevents.corn or St., Madras; 541-475-3351. 844-462-7342. "EVIL DEADTHEMUSICAL": A "EVIL DEADTHEMUSICAL": A play about five college students play about five college students who visit an old abandoned cabin who visit an old abandoned cabin in the woods and unleash an evil in the woods and unleash an evil force; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for force; 7:30-10:30 p.m.; $22, $19 students and seniors, $28 for the for students and seniors, $28 Splatter Zone; 2nd Street Theater, for the Splatter Zone; 2nd Street 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., www.2ndstreettheater.corn or Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.corn or 541-31 2-9626. 541-312-9626. "BOBBY GOULD INHELL": Featuring the one-act play by David FRIDAY Mamet; 7:30 p.m.; $10; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, AUTUMN FEST:Featuring handBend; www.volcanictheatrepub. crafted items, baked goods, an corn or 541-323-1881. auction and more; 8 a.m.-2 p.m.; JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD — JOEY Prineville Presbyterian Church, DEFRANCESCO TRIO: The three1771 NW Madras Highway, time Grammy nominee performs; Prineville; 541-447-1017. 8 p.m.;SOLD OUT;TheOxford HISTORICALHAUNTS OF DOWNTOWN BEND:Takeawalkon Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheoxford.corn or the haunted side through historic 503-432-9477. downtown Bend, weaving history with mystery of the unknown; 4 HOT TEACOLD: Theblues-funk band from Portland performs; p.m.; $10, free for children 12 and younger and members; Deschutes 8 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; Ave., Bend; 541-389-1813. 541-383-0889.

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

for kids 1K; Pine Nursery Park, 3750 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend; www. bendticket.corn or 503-267-0210. DD RANCHPUMPKIN PATCH AND MARKETPLACE:Featuring a farmers market, crafts, live music, a pumpkin patch, a petting zoo, a hay maze and more; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch,3836 NE Smith RockWay, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. FALL GARDENWORKPARTY: Help clean up and winterize the

TODAY

Tammy Baney,chairwoman of the health council board, said Continued from Bf Mills' passion andexperience In the role, Mills will oversee is exactly what the board needs care coordination and budgeting to create a healthier population. and will implement a newRegional For more information, contact Health Improvement Plan for Cen- Baney at 541-388-6567 or info@ tral Oregon. cohealthcouncil.org. The council overseesCentral Oregon's coordinated care organi- Woman accused zation, the entity that administers of selling stolen goods funding and coordinates care for A 33-year-old Bendwomanwas the region's Medicaid population, cited on several charges in the knowninOregonastheOregon theft and sale of more than$5,000 Health Plan. Thereare 16coordiin merchandise from the Fred nated care organizations in Oregon. Central Oregon's is operated Meyer store in Bend,according to Bend police Lt. Glint Burleigh. by PacificSource Community Solutions. Fred Meyer's loss-prevention

LOCAL BRIEFING

.:. r

Submitted photo

Kate Rockwell, aka Klondlke Kate, was a vaudeville singer and

dancer who becameknownfor her flamboyant shows in theYukon during the Klondike Gold Rush. Learn more about her life today at the A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum In Prlneville. THOMAS MAPFUMO AND THE BLACKS UNITED: Theworldmusic artist performs; 8 p.m.; $20 plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122. "WHAT AREYOU AFRAID OF" COMEDY IMPROV: A longform comedy show, based on the audience's fears; 9 p.m.; $5; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-771-3189.

BLUELOTUS:Therock'n' roll jam band from Eugene performs; 9 p.m.;$8 plusfees in advance, $10 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. KOTTONMOUTHKINGS:The band performs, with Marion Asher, Chucky Chuck and C4 Nicky Gritts; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; $20 plusfees inadvance, $25 at the door; Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0800.

officers first noticed in late September a substantial amount of property had beenshoplifted from the Bend store, Burleigh wrote in a news releaseWednesday. Loss-prevention specialists connected "numerous items" posted on Craigslist to recent thefts from the store. They responded to the Craigslist ads several times andpurchased the allegedly stolen items, documenting their exchangeswith the seller. A final meeting wasarranged for Tuesday, whenthe person agreed to sell a "large quantity of property." LenseyGreenman,who allegedly had taken kitchen appliances and acordless lawnmower,

BATTLETAPES:The electro-synth rock band from Los Angeles performs; 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.corn or 541-388-0116.

SATURDAY AUTUMN FEST:Featuring handcrafted items, baked goods, an auctionand more;8 a.m .-noon; Prineville Presbyterian Church, 1771 NW Madras Highway, Prineville; 541-447-1017. SECONDANNUAL SCANDINAVIAN CHRISTMAS MARKET:Featuring new and previously owned items, and Scandinavian items for sale; 9 a.m.-3p.m.;Fjeldheim Lodge, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend; 541-382-4333. PINE NURSERYPACERSK:Afun 5K run and a kid-friendly 1K run to benefit Ponderosa Elementary PTA and the students and community of Ponderosa Elementary school; 9:30 a.m.; $15-$25 plus fees, $5

among other items, wassubsequently arrested by Bendpolice. Greenmanwas issued acitation to appear in DeschutesCounty Circuit Court on charges of first-degree theft, theft by receiving, attempted theft by receiving and computer crime, Burleigh wrote.

Brookswood toclose intermittently

TERREBONNEGRANGEANNUAL FREE HAUNTED HOUSE: Featuring games and a haunted house; 6 p.m.; Terrebonne Grange Hall, 828611th St., Terrebonne; 541-788-0865. HARVEST WRITINGCONTEST SHOWCASE:Winners of the Central Oregon Writers Guild's annual Harvest Writing Contest will read their winning entry and be recognized for their work; 6:30p.m.;Hampton Inn,425 SW Bluff Drive, Bend; www. KansasAvenueLearning Garden; centraloregonwritersguild.corn or 10 a.m.; The Environmental Center, 360-798-9030. 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend; www. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Author envirocenter.org or 541-385-6908. Kim Heacox will read from and sign REDMOND QUILTB CRAFT SHOW: his new novel, "Jimmy Bluefeather"; A fundraising event for Scleroderma 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Angel Foundation; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Books,422 SW Sixth St.,Redmond; $25 vendor booths; Centennial www.paulinasprings.corn or Park, corner of SW Seventh Street 541-526-1491. and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; "BEYOND MEASURE": Featuring 541-480-1958. a film about transforming our "ED SHEERAN— JUMPERSFOR education system from the ground GOALPOSTS": A showingofa up; 6 30 p.m.; $15 in advance, $20 concert documentary on the X Tour at the door; Mountain View High at Wembley Stadium; 12:55 p.m.; School, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend; $16; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 541-330-8841. IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, "I LOVE A MYSTERY": Featuring Bend; www.fathomevents.corn or episodes from "The Whistler," "Lux 844-462-7342. Radio Theater" and "The Haunting HARVEST HAYDOWNFORTHE Hour"; 7 p.m.; $15, $10 for 18 HORSES:Featuring hayrides, and under, $35-$40 for Saturday hotdogs, music,piesandmore;2 dinner show; Sunriver Homeowners p.m.; Equine Outreach, 63220 Silvis Aquatic8 Recreation Center, Road, Bend; www.equineoutreach. 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; corn or 541-419-4842. 541-588-221 2. "A FORESTFORTHETREES": "EVIL DEAD THEMUSICAL": A A lively look back to the roots play about five college students of conservationists' ethic with who visit an old abandoned cabin Teddy Roosevelt, Gifford Pinchot, in the woods and unleash an evil John Muir and Eleanor Roosevelt, force; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for exploring the movement's big students and seniors, $28 for the personalities and fractious debate; Splatter Zone; 2nd Street Theater, 3 p.m.; $5; First Presbyterian 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.corn or www.oregon2.sierraclub.org or 541-312-9626. 541-389-0785. "BOBBY GOULD INHELL": HISTORICALHAUNTS OF DOWNTOWN BEND:Takeawalkon Featuring the one-act play by David Mamet; 7:30 p.m.; $10; Volcanic the haunted side through historic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, downtown Bend, weaving history Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. with mystery of the unknown; 4 corn or 541-323-1881. p.m.; $10, free for children 12 and younger andmembers; Deschutes CENTRAL OREGON SYMPHONY Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho FALL CONCERT: Featuring guest Ave., Bend; 541-389-1813. German cellist Claus Kanngiesser performing Lalo's Cello Concerto in JAZZ AT THEOXFORD— JOEY D Minor, also including The Secret DEFRANCESCO TRIO: The threeof Suzanne Overture by Wolf-Ferrari time Grammy nominee performs; and Symphony No. 4 by Brahms; 5 p.m.;SOLD OUT;The Oxford 7:30 p.m.; free, ticket required; Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheoxford.corn or Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St., 503-432-9477. Bend; www.cosymphony.corn or "CHASING SHADOWS":A showing 541-317-3941. of the 2015 Warren Miller ski film, PRAY FORPOWDERPARTY: first100 attendees receive a lift Featuring live music by The Mostest and more; 7:30 p.m.; Broken Top ticket to Mt. Bachelor; 6 and 9 Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, p.m.; $20 plus fees; The Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.corn 541-317-0700. or 541-728-0703.

Wednesday. The intersection is one of the last stages of construction in ODOT's Murphy Roadproject, which extended Murphy Road from Brookswood to Third Street. Drivers are advised to usethe recently openednewsegment of Murphy Road todetour around the area when northbound traffic on Brookswood is stopped.

The northbound lane of BrookControlled durns swood Boulevard in Bendwill on reservation be intermittently closed over the next week aswork continues at Firefighters with the Confedits intersection with Pinebrook erated Tribes of WarmSprings Boulevard, the OregonDepartstarted controlled burns Wednesment of Transportation announced day on the WarmSprings Indian

Reservation. More burning is planned for today, said Charles Hudson, adispatcher with the tribes. The prescribed fire is near Metolius Bench onthe south side of the reservation, he said. Thecontrolled burns are part of a yearly program. — Bulletin staffreports

9 ILSONSo f Redmond 541-548-2066

$INCl

Food, Home & Garden In AT HOME

NEWS OF RECORD p.m. Oct. 15, in the 500 block of SW Reed Market Road. Criminal mischief —An act of The Bulletin will update items in the criminal mischief was reported at Police Log whensuch arequest 4:31 p.m. Oct. 15, in the 21200 block is received. Anynewinformation, of Dove Lane. such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Theft —A theft was reported at 2:37 a.m. Oct.16, in the 900 block of NW information, call 541-383-0358. Galveston Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:25 BEND POLICE a.m. Oct.16, in the 3000 block of N. DEPARTMENT U.S. Highway 97. Burglary — A burglary was reported Theft —A theft was reported at 4:39 at 8:07 a.m. Oct. 16, in the 800 block p.m. Oct. 8, in the 61100 block of of NE Ninth Street. Brosterhous Road. DUII —Matthew Mason VanHouten, DUII —Brenden Thomas Orton, 20, 28, was arrested on suspicion was arrested on suspicion of driving of driving under the influence of under the influence of intoxicants at intoxicants at 9:03 a.m. Oct. 16, in 10:32 p.m. Oct. 10, in the area of NW the area of Murphy RoadandSE 10th Street and NWNewport Avenue. Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:46 Criminal mischief —An act of p.m. Oct. 12, in the 2700 block of NE criminal mischief was reported at 27th Street. 2:59 p.m. Oct.16, in the 600 block of Criminal mischief —An act of SW Powerhouse Drive. criminal mischief was reported at Theft —A theft was reported at1:34 8:22 a.m. Oct. 14, in the 2900 block a.m. Oct.17, in the 1300 block of NW of NE Saber Drive. Milwaukee Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:37 Theft —A theft was reported at 8:24 p.m. Oct. 14, in the 2300 block of NW a.m. Oct.17, in the 100 block of SW Quinn Creek Loop. Century Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:58 DUII —Christopher Ashley Honey, p.m. Oct. 14, in the 200 block of SE 47, was arrested on suspicion Third Street. of driving under the influence of Theft —A theft was reported at intoxicants at 9:06 p.m. Oct. 17, in 11:28a.m. Oct.15, in the 2400 block the area of SEThird Street and SE of NW Marken Street. Cleveland Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at Theft —A theft was reported at 9:10 11:32a.m. Oct.15, in the 800 block a.m. Oct. 19, in the 20100 block of of NE Sixth Street. Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:24 Unauthorized use —A vehicle was

POLICE LOG

8:34 a.m. Oct. 20, in the area of NW Harwood Street.

DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE

DUII —Darin Robert Pope, 50, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:07 p.m. Oct. 19, in thearea ofThird Street and Badger Road. DUII —Tyler Allen Stoumbaugh, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:59 p.m. Oct. 19, in thearea of U.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost140. DUII —Breann Raefren Redfox, 19, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:49 p.m. Oct. 20, in the area ofU.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost123.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — A theft was reported at

541-330-5084

OREGON STATE POLICE

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reported stolen at11:01 a.m. Oct. 19, in the 61700 block of Metolius Drive. Unauthorized use —A vehicle was reported stolen at 5:42 p.m. Oct. 19, in the 2500 block of NETwin Knolls Drive.

Theft —A theft was reported at10 a.m. Oct.19, in the15700 block of Jackpine Road. Theft —A theft was reported at12:40 p.m. Oct.19, in the100 block of W. Main Avenue.

IINTREss

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

OU FeVIVeS FISOA WOF eF BWSUI OVeF WFOI1 U IFIA By Steven DuBois The Associated Press

PORTLAND — The state Court of A ppeals has kept

alive a lawsuit filed by a former MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility employee who was fired after telling Oregon State Police he thought he had been poisoned on the job. The Oregon Youth Authority fired Tim Hall in 2011, at

least in part for filing a false report. Hall and his attorney, Kevin Lafky, said the dismissal was in retaliation for

Hall's complaints about management and assaults at the youth prison in Woodburn. "When they had this excuse to terminate him, they jumped on it," Lafky said

Wednesday. Oregon Youth Authority spokeswoman Ann Snyder said the agency does not comment on issues involving

He left the bottle when his tained barbiturates. job took him to another part A trial judge dismissed of the building. When he re- Hall's claim of wrongful terturned, he took another drink mination, agreeing with the and felt a hard substance, Oregon Youth Authority that human resources. In court which he believed to be a dis- the report of criminal activity d ocuments, the Youth A u solving pill. Hall showed the was unreasonable. thority said Hall also violat- bottle to three other employThe Appeals Court, howeved its drug-free workplace ees who thought there might er, said Wednesday the hindpolicy and provided false or be something in the liquid. sight of videotape does not misleading information to Hall said he later felt dizzy defeat the "objective reasonmanagement during an in- and went to Salem Hospital, ableness" of Hall's decision to vestigation and pre-dismissal where a urine sample tested go to police, given that other meeting. positive for barbiturates. He employees noticed a subHall was hired in 2000 and filed the police report shortly stance and it was not rare for supervised young offenders. after getting the result. offenders to try to harm staff. He brought a sealed bottle of Surveillance video proved The lawsuit returns to Marsweetened water to the visit- that no one tampered with ion County Circuit Court, ing center during a shift on the bottle and Hall later ac- where it resumes its path Dec. 22, 2010, and noticed knowledged that a prescrip- toward triaL Hall seeks renothing strange after taking tion medication he took for instatement, back pay and a few sips. migraine headaches con- monetary damages.

and other items must be held

P ORTLAND — T h e c i t y

of Troutdale has paid nearly $4,000 for the rifle used in last

tion and other items recovered

the appropriate time, will re-

as evidence in case a charge is at the scene. "Understanding the emoever filed.

quest an order for "final disposition of the property."

H owever, the d i strict a t -

year's deadly school shooting, torney's office said almost a rather than returntheweapon year ago that Lucas Padgett to the shooter's brother. couldn't be prosecuted for alFreshman Jared Padgett lowing his brother to access killed Reynolds High School the rifle, because he kept it in classmate Emilio H offman, a locked container. then himself, with an AR-15 The judge ruled city porifle he stole from his older lice must return the gun unbrother. went to court this summer,

say the "flying people" on airport walls will temporarily be movedto Lane Community College sothe airport's $16.8 million expansion project can proceed. Theiconic art installation officially titled "Flight Patterns" will be displayed at the college's David JoyceGallery. The artwork was created bythe late LCCart instructor David Joyce. It features seven panelsand morethan100 black-and-white photo cutouts of local people in flying poses. Airport spokeswomanCathryn Stephens says no final decision has beenmadeabout where, when or if the artwork will return to the airport. She saysthe wall configuration will be very different after the expansion project.

Body identified —Officials haveconfirmed that a bodyfound near Zillah, Washington, in September isthat of a24-year-old Oregon man believed killed earlier this year.TheYakima County Sheriff's Office said Wednesdaythat DNAanalysis identified the body asAntonio Hernandez-LedezmaofBoardman.Thebodywasfoundbyahiker.Thesheriff's offic esaysanautopsyshowedhehadbeenshotinthebackofthehead at close range.YosetDominguez-Serrano, 19, ofOutlook, Washington, is chargedwith first-degree murder in thedeath. Officials believeHernandez-Le dezma wasshotinFebruaryintheSunnyside,W ashington, area. The victim was facing rape charges inYakima County Superior Court for allegedly impregnating arelative of Dominguez-Serrano,who is being held intheYakimaCounty jail on $1 million bail.

Milwaukie minimum wage — Thecity of Milwaukiehasapproved a raise in minimumwagefor city workers. The City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to raise the minimumwage to$15 an hour. The payhike, proposed by Mayor Mark Gamba, only applies to city employeesandcontractors. The Portland City Council approved a $15 minimum wage for its city workers in February. The raise affected about 200 employees.

Padgett's attorney, Shawn

Hoffman and Padgett families Kollie, told The Oregonian the have been through, the city of city contacted him shortly afTroutdale reached out to Lu-

ter the judge ruled last month.

to all involved and help con-

said. "The thing that made the

tinue the healing process of this terrible tragedy," Mayor

difference in this case is that

TOilet trundle —An Oregon city is considering adding additional portable toilets to stop public defecation around businessesand parks. A Corvallis City Council Committee is recommending the city add more portable toilets along the Willamette River to stop the problem. Onewould be placed at theentrance to Riverfront Commemorative Park, and thesecondwould be just south of downtown. The full council will consider the recommendation Nov.2. A homeless shelter also installed a portable toilet behind its men's shelter on Wednesday. Corvallis Housing First built a woodenstructure around the toilet to make it more aesthetically pleasing.

"People have wildly varycas Padgett to seek a compromise that would be acceptable ing opinions on guns," Kollie it was undisputed that items

were stolen. If you steal my days it was still being held as ment Tuesday. car and get a DUII, (the police) evidence. The release said the city, at don't get to keep my car." less it could prove within 45

The brother, Lucas Padgett,

tional trauma that both the

'Flying people' moved to college —EugeneAirport officials

150-tun IOCk sSCul'Sd —Oregon authorities say the massive rock threatening to fall from a cliff onto Highway 58hasnow been secured. A contractor for the OregonDepartment of Transportation has bolted down the 150-ton rock, which hadbeen separating from the cliff face abovethe highway east of Oakridge. Workers from Rock Supremacy of Bend climbed the 75-foot cliff and used awagon drill to make sevenholes in the rock. They usedsteel reinforcement bars to secure it in place. The$32,000 project was declared a success after strength tests.

Troutdale buysgun usedin 20'i4 school shooting The Associated Press

AROUND THE STATE

Doug Daoust said in a state-

— From wire reports

asking a judge to order the The City Council, on Oct. city to return his property. 13, agreed to pay the brother The city argued the weapon $3,950 for the rifle, ammuni-

Jade McDow ell/ East Oregonian via The Associated Press

A "No Camping" sign marks the entrance to a spot along the Umatilla River near Umatilla High School in Pendleton on Tuesday.

A hfagazine Highlightingthe Vari ety of Organizations That Connect Your Community.

Homeless campsempty out in Umatilla, Hermiston By Jade McDowell

any way diminish the plight of

East Oregonian

the homeless population, but

this is not just someone strugbe a community of sorts, a ha- gling to survive in the woods," ven for some of Umatilla's most Ward said. "These are places down and out. that are unsafe to live due to Now the stretch of woods illegal activity and unhygienic along the Umatilla River be- conditions." tween the high school and At the same time the UmaRiver Road is quiet. The impro- tilla Police Department was vised homeless camp that used directing people to move out of to be nestled against the river the camps along the river, a pribanks is gone. In its place is a vate property owner in Hermred and white sign proclaiming iston decided to clear out trees "No camping," the "N" defiant- along the Hermiston Ditch bely whited out. hind Walmart that had often City Manager Bob Ward given shelter to some of Hermsaid the sign is part of the city' s iston's homeless population. enforcementof an ordinance Hermiston Police Departpassed Sept. 1 that banned liv- ment Chief Jason Edmiston ing in tents inside city limits. said the burning of the trees After people living near the along the ditch was not initiatriver were put on notice by the ed by law enforcement, but the city that they needed to move property owner did contact the or becited,W ard saidthecamp department to ask if officers was abandoned and its tenants could be sent beforehand to seemed tohave moved upriver notify people of the plan to deout of the city. stroy the trees. Edmiston said "When theymoved out,what the department assisted in noremained was not a pleasant tifying people they were on prisight," he said. vate property. Ward said the city's public David Hughes of the Agape works department had been House said when cities or cleaning out the debris. property owners undertake an He said law enforcement had effort to dear out a homeless tried to make sure those who camp, it may take care of that were contacted about moving particular site, but the people out of the city were given infor- who were living there almost mation about available help, in- always just move to a different cluding a free bus that can take place. "Unfortunately that does not people from Umatilla to Hermiston for a visit to resources solve the problem; you need a such as the Agape House food long-range plan to get them off bank. drugs and off the streets," he

s

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

-

PENDLETON — It used to

" I really don't want to i n

SBld.

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

ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS The Bulletin is in theprocess ofverifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon.Pleasefill out this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail backto: The Bulletin, Attn: Kari Mauser, P.O. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. E-maii information to coliiIectiolis©bendbtilletin.corn or call 541-383-0379 Name of Nonprofit Group Contact Person

E-mail

Organization Phone Number

Website

Nonprofit Mission Statement/Purpose


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end city government is doing something about affordable housing. The city's Affordable Housing Committee met Wednesday and made recommendations for funding from Bend's new fee exemption. The new system development charge exemption doesn't solve Bend's affordable housing problem. But coupled with the affordable housing density bonus approved by the Bend City Council, the policies might be able to tip the balance in favor of homes for some families. The council has agreed to for-

Paul has completed nearly 1,100 units of affordable housing. In Bend, St. Vincent De Paul wants to start doing something similar. It may get about $157,000 for a project on Third Street. A proposed five-story building would have a commercial area on the first floor and affordable housing on the others. go as much as $1 million in system Projects also being considered development charges over the next include $52,000 for Habitat for Hutwo years. SDCs drive up costs manity, $78,000 for private developsignificantly. er Steven Rzonca and $157,000 for For a single-family home, Bend affordablehousing developer Pacifcollects $4,928 in SDCs for trans- ic Crest. That leaves about $250,000 portation,$3,058 for sewers and left over to be allocated later. $4,868 for water. The SDC rates for The committee just makes recapartments and multifamily hous- ommendations. It's going to look ing are a bit lower. into adding conditions to ensure the The projects awarded the ex- money is spent how the city intends emption would not have to pay wa- or the city will get it back The Bend ter and sewer SDCs and would get City Council will make final decia 75 percent reduction in fees for sions on what projects are granted transportation. the SDC exemption. Projects under c onsideration The Bend Park 8 Recreation Disindude one from Housing Works, trict board rejected a similar SDC the local housing authority. It has a exemption earlier this year and 52-unit affordable townhome proj- again Tuesday night. By dwelling ect almost ready to go. It may get on how the exemption is imperfect, $306,000. the park district failed to confront a In Lane County, St. Vincent De critical problem for Bend.

te Q.PQAk 5CQAh,ka,r l'~q a 0. 47Rl ~~ » 1 l ~ 1 a. l 'v/CO ~ ~> <s bul ~t ~e b blu ese . c Mmr~ d~g ~z y r e v ~~~

M nickel's Worth Columnist Hanson

wrong on the pope Elitist columnist V ictor D avis

Hanson — fully being a right-wing conservative, Protestant and scholar

helps wildlife, farmers T hree Sisters Irrigation Dis- They leakedterribly,and evapora-

tion took a toll — so much so that some districts saw more than half their water disappear into the air or

properly.

grouts

The district, the oldest in Deschutes County, was formed in 1891. Almost all irrigation districts operating in the county today or their predecessors were up and running before the 1920s. North Unit district, which serves Jefferson County farmers and draws water from Wickiup Reservoir, was not operating until 1949. The districts turned the High Desert green by taking water from the Deschutes River and its tributaries and in doing so drew people to the area. Neither the districts' creators, their water users nor anyone else was concerned much aboutthings such as fish habitat, streamflow or water temperature, all of which are considered critical today. That shift is partly responsible for the current push to improve districts' efficiency. Canals across Central Oregon were carved through rock and earth or built of wood.

Piping water solves that problem and leaves more water in the rivers and streams in the process. Just ask the folks who run the Three Sisters district. The district and Energy Trust of Oregon late last week completed a decade'sworth of combined efforts and money to pipe some 75 percent of the district's canals and build a small hydropower project, which will produce enough electricity to serve about 275 homes. They' ve spent about $15 million doing so. They have also returned water to Whychus Creek in the summer, creating a welcoming environment when native steelhead start to return after more than a century-long absence. And, even in thisdry summ er, customers continued to receive water all season. Good things happen when conservation measures, including pip-

ing, take place.

and West Germany to look at for the example of socialism versus capitalism. Do you think East Ger-

and elect a socialist revolutionary Jew for president — Go Bernie Sanders!

mans had gun rights? In Switzerland, every house can be armed as

Scott Ferguson they get military training and get to Bend keep their weapons. There are low

of war — surprised nobody in a recent column: He doesn't like a man ofthepeople such asPopeFrancis. I am not Catholic myself, but Hanson's slings at the pope, on a

Don't curtail guns

truth. And he sounds convincing, if

nals.Second, no gun-control mea-

charter was a sound one based on

one does not hear the other side of sure could have prevented any of the argument. So where in The Bul- these tragedies. They happened in letin is the balance? gun-free zones. Yes, the pope's ideas oppose HanLet us look at th e other side, son's worldview. But what do Amer- which is allowing concealed-carry

staff recommendation. There is a templateto rendera charter's sound-

amounts of crime, and no one tries

to take them over. The best defense is a good offense. Every time there is a mass shootNils KrlstIansen Sunday no less, were a bit too much ing by some crazy that wants fame Bend for me. As a classical scholar, Han- and notoriety, the politicians and son knows rhetoric welL His talent some naive citizens bring up gun Right decision on charter involves presenting a few facts, then control. First, you can only get guns crafting an argument that supports from law-abiding gun owners, leavThe recent Bend-La Pine school c orporatist views, w hatever t h e ing the guns in the hands of crimi- board rejection of the Montessori

Three Sisters district trict has proved streams, fish and irrigators all can prosper when irrigation is handled

Perhaps it is time to overturn the tables at the temple of Wall Street

ican's really want? Is it unbridled

permit owners to have their weap-

destruction of the earth, an out-of- ons in schools and theaters. Is there balance economic system that eats a chance one of them could stop the away atcommon working people, shooter? If airline pilots were alwar, hate and death? Do we really lowed tobearmed, isthere achance believe that pharmaceutical companies, oil companies, the military in-

9/11 could have been averted? Likewise, if there was a licensed con-

ness — i.e., fiscal soundness, minori-

ty services and special education needs among other criteria. As a former Contra Costa Coun-

ty (San Francisco Bay Area) board trustee, we accepted and rejected many charters. The decisions were

not based on staff alone, as each of the five of us read the petitions from front to back and asked many

dustrialists and the super-rich who cealed carry on board the planes, questions. fund the likes of Hanson through it there a chance they could have I am now a board member of a the Hoover Institution have our best stopped the guys with box cutters? highly regarded charter high school interests in mind'? And certainly the Has there been one case of a con- in California. We just received a fiveanswer is not the neoliberal Demo- cealed carry doing a mass shoot- year renewal and a six-year Western crats who are more to the right than ing? Not to my knowledge. Association of Schools and Colleges Richard Nixon. The Second Amendment was accreditation. I feel charters have The pope brings a reminder of given so citizens would not be help- their place in our educational system. a socialist revolutionary Jew who less to an overzealous government. Oversight by the approving agency overturned the tables at the temple, History shows us that every dicta- is a must! striking out at a corrupt, powerful tor confiscated guns before holding Richard AsadoorIan elite some 2,000yearsago. the public hostage. We have East Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.corn Write: My Nickel's Worth/ In My View P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708

Fax: 541-385-5804

Is the Unite States losing A ghanistan again? By Thomas Joscelyn andBill RoggIo The New York Times

A

30 districts are already under Taliban control. And the insurgents are

llah has promised us victory, threatening provincial capitals in both and America has promised us northern and southern Afghanistan. defeat," Mullah Muhammad

Confronted with this grim reality,

Omar, the first head of the Taliban, President Barack Obama has decided once said. "So we shall see which of to keep 9,800 American troops in the

the two promises will be fulfilled."

country through much of 2016 and

When his colleagues admitted this summer that Omar had died, al-Qaida and affiliated groups around the globe rememberedthose wordsvictory is a divine certainty — in their eulogies. And in Afghanistan today, though the majority of Afghans still do not identify with the Taliban or al-Qaida, Omar's bold defiance in the face of a superpower is beginning to look prescient.

5,500 thereafter. The president was

Since early September, the Taliban

right to change course, but it is difficult

to see how much of a difference this small force can make. When justifying his decision last week, the president explained American troops would "remain engaged in two narrow but critical missions

— training Afghan forces and supporting counterterrorism operations against the remnants of Al Qaida." He added,"We've always known thatwe

have swept through Afghanistan's had to maintain a counterterrorism north, seizing numerous districts

operation in that region in order to

and even, briefly, the provincial cap- tamp down any re-emergence of acital Kunduz. The United Nations has tive Al Qaida networks." determined the Taliban threat to ap-

But the president has not explained

proximately half of the country's 398 the full scope of what is at stake. districts is either "high" or "extreme." AI-Qaida has already re-emerged. Indeed, by our count, more than Just two days before the president's

The Taliban are not hiding their led raids against two al-Qaida training continuing alliance with al-Qaida. In camps in the south, one of which was August, al-Zawahri pledged his allean astonishing 30 square miles in size. giance to Omar's successor, Mullah The operatio n lasted severaldaysand Akhtar Mohammad Mansour. Within involved 63 airstrikes and more than hours, Mansour publicly accepted the 200 ground troops, induding both "esteemed" al-Zawahri's oath of fealty. Americans and Afghan commandos. And Qaida members are integrated "We struck a major al-Qaida sanc- into the Taliban's chain of command. tuary in the center of the Taliban's In fact, foreign fighters affiliated with historic heartland," Brig. Gen. Wilson al-Qaida played a significant role in Shoffner, a military spokesman, said. the Taliban-led assault on Kunduz. Shoffner described it as "one of the The United States made many mislargest joint ground-assault operations takes in the 9/ll wars. After routing we have ever conducted in Afghani- the Tahban and al-Qaida in late 2001, stan." Other significant al-Qaida fa- President George W. Bush did not dedcilities are already being identified in icate the resources necessary to finish local press reporting. the fight. Obama was right in DecemRecently, Hossam Abdul Raouf, a ber 2009 to announce a surge of forces chief lieutenant of the al-Qaida leader in Afghanistan, but it was short-lived. Ayman al-Zawahri, confirmed in an AI-Qaida is not nearly as "decimated" audio message that al-Qaida's senior in South Asia as Obama has claimed. leadership has relocated out of northWe don't think 5,500 troops are ern Pakistan — no secret to the mil- enough. No one is calling for a fullitary and the CIA, which have been scale occupation of the country. But a hunting senior al-Qaida figures in Af- force ofas many as 20,000 to 25,000 ghanistanand elsewhere throughout would far better support our local Afthe year. ghan allies. statement, the military announced it

While many believe al-Qaida is solely focused on attacking the West, it has devoted most of its efforts to

waging insurgencies. This is the key to understanding how it has been able

to regenerate repeatedly over the past 14 years. Al-Qaida draws would-be terrorists from the larger pool of para-

military forces fighting to restore the Taliban to power in Afghanistan or to build radical nation-states elsewhere.

Al-Qaida and like-minded groups were founded on the myth that the Soviet Union was defeated in Afghani-

stan because of the mujahedeen's faith in Allah alone. This helped spawn a generation of new wars and terrorist attacks, most of which have targeted Muslims. Should the Afghans suffer additional territorial losses, Omar's words will appear prophetic. And a new myth, one that will feed the Tali-

ban'sand al-Qaida'sviolenceforyears to come, will be born. — Thomas Joscelyn and Bill Roggio are senior fellows at the Foundation for D efense ofDemocracies and the editors of The Long War JournaL


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Parks

BITUARIES

Continued from B1 Developers pay

n early

$19,000 in SDCs for a new

single-family home in Bend.

"I'm not yet convinced that a developer subsidy in the form of an SDC exemption,

Harrell "Hal" J. Taute, of La Pine

Robert 'Bob' David Johnson July 7, 1951 - October18, 2015

July 31, 1945 - Oct. 16, 201 5 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdfh.corn

Services: A private service will be held in Montana at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Heart 'n Home Hospice, PO Box 3540, La Pine, OR 97739,

www.gohospice.corn

Jack E. MacDonald,of Bend April 24, 1924 - Oct. 19, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel (541) 382-5592. Please visit our online register book at deschutesmemorialchapel.corn

Pc++ '+A+4. R obert D a v i d Jo h n s on went into th e p r esence of his Savior on O ctober 18, 2 015, as a result of a c a r accident. Bob was born in Salem, Oregon, on July 7, 1 951, t o J o s ep h V e r n o n Johnson an d C h a r c elene Barnes Johnson. I n 1 9 55, his parents moved to Bend

where

B ob

att e n d ed

s chool, g r a d uating f r o m Bend High in 1969. He received a B.S. in Mechanical Technology from Leto: Tourneau Col l e g e in Partners In Care Hospice, Longview, Texas, in 1973. 2075 NE Wyatt Court, While there, he served as Bend, OR 97701, p resident of t h e A u t o m opartnersbend.org; Burned tive Society and, also met Children Recovery h is b r i de , M a r sh a G r a y . Foundation, 409 Wood T hey w er e m a r r ie d S e p Place, Everett, WA tember I, 1973. Their sons, 98203, D avid a n d B r i a n , w e r e burnedchildrenrecovery.org born in 1974 and 1977. Jack Michael Bob returned to Bend afReynolds, Sr., of t er college to w or k i n t h e La Pine f amily b u si n e ss , JV Johnson Bu i l d i ng , an d Sept. 23, 1948- Oct. 9, 2015 later, Th e H o m e C e n t er, Arrangements: w hich b e c am e J o h n s on Baird Memorial Chapel of Brothers TV & A p p l i ance. La Pine is honored to He eventually assumed the serve the family. general manager role and 541-536-5104 r an the b u siness with i n www.bairdfh.corn tegrity. H e w a s r e spected Services: and loved by h i s e m ployA private family gathering ees. His business model rewill take place at a later s ulted i n s u c c ess w h i c h date. enabled him to do what he Contributions may bemade m ost l o v ed , w h i c h w a s to: s erving others and g i v i ng Partners In Care Hospice, to others. It gave him great 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, joy to be able to share his OR 97701, r esources w it h o u t ac541-382-5882, knowledgement and many www.partnersbend.org local and foreign charities, churches, and i n d i v iduals have been t h e b e n eficiaDEATHS ries of his generosity. Bob was a ma n o f d e ep f aith. H e tr u s t e d co m pletely i n C h r i s t' s d e ath a nd r esurrection f o r t h e forgiveness of his sins. He Deaths ofnote from around w as a c t i v e i n Su n d a y the world: Gory Wells, 74: Found- S chool ministry fo r m u c h his adult life. He taught ing member of the popular of c lasses and served on t h e 1970s band Three Dog Night Christian Education Board and lead singer on such hits at First Baptist Church. He as "Never Been t o S p ain" taught f o r t h e A m e r i c an and "Mama Told Me (Not S unday School U n i o n i n to Come)." Died Tuesday in B rothers, Or e g on , an d m ost r e cently, t a u gh t a t Dunkirk, New York. Gamal al-Ghitani, 70: For- G race Bi bl e C h u r ch . H e mer carpet designer who loved the Bible and l oved teaching children. switched careers tobecome B ob earned a p i l o t' s l i one of Egypt's most acclaimed c ense in h ig h s chool a n d novelists and was most fa- l ater e n j oyed t a k i n g h i s mous fo r h i s 1 9 7 4 n o vel f amily o n t ri p s i n hi s "Zayni Barakat," a scorching plane. He had a knack for allegorical critique of totali- m echanics an d c o ul d f i x tarianism in which a ruthless j ust a b ou t a n y t h i ng . H e Egyptian leader's legitimacy w as a bl e t o p a s s a l o n g is challenged. Died Sunday in many practical skills to his sons a n d not h i n g d eCairo. l ighted h i m mo re th a n — From wire reports w orking o n p r o j ects w i t h t hem. Spending time w i t h f amily wa s a t o p p r i o r ity f or Bob. H e a n d M a r s h a h ad recently s h are d te n m emorable d a y s i n th e Death Notices are freeand m ountains o f W yom i n g will be run for oneday, but and Montana. specific guidelines must be In recent years, Bob took followed. Local obituaries g reat delight i n h i s e i g h t are paid advertisements g randchildren. H e w a s a submitted by families or fuv ery h a n d s-o n g r a n d f aneral homes. Theymaybe t her, w o r k i n g p uzz l e s, telling bedtime stories and submitted by phone, mail, adventuring a r o u n d th e email or fax. TheBulletin farm on t h e f o u r -wheeler reserves the right to edit loaded with kids. all submissions. Please B ob i s s u r v i ved b y h i s include contact information wife of 42 y e ars, Marsha; in all correspondence. s on, David, and h i s w i f e , For information on anyof Carrie, of K l a m at h F a l l s, O re.; son, B r i an, an d h i s these services or about the w ife K e l ly , o f W i l l i a m s , obituary policy, contact Ore.; hi s s i ster, C h ar cie, 541-61 7-7825. and he r h u s b and, S t eve; Deadlines:Death Notices g randchildren , Scar l e t t , are accepted until noon Jude, Georgie and Charlie Monday through Friday for of K l a m at h Fa l l s ; an d next-day publication and by K aty, A l i i , E m ma an d Clara of W i l l i ams; as well 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday a s n u m e r ou s ex t e n d ed publication. Obituaries family. must be receivedby5p.m. A m emorial s e r vice f o r Monday through Thursday Bob will be held Saturday, for publication on the secOctober 24, 3 PM, at Grace ond day after submission, B ible Church of Bend. I n by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday lieu of flowers, please conpublication, and by 9a.m. s ider an h o n orary g i f t t o MondayforTuesday one of these organizations that Bo b e n t h u siastically publication. Deadlines for s upported: T h e El i sh a display ads vary; pleasecall Foundation, Orphanges of for details. K enya, o r Gra c e Bi b l e Phone: 541-617-7825 Church of Bend. Email: obits©bendbulletin.corn A rrangements : Ni swonger R e y n o lds. GuestFax: 541-322-7254 b ook c a n b e si g n e d a t Mail:Obituaries www.niswonger-reynolds. P.O. Box6020 corn Services: No Services will be held. Contributions may bemade

ELSE% THERE

Obituary policy

Bend, OR97708

rates for free-standing houses and apartment units. He

said the district could reduce

accomplish (affordable housing)."

SDC collections, raise SDCs for other units to offset funds

— Nathan Hovekamp, Bend Park & Recreation District board member

or discount have said reducing that rate would make it easierfor developers to create

housing affordable to those of modest means. in agreement that housing Board member Brady Full- affordability is a serious coner said he and Ellen Grover cern in Bend, an SDC exemp— the two newest members

tion might not be the right

of the board — were willing

remedy.

to revisit the matter but got

trict currently have different

a park SDC exemption, is the best way to

Proponents of an exemption

DEATH NOTICES

B5

"I'm not yet convinced that

no support from others on the a developer subsidy in the five-member board. form of an SDC exemption, "I think all three of those a park SDC exemption, is the guys, philosophically, are not best way to accomplish that," interested in revisiting poli- he said. cy decisions that have been Board chairman Craig through a good process by Chenoweth said he's open the board," he said. to the idea of taking another Hovekamp said while ev- look at possible SDC exempery member of the board is tions for affordable housing

servicesto account for lower not collected from affordable

housing units or reallocate the district's tax collections to fund projects that would

otherwise be funded through SDCs. SDCs. Park districts and cities peChenoweth said he's still as part of an overall look at

riodically revisit their SDCs to set new rates, taking into

not certain if an SDC exemp-

tion would have the desired a n t icipatedeffect of s t i mulating conconstruction and population structionof affordable housgrowth and the cost of pro- ing. He said the city's decision viding new residents with the to push ahead with its own same level of service enjoyed exemption could put the theoby current residents. ry to the test and provide the Chenoweth said an overall district board with useful inlook at SDCs could incorpo- formation should it choose to rate an agreed-upon SDC rate revisit the issue in the future. for affordable housing units, — Reporter: 541-383-0387, just as the city and park disshammers@bendbulleti n.corn consideration

FEATURED OBITUARY

Anderson put modern twist on masters By William Grimes

"Anything that was painted interested me. It Lennart Anderson, one of the most prominent and ad- could be the stupidest calendar art. If it was mired painters to t r anslate put down with paint, I would cross the street to New York Times News Service

figurative art into a modern idiom, died Thursday at his home in Brooklyn, New York. He was 87. The cause was prostate can-

see it."

and a son, Orrin. Other survivors include a brother, Sigfrid, and threegrandchildren. His second wife, Barbara Stenglein-Anderson, died in 2002. For many years, beginning in the late 1970s, Anderson

cer, his daughter Jeanette Wal-

— Lennart Anderson, painter laboredoverthree large-scale acrylic paintings he called "Idylls." Influenced by Poussa quality that put him at odds in, they depicted scenes of pas-

lace said. Anderson brought a deep

with most of his abstractionist contemporaries,and praised

degree in fine art in 1950. At the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield, Michiunderstanding of masters like gan, where he earned a masPiero della Francesca, Diego ter's degree in fine art in 1952, Velazquez, Nicolas Poussin he fancied himself an expresand Edgar Degas to his still sionist in the vein of Oskar lifes, portraits, landscapes and Kokoschka. "I painted horrenstreetscapes, while applying a dous subjects — dead babies,

toral bliss, with maidens and

garlanded youths dancing to him as "a young painter who the strains of a guitar. "The idyll should never go engages himself with the stiffest of competition, the com- out of style," he told Newsweek petition of the past, and gives in 1982. "The further we are every promise of being able to from an Arcadian scene, the meet it." more meaningful it is, and we modern twist that lifted them trash heaps, prostitutes," he In 1974, Anderson's gallery, should find ways to paint it. from the common run of aca- told Samet. Davis and Long (now Davis Besides, the subject is not just demic realism. The fever quickly passed. and Langdale), mounted a ret- classical. It is air, flesh and sky, The Chardinesque "Still Life He turned to portraits, still rospective of his work. Three and all the great art of the past, With Corn Popper, Salt Shak- lifesand street scenes,adher- years later, he was inducted which had those things in it." er and Buns," one of his best- ing to a cool, restrained pal- into the American Academy of The paintings, endlessly reknown paintings, from the ette. His color warmed up con- Arts and Letters, and in 1992 vised, were always referred to early 1990s, presents the view- siderably in the three years he he was given his first big mu- as works in progress. er with an array of humble spent at the American Acade- seum show, at the Delaware Like so many of his paintobjects on a kitchen table that my in Rome beginning in the Art Museum. ings, they were assertively includes — like a gate-crash- late 1950s. He taught at several schools, unfashionable and almost emer at a private affair — a Jiffy A few years before Rome, including Pratt Institute, Yale blematic of his semi-outsider Pop pan with its foil cover fully he had moved to New York, University, the Art Students status. Reflecting on New York puffed. where he studied briefly with League, Princeton University in the 1950s in an interview His stteetscapes likewise Edwin Dickinson at the Art and Columbia University. But with the website paintingconveyed the still timelessness Students League. he was most closely associated perceptions.corn in 2013, Anof a classical tableau by Piero Anderson was given a solo with Brooklyn College, where derson recalled living on the while addressing contemporary show in 1962 at the cooperative he taught from 1974 to 2004. same block with fellow artists subject matter, a fusion that of- Tanager Gallery on 10th Street In the early 2000s, after An- Willem de Kooning and Franz ten drew comparisons to the in Manhattan, a hopping-off derson began experiencing Kline. "They are history, but I'm Polish-born French artist Bal- point for many young artists at macular degeneration of his thus. His "Street Scene," from the time, usually Abstract Ex- eyes, he could paint only with not history," he said. "It's just the early '60s, depicts a child' s pressionist painters. A year lat- extreme difficulty. the way I am. I'm not unfriendsidewalk accident, with adults er, when reviewing his work at In addition to his daughter ly, but I feel like I' ve always racing to the scene, gesticu- the Graham Gallery on Madi- Jeanette, he is survived by two been hunkered down, you lating wildly, and a young girl son Avenue for The New York children from his first mar- know? I' ve got something I bursting through the front door Times, John Canaday noted riage,which ended in divorce: want to do, or try to do, and am of an apartment building, her Anderson's "intense reserve," a daughter, Eliza Anderson, working to get by." mouth frozen in a horrified O. For a generation of figurative artists, many of w h om

studied with him at Brooklyn College, Anderson, a master

colorist whose surfaces displayed a virtuosic touch, was

an inspirational figure: an artist working outside the dominant trends in contemporary

art, steadfast in his allegiance to his chosen masters.

Reviewing

A n derson's

"Idylls," an ambitious series of tableaus he worked on for decades, Hilton Kramer wrote in the New York Observer in 2001, "In a saner art world than ours, museums would be

K SK48 K > M K

EÃ8"

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

vying for the honor of mounting a major retrospective of Anderson's work, but that is

not something likely to happen anytime soon." Anderson was born Aug. 22, 1928, in Detroit, where his fa-

ther worked as a patternmaker for Ford. Two drawings, he oncesaid,m ade adeepimpression on him as a child: one by his father, of a worker chained

to his workbench, the other by his mother, who, to amuse him and his brother, copied the figure of Johnnie Walker from a whisky ad in the newspaper. I tching to

m ake art, h e

nagged his father to buy him a set of oil paints. He began drawing and painting from the model at an early age at the Detroit Institute of Arts and the school of the Detroit Soci-

ety of Arts and Crafts. "Anything that was painted interested me," he said in an interview with art historian Jennifer Samet in 2002. "It could be the stupidest calendar art. If it was put down with paint, I would cross the street to see it."

After graduating from Cass Technical School, whose commercial-art program funneled

KIDS Center

a child abuse intervention center

students into Detroit's auto

plants, Anderson won a scholarship to attend the School of the Art Institute of Chicago,

where he earned a bachelor' s

Sign up at kidscenter.org


B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

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

I

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TODAY

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TONIGHT

HIGH 33.

ALMANAC EAST:Partly to mostly

TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 68' 60' 82'in 1925 32' 32' 13'in 1949

PRECIPITATION

o

24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday O.oo Record 0.79o in 1934 o Month to date (normal) 0.8 2 (0.34") Year to date (normal ) 7.74o (7.51 ") o Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 3D . DB

SUN ANDMOON Today 7:28 a.m. 6:11 p.m. 3:29 p.m. 1:29 a.m. L ast Nw e

Fri. 7: 2 9 a.m. 6: 0 9 p.m. 4: 0 6 p.m. 2: 3 9 a.m. Firs t

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Tonight's sky:TheGreat Square of Pegasus is nearly overheadbefore midnight.

CENTRAL: Sunshine will mix with some clouds today; anice

andmil dafternoon.

2 p .m. 4 p.m.

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The highertheAccuWeelher.corn UVindex" number, the greatertheneedfor syesndskin protection.0-2 Low 34 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10Very High; I I+ Extreme.

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

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Wee d s Abse n t

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Juniper Ridge Continued from B1 Clinton disagreed, saying the city "has to have a vision," adding that land at Juniper Ridge will never be as cheap as other properties for big industrial buildings because of how rocky the soil is. As a result, higher-end firms look-

revenuebeing generated from

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Yesterday Today Fdday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 66/4 7/0.0064/43/pc 66/45 /pc 68/ 2 8/0.0064/26/s 63/30/pc 70/ 28/0.0064/24/s 66/29/pc 61 / 49/0.0067/41/pc 68/43 /pc 66/42/0.00 64/40/pc 64/42 /pc 70/28/0.00 64/26/pc 64/32/ pc 6 9 / 40/0.0069/40/pc 67/42/ pc WeatherlWI: s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy,sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, st-snowflurries, sn-snow i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday

city

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whatever buildings may even- stretching from downtown tually occupy the site. east to Third Street and the As part of a separate topic, area along U.S. Highway 97 the council discussed the pos- west of Pilot Butte. Another sibility of creating three new study area covers much of southwest Bend west of the

criteria for creating such a Deschutes River, while the fidistrict is vague, Eagan noted, nal area is centered around the with the requirement that an

58'

33o

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32o Mostly sunny

Mill District, extending to a big

chunk of the city to the south. The areas are intentionally

borhoods toincrease density

and a city's tax base, getting the most intense development possible. The other leverages money to help struggling neighborhoods, for example by creating new access to an area that was previously isolated. Councilor Nathan Boddie

said development can be great

large, Eagan said, so the eval- but that he doesn't want "viuation may determine what

areascould feasibly work as urban renewal districts. The history of urban renewal, Eagan added, is divided One of the areas covers the between two traditions. One city'score commercial areas, emphasizes building up neigh-

brancy to hurt affordability,"

suggesting the city intentionally protect affordable housing in any new urban renewal dlStrtCtS. —Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@beftdbtflletin.corn

Trails Continued from B1 While the North Fork Malh eur Trail i s r eady to r i d e

and mainly in need of better maintenance, Mesple and her

group also have proposed 42 miles of various trail loops

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

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln

50/44/1.31 84/63/0.00 71/53/0.18 78/64/0.01 74/44/0.00 69/57/0.07 Little Rock 86/52/0.00 Los Angeles 84/63/0.00 Louisville 76/45/0.00 Madison, Wl 70/55/Tr Memphis 83/57/0.00 Miami 86/76/0.01 Milwaukee 73/56/0.03 Minneapolis 63/54/Tr Nashville 79/46/0.00 New Orleans 82/67/0.00 New YorkCity 76/57/0.00 Newark, NJ 76/50/0.00 Norfolk, VA 76/45/0.00 OklahomaCity 83/57/0.00 Omaha 68/57/0.01 Orlando 84/67/0.07 Palm Springs 87/63/0.00 Peoria 83/60/0.01 Philadelphia 78/50/0.00 Phoenix 77/64/0.06 72/43/0.00 Pitls burg h Portland, ME 54/49/0.03 Providence 71/56/Tr Raleigh 76/38/0.00 Rapid City 60/41/0.00 Reno 64/38/0.00 Richmond 74/40/0.00 Rochester, NY 62/53/0.01 Sacramento 86/50/0.00 St. Louis 86/59/0.01 Salt Lake City 68/46/0.00 San Antonio 90/71/0.03 San Diego 77/66/0.00 San Francisco 75/55/0.00 San Jose 82/52/0.00 Santa Fe 47/41/1.39 Savannah 81/54/0.00 Seattle 61/47/Tr Sioux Falls 60/50/Tr Spokane 62/37/0.00 Springfield, MO 82/56/0.00 Tampa 86/68/Tr Tucson 71/54/0.99 Tulsa 83/54/0.00 Washington, DC73/48/0.00 Wichita 82/57/Tr Yskima 68/38/0.00 Yums 83/66/0.05

76/64/t 79/60/t 70/42/c 63/49/s 71/41/sh 53/31/pc

61/45/pc 65/46/pc 42/34/pc 42/36/pc 79/56/s 81/57/s 72/52/s 62/46/s sono/t 82/64/r 76/49/s 64/39/s 67/42/pc 59/37/pc 82/59/s 83/61/s 67/44/pc 53/33/r

64/39/pc 63/42/pc 70/46/c 53/39/s 71/47/s 57/39/s 62/39/c 52/38/s

64/37/c 48/33/i 79/55/pc 78/48/s 78/50/s 48/39/r 62/49/s 78/54/pc 66/44/pc 51/39/r 81/59/pc 80/50/s 81/57/s 75/47/c 68/35/c

r

I

48/30/pc 44/26/c 81/58/s 80/54/s 79/56/s 56/32/pc 69/59/pc 76/59/pc 61/49/s 59/38/t 70/55/r 82/55/s 83/56/s 68/53/s 52/25/s 85nt/t

85/73/t 77/69/t 78/66/r 77/50/c 71/58/pc

51/40/r 61/37/pc 67/57/pc 68/51/r 67/42/s 60/49/s 56/37/s 49/42/sh 73/51/pc 76/51/s 32/23/c 35/23/s 67/46/pc 55/39/r 55/34/pc 58/32/pc 62/40/s 62/52/pc 60/40/s 56/51/r 79/53/s 79/54/s 76/48/s 62/37/s 73/41/pc 55/30/s 63/35/s 58/30/pc

89/76/pc ssn5/s 78n2/t 84no/t 84/56/s 85/61/s

77/55/pc 77/60/pc 86/63/s 88/65/c 81/62/pc 80/61/pc I

M ee 47

• Pi O

urban renewal districts. The

' '

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

84/63/0.01 72/45/0.00 58/52/0.03 Albuquerque 55/48/0.58 Anchorage 44/30/0.00 Atlanta 76/50/0.00 Atlantic City 68/53/0.00 Austin 88/71/0.00 Baltimore 74/41/0.00 Billings 64/37/0.00 Birmingham 78/53/0.00 Bismarck 62/42/0.00 Boise 66/43/0.00 Boston 61/56/0.07 Bridgeport, CT 74/52/0.00 Buffalo 64/54/0.06 Burlington, VT 52/45/0.01 Caribou, ME 45/28/0.00 Charleston, SC 79/52/0.00 Charlotte 74/37/0.00 Chattanooga 75/44/0.00 Cheyenne 48/43/0.56 Chicago 75/52/0.44 Cincinnati 74/42/0.00 Cleveland 72/53/0.00 ColoradoSprings 53/46/0.27 Columbia, MO 85/57/Tr Columbia, SC 79/42/0.00 Columbus, GA 78/50/0.00 Columbus,OH 74/44/0.00 Concord, NH 62/45/0.00 Corpus Chnsti 87n2/Tr' Dallas 86/69/Tr Dayton 74/49/0.00 Denver 52/45/0.87 Des Moines 71/58/0.06 oetroit 75/54/Tr Duluth 50/41/0.09 El Paso 78/60/0.27 Fairbanks 35/25/0.00 Fargo 61/48/0.00 Flagstaff 53/33/0.00 Grand Rapids 72/53/0.48 Green Bay 69/48/0.09 Greensboro 75/39/0.00 Harrisburg 76/43/0.00 Harfford, CT 72/52/Tr Helena 62/29/0.00 Honolulu 89/77/0.02 Houston 85/68/0.00 Huntsville 80/50/0.00 Indianapolis 76/50/Tr Jackson, MS 84/55/0.00 Jacksonville 80/65/0.01

Amsterdam Athens x %ye • Mil e Auckland ffa et/4 Baghdad e s or s Bangkok , o N i 4S/ P iledelphia Beijing ' fmg . ". vi s a 8/52 Beirut an encisco S e h Leke ' i i i i i< W< C' m 2/49 64/45 ~ 76/57 ington Berlin /47 77 Bogota Louis e i i ii i t/nu k k s s fgrerVIS Chy St. Du 78/5 Budapest as/5 xxx xxx • V y4 4 ~QSe 82/ BuenosAires Cherie LosAn les i i xi i i » Cabo SanLucas <, dd4dMd. x ashville 9/61 Cairo Pho iso k d v d • 2 o Anchorage e CSItr'o' le Ro •A Calgary • ae/da Atkuquerqu Okfe et/45 YS)/ 4 4 • 42/34 n o 79/se Cancun d a d d is Si ingha 7 /64 Dublin * Juneau Sl Pav k W X Pegaeos 82/ 9 * Edinburgh so/42 * * I d s d 3 Geneva ; rtendo Harsre XX , d~d~do Orleans Hong Kong Honolulu 82/es Chihuahua +++++L,o Istanbul Se/76 iemi 79/47 Jerusalem 4rs/7I5 Johannesburg vv Lima Lisbon Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London T-storms Rai n Sh owers S no w Fl u rries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front Manila Sois • 64/39

area contain "blight." Blight can simply mean an ing for smaller sites make the area is isolated or not fully most sense, he suggested. developed. The City Council Juniper Ridge is an urban signaled its support for studimprovement district, mean- ies evaluating the potential of ing the city can borrow money three large areas to serve as to build infrastructure based urban renewal districts. on the prospect Of future tax

upi

• Eugene

OREGON EXTREMES co YESTERDAY

C rane Prairie 270 8 4 49% EXTREMES Wickiup 17% YESTERDAY(for the 337D7 Crescent Lake 4 9 1 95 57% 48 contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 10095 23% National high:95' Prineville 43603 29% at Laredo, TX River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low: 20 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 124 at Presque Isle, ME Deschutes R.below Wickiup 21 Precipitation: 2.38" Deschutes R.below Bend 376 at Dumas TX Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 455 Little Deschutes near LaPine 52 Crescent Ck, belowCrescent Lake 29 'r Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 8 * r Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 54

Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.

63/29

57'

Mostly cloudy

r

68/35

Rufus

• e5 Camp Sh an Red n

MONDAY

TRAVEL WEATHER

BB/

Sale 64/4

Newpo

Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL

Bend/Sunriver ~M Redmond/Madras ~M Sisters ~ Prineville ~M La Pine/Gilchdst ~M

SUNDAY

59'

~

• ermiston 42 lington 68/34 Mesc am Losune • W o /38 62/30 EnterPrise dletcn 59/2 he Dau • • 61/30 /40 Heppner L G r ande "osePH •

andy e 0/40 Gove

Source: OregonAllergy Associates 541-683-1 577

Reservoir

34o

Intervals of cloudsand sunshine

Clear to partly cloudy

Cam

60/48

UV INDEX TODAY 3

""

64'

~

Hood

/3

Lincoln '

0 '

t I~

23o

~

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures aretoday's highs and tonight's lowe. umatiua

ria

Tinamo • 61/41 Mc rnnvru

Source; JimTodd,OMSI

10 a.m. Noon

/4

sunny today; notas Seasid warm as yesterday. 61/49 Clearto partly cloudy Cannon tonight. 61/50

High: 75'

O ct 27 Nov 3

~

SATURDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

High Low

LOW

Sunny to partly cloudy

If ' I

FRIDAY

50/42/sh 49/39/r

76/60/pc 73/51/r 62/38/s 60/50/s 78/59/s 80/58/s

78/53/s 78/59/pc 67/59/r 73/46/r 85/64/pc 81/63/sh 79/61/pc 81/62/pc 82/56/s 81/63/pc 62/43/s 62/56/r 84/65/s 83/68/pc 85/75/sh Ssn5/sh 61/47/s 62/57/pc 62/47/pc 59/47/r 80/52/s 82/62/s 82/68/pc S4no/pc 77/52/s 60/44/s 77/49/s 61/41/s 75/55/s 68/51/s 74/65/t 79/58/c 69/58/c 74/48/r 85/68/pc 86/67/pc 88/65/s 90/67/s 74/55/pc 74/57/r 78/52/s 62/42/s 80/63/s 84/63/s 72/42/c 62/47/s 64/39/r 52/32/pc 72/44/c 56/35/s 78/51/s 78/51/s 57/40/r 56/30/r 69/38/pc 68/39/pc 77/53/s 70/42/s 63/38/sh 49/35/pc 84/51/s 82/52/pc 82/61/pc 74/61/r 64/45/pc 62/42/pc 82/73/t 81/69/r 76/64/pc 78/66/pc 75/57/s 74/56/pc 79/55/s 79/55/pc 58/37/pc 63/37/pc 81/56/pc 82/56/s 58/46/pc 58/46/pc 64/53/pc 63/43/r 62/37/s 59/37/pc 80/61/pc 70/61/r 87/70/pc 88/69/s 74/53/pc 78/55/s 80/64/c 78/60/r 77/55/s 67/45/s 78/61/t 78/53/r 69/35/s 66/36/pc 87/64/s 89/66/s

r

I

Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow

54/43/0.74 59/46/sh 57/46/pc 79/64/0.03 75/65/t 69/58/1 59/52/0.04 66/58/c 66/56/pc 95n5/o.oo 86/63/c 88/66/pc 91/81/0.04 92/77/pc 93/77/1 55/49/0.29 53/44/r 65/43/s 82/71/0.00 82/76/pc 88n5/c 53/46/0.04 53/48/sh 55/40/pc 72/46/0.00 71/46/pc 68/48/c 55/39/0.00 55/40/s 58/39/pc 75/54/0.00 75/47/pc 66/46/pc ssn2/0'.00 87/66/s 89/65/s 91/70/0.00 92/76/pc 95n2/pc 68/36/0.00 57/32/pc 53/32/pc 84/79/0.34 87/77/pc 86/76/pc 59/52/0.42 56/45/c 58/46/pc 59/49/0.13 56/42/pc 57/48/pc 54/44/0.00 50/44/c 58/42/pc 86/55/0.00 86/57/s 85/55/s 86n4/o'.oo 86nr/s 86//7/s 61/60/0.19 67/59/r 65/57/r 80/61/0.00 79/66/c 82/68/pc 81/57/0.00 79/54/pc 80/58/s 70/65/0.00 75/66/pc 75/66/pc 73/59/0.00 74/57/s 73/60/pc 59/48/0.20 59/42/pc 58/49/pc 66/42/0.00 68/44/s 70/49/pc gona/o.oo Sang/pc 87/78/t

101/82/0.14 98/76/pc 73/51/0.10 71/56/t 50/36/0.01 61/34/pc 37/21/0.00 40/28/pc Nairobi 84/61/0.00 79/61/pc Nassau 86/78/0.02 86/73/pc New Delhi 91/73/0.00 91/64/pc Osaka 79/59/0.00 77/55/pc Oslo 48/34/0.14 58/50/sh Ottawa 52/37/0.04 61/30/pc Paris 57/38/0.30 59/45/sh Rio de Janeiro 88/73/0.00 sgn4R Rome 64/54/0.01 66/48/pc Santiago 68/46/0.00 76/47/s Sao Paulo 88/75/0.14 90/67/t Sapporo 51/44/0.01 54/41/pc Seoul 73/51/0.00 72/54/pc Shanghai 79/58/0.00 79/64/s Singapore 90/80/0.00 90/80/pc Stockholm 50/44/0.14 55/43/sh Sydney 84/66/0.52 71/60/sh Taipei 80/72/0.18 81/74/r Tel Aviv 83/63/0.00 86/76/c Tokyo 67/58/0.00 70/61/pc Toronto 55/50/0.01 60/34/s Vancouver 57/45/0.03 56/44/s vienna 54/45/0.02 51/44/s Warsaw 46/45/0.46 51/45/pc

101/75/s 70/55/1

49/31/pc 37/31/r 75/61/1

85/74/pc 91/66/s 76/55/pc 58/45/s 47/30/s 56/44/pc 84/72/pc 68/48/s 77/48/pc 80/63/pc 60/44/pc 69/56/pc 78/65/pc 91/80/pc 55/32/s 69/59/sh 80/74/r 92/78/pc 69/60/pc 49/38/s 54/43/s 55/39/pc 53/42/c

Housing

mittee praised it for blending

Continued from B1 After discussing the district's decision, the committee weighed the five affordable housing projects seeking exemptions, eventually deciding to fund all five of them, though most will receive an amount less than requested. One of the largest projects is near St. Charles Bend and backed by Housing Works, the region's housing agency.

units, which will be used to helpoffsetthe costofreserving some homes for low-income residents. The committee also commended Rzonca for showing that private developers can take on affordable projects.

affordable and market-rate

"It will encourage others,

showing it can be done and should be done," Campbell said. In total, th e

c ommittee

only awarded $750,000 of the mended to receive$306,305in $1 million available, a move exemptions, indudes housing members said will a llow for low-income residents with them to evaluate other projcomplex medical issues. ects, should they arise. AddiAnother project, recom- ttonally, as many affordable mended to receive$156,925in projects are dependent on eXemPtiOnS, iS a 48-Ltnit deVel- stitching together a number of opment on a yet-to-be deter- funding sources, it's possible mined west-side parcel. That not all five will be built. project is being developed However, Jim Long, the by Pacific Crest Affordable city's affordable housing Housing, which built the Dis- m anager, noted it's easier for covery Park Lodge, a build- a project to receive state funding for low-income seniors, in ing if there's local support, NorthWest Crossing. saying, "We have to show The 53-Lmit PrOjeCt, reCom-

A 12-unit project off NE R evere Avenue n orth o f

we' re committed."

The City Council must vote downtown being developed to approve the exemption by Steven Rzonca, a private recommendations. developer, was recommended — Reporter: 541-633-2160, to receive $77,845. The comtleeds@bendbulletirLcom

as part of the Summit Creek Restoration P r o j ect. Th e Summit C reek R estoration network and series of trails

near Magone Lake are both under analysis by the U.S. Forest Service — most of the

proposed trails in and around John Dayarein the Malheur

~h osts

National Forest — while the

repurposing of multiple old forest roads, a project called Camp Lick, is in development. "Our current trails are on three different sides of the for-

he o eSW senor

r

Submitted photo

est," Mesple said. "They' re far A mountain biker rides alongside the North Fork of the Malheur River earlier this month. enough apart, you couldn' t ride all three in one day. "COTA's been great, and What we need is a network Russ Comer and Joe Hittle of stacked loops that draws opened up Fossil Shift Bike the other chapter reps have in people, including locals, Shop in John Day. been really incredible," said For more information about "There's lots of trails out Mesple, who had five COTA something that starts off easy mountain biking in the and goes to intermediate and here, just nothing specific to members f r o m Pr i n eville John Day area, go toFossil then harder. biking yet, o COmer Said. "The come out for the Grant CounShift Bike Shop's Facebook "Once you' re able to draw thing our trails have that oth- ty chapter's first work day. page or contact Andrea people into the area, the hope ers don't is the serenity. It' s "COTA has trail designers, Mesple at grant-co-rep© is they might want to then lat- very peacefuL You' re not go- which we have access tch Othcotamtb.corn. er go out and explore some ing to run into other riders out erwise, those can be really more." there. You might not run into expensive. And they brought Cycling in general has seen another anybody out there. out a Ditch Witch (a mechaan increase in popularity in The population of our county nized ditch digger) and some ested in hiking or don't have John Day, which is located is only 7,500 people. It's very other machinery and gave us access to horseback, meaning about 150 miles northeast of peacefuland very remote out a bunch of tools." biking's a great way to get Bend on U.S. Highway 26. here." In the l ong t erm, Grant them into the woods. The Old West Scenic BikeMesple said she and othCounty's bike s upporters "And someone like me, way, a 173.8-mile loop, goes ers had been developing trail hope to have more trails clos- I just got back from a bike through Grant County's larg- plans before joining COTA, er to John Day that cater to trip to Bend," Comer added. est community, as does the but the Bend-based nonprofit riders with a wide range of "I want more trails that are TransAmerica Trail, w h i ch provides a wealth of knowl- skills. close by to enjoy. I'I excited "Our youth are really inter- about the possibilities here." takes cyclists 4,229 miles edge in terms of trail-building from Astoria t o Y o rktown, and working with landown- ested in biking," Comer said. — Reporter: 541-61 7-7829, "They' re maybe not that interVirginia. And this summer, ers and community officials. beastesCmbendbulletin.corn

Nore information

r

October 24th 8 2Sth Deschutes County Expo Center Redmond (Itear Bend), Oregon97756 • 3800 SW Airport Way Concert:

Michael Martin Murphey Red feather Woman,Sat. 7:30-10:30prn • DynamiteDames,Rhinestone Roper,Leapln' Louie • EducationalClinics - AIC HoofCare, Saddle-lttdog IB v + • Two-Day'CowboyOrcus' 8. Education/fun l s • Excellent MustangNational HomemanshlpTralners

irm x:

• Wild MustangStartingCompedtlon L Auction • Vendors:National Attention/Media • food andTack, Art Vendors(see webslte)

Tickets discounted before Oct. 18th: 5 15/day, 540 Concert, $50 full Pass(after Oct. 18thpricesSoup, sohurry) fOR TICKETS GO TOt www.AllAboutTheHoreses.corn or www.BendTlcket.corn


IN THE BACI4 BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N HL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Cycling, C3 MLB, C3 Preps, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

ALPINE SKIING

Ford to race in World Cupopener

PREP FOOTBALL THIS WEEK -

Alpine skier Tommy Ford, of Bend, is scheduled to start in the giant slalom Sunday in the International Ski Federation World Cupopener in Soelden, Austria, according to a U.S.Ski Team news release. Ford, 26, last season finished 19th in giant slalom in the alpine skiing world championships just two years after breaking his right leg. An eight-time national champion and 2010 Olympian, Ford fractured his right femur while freeskiing in the French Alps in January

GRANT LUCAS

Numbers

g am e is a losing one forsome

programs he depth chart at

2013.

After missing the entire 2013-14 racing season, the Summit High School graduate was determined to race again last season, and he competed in several Europa Cupand Nor-Am Cup events before racing in the world championships in February. Now he is starting in the high-profile World Cup opener this Sunday along with U.S. teammate TedLigety, a two-time Olympic gold medalist and five-time World Cup champion.

Gilchrist has typically run thin.

At a school of just more than 60 students for four grades, the Class IA 8-player football

Grizzlie shaveaveraged between 16 and 19 players over the pastfew seasons — far

fromthebehemoth programs in Oregon's larger high school classifications that boast three, four or even fiveplayers ateach

position, yet enough to conduct full scrimmages at practice and have a few

l

reserves on the sidelines

on game days. But this is not a typical

— Bulletin staff report

year for the Grizzlies. They began this season with 12 players. Two weeks ago, they kicked off against Triad in

Ted S. Warren / .The Associated Press

PREP VOLLEYBALL

Klamath Falls with just 10

healthy players. By the end of the first half, because of injuries, they were down to eight

Outlaws, Cowgirls clinch playoff dids After compiling perfect records within their respective leagues, Sisters High and Crook County have secured spots in the first round of the Class 4Avolleyball state playoffs. The Outlaws, ranked No. 2 in 4A, and the Cowgirls, No. 4, finished first in the Sky-Em Leagueandthe Tri-Valley Conference, respectively, to earn bids to the playoffs, which are scheduled to begin Oct. 31. Play-in round contests will take place on or before Oct. 27, according to the OSAA, and play-in winners will advance to the state playoffs. Last season, on its way to the state title, Sisters eliminated Crook County in the semifinals to end the Cowgirls' eight-year run as state champs. As the second- and fourth-ranked teams, the Outlaws and the Cowgirls are positioned on opposite sides of the bracket, setting up a potential all-Central Oregon state championship final at Forest Grove High School. — Bulletin staff report

ARMWRESTLING State eventsotfor Saturday inBend

— the minimum required to

continue the game. SeeNumbers/C4

Inside • Sisters boys, girls cross-country win league titles,C4

MOTOR SPORTS

Spin raises • The return of quarterbackVernonAdamsjr. gives Oregon new life ot to put too much emphasis on one victory, but Oregon's 26-20 win over Washington this past Saturday might have, in some way, saved the season for the Ducks.

Washington puts them on track to at least qualify for a bowl game. an unfamiliar fourth in the Pac-12 North. But with the return of

next four games winnable. If the Ducks' leaky defense

senior transfer Vernon Adams Jr. at quarterback and

Stanford and Southern Cal-

Darren Carrington at wide

ifornia loom large for the Ducks, who at 2-2 in con-

receiver, it seems Oregon has enough firepower back

nents to pass at will, perhaps now Oregon can score enough to hang with the likes of the Sun Devils and

ference play are currently

on offense to make those

gifIIIII$ When Vernon Adams Jr. plays the entire game —ashe r did against Eastern Washington, Michigan State and fggtpl Washington, theDucksare moreproductive on offense.

the Bears.

-

seemingly unwritten rule that

you don't spin someone when you' re already guaranteed of advancing in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. After all, as he pointed

NeXtufl

out after sending fellow title

Oregon at Arizona St. When:7:30 p.m. Oct. 29

contender Matt Kenseth for a ride at Kansas Speedway, "NASCAR does the rules. I

TV:ESPN

of questions over Chase decorum, though. Logano had won the opening race of the "contender" round at Charlotte, so he had nothing to lose in Sunday's race. SeeDecorum/C3

Rale: KBND 1110-AM

See Ducks/C4

PASSING With:275.7 ypg Without:176.3 ypg

The Associated Press

TOTAL OFFENSE SCORING Iii f ith 535 ypg With :+22 (3G) Without: 502.3 ypg Without:+1 (4G)

just drive the race car." That attitude raised plenty

NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION

Think therearetoo manygames """' in preseason?Sodo coaches

will be held at Atlas

— Bulletins taf freport

continues to allow oppo-

By Dave Skretta Joey Logano scoffed at the

Football Playoff, or even a top-tier bowl game for that matter. But the Ducks' win over rival

The schedule gets no easier for Oregon (4-3), with pass-happy teams Arizona State (Oct. 29) and California (Nov. 7) next up. Then

of decorum KANSAS CITY, Kan.

No, this is not a season in which Oregon will return to the College

The World Armwrestling League's Oregon State Championships are scheduled to take place Saturday in Bend. The event will include competition in pro and amateur classes in weight divisions for men and women. The championships Cider Company,550 SW Industrial Way.Weighins are from 10:30 a.m. until noon; competition begins at1 p.m. For more information or to register for the championships, go to www.walunderground. corn.

MARK ( MORICAL

questions

By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press

Real basketball is almost here.

Everyone would be, if some coaches had their way. The schedule can become such a bore that Milwaukee's Jason Kidd

Portland guard Damian Lillard looks on during practice before the

The NBA preseason schedule, with so many games that Gregg Popovich did not even bother going to San Antonio's opener, is mercifully nearing

start of a game inSalt Lake City on Oct. 12. Portland's preseason

its end.

arrived.

schedule stuck mainly to the West with home-and-away games with Sacramento and Utah, a home game with Golden State and

It is already over for Kobe Bryant, nursing an injury. LeBron James also

road games in LosAngeles with the Lakers and Clippers.

was done last week.

Rick Bowmer / The Associated Press

longs for the glory days of the lockout, when teams could squeeze in only two tuneupgames beforethe realones "No one complained," Kidd said. They do now. SeePreseason/C3

NBA

preseason, Portland at L.A. Clippers When: 7:30 p.m. today TV:None Radio: KBND 1110-AM


C2 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREB DARD

TODAY SOCCER Europa League,Gabala(Azerbaijan) vs. Borussia Dortmund (Germany) Europa League,Schalke 04(Germany) vs. Sparta Prague(CzechRepublic) Europa League,Anderlecht (Belgium) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (England) Europa League, Liverpool (England) vs. Rubin Kazan(Russia) Europa League, Villarreal (Spain) vs. DinamoMinsk (Belarus) U-17 World Cup,Russia vs. Costa Rica Women's college, South Carolina at Florida Women's college, Stanford at Washington St.

Time TV/Radio 7 :50 a.m. F S 1 9 :50 a.m. F S 2 10 a.m.

FS1

noon

FS1

noon FS2 3 :55 p.m. F S 2 4 p.m. SEC 7 p.m. P a c-12

GOLF

PGA Tour,Shriners Hospitals for Children Open 2 p.m. LPGA Tour, LPGA Taiwan Championship 9 p.m.

Golf Golf

FOOTBALL

College, Temple atEastCarolina College, Georgia Southern at Appalachian St. NFL, Seattle at SanFrancisco College, California at UCLA

4 p.m. E SPN2 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5:25 p.m. CBS,NFL 6 p.m. E S PN

BASKETBALL

NBA preseason, GoldenStatevs.L.A.Lakers NBA preseason, Portland at L.A. Clippers

7 p.m.

TNT

7:30 p.m. KBND 1110-AM

HOCKEY

NHL,WashingtonatVancouver

7 p.m. CSNNW

FRIDAY

Saturday Boys soccer: CrescentValley atSummit, 11a.m. Volleyball:Culverat ColumbiaBasin Conference tournament in Culver,noon; Trinity Lutheranat MountainValley Leaguetournament at Trinity Lutheran,TBD Girls waterpolo: Madrasat MountainView,6;30 p.m. Boyswater polo: Madrasat MountainView,7:30 p.m.

FOOTBALL

4 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. NBCSN 5 p.m. E S PN 7 p.m. C O TV 7 p.m. E SPNU 7 p.m. Roo t 7:30 p.m. ESPN2

BASEBALL

5 p.m.

FS1

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF WINTER SPORTS Fenninger to miSSWOrld CupSeaSOn—Two-time overall champion AnnaFenninger will miss the entire World Cupseason after seriously damaging her right knee during a training crash Wednesday in Soelden, Austria, three days before the alpine skiing circuit starts. The Austrian skier underwent surgery after tearing ligaments in a fall during a giant slalom run. The26-year-old Fenninger was transported by helicopter to a clinic in nearby Innsbruck after the incident. According to the doctor, Fenninger tore the medial collateral and the cruciate ligament as well as the patellar tendon in the right knee.

Canadian Skier COOk injured in AuStria — Canadianskier Dustin Cook will be out for an indefinite time after hurting his knee in a training crash in theAustrian ski resort of Pitztal Wednesday. The Canadian ski federation said Cook was preparing for the first race of the upcoming World Cupseason, the traditional giant slalom on the Rettenbach glacier in nearby Soelden. Specializing in the speed events, Cook took silver in super-G atthe world championships in Beaver Creek inFebruary andwon his first World Cuprace in Meribel, France, the following month.

FOOTBALL Mariota miSSeSpraCtiCe, eXpeCted to play — Tennessee Titans quarterback Marcus Mariota did not practice Wednesday, giving the sprained MCL inhis left knee aday of rest. The rookie was not wearing any protective gear on his injured leg as hetalked about playing Sunday. Nobrace, not even awrap for any support. Mariota said he would wear abrace if he must. Healso said his chances of playing against the Atlanta Falcons are pretty good, and he's keeping up with treatment and preparing as if he will start his sixth NFL game. Mariota sprained the ligament in his kneewhen hit low by Dolphins defensive endOlivier Vernon in last week's 38-10 loss to Miami, and Vernon said Wednesdaythe NFLfined him for the hit. It' s the same kneeMariota sprained in 2013 at Oregon, and heplayed the final four games that seasonwearing a brace.

Jackson fine after car crash, will play for Seattle — Seattle Seahawks running back FredJackson will play tonight against San Francisco after being examined by the team following a minor car crash, coach PeteCarroll said Wednesday. Jackson participated in the team's walkthrough practice before departing to face the 49ers. It's the second car accident the Seahawksare dealing with after fullback Derrick Colemanwas involved in a two-car crash last week that led to his arrest for investigation of vehicular assault and hit-and-run.

Texas agrees to 15-year deal with Nike —Apersonwith knowledge of the negotiations says Texashas reached a15-year licensing and apparel deal with Nike Inc. The contract will approach $200 million for the university, which has one of the wealthiest athletic programs in the country, according to the person, who spoke Wednesday on condition of anonymity because the agreement must still be approved by the school's regents. The deal, which was first reported by the Austin American-Statesman, extends a partnership that dates to 2000. Nike's previous contract included a clause that allowed it to match any offer made byanother company. — From wire reports

TENNIS

IN THE BLEACHERS

WTA Tour t 0/aa In the Bleachers O 201 5 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.corn/inthebleachers

Friday Football:Bendat Summit, 7 p.m.;MountainView 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 championships atDrakePark in Bend, 1 p.m.; Culver atClass3A/2A/1A Special District 5championshipsinPendleton, 1p.m. Girls water polo:MadrasatBend, 6:30p.m. Boys waterpolo:MadrasatBend,7:30p.m.

Luxembour gOpenResults Wednesdayat Luxembourg First Round KirstenFlipkens,Belgium,def. MadisonBrengle, UnitedStates,6-4,6-3. AnnaLenaFriedsam,Germany,def.AnnikaBeck (6), Germ any,4-6, 6-3,6-4. AnnaTatishvili, UnitedStates, def. OceaneDodin, France,7-6(5), 6-3. LauraSiegemund,Germany,def. TimeaBacsinszky (I), Switzerland, 4-6, 6-4,retired. JelenaJankovic (5), Serbia,def. MandyMinella, Luxembourg,6-1,6-4. SecondRound MoneBarthel, Germany,def.TatlanaMaria,Germany, 6-3,2-6, 6-2. MirianaLucic-Baroni,Croatia, def. SaraE rrani (3), Italy, 6-3,6-4.

Misaki Doi,Japan,def. DenisaAgertova, Czech Republic,7-5, 6-2. KremlinCup Wednesdayat Moscow First Round DenisIstomin,Uzbekistan, def.Aliaz Bedene, Brit-

ain, 6-3,6-3. RicardasBerankis, Lithuania, def. MalekJaziri, Tunisia,6-4,6-4. LucasPouile, France,def. SimoneBoleli, Italy, 7-5, 4-1,retired.

AsianKaratsev,Russia, def.Mikhail Youzhny,Russia, 6-4,6-4. SecondRound RobinHaase, Netherlands, def. PabloCuevas (5), Uruguay,6-2, 5-7,6-1.

Teymuraz Gabashvili, Ru ssia, def.ViktorTroicki (3),

"I' ve decided to resign as head coach in order to spend more time with my therapist."

Serbia6-2, 6-3. RobertoBautistaAgut(2), Spain,def.Marsel lhan, Turkey,6-2,7-5.

ATP Tour

Stockhol m Open Wednesday atStockholm,Sweden SecondRound GillesMuller(6), Luxembourg, def. JohnMilman, MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL Australia,7-5, 6-3. All TimesPDT America's Line Marcos Baghdatis, Cyprus,def. BernardTomic (4), BASKETBALL Australia,7-6(7), 6-3. LEAGUECHAMPIONSHIP SERIES HOME TEAMINCAPS (Best-of-7;x-if necessary) J ack Sock (7), UnitedStates,def. FernandoVerdasNBA preseason NFL Wednesday'sGames , (5), 6-7(5), 6-4. Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog co, Spain7-6 NATIONAL BASKETBALL AS SOCIA TI ON Toronto7,KansasCity1, KansasCity leadsseries 3-2 Gilles Simon(3), France,def. LeonardoMayer, Today All TimesPDT N.Y. Mete6,ChicagoCubs3,N.Y.Metswinseries4-0 Seahawks 4 t/t 6 42t/ t 49ERS Argentina,6-2,6-4. Friday'sGame Sunday Wednesday'sGames x-Torontoat KansasCity, 5:07p.m. TourErsteBankOpen Bills 4 5 '/z 4 2 Jaguars Orlando110,NewDrleans107, OT Saturday'sGame Wednesday etVienna, Austria Browns RAM S 5 5t/t 4 2 H Charlotte 99, De t r oi t 94 x-Torontoat KansasCity, 5:07p.m. First Round CHIEFS Steelers Memphis62,Atlanta61 Fabio Fogni n i (6), Italy, def. Paul-HenriMathieu, DOLPHINS 4'/z 4 44'/~ Texans France,6-4,3-6, 6-3. Miami110,Washington105 Wednesday'sboxscores P ATRI O TS 9 9 46 '/ ~ Jets Phoenix99, Dallas67 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga(4), France, def.TommyHaas, Vikings 2 2t/t 44Ht LIONS Today'sGames 6-3, 6-7(3), 6-4. Falcons 3t/t 4 47at TITANS Germany, Blue Jays7, Royals1 Charlottevs. IndianaatFort Wayne, Ind.,4 p.m. Kevin Anderson(2), South Africa, def. Andreas REDSKINS 3Ht 3Ht 43'/z Buccanee rs NewYorkat Boston, 4:30p.m. Austria, 6-4,7-5. COLTS 5' / z 4 V z 5 2'/z Saints Haider-Maurer, DenveratUtah,6p.m. KansasCity Toronto SecondRound CHARG ERS 4Ht 4 47 Raiders Golden State vs. LA. Lakers at Anahei m , Cal i f ., 7 eb r hbi eb r hbi ErnestsGulbis, Latvia,def. JohnIsner (3), United GIANTS 5 3'/z 45'/~Cowboys A Escorss 4 0 I 0 Reverelf 3 I 0 0 p.m. 6-4, 4-6,6-4. P ANTHERS 3 3 46' / ~ Eagles States, PortlandatLA. Clippers,7:30p.m. Zobrist 2b 4 0 0 0 Dnldsn 3b 3 2 I 0 Ivo Karlovic(7), Croatia,def.Sergiy Stakhovsky, Monday L .caincf 3 0 0 0 Bautistrf 3 I 2 I Ukraine, 6-4,7-5. C ARDINALS 7 6 46H t Ravens Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 Encrncdh 3 I 0 I FOOTBALL K Morlsdh 3 0 0 0 Colaell1b 4 I I I KremlinCup College Mostks3b 3 00 0 SmoakIb 0 0 0 0 Wednesdayat Moscow Today S .Perezc 3 I I I Tlwtzkss 4 I 2 3 NFL Second Round APP'CHIAN ST 5 6 61'/~ Ga Southern AGordnlf 3 0 I 0 DNavrrc 3 0 0 0 NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE T emple AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova,Russia, def.LucieSafaECARO LINA 2 3 51'/~ R iosrf 3 0 I 0 Pillarcf 4 0 2 I All TimesPDT UCLA 4 3 /12 67th California rova(2),CzechRepublic, 6-1,6-7(2), 6-3. Goins2b 3 0 0 0 Lesia Tsurenko, Ukraine, def. Anna Karoline Friday Totals 30 I 4 I Totals 3 07 6 7 (6), Slovakia,7-6(5), 4-6, 6-3. AMERICAN CONFERENCE Memphis 11 I gt/t 7Plt TU L SA Schmiedlova K ansas City 0 0 0 0 0 0 010 — 1 FlaviaPennetta (3), Italy,def. Daria Gavrilova, RusEast UtahSt 5V, 5 43/2SANDIEGO ST Toronto 010 004 11x — 7 W L T Pct PF PA sia, 6-2,6-4. Saturday DP — Kansas City 1, Toronto 1. LOB —Kansas MargaritaGasparyan, Russia,def. Kristina Mlade50 0 1.000163 103 NILLINOIS 26 26 69'/~ EMichigan City 3,Toronto4. 2B—Donaldson (2), Bautista(1), 4 1 0 . 600 129 75 CMichigan 7'/z 7'/z 5Plt B A LL STnovic (9),France,6-2, 6-3. Tulowitzki(2), Pilar(3). HR —S.Perez (2), Colabello 33 0 . 500 145 139 Toledo 14 14H 62H U MASS Daria Kasatkina,Russia, def.Irina-Camelia Begu 0) 23 0 . 400 103 111 BowlGreen 14 14 t/t 59'/~ KENT ST (7), Rom ania,6-3, 3-6,6-3. IP H R E R BBSO South AnastasilaSevastova, Latvia, def. Karoline Pliskova Ohio U 3 3 53'/~ BUFFALO KansasCity W L T Pct PF PA Pittsburgh Republic, 6-3, 7-6(10). 7 7 49'/~ SYRACUSE (6), Czech VolquezL,1-1 5 3 5 5 4 2 Indianapolis 33 0 . 500 126 147 MICHIGAN Kuznetsova,Russia,def. KlaraKoukalova, ST 16'/z 16'/z 63t/t Ind iana Svetlana K.Herrera I I 0 0 0 3 Houston 24 0 . 333 126 155 Czech R e p ub lic, 6-4,6-2. 5'/z fy/t 55'/~ MIAMI-FLA Clemson D.Duffy 2 4 2 2 0 5 Tennessee 14 0 . 200 112 129 Ouarlerlinals 9'/z 10 46'/z WAKE FOREST NC State Toronto Jacksonvile 15 0 . 167 113 176 LesiaTsurenko,Ukraine,def. FlaviaPennetta (3), 2'/z 3 35'/~ VANDER BILT Missouri EstradaW,1-1 7 2 -3 3 I 1 1 5 North walkover. 1-3 I 0 0 0 0 MICHIG AN 23'/~ 25 54'/z Miami-Ohio Aa.Sanche z w L T pm pF pA W 23 23 54'/~ T u lane Osuna I 0 0 0 0 0 60 0 1 .000162 122 NAVY ST 31'/~ 35 56'/~ Wyoming Volquezpitchedto4 batters inthe 6th. DEALS 42 0 . 667 145 106 BOISE RCE 17 t 7)t 56H Fresno St HBP —byVolquez(Donaldson). 24 0 . 333 141 156 AIR FO M ARSHA L L 29 2g t/t 60 N Texas T—2:56.A—49,325 (49,262). 15 0 . 167 143 162 Transactions 3'/z 4 59t/t Utah USC Weel BASEBAL L STANFO RD Washi n gton W L T Pcl PF PA Meis 8, Ctlbs 3 53t/t Tennessee NationalLeague Denver 60 0 1.000 139 102 ALABAMA 14 16 SEATTLE M AR IN E R S — N a med AndyMcKaydi3'/z 4 50 K ansas St Oakland 23 0 . 400 107 124 TEXAS NewYork Chicago 6 65 Texas A&M rector ofplayerdevelopment. SanDiego 24 0 . 333 136 161 MISSISSIPPI 5 nb r h bi eb r hbi RANGERSReinstated RHPYuDarvishfrom LINA 15 16 6ttA Vi r ginia TEXAS 15 0 . 167 127 159 NCARO G rndrsrf 5 I I 0 Fowlercf 5 0 I 0 KansasCity NATIONAL DL.Sent INFKyleBlanks,CCarlos CorpoNEBRA SKA 6 7 / 51'/~ Northwestern the 60-day CONFERENCE D Wrght3b 3 2 0 0 Solerrf 4 2 3 0 r an, OF A ntoan RichardsonandDFRyanStrausborger East Wisconsin 6'/z 6'/z 44'/~ ILLINOIS D nMrp2b 5 2 4 2 Bryant3b 3 I I 2 outright to Ro undRock(PCL). 43t/t Du ke W L T P cl PF PA VIRGINIATECH 3 C espdscf 1 I 0 0 RizzoIb 4 0 I 0 Philadelphia NationalLeague 61'/~ ID AHO 33 0 . 500 144 110 UL-Monroe 2 I Lagarscf 2 0 0 0 Stcastr2b-ss 4 0 0 0 N.Y.Giants LOSANGELES DODGERS— Claimed RHP Lisal20'/~ 21'/~ 56'/~ C FLORIDA 33 0 . 500 139 136 Houston D uda1b 4 I 3 5 Schwrrlf 3 0 0 I verto Boni g a off wa ivers fromTexasand placedhim 2I / 2 59'/~ Colorado 23 0 . 400 101 131 OREGO NST 3 TdArndc 4 I I I J.Baezss 3 0 0 0 Dallas on the60-dayDL. Washi n gton 24 0 . 333 117 136 BAYLOR 37 36 79'/~ i o wa St Confortlf 2 0 0 0 Rodneyp 0 0 0 0 PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES— Named Rick Kranitz South PennSt 7'/z 6'/z 47t/t MARYLAND B.colonp 0 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 pencoachandJohnMcLarencatchingcoach. W L T P ct PF PA RICE t gt/t 9 5 4'/~ Arm y bull KJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Coghlnph I 0 0 0 BASKETB ALL Carolina 5 0 0 1.000135 94 SMississippi 16 16 64 CHARLOITE A.Reedp 0 0 0 0 Hammlp 0 0 0 0 NationalBasketballAssociation Atlanta 51 0 . 633 163 143 LOUISVILLE 6'/z 6 37t/t Boston Coll C lipprdp 0 0 0 0 TWoodp I 0 0 0 CLEVEL ANDCAVALIERS—Agreedto termswith TampaBay 23 0 . 400 110 146 LA TECH 7Hr 64'/~ MidTenn St Cuddyrph 1 0 0 0 Richrdp 0 0 0 0 NewOrleans 24 0 . 333 134 164 CINCINN ATI 13 13 56tyt Connecticut FTristanThompsononafive-yearcontract. Familip 0 0 0 0 AJcksnph I 0 0 0 MILWAU KEEBUCKS—WaivedGJorgeGutierrez North SFLORID A 13 11'/g 60'/~ Smu W Florsss 4 0 2 0 Cahillp 0 0 0 0 and Fs MarcusLandry andJoshPowell. w L T pm pF pA T EXAS S T 3 3 ' /~ 66'/z S Alabama M atzp 2 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 SAN ANTO NIO SPURS — Waived GsJimmer 60 0 1.000164 101 FLA INTL 14 13 52t/t Old Dominion Niwnhs lf 2 0 0 0 LaStell ph-2b 2 0 0 0 tteand KeiferSykes,C YoussouNdoyeandF 3 2 0 . 6 0096 63 MISSST 11 11 55'/~ Kentucky Frede D.Rossc I 0 0 0 D eshaun T ho m as. 24 0 . 333 120 179 ARKANS 50'/~ A uburn AS 5'/z 6 MMntrph-c I 0 0 0 FOOTBAL L 15 0 . 167 120 172 OKLAHO 15 14t/t 74'/~ Texas Tech M A Totals 36 6 116 Totals 3 3 3 6 3 NationalFootballLeague West K a nsas OKLAHOM AST33H 33H 61 tA N ew York 420 0 0 0 020 — S ARIZONA CARDINALS— Released DELawrence W L T Pct PF PA FloridaSt 5H 5H 57at GA TECH Dkoye Chicago 0 00 100 020 — 3 fromthepracticesquad.SignedCBCarrington Arizona 42 0 . 667 203 115 OhioSt 21 21 RUTGE RS Byndom LDB —NewYork 9, Chicago7. 2B—Dan.Mur- St. Louis an d D TDlsenPierreto thepracticesquad. 2 3 0 . 400 64 113 LSU 16 17 65'/~ W Kentucky phy (I), Duda 2(2), Soler 2 (2). 3B—W.Flores Seattle BALTIMORERAVENS— ReleasedRBAkeemHunt 24 0 . 333 134 125 Fla Atlantic 6 6 ' / z 5 6'/z U T E P I). HR — Dan.Murphy (4), Duda(1), T.d'Arnaud SanFrancisco 2 from the practicesquad.SignedDENordly Capi and 4 0 .3 33 100 160Troy —NEW MEXICOST SheldonPriceto thepracticesquad. 2), Bryant(1).SB—Granderson(3), W.Flores (I). SANJOSEST 7'/z 7'/z 56'/z New Mexico S—Lagares. CHICAGO BEARS— SignedCB BryceCallahan Today'sGame 51'/~ H a waiifrom thepracticesquadandSDemontre Hurst to the NEVADA Tat IP H R E R BBSO Seattleat SanFrancisco,5:25 p.m. 71'/z W ash St ARIZONA NewYork practicesquad. Sunday'sGames 4 2-3 4 I 1 2 4 Buffalovs.Jacksonville atLondon, 6:30a.m. Matz DETROITLIONS — Released G TaylorBoggs. B.colonW,1-0 I 1 - 3 0 0 0 1 1 AtlantaatTennessee, 10a.m. ClaimedDTMichael DlaoffwaiversfromSan Diego. HOCKEY A.Reed I 0 0 0 0 1 Pittsburgh PlacedRBZachZenner oninjured reserve.SignedRB at KansasCity, 10a.m. Clippard I 2 2 2 0 1 Cleveland GeorgeWinnfromthepractice squadandWRRyan at St.Louis, 10a.m. NHL Familia I 0 0 0 1 1 TampaBayatWashi SpadolaandRBMarion Grice tothepracticesquad. ngton,10a.m. Chicago NATIONAL HOCKEY L E AGUE HOUSTONTEXANS— ReleasedRBDarylRichardMinnesota at Detroit, 10 a.m. All TimesPDT HammelL,0-1 11 - 3 4 5 5 2 1 Houston son from thepracticesquad.SignedLBStevenMeans atMiami,10a.m. TWood 12-3 2 I 1 1 3 NewOrleansat Indianapolis, 10a.m. to thepracticesquad. EasternConference Richard 2 I 0 0 0 2 N.Y.Jetsat NewEngland,10 a.m. INDIANA POLIS COLTS — Released LB Amarlo AtlanticDivision Cahill I I 0 0 0 0 Oaklandat SanDiego,1:05p.m. HerreraandDBShaunPrater. ReleasedQBAlexTanGP W L OT Pts GF GA Strop I I 0 0 1 1 Dallas atN.Y.Giants, I:25 p.m. ney fromthepractice squad.SignedDBDewey McMontreal 7 7 0 0 14 2 3 7 Donaldfromthe practice squadandTESamMcGrath Rodney I I 2 2 1 2 PhiladelphiaatCarolina,5:30p.m. T ampa B ay 7 4 2 I 9 23 20 to the H.Rondon I I 0 0 0 1 Open:Chicago,Cincinnati, Den practicesquad. ver,GreenBay Florida 6 3 2 I 7 16 12 HBP —byHammel(Conforto), byStrop (Td'Arnaud). JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS — Placed RB Corey M onday' s Ga m e Ottawa 6 3 2 I 7 19 17 T—3:32.A—42,227 (40,929). GrantandWRTonyWashington on injured reserve. BaltimoreatArizona,5:30p.m. Detroit 6 3 3 0 6 16 16 Rele asedDEZiggyHood.ReleasedQBJeffTuelfrom Boston 6 2 3 I 5 22 26 the practice squad. InjuryReport SOCCER Buffal o 6 2 4 0 4 11 15 K ANSAS CITYCHIEFS—SignedLBJoshKeyes NEW YORK—TheNationalFootball Leagueinjury Toronto 6 I 3 2 4 13 19 to the practicesquad. report, as providedbytheleague(DUT- Definitely wil Metropolitan Division MIAMIDOLPHINS—ReleasedRBBronsonHil from MLS not play;DNP—Did not practice; LIMITED—Limited GP W L OT Pts GF GA the practicsq euad.SignedTEBrandonWilliamsfromthe MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER participation inpractice; FULL—Full participation in N.Y. Islanders 6 4 I I 9 21 15 practice squadandCBTrovonReedtothepracticesquad. All TimesPDT practice): N.Y.Rangers 7 4 2 I 9 16 15 NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Signed RB Joey SEATTLESEAHAWKS et SAN FRANCISCO Washington 5 4 I 0 6 19 12 losefa to thepractice squad. EasternConference 49ERS — SEA H A W K S : OU T : CB Ma rc us Burl e y P hiladel p hia 6 3 2 I 7 13 16 NEW ORLE ANS SAINTS— ReleasedLBAnthony W L T Pts GF GA (hand), DT JordanHil (quadriceps),CPatrick Lewis Pittsburgh 6 3 3 0 6 10 11 SpencerandPBrandonFields. ReleasedWRR.J. Hary -New York 1 7 1 0 6 57 6 0 4 2 (ankle), LB Ni c k Mo ody (ankl e ). QU E S T IO N AB LE : D E NewJersey 6 2 3 I 5 11 16 ris fromthepracticesquad.SignedWRTJ. Graham. x -D.C.United 15 12 6 5 1 43 40 Dobbs(shoulder). PROBABLE: DE Cliff Carolina 6 2 4 0 4 12 17 NEWYORKGIANTS— Wai vedDBCooperTaylor. x -Columbus 1 4 1 1 6 5 0 5 3 5 3 Demarcus Avril (ankl e ), T Justi n Bri t t (hi p ), S Kam C han ce l o r C olumbus 7 0 7 0 0 13 34 ReleasedDTXavier Proctor fromthe practice squad. x -Toronto FC 15 1 4 4 4 9 5 7 5 6 (shoulder), DE FrankClark (hamstring), T Garry GilWesternConference Signe dCBLeonMcFaddenoffArizona'spractiilsquad x -Montreal 14 13 6 46 4 6 4 3 liam (ankle),WRTyler Lockett (hip), RBMarshawn CentralDivision and TE Jerome Cunninghamand OLAdamGettis to the N ew England 13 1 2 6 4 7 4 5 4 6 Lynch (hamstring), CBRichard Sherman(ankle), GP W L OT Pls GFGA practice squad. O rlando Cit y 1 2 1 3 6 44 4 6 5 5 CB TyeSmith (hip), LB BobbyWagner (pectoral). Dallas 6 5 I 0 10 2 1 1 4 PHILADE LPHIA EAGLES— Waived-non-football N ew YorkCity FC 10 16 7 3 7 4 6 55 49ERS: QUESTIONABLE:WRAnquanBoldin(ham- Nashville 6 5 I 0 10 1 9 1 3 injury DE B.J. McBryde. P hiladelphia 9 17 7 34 4 1 5 5 string), RB Carlos Hyde(foot), G Erik Pears(back). St. Louis 7 5 2 0 10 2 1 1 7 SAN DIEGOCHARGERS — Signed DB Adrian Chicago 6 19 6 3 0 4 2 5 6 PROBA BLE: GAlex Boone(shoulder), LB NaV orro Winnipeg 6 4 2 0 6 20 13 Phillips fromthepractice squadandNTChukaNdulue WesternConference Bowman(shoulder), LB Ahmad Brooks(shoulder), Minnesota 5 3 I I 7 14 15 to thepracticesquad. W L T Pts GF GA RB ReggieBush(calf), TEVernonDavis (knee), WR Chicago 6 3 3 0 6 14 14 TENNESSEE TITANS— WaivedFBConnorNeighy -FC Dalla s 1 7 1 0 6 57 5 0 3 6 BruceEllington (calf), TEVance McDonald (chest), 6 2 3 I 5 16 17 bors. SignedLBMarkus Pierce-Brewster to thepracx -LosAngeles 14 10 9 5 1 5 5 4 4 S EricReid(chest), TJoeStaley (knee), GBrandon Colorado Pacific Division tice squad. x -Vancouver 1 5 1 3 5 5 0 4 2 3 6 Thomas (ankle). GP W L OTPtsGF GA HOCKEY Portland 1 4 11 6 5 0 3 7 3 6 S an Jose 6 4 2 0 6 17 12 NationalHockeyLeague Seattle 1 4 13 6 4 6 4 1 3 5 Vancouver 6 3 I 2 6 16 11 CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — PlacedD Duncan S porting KansasCity13 11 9 46 46 44 College Arizona 6 3 2 I 7 16 14 Keith onlong-terminjured reserve. SanJose 1 3 12 6 4 7 4 0 3 7 A H Times PD T E dmonton 7 3 4 0 6 15 17 C OLUMBU SBLUEJACKETS—FiredcoachTodd Houston 1 1 13 9 4 2 4 2 4 6 Los Angeles 5 2 3 0 4 6 14 Richards.NamedJohnTortorella coach. R eal Salt Lake 11 1 4 6 4 1 37 45 PAC-12 Anaheim 5 I 3 I 3 5 12 FLORIDAPANTHERS—Assigned DJosh Brown Colorado 9 14 10 37 32 39 Today'sGame Calgary 6 I 5 0 2 12 25 from Portland (AHL)to Manchester (ECHL). x- clinchedplayoff berth C alifornia at UC LA , 6 p.m . W ednesday' s G am es NEWJERSEYDEVILS— AssignedFReidBoucher y- clinched conference Saturday'sGames Buffalo 2,Toronto1, SD to Albany (AHL). WashingtonSt.atArizona, 1p.m. Philadelphia5, Boston 4,DT NEWYORKISLANDERS— AssignedDLaicLeduc Wednesday'sGame Utah atSouthern Cal, 4:30p.m. Edmonton 3, Detroit1 and FCarter VerhaeghefromBridgeport (AHL) toMisColorado 2, Sporting KansasCity 0 C olorado at O r egon S t . , 7:30 p. m . C arolina1, Col o rado 0, D T souri (ECH L). Sunday'sGames Today'sGam es WashingtonatStanford, 7:30p.m. NEWYORKRANGERS—AssignedFTannerGlass OrlandoCityatPhiladelphia, 2o.m. NewEnglandatNewYorkCity FC,2 p.m. Thursday,Oct.29 Arizona at N.Y. Rangers, 4p.m. to Harfford (AHL). D.C.UnitedatColumbus, 2 p.m. OregonatArizonaSt., 7:30p.m. Dallas atPittsburgh,4 p.m. ST.LOUI S BLUES — PlacedFPaulStastnyon NewYorkatChicano,2p.m. Saturday, Oct. 31 N ew Jersey at O ttawa , 4:30 p.m . i n jured reserve. TorontoFCat Montreal, 2p.m. C olorado at U C LA , no on Anahei m at N a shvi l e, 5 p.m. VANCO U VER CANUCKS — Assigned DAnton RealSalt LakeatSeattle, 4 p.m. OregonSt.atUtah,4 p.m. ColumbusatMinnesota, 5p.m. CederholmfromUtica (AHL)to Kalamazoo(ECHL). Coloradoat Portland, 4o.m. StanfordatWashington St., 7:30p.m. Florida atChicago,5:30p.m. COLLEGE SanJoseatFCDallas,4p.m. Los Angeleat s Sporting KansasCity,4p.m. Arizona atWashington, 6p.m. Washi ngtonatVancouver,7p.m. NORTHCAROLINA— ReinstatedCBMikeHughes HoustonatVancouver,4p.m. SouthernCalat California, TBA Los AngelesatSanJose, 7:30p.m. fromsuspension.

MLB piayoffs

Formula One,United States GrandPrix, practice 8 a.m. NBCSN NASCAR,Truck Series, Fred's 250, practice 10 a.m. FS1 NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Talladega500, practice 11 a.m. NBCSN NASCAR,Truck Series, Fred's 250, practice noon FS1 Formula One,United States GrandPrix, practice 2 noon N B CSN NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Talladega500, practice 1:30 p.m. NBCSN FIA Formula EChampionship, Beijing 1 2:30 a.m. F S 1 SOCCER Bundesliga, 1899 Hoffenheim vs. Hamburg 11:20 a.m. FS2 FIFA U-17World Cup, Korea Republic vs. England 12:55 p.m. FS1 Men's college, SanDiegoSt. at California 2 p.m. P a c-12 FIFA U-17World Cup, United States vs. Chile 3 :55 p.m. F S 2 Women's college, California at Washington 4 p.m. P a c-12 Men's college, UCLAat Stanford 8 p.m. P a c-12 GOLF PGA Tour,Shriners Hospitals for Children Open 2 p.m. Golf LPGA Tour, LPGA Taiwan Championship 9 p.m. Golf

MLB playoffs, Toronto at KansasCity

Today Boyssoccer:BendatMountainView,4:15 p.m.; RedmondatRidgeview,4:30 p.mc Estacadaat CrookCounty,4p,ms MadrasatGladstone,4p.m.; Sisters atSutherlin, 2:30p.mcLaPineat Pleasant Hill, 6:30p.m. Girls soccer:Bendat Mountain View,2:45 p.m.; Redmond at Ridgeview,3 p.mc CrookCountyat Esta cada,6 p.m.;GladstoneatMadras,4 p.m.; Sisters atSutherlin, 4 p.msCreswell at LaPine, 4 p.m. Volleyball:MountainViewat Summ it, 6:30 p.m.; Bend atRedmond, 6:30 p.m.; PleasantHil at La Pine, 6p.m. Girls waterpolo:Summit at Ridgeview,3:30p.m. Boys waterpolo: Summit at Ridgeview,4:30 p.m.

BASEBALL

AUTO RACING

High school, Paramus(N.J.) at IMGAcademy (Fla.) College, Yale atPennsylvania College, Memphis at Tulsa High school, Bend atSummit High school, Kamiak at LakeStevens (Wash.) High school, Newport at Mount Si College, Utah St. at SanDiegoSt.

ON DECK

I)


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

NHL ROUNDUP

MLB PLAYOFFS

C3

Decorum Continued from C1

McDavid scores as Oilers take out Red Wings

Kenseth had a m i serable finish and arrived at Kansas

knowing that he would need to win there or this coming

weekend at Talladega to earn a spot in the next round. Everything looked like it was playing out perfectly for him too. Kenseth had his No. 20 Toyota at the f ront

The Associated Press

all day, leading a race-high 153 laps, and had a spot in

EDMONTON, Alberta — Connor McDavid scored his fourth goal of the season to help the Edmonton Oilers beat the Detroit

the eight-driver "eliminator" round within sight with five

Red Wings 3-1 on Wednesday night.

laps to go. But by that point

The No. I overall pick in the June draft,

Logano had the faster car-

the 18-year-old McDavid beat Petr Mrazek with a deke on a breakaway to give the Oil-

and had spent the last 10 laps glued firmly to Kenseth's rear bumper. Kenseth was doing every-

ers a2-0 lead at6:34 ofthe second period.He

also has two assists in his first seven NHL games.

thing he could to protect the

lead, and Logano finally got fed up with a series of blocks. With a good run going into Turn 1, Logano stuck his nose under Kenseth's rear fend-

Edmonton has won t hree straight af-

ter losing its first four games. The Oilers also snapped an eight-game losing streak

W

ni

against Detroit.

Teddy Purcell scored 30 seconds afterM cDavid's goal. Mark Letestu scored his first goal for Edmonton on a first-period power play. Cam Talbot made 28 saves, allowing only Tomas Tatar's third-period goal off a rebound.

Mrazek stopped 25 shots for Detroit. The

er, and one of the Chase fa-

vorites was suddenly sliding across the track. Nam Y. Huh /The Associated Press

New York Mets' Daniel Murphy celebrates after hitting a two-run home run during the eighth inning of Game 4 of the NLCS against the Chicago Cubs Wednesday inChicago.

Red Wings have lost three straight after

winning their first three games. Also on Wednesday: Flyers 5, Bruins 4: BOSTON — Claude Giroux scored his second power-play goal of the game at 2:09 of overtime to give Philadelphia a victory over Boston. Sabres 2, Maple Leafs 1: BUFFALO, NY. — Evander Kane tied it with 4:29 left with

his first goal for Buffalo, and Matt Moulson and Tyler Ennis scored in the shootout to beat Toronto.

wee 0 u S a S e S ac in o r o r er i e S

Kenseth tends to be lowkey, but the spin heard 'round N ASCAR rubbed hi m

me," Kenseth said. "He cries

on his radio a lot, I guess, about blocking or moving

By Jay Cohen

struggling Carolina beat Colorado. Cam Ward stopped 26 shots in his first shutout of

The Associated Press

CYCLING

ReigningTour champ excited about route

the

wrong way. "He just plain wrecked

Hurricanes 1, Avalanche 0: DENVER-

phy had the lone assist for Carolina, which won for just the second time in six games.

ran

what this team is doing."

Victor Rask scored 1:49 into overtime, and the seasonand 23rd ofhis career.Ryan Mur-

" He ran m e h a rd. I

him hard back," Logano explained. "Unfortunately, those things happen, right? It doesn't take anything away from our team. I'm proud of

around, but man, you' re lead-

NL Cham pionshipSeries

One f i nal, charmed swing by Daniel Murphy, and the New York Mets finished a playoff sweep of the Chicago Cubs. A new generation of Amazins is heading to the World Series. Murphy homered for a record sixth c onsecutive postseason game, and the Mets brushed aside the Cubs 8-3 Wednesday night, cappingaNationalLeague Championship Series in which New CHICAGO

York never trailed.

"I can't explain it. It's such a blessing to contribute to what we' ve been able to do," he said.

Lucas Duda hit a t hree-run homer in the first inning and a two-run double in the second at

Wrigley Field, silencing a crowd of

NETS 4, CUBS 0 Game1: NewYork 4,Chicago 2 Game 2: NewYork 4, Chicago1 Game 3: NewYork 5, Chicago 2 Game 4: NewYork 8, Chicago3

the first time since the Mets lost

ing the race and you can pick

to the crosstown Yankees in five games in 2000. They will play at

whatever lane you want. It' s

either Toronto or Kansas City in

not like he was alongside me. To wreck somebody for being

Game 1 on Tuesday night — the

in a lane that you wanted to

Royals lead 3-2 in the ALCS.

be in seems kind of risky and

But the first big question for New York is the health of center fielder Yoenis Cespedes, who left

not very smart. That was a decision he made." It was risky in two entirely

in the second inning with soreness in his left shoulder. Any health issue for the slugger could be a big

different ways. For one t hing, Logano could have spun himself out

factor in the next round.

t oo. But with a spot in t h e next round already assured, that hardly mattered.

The Cubs, meanwhile, still ha42,227 desperately hoping for the ven't won the crown since 1908. beginning of an epic comeback in Manager JoeMaddon's wild-card Game 4. bunch surged into this series, but Not this time. Not with N ew

York's array of power arms, and Murphy swinging a hot stick that

was overmatched.

"They didn't give us — they did not let us up for air at any point,"

made him the NLCS MVP.

Maddon said. "Their domination

Manager Terry Collins' team advanced to the World Series for

of the early part of the game and their pitching was impressive."

By Marissa Payne

More important, Logano risked irking other drivers with plenty of Chase races left. He heads t o

u n p r edict-

able Talladega this weekend once more with nothing to lose, but things reset the fol-

The Washington Post

lowing week at Martinsville. Logano will have everything

Reigning Tour de France champion Chris Froome wasted no time predicting how he

to lose as the Chase hits the homestretch, while Kenseth

will do at next year's event. On Tuesday, just

hoursafter race organizers announced the 2016 route, Froome praised it, telling report-

Blue Jays beat Royals, force Game6

ers it "suits" him better than the 2015 Tour.

"It challenges every aspect of cyclingtime trials, mountains, a technical descent," the 30-year-old Team Sky rider said (via the BBC). "It suits me better than this year' s Tour'."

AL ChampionshipSeries

By Howie Rumberg The Associated Press

TORONTO — M arco Estrada took the mound with one task: save

course featured two time trials totaling 54 kilometers. This year's featured just one

the season for the Toronto Blue Jays. He did it, pitching one-hit ball into the eighth inning to give Toronto's tattered bullpen a rest, and the Blue

individual time trial that totaled just more

Jays beat the Kansas City Royals

than 13.8 kilometers. Froome also posted a picture of the 2016 route to his Instagram page, where he gushed over its four summit finishes and its

7-1 Wednesday to close to 3-2 in the best-of-seven American League Championship Series.

Bastille Day finish in Mont Ventoux.

shortstop Troy Tulowitzki said.

Froome was especially excited that the

"I won the stage in yellow on Bastille Day in 2013 and 2015," Froome captioned the photo, referring to his two Tour de France

victories. "Good omen I hope!" Froome was all smiles on Instagram, but he knows the stage will not be a breeze. "I know how difficult this climb is and

how much time can be won or lost," said Froome,who was dogged with unproven allegations of doping last year. "The beautiful thing about the Tour de France is that it's not specifically about one stage — I think it's going to take a complete cyclist." He added: "I'm still 30 years old and feel I have a lot left in my legs."

Preseason Continued from C1 The league allows for a maximum of eightpreseason games, or nearly one-tenth of an entire regular season.

But it is condensed into a span of just three weeks, sometimes creating the necessity of back-to-backs that play-

ers dread when the games count, let alone when they are just for practice. Kidd, who was still playing when the 2011 lockout ended, favors four preseason games. Cleveland coach David Blatt agrees.

"I' ve expressed myself to the people that make those decisions on more than one occasion," Blatt said.

"My voice is only one, but it's clearly my opinion that we should play four, maximum five preseason games and create a situation where we could have fewer back-to-backs and give players a little bit more time to rest and a lit-

tle bit less wear and tear during the preseason." It is not that coaches want to short-

en the preseason itself. They like the month they get between the start of

training camp and the beginning of the regular season. It's just that the games get in the

Game 1:Kansas City 5, Toronto 0 Game 2: KansasCity6,Toronto3 Game 3:Toronto 11, KansasCity 8 Game 4: KansasCity 14, Toronto 2 Game 5:Toronto 7, KansasCity 1 Fri. a t Kansas City 5:07 p.m x-Sat. at Kansas City 5:07 p.m

"They' re a great team over there.

offense to settle in and get some

runs. Tulowitzki provided three of those runs. He broke the game open

Frank Gunn /The Canadian Press

Toronto's Jose Bautista, left, and Edwin Encarnacion celebrate after scor-

ing on a three-run double by Troy

x-if necessary

perfect in the ninth. Yordano Ventura will start for the

defending AL champions on Friday

Tulowitzki during the sixth inning of

with a bases-clearing double off Kel- Wednesday's game in Toronto. vin Herrera in the sixth, giving him

in Game 6 against David Price, the Game 2 loser.

seven RBIs in the series. Edwin En-

Estrada,a 32-year-old free-agent to be, kept the bullpen door closed

carnacion had walked with the bases loaded against Edinson Volquez, who seemed flustered by a couple of close calls against the Royals. Kansas City totaled 22 runs and

In other w o rds, L ogano

may have to watch his back the rest of the way. "He's got to race the guys around him," team owner Roger Penske said. "Each one ofthese drivers know the

ROYALS3, BLUEJAYS2

"It's the start that we needed,"

We know that. But this guy kept them off balance and allowed the

— assuming he does not win at Talladega to keep his own title hopes alive — will be the one who has nothing to lose.

30 hits in the first two games in Toronto, but Estrada faced the minimum 20 batters before Lorenzo Cain walked with two outs in the seventh. Closer Roberto Osuna was

for most of the afternoon, a day af-

ter Kansas City romped 14-2 in a game that saw infielder Cliff Pennington pitch in the ninth.

circumstances, and they' re going to make the moves that are necessary to try t o g et

ahead.... To me, that's going to be the pattern as we go the next four or five races."

In the aftermath of Sunday, two distinct camps emerged. Some sided with Kenseth,

claiming that Logano made a move for the lead in t h e

No. 22 that was aggressive at best, malicious at worst. Others sided with Logano, arguing that he was racing to win, taking the "have at 'em, boys" approach that NASCAR has

encouraged the past f ew years. "I don't know w hat t h at

mentality is," said Denny Hamlin, one of K en seth's teammates at Joe Gibbs Racing. "I'm sure from the 22 standpoint, he d i dn't w a nt the 20 to win. That's one of

way of the work.

"It's something that with the (col-

up more interest before the All-Star

most of the top ones don't even consid-

Game and Olympics are held in those er playingin every preseason game. lective bargaining agreement) you countries in 2016. And the two-game Carmelo Anthony noted that the New can only have five days of training trip to China got a boost with the in- York Knicks' six-game schedule was camp, and you can have two-a-days clusion of the Charlotte Hornets, send- better than the seven they played last and even in that, one of the practices ing owner Michael Jordan to fans who year, then promptly sat out the second is only an hour with limited contact," are crazy about basketball. night of a back-to-back at Charlotte. Brooklyn Nets coach Lionel Hollins The Hornets paid for it on the back Popovich, who sits players out of said. "You need practice time. Guys end, though, with four games in six regular-season games for rest, held need to be able to prepare and get nights, a brutal stretch that would Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu comfortable with each other, get com- have coaches seething if the NBA had Ginobili out of the Spurs' opener at fortable with whatever you' re trying drawn it up. Sacramento along with himself, keepto implement. It's hard in the preseaBut the teams handle their own pre- ing to his policy of letting an assistant son when you' re playing and traveling season scheduling, determining how run theteam each year in apreseason like you do during the regular season. many games to play (there is no min- game. There's really no need to." imum) and how often. Coaches are The NBA would probably welWell, there is to the organizations not always thrilled with what they get. come a shorter preseason, because and the league. New rules can be test- Hollins did not like that the Nets' six- that could lengthen the regular-seaed, game-night operations ironed out, game slate included two games apiece son calendarto create more restopand of course, money can be made. against Atlantic Division rivals Bos- portunities for players, a goal of the "I like the number of games. I love ton and Philadelphia. league's commissioner, Adam Silver. "I wouldn't mind playing some of Silver said during All-Star weekend giving young players a chance to play. And off the court it lets us get our the Western teams that are close by, that coaches told him they do not valentertainment and presentation put but it is what it is," he said. "It's easy ue the exhibition games as much as together," Dallas Mavericks owner to get to these games and it makes the they once did, so perhaps those can Mark Cuban said. travel different. It's not a huge issue, be reduced and the overall preseason "It's also the best and really only but I would prefer to play some teams trimmed. "I think that would be good for way to introduce NBA teams around that you' re not playing all year long the world." in your division, in your conference, the game," Blatt said. "I know that it The NBA added preseason games that you' re battling with for playoff would be good for the players and I in Canada and staged another ex- positions." also think it would be good for the hibition in Brazil, seeking to drum Playersdo not gripe as much, as fans."

the faster cars in the Chase. If you can eliminate someone like that, he's trying to do that. "It's a mix there," Hamlin

said. "One guy has to win and another has nothing to lose." NASCAR chairman Brian

France sided with Logano, calling the move "quintessential NASCAR" during an interview on SiriusXM radio.

France said it was "a great example of everybody doing probably exactly what they should be doing" — two drivers racing for the win. It is part of the tension pro-

duced by an elimination-style playoff format. "I think the Chase format

was designed to create tension, to c reate competition

and certainly pressure on the teams and the drivers," Penske said. "From the stand-

point of the way they drive on the track, you just have to watch the restarts and see that it's elbows-out-the-window there every time. ... I think the format is terrific."


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

PREP SCOREBOARD

Sisters os, irsta eS -Emtites Bulletin staff report

bury finished 7-10.

Lane Community College in Eugene, while top-five placers not on season, the Sisters girls and boys ning by more than 40 seconds, qualifying teams also earn spots at cross-country teams each claimed Tony Hooks claimed the individual the state meet. Pickhardt completed a Sky-Em League title Wednesday title for the Sisters boys, who with the 5,000-meter course in 17:07.62 at Lane Community College, quali- 44 points edged Elmira by a single to edge Santiago, who had a time of fying the Outlaws for the Class 4A point to take the team champion- 17:09.04. Zack Lawson was sixth for state championships next week on ship. Jordan Pollard was sixth for the Cowboys, and Connor Chancy the same LCC course. the Outlaws, and Izaak Kanzig took took seventh. Madras, which was The top two teams earn spots for seventh. fourth in the six-team standings the state meet, which is scheduled Also Wednesday: with 96 points, qualified one runner for Oct. 31, as do top-five placers not to next week's state meet, as Tyler Cross-country already on qualifying teams. Anderson placed fourth in 17:21.19. EUGENE — For the fifth straight

With a time of 16:34.9 and win-

In the 5,000-meter girls race, So-

Cowboys take TVC title: ESphie Borders, who won in 20 minutes, TACADA — Liam Pickhardt and

In the girls race, neither Crook

third and fourth, respectively, and

while Maddie Molitor took 23rd for

County nor Madras qualified a run41.9 seconds, led seven top-10 finish- Sam Santiago went 1-2 to lead the ner for state. Abby Dalton was ninth ers for Sisters, which topped the six- Crook County boys to 29 points for Crook County, which finished team standings with 23 points. Anna and a second straight district title third with 59 points and just two Bartlett and Megan Calarco finished at the Tri-Valley Conference cham- points behind runner-up Estacada, pionship meet at McIver Park. The

Continued from C1 "That's a p retty n aked feeling, you know'?" says Gilchrist coach Mark Heat-

er. "I had a lineman playing tight end. Pretty talented kid but certainly not h i s p o si-

tion. Our practice sessions as of late, being even thinner than where we were when we

started, you' re just not backing up the positions the way you would.... It's almost just

desperation mode." Such is the case for a number of high school football programs in Oregon, where, according to t h e N a tional Federation of State High

School Associations, football participation has declined by nearly 7 percent since 2007

— falling in line with the national trend. At l east some of that downturn can be at-

tributed to rising fear of high school players suffering serious headinjuries.According to statistics from the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, for exam-

ple, about 47 percent of high school football players suffer at leastone concussion each season. And of those, 35 percent actually sustained two

or more in the same year. Still, Summit coach Joe Padilla says, there is "a lot of

misinformation" about head injuries that skews parents'

tinues, football

e q uipment

has consistently been updated over the past 10 years, as have athletic training proto-

cols. Just this past summer, the Oregon School Activities Association became the first

state high school activities association in the nation to require c o ach e n r o llment

into USA Football's Heads up Football program, which teaches tackling and blocking techniques to reduce helmet-to-helmet contact while

addressing how to properly recognize and react to

-

Girls Teamscores — Molala18,Estacada57, CrookCounty 59, Gladstone 88,Madras134. Top 10 —1, Amanda Clarizio, Molaga,19:40.77. 2, Brianna Loughridge,Molala, 20:19.24.3, MomoWilms-Crowe,Corbett, 20:36 .58.4,HeatherLoughridge,Molalla,20;38.2.5,HannahHart , Estacada, 20:52.11.6, MorganHolas, Molala, 21:31.51.7, Rosie Shaver,Estacada,21:53.91.8, AudreyBever, Molala, 22:04.24.9, AbbyDalton,CrookCounty, 22:08.55. 10,KatyStorer, Gladstone,

CrookCounty(69) —9,AbbyDalton,22:08.55; 11,Maggie Kasberger,22:23.19; 12,YukoKomaki, 22:39.39; 15,IreneMorales, 23:03.83;17,Noel Stringer,23:41.07; 29,KianaOrazem,

FRIDAY Bend(1-1, 5-2) at Summit(3-0, 6-1), 7 p.m.:QBChase Lettenmajer, who passed for 186 yards and aTD jn last Friday's 45-21 homeloss to Liberty, leads No. 10 Bend into thjs intracity matchup asthe Bears look to keeptheir postseason hopesalive. No. 5 Summit aims for the program's first IMC title behind a stingy defense that hadsjx takeaways jn a59-7 rout at Ridgevjew last week, including three fumble recoveries returned for TDs. Mountain View(0-2,1-6) at Ridg eview(0-2, 3-4), 7 p.m.:After passing for152 yards and two TDs jn Mountain View's 50-27 loss at Redmondlast Friday, QBNoahSpear leads theCougars into this IMC matchup. TheRavens fell at home 59-7 to Summit last week blJt look to rebound behind RBBrent Yeakey, who hasrushed for 1,126yards and 10TDs this season. Redmond (5-2) at North Eugene(7-0), 7 p.m.: In a 50-27 homewin over Mountain View last Friday, the Panthers rushed for 570yards andajm to take that momentum into this nonleague contest. RBDerek Brown, who has rushedfort,797 yards and 14TDs this season, leads No. 6Redmond against North EIJgene. TheHighlandersareplayinganindependentschedul ethisseasonandcome offa61-0homewin over 3A Colton jn which QBJohn Avrill had four touchdown passes. Crook County(2-1, 4-3) at Estacada (1-2, 4-2), 7 iy.m.:The Cowboys look to rebound from a 30-13 loss at Ridgevjgw (Washjngton) last Friday andclinch aspot jn the 4A play-in round as they take on TVC opponent Estacada jneachteam's regular-season finale. QB Blake Bartels, who threw for100 yards and a TD last week, andCrook County face off against the Rangers, who lost 45-37 at Gladstone last week despite 292 rushing yards andfour TDs by RBDoug Kjrchhofer. Maclras (0-7) at Corbett (5-2), 7 p.m.:Following a 33-0 home loss to Molalla last Friday, the White Buffaloes, paced by QB Miklo Hernandez, wrap IJpthe regular season with a nonleaglJBcontest against independent Corbett. TheCardinals comeoff a 55-32 road win against the Hjllsboro JV squad. Elmira (1-3, 1-6) at Sisters(30, 60), 7 pm.:Last Friday's 34-10 road win against Junction City earned the Outlaws the top ranking in 4Aandset Sisters up to clinch its first Sky-Em championship since 2007 with a victory over Elm)ra. Running backs Mitch Gjbngyand Logan Schutte guide the Outlaws into this matchup against the Falcons, who lost at home27-14 against Sweet Homelast week. La Pine (03, 1-6) at Harrisburg(20, 61), 7 pm.: The Hawks,who lost at home54-0 against CoqlJ)lie last Friday, ajm for their first MVC win of the season behind WRAustin Kentner. Class 3A fourth-ranked Harrisburg won 40-12 atCreswell last weekbehind 233 rushing yards andthree TDsby RBHunter Knox. Westen-McEwen(2-1,5-2)atCulver(1-2,3-4),7p.m.:JaidenJonespoweredto322rushingyardsand two TDs jn CIJlver's 34-20 win at Pilot Rock last Friday, and helooks to continue that dominance against Weston-MCEwen.TheTjgerScots come off last week's 37-12 homewin against Irrjgon, jn which both Ethan RegerandVince Roff rushedfor more than 140yards. Gilchrist (0-1, 2-5) at Prospect (0-1, 2-5), 7 p.m.:TheGrizzlies, who fell 71-6 at Hosanna Christian last Friday, wrap IJp the regular season on the road, as QBNathan HBjtzman looks to earn Gilchrist a season-ending 1ASpecial District 2 victory. The Cougars, paced by194 yards and three TDspassing and another 185 rushing yards and ascore by QBRoo Driskell, lost 52-32 at Chjloqujn last week. — Bulletin staff report

OSAArankings

took my current senior class , CLASS4A 7-0. :1. Sisters 5-2: 2. Scappoose 7-0: 3. Cascade

8. Wjlsonvjlle

7-0: 8. Mazama

9. South Albany

5-2. :9. Astorja 5-2. :10. Molalla

10. Bend

7-0. :4. Philomath

6-1: 5. Phoenix 5-2: 6. Banks 6-1. :7. Marshfjeld

s tudents, according t o

Boys

Team scores — Sisters44,Elmira45,Junction City 63, SweetHome102, CotageGrove117, Sutherlin164. Top 10 —1, TonyHooks, Sisters, 16:34.9. 2, KonradRaum, Cottage Grove,17:17.4. 3, ShaneOrme, Elmira, 17:38.2. 4, Benjamin Swan cutt, JunctionCity, 17:39.1.5, RyanMeighan,Junction City,17:40.3 . 6, JordanPollard, Sisters, 17:47.8. 7, Izaak Kanzig,Sisters, 17:58.3. 8,Riley Craig,Elmira, 17:59.3.9, Ben Douthit, Elmira,18:08.5.10,TreyReed,Sweet Home,18:13.2. Sisters (44) — 1,TonyHooks, 16:34.9; 6, JordanPollard, 17:47.8; 7,IzaakKanzig, 17:58.3;12,Dyut Fetrow,18:27.8; 18, ColePade,19:04.2;28,Patrick Krevi,19:40.8; 31,Wiliam Werts, 19;58.

Girls Teamscores— Sisters23, Junction City54, Sutherlin 94, Cottage Grove106,Sweet Home125,Elmira129. Top 10 — 1,SophieBorders, Sisters, 20:41.9.2, Camerin Feagins,Sutherlin, 21;01.5. 3,AnnaBartlett, Sisters, 21;12.4. 4, MeganCalarco, Sisters, 21:14.9. 5,AudreySherman, Junction City, 21:48.1. 6,SydneyThielman,Junction City, 21:52.2. 7, Amy Hills, Sisters, 21:55.1.8, MacadiaCalavan,Sisters, 21:55.5. 9,MaryStewart, Sisters, 22:18. 10,SerenaSalisbury, Sisters,22:18.4. Sisters (23) — 1,SophieBorders, 20;41.9; 3, Anna Bartlett, 21:12.4;4, MeganCalarco, 21:14.9; 7, AmyHils, 21:55.1; 8, MacadiaCalavan, 21:55.5; 9, MaryStewart, 22:18; 10, Serena Salisbury,22:18.4.

"It's like a

Continued from C1

when they were freshmen to

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

t h e that's only about 65 percent OSAA, Cease oversees a of what they started with. But "There's a lot of education football team that has been they' re giving me what they (by players and parents) that plagued with injuries. The have. You' ve just got to find needs to happen," Padilla White Buffaloes began the ways to build that up, and as says. season with 19 varsity play- coaches, we just keep coachE ducation c o ul d h e l p ers — just 41 players pro- ing them. It doesn't matter for fut u r e par t i c ipation gramwide — and heading what the score is, you just numbers. But r i ght n ow, i nto their g am e a t C r o ok keep going hard.... That' s Gilchrist's depth chart is run- County tw o w e eks a go, two things we can control: ning thinner than normal. Cease was unsure if Madras their attitude and their effort. "Obviously I can't go eight- would even be able to field a We just preach that kind of on-eight," Heater says. "If complete team. At one point, stuff." you' re actually trying to do about three weeks ago, the Cease a n d Gi l c h r i st's a scrimmage environment ... coach and the high school's Heater both note that at this you just don't have bodies. administration di s cussed point in the season, each Even an assistant coach hold- canceling the remainder of team playing its final game ing a (blocking) bag, you' re the season. Since then, the on Friday, there is not much just not m i micking play. Buffs have continued play- the two coaches can do to That's the real challenge.... ing, Cease says, as "it never reverse course. Instead, they I think every coach in the got to the point where we can only encourage their world will tell you, 'You prac- needed to have a serious con- players to keep working hard tice the way you play.' When versation about (canceling all while playing the waiting you can't mimic Friday night the season)." game to see what next seagames at practice, it's pretty The White Buffaloes prac- son brings. tough." tice against their JV squad, That was the strategy used There are t i mes when made up of freshmen and by Joe Padilla when he beHeater takes half his offen- sophomores, but are some- gan head coaching duties at sive players and positions times forced to practice like Summit High four years ago. In his first season, Padilla rethem on the defensive side, G ilchrist — against air. In simply to give his Grizzlies games, Madras t i meouts calls, the Storm fielded varsome hands-on p ractice. are not used strategically so sity and JV squads totaling Many times, Heater has much as to simply give the about 45 players. By the end his offense run "on air " Buffs a chance to catch their of that season, as the roster a gainst a n o n existent d e - breath. was depleted by sickness and "The mindset changes injury, the final JV games on fense. On what he describes as "contact days" in practic- because there are differ- the schedule were canceled. "It was tough because one es, Heater must weigh his ent ways to find victories desire to have players ex- in games," says Cease, who of the things it takes to be perience live action against came to Madras after coach- successful is dedication," Pathe risk of those few healthy ing at 6A Jesuit in Portland. dilla says. "You' ve got to have players getting injured and "You look at kids' effort, how kids that are dedicated to further depleting the Griz- hard they' re working. At the classroom, definitely the zlies' roster. some point in the game, our weight room. I started an inSean Cease can relate. kids are exhausted. They' re centive program called CateNow in h i s second season giving us a hundred percent gory 5. That's how they earn at 4A Madras, which has of what they have left, but the name on the back of their an enrollment of nearly 600 unfortunately, som e t imes jersey. It's a lot of sacrifice. It concussions.

Top 10 —1, LiamPickhardt, CrookCounty, 17:07.62.2, SamSantiago,CrookCounty, 17:09.04. 3, LukeDavis, Corbett, 17 1391.4, TylerAnderson,Madras,1721.19.5, Mathew Borowczak, Molalla,17;23.2.6,ZackLawson,CrookCounty,17:25.25. 7,ConnorChancy,CrookCounty,17:25.43.8,KeenanHoffman, Molalla,17:36.8.9, EliRome,Molala,17:54.59.10, NathanBackwell, Estacada, 18:05.88. CrookCounty(29) —1,LiamPickhardt 17:07.62; 2, SamSantiago,17:09.04;6, ZackLawson, 17:25.25; 7, Connor Chancy,17:25.43;13, NoahChancy,18:14.1; 14, NoahCarmack, 18:15.1 7; 18,Tyler Lawson, 18:33.51. Madras (gg) — 4, TylerAnderson,17:21.19; 15, Israel Tapia,18;19.31;20, Genesis Lucei, 18;43.49;28, HunterDnstad, 20:03.77;29, ChadThurby, 20:14.17; 31,AaronWinishut, 20:22.72;34,Catalina LeClaire, 21:40.31.

Prey footballthisweekend

CLASS SA 1. Liberty 2. Ashland 3. Springfield 4. Crater 5. Summit 6. Redmond 7. Hillsboro

Class 4A Sky-EmLeaguechampionships Ai LaneCommunity College, Eugene 5,000 meters

Boys Teamscores— CrookCounty29,Molalla59,Estacada69, Madras 96, Corbett111, Gladstone167.

Ducks

decisions to allow their chil-

dren to play football. However,the Summit coach con-

Madras (134) —23, MaddieMolitor, 25:31.32;27,Gracie White plume,27:55.74;28,Cecei aAndy,28:26.4;30,JoceneTutti, 33:50.62;31,BlueWhiteplume, 51;59.25.

Class 4A Tri-Valley Conferencechampionships Al Mclver Park, Estacada 5,000 meters

22:09.28.

Outlaws Amy Hills, Macadia Cala- top two teams qualify for the Class Madras, which rounded out the fivevan, Mary Stewart and Serena Salis- 4A state championships Oct. 31 at team standings.

Numbers

33:22.34.

Cross-country

really start doing that and buy in. "When you put thatmuch

time in and you sacrifice so much, it's harder to give up," adds Padilla, whose program boasts nearly 100 players. "The competition level goes up. It just means more."

While Summit's football

participation numbers have climbed to near 100, the oth-

er two Class 5A Bend high schools have sustained high levels. Mountain View, which

has averaged 104 players programwide over the past six years, sits at 108 this sea-

son, while Bend High is at 138, down a touch from last season's total of 146. In Red-

mond, Ridgeview has a total of 75 players this season, and Redmond High is between 85 and 95 players. The athletic director at

e ach R edmond

school mentions how classes vary in size, which affects t he o v erall

t u r n ou t e a c h

season. For now, programs such as Madras and Gilchrist are left

waiting out the 2015 season, continuing to coach their players and finish the schedule strong and hope next season brings an influx of athletes. Gilchrist's Heater has

pleasantly discovered that some players are becoming

That did not seem likely

after embarrassing home losses to Utah and Washington State sent the Ducks'

season into a tailspin. Returning after missing most of the previous four games with a broken index finger on his throwing hand, Adams was 14-of-25 passing for 272 yards and two touchdowns Saturday

at Washington. On third downs in the first half, he was 5-of-6 for 182 yards and

a touchdown. "When you look at it, we converted more third downs

(basketball) point guard that is dribbling through traffic at midcourt

— they either look down and dribble it

between their legs, like I would, or they

keep their eyes up and throw an a//eyoop. He has that innate skill." — Oregon coach Mark Helfrich on quarterback Vernon Adams Jr.

on our first drive than USC did all last week (against W ashington)," Ore g o n suspension. "He's a guy that's very coach Mark Helfrich said this week. "After a couple dynamic and he's practiced of those (third-down con- really hard," Helfrich said versions) happened, I think of Carrington. "He's a guy absolutely, that's something that loves practice. He plays that permeates your team." hard in practice, and he had In complimenting Adams, played on the scout team Helfrich wanted to be clear quite a bit. He's a competitor that he was not criticizing

that way, and that will help a

the play of Jeff Lockie and Taylor Alie, who both filled in for Adams at quarterback while he was sidelined earli-

young secondary get a lot of work against a quality guy.

er this season. But the num-

bers do not lie. Oregon was 9-of-18 on third-down

conv e r sions

But yeah, we had to make

some things happen in the passing game, and we got off to a good start (against Washington) that way."

Carrington's

return

against Washington with comes at just the right time Adams at the helm, and just for the Ducks, who appeared 9-of-29 combined in the loss-

deep at receiver to start the

es to Washington State and season but not so much now. Utah, games in which Lock- They lost last season's leadie took most of the snaps. ingreceiver Byron Marshall "I don't know if the ento injury against Utah, and ergy was different on the Charles Nelson, another top field," Helfrich said of Ad- receiver, now appears to be ams starting against the playing mostly on defense Huskies. "I think once play at safety to help the beleastarted there were a few guered secondary. plays made that were differBut with Adams and Carent. And again, every time rington back,the Oregon you say something good offense is once again potent about somebody, you say — though Helfrich, himself a something bad about (some- former quarterback, always body else,) and that's not sees room for improvement what I'm doing. (Adams) is at the position. "(Adams) just needs to gonna watch the tape, and a bunch of times there's plays continue to trust the scheme to be made again, but then a little bit, get his eyes in the he kind of freelanced a few right place, get his feet in things." the right place, and then imThat brand of "freelanc- provise," Helfrich said, "and ing" and play-making ability that's when a guy like that is what Oregon needs from can be really lethal." its quarterback to get back Helfrich said that Adams' on track this season. instinct to keep his eyes up "There was definitely a lit- and look down the field is tle bit more excitement and part of what makes him an juice of plays being made effective quarterback within out of the system, and out Oregon's spread offense. "It's like a (basketball) of the normal rhythm of the offense," Helfrich said. "And point guard that is dribbling thatcreatedsome energy." through traffic at midcourt The return Saturday of — they either look down Carrington also brought and dribble it between their some added energy to the legs, like I would, or they Oregon passing game. keep their eyes up and throw Carrington, who missed an alley-oop," Helfrich exthe first six games of the plained. "He has that innate s eason after f ailing a n skill." NCAA-administered drug As Adams continues to test just before the Col- improve, so too, it seems, lege Football Playoff na- will the Ducks. While posttional c h ampionship l a st

season expectations have

stronger at new positions-

season, finished with five

positions they are playing out

receptions against the Hus-

of necessity at the moment

kies for 125 yards and two touchdown s.

changed this season compared with last season, Oregon is not looking back on the disappointing losses, but looking ahead to a poten-

— while Madras' Cease has seen a spark from his squad that could pay off next year. "As far as the willingness t o want t o ge t b etter an d learn and have the drive to g et better, I think our k i d s have that," Cease says. "It' s

been a tough year with the numbers, but it hasn't been

a horrible year to coach because our

k i d s ' a t t i t udes

have been awesome." Cease begins to laugh before adding: "One thing is for sure: Nobody's complaining about playing time this year." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletirz.corn.

Carrington became Mar-

cus Mariota's favorite target late last season, recording

tially better second half of

the season with Adams and Carrington back and leadand five touchdowns in his ing the way. "Right now, there's just last three games, including the Pac-12 Championships a ton of education, playing Game win over Arizona and so many young guys in key the Rose Bowl victory over positions, or just guys who 19 receptions for 416 yards

Florida State.

haven't played that much,"

ship game loss to Ohio State,

and the suspension carried over to the first half of this

and what we have right now, rather than what's behind us. And I think that is never

season. Carrington, now a

gonna change."

He was suspended just be- Helfrich said. "We' ve always fore the national champion- looked at what we have left

redshirt sophomore, was allowed to practice during his

— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletirz.corn


C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

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Vol.:37.2m (2.2x avg.) P E : 13.1 Vol.:9.0m (2.2x avg.) PE: 19 . 2 Mkt. Cap:$56.11b Yie l d: 4.1% Mkt.Cap:$95.94 b Yield: 2.6%

+25. 1 +6 7 .1 1 708 15 0 . 8 0 - 2.5 + 7 . 2 1 9 8 1 9 1 . 3 2 -11.1 + 0.9 64092 12 0 . 20 +59. 6 +1 1 .6 5 9 dd 0.8 8 +8.6 +14 . 5 8 6 09 1 9 3 . 6 4 +2.5 +8. 4 19 22 +16. 1 +3 6 .8 1 1 1 2 1 0 . 72a +2 5.7 +63.6 142 28 0.60 +9.5 +25 . 4 1 7 88 29 1 . 6 0 -40.7 -52.3 33 99 -15.0 - 3.6 70 1 1 7 0 . 44 -8.0 +8 . 9 31 796 14 0 . 96 -6.2 +8 . 6 14626 12 0 . 30 +18.6 +44 .2 6 2 46 2 0 0 . 42f -37.4 -27.8 2900 dd +2 3 +18 3 180 5 dd -20.3 - 25.3 576 d d 0 . 73 + 17.3 +35 . 3 377 19 0 . 22

Union Pacific delivers results for the third quarter today. The railroad is expected to DividendFootnotes:8 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. 8 -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last t 2 months. f - Current report lower earnings versus the annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum ef dividends paidafter stock split, re regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend same quarter a year earlier. Union dividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared er paid in preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximatecash value on ex-distrittution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months. Pacific has been hurt by a sharp decline in the amount of coal shipped by railroads. In August, the company announced plans to cut hundreds of management jobs Biogen plans to cut about 11 percent of its Part of the savings from the layoffs will be used for and projected that demand for workforce as it refocuses its research on treatments initiatives to drive more sales of Tecfidera, the coal would remain weak for the for Alzheimer's disease and company's key revenue driver. The rest of the year. multiple sclerosis. drug is currently approved to treat The drugmaker announced ' relapsing forms of multiple sclerosis. the job cuts Wednesday as it Biogen will also boost spending on reported better-than-expected development programs for Alzheimer' s profit and revenue for the third disease treatments and other programs. Biogenhas about 7,550 employees, quarter. It also raised its forecast for how much it will earn this and the plans announced Wednesday 0 '" year. w ould meanabout830 job cuts.

Biogen (BHB)

140

30

Coca-Cola

-.15 -0.4 T L L + . 20 + 0.1 L L -.44 -2.6 V L L -1.24 -0.5 V L L -.18 -0.2 V L L -.35 -0.6 L L L 8.92 16.51 -.31 -1.8 V L L 46.26 4 1. 1 0 -.15 -0.4 L L L 24.25 24 .00 + . 3 2 + 1 .3 L L L 8.7 7 53.12 +.04+ 0.1 L L L 37.04 29. 2 2 +. 0 8 +0.3 V L L

45.26 4 0. 8 0 245. 0 5 23 1.40 24.7 5 1 6. 6 4 294. 3 5 23 0.36 11 5 .00114.59 61.36 60 .53

35

J

North westStocks

Dividend:none

A

.8"."'".p."

Stocks faded Wednesday afternoon and finished the day lower. The markets got an early boost from earnings reports from General Motors and Boeing and more merger news. However stocks later slumped, and nine of the 10 sectors of the Standard 8 Poor's 500 lost ground. Industrials were the only sector to rise, thanks to gains by Boeing and United Technologies, among others. Oil prices fell after the U.S. government said crude inventories grew by more than twice what analysts had expected. Chipmaker KLA-Tencor surged after it accepted a $10.6 billion offer from Lam Research. Yahoo shares fell after a key revenue figure disappointed investors.

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

based on past 12-month results

flat

"

EURO $1.1337 -.0001

CRUDEOIL $45.20 -.35

StoryStocks

"

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17314.99 17153.13 17168.61 -48.50 OOWTrans. 821 9.05 8109.25 8118.93 -39.60 OOW Util. 604.15 597.80 598.31 -1.08 NYSE Comp. 1041 0.99 10299.05 10306.44 -76.98 NASDAQ 4904.85 4836.46 4840.12 -40.85 S&P 500 2037.97 2017.22 2018.94 -11.83 S&P 400 1442.40 1421.23 1422.22 -16.13 Wilshire 5000 21322.83 21077.45 21093.24 -162.97 Russell 2000 1167.01 1144.90 1144.94 -18.33

3Q '15

Price-earnings ratio: 33

0.0

.

SILVER $15.7 0 -.21

.

OOW

$671.80

$800

"

Dow Jones Industrials Close: 17,168.61 Change: -48.50 (-0.3%)

18,400"

.:

M

17,080

16,840 "

"

GOLD $1,167.60 -10.40

17,320" 10 DAYS " .

Sstp 500

Thursday, October 22, 20t5

r

10-YR T-NOTE 2.03% -.04

Kp Close:$42.19 V-0.10 or -0.2% The beverage company reported a drop in third-quarter profit and revenue on cost-cutting measures and a strong dollar. $45

Chipotie Mexican Grill

CM G

Close:$665.67 V-39.96 or -5.7% The restaurant chain reported worse-than-expected third-quarter profit and issued disappointing fourth-quarter guidance. $800 750 700

40

J

A S 52-week range

$36.56~

0 $45 .66

J

A S 52-week range

$597.33 ~

$758 .6 1

Vol.:19.3m (1.2x avg.) P E : 24.8 Mkt. Cap:$103.89 b

Vcl.:2.0m (4.1x avg.) Yi e ld: 3.1% Mkt. Cap:$20.73 b

Biogen

BIIB Close:$276.34 L10.53 or 4.0% The biotechnology company reported third-quarter results that topped expectations and said it will cut 11 percent of its wcrkforce $350 300

0

PE:4 0 . 0 Yield: ...

SanDisk

SNDK Close:$76.78 L1.59 or 2.1% Western Digital is buying the flash-memory chip maker for about $19 billion in a cash-and-stock deal after days of speculation. $80 60

J

A S 52-week range

0

J

A S 52-week range

$44.28 ~

0 $136.64

$254.96~

$48 3. 18

Vol.: 0.4m (2.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$64.99 b

PE: 18.7 Vol.:30.9m (6.2x avg.) P E : 30.0 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$15.7 b Yiel d : 1 .6%

Lam Research

LRCX Close:$70.79 %0.76 or 1.1% The company is buyingKLA-Tencor Corp. for about $10.6 billion, creating a huge player in the semiconductol sector. $80

VRX

Close:$118.61 V-20.13 or -1 9.2% A short seller's research firm accused the drug company of creating a network of phantom pharmacies to fool auditors, which it denied. $300 200

70 BOJ

Valeant Pharma. Int'I

A S 52-week range

0

OOJ

A S 52-week range

0

$61.26~ $8 5.76 $88.56 ~ $ 263 .8 1 Vol.:18.7m (7.2x avg.) P E : 1 9.1 Vol.:88.3m (16.7x avg.) PE:49.2 Mkt. Cap:$11.21 b Yie l d: 1.7% Mkt. Cap:$40.47 b Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

IU HS

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill

.01 . 1 1 .11 .21 .21

-0.01 ... L

T L T

T V T

. 6 3 .63 5-year T-note 1.36 1.39 10-year T-note 2.03 2.07 30-year T-bond 2.87 2.92

... L -0.03 L -0.04 L -0.05 L

T T T V

T .37 T 1.43 V 2.22 V 2.99

52-wk T-bill

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.03 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

2 -year T-note

Commodities

FUELS

Oil prices fell after the U.S. government said crude inventories grew more than analysts expected. The price of gold fell almost 1 percent. Silver and copper prices also slipped.

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

BONDS

NET 1YR TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.66 2.71 -0.05 L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.34 4.35 -0.01 V Barclays USAggregate 2.30 2.27+0.03 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 7.53 7.59 -0.06 V RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.95 3.95 .. . V TEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.30 1.32 -0.02 L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3.37 3.34 +0.03 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Foreign Exchange The dollar was little changed against the Japanese yen and euro. It edged higher against the British pound and rose more decisively against the Canadian dollar

h58 88

METALS

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

.01 .04 .09

CLOSE PVS. 45.20 45.55 1.56 1.54 1.45 1.45 2.40 2.48 1.28 1.28

CLOSE PVS. 1167.60 1178.00 15.70 15.91 1006.00 1018.90 2.36 2.37 676.65 694.35

V V V L V V V

V V V L V V V

2.80 4.31 2.12 6.11 3.8 9 1.69 2.88

%CH. %YTD -2.39 -15.2 -4.3 +0.39 +0.09 -21.5 -2.91 -16.8 +0.20 -1 0.8 %CH. %YTD -0.88 -1.4 - 1.31 + 0 . 8 -1.27 -1 6.8 -0.23 -16.7 -2.55 -15.3

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.40 1.40 -0.20 -15.5 Coffee (Ib) 1.21 1.25 -3.01 -27.4 -4.1 Corn (bu) 3.81 3.77 +1.06 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.64 + 0.71 + 6 . 6 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 262.50 260.00 +0.96 -20.7 -4.3 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.34 1.34 +0.41 Soybeans (bu) 9.05 8.96 +1.03 -11.2 Wheat(bu) 4.95 4.91 +0.71 -1 6.1 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USO per British Pound 1.5424 -.0016 -.10% 1.6121 Canadian Dollar 1.3 1 19 +.0134 +1.02% 1.1228 USO per Euro 1.1337 -.0001 -.01% 1.2725 JapaneseYen 119.96 + . 0 4 + .03% 1 06.85 Mexican Peso 16. 6 313 +.0522 +.31% 13.5551 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8680 +.0142 +.37% 3.7408 Norwegian Krone 8 . 1897 +.0609 +.74% 6.5675 South African Rand 13.5153 +.2133 +1.58% 11.0445 Swedish Krona 8.3 3 2 9 + .0260 +.31% 7.2323 Swiss Franc .9591 +.0022 +.23% . 9 484 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.3846 +.0070 ».51% 1,1391 Chinese Yuan 6.3493 -.0028 .04% 6.1210 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7506 +.0006 +.01% 7,7568 Indian Rupee 65.111 +.121 +.1 9% 61.101 Singapore Dollar 1.3937 +.001 9 ».14% 1.2715 South KoreanWon 1140.20 +8.11 +.71% 1055.93 Taiwan Dollar 3 2.47 + . 0 9 +.28% 30.42


© www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

BRIEFING Library proposal gets $1,000 grant Serenity Johnson, a senior at Summit High School, won $1,000 Tuesday evening for her proposal to create small, curbside libraries in Bend. Johnson was oneof five finalists to present at the October Awesome BendPitch Night. Awesome Bend is the local chapter of the Awesome Foundation, a global organization that provides small grants for proposals that improve local communities. According to a news release, the only guidelines for selection are that the project must be able to becompleted with the $1,000 grant within three months and that the moneycannot be used for personal expenses. The $1,000 grant was provided by10 trustees, each of whom donated $100. According to the release, Johnson's proposal, called "Little Free Libraries," will use the $1,000 grant to build small, free libraries in neglected parts of Bend. The October event, held at the Deschutes Brewery taproom, was the third pitch night for Awesome Bend.The next event is scheduled for Jan. 19. — Bulletin staff report

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Lunch and Learn — Monthly Market Overviews: Jacob Fain, financial adviser, provides monthly market overviews at theMorganStanley office; free;noon;Morgan Stanley, 705 SWBonnett Way, No.1200, Bend, 541-61 7-601 3. • Nonprofits Open Lab: Search for grants using Foundation Directory Online with staff assistance; prerequisite: Introductionto Finding Funders; free;noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW DeschutesAve., Redmond, 541-617-7089. • DN Marketing: Learn to write effective email blasts, newsletters, press releases, fliers, blogs and more; geared to businesses without dedicated marketing personnel;through Nov. 12; $79;6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way,Bend, 541-383-7270, www. cocc.edu/continuingedl marketing--social-media. FRIDAY • Redmond Chamber of Commerce Dinner, Dance and Auction Fundraiser: Themed dinner, music from the '70s, dancing and a silent auction; $50; $500 per eight-person corporate table;6 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, South Sister building, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond, 541-923-5191. • Coffee Clatter: A Redmond Chamberof Commerce business networking event;8:30 a.m.; Boys & Girls Club of Redmond, 1379SW 15th St., Redmond, 541-504-9060. MONDAY • GttickBooks Online Beginning: Do your own bookkeeping using the QuickBooks Onlineversion; through Nov. 2; $89;6 p.m.; COCC,2600 NW College Way,Bend, 541383-7270, www.cocc.edul continuinged/software. TUESDAY • SCORE Business Counseling: Business counselors conduct free one-on-one conferences forlocal entrepreneurs; 5:30p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend, 541-706-1639. WEDNESDAY • Best In Business Showcase: Featuring awards, exhibitors and networking opportunities; freeto attend; Nf 95for exhibitors who areBend

is ers ousin ro e for being able to put together really nice community-based A developer plans to break plans," Macy said Wednesday. ground this morning on phase "People call us all the time one of a 20-acre, 100-home and say, 'We want to do some-

re a s r o un

By Joseph Ditzler

said. The plan also calls for a

permit, which Davenport said

The Bulletin

central park and some homes built dose to the street, with

the city might issue any day

alley access to garages. "The homes are going to be a fair amount less expensive than they are on the west side

The project, despite being relatively small in scale, is a significant one for the city,

project in northeast Sisters

thing much like NorthWest

with prices starting around $350,000. The design for ClearPine, on property that once served as the log deck for the former Lundgren Mill, is inspired by

Crossing.'"

NorthWest Crossing, the West

Bend Property Co. subdivision

The Sisters property posed a challenge in designing the

in Bend, developer Peter Hall

kind of amenities Hall was

However, NorthWest Cross-

ing is hundreds of acres, with several varieties of housing styles and acres of parks and other amenities.

said. Hall owns the Sisters after, Macy said. He said he property; phase one plans for basically created a scaled14 single-family homes. down version of NorthWest In fact, the designer — Doug Crossing for Hall's ClearPine. Macy, of Portland firm Walker The master plan lists four Macy — is the same urban approvedstylesinthe subplannerand architectwh o de- division: craftsman, prairie, signed NorthWest Crossing. midcenturymodern and "We sort of got a reputation American foursquare, Hall

ClearPIne snddivisien I

now.

c

where few new subdivisions

day, "but they' re going to

have the feel of NorthWest

Hall said he expects to at-

Crossing." Town houses or cottages will occupy about 25 of the lots, Hall said. The project also must dedicate eight lots to affordable housing, available to buyers or tenants making at most80percentofarea

Lundgren Mill Dr.

CG I:

come up, Davenport said. "This is a really big deal."

of Bend," Hall said Wednes-

(

SIST ERS

tract homebuyers ready for a step up from entry-level homes

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

and retirees from Eugene to

by Hall in 2005, was formerly

nity development director.

Seattle looking for less expensive and quieter homes. He estimated listing prices for phase one starting around $350,000; the cottages and town houses will list in the high $200,000s. "I think there will be houses up in the $500,000s and

Hall has two years to build the

$600,000s in the later phases,"

he said.

affordable homes from theday he obtains his first building

he said. The property, purchased

median income, said Patrick Davenport, Sisters' commu-

zoned industrial. Streets, water and sewer lines and other

infrastructurearealready in place. Hall plans a model home and several homes built on speculation, but the remainder will be custom built, — Reporter: 541-61 7-7815, j ditzler@bendbulletin.corn

EU says

1V

Starbucks owes tens

1Z

of millions

By Jeff Green and Leslie Patton Bloomberg News

Domino's Pizza Inc., facing stiff competition and more demanding customers, is working with General Motors to build its own fleet of custom delivery cars. The company is rolling out 100 test vehicles emblazoned

By Angel Gonzalez The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — The Euro-

I v II

I

O

I

pean Union said Wednesday the Netherlands gave Starbucks an illegal break on its tax bill, and it ordered

the Dutch government to

with the Domino's logo and

collect between $23 million

red-and-blue colors, as well as an oven in the rear that

a

can keep pizzas warm during

and $34 million from the coffee company. The decision is part of a

transit. Domino's plans to

wider crackdown by Brussels on so-called "comfort

fin

bring the cars to 25 markets, including Boston, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, New Orleans and Seattle, according to a

letters," tax rulings issued trnta -,t7n

statement Wednesday.

Domino's, the second-largest U.S. pizza company, is

by countries such as the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Ireland, to compa-

nies like Starbucks and Amazon. The EU said the specific

attempting to stay ahead of

a fast-food industry where delivery is increasingly the

tax deals with Starbucks

norm. McDonald's, Taco Bell,

Sam H odgeon /The New YorkTimes file photo

Burger King and Starbucks are all experimenting with delivery services, bringing more competition to pizza chains. Though the modified-car program remains small, the idea is to use technology and cus-

A delivery worker walks into a Domino's Pizza store in New York last year. Domino's is building a number of custom delivery vehicles it plans to bring into 25 markets, according to a statement Wednesday.

tom features to give drivers an

edge — as well as creating a marketing tool that can roam

Planners

and Fiat, against which it also ruled Wednesday,

allowed the companies to use "artificial and complex" methods to calculate

taxable profits that "do not relying on employees' vehi-

versus our competition." The vehicles were designed

cles. But Domino's has cred-

over three years with input

ited technology — including its mobile app — with helping

from former GM executive

small storefront locations and

fuel growth. Same-store

Kenneth Baker, who worked on the development of that

mode of delivery will remain employees' personal cars, the company said. The chain has more than 5,100 U.S. locations, most of which are

reflect economic reality." Starbucks' Dutch unit

operates the Seattle company's only European roasting facility. The EU investi-

franchised. That means independent owners would have to

gation, started last year,

embrace the DXP concept for it to expand.

artificially lowered its profits by paying a "very sub-

automaker's first modern electric car, the EV1. The socar's seats are removed — and an interior that's designed

drivers cover 10 million miles

Spark models for the project.

sales rose almost 11 percent domestically last quarter. The company ranks second to Pizza Hut in sales, according to Technomic. "As people have tried to

each week in the U.S., doling

Starbucks subsidiary in the U.K.for"coffee-roasting

Chevrolet dealers also will be trained to maintain the pizza

compete with us around the

to hold food items, including as many as 80 pizzas. The warming oven is accessible from the side of the gaso-

out more than 400 million

know-how."

world in delivery, I think they

pizzas annually. The chain introduced tracking technology

The EU says the Dutch subsidiary is the only Starbucks unit to pay a royalty

city streets.

Domino's hired Roush Enterprises, the company building Google's self-driving cars, to retrofit GM's Chevrolet

vehicles. The car was unveiled have found out over time that it's operationally not as easy at the company's Ann Arbor, Michigan, headquarters to operate as people may during a meeting of the Auto- think," Chief Executive Offimotive Press Association. cer J. Patrick Doyle said on a It's an unusual step for a conference call this month. "And it has been a great company that tries to keep costs down by operating source of advantage for us

Chamber of Commerce members, $295 for nonmember exhibitors; 4 p.m.; The RiverhouseHotel 8 Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway97, Bend, 541-382-3221; http:Il bendchamber.org. OCT. 30 • Contractors CCB TestPrep Course: A two-day classto prepare for the state-mandated Oregon constructioncontractor licensing test; $359;8 a.m.; COCC Redmond Campus, Technology Education Center, SE College Loop, Redmond, 541-383-7290,www.cocc. edu/ccb. OCT. 31 • Mt. Bachelor Job Expo: Apply for seasonal jobs and speak with hiring managers; free; 9 a.m.; Mt. Bachelor Ski Area, West Village Lodge, 13000 SW Century Drive, Bend, 541-693-0942, www. mtbachelor.corn/jobs. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.corn/bizcal

called DXP has a seat for the

driver — the rest of the small

line-fueled vehicle, and there' s

a "puddle light," which projects the Domino's logo on the ground. Even with the push into

custom vehicles, the primary

PERMITS City of Bend • Long Term BendInvestors LLC, 21335 NEBrooklyn Place, Bend, $264,550 • Long Term BendInvestors LLC, 21369 NEEvelyn Place, Bend, $264,550 • Long Term BendInvestors LLC, 21381 NEEvelyn Place, Bend, $251,864 • Steven Randall, 1032 NW StanniumRoad,Bend, $120,310 • Dream HomeBuilding and Design, 1833 NWAwbrey Road, Bend, $161,696 • Robert Woolridge, 1075 NE KayakLoop, Bend, $362,232 • Stephanie Heindel, 1415 NW Elgin Ave., Bend, $199,690 • Eric Meloling, 1847 NW Fields St., Bend, $269,468 • Hale-Campbell Properties LLC,20788SEShea Court, Bend, $244,685 • Palmer LLC, 652NE Isabella Lane, Bend, $278,983

• Arbor Builders, 2265 NW Deschutes Place, Bend, $210,297 • Frank Martynowicz, 2249 NW Deschutes Place, Bend, $210,297 •StoneBridgeHomesNW LLC, 20637 SECougar Peak Drive, Bend, $214,348 • Hayden HomesLLC, 21101 Darnel Ave., Bend, $153,903 • Palmer LLC,675NEVail Lane, Bend, $154,652 • Hayden HomesLLC, 21339 NEEagle Crossing Ave., Bend, $197,481 • Hayden HomesLLC, 21334 NEEagle Crossing Ave., Bend, $183,048 • St. Charles Medical Center, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend, $198,915 • John L. Davidson, 19373 Soda Springs Drive, Bend, $377,904 Deschutes County • Hank Elliott, 191 83 Kiowa Road, Bend, $273,922.65 • Peter C. andJamie R.

Warnke, 21535Modoc Lane, Bend, $335,410.08 • Central Electric Coop Inc.,6109027th St., Bend, $267,958 • Ken and Meredith Khachigian Family Trust, 58113 Winners Circle, Sunriver, $565,873.16 • Mark W. andRoberta R. Benke,55842 Lost Rider Loop, Bend, $312,871.89 • Chris Hoff,16568Beaver Drive, Bend, $334,816.62 • Timothy E. Brewerand Amy J. Rider, 17233 Merganser Drive, Bend, $383,317.34 • Richard Shrode,56225 Black DuckRoad,Bend, $197,746.24 • Pineriver Homes LLC, 56100 Sandpiper Road, Bend, $261,484.99 • James A. andPatricia Arneson, 16180Mountain Goat Lane, Bend, $287,318.96 • David and TeresaFoote, 16177Elkhorn Lane, La Pine, $202,672.80

Domino's says its delivery

in 2008 that allows customers to follow the progress of their

determined the subsidiary stantial royalty" to another

for that know-how. Star-

orders. Domino's also lets people order via Twitter, text

bucks says the E.U.'s asser-

messages andsmartwatches

of the Dutch royalty payments "is false" and plans to appeal.

— technologies other chains haven't yet adopted.

tion about the uniqueness

YouTubeunveils ad-free service forsubscribers By Saba Hamedy

that they love and much

Los Angeles Times

greater experience they have been asking for,"

LOS ANGELES — You-

Tube, the pioneer of free on- Robert Kyncl, YouTube's line videos, is jumping into chiefbusiness officer,said the subscription streaming Wednesday at a news conmarket with YouTube Red. The new service, which

will be available for $9.99 per month beginning Wednesday, will give paying users an ad-free experience with access to YouTube videos offline, Google Play music and a slate of new YouTube original content.The Google-owned

ference. The conference

took place at the company's 41,000-square-foot video-production facility in Los Angeles. Kyncl was joined by other YouTube execs, including Global Head of Original Programming Susanne Daniels, who recently exited her post as MTV

video giant also unveiled a brand new You Tube music app "This marks an evolution in our desire to give fans

programming chief, and a

more choice and features

the Fine Brothers.

handful of YouTube's top

stars, including Lilly Singh (known as Superwoman to her fans), Joey Graceffa and


IN THE BACI4 ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT W Nutrition, D2 Fitness, D3 Money, D4 Medicine, D5

© www.bendbulletin.corn/health

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

e'Hmee a

0 enia

Oregon continues battle over feeding livestock antibiotics By Kathleen McLaughlin The Bulletin

Emma:33-year-old female

California's new law

Brad:21-year-old male, healthy

fessionals think a state ban

She's a cancer survivor who is still struggling with some lingering health issues.

illustrations by Greg Cross /The Bulletin

Tips forEmma

Tips forBrad

Tips forJoAnn

• Choose your caregivers aheadof time. Not all carriers cover midwives, and some that do require certifications not all midwives have. If you want acertain obstetrician to deliver your baby,makesure that provider is in-network in the policy you choose. •Focusonout-of-pocketmaximums over premiums. Thecost of giving birth — a procedure for which St. Charles Bend charges roughly $13,000 if there are no complications — will without a doubt send anindividual over their outof-pocket maximum, after which point the insurer pays for all coveredservices in their entirety. (The highest out-ofpocket maximum in2016 is $6,850.) For that reason, several experts recommended going with either gold or platinum plans, which havemuch higher premiums than bronze orsilver plans, but also havefar lower out-of-pocket maximums. Moda's gold plan, for example, will have a $5,500 out-of-pocket maximum in 2016 andcost a 33-year-old about $360 per month. Providence's gold plan, meanwhile, has a$4,000 out-of-pocket maximum in 2016andcosts about $354 per month for a33-year-old. • Many services are covered, but not all. The Affordable Care Act requires insurers cover with no out-of-pocket costs a number of preventative health services regardless of type of plan. That includes anumber of recommended screenings for pregnant women (gestational diabetes, Hepatitis B, anemia, etc.), folic acid supplements for women who might becomepregnant and check-ups. Oncethe baby is born, the ACAalso requires insurers cover vaccinations, breastfeeding supplies and counseling andscreenings for development, behavior, blood pressure, vision and autism, amongother things. It's worth checking apolicy's ultrasound coverage, assomedoctors might order more of thesetests if they have concerns. • Plan ahead! Pregnancy is not one of the federally designated "qualifying events" that allow people to sign upfor health insurance orswitch policies outside of openenrollment. That means once you get pregnant, you' restuck with the plan youhave.

• Worst-case scenario, make sure you cancover the out-of-pocket maximum.Lots of young, healthy people who don't expect to go tothe doctor opt for bronze or catastrophic plans (the latter areonly available topeople younger than30). Whilethey offer the lowest premiums, they' ll alsohavesomeof the highest deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums. • Consider accident coverageif you' reactive. Sometimes evenless expensive policies with midrangeor high deductibles alsooffer benefits that kick in inthe event of aninjury. • Catastrophic plans typically offer no coveragefor medications. Forthat reason, someagents said they recommendshelling out theextra $50 or sofor a bronze plan. • Take advantage ofpreventative care. Anyonebuying a less expensiveplan that doesn't offer a lot of coverage should beawareof the preventative services theACA requires insurers coverfor their enrollees with no outof-pocke tcosts.Thatincludesanannualcheck-upand a number of screenings, including for various cancers, high blood pressure, cholesterol, sexually transmitted infections andimmunizations for things like the flu, hepatitis A and B and measles. Specifically for women, it includes contraceptives andcounseling for women who may havea higher genetic risk for breast cancer. • Open a health savings account. Some high deductible plans areconsidered HSAcompatible, which means the federal governmentallows peoplewhobuy these plans to openaccounts that allow them to put money aside that's tax deductible off of their gross income each year.Whenusedfor qualified medical expenses, the money istax-free. Medical expensesinclude any out-of-pocket expenses,dental care, vision exams, glasses or contacts andalternative care, such aschiropractic adjustments oracupuncture. And, unlike many flexible spendingaccounts employers offer, themoney in HSAs rolls over into thenext year if youdon't spend it all in a singleyear.

• Check coverage of prescriptions you' ll need. A number of carriers changed their prescription drug benefits for 2016, so this also goesfor people who do not expect to switch plans. Sometimes this is far from simple. Moda, for example, has four tiers of drug coverage: value, select, preferred and brand.This is an areawhereworking with an agent would be helpful. • A cancer survivor with lingering health issues will want to seetheir doctor relatively frequently, so they' ll want to look for a plan that covers frequent office visits with little or no co-pays. This probably means a moreexpensive plan with a lower deductible. • If a big surgery or procedure is forthcoming, like a hip or knee replacement, pay specific attention to plans' out-of-pocket maximums. Whether you need a$50,000 hip replacement or $150,000 open-heart surgery, you'll be responsible for the outof-pocket maximum plus your monthly premiums.

Source information for potential candidates: Patrick O'Keefe (Cascade Insurance Center), Don Ktippenes (Health Insurance Strategies), Jake Sunderland (Oregon Insurance Division), Maile Austen (Oregon Association of Health Underwriters), Lisa Lettemier (Health Source NW).

dru g -resistant staph. (While the presence of drug-resis-

Senate Interim Committee on t a nt bacteria make the farm Health Care, thinks that the wor k e rs more vulnerable to

overuse of antibiotics is an urgent public health matter, but he agrees with the farm

inf e ction, they don't necess a r ily get sick.) SeeAntibiotics /D2

OHSUopensnonclinical office in startup cluster By Tars Bannow The Bulletin

ial region, and that's being noticed," said Kate Ryan, a

Bend is a town famous for its beer, tourism and outdoor

l oc a l who co-founded the Be n d Bioscience Consortium

gear. — more commonly known Administrators at Oregon as Bend Bio — a group of Health & Science University,

bi o t ech leaders looking to cul-

the state's only academic tiva t e the sector here. "OHSU medical center, see must see that and say, another defining MEDICI N E 'I fwe can put more feature. They see an effort into this area in energetic, burgeoning bioCen t ral Oregon, that can only technology community, and h e lp the whole ecosystem

they wanttobecloser to the action.

thr i v e.'" Shannon, the woman

The university recently opened an office at the

behi n d much of OHSU's Central Oregon expansion,

southwest corner of Simpson

w e a r s a number of hats at

Avenue and Cyber Drive, an t h e university. She serves industrial area that's smack- a s director of communidab in the middle of Bend's ty- e ngaged research for its startup cluster. It's the first

K ni g h t Cancer Institute and

nondinical office OHSU has associate director of its Orleased outside its main campus in Portland, said Jackie Shannon, the OHSU administrator who will head up the Bend office.

"We are an entrepreneur-

eg o n Clinical Translational Res e arch Institute. She' s al s o an associate profess o r in its School of Public Health.

SeeOHSU offi ce/D5

By Darcy Costello

of her daughter, Carolina, in

The Baltimore Sun

April 2014. When she moved to the U.S. that summer, she

You' re going to pay more. In some cases, significantly more. All the more reason to scrutinize the policies you' re considering on a number of factors: not just the ballooning monthly premiums, but the out-of-pocket maximums, prescription drug coverage and

going to see bigger increases than those averages. Moda, for example, got an average rate increase across its individual policies of 25.6 percent. If you live in Bend and have Moda's bronze plans, however, you' re going to see a rate hike of about 42 percent.

"It's crazy," said Patrick O'Keefe, the owner and man-

ly to b e colonized by those

Bend Sen. Tim Knopp, a Republican member of the

health insurance on HealthCare.gov, there's no way around it:

between this year and next, but in reality, most people — especially those in Central Oregon — are

percent.

a state law unnecessary.

or the vast majority of Oregonians buying their own 2016

The Oregon Insurance Division focuses a lot on carriers' average individual market rate increases

see increases of 48 and 49

contr i b utes to the growth of

Kangatraining helps moms get backinshape

By Tata BannOW eThe Bulletin

networks, too.

carrier's bronze, silver or gold plans, however, will

Public Interest Research

drug-resistant bacteria. Group. Buttheadvocateswould R e searchers traced suhave to overcome opposition perbugs, including Methicilfrom the Oregon Farm Bulin - resistant Staphylococcus reau, which contends that aur e us, to farms through regulations under developg e n etic markers. Further ment by the U.S. Food and s t u d ies have found that hog Drug Administration make f a r m workers are more like-

JoAnn:57-year-old female

percent. Bendites with the

bi o t i cs sold in the United

would help control drug-reS t ates are given to food-prosistant germs that sicken duci n g animals, and they millions of Amercan be used to icans each year — NUTRI T I ON pr o mote weight so-called superbugs gain or to prevent — and have backed a bill dise ase. Giving antibiotics pushed by the Oregon State t o animals that are not sick

He's very active, plays sports in his free time and is arunner. Doesn't havemuchmoneyto spend on health insurance.

PacificSource Health

busine ss for farmers and

against feeding antibiotics to ranchers. "What we' re trying livestock is encouraging to t odo is keep pressure on the Oregon consumer advocates FDA to deal with some of who hope to see a similar the s e issues," he said. ban pass in 2017. Around 70 percent of Oregon public health pro- m e dically important anti-

She's generally healthy and plans on having a child within the next year.

Plans' averageincrease in individual plans is about 37

burea u that a patchwork of state regulations could hurt

ber of providers and only Insurance Center in Bend. — 22.8 percent — beneath one hospital provider for "It's not going to be a fun Minneapolis, which saw incarriers to contract withyear." creases of 28.7 percent, St. Charles Health System, A study released this MO N EY ac c ording to the Kaiser which means rates tend to month on premium Family Foundation. be higher here, said Maile increases in major cities in Altho ugh people in Bend Austen, president of the Oreach state found that Portten d to be active and healthy egon Association of Health land had the second-highest c o mpared to the rest of the Underwriters. rate increases in its silver state, there is a limited numSeeInsurance/D4 aging partner of the Cascade p l a ns between 2015 and 2016

As the first notes of the

Ronettes' "Be My Baby" pulse through the stereo, the

saw a need for similar exerciseclasses formothers and

babies. The workout begins on yoga mats, with babies in unison as a warm-up for lying on their backs as the their exercise class. women do strength-based Babies aren't typically wel- movements, following Reif's women at Avalon Gym, in

Columbia, Maryland, hold their own babies, marching

come in an exercise environ-

instructions. Next, the moth-

ment, particularly ers strap baby carriers d uring the workouts F I T N ESS onto their shoulders themselves. But in and chests, carrying Jasmin Reif's Kangatraining their babies in pouches like class, they' re encouraged kangaroos — hence the — in fact, the routines are name of theclass— before designed for mothers with continuing with dance and children under 2. exercise routines. Kangatraining was first The class builds not just developed by Austrian fitmuscles but relationships, ness trainer Nicole Pascher Reif says. "It's a good way for the in 2008. The workout, which has now spread to more than mothers to bond with the 15 countries, targets muscles children, which is especially weakened during pregnancy important for the very little and those most important ones," she says. "Moms can for carrying a child. rebound and the little one is A native of Austria, Reif calm, so they don't have to first took the exercise class think about who cares for in Vienna in an effort to get the baby." back in shape after the birth

SeeKanga/D3


D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

N

TjoN HEALTH EVENTS

TODAY

FRIDAY

HEALTHYBACKCLASS:A program to heal, strengthen and protect your back by providing stretches and

AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 9 a.m.; BendBlood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS. PARKINSON'SSUPPORTAND INFORMATIONSEMINAR: Featuring guest speakers on living with Parkinson's disease andinformation about resources in the Redmond Community; 10 a.m.; Hospice ofRedmond,732SW 23rdSt., Redmond; 541-548-7483. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 1 p.m.; VFWHall, 1836SW VeteransWay ,Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.

core exercises; 8 a.m.; $9per class, $30 per month; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NWLouisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter.corn or 541-330-0334. BREASTCANCERAWARENESS MONTH PRESENTATION: Learn about programs to increase cancer

awareness,screeningincluding 3D mammographyandcancer survivorship plans for quality of life improvements; noon;DesChutes Historical Museum, 129 NWIdaho Ave., Bend; 541-382-8608. DARKNESS TOLIGHT:STEWARDS OF CHILDREN (SPANISH): Learn tools for recognizing the signs of sexual abuseandresponding to suspicions; learn simple ways to minimize opportunities for abuse in ourcommunity;3 p.m.;$20;Becky Johnson Center, 412 SW 8th St., Redmond; www.kidscenter.org or 541-306-6062. "FRONTIERMEDICINE:ENERGY HEALING":Lynette Frieden, natural health practitioner, shares her insights on energetic techniques that can rebalance the body's energy field, re-establish homeostasis and promote self-healing; 4 p.m.; Dudley's BookshopCafe,135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.natural-health-care. net or 541-388-9275. FALLDETOX WITH DR. KERIE RAYMOND:Group cleansing process based onMetagenics Clear ChangeProgram includes medical foods, supplements and tea as well as weekly meetings; 5:30 p.m.; $199; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 Louisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter.corn or 541-330-0334.

for appointment; 1 p.m.; BendBlood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS. LIVING WELL WITH DIABETES:A six-week class intended for people with Type 2 diabetes or family members who live with them;1 p.m.; $10; RedmondCommunity Presbyterian Church, 529 NW19th St., Redmond; 541-322-7446. LET'S TALK ABOUTHEARING LOSS:Learn about hearing loss, with free screening from 2 to 4 p.m.; 1:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Library — Hutchinson Room, 601 NWWall Street, Bend; 541-382-3308.

TUESDAY

AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 10 a.m.; MODA, 360 SW Bond St.,Bend; SATURDAY www.redcrossblood.org or FOAM ROLLERCLASS:Learntohelp 800-RED-CROSS. decreasemusclesoreness, improve AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD flexibility and even build core strength DRIVE:Identification required; call for using a foam roller; 10 a.m.; $15; appointment; 12:30 p.m.; BendBlood Bend Pilates, 155 SWCentury Drive, Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876. Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS.

MONDAY AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; noon; Redmond Grange, 707SW Kalama Ave., Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or800-RED-CROSS. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call

WEDNESDAY AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 10 a.m.; BendBlood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS.

A eat o tion or eiver By Barbara Quinn

had all the items, including my culinary comfort zone," step-by-step recipes, for she says. "Meals are balAhh, the adventures of three generous meals.I ac- anced, healthy and most imm oving. You think you' ve cepted her offer and took it portantly tasty!" got your precious belong- on faith that I could find the And enough for leftovers ings carefully labeled. Then necessary cooking utensils the next day, I'd add. All I when you get to your new lo- somewhere. need is a fork and a plate cation, you' re surrounded by Forty-five m i nutes l ater and I'm in business. strange unpacked boxes that (including 15 to find a knife, Another nice thing about seem to say, "Bet you can' t cutting board and cooking these companies is how guess what's in here!" pot) I sat down to a yummy they feature seasonal foods. Normal meals take a back Cod Cioppino Tomato Stew, For example, winter squash seat during times of transicomplete with toasted ba- recipes and fun facts are tion. Groceries'? My refriger- guette for dunking. included with this fall shipator has not been this clean I was impressed with the ment. Did you know, say — or empty — in a long time. generous proportion of veg- these cooking experts, that And after begging meals etables in these recipes in the squash we call "winter at my daughter's house all addition to the more than ad- squash" is actually grown in week, I suggested we eat out equate servings of protein. If the summer? It gets its name — again. I didn't know better, I'd say because its hard shell is du"Oh, I forgot to tell you," this company has a regis- rable enough to be stored she said. "I got an extra de- tered dietitian on staff. Sure during winter months. And livery from my meal service enough, they do. Thank you, you can choose to peel the that I'm not going to use. Do Rebecca Lewis, RDN. thick skin on these winter you want it?" Several such companies varietiesof squash before or I hesitated, thinking about exist these days. Registered after cooking. my empty kitchen cabinets. dietitian n u t r itionist T e ss E ven w i t h l a b els, w e "All you need is olive oil Warwick o f C o mmunity sometimes d o n ' t kn ow and salt and pepper," she Hospital of t h e M o n terey what's really i n side u ntil explained. "Everything else Peninsula, California, gets we investigate. I'm glad I is included in the box, even fresh ingredients delivered had the chance to try out spices." to her door each week by this new idea of fresh delivSure enough, this box of a company called "Blue ered food and recipes. Now food supplies from a com- Apron." w here in th e w o rld di d I "It's helped me step out of pack my cellphone charger'? pany called "Hello Fresh" The Monterey County Herald

Antibiotics Continued from 01 Oregon has seen fewer superbug infections than other states, according to Dr. Brian Wong, former chief of the Division of In-

fectiousDiseases atOregon Health and Science University, but MRSA, C. diff. and

FITNESS EVENTS

TODAY

MONDAY

p.m.; 842 NWWall St., Bend; www. footzonebend.corn or 541-317-3568.

MONS RUNNING GROUP:All moms welcome with or without strollers; 3to 4.5-mile run at 8- to12-minute mile paces; meet atFootZone at9:15a.m., rain or shine; 9:30 a.m.; 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.corn or 541-317-3568. ZUMBA:Focuson dance-oriented Zumba;5:30p.m.;$7,$60for10-class pass; Black CatBallroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive, Suite 3, Bend;www. blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490. LEARN TO RUNSEMINAR: A learn to run clinic; 5:30 p.m.; Xcel Fitness/ CrossFit X2, 2410 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Bend; 541-383-3481.

MOMMY & ME YOGA:Moms and babies, 6 weeksold to newly walking, are invited to stretch, breathe, relax and have fun together; 2 p.m.; $10$12; NamaspaYoga 8 Massage,1135 Galveston Ave., Bend;www.namaspa. corn or 541-550-8550. ZUMBA:Focuson dance-oriented Zumba; 5:30 p.m.; $7,$60 for 10 pass; Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive, Suite 3, Bend;www.blackcat. dance or 541-233-6490.

TWEENYOGA:Ages 10to12; build strength, focus, breath awarenessand flexibility in this safe, fun atmosphere; includes gamesand partner work;

FRIDAY

TUESDAY TUESDAYPERFORMANCE RUNNING GROUP:Aninterval-based workout to help you get the most out of your running; distance andeffort vary according to what works for you; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St.,

PSALM YOGA: Ayoga class that infuses spiritual strength and focus, set to Psalms; 8:30 a.m.; Victor School Bend;www.footzonebend.corn or of Performing Arts International, 541-317-3568. 2700 NEFourth St., Suite 210, Bend; ZUMBA:Focuson dance-oriented www.victorperformingarts.corn or Zumba;5:30 p.m.;$7,$60for10-class 269-876-6439. pass; BlackCat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive, Suite 3, Bend;www. SATURDAY blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490. HAPPYGIRLSHALF:A 5K race through downtown Sisters; 9 a.m.; $40 for 5K, $90 for half-marathon; Five Pine Lodge,1021 EDesperado Trail, Sisters; 541-323-0964. YOGA SCULPT: Learntotalbody strength and increase flexibility; 9:30 a.m.; $10; Thin Lizzy Athletics, 800 NWWall St., Bend; www.thinlizzyathletics.corn or 541-749-0048. FOAM ROLLERCLASS:Learnto help decrease muscle soreness, improve flexibility and evenbuild core strength using a foam roller; 10 a.m.; $15;Bend Pilates, 155 SWCentury Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876.

WEDNESDAY NOON TACORUN:MeetatFootZone a few minutes before noon; 12

4p.m.; $5-$6;NamaspaYoga& Massage, 1135 NW Galveston

Ave., Bend;www.namaspa.corn or 541-550-8550. BROLATES: A challenging workout

focused onimproving strength, flexibility and power; 5:30 p.m.; $20; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104, Bend;541-647-0876. WEDNESDAY GROUPRUN: Featuring a 3- to 5-mile group run; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www.fleeffeetbend.corn or 541-389-1601. BEYOND BEGINNERRUMBA GROUP DANCECLASS:Expand your dance knowledge with Rumba in this 4-week

course; nopartner is necessary;6:30 p.m.; $40; Black CatBallroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive, Suite 3, Bend;www. blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490. BEGINNERNIGHT CLUB TWO-STEP GROUPDANCECLASS: Learn the two-step; no partner necessary; 7:30 p.m.; $40; BlackCat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive Suite 3, Bend;www. blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490.

How to submit Events:Tosubmit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" at least10 daysbefore publication. Ongoing listings must be updatedmonthly. Questions: health@bendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0351.

Announcements:Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to health@bendbulletin.corn. Contact: 541-383-0351.

drug-resistant gonorrhea are significant problems. Testifying last spring in favor of Oregon's first, short-lived antibiotics bill,

Wong said hospitals and nursing homes in Oregon have invested heavily in trackingand managing resistant organisms. It's important to eliminate the use

of antibiotics in animals for anything other than treat-

ing and preventing infectious disease, he said. An FDA guideline that' s

supposed to end the use of antibiotics for weight gain takes effect at the end of

2016. In June, the agency issued a final rule requiring veterinary supervision for all other uses. "At f i rs t b l u sh, that

sounds like, hey, great, we' ve got the p roblem solved," said David Rosenfeld, executive director of OSPIRG. "There's a huge,

gaping loophole in what they' re doing."

a problem on your hands — an OSPIRG or others about why expensive one that could wipe we need these tools and how out your operation," said Jen- we use them responsibly," she nifer Dresler, director of state sard. public policy. Dresler considered the lanThe farm bureau frequently guage that OSPIRG floated cites sheep shearing season as this year to be more "extreme" an example of where antibiot- than what California signed ics are used to prevent wide- into law Oct. 10. Rosenfeld spreadloss of animals before countered that there would disease even crops up. have been plenty of exceptions Removing a ewe's fur is for activities like sheep shearstressful to her lamb, which ing, and he argued that Orefinds its mother through the gon's proposed policy would scent of her lanolin. When be more efficient than the buthey' re stressed, lambs become reaucracy that California now vulnerable to swiftly spreading must set up to regulate antibipneumonia, so farmers give oticson farms. the ewes antibiotics, which are Under OSPIRG's propospassed to the lambs through al, which was supported by milk, for about a week before a small farm-oriented group shearing, Dresler said. called Friends of Family Farms, California's law, which compliance would be essentialtakes eff ect in January 2018, ly voluntary. But the 113 largest is the product of compromise farms — concentrated animal between consumer advocates feeding operations, or CAFOs and agriculture interests. Ore- — would be required to make gon is nowhere close to that. an annual report about their A bill pushed by OSPIRG, antibiotic use. Senate Bill 920, in this year' s Currently the r e' s no legislative session received a farm-specific data on antibiothearing in the Senate Interim ic use, and Rosenfeld argues Committee on Health Care but that the new level of transdidn't advance to the full cham- parency and public scrutiny ber. The bill's main sponsor, would discourage major livethe health committee's chair- stock producers from misusing woman Laurie Monnes Anantibiotics. derson, D-Gresham, said she Half a dozen CAFOs are in couldn't line up enough votes, Jefferson and Crook counties. despite the fact that Democrats Almost all of them are cattle-feeding lots with 3,500 or control both chambers. "This was on a bad bill list," more animals.

U nder the

F D A r u l e , she said. "We couldn't get some of the moderates to take their otics in animals' food or wa- heels out of the sand, so to

farms could still put antibi-

— Reporter:541-617-7860, kmclaughlin@bendbulletin.corn

ter on a routine basis, Ros- speak." enfeld said. "That's the loopThe language, drafted by hole we' re seeking to dose. OSPIRG, doesn't take into acThat's the loophole that the

count how antibiotics are ac-

California bill dosed." The Oregon Farm Bureau says OSPIRG's quest to eliminate the routine use

tually used in Oregon, Dresler said. The farm bureau has

of antibiotics would keep

7,000 members who are di-

rectly involved in farming and ranching, from the largest con-

farmers and ranchers from centrated feeding operations taking steps necessary to to small family farms, Dresler prevent the loss of entire

said.

"We haven't had an opporherds. "Once a disease takes hold, you really have tunity to sit down and talk to

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o r n

SUNDAY BEGINNINGTWO-STEP ROUND DANCE LESSONS: Beginningtwo-

step lessons; no partner necessary; 4:30 p.m.; $5 per person; PineForest Grange, 63214 BoydAcres Road, Bend;503-856-4874.

PEOPLE • Dr. Edward McEachern,M.D., has joined PacificSource Health Plans as medical director for Medicare Programs. McEachernwasthe chief medical officer and executive director of operations at Saint Alphonsus Health Alliance in Boise, Idaho.

DISPATCHES • Cascade Gastroenterologyhas opened at1247 NEMedical Center Drive in Bend. Dr.SandraHolloway and Dr. Richard Bochner will be the practicing physicians. •Namaspa Yoga in Bend willopen a new studio in Redmond at974SW Veterans Way.Thenewstudio will openNov.5at4p.m.witha meetand greet, tours and classes.

Partners In Care helped us cope. They were with us the entire time, helping us deal with grief in a healthy way. In fact, they' re still here for us, continuing to

care for our family every step of the way. Central Oregon's choice for hospice care. (541) 382-5882

p a r t n ersbend.org

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


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

FrrNEss

ai io ennisisa a out

t esweatan nott enet By Des Bieler The Washington Post

Created in 2005, it "was designed to attract

A few months ago, my wife and I acquired a dog, and now she can't stop comparing me

fitness-seekers into the game of tennis," and as such, it's aimed more at folks who want

to our canine companion in

Bastiaan Slabbers/ NPR via Tribune News Service

Women incarcerated at the Riverside Correctional Facility in Philadelphia take part in a spinning class

run by Gearing Up. Amends Cortes, second from left, lost 90 pounds in a year.

ema e inmates att e wei t By Taunya English

a i n w i t i in

gained nearly 11 pounds, men only gained 2.5 pounds. Gearing Up is working with researchers at Temple University to track the weight and body image of the women who There's a basketball court spin at Riverside Correctional. like one you'd see at any high The study was just eight weeks school, except there's a correc- long and small, but they' ve tions officer on guard near the already found small improve3-point line. ments in resting and recovery Sixteen stationary bikes are heart rate — two preliminary set up in a half cirde in the cor- measures of heart health. ner. On bike number two, Lakiesha Montgomery, 32, from More than exercise Philadelphia, is pedaling fast Gavin says the women often and singing along to the Nicki come to dass initially to stop Minaj's song "Fly." gaining weight then later find The gym at Riverside Correctional Facility in Philadelphia is through the metal detector, two heavy doors and down the hall.

"I didn't think I'd be able to

other reasons to keep coming

keep up. I'm not the skinniest thing in the bunch," she says. But she is keeping up. In 2011, biking advocates from the nonprofit group Gearing Up persuaded prison administrators to let them bring in bikes to teach indoor cycling.

back. "I can speak to myself, if I weren't given the opportunity tobe physically active, I'd probably go a little crazy. I probably wouldn't be able to manage my emotions, my temper, my anger. I think anger management Founder Kristin Gavin says is a huge issue for a lot of wombefore that she had mentored en who are in prison; they are ex-offenders in the community. victims of trauma and abuse," "Over and over I had conver- Gavin says. sations with women who were And, of course some of the saying, 'While I was incarcer- women have hurt otherpeople. ated, I put on 60 pounds, I put Exercise can be a way to reon 70 pounds,'" she says. Then lease all sorts of emotions. she would ask them how long Erica Tibbetts from Gearing they were in prison and she Up often leads the spin dass. says they'd typically respond, Tibbetts is in bike shorts. "six months." Everyone else has on prison blues: long navy pants and a

Umited options

white T-shirt.

" The worst seems to b e At Riverside, Montgomery spends time in the prison yard women don't have good sports most days but doesn't get much bras in here," she says. exercise there. No one has a water bottle,

work on technique. was just one of many games with abetter understanding of devised to make Cardio Ten-

nis a fun experience; music is often played at the same time

the sport. "Learn and burn" is Robinson's preferred mode. "Basi-

(very much unlike a standard cally, I have a high degree of tennis lesson) to heighten instruction in my dasses withthe sense of fun, although it out slowing down the tempo wasn't during the session I of the class, with instructions attended. provided during rest breaks, One particularly taxing when people are picking up segment was the "poach" balls, or," he added with a drill, in which we played an chuckle, "are so winded that approach shot on the left side we need a little 'chalk talk.'"

recent introduction to Cardio

Tennis, a branded fitness activity that more or less uses

the basic elements of tennis as an excuse to run participants ragged. At an open demonstration on some courts in Bethesda, Maryland, I was one of about

of the court, then immediate-

That helped, but the facility-provided meals aren't the

ly had to lunge to the right to Adding exercise Shelley Puterman, who was quickly backpedal and scuttle my doubles partner for most back over to the left to cov- of the class, is a fitness buff er for doubles partners who who has been playing tennis with th e i n structor, David were doing the same thing, for 13 years and appreciates Robinson, feeding us balls to with Robinson continually how the Cardio version ramps get things started in a certain feeding balls. A few rounds up the physical benefits. "Doubles is a lot of fun, and way and tokeep the tempo of that, and I was less "Wimhigh. What we weren't doing ble" and more "done" — but I it's strategic, but there's not was keeping an overall score, was darned if I wasn't going much exercise," the 53-yearor worrying about the relative to keep trying to track down old Washington resident told abilities of other participants, those balls. me. "So that's why I like to "Really a fun way to get fit play singles, but not as many or standing around very much. with a tennis racket in your people play singles. So when hand," is how Scott Baxter de- you come to something like The purpose scribed Cardio Tennis. Baxter Cardio Tennis, you' re getting Robinson told me that Car- is the chief executive of Play the exercise, you' re getting the dio Tennis is meant to provide Your Court, a company that cardiopart and you' re actual"a very consistent platform helps people who can't afford ly improving your strokes as for a high caloric expendi- club memberships, or who you' re doing it." ture, regardless of skill lev- don't want to travel far, get There are about 1.7 million el, and in a group format." individual and group lessons Cardio Tennis participants in Created in 2005, it "was de- from certified pros on public the United States, according to signed to attract fitness-seek- courts in or near their own Michele Krause, who managers into the game of tennis," neighborhoods. es the program forthe Tennis "A very common reason Industry Association. She told Robinson said, and as such, it's aimed more at folks who why people are looking for me via email that it is offered want to work up a sweat than tennis lessons" is simply for in about 3,000 facilities across

only food a r ound. Inmates

those who want to work on

fitness, Baxter said. "A lot of

also make do-it-yourself meals with food from the prison com-

technique.

people are sick of the gym, countries, particularly Britain and they' re looking for a more and Australia. fun way to stay in shape." My decidedly rusty game Baxter also pointed out — especially a very loose canthat Cardio Tennis dasses, non of a forehand — certainly elements of which can be in- has room to grow, but my incorporated int o i n d ividual terest in resuming some form sessions, are adaptable to par- of tennis also stems from the ticipants' abilities. "Each class full-body workout it provides, can accommodate a pretty one Cardio Tennis effectively broad range of skill level, and accentuates. "One of the inherent greatfitness level, so that's one of the best parts about it." nesses of tennis is diversified In Robinson's class, there movement," Robinson said. was a bit more downtime than "You' re running sideways, I would imagine a regular ses- you' re backpedaling, you' re sion involves. That was both jumping, you' re at different because it took a little while to speeds, you' re lunging. This is explain each drill to a bunch of what our legs were designed newbies and because he want- to do. And the different intened the participants in the open sities is what our hearts were demonstration to come away designed to do."

to men. Women on average but it's not the most urgent

WHY Y

to work up a sweat than those who want to

various respects. I will admit to at least one: If you tell me to go run 5 miles, I' ll probably just sit there, staring at youand wondering when I' ll get a snack — but if you produce a ball, I' ll chase after that sucker until my tongue hangs out. Which is why I enjoyed my

health problem his team is managing. "The chlamydia rate — 6.6 percent on admission. We' ll treat a thousand people for HIV. The hepatitis C rate here,

largely because of intravenous drug use, is 13 percent. Then you have hypertension, diabetes, all the regular things," he says.

An eye on nutrition, too The prison pays Gearing Up to hold spin class three times a week. There's also an occasion-

alyogadass,butthebigchange affecting women's weight was the food. The meals are certi-

fied heart healthy by a nutritionist. There's a lot of it, but portion sizes are smaller now.

Last year, the prison cut calories from nearly 2,900 a day to 2,500 for men and women.

missary. A favorite is called

"chi-chis."

"It's where you mix ramen noodles with cheese puffs. You

put it in hot water, you put the meat inside, you can do hon-

ey mustard sauce or ranch on top, and you just put in a potato chip bag and you mix it up. It' s actually pretty good," explains Amanda Cortes. Cortes has been in jail for

five years and eating that way for most of that time. She's facing several charges, including "The outside is not a real and exerciseshorts aren't al- involuntary manslaughter, and outside, it's like a mini garage. lowed. Tibbetts says the wom- is waiting for a court date. She They have a basketball court en come to class anyway and says lots of women use food there, but I don't play basket- work with what they have. to cope with boredom and ball. It's a lot of people that Climb on a bike and there's a depression. come out so you don't have sense of freedom, even if you' re So Cortes cycles to keep the room to really jog or walk. It' s not going anywhere. weight off, and on visiting day, like you sit out to just get some At the beginning of class, her 10-year-old son noticed. air," she says. "When he first seen me he one by one, the women call out Montgomery was charged their intention for the ride. The was like: 'Mommy you got with assault this year, among ritual is called "clearing." skinny!' So I was excited," she other charges, and has been Christina wants to leave be- says, smiling. in county jail for about six hind shakedowns. Jean wants During a year, going to three months. to forget "cough and squat." spin classes a week, Cortes "First time, last time," she Sheik is leaving behind dropped 90 pounds. says. In the meantime, spin "wrongful mistakes." At the end of the Gearing Up class is something to do. Others want to shake off the class, justbefore the goodbyes "Keep away frustration be- past, stress and depression. and sweaty hugs, there's one ing locked up, it helps you get In a 2010 survey, women last ritual. through," Montgomery says. at Riverside gained about 36 The women share w h at The Department of Justice pounds in a year, on average. they' ve brought back from the surveyed the health of state But after some changes at rtde. and federal inmates in 2012 the facility, that weight gain One women says she' s and found that women are dropped to 26 pounds when the "bringing sexy back." She and more likely than men to be medical team checked again in everyone around the circle obese. 2015. have a wish: "I'm Jean, and I'm A study of prison health in Bruce Herdman, the prison's bringing back my bikini. I'm Kentucky found greater weight chief of medical operations, Ruth, and I'm bringing back gain for women compared says weight gain is a problem, faith and confidence."

10 people using rackets to hit balls over a net (or, all too often in my case, into the net). We took quick turns volleying with each other, usually

play a cross-court return, then

Constant movement is the key. Conventional tennis can

get slowed down by walking to collect balls, waiting for another player to do the same,

or simply getting lazy after playing several points. In the demo class, Robinson made

a point of having us keep running on, off and around the court, with agility ladders set up on each side to provide some extra exertion.

Robinson had our group start off by playing short bursts of doubles, with a lot

of scampering either to the back of the court or over to the other side, depending on the outcomes of our best-of-

three-points skirmishes. This

the country and in 30 other

• •

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24TH 3:00 PM

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Plus, it gives the mothers a

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D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

MoNEY mammogramcosts p e Watc cou pre ict seizures, How can changesodramatically than to johns HopkinsUniversi By Jordan Rau

Kaiser Health News

By Hayley Tsukayama The Washington Post

One of the most promising uses for the Apple Watch is its potential for improving health and fitness. And now, thanks to a new

study from the Johns Hopk ins Un iversity S chool o f

through specially designed apps. In addition to epilepsy, researches have used to the

to test their mental state, or to

If you' re thinking about getting a mammogram in

take a memory test as a way

the Dallas-Fort Worth area,

to measure recovery.

tool to gather data for stud-

This is all valuable information for researchers. But,

you might check carefully, because the cost can vary from $50 to as much as $1,045.

ies on breast cancer, asthma, heart disease, autism and

Accessibility

Medicine, the watch is being used for the first time as a

It's easy to see why medical researchers have embraced

tool to help those diagnosed

this opportunity. Traditional-

with epilepsy. E piWatch, an

Krauss said, there are a num-

melanoma.

tage of the sensors in Apple's schedule regular follow-up

the actual cost of care.

ten ask epileptics to log their seizures so individuals can

prices can range from $72 to $388. According to an analysis released last week, shopping around for women' s

And that l eaves health care c onsumers i n t he

P h o enix , th o s e

grams and other routine

doses is one of the most com-

services often costing far

study, said Gregory Krauss, a Johns Hopkins University professor of neurology and physician who specializes in

watch, anyone can download an app, register electronically

mon triggers, Krauss said.

more in one office than in

One feature, for example, lets

from the comfort of their own

you compare how well you adhere to your prescribed

a nother. R esearchers a t C astlight Health, a c o m -

There are already devices from across the country — no on the market that can take appointment needed. these measurements individThe information gathered ually, Krauss said. But there' s from the Hopkins study will no tool with quite the reach help researchers design and and versatility of the watch. launch an app specifically for From its vantage point on an people suffering from epilepepileptic's wrist, the device sy, Krauss said. That will give can directly measure limb those with epilepsy a way to movement while also mon- notify their loved ones autoitoring the blood flowing matically when they' ve had through the veins of some- a seizure and to help individone in the throes of a seizure.

uals track the condition and,

The watch's multiple sensors with luck, make it easier to makes it far easier to collect manage. all of that i nformation and

look at it together.

"It's been a goal to have a

In addition to putting the

research app on the App Store, Krauss said that his

method for detecting when a team is reaching out to epiperson's first going into a sei- lepsy support groups to find zure" for years, Krauss said.

study participants.

Now, the sensors in the ApT he research app w as ple Watch give patients and developed with Thread Re-

A look at EpIWatch, the app associated wIth the first Apple

Watch research study, run by the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

treatment against other (ano-

nymized) people in the study — an attempt to gamify the tedious ritual of taking your medicine. The app may also be able to help possible side effects from medication.

Krauss said that he hopes that a year of having peopie with epilepsy often expe- ple use EpiWatch will give rience warning sign symp- researchers enough data to t oms, known a s a n a u r a . make a truly useful educa-

who have asked for the app to include more education fea-

khn.org.

tures,so they can learn more

shocking," said Jonathan Rende, chief of research and development for Castlight, which is based in San Francisco and collects billing records from employ-

Once the app is activated, the heart rate sensor, ac-

to have tools like this. Fami-

How it works

introduced in March. Build-

Ar Continued from 01 It doesn't cost an individual any money — either up front or in the form of pricier insurance — to visit with a health

insurance agent, and many agents say with plans being so complex and constantly changing, it's more important than ever to have experts help people pore over the options. Agents make their money off of commissions from health insurance companies, and the companies build those ex-

penses into the overall cost of their policies. I mportant points o f

pol-

icies everyone should focus on when choosing one, agents say, is networks, out-

of-pocket maximums and formularies.

Mind your network Since provisions of the Affordable Care Act kicked in,

insurance carriers can no longer ask people about their medical histories or pre-ex-

isting conditions. Because of that, they' re taking on many more people who need lots of

Enrollment deadline Medicare enrollees have until Dec. 7 to evaluate their Medicare Advantage plans and Medicare prescription drug coverage (Part D) and make changes. Changes made during the openenrollment period take effect Jan. 1, 2016. • People who havequestions about Medicare and its offerings can visit the Senior Health Insurance Benefits Assistance Program's website at www. oregonshiba.org or set up an appointment to speak with one of its volunteer counselors by calling 541678-5483.

• The "ABCDs of Medicare" is a workshop where alocal expert will walk people through the program's basics. Theseworkshops are offered at the BendSenior Center, 1600 ReedMarket Road, at 4:30 p.m. on the first Thursday of each month.

medical care. That leaves carriers exposed to all kinds of risk they were able to avoid be-

Any providers not considered in-network, meaning

fore, said Lisa Lettenmaier, a health insurance agent with

the insurer has not negotiated specific rates with that

"The

v ar i a tio n

was

ers that show the prices insurers and patients pay. "It

speaks to how broken the health care system is."

The Castlight study is one of the first to look at price variation in women' s

health services, and it did not explain what may be

But Castlight found price

differences in tests for the human papillomavirus which is linked to the risk

of cervicalcancer — of 10 times or more in the major-

ity of the major metropolitan regions it examined. An HPV test in the Philadelphia-Atlantic City, New Jer-

sey area ranged from $32 to $626. C astlight a l s o f o u n d prices varied significantly from one region to another

beyond what could be attributed to cost-of-living differences. The average price for a mammogram ranged from $485 in Sacramento to $159 in Cincinnati, Ohio.

The average HPV test in Indianapolis was $165, five times the $32 price in Charlotte, North Carolina.

1 in 8 Women ffected By BreastCancer

Before

the

A f fo r d a ble

Care Act, none of a person' s co-payments for medical expensescounted toward their out-of-pocket m a x i mums. For that reason, many people

never reached those maximums, said Don Klippenes, the founder of Health Insur-

ance Strategies, Inc., in Bend. The ACA, however, made it so that all out-of-pocket med-

ical expenses (to in-network providers, at least) are applied toward peoples' out-of-pocket

maximums. For that reason, although there's a lot of talk about the

importance of deductibles, ultimately, the out-of-pocket maximum is the truly import-

ant number, he said. "This is the key number go-

Early Detection Is The Best Cure.

ing forward: that max out-of-

pocket," Klippenes said. Each year, the federal government sets a new out-of-

pocket maximum. This year? $6,850. Make no mistake:The de-

October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month

ductible is important, too. That's the amount a person

has to pay before your plan's benefits kick in. In a cheaper plan, it' ll be higher. In an expensive plan, lower.

Don'tforgetthe drugs Several agents warned that

provider, will be much more carriershave revamped their e xpensive, and they w i l l formularies, the lists of drugs not contribute to reaching a they cover, for 2016. If you person's out-of-pocket max- need to take certain medicaimum, the h ighest amount tions, it's important that you someone has to pay before determine how much they' ll the insurance plan covers 100 cost under certain policies. These days, carriers often percent of their services. For 2016 open enrollment, sell plans that are labeled as In fact, a recent study by the federal government is rea preferred provider organi- HealthPocket.corn, a website quiring insurers to post their zation, w h ich t r a ditionally that ranks health insurance drug for mularies on their give customers a range of plans, found that nearly 20 websites, and the lists must providers to choose from but percent of plans sold to Ore- be updated when any changes act more as a health main- gonians via HealthCare.gov are made. tenance organization — a offer no coverage for out-ofAlthough people will be plan that requires you to see network providers. able to find the drug lists onone physician for most of And since there's no conline, it's never a bad idea to your care and get other care tract with th e i nsurer, out- call the carriers directly and through referrals from that o f-network p r o v ider s c a n ask about specific drugs you physician, Lettenmaier said. charge whatever they want know you' ll need, LettenmaiToday's narrow n e twork for the services, Lettenmaier er said. plans often give people only a sard. — Reporter: 541-383-0304, "It's their choice," she said.

was in Phoenix, where the

Out-of-pocket max: The new dedud:ible

Health Source Northwest in Portland. They' ve mitigated that risk by forming contracts with smaller groups of providers, such as one hospital system or group of doctors.

few optionsfor doctors.

defer to their doctors' recommendations for where to get a test, and those physiciansrarely consider price. Not every type of procedure Castlight examined had gigantic variations. The widest price difference for a

ister tests. Patients may be

study participants and colSo how does it w o rk? asked to tap a circle to test lect data from Apple gadgets Krauss said that many peo- responsiveness, Krauss said,

Insurance

and insurers do not publish

In the Washington-Balti-

chart can be found at www.

about what they' re facing. "It's a pretty disabling condition and people are eager

most medical professionals

Los Angeles, Miami, Phila- cheapest visit cost $57 and delphia and Seattle, among the most expensive one cost other cities. $137.

requests from early testers

ditional tests.

toolbox for medical studies

greatly in Atlanta, Houston,

for those with epilepsy. His team have alreadyreceived

mation, scientists can enroll

ResearchKit, an open-source

1 7 9 m e tropoli-

the study senses a seizure is about to happen, he or she can then activate the appor have acaregiver activate

ing on Apple's secure framework for collecting infor-

measure several important measures such as heart rate, lucidity during a seizure and limb movement. The school is using Apple's

looked at

tion and m anagement tool

what's to come.

dark. They are in weak positions to shop around as

tan areas and found that follow-up visit with an obmammogram prices varied stetrician and gynecologist

When someone enrolled in

celerometer and gyroscope lies want it for children; they s earch, a de v eloper t h a t all turn on for ten minutes, want to w or k o n m a nagespecializes in ResearchKit; which Krauss said is longer ment," he said. Being able to Acuma Medical provides the than the duration of a normal offer a measure of indepenback-end data processing. seizure. After a certain peri- dence to epileptics, he said, The study was designed with od of time, the app will also may be important as the rethe university's institution- directly ask a watch-wearer search benefits of EpiWatch. al review board, and d ata whether what it sensed was "This is a personal product, collected from watch users a seizure. It w i l l a l s o a sk not a physician product," he will be analyzed alongside whether the person has taken sard. data researcherscollect from medication that day. in-person and other more traThe app can also admin-

researchers a unique way to

pany that helps businesses analyze health care prices,

more region, which includes Virginia and West Virginia, mammogram prices ranged from $150 to $663, with the average cost $390. The entire mammogram price

it — to collect information on

market power as much as

health care can be worth prices or make it easy to get the effort, w it h m a m mo- quotes. Patients frequently

t he

Courtesy Johns Hopkins Universityof Medicine

gotiations that are driven by

A round

appointments.

home and agree to feed information back to researchers

different deals with hospitals, labs and doctors in ne-

just as important. Doctors of-

How about an initial rou-

wearabledevice fora medical

the treatment of epilepsy.

With

influences. Private insurers sometimes strike markedly

tine gynecologic exam?

lives, and in their own behaviors, to find possible triggers. It's also designed to nudge people to take their medicine more regularly, as skipping

school r e cently l a u nched, their local area, give them will be the first to take advan- long forms to fill out and

ies have identified a host of

ber of support features built into EpiWatch that may be

look for patterns in their own

ly, studies require scientists a p p t h e to seek out participants from

causing the disparities or publish the names of providers. However, other stud-

tbannowibendbulletin.corn

Look Past The Pink & Schedule Your

3D Mammogram Today

CentralOregon I 100 ASSOC., I.C. 541.382.9383 www.cora pc.corn


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

MEDICINE

Animate caracters e atients iscussaim ents By Guy BoultoneMilwaukee Journal Sentinel

MILWAUKEEhe company's vision initially seems fanciful: Create applications for health care featuring animated characters that can understand language in all its complexity, from context to regional idioms, detect emotion and recognize facial expressions, perceive differences in personalities, and on top of all that, constantly

'v

learn. To make all this seem even more far-fetched, put the company's base in the second floor of a modest office building in suburban Milwaukee. Yet iDAvatars is among the companies that have set out to create applications based on one of the most advanced computer systems in the worldIBM's Watson. And IBM has taken note. "They are one of the most

Affairs, Intel and Bayer AG.

innovative companies we

The company, which has Mike De Siati / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel raised $3.4 million from in- Norrie Daroga is the founder and CEO of iDAvatsrs, a company which aims to create health care applications to detect emotions,recogvestors, projects revenue of $1 nize facial expressions, perceive different personalities and constantly learn in order to aid patients. ships with companies devel- million this year and is close to oping applications for the Wat- breaking even, Daroga said. son system. "I' ve seen very few It is one of more than 350 can open a lot of doors. York. Thousands of lines of degree. in Boston. "We will go put them in front dialogue, gestures and facial that have moved as quickly as companiesthat have or are IDAvatars, he said, has two The meeting with Samsung they have." building applications using the of large clients," Saft said. e xpressions all h ave t o b e business models. came after the company heard iDAvatars also has put to- technology underlying IBM's scripted. One is to develop mobile ap- about iDAvatars and contactgether a team of about 20 peo- Watson — the computer sys- Accessibleapplications For the VA project, iDAva- plications for hospitals, man- ed Daroga. It later asked if he ple scattered around the world. tem commonly known for its At the same time, IBM rec- tars is creating two avatarsaged care organizations and could give a one-hour demonTom Meyer, who oversees appearance on the quiz show ognizes that it will never know a receptionist at a registration health insurers who would pay stration for company executechnology, lives in Pune, In- "Jeopardy!" all the ways the technology desk and a virtual medical a monthly fee for each user. tives from Korea. It's an example of the interdia. Ozlem Ulusoy Chavez, Watson understands con- can be used. assistant. The other is to develop appli"They have the technology, who oversees project manage- text — IBM uses the example The VA gave the company cations for patients in clinical est in what iDAvatars has set ment, lives in Istanbul. Antonio of "we feel blue because it is but they need people like us 2,000questions,each thatcan research trials. out to do — and it suggests that Saraiva, a "game master" who raining cats and dogs" — and who know what to do with it," be asked in five, 10, 15 different Last month, Daroga took the company has overcome works as a contract employee, can discern meaning from said Jerry Brown, iDAvatars' ways. The application has to three trips to Silicon Valley, one challenge. "When you first hear about lives in Lisbon, Portugal. Jerry syntax. It also can learn pat- designer, whose dients have recognizeslang, for instance, meeting with Intel, Samsung Brown, who oversees design, terns and trends. included IBM, Chrysler and used in different parts of the and IBM. The company's key it," Daroga said, "it's too lives in the San Diego area. IBM contends the technolo- Lenovo. country and by people from employees also met with IBM bizarre." Several of them contacted gy — which it calls "cognitive The goal is to develop appli- different backgrounds. "It's an enormous chaliDAvatars after hearing about computing" — will change how cations for health care that are gS the company. people interact with computers. more accessible and effective. lenge," Brown said. "For me it' s "The fact that you are a The system, the result of For example, when someone a chance to use everything I' ve small company doesn't give decades ofwork, started with says his or her pain is a 10, on ever learned in one job." you an excuse not to be glob- one so-called application pro- a scale of 1 to 10, yet the perSome of the technology al," said Norrie Daroga, iDAv- gramming interface, API, for son's facial expression or tone hasn't been p erfected. But atars' founder and chief execu- questions and answers, said doesn't show any pain, the an- Daroga, iDAvatars' founder, tive officer. Saft, vice president of IBM imated character, or "avatar," points to the improvement in Only In the case of iDAvatars, it Watson Ecosystem. It now has can ask follow-up questions. voice technology. "See how much change has also is a necessity — the com- 28, such as one that analyzes IDAvatars' tagline is "The pany would have a much hard- the tone of a conversation. Art of Empathy," and the com- happened in two years," said ~4~-389-969~ er time finding people with The application program- pany has set out to create em- Daroga, who has undergradOriginally $~ comparable experience in its ming interface is the way com- pathetic avatars. uate and master's degrees in 141 SE 3rd • Bend Exp 10/30/15 "Other companies create a engineering as well as a law I own backyard. panies such as iDAvatars conOrigin 3 Ite/Bte I nect with the Watson system. technology product," Brown L ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ II Founded in 2013 "We help them every step of said. "What we create is a Daroga, the former chief the way," Saft said. character on a t echnology administrative officer of MetaIBM also has a $100 million platform." vante Corp., founded iDAva- fund that it plans to invest in That requires the skill of a age companies. tars in 2013. So far, the com- early-st playwright or television writpany has won contracts from The relationship with IBM er, said Brown, who started the Department of Veterans has an additional advantage: It out as a copy writer in New work with," said Lauri Saft, who oversees IBM's partner-

l Quality sound is at thecore of l Beltone Origin 3 Hearing Aid

Belton-e s115Q each',

OHSU office

said her office could also edu-

Continued from D1

studies on human subjects. "So instead of having to

Shannon has worked for

OHSU for 15 years. She moved to Bend roughly five years ago to work on clinical trials here in prostate and breast cancer prevention. They' re just wrapping up now.

cate locals on how to perform go to San Francisco or up to

Portland to take a product into human research, they could potentially stay here in Bend," she said. "We' re building the capacity and hoping to

educational laboratory, developed modules for teachers for implementing the program in their classrooms, including using UV sensors, hand-held cameras, UV beads and mi-

croscopes. The project concludes with distributing sun

IIIII',!;

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hats to the kids.

Right now, a big part of the At first, Shannon wasn' t enhance the capacity. A lot of work is just getting to know sure whether or n o t s he' d that was here already." people and learning what move back to Portland once Ryan, of Bend Bio, said kind of things the commuthe research was finished. that's a ways off for the area's nity needs, Shannon said. After a while living here, she startups, partially because Four other people will work realized she wanted to find a Central Oregon doesn't yet in OHSU's Bend office with way to stay. have the population for such Shannon — all of whom al"It gets under your skin rap- research. She also said St. ready lived in Bend — includidly," she said. "I fell in love Charles Health System al- ing Erin Solomon, who will with the place and the people." ready performs human sub- serve as community liaison. She pitched the idea of an ject research. Until now, Solomon has been "It's a long-range goal of focused on performing federoffice in Bend, and the administrators in Portland liked it. what they could help assist ally funded research on skin The building won't be used with," she said. cancer. Des chutes County as a laboratory or a clinical Enhancing research capac- currently ranks number one space; it' ll be a hub for train- ity also means providing the in Oregon for incidence of ing, education and research, actual bucks to make the re- melanoma. Shannon said. Its staffers will search happen. OHSU repreAs community liaison, Solhost educational s eminars sentatives can do that through omon's job will be to learn forhealth care providers and hooking specific projects up what's important to the r eother community members with Knight Cancer Institute gion's various industries, inand other events. Shannon funding. cluding health care, education has already been organizing One project that's already and biotech. "It's just kind of going out events designed to bring to- received Knight funding ingether people in the biotech volved training 12 elementary and trying to figure out where sector. school teachers to implement we fit in, how we can help if O ne of t h e skin cancer prevention pro- we can help and just kind of primary missions will be to grams at their schools. Even- get the name out right now," enhance the area's research tually, they' ll help students said Solomon, who has lived capacity. That means provid- through experiments such as in Bend since 1995. ing training for locals on the monitoring ultraviolet light In the future, Solomon said basics for getting research levels during the day and com- she foresees her office potenideas off the ground — simple paring those levels with shad- tially doing education around things like teaching people ed areas. Students will also subjects like physical inactivito write grant proposals and test the effectiveness of dif- ty, nutrition and breast health. describing different study de- ferent sunscreens. The Bend — Reporter: 541-383-0304, signs. In the future, Shannon Science Station, a nonprofit tbannow@bendbulletitt.corn

LILl/('I!

university's

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

ew

s e riesex ores uman rain

TV SPOTLIGHT "The Brain with David Eaglemann 10 p.m. Wednesdays, PBS

By LuaineLee Tribune News Service

BEVERLY H I L LS, C a lif. — The last great unknown territory on Earth doesn't lie at

the bottom of the sea or in the Arctic Cirde or in the molten

Earth's core, but right here in the human brain. That's what neuroscientist

Dr. David Eagleman says in his new PBS series, "The Brain

with David Eagleman." "The way we structured these six episodes, they' re all about the big questions," he

says in a conference room here. "What is reality? Who am I'? How do I decide? Who's in

control? Who will we be? These are questions that happily are evergreen, so we don't have to

worry about some new piece of data coming along next year that will suddenly overturn this

question of what is reality." One of the major puzzles that

has confounded man since Aristotle is how we comprehend the world. "Your entire reality takes

place in this dosed theater of your brain," says Eagleman, who holds joint assignments in neuroscience and psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. "And it, at various times, has more or less to do with what' s

alive. Why? It's because, for

the person's just fine. You can' t

example, the nuns who lived

do that in an adult. They' ll die.

together in these convents keep very cognitively active. They' re cognitively fit because they' re socializing. They' ve got tasks. They' re doing things. As opposed to many people who, for example, retire and sit around and don't do much of anything and then they have cognitive dedine. So this has

But children's brains are suffi-

ciently plastic," he says. Unlike some other TV shows that concentrate on the aberrations of the brain, this one ex-

aminesthe normal brain,says Eagleman. "Aside from dealing with the

legal system and things like that, I'm also in a whole episode dealing with the issue about the

led to a new concept which we cover in the show about cogni-

social brain and how so much tive reserve. If you keep your of our circuitry is devoted toDr. David Eagleman, left, talks to nuns who are a part of the Relibrain active, you' re making wards other brains and dealgious Orders Study — run by David Bennett, M.D., director of Rush new pathways." ing with other brains. We' re Alzheimer's Disease Center — which is collecting detailed family Eagleman, 44, thinks the extremely wired up to be a sohistories, socioeconomic data and records of cognitive exams idea of the dominance of one cial species. It's what holds us from more than 2,300 people, including older Catholic nuns, side of the brain over the other together. Things like empathy priests and brothers living in 40 communities across the U.S. Part is mostly overrated. "It's almost is the glue that allows us to step of their findings will be on PBS's "The Brain with David Eagleman." to the point of an old wives' tale into each other's shoes and see in the sense that there's a little stuff," he explains. "And I explore this issue to bit of difference between the "One of the things we cover hemispheres. The left hemi- try to understand what it is happening in the outside world. And what can happen, for ex- on the show has to do with a spherein most people has lan- about things like genocide: ample, when you go to bed very fascinating study about guage in it, and that's what' s What happens at a societal levand dream at night, is that the hundreds of nuns and priests special about it. But, otherwise, el that allows people to dehutheaterkeeps running,and the who all agreed to donate their the idea of a big difference be- manize other groups, and what actors keep acting, and you brains upon their death," says tween left and right brain isn' t it takes to re-humanize." have this whole virtual reali- Eagleman. so true. There's a girl in the To study the subject first "And this has been going on show named Cameron Mott hand, Eagleman traveled to ty that you take to be reality. And the same thing happens for a number of years now. And who had a particular kind of Sarajevo. "Some of it was very as somebody becomes dement- the researchers were really sur- epilepsy where the only solu- fresh genocide that happened ed. There are many different prised when they discovered tion was to remove in a neuro- there just a couple decades ago. aspects to dementia, but one of that about a third of the brains, surgery half of her brain." And so then we go and talk to the issues is that somebody can when they looked at them unA CAT scan reveals one side people, and we really seek to confuse what's real. It has less der themicroscope at autopsy, of her brain is just blacked out. understand how our k nowland less anchoring to the out- had the signs of Alzheimer' s "If you do that kind of surgery edge about the brain maps onto side world." disease in them. under the age of 8, a child will the world we live in, and what "In other words, the tissue be totally fine. All of the func- can be done about it, and how One of the most interesting studies regarding Alzheimer' s was being ravaged by Alzhei- tions that would have been tak- we can structure things at a disease revealed that what we mer's. And yet, NONE of the en care of with the other hemi- governmental level. Also to try do as we age has a profound ef- cognitive symptoms were ap- sphere get mapped onto the sin- to make a better place, given fect on the brain's function. parent when the people were gle remaining hemisphere, and the knowledge we have." Courtesy PBS via Tribune News Service

7:10 p.m. on STARZ, Movie: "Edward Scissorhands" —In this visually stunning 1990 Tim Burton film, Johnny Depp manages to wring tears from

moviegoers astheyoung man created from bits and pieces by a nameless inventor (Vincent Price). Unfortunately, the old guy dies, leaving Edward all alone — until the Avon lady

(Dianne Wiest) comescalling. She brings him home to meet the family, and he becomes the toast of the town. Winona Ryder also stars as the young woman who risks blood loss to love him. Sp.m. on5,8, "Heroes Reborn"— Masi Oka reprises his

role from the original series as Hiro in the new episode "Game

Over." Noah(Jack Coleman) takes his own route in his search for answers. Tommy and Emily (Robbie Kay, Gatlin

Green) embark on ajourney. Luke (Zachary Levi) has a hard time adjusting to his new reality. Erica (Rya Kihlstedt) gets in the way of Miko's (Kiki

Sukezane) plans. Carlos (Ryan Guzman) gets information from an unexpected source. Dylan Bruce and Eve Harlow guest star. 9 p.m. on CW, "The Originals" — Ever wonder about the birth of the very first vampire? The new episode "I' ll See You in Hell or New Orleans" purports to deal with it as Klaus and Elijah (Joseph Morgan, Daniel Gillies) try to overcome their differences to find out what Lucien (guest star Andrew Lees) is up

to. Cami (LeahPipes) learns

Genderswitchtakesgetting usedto

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times aie subject to change after press time. I

Dear Abby: My daughter has been in a lesbian relationship for 14 years. They recently took me

me a chance to get used to the new name? — Margaretin Mississippi to lunch and informed me that her Dear Margaret:Adjusting to genpartner, "Nicole," is in the process der reassignment takes time for of transitioning to a male. all concerned. As your letter illusNicole has now legally changed trates, there are often more people her name to "Nick" involved than the inand has begun hordividual making the mone t r eatments. DFP,R change. They have b e en It seems only natgoing to c o unselural that you would ing for the past six need some time to months. Since Nick adjust. However, it began the transition, I have seen also seems to me that you are behim three times. Last week when

ing overly sensitive about what

mother's birthday.

There are some very good people in this world. We want him to know how very much we appreciatedhiskind gesture,and we have pledged to "pay it forward" whenever we can. — Blessed in Ohio

Dear Blessed: Idon't know who originated this saying, but your letter certainly proves the truth

of it: A good deed is like a pebble thrown into a pond; its ripples con-

tinue ever outward. Thank you for an upper of a letter. Dear Abby:We were visiting our son and daughter-in-law last weekend. When I had to use the facili-

I was visiting, I accidentally called happened. Your daughter and her Nick by the wrong pronoun, "she" partner were right to correct you instead of "he" a couple of times. I for your slip of the tongue, and it ties downstairs, I told her the hand was either immediately corrected wasn't rude for them to do so. How towel was missing. I had used that or ignored until I realized I had else is a person to learn that a mis- bathroom the day before. Guess used the wrong word. It hurt my

take was made if it isn't pointed

what she said'? "Well, that's what

feelings.

out? Dear Abby: Recently, 12 of us

pants are for." Abby, she wasn't joking! We see

women from a retirement home

them only twice a year because we

After I got home I sent Nick

a text to apologize and explain that it would take time for me to get used to saying "Nick" and re-

in Dayton were having lunch at a local steakhouse. As we were digferring to him as a he. I told them ging in our purses for money and their correcting me bothered me. coupons, our server informed us All weekend I could tell they were that we did not owe anything for irritated with me, and I felt it was our bills! He said a gentleman who uncalled for. had been seated nearby had takWhat do you say'? Am I wrong en care of what we owed. It seems to feel hurt that they haven't given

the day we were there was his late

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, OCT. 22, 2015:This yearyour zest for living marks your actions. You

seem to bemore present in the moment. Your day-to-day life flourishes, especially as it becomes normal for you to be full of ideas. If you' re in a creative field, you are likely to create a piece of work to be proud of. If you are single, you could be pushing others away, as Stars showthe kind so many People of day yon'0 have exPress interest in ** * * * D ynamic being your signif** * * Positive ic a nt other. Date, ** * Average but don't commit ** So-so until that special * Difficult person entersyour life. If you are attached, romance seems to flow. The two of you will make a positive decision about your relationship. AQUARIUSmakes you smile.

live five hours away. Could they be short of money or what? Should I send her some hand towels? — Wet Hands in Wisconsin

Dear Wet Hands: Byall means. And don't forget a short, sweet note

thanking her for her "hospitality." — Write toDearAbbyat dearabbycom or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

ence in yourperspective onceyoucreate some distance. Your imagination is likely to create exactly what you want. Tonight: Consider starting your weekend early.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

** * * You could be too tired for words. You might want to understand where a family member is coming from. This person might be asking for one thing, but really wants another. Refuse to have an argument. Be patient. Tonight: Get some extra R and R before the weekend.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * You could be surprised by the behavior of someone who often appears to be dignified. Defer to others if you' re feeling confused or tired. If you feel lucky, buy a lottery ticket. Be careful with wild risk-taking! Tonight: Go along with some-

** * * * S peak your mind, and get past a problembyhavinga discussion.The unexpected could occur when you focus on a creative project or a new friend. Open up to greater give-and-take with friends and associates. Tonight: Let your hair down, and start the weekend early.

one else's desire. LEO (July23-Aug.22)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)

* ** Curbanyspending untilyouhave ** * * Your ability to initiate might not more facts about an expenditure. You have the impact it normally does. Others might want to do some price comparison seem to be quicker at taking action right as well as make sure your checkbook now. Don't worry; you won't be excluded. is balanced. You will want to spruce up ARIES (March21-April 19) You could choose to create some uproar your professional or community image. ** * * You' ll remain focused on an achievement that's about to happen. You if you want more control, but it would not Tonight: A must appearance. often use your unpredictability to promote be wise. Tonight: All smiles. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) important causes. You might feel presVIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * * U se today to the max. You are sured by a higher-up or someone you care ** * * Curb a tendency to go overboard. likely to receive positive responses, with a lot about. Take time to relax. Tonight: A partner could surprise you, as he or she the exception of one person who generally Where your friends are. will act in an unexpected way. Don't try is quite controlling. Detach from a heated to control a child or loved one. You can situation and avoid frivolous squabbles. TAURUS (April 20-May20) This matter will calm down given time. ** * * You continue to take charge of choose only your own path; let this person decide which way is best for him or Tonight: Head out for live music. a matter and carry it to fulfillment. You' ll her. Tonight: Clear out an errand. be willing to work carefully to achieve PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) this goal, even though some of the steps ** * Follow your instincts. As you test LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) you need to take seem silly or petty. Take ** * * Your ingenuity seems to make the water, you might want to maintain a stock of your energy levels in the afterothers demand less, which allows you to low profile. Be careful with your funds. noon. Tonight: Do something just for you. complete a project. Avoid working from You easily could miscount your change or GEMINI (May 21-June 20) home, as there could be a collision of m ake mist a akesomewhere inyourbud** * * * D etach and take a complete wills. Refuse to get into a spat or power get. Don't forget to reach out for a loved overview of what is happening around one. Tonight: Feel free to do nothing. play; that type of interaction won't be you. You could be surprised by the differ- helpful. Tonight: Let the kid in you out. © King Features Syndicate

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 99 HOMES(R) IO:40 • ALVINAILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER: "REVELATIONS," "CHROMA," "GRACE" AN0 "TAKA0EME"(NoMPAArating) 7 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) 12:05, 3:25, 7:10, 10:20 • CRIMSONPEAK(R) 12:30, 3:30, 6:20, 9:15 • CRIMSONPEAKIMAX (R) 1:05, 4:30, 7:15, 10:05 • EDSHEERAN: JUMPERS FOR GOALPOSTS (No M PAA rating) 7:30 • EVEREST(PG-13) 10:30 • EVEREST3-0 (PG-13)12:35 • GOOSEBUMPS (PG) noon, 2:30, 5, 7:40, 10:15 • GOOSEBUMPS3-0(PG)I:I5,3:40,7,9:45 • HENAMED ME MALALA(PG-l3)1:25 • HOTELTRANSYLVANIA2 (PG) 12:50, 3: IO • HOTELTRANSYLVANIA2 3-0 (PG) 1:20, 3:50 • THE INTERN (PG-13) 12:40, 3:45 • JEMAN0 THE HOLOGRAMS (PG)7:20,10:30 • THE LASTWITCHHUNTER(PG-13) 7, 9:55 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 12:25, 3:35, 7:45, 10:45 • THE MARTIAN 3-0 (PG-13)1, 4:10, 7:20, 10:30 • MAZERUNNER:THE SCORCH TRIALS (PG-13)4:20 • PAN (PG)3 • ROCK THE KASBAH(R) 7,9:45 • SICARIO (R)1:10, 4:50 • STEVE JOBS (R) 8,9 • WOODLAWN (PG) 12:I5, 3: I5, 7:05, IO: IO Accessibility devices areavailable for somemovies.

9 p.m. on LIFE, "Project Runway" —After getting through all the ... well, let' s call them "sillier" challenges in the competition, the designers still standing get their reward in their final challenge before Fashion Week: traveling to Los Angeles to create some smashing red carpet looks. One designer decides to really go for broke and takes a huge risk, but that's exactly the same kind of strategy that paid off for Season 4 winner Christian Siriano, who joins the judging panel in the new episode "Roll Out the Red Carpet." © Zap2it

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Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • GRANDMA(R) 6 • MERU (R) 8 I

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CRIMSONPEAK(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 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) 4, 6:45 • THE INTERN (PG-13) 4:30 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 4, 6:45 • PAN(PG)7 • ROCK THE KASBAH(R) 7 • UNBRANDED (PG-13) 4:30 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CRIMSONPEAK(R) 4:15, 7:20 • GOOSEBUMPS (PG)4:45,7:05 • HOTELTRANSYLVANIA (PG)5,7:IO • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 3:30, 6:30 • PAN(PG)4:50, 7:20 •

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O

from Lucien about his past with Klaus. Marcel (Charles Michael Davis) gets a questionable offer. Phoebe Tonkin and Yusuf Gatewood also star.

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

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

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OIV PAGES 3R4:COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

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Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend checks, or credit inBreakfast table: 4' 264 bendbulletin.corn Coins & Stamps class rings, sterling sil- Fake cashier checks Snow RemovalEquipment round oak, seats 4+ formation may be and money orders ver, coin collect, vinCullis Moving Sale leaf seats 6, 4 upsubjected to fraud. are common. tage watches, dental given by Farmhouse ** FREE ** holstered ch a i rs, Private collector buying For more informav'Nevergive out perTake care of postage st amp al bums & gogld. Bill F l e ming, Estate Sa/es SOLD. Garage Sale Kit tion about an adver541-382-9419. sonal financial inforcollections, world-wide Friday - Saturday, 9-4, Place an ad in The Dining room: your investments tiser, you may call mation. and U.S. 573-286-4343 76"x18" dark wood 64685 Horseman Ln., B ulletin fo r yo u r the O r egon State with the help from v'Trustyour instincts (local, cell phone). Bend. Between buffet, $150. 72"x42" sale and receive a Attorney General' s and be wary of The Bulletin's Tumalo and Sisters. G arage Sale K i t Office C o n sumer beautiful glass din241 someone using an Entire house & garage, FREE! ing room table, 8 Protection hotline at "Call A Service I Craftsman 24" Snow escrow service or Bicycles & beautiful furniture and upholstered chairs, 1-877-877-9392. agent to pick up your I Blower, LIKE NEWI, Professional" Directory household items. See KIT INCLUDES: $400.541-504-8228 Accessories merchandise. I 4fwd/2 rev drv, elect pix and descriptions at • 6 Garage Sale The Bulletin or m anual s t art, farmhouseestateSigns Copper Fire Pit 1971 Western Flyer biThe Bulletin KAHR pistols; P9 G ENERATE S O M E I $390. (719)358-3198 serving Cenrral Oregonsince 1903 sales.corn • $2.00 Off Coupon cycle, $150. Cover / 9 mm, $525 o b o . EXCITEMENT in your 541-699-9766. Adopt a great cat or To Use Toward Estate Sale. P45 .45ACP, $495 two! Altered, vacci- neighborhood! Plan a 265 Your Next Ad Tupperware Stop & Everything in house & Restored & Patinaed nated, ID chip, tested, garage sale and don' t G iant Talon 1 2 9 e r obo, with case, ex10 Tips For Shop &Bingo! Building Materials garage goes. 245 Soft • "Garage 65" dia. 20" high c o n dition. more! CRAFT, 65480 forget to advertise in hardtail, small, excel- cellent Sale Oct 24th, 11am - Spm. Tail Dr., Bend. Friday 541-389-9836 classified! 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, lent condition, $475. New Smaller Cover Success!" REDMOND Habitat Bingo starts at & Saturday, 7:30-3:30 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 541-385-5809. 541-408-1676 For Owner - $3000 RESTORE 6:30pm. Located at Cash only! www.craftcats.org PICK UP YOUR Building Supply Resale Holiday Inn Express, Waffen Bennewitz $1800 Queen mattress and 242 GARAGE SALE KIT Adorable Quality at 20615 Grandview Dr., C h i huahua box springs, Simclassic mauser ESTATE SALE Fri. 541-480-7823 at 1777 SW ChanLOW PRICES Bend. Call Tammy for female puppies, pure- mons extra firm, exc Exercise Equipment mountain rifle, as 23rd 8 Sat. 24th Richard dler Ave., Bend, OR 1242 S. Hwy 97 info. 541-408-5697 9:00-Noon. Furnibred, 8 weeks old, 1st cond. always covered, new, $600. 97702 541-548-1406 shots, wanting good $225. 541-330-0733 Aquarium d e corative Ithaca single barrel ture, lamps, rugs, 541-385-5809 Open to the public. l arge rocks, $ 3 0 . trap shotgun, very h omes, $20 0 e a . fine and decorative Need help fixing stuff? 541-382-9684 art work (Remingnice,$650. The Bulletin 702-541-0447 Call A Service Professional BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS The Bulletin Serktkg Central Okegan kkke 1903 541-548-3408 ton, Dali, Vorhees, Cans & bottles wanted! recommends extra ' Pilates Power Gym Pro, find the help you need. Search the area's most Neiman), solid They make a big dif- l caution when purnew, extras. $200 www.bendbulletin.corn comprehensive listing of wood king & queen WANTED: Collector FiND IT! ference in the lives of chasing products or e OBO. 541-408-0846 classified advertising... bed frames, king seeks high quality fishabandoned animals. services from out of I BUY IT! real estate to automotive, Costume Clearance! mattress set, tools, ing items & upscale fly 263 Local nonprofit uses r the area. Sending r merchandise to sporting SELL IT! 100's of adult cosMUCH MORE! In Precor Multi-starods. 541-678-5753, or spay/neuter costs. ' cash, checks, or e Tools goods. Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classifieds for tumes for sale or rent Awbrey Glen off Mt. tion strength and 503-351-2746 www.craftcats.org or l credit i n f ormation appear every day in the at THE BEND FUN Washington, 2763 fitness unit, high call 541-389-8420 for may be subjected to print or on line. 249 FARM! 541-408-1210 Chicagopheumatic 4.5" NW Champion 288 quality always inpickup or to learn lol FRAUD. For more angle a i r gr i nder, Call 541-385-5809 Circle side, exc. cond., Art, Jewelry Sales Southeast Bend cations of trailers. information about an g paid C P9110 12,00 0 over $1500, sell Fireplace screen metal RPM, used very little. www.bendbulletin.corn & Furs you may I pups, AKC. t advertiser, for $600. Must see! custom 50"x34" exc. $260. 503-936-1778 Estate Sale Gerry/Mary Sale! Fri., 9-5. SS ap- Chihuahua call t h e Ore g on t The Bulletin Parents on site. ' State You move $75. 503-869-5101 SerVing CentralOkeganSinCe1%8 Crowley 19950 Drift- pliances, furn., bikes, $350. Atto r ney ' Beautiful 1.50 c a r at 541-420-9474 541-330-0733. an t i ques, wood Ct/Brookswood. lighting, r ing, recently a p l General's O f f i ce Fri-Sun 9-4, 50% Sun. much more! 61367 German Shor t hair Consumer Protec- • praised at $15,400. King Jehu Way. Asking $10,400 obo. puppy, female, 7 wks. t ion ho t l in e at t 245 Estate Sale & More! Fri. YQUR AD wILL REcEIYE cLosE To Lace,eee 541-617-0846 old, N F C , T o nil'sl 1-877-877-9392. & Sat., 9am-3:30pm, Golf Equipment EXPOSURESFORONLY$2SO! R ising Su n br e d , 61380 B r osterhous Have an item to Desperately Seeking OregonClkki rkkkd kk k k kkkk kkkkkkkkkofll Okkkk iVkkkkk Pk kek kk k k kn $500. 541-213-4211 t The Bulletin > 500 assorted golf balls, MIssing 1940s d iaRd., Bend. Bed sets, ServingCentral Oregan SinCekk03 sell quick? one adjustable bed. Week of October 19, 2015 m ond ring sold a t Jack Chi-Weenie Minis, playable. $30. If it's under Bend Pawn approx. 7 weeks old. o n e 541-699-9766. Karstedt Estate Sale 212 Sept.13-17, 2014 has male, two f e males given by Farmhouse '500you can place it in CHECK YOUR AD central diamond and 2 $250 obo. Call or text Antiques & Estate Sa/es The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 19IB little side stones, one 360-932-4054 Friday - Saturday, 9-4, Collectibles is missing. Sz. 7.5. 541-385-5809 Classifieds for: 640 NW Trenton Ave., 541-213-1221 Please Find exactly what Bend. Early sign in Antiques Wanted: keep trying! Will pay '13 -3 lines, 7 days you are looking for in the Wood furniture, old sheet at door, limited any reasonable price. entry. signs, pocket knives, '20 -3 lines, 14 days CLASSIFIEDS on the first day it runs Historic Westside home fishing gear, marbles, 255 full of antiques, furni- (Private Party ads only) Lab Pups AKC,black & tools, weathervanes, to make sure it is corComputers rect. "Spellcheck" and ture, tools, '93 Toyota, toys. 541-389-1578 yellow, Master Hunter low miles, too many human errors do oc- T HE B U LLETIN r e 292 shred, performance peditreasures to list. See gree, OFA cert hips & el- The Bulletin reserves cur. If this happens to quires computer adSales Other Areas the right to publish all your ad, please con- vertisers with multiple pix and descriptions at bows, 541-771-2330 us ASAP so that ad schedules or those farmhouseestate69389 Camp Polk Rd, www.kinnamanretrievere.corn ads from The Bulletin tact sales.corn newspaper onto The corrections and any selling multiple sysSisters. Sat. & Sun., Maremma guard dog Internet web- adjustments can be tems/ software, to disSat 10-5 and Sun 12-4 8-4. Woodworking and pup, purebred, $350 Bulletin site. made to your ad. 20050 Elizabeth Lane. welding equip., appli 541-546-6171 close the name of the 541-385-5809 business or the term king bed, book cases, ances, generator, 6 The Bulletm The Bulletin Classified POODLE pups, "dealer" in their ads. dining table, furniture. faucets, e l e ctronics, SekkknyCenkkalOregan since Sta automatic garage door, tov or mini, Private party advertis246 282 541-475-3889 elect. bikes, camping ers are defined as Guns, Hunting Sales Northwest Bend equip., tent trailer, Jag Queens/and Heelers The Bulletin is your those who sell one uar tires & wheels, arts, Standard & Mini, $150 computer. & Fishing Employment 5 Car Garage, HUGE crafts and a ntiques. & up. 541-280-1537 541-549-0891 257 Moving Sale w ti h B rowning 12 ga . 3 " www.rightwayranch.wor Marketplace kid's ATV, a n tique auto, in exc. cond., Musical Instruments dpress.corn randfather cl o c k, NOTICE with 6 boxes shells, Call urn., electronics, crib, Remember to remove Shih Tzu Poo teacup $795. 541-977-5358 BASS GUITAR holiday 8 home decor, your Garage Sale signs puppies, first shots, SOUNDG EAR by crystal gl a ssware, (nails, staples, etc.) dewormed, gorgeous. 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 CASH!! Ibanez 4-string, black For Guns, Ammo 8 dishware, framed art, $450. 541-771-2606 exc. cond., with preafter your Sale event lawn & garden, wm.'s to advertise. Reloading Supplies. is over! THANKS! mium padded case, Yorkie AKC pups, 1F, 541-408-6900. name brand winter strap and amplifier. From The Bulletin 3M, tiny, cute, UDT clothing, western and your local utility $285. Fender electric www.ben dbulletin.corn shots, health guar., pics, saddle, and lots more! companies. guitar, Squire Strat & Colt .44-40 Frontier $850/up. 541-777-7743 Fri. 23rd & Sat. 24th, case, SOLD. Vintage Six Shooter 1892, k 8:30-3:00 PM. 64005 The Bulletin Yorkie pup, 12 wks. old, banjo, 5-string, new $3,400 4 ' /4 barrel. SenfneCentral Oregonk/nce fRB O.B. Riley Rd. Gate female, AKC, $850. serkikkycentra/ oregon since 19IB keys & strings, $150. 541-233-3156. opens @ 8:30. www.bendbulletin.corn 541-241-0518 541-385-4790.

To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email classified@bendbulletin.corn

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The Bulletin

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E2 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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

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

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

• . 3:00 pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad for only$15.00par week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $13.00 14 days................................................ $20.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $25.00 7 days.................................................. $35.00 14 days .................................................$49.00 28 days .................................................$79.00

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $25.00

(caii for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

*llllust state prices in ad

266

267

Fuel & Wood

541-385-5809

with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

lunch. thanx R. 503.305.5191

Permanent h a l f-time Crooked River Watershed Council position. C ontact C hris f o r more information at

541-419-1871

Call 54 I -385-5809 to r o m ot e o u r service Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care

LOST DOG 10-17-2015, L a b/Pit

NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land- mix, male. 8 years old law requires anyone scape Contractors Law black/white, 111 lbs. who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all "Cody," L ogan/Emconstruction work to businesses that ad- pire/Boyd Acres/Town be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form NE area of BEND. Construction Contrac- Landscape Construc- Very friendly, quiet. tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Needs his MEDICINE, active license p lanting, deck s , on a special diet. Surmeans the contractor fences, arbors, gery recently, disoriis bonded & insured. water-features, and in- ented. Please Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir- c all/text/email: R i ck 541-678-8563 rickgCOB l i c ense at rigation systems to be www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e soto@outlook.corn. contractor.corn Landscape Contrac- Shellykovacs Iho tor call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit mail.corn The Bulletin recom- number is to be in- 626-375-2045, or see mends checking with cluded in all adver- ad pos te d on the CCB prior to con- tisements which indi- Craigslist or F a cetracting with anyone. cate the business has book- "Dogs lost in Some other t rades a bond, insurance and Bend" with photo. also req u ire addi- workers c ompensational licenses and tion for their employcert ifications. ees. For your protecTick, Tock tion call 503-378-5909 or use our website: Tick, Tock... Handyman www.lcbistate.or.us to ...don't let time get check license status I DO THAT! before contracting with away. Hire a Home/Rental repairs the business. Persons Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape professional out Honest, guaranteed maintenance do not of The Bulletin's work. CCB¹151573 r equire an LC B l i "Call A Service Dennis 541-317-9768 cense. Professional" Directory today! Landscaping/Yard Care

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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. 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 email resume and any relevant writing samples to: spokesmaneditor@bendbulletin.corn

The Bulletin a

PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT

Equal Opportunity Employer Visit our website at www.wchcd.org or contact Linda Childers O 541-426-5313

In this position you will play a vital role on our Sports Staff!

Home Delivery Advisor

The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. Strong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. Computer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we b elieve in p r omoting from w i thin, s o advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:

The successful candidate will work weeknight and Saturday shifts. •

TOIDUTlllfr,

• Proven interpersonal skills • Professional-level writing ability and sports background a must • Working knowledge of traditional high school sports • Proven computer and proofreading skills • Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadlineoriented environment • Must be able to successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen

If you are a sports-minded journalist and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!

Please send your cover letter, resume, and a work sample attention: sportsassistant©bendbulletin.corn

/I 0

c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller©bendbulletin.corn No phone calls, please. The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE Pre-employment drugscreen required.

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421

Schools & Training HTR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888%38-2235

No agencies or telephone ca//s p/ease

• •

Tht: BLjiletin

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General

I

* ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * I ADVERTISING SALES *

/ * Great Supplemental Income!!

/

I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I • day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI • currently have openings all nights of the week.• Za~<0a ~r,. don't forget to check Sprinkler Blow-out / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts The Humane Society Sprinkler Repair start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and MANAGING Bend Alison's Resort House / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoCentral Oregon 541-382-3537 Maintenance Keeping Service • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• LANDSCAPES • Fall Clean up Redmond Offering resort, residen- I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI 541-923-0882 Since 2006 .Weekly Mowing tial, and commercial I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI Madras & Edging cleaning. • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• 541-475-6889 Fall Clean Up •Bark, Rock, Etc. 541-213-5288 I loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackPrineville Don't track it in all Winter ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and 541-447-7178 •Leaves ~Landsca in 476 I other tasks. •Landscape or Craft Cats •Cones Employment Construction 541-389-8420 • Needles IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl • Debris Hauling ~Water Feature Opportunities I including life insurance, short-term & long-term Still looking for Annie, Installation/M aint. disability, 401 (k), paid vacation and sick time. 22 lb. 3-yr-old black & Deputy Sheriffrs Winter Prep ••Pave brown Mini Aussie, CrookCountyRenovations •Pruning last seen near Green Part-time/On-call: ~ Please submit a completed application •Irrigation Installation .Aerating attention Kevin Eldred. Lakes trailhead. Fam- To apply go to: •Fertilizing ily misses her. Re- http: //crook-county. Applications are available at The Bulletin Bonded & Insured front desk (1 777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or w ard! Call o r t e x t hiringthing.corn/ 541-815-4458 Compost 541-520-2481 or an electronic application may be obtained LCB¹8759 541-520-8528. upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via Applications Bigfoot Beverages is email (keldred@bendbulletin.corn). Use Less Water seeking a General Personal Services Good classified ads tell Manager. For details $$$ SAVE $$$ No phone calls please. the essential facts in an & to apply, visit: At YourService Improve Plant Health interesting Manner.Write www.bigfootbeverErrands8 Notary * No resumes will be accepted* from the readers view -not ages.corn. Deadline I stand in line so you 2015 Maintenance the seller' s. Convert the 11/2/1 5. EOE don't need to. Package Available Drug test is required prior to employment. facts into benefits. Show errandsandnotary Add your web address EOE. the reader how the item wi l l @ gmail.corn EXPERIENCED to your ad and readhelp them in some way. 541-81 5-1 371 Commercial ers on The Bulletin's This & Residential The Bulletin web site, www.bendservrngcentra oregon since $03 advertising tip Find It in bulletin.corn, will be brought toyou by Senior Discounts able to click through The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-390-1466 automatically to your The Bulletin 541-385-5809 ser ag cenwto~nsince res Same Day Response website. REMEMBER:If you have lost an animal,

The Bulletin

WWW.HTILEDU

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

The Bulletin

Current Oregon RN License Current BLS, ACLS, PALS, TNCC, NRP Required LDRP Experience Preferred One Year Mgmt Experience Preferred Min. Three Years Supervisory Experience Strong Communication, Interpersonal and Organizational Skills Excellent Benefit Package

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

604

Storage Rentals

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.

Nurse Manager Full-time Wallowa Memorial Hospital Located in Enterprise, OR

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 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn

Rmilism

Community/Sports Reporter

"""" J

L OST: REWARD f o r

corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Redmond Spokesman

I

Bend. 541-280-3659 cash, check, Visa, MC Straw for Sale. 541-420-3484, Bend FOUND: Set of Toyota Wheat Also, weaner pigs. keys at Summit ten541-546-6171 Ponderosa pine nis courts on 10/14. Call to ID. firewood split, 541-408-5590 Looking for your $160 or trade.

tact us ASAP so that

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on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please con-

Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily 1 & 2 Bedrooms Avail. NOW at StoneLodge. Call 541-460-5323

® IMIIIm

or

r-„-,;...;a L

1-877-877-9392.

CHECK YOUR AD

AptAIlultiplex NE Bend chris@crwc.info. Job opportunity c l o singLOCAL NfONEYrWe buy 27'x13.5', 14' overhead Copper Leaf Village secured trust deeds 8 New C o n struction, October 30th, 2015. door, thermostat note, some hard money t ownhouse style 2 heated, rec. 8 rest Call The Bulletin At loans. Call Pat Kellev room. GarajMahal on master suites or 3 541-382-3099 ext. 1 9. 54t -385-5809 Crusher Ave. in Bend. bdrm, 2.5 bath, gaPlace Your Ad Or E-Mail Annual rent neg. rage, some fireplaces People Look for Information Tenant pays utilities. and some wash ers/ About Products and 541-389-4111 dryers, spacious kitchen, extra storage, Services Every Daythrough 630 gas heat, patio, no The Bulletin ClessiBells Rooms for Rent pets. Call Plus Property Ma n agement chasing products or I BANK TURNED YOU Furnished room, no 541-389-2486. services from out of a DOWN? Private party smoking/drugs. $550/mo I the area. Sending will loan on real es- + dep. 541-408-0846 c ash, checks, o r tate equity. Credit no Look at: I credit i n f ormation problem, good equity Room rental/Bend. Nice Bendhomes.corn master bdrm, private I may be subjected to is all you need. Call full bath, $500 mo. + for Complete Listings of FRAUD. Oregon Land MortFor more informasec. dep/references. Area Real Estate for Sale gage 541-388-4200. 541-350-1281 tion about an adver541-447-8567

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m ent and how t o apply, visit our website at w ww.odocjobs.corn. For quest ions, call Eric at 877-888-5234, X41059.

AssistantProfessor LThe Bulletin Oregon State University E x t ension Looking for your next Service and the 4-H employee? Youth Development Place a Bulletin help Program is recruitFor newspaper ing for a f ull-time, wanted ad today and delivery, call the reach over 60,000 tenure-track, AssisCirculation Dept. at readers each week. t ant Professor i n 541-385-5800 Your classified ad Deschutes, Oregon. To place an ad, call will also appear on Salary is commen541-385-5809 306 bendbulletin.corn surate with educaor email Farm Equipment which currently claeeiiied@bendbulletimcom tion and experience. receives over 1.5 & Machinery To review posting million page views The Bulletin and a p ply, v i s it every month at Tractor - Kubota diesel, http: //oregonstate.ed no extra cost. w/front loader, 18HP, u /jobs. Apply t o Bulletin Classifieds 4WD, NOYY $4200! posting ¹ 16 0 8 6. Get Results! 541-385-4759 Closing: 11/1 0/2015. Call 385-5809 OSU is an + Peat Mixes or place 325 AA/EOE/Vets/Dis+ Juniper Ties your ad on-line at abled. Hay, Grain & Feed + Paver Discounts bendbulletin.corn + Sand + Gravel First Quality green grass + Bark I lnstantlandscaplng.corn I hay, no rain, barn stored, Nfedical $250/ton. Call 541-549-3831 MED SURG/EMERGENCY DEPT. Patterson Ranch, Sisters

return of apple iPad, p ossibly lost in N E Bend on Tues., 10/13. 541-876-2021

• •

full j ob announce-

Gardening Supplie • & E q uipment

Multi-cord discountsl

Daniel: on 10/4 I St Francis Service you sat behind me. Please call for

efits. T o v iew the

WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,

I I I I I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General'sI C o n sumer l SPQKESM/ ttN I Office Protection hotline at l I 1-877-877-9392. I

e ROW I N G

Quality o rchard/grass All Year Dependable • Lo s t & Found mix $225-$245 ton, Firewood: dry bales, between Lodgepole, split, del, FOUND motorized bi- small 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . cycle on east side of Bend Redmond, del. avai. 541-280-7781

Institution in Madras,

Oregon is seeking qualified applicants for Correctional Officer positions. Salary: $40,116.00 $57,432.00 annually, with excellent ben-

Sales Help Wanted: En e rgetic kiosk sales person ne e ded immediately for the Central Or e gon area. Secured locations, high commissions paid weekly! For more information, please c all H o ward a t 541-279-0982. You can a ls o e m a il tcoles©yourneighborhoodpublications.corn for more information.

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Get your business

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Correctional Officer T he Oregon D e partment of C orrections' D e e r Ridge Correctional

269

NOTICE TO WHEN BUYING ADVERTISER Since September 29, FIREWOOD... 1991, advertising for To avoid fraud, used woodstoves has The Bulletin been limited to modrecommends payels which have been ment for Firewood certified by the Or- only upon delivery egon Department of and inspection. Environmental Qual- • A cord is 128 cu. ft. ity (DEQ) and the fed4' x 4' x 8' eral E n v ironmental • Receipts should Protection A g e ncy include name, (EPA) as having met phone, price and smoke emission stanof wood dards. A cer t ified kind purchased. w oodstove may b e Firewood ads identified by its certifi- • MUST include cation label, which is species 8 cost per permanently attached cord to better serve to the stove. The Bulour customers. letin will not knowingly accept advertisThe Bulletin ing for the sale of senlnrr central oregon sincefaa uncertified woodstoves. •

Employment Opportunities

The Bulletin

CLASSIFIED TELEPHONE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ada running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Heating & Stoves

Employment Opportunities

97'I -673- 0764.

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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476

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads fo r p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra c aution when a pplying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division,

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday. • • • • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

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EXECUTIVE

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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.

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.

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



E4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCT 22, 2015

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD w'ii SIIprtz

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B Thursday, October 22,2015

Louie re-hits bottom

ACROSS 1 Almost a controlling interest S "More's the pity"

as the Buckeye Bullet 27 Pink elephant, e.g. 29 Exhibit extreme 10Spanish getaway exhaustion locale 30 Small, playful 14Second sort major figure 33 Subterranean in the Bible toiler alphabetically 34When many 15Clued in verge on 16TV tavern adolescence named after its 36 Duty on gasoline proprietor or tobacco 17Charles Lamb 39 Annual gala collection first usually held in published in September 1823 40 Lump in the 19Question throat persistently 41 Back 20 Dispel the doubts 42 Highway caution of 43 One-named 21 They' re never German singer free of charge who was a 23 New school? one-hit wonder 24 First letter in 44 Remote chance, "Thanatos" informally

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency U nlucky Louie had l ost i n h i s penny game again. " Every t im e I th i n k I ' v e h i t bottom," Louie told me, "there turns out to be an underground garage." Louie brings most of his bad luck on himself, o f c o urse. He p l ays w ithout thinking. W hen h e w a s declarer at four hearts, West led a low

spade. Louie captured East's king and started the trumps. West took the ace, cashed the jack of spades and exited with a trump. Louie then led the ace and a second club. When East had the K-J, Louie lost two clubs, went down one — and blamed his luck.

he rebids two hearts. What do you say? ANSWER: Your hand is worth at least 10 points — enough in theory to bid again to try for game — and parmer promises six or more cards in hearts. Still, yo u h ave secondary values, and no bid — 2NT with no club stopper or three hearts to aim t oward a 1 0 - t rick g a m e — i s a ttractive. Ta ke a sli gh t l y conservative view and pass. West dealer

Both sides venerable NORTH

485 9 1 0954 2 O AK 6 4Q 108

How would yon handle the play? SECOND TRUMP

WEST After L o ui e w i n s t h e s e cond trump, he digs for information. He ruffs his last spade in dummy, takes t he to p d i a monds an d r u f f s a diamond, dropping West's Q-J. Then West, who passed as dealer, is known to havehad the Q-J of spades and ace of hearts also, so he can't have the king of clubs. Louie should lead a low club to dummy's ten without cashing the ace. East takes the jack but is end-played.

DAILY QUESTION

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10/22/1 5


THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 648

Houses for Rent General

880

881

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

870

Redmond Homes

B o a ts & Accessories

Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help All real estate adver- wanted ad today and tising in this newspareach over 60,000 per is subject to the readers each week. F air H o using A c t Your classified ad which makes it illegal will also appear on to a d vertise "any ben dbulletin.corn preference, limitation which currently reor disc r imination ceives over based on race, color, 1.5 million page religion, sex, handiviews every month cap, familial status, at no extra cost. marital status or naBulletin Classifieds tional origin, or an inGet Results! tention to make any Call 385-5809 or such pre f erence, place your ad on-line limitation or discrimiat nation." Familial stabendbulletin.corn tus includes children under the age of 18 755 living with parents or legal cus t odians,Sunriver/La Pine Homes pregnant women, and people securing cus- 15323 Bear Street, La tody of children under Pine, $265,500. 3 18. This newspaper bdrm, 2 bath, 24x36 will not knowingly acinsulated shop. High cept any advertising Lakes Realty & Propfor real estate which is erty Management 541-536-0117 in violation of the law. O ur r e aders a r e 771 hereby informed that all dwellings adverLots tised in this newspaper are available on Yz Acre in Bend city an equal opportunity limits Flag lot in NE basis. To complain of area of newer homes. d iscrimination ca l l All underground utiliHUD t o l l-free at ties at street, view from 1-800-877-0246. The building site. Down- I toll f ree t e lephone town, outdoor recrenumber for the hear- ation, all necessities in ing i m p aired is minutes. $135 , 000 1-800-927-9275. Owner terms availI able 541-385-4790

4•

PUBLISHER' S NOTICE

$v 16' Seaswirl Tahoe with trailer, 50 HP Evinrude, bimini top, excellent condition. $3,500 541-647-1918

Fleetwood Southwind, F o rd, 3 2 ' , 1994, 82,000 miles, queen bed & sleeper sofa, TV, coo ktop, oven, m i crowave, refrigerator & freezer, trailer hitch equipped, new tires, just serviced. $9,800. 503-459-1580.

16' Smoker Craft Itasca 2003 31' Class C fishing boat, 50 HP MH. Great cond., 31K Yamaha ou t board miles, slider, $32,000. motor w/electric tilt & 541-508-9700 electric trolling motor w/remote control mounted on bow, walk through w i ndshield, exc. cond. $8,500. 541-233-6223 .Rm,v '.

17' SunCraft, 2 motors. $1,000.

r- - - - a 541-593-7257

I I

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Garage Sales Garage Sales

Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 654

Houses for Rent SE Bend

775

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Multiplexes for Sale

a handful of times & ~ has been in covered ~

[ storage.

:s.

®

: 0 3

BARON 2003 custom built on '03 vulcan chassis, 1600 V-twin, 4600 miles, custom paint, fenders, wheels, etc., comes with helmet,

g a~-

Desert Fox 21SW 2014 toy hauler in excellent condition, has al l f e a tures shown o n N o rthwood website, 4 season trailer, fuel s tation fo r AT V , non-smoker owned, n ever ha d AT V inside, u p g raded memory foam mattress, wheel bearings re- p acked. $31,000 406-396-1043 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

Monaco Iiilonarch 31 ' 2006, F ord V 10, 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides,

Redmond:

541-548-5254

The Bulletin

To Subscribe call queen bed & hide-a-bed sofa, 4k 541-385-5800 or go to gen, convection mi- www.bendbulletin.corn crowave, 2 TVs, tow package.

19' Classic 1 9 90 Mastercraft ski boat. PRICE REDUCTION! Pro-star 190 conven$59,000. tional in-board, cus541-815-6319 tom trailer, exc. cond. $8,995. 541-389-6562

FUN & FISH!

2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and many extras. Stored inside $1 9,900 541-350-5425

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

he Bulleti

ervivt Central Ore on since 1

875

windshield and more! Discounted for off-season. $8,495.

Comfortable duplex, full of character, near the heart o f P r i neville. 541-280-9404 AD¹1682 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.corn

541-520-3407

Ask ing[

541-548-5511

Kml &i@Ra ~v ®gg

738

2003 Sun Cruiser - pontoonI boat, fully equipped. I Has only been used I

List your Home JandMHomes.corn We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available.

$1950/4 Bdrm, 3 Bath, 2899 sq. ft. Larkspur Neighborhood 61617 850 K act L a ne, B e n d. Spacious Two Story Snowmobiles Home with stainless Steel appliances, Living Room, D i ning Room, office,Huge Den with vaulted ceiling, gas fireplace, air conditioning. central I:='u. heat, large f enced 4-place enclosed Interyard & triple car ga- state snowmobile trailer rage RV and Boat w/ RockyMountain pkg, parking. Great Value. $7500. 541-379-3530 One y ea r le a se. 860 P lease c al l 54 1 990-6899 for q ues- liilotorcycles & Accessories tions or viewing.

'$Qoo

18'

Lexington 2006 283TS class 8+ 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.

34' Winnebago One 2013 30RE. $23,000.Two slides. Fully loaded. Full photos and info sent upon request. Family illness requires sale. 541-923-2593

Watercraft

Unique R-Pod 2013 trailer-tent combo, f ully l oaded, e x tended service contract and bike rack. Pace A r row V i s ion $16,000. 541-595-3972 or 1997, Ford 460 engine w/Banks, solar, 503-780-4487 walk-around queen bed, 2 door fridge, miLooking for your cro-convection oven, WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, next employee? needs work, (photo Place a Bulletin help similar to actual rig) wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 $9,500. 541-280-0797 readers each week. Your classified ad RV will also appear on CONSIGNMENTS bendbulletin.corn WANTED which currently reWe Do The Work ... ceives over 1.5 milYou Keep The Cash! lion page views evOn-site credit ery month at no approval team, extra cost. Bulletin web site presence. Classifieds Get ReWe Take Trade-Ins! sults! Call 385-5809 or place your ad BIG COUNTRY RV on-line at Bend: 541-330-2495 ben dbulletin.corn

v ef

Redmond: 541-548-5254

882

Fifth Wheels

Cameo 32' LXI, '01, 3 slides, rear lounge, island kitchen, new tires, wheel pack, new batteries, Onan rear generator, cargo carry hitch, $18,500. 541-923-2595.

o

925

932

933

Utility Trailers

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

v

00

Ford F-150 1995, 4x4,

new tr a nsmission, new rear end, runs great, custom wheels & new tires. $2,000.

541-213-4211 Ford F150 2013 SuperCarry-On open car crew 4X4 Loaded! 30k Sunbeam Tiger 1966 hauler trailer. Used Very clean car. Al¹KE18501 $33,995 only three times to & Service ways garaged since AAA Ore. Auto Source haul my 1967 Carepaint 3 0 y e a rs West Empire & Hwy maro, and looks like 97, Bend. ago. Original 260 new. I had the front 541-598-3750 V-8 engine totally barrier made and inwww,aaaoregonautorebuilt 9,400 miles stalled and added source.corn D l r 0225 ago. Factory hard the tool box. It also top, good condition has a mounted new Need to get an soft top, many LAT spare tire. $3995 dealer sold options ad in ASAP? 1/3 interestin obo. 541-876-5375 so car is considered You can place it Columbia 400, OI' cell: "stock" at car shows. Financing available. 503-701-2256. online at: I have owned the car $125,000 f or 18 year s . www.bendbulletin.corn (located © Bend) Advertise your car! $ 70,000. Te l 5 4 1 541-288-3333 Add A Pfcture! 548 3458 541-385-5809 Reach thousands of readers! Call 541 -385-5809 Just bought a new boat? The Bulletin Ctassifieds Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our 931 Super Seller rates! Automotive Parts, 541-385-5809 1/5 share in very nice Service & Accessories 933 FordF250 Crew Cab 150 HP Cessna 150; Pickups 2002-2006 Caddy EsSuper Duty 201 2, 1973 Cessna 150 with calade hea d light, (exp. 10/31/1 5) Lycoming 0-320 150 good cond. $40/pair. Vin ¹C52424 hp engine conversion, 503-577-1695 Stock ¹83414 4000 hours. TT airframe. Approx. 400 4.2L 6 cyl. engine from $32,977 or $449/rn., $ 1000 down 84 mo hours o n 0- t i med Chevy T r ail4 .49% APR o n a p 0-320. Hanga red in 2001 blazer, complete with credit. License nice (electric door) computer, starter & Chevrolet 2500 HD, proved title included in city-owned hangar at alternator. A p p rox. 2003, 4x4, 8.1L, Alli- and payment, plus dealer inthe Bend Airport. One 15K mi., stored inside son trans., 99,650 mi, stalled options. of very few C-150's for many years, $800 LS, AC, all p ower, that has never been a obo. 541-617-0211 s u a A R Lj. cruise ctrl., $16,500, © t rainer. $4500 w i l l call 541-280-0707 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. consider trades for 4 P195/70/r14 Hank877-266-3821 whatever. Call Jim ook studded t i res, CA L L @@ Dlr ¹0354 Frazee, 541-410-6007 great cond., used 4 TODAY 5 months, $300 obo. GMC 2500 1990, 4x4, Check out the ChevyPickup 1978, 541-923-6303 long bed, overloads, long bed, 4x4, frame classifieds online oversized w h e els/ www.bendbuiietin.corn Goodyear t o p-of-the- up restoration. 500 tires, strong engine, Cadillac eng i ne, line all weather tires Updated daily reat f a r m tr u ck, T 255/60R19 10 8 H fresh R4 transmis2250. 541-548-7137 E agle RS-A $ 4 0 0 sion w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom GMC Pickup 1983 w/ 541-382-0421 interior and carpet, topper, 4 wheel drive, Jeep Wrangler JK 4 I 'Uns good, goo d n ew wheels a n d d oor M opar s i d e tires, You must see winter truck. $1,500 step/running board, it! $25 000 invested obo. 907-310-1877 1947 Stinson 108-2, $150. 541-480-0008 $12,000 OBO. engine has been gone 541-536-3889 or Find It in through, the m a gs SNOW T I RES (4) 541-420-6215. The Bulletin Classifiedsf h ave b ee n g o n e 205/60R15-910, rims through, new c arb, and 5-l ug hubcaps/ 541-385-5809 brakes rebuilt, new in- $200 541-317-0291 s trument panel & S tudded tires (4) o n gauges, new ELT, & rims 2 2 5/55R-17XL much more. Fresh Used on e s e ason annual. Signed offby Bend Ace mechanics, $385. 541-312-9312 Chevy Silverado Bend airport. $24,000. 932 2500HD 2002, 4x4 541-385-5662 Toyota Tacoma 2006, Antique & Crew cab, canopy, reg. cab, 4x4, 5 spd HANGAR FOR SALE. 85K original miles, Classic Autos standard 4 cyl engine, 30x40 end unit T LOADED! 2 2+ mpg, one s e hanger in Prineville. $16,250 OBO. nior owner, Dry walled, insulated, 541-647-0565 non-smoker, wel l and painted. $23,500. maintained, n e a rly Tom, 541.788.5546 new tires, o r iginal spare near new, runs excellent. $ 1 4 ,750. Jeep CJ5 4x41967, 541-633-9895 first year of the orig. Dauntless V-6, last year of the "All metal" Dodge Big Horn body! Engine overSuperhawk N7745G Ram 2500, 2005, 6 hauled: new brakes, Owners' Group LLC speed manual. Exfuel pump, steering Cessna 172/180 hp, tra tires and rims, full IFR, new avionics, gear box, battery, alcanopy goes with. ternator, emergency GTN 750, touchT OYOTA T A C O M A screen center stack, brake pads, gauges, Excellent condition, 4x4 1999 4 cyl., non well mai n tained, exceptionally clean. warn hubs, dual exsmoker, snow tires, runs great. 160K Healthy engine haust, 5 wide traction canopy, extra cab, miles. $2 8 ,500 reserve fund. tires, 5 new spoke, L ots of e x t ras, 2 541-620-1212 Hangared at KBDN. safes, 332,000 miles. chrome wheels. NO Oneshare $6000. 541-389-9115. rust, garage stored. available. $7,495 OBO! 935 Call 541-815-2144 (775) 513-0822 Sport Utility Vehicles 908 Aircraft, Parts

916

2013 7

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vv,

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

DodgeRam 3500 Ads published in "Wa 2008, tercraft" include: Kay 1997 Utility 53'x102" dry VIN ¹146871 ks, rafts and motor Southwind 33 ft. 1989 freight van. S liding $39,990 Mercedes 450 SL zed personal on Chevy chassis, axles, leaf s prings (exp. 10/31/1 5) waterc rafts. Fo 1979 Roadster, soft Toyota FJ40 64k mi., 454 motor, good tires, body & DLR ¹366 'boats" please se 8 hard tops, always Landcruiser 1977 s new front brake pads, swing doors in exc. lass 870. garaged, 122k mi., with winch, 6.5k Onan generator. SMOLICH cond., has no dings, new tires, shocks 541-385-5809 $18,000 $9000. 541-389-7669 745 road ready! $7500 and brakes, $7900. V O LV O H arley Road K i ng 541-389-7113, o bo. Sisters, O R . 541-548-5648 Homes for Sale Classic 2003, 100th 541-749-2156 Michelle Cameo LXf 20 01, 541-719-1217 Anniversary Edition, Serving Central Oregon since 1903 smolichvolvo.corn $550,000 Eagle Crest 16,360 mi., reduced 32 ft. 5th wheel, 2 880 slides, A/C, micro, w/Privacy. O r i ginal $9,999. 541-647-7078 Motorhomes owner, custom home, DVD, CD p l ayer, awaskai Vul c a n conv. and i n vert. 3255 sq. ft., 1 story in K Drifter 2005, 800cc, the trees, backs to reSunseeker 2500 T S New batteries, tires 1,150 mi., 1 owner, sort course ¹4, formal i n new cond., n o 2015 by Forest River and shocks. Quad living 8 dining rooms, carrier. Quad avail. triple slide Class C. chips or scratches, a t end o f g a t ed always stored inOBO. Purchased June $11,900 cul-de-sac. Dee 2015, used twice (wife 54'I -390-7179 s ide, $3,4 0 0 . Baker, Broker, 541-350-3886 Allegro 32' 2007, like became ill) F ULLY 5 41-977-7756. B o b CHECK YOUR AD new, only 12,600 miles. Loaded with Platinum Ahern, Broker, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Full Body paint, auto 541-420-3891 Windtransmission, dual ex- level system, Arctic ermere Central Orhaust. Loaded! Auto-lev- Pkg, rear camera, egon Real Estate eling system, 5kw gen, B luetooth. Also i n power mirrors w/defrost, cludes NEW Adco allNOTICE t 2 slide-outs with aw- weather coach cover. on the first day it runs All real estate advernings, rear c a mera, $74,900. Call Jim cell to make sure it is cortised here in is sub- Moto Guzzi Breva trailer hitch, driver door 209.401.7449 (can rect. "Spellcheck" and ject to th e F ederal 1 100 2007, o n l y w/power window, cruise, email addt'I photos) human errors do ocmiles . exhaust brake, central F air H ousing A c t , 1 1,600 Tow Dolly Roadmaster, cur. If this happens to which makes it illegal $5,500. vac, satellite sys. Read, please conto advertise any pref- 206-679-4745 duced price: $64,950. m odel 3 4 77 , li k e your tact us ASAP so that new-never erence, limitation or 503-781-8812 used, corrections and any discrimination based Sport 15 0 Ta o Tao electric breaks, magadjustments can be Alon race, color, reli- Scooter, 2014 netic lights w/wiring made to your ad. harness, professiongion, sex, handicap, most New , $ 9 9 5. 541 -385-5809 ally w ired. $ 1 450. familial status or na- 541-548-0345 The Bulletin Classified tional origin, or inten541-419-5151 tion to make any such Leredo 31'2006, preferences, l i mitaBeaver Contessa 40'5th wheel, fully S/C tions or discrimination. 2008, four slide dieWe will not knowingly one slide-out. sel pusher. Loaded, accept any advertisAwning. Like new, great condition. Waring for r eal e state hardly used. ranty. Pictures/info at which is in violation of V-Max 2009 Must sell $20,000 www.fourstarbend.corn Winnebago 22' this law. All persons Yamaha or refinance. Call 541-647-1236 2002 - $26,900 are hereby informed Lots of factory 541-410-5649 Chevy 360, that all dwellings adextras: windshield, Bounder, 1999, 3 4 ', heavy duty chassis, vertised are available saddlebags, back one slide, low milecab & roof A/C, on an equal opporturest, rear cargo age, very clean, lots RV tow hitch w/brake, nity basis. The Bullerack, bike cover, of storage, $28,500. CONSIGNMENTS 22k mi., more! tin Classified motorcycle hoist, 541-639-9411 WANTED 541-280-3251 alarm system, also We Do the Work, Columbus by Thor 30' 750 set of new tires. You Keep the Cash! m otorhome, 1 9 94, Redmond Homes $1 1,000 On-site credit Chevy 454, B anks 541-508-1554 Winnebago 1 955 C h e vy, c l a s s ic . R e a l approval team, p ower w / new e r New Redmond listing. Journey web site presence. transmission, w a lkH ome in a gr e a t beauty. Powerful engine. 15,000 We Take Trade-Ins! around queen bed, 2001 36' 2nd owner, neighborhood on quiet 300 Cummins Turbo 41K miles, full gas cul-de-sac..34 acre of BIG COUNTRY RV t ank! $ 9,500 o b o . diesel, Allison 5 spd, privacy, fruit t rees, 80k miles. D r iver Bend: 541-330-2495 541-598-6978 555-9999 sprinkler system and s ide s l ide, g a s Redmond: elevated for easterly stove, oven, 2 flat 541-548-5254 Just too many views. 3 bdrm, 2 bath Yamaha V Star 1100 screen TVs, refer, collectibles? offers large l i ving Classic, year 2004, generator, inverter, 885 room, vaulted ceiling, -Many extras. 17K King Dome, tow bar. large windows, new miles. Canopies & Campers Sell them in Non-smoker, no $4800 . tile a nd car p e t. 541-548-2109 pets, no c hildren. The Bulletin Classifieds K itchen ha s ne w C lean, an d w e l l 870 granite counters, tile maintained, $43,000 backsplash, new GE Boats & Accessories 541-385-5809 541-390-1472. appliances in s l ate color. Master bdrm 14' 2006 Tracker fishseparation, real wood ing boat, 15hp motor, 881 www.bendbulletin.corn baseboard trim, heat nice trailer. Like new. Travel Trailers Northlander 1993 pump/AC. 450 sq. ft. $4999. 541-719-0050 17' camper, Polar add'I to utilize as you 990, good shape, wish. Double garage, 14' aluminum boat w/ new fridge, A/C, — lfi'v lots of parking, stor- trailer. Trailer has 2 Fleetwood D i scovery queen bed, bathjv vvr age building. Prop- brand new tires & 40' 2003, diesel, w/all room, indoor/outI erty fenced. Agent wheels. Trailer in exc. options - 3 slide outs, door shower, lots of owned. $239,900 cond., guaranteed no satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, storage, customHeather Hockett, leaks. 2 upholstered etc., 34,000 miles. 19' Ampex. 2011. Slide ized to fit newer Principal Broker swivel seats, no mo- Wintered in h eated out and other extras. pickups,$4500 obo. 541-420-9151 Gold tor. $2,900. shop. $78,995 obo. Tows well $12,500. 541-419-9859. Country Realty 541-410-4066 541-447-8664 541.316.1367

I'

The Bulletin

. Per eet Fi~t~

miles. Always garaged. $4,000.

assi ie s

To advertise, call 385-5809


E6 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22 2015 • THE BULLETIN 935

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

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

975

Auto m obiles

975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

975

Automobiles PRIUS

Ford Escape AI/I/D 2012,

Volvo XC60 2014, VIN ¹556164

Vin ¹B18831 Stock ¹45590A

$33,997 /exp. 10/31/1 5) DLR ¹366

(exp. 10/31/2015)

BMW Z3 R o adsterFord Fusion SEL2012, 1 997, $4500. C a ll (exp. 10/31/1 5) 541-548-0345 to see. Vin ¹117015 Stock ¹44382A

$14,979 or $199/mo.,

975

Kia Soul 2013, (exp. 10/31/2015) Vin ¹768357 Stock ¹45202A1 $12,979 or $215/mo., $1000 down, 66 mo., 4.49% APR on app roved credit. L i cense and title included in p ayment, plus dealer installed options.

C3

Automobiles

2014

w/12,000 miles, assume lease with 20 months remaining at $240 mo., 50+ mpg. $3000. Call L a r ry 541.728.1775 e mail Toyota Camry Hybrid 2007, 1 51 k m i l es, Imbatstar© aol.corn one owner, garaged, cruise, non-smoker, Want to impress the fully lo a ded, all relatives? Remodel r ecords, $850 0 . 541-350-9806 your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

have an interest in the LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E C I R CUIT seized property. Your COURT O F THE deadline for filing the proved credit. License V OL V O claim document with STATE OF OREGON and title included in 541-749-2156 cou n sel FOR THE COUNTY forfeiture payment, plus dealer insmolichvolvo.corn OF DES C HUTES named below is 21 stalled options. BNVV Z4 3.1 days from the last day NATIONSTAR Convertible2003, 940 S UBA RU MORTGAGE LLC dba of publication of this SUSARUOP3lMD.ODM VIN ¹U06112 S UBA R U Vans C HAMPION M O R T - notice. Where to file a $9,977 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Suaaau GAGE COMPANY, a claim and for more (exp. 10/31/1 5) 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Toyota Corolla S D a i na limited liability com- i nformation: 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. DLR ¹366 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 2007, 93 k m i l es, pany, Plaintiff, vs. ALL Vitolins, Crook County 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 SMOLICH automatic, s i l ver. District Attorney OfUNKNOWN H E IRS Dlr ¹0354 N ew brakes a n d AND DEVISEES OF fice, 300 N E T hird Need to get an ad V OL V O battery. Super clean, JAMES H. MURRAY, Street, Prineville, OR 541-749-2156 in ASAP? no smoking. Cruise a deceased individual; 97754. smolichvolvo.corn REDUCED! Ford Windstar 2001, control, CD player, M ARIAN E . MU R - Notice of reasons for Toyota Avalon wheel chair ramp plus c loth s eats, A C . RAY, an i ndividual; Forfeiture: The propFax It te 541-322-7253 Lmtd 2007 Jazzy chair, 6 cyl., Price: $6500. Call Julian Castro, solely erty described below V-6 4dr. only 54k mi, 23K mi., g a raged. 541-480-2700 to in his capacity as Sec- was seized for forfeiThe Bulletin Classifieds Lexus ES350 2010, New Everything: $11K. 541-548-3172 view. NO T E XTS retary fo r U N ITED ture because it: (1) F ord Explorer X LT brakes, battery, Excellent Condition PLEASE! STATES D E PART- Constitutes the pro1991 r eliable w e l l 975 Michelin tires/rims, 32,000 miles, $20,000 ceeds of the violation pattym51 © q.corn MENT OF HOUSING cared for, clean, nonshow room condiAutomobiles 214-549-3627 (in A ND U R BAN D E - of, solicitation to viosmoking, incl. 4 studBuick Lucerne 2008 tion, local car, all Bend) Very clean 6 cylinder, VELOPMENT; DOES late, attempt to vioded winter tires, new services, too! Noth1 through 10, inclu- late, or conspiracy to H D b attery, 1 9 0 k auto., leather interior, Find exactly what Mercedes Benz 560-SL ing to do to car. Just violates, the criminal 87k mi. $6950 Will miles, 20k towed beyou are looking for in the sive, and ROE S 1 1988, white, 74K mi., drive! GPS/AC and through 10, inclusive. laws of the State of hind moto r home consider part trade. $10,100 541-350-6057 heated seats, etc. CLASSIFIEDS Ford Taurus 2007 88k Call or text Ron at D efendants. C A S E Oregon regarding the $1500 obo Message Too much to list! miles, 4 studded tires 541-419-5060 NO.: 15C V 2 1966 manufacture, distribu541-241-4896. Was $17,459, included w/ri m s. SUMMONS for PUB- tion, or possession of now $15,950. $5300. 541-416-9566 Toyota Corolla 2008, L ICATION To: A L L controlled substances In Bend VIN ¹013663 (ORS C hapter475); UNKNOWN H E IRS (928) 210-8323 $8988 AND DEVISEES OF and/or (2) Was used (exp10/31ff/1 5) JAMES H. MURRAY or intended for use in DLR ¹366 lI/fercedes Benz E 17081 Faun Lane La committing or faciliVW Jetta 1999, 187K Pine, OR 97739 THE tating the violation of, Class 2005, mi., 1 7 " whe e ls, STATE OF OREGON solicitation to violate, Jeep Grand CheroCadillac CTS 2010, (exp. 10/31/1 5) R aceland Ult i m o TO T H E DE F E N- attempt to violate, or kee Loredo 2007 4x4, V 6 I n j ection, 6 Vin ¹688743 Honda Accord 2005, Stock ¹82316 coilovers, K enwood DANT/RESPONconspiracy to violate Maroon with gray inteSpeed A utomatic. ~~a V6, fully l o aded, $10,979 or $155/mo., stereo. New radiator D ENT(S) rior, 118k, 6 cyl 3.7L, Luxury series. ExteABO V E the criminal laws of Nav, Moon roof, CD, $1500 down, 72 mo., Scion TCcoupe 2007, hoses, motor mount N AMED: You a r e the State of Oregon auto, cruise, A / C, rior: Black Raven, 541-548-1448 perfect leather inte4 .49% APR o n a p and new CV a xle. hereby directed and Interior: Light Titaregarding the manupower, excellent cond, (exp. 10/31/1 5) smolichusedcar rior, one owner, full proved credit. License $2500. 541-420-2016 required to appear in, facture, distribution or Goodyear D u ratrac nium/Ebony. 22,555 Vin ¹198120 center.corn maintained, always and title included in or 541-279-8013 t ires. $9,00 0 . miles. 4 door. Expossession of conStock ¹44193B and defend against, garaged, never payment, plus dealer in785-231-0990, Local. s u b stances cellent condition all this legal action within trolled $10,379 or $149/mo., wrecked, 143K road stalled options. around. Has A r i- miles, $7,999. Great $2800 down, 60 mo., 30 days after the first (ORS Chapter 475). Looking for your 4 .49% APR c n ap Lexus RX350 2013 zona plates. This is date of publication of ® s u a aau car ready to drive. next employee? proved credit. License AWD, 31,821 mi. car is a great mix of IN THE MATTER OF: summons, which is Mike 541-499-5970 Place a Bulletin help and title included in ¹198432 $37,495 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. luxury, com f ort, the 15th day of Octowanted ad today and payment, plus dealer in877-266-3821 AAA Ore. Auto Source style, and workman(1) $1,586.00 in US ber, 2015, and destalled options. reach over 60,000 corner of West Empire Chevy impala 2007, Dlr ¹0354 ship. $24,000 fend the above en- Currency, Case No. readers each week. & Hwy 97, Bend. Dlr Call 541-408-3051 V IN ¹334268 t itled action i n t h e 15-00268897, seized Suaaau Your classified ad SAUS R U O P S E H D .OtM 0225 541-598-3750 above entitled court, September 22, 2015 $6,988. will also appear on 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. www.aaaoregonauto(exp. 10/31/1 5) and answer the com- from Francisco Antobendbulletin.corn 877-266-3821 source.corn. plaint of the plaintiff nio Echavarria. DLR ¹366 which currently reDlr ¹0354 NATIONSTAR Hyundai Santa Fe GLS ceives over 1.5 milMORTGAGE LLC dba The Bulletin's 2012, lion page views Call a Pro Champion mortgage "Call A Service (exp. 10/31/2015) every month at Mercedes-Benz company, and serve a Whether you need a Vin ¹151185 no extra cost. BulleProfessional" Directory SLK230 2003, copy of your answer fence fixed, hedges Stock ¹45197A tin Classifieds is all about meeting exc. cond., auto, upon the undersigned Chevy Ei Camino $15,979 or $199/mo., 541-548-1448 Get Results! Call convertible retractyour needs. attorneys for plaintiff, trimmed or a house 1987, Classic! $1900 down, 84 mc., smolichusedcar 385-5809 or place able hard top. LAW OFFICES OF Small Block 327 4 .49% APR o n a p built, you' ll find center.corn Subaru impreza 2013, your ad on-line at Call on one of the 54,250 miles, carfax LES ZIEVE, at their proved credit. License Modified engine. (exp. 10/31/1 5) bendbullefin.corn professional help in available.$13,000. professionals today! office below stated; and title included in Large duration roller Vin ¹027174 541-389-7571 payment, plus dealer inand in case of your The Bulletin's "Call a Cam. Edlebrock Stock ¹83205 stalled options. failure so to do, judg- Service Professional" Alum Heads and $19,965 or $249/mo., I The Bulletin recoml ment will be rendered N issan R o u e more. $8,000 S UBA R U . $1300 down, 84 mo., Directory mends extra caution I against you accord[ 2011 VERY cean [ Runs Great! 4 49% APR c n ap 541-385-5809 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. when p u rchasing ~ ing to the demand of 30+ mpg hwy (25+ 541-977-2830 proved credit. License 877-266-3821 the complaint, which I in town). Runs great! I Toyota Corolla 2013, and title i ncluded in f products or services Dlr ¹0354 (exp. 10/31/1 5) has been filed with the payment, plus dealer from out of the area. [ AWD, white w/black LEGAL NOTICE Vin ¹053527 f S ending c ash , clerk of said court. interior, air, cruise, installed options. What are you '70 Nissan350Z I mpala E 4 0 0, Wilmington Savings checks, or credit ing Stock ¹83072 This is a Complaint for [ tilt, single CD, rear '76 $2,500. Nova, Convertible 2005, formation may be I Judicial Foreclosure Fund Society, FSB, looking for? defrost, factory win- $15,979 or $199 mo., $1,800. '03 Honda VIN ¹752136 $2000 down, 84 mo., J subject to FRAUD. of Deed of Trust. You doing business as ( dowtint, powerlocks You' ll find it in 700cc MC, $ 2 000. $14,988 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. For more informa- must "appear" in this Christiana Trust, not & windows. N e w 4 .49% APR c n ap 541-410-5349 (exp. 10/31/1 5) 877-266-3821 its individual capacToyo AT tires (less I proved credit. License The Bulletin Classifieds l tion about an advercase or the other side in DLR ¹366 and title included in Dlr ¹0354 than 6k miles and tiser, you may call will win automatically. ity but solely as Legal payment, plus dealer inT itle T r ustee f o r I the Oregon State To "appear" you must ~ siped). New AGM ~ stalled options. b attery. Alw a y s Attorney General's f file with the court a le- Bronze Creek Title 541-385-5809 Trust 201 4 -NPL1, ~ maintained. G reat ~ Office C o nsumer I gal paper called a Suaaau [ commuter - winter "motion" or "answer." Plaintiff/s, v. Blaise W. f Protection hotline at driver. $1 3 , 500 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 1-877-877-9392. The "motion" or "an- Butcher; Ashley D. 541-548-1448 I OBO Call or text I 877-266-3821 swer" must be given Butcher; State of OrKia Soul2013, gon; State of O r smolichusedcar Dlr ¹0354 V IN ¹767481 to the court clerk or e Subaru Legacy Serving Central Oregon since 1%8 center.corn administrator w i thin egon by and through $1 1,988 LL Bean 2006, its of Jus(exp. 10/31/1 5) 30 days along with the ticeDepartment (exp. 10/31/1 5) Division of Child Dodge Challenger required filing fee. It DLR ¹366 Vin ¹203053 Have an item to and all other 2011, 28K mi. must be i n p r oper Support; Stock ¹82770 ~yNQp VIN ¹503833 form and have proof Persons or P a rties sell quick? $16,977 or $199/mo., clai ming any $19,998 o f service o n t h e unknown $2600 down, 84 mo. at If it's under title, lien, or in(exp. 10/31/1 5) plaintiff's attorney or, tright, 4 .49% APR o n a p Audi A4 Quaftro 2010, erest in t h e R e a l DLR ¹366 if the plaintiff does not Property credit. License '500you can place it in NissanRogue 2014 VIN ¹017492 c ommonly Porsche Bo x ster proved have an a t t orney, and title included in VIN ¹799777 541-548-1448 The Bulletin $19,497 known as 904 North2008, exc. c ond., proof of service on the payment, plus dealer +~ 0~ /exp. 10/31/1 5) smolichusedcar 8th Street, Bend, $20,997 less than 18K mi., Classifieds for: installed options. plaintiff. If you have east DLR ¹366 center.corn (exp. 10/31/1 5) OR 97701, D efenblack/black, s p ort any questions, y ou ~ DLR ¹366 SuaWau S IVIOI IC H pkg., stored in winshould see an attor- d ant/s. Case N o . : FIND IT! '1 3 -3 lines, 7 days 898lRUOMHHO.CO M 14CV0874FC. SMOLICH t er. $25,0 0 0 . 2060 NE Hwy ney immediately. If BUY lT! V Q LV Q 541-548-1448 20, Bend. '20 3 lines, 14 days NOTICE 224-558-1887, y ou need help i n AMENDED V OL V O 877-266-3821 541-749-2156 smolichusedcar SELL ITl Bend. (Private Party ads only) finding an attorney, OF SALE U N DER Dlr¹0354 541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.corn center.corn The Bulletin Classifieds OF E X ECUyou may contact the WRIT smolichvolvo.corn - REAL PROPOregon State Bar's TION ERTY. This Amended Lawyer Referral SerN otice of S ale r e vice onl i n e at www.oregon statebar. places the o r iginal org or by calling (503) Notice for al l p u re s t ab684-3763 in the Port- poses an d land met r opolitan lishes a n e w s a le area. DATED: Sep- date. Notice is hereby Toyota FJ Cruiser tember 24, 2015 LAW given that the Des2012, 64K miles. all Count y O FFICES OF L E S c hutes hwy, original owner, ZIEVE By: /s/ Ben- Sheriff's Office will, on never been off road jamin D . Pe t i prin Thursday, November or accidents, tow 19, 2015 at 10:00 AM, Ben)amain D. Petipnn, in pkg, brand new tires, the main lobby of OSB No. 136031 Atvery clean. $26,000. torneys for P l aintiff the Deschutes County Call or text Jeff at Sheriff 's Office,63333 NATIONSTAR 541-729-4552 MORTGAGE LLC dba W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public CHAMPION M O R TG AGE CO M P A N Y o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r A-4545931 cash o r ca s hier' s 10/1 5/201 5, check, the real prop10/22/2015, erty commonly known 10/29/2015, as 904 NE 8th Street, 11/05/2015 Bend, Oregon 97701. Toyota Highlander Conditions of S a le: Ltd 2005, all-wheel Potential bidders must drive, V-6, third row Where can you find a arrive 15 minutes prior seat, only 59,900 to the auction to allow helping hand? miles! very c lean, the Deschutes County From contractors to excellent condition. Sheriff's Office to reone owner, navigayard care, it's all here view bidder's funds. tion system, DVD Only U.S. currency in The Bulletin's entertainment sysand/or cashier' s "Call A Service tem, premium audio checks made payable system, su n roof, Professional" Directory to Deschutes County h eated leat h er Sheriff's Office will be seats, pre m i um accepted. P ayment wheels plus studmust be made in full LEGAL NOTICE ded snow tires on immediately upon the NOTICE OF SEIZURE separate rims, towclose of the sale. For FOR CIVIL ing package, new more information on FORFEITURE TO ALL f ront brakes a n d this s al e g o to: POTENTIAL struts, $14 ,500, http: //oregonsheriffCLAIMANTS AND TO 541-330-1520 ssale.org/ ALL UNKNOWN UPRIGHT PlANO PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY FIND YOUR FUTURE FIND YOUR FUTURE Oak piano in great HOME INTHE BULLETIN If you have any inter- HOME INTHE BULLETIN shape. Just tuned, has est i n t h e s e i zed Your future is just apage Your future is just apage a few scratches on lid. property d e s cribedaway. Whetheryou're looking away. Whetheryou're looking below, you must claim for a hat cr a place tc hangit, for a hat cr a place tc hangit, BenCh not inCluded. that interest or you will The Bulletin Classified is Item Priced at: Your Total Ad Cost onl The Bulletin Classified is Moving forces sale! automatically lose that your best source. your best source. interest. If you do not • $499 and under $39 Every daythousandscf Every daythcusandscf file a claim for the buyers andsellers cf goods >650 08~ • $500 to $999 $49 property, the property buyers andsellers cf goods and services dcbusinessin may be forfeited even and services dcbusiness in 541-000-000 these pages.Theyknow these pages.Theyknow • $1000 to $2499 if you are not con$59 ycu can't beatThe Bulletin victed of any crime. ycu can't beatTheBulletin Classified Section for • $2500 and over Classified Section for $69 To claim an interest, selection andconvenience you must file a written selection andconvenience - every item isjust a phone claim with the forfei- -every item isjust a phone call away. call away. Includes up to 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline, and price. ture counsel named below, The w r itten The Classified Section is The Classified Section is 3 items per ad maximum. claim must be signed easy tc use.Everyitem easy tc use.Every item by you, sworn to un- is categorizedandevery is categorizedandevery der penalty of perjury cartegcry is indexed cnthe • The Bulletin •The Central Oregon Nickel Ads cartegcry is indexed cnthe before a notary public, section's front page. section's front page. • Central OregOn NlalketPlaCe • bendbulletin.COm and state: (a) Your Whether ycu arelookingfor true name; (b) The Whether ycu arelookingfor a home crneeda service, address at which you a home crneed aservice, your future is inthe pagescf will a c cept f u ture your future is inthepagescf The Bulletin Classified. m ailings f ro m t h e The Bulletin Classified. court and f orfeiture *Private party merchandiseonly - excludes pets & livestock, autos, RVs,motcrcycles, boats, airplanes, andgarage sale categories. counsel; and (3) A The Bulletin The Bulletin ServingCental Oregon s>met9D3 SergCentralOregonsince N statement that y ou

$15,999 or $199/mo.,

$2500 down, 72 mc., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment, plus dealer installed options.

SMOLICH

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54 I-385-5809


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