Bulletin Daily Paper 10-25-15

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Serving Central Oregon since 1903$2

SUNDAY October 25,2015

COMMENTARY D1 TEAM Q8tAD5

'50 IN COUPONS INSIDE

IN BUSINESS : A COLLABORATIVESPACEFORBEND'S OUTDOORCOMPANIES, E1

bendbulletin.corn TODAY' S READERBOARD

FRAMING THE GAS TAX DEBATE

Passwordpoetry —The

Oregon's tax system and Bend's roadwork

passwords we havenow, mixing letters and symbols, are easy to forget. But a few rhyming words aren't — and they'd be more secure.A3

Bush 41 —The former president and father of cans

dldate Jeb Bush l

frustrated by this election cycle — anddeeply engaged with it.Al

e

backlog By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

TraVel —How to makethe most of your credit card rewards points.C3

It's not much of an over-

statement to say no one understands Oregon's tax

Sunday reader —Cycleof

system. Oftendescribed asByz-

poverty in the DeepSouth. F1

antine, the state's rules

have capped local property

, Ei<t

taxes at vastly

And a Wed exclusive-

GrePdiC differentrates

Extremeadventure: 1950s film shows beavers parachuting into Idaho backcountry. bearibelletia.cern/extras

on A4

,p$ r.' k'.,"-,.r44RA~;:. IQ.

"'"ll.'tt: Il.'i't~'.ijbti~4'4 Gary Lewis/The Bulletin file photo

By Dylan J. DarlingeThe Bulletin

Hunting and fishing license costs in Oregon

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Giving up on God, but not

on ghosts By Andrew Higgins New York Times News Service

MOSS, Norway — Like

many Europeans, Marianne Haaland Bogdanoff, a travel agency manager in this southern Norwe-

gian town, does not go to church, except maybe at

Christmas, and is doubtful about the existence of God. But when "weird

things" — inexplicable

are steadily going up, starting next year and continuing every other year until 2020. An annual hunting licenseforan Oregon resident, which costs $29.50 this year, will increase to

$32 next year, $33.50 in 2018 and $34.50 in 2020. An annual state resident fishing

ing to Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Service data. Since 2004 the cost of annual hunting and fishing licenses for residents has increased every six years, said Aaron Jenkins, econo-

license, which costs $33 this mist with the agency in Sayear, will cost $38 next year, lem. Gov. Kate Brown this $41 in 2018 and $44 in 2020. summer signed a bill setting Increases in the license thegradualpriceincreases, costs are not new, but the he said. "We would like the fees to frequency of the price bumps and the smaller size edge up slowly rather than of the increases are, accord- have a big jump," Jenkins

said. "People don't like big jumps in prices."

Numbers from 2013 showed a drop to8.3 percent of Or-

Compared with Califor-

nia, where resident hunting and fishing licenses cost $47.01 apiece, Oregon's prices seems smalL But in contrast, a combined resident hunting and fishing license in Idaho costs $33.50. Since the late 1970s, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has seen a decline in the percentage of Oregon resident hunting and fishing license sales. Forty years ago, in 1975, 18.9 percent of Oregon's 1.7 million residents age 12 to 69 bought a hunting license

egon's 2.9 million residents age 12 to 69 who purchased a hunting license and 17.4

million residents age 14 to 69 had a fishing license.

KC Thrasher, president of

the Redmond chapter of the Oregon Hunters Association, said he started hunting

$40 --.

$30

(Does not include cost of a deer tag, which will be $26.50)

$35--$30--$25---

$20"---

License in2016:S38 (Does not include cost of an adult combined tag, which will be $35)

$20 --. $15 --.

$15"--$10"-"

$10$5-

$5-

electricians and a plumber 199 5

2000

2005

2010

2015

-

"I don't know what she

did," Bogdanoff said. "It was very strange," she added, recalling how the clairvoyant "cleansed" her travel office of a ghostlike

-

1985

presence neither she nor

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

201 5

Pete Smith I The Bulletin

her staff had seen but whose existence they had all felt and come to fear. See Ghosts /A5

No easy prescription for rising drugcosts Kaiser Health News

When Turing Pharmaceuticals raised the price

of an older generic drug by more than 5,000 percent last month, themove sparked a

public outcry. How, critics wondered, could a company charge $13.50 a pill for a

Correction

treatment for a parasitic in-

In a story headlined "Finding funds to maketheworld a classroom," which appeared Saturday, Oct. 24, onPageA1, the date for an upcoming Oregon OutdoorEducationCoalition fundraiser was incorrect. It is on Tuesday,Oct. 27. The Bulletin regrets the error.

next?

fection one day and $750 the The criticism led 'luring's

unapologetic CEO to say he' d and Medicaid, pricesare pare back the increasegenerally shaped by what the although no new price has market will bear. yet been named — and the A jump in the number of New York attorney general new expensive drugs hitting has launched an antitrust the market — along with investigation. moves by drugmakers like The outcry has again foTuring to raise the price on cused attention on how drug older and generic drugsprices are set in the United have helped make prescripStates. tion drugs the fastest-growAside from some limited ing segment of the nation's government control in the health care tab. veterans health care system Prescription drugs account

TODAY'S WEATHER ty

b

A shower High 56, Low 36 Page B6

for about 10 percent of all health care spending. Two ideas for curbing that spending surface every time a price spike renews interest in drug costs: Letting consumers buy

products from other countries with lower prices set by government controls, and

allowing Medicare administrators to negotiate drug

prices, from which they are currently barred. See Prescription /A4

INDEX Books Business Calendar

Officials: too many school tests By Kate Zernike

Source: Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife

By Julie Appleby

ey,'" said Councilor Sally Russell. "Of course, when you really look at the city' s finances, you realize that' s not the case."

New York Times News Service

-

with the dead. The head-

aches and other problems all vanished.

my God, we' re growing,

SeeTax /A4

License in2016: $32

1990

bring, is one solution a majority of the City Council has suggested. "People in the community ask why we can't be we must have all this mon-

Prices for annual resident hunting and fishing licenses haverisen for decadesand areset to go up again at the start of next year. While the state has seenthe percentage of the population in Oregon that buys hunting and fishing licenses drop, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said people give reasons other than cost whenasked why they havestopped going out to hunt or fish. Hunting group leaders say the cost is a bigger factor than polls show.

1 985

the new revenue it would

rise, and he's 33 now. "There

$35

all failed to find the cause of her office's troubles, she finally got help from a clairvoyant who claimed powers to communicate

which they contend are adequately funded, but just barely. A gas tax, and

better as a city, that, 'oh

strange smells and noises and complaints from

After computer experts,

cuts to emergency services,

when he was 13. Ever since, he has seen license costs

ANNUAL COST OFA RESIDENT FISHING LICENSE

beyond the here and now.

a number of city leaders argue it's impossible to keep crumbling without making

The risingcostsof huntinganii fishing

$25

has to start with property taxes. Bend's tax rate is one of the lowest in the state, and the street system from

ANNUAL COST OFA RESIDENT HUNTING LICENSE

headaches — started happening at the ground-floor travel office, she slowly began to put aside her deep skepticism about life

debate in Bend over whether to institute a gas tax, one

million residents age 14 to 69 who bought fishing licenses. Some hunters and anglers say the drop in the percentages could be linked to the rising license costs.

computer breakdowns, staff members of constant

cities. But to understand a

percent of the state's 2.8

has been quite the increase," he said. See Licenses /A5

and 34.6 percent of the 1.6

eve n across very similar

F4, F6 Classified G 1 - 6 L ocal/State B 1-6 Puzzles C6 D1-6 E1 - 6 Community Life C1-8 Obituaries B 4 - 5 Sports B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Opinion F1-6 T V/Movies C7

The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 113, No. 29B,

4e pages, 7 sections

Faced with mounting and bipartisan opposition to increased and often high-stakes testing in the nation's public schools, the Obama administration

declared Saturday that the push had gone too far, acknowledged its own role in the proliferation of tests, and urged schools to step back and make exams less onerous and more

purposeful. Specifically, the administration called for

a cap on assessment so that no child would spend more than 2 percent of classroom instruction

time taking tests. It called on Congress to "reduce

over-testing" as it reauthorizes the federal legislation governing the nation's public elementary and secondary schools. See Tests /A7

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A2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

The

NATION Ee ORLD

Bulletin How to reachUs

JeruSalem viOlenCe — Looking to reducetensions at aJerusalem holy site that set off weeks of Mideast violence, U.S.Secretary of State John Kerry announcedSaturday that Israel and Jordan had agreed on steps, including round-the-clock video monitoring, to bring an end to the unrest. But the announcement contained fewdetails on how the monitoring system would work, and it was not immediately clear whether it would beenough to calm the unrest that has raised fears that the region is on the brink of a new round of heavy fighting. Late Saturday, Israel said it welcomed "increased coordination" with the Jordanians. Therewas no immediate Palestinian reaction.

emo

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BangladeSh dOmdilIg — Threebombs explodedearly Saturday during a giant procession inDhaka,Bangladesh, commemorating the Shiite Muslim holiday ofAshura, killing one person, wounding dozens more andunsettling a country that haslittle history of sectarian tension. For weeks,Dhaka,the Bangladeshi capital, has beenonedge over reports of unusualterrorist threats. After two foreigners wereshot several weeks ago,someembassies warnedtheir citizens against walking outside or attending largegatherings. Saturday's bombings werethe first time Shiite Muslims hadbeentargeted in Bangladesh, officials said.

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Bystanders help the injured after a vehicle crashed into a crowd of spectators Saturday during the Oklahoma State University homecoming parade in Stillwater, Oklahoma.

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officials said. The scene unfolded around 10:30 a.m. at an intersection

STILLWATER, Okla. — The

two blocks from the stadium

crowd was thick. The music was upbeat. The energy was at fever pitch. This was Oklahoma State University's home-

where, hours later, Oklahoma State defeated the University

comlIlg parade.

had been flown from Stillwater Medical Center, and two

were in critical condition, the hospital said. Shyla Eggers, a spokeswoman for the Stillwater hospital, said the facility had

of Kansas in the homecoming received 43 patients from the football game. The driver of crash who ranged in age from a Hyundai Elantra struck an 1 to 66. Three were admitted unmanned police motorcyde Saturday, and one was taken

As it does here every year, the parade on Saturday, called before running into the crowd, the Sea of Orange, wound up Capt. Kyle Gibbs of the Stillwaa mile-long stretch from West ter Police Department said. Ninth Avenue to West Hall of Eight people were in critical Fame Avenue, as thousands of condition, including seven who spectators — some of them chil- had been airlifted to hospitals, dren being pushed in strollers, city officials said. Nine people and nearly all of them dressed were seriously injured, and in orange — gathered down- 17 others were described as town and packedonto Main "walking wounded." Street to watch the penultimate But hospitals continued to eventofhomecoming weekend. report receiving more patients. old boy died atOU But the occasion sudden- The 2-yearly turned tragic when a car Medical Center in Oklahoma plowed into the crowd near the City, where hospital officials end of the parade, killing four said four children and three people, induding a 2-year-old adults were being treated boy, and injuring at least 49, Saturday. law enforcement and hospital

to St. John Medical Center in

LOuiSiana gOVernOrVOte —Republican U.S. Sen.David Vitter survived challengesSaturday from two GOPrivals who called his years-old prostitution scandal a stain on Louisiana, reaching a runoff against Democratic state Rep. John BelEdwards in the governor' s race. The Nov. 21runoff will decide who follows Republican presidential hopeful Gov. BobbyJindal into office, the winner inheriting leadership of a state mired in financial problems that both candidates blame on the term-limited governor. Jindal is nowwaging a long-shot campaign for the presidential nomination. While Edwards always seemed assured of a runoff spot, Vitter bested two other major Republicans to secure his position on the Novemberballot, eclipsing Public Service Commissioner Scott Angelic and Lt. Gov.Jay Dardenne. Argentina eleCtiOn —Her party's candidate is widely seen as the front-runner. One ofher closest aides is his running mate. Her son and her economy minister are running for Congress, too. And if they don't win, a newlaw prevents whoever replaces her from undoing one of her signature economic policies. Argentines go to the polls today to pick their next president, officially marking the end of an era. For the past12 years, the presidency hasbeenshared by one couple — Cristina Fernandezand her late husband, Nestor Kirchner.

Tulsa. Officials at Perry Memorial Hospital said it had received two patients with minor

injuries. Officials did not identify the

people killed Saturday. But the University of Central Oklahoma said that one was Nikita Nakal, an MBA student from Mumbai, India. The driver, identified as Ad-

EU migIalItS —A day before a Europeansummit on the migrant crisis, Slovenia's president demandedimmediate action from the EU and tempers flared at oneovercrowded refugee center asthousands more asylum-seekers poured into the tiny Alpine nation. European nations havebeencriticized for being slow to react as hundreds of thousands of people seeking safety pour in through Greece and Italy. But a draft plan submitted to the countries coming to today's summit in Brussels, sent by EuropeanCommission President JeanClaude Juncker, was already drawing strong opposition. — Fromwirereports

acia Avery Chambers, was arrested on charges of driving under the influence, police said.

Chambers, 25, of Stillwater, was in jail Saturday, according

to Gibbs. She is not an Oklahot h o s e p a tients ma State student, he said.

Three o f

HOSpital ailStrike — With an initial military assessment confirming civilian casualties in the bombing of aDoctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz,Afghanistan, by a U.S.warplane, Gen.John F. Campbell, the U.S.commander in Afghanistan, has appointed atwostar general to conduct an independent investigation, his office said in a statement Saturday. The announcement came asthe death toll in the bombing rose onceagain, three weeks after the AC-130 gunship repeatedly bombedthe trauma center. Doctors Without Borders said the casualty figures now stood at 23 staff members andpatients killed and three others missing who arepresumeddead.

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Mexico spare major amage y recor — reaking hurricane By Azam Ahmed and Paulina Villegas CIHUATLAN, Mexico — A day after Hurricane Patricia all but destroyed his home,

Roberto Garcia Lopez took the unusual step of going to

OTHER SERVICES

work. He left the wreck of shat-

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P552-520, ispublisheddailybyWestern Communications Inc.,1777SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster: Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR 97706. TheBulletin raisins ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsoradilustrations. They may not be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

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CANCER PATIENTS

tered doors and windows, broken columns and splintered trees, filled a cooler with shrimp and began selling his wares on the street Saturday

afternoon. A short while later, Sabina

Did yeu knOW SheI Ray

Montes, a fruit vendor, joined

Eduardo e Vrdugo/The Associated Press

him to peddle cut pineap- Residents stand outside their flooded house in Zoatlan, Nayarit ple, papaya and slaw. Carlos state, northwest of Guadalajara, Mexico, on Saturday. Hurricane Agustin Manzo, the owner of Patricia made landfall Friday on a sparsely populated stretch of a store selling bootleg videos Mexico's Pacific coast as a Category 5 storm, avoiding direct hits and cellphone accessories, on the resort city of Puerto Vallarta and major port city of Manzaalso declared himself open nillo as it weakened to a tropical storm. for business. " Yesterday there wa s s o

much fear, people thought they were going to die," said Garcia, cracking a b r oad smileas he eased the cooler's lid over the seafood to keep it from th e b listering heat. "We' re all just relieved that

been no reports of d eaths. ml'm just so g r ateful," said

Manzo, 47, holding his infant son, as a rush of people

the two cities. For many in these impoverished communities, it could take much time

passed on the street, ducking in and out of the stores that

to recover from even moderate damage. opened the morning after the The government has not storm. "People are getting on come up with a total for how

nothing happened. 1 can't tell you how happy 1 am." with their lives." It might seem odd for a In the end, Hurricane Paman like Garcia to call him- tricia left as suddenly as it self blessed the day after a came. After roaring to life in hurricane swept away most of the warm waters over the Pahis earthly possessions, items cific, transforming practically he cannot afford to replace overnight into a Category 5 or repair. But t hroughout storm with winds of 200 mph, some ofthe hardest-hitareas it had all but dissipated by of Mexico's Pacific coast, the Saturday morning, little more refrain was the same: feelings than 12 hours after touching of euphoria outweigh whatev- land. By 4 p.m., it no longer er grimwork liesahead. ranked as a tropical storm. H aving weathered t h e That is not to say the damw orst storm t o s t r ik e t h e age is not severe. While the Western Hemisphere, many hurricane spared the densely Mexicans felt relieved that populated centers of Puerto they suffered only financial Vallarta and Manzanillo, it damage. For now, there have

damage to villages between

appears to have done the most

much the recovery will cost,

but a drive through the affected areas paints a clear enough picture: mangled telephone wires, shards of trees and brush and palm blanketing the street, all manner of

street signs, from 30-foot-tall billboards to traffic signs, upended. It was a scene repeated up and down the coast, as nervous residents and frazzled

tourists awoke to f looded roads and widespread power failures.

Rescue workers were sent up and down t h e w estern coast to assess the damage.

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Sunday, Oct. 25, the 298th

day of 2015. Thereare 67days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS EleCtiOn day —Anelection in Tanaznia will decide if ruling party CCMstays in power or if opposition party, Chadema, will take control.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1415,during the Hundred Years'War, outnumbered English soldiers led by Henry V defeatedFrenchtroops in the Battle of Agincourt in northern France. In1760, Britain's King George III succeededhis late grandfather, George II. In1854, the "Charge ofthe Light Brigade" took place during the CrimeanWaras an English brigade ofmorethan 600 men chargedthe Russian army, suffering heavy losses. In1929, former Interior Secretary Albert Fall wasconvicted in Washington, D.C., ofaccepting a $100,000 bribe from oil tycoon Edward L.Doheny. In1939,the play "The Timeof Your Life," by William Saroyan, opened in New York. In1945,Taiwanbecame independent of Japanesecolonial rule. In1954, a meeting of President Dwight D. Eisenhower's Cabinet was carried live onradio and television; to date, it's the only presidential Cabinet meeting to be broadcast. In1957,mob bossAlbert Anastasia of "Murder Inc." notoriety was shot todeathbymasked gunmen in abarber shop inside the Park SheratonHotel in New York. In1962, during ameeting of the U.N. Security Council, U.S. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson II demanded thatSoviet Ambassador Valerian Zorin confirm or deny theexistence ofSoviet-built missile bases inCuba, saying hewas prepared towait "until hell freezesover" for an answer. In1971, the U.N.General Assembly voted toadmit mainland China andexpel Taiwan. In1983,a U.S.-led force invaded Grenada at the order of President RonaldReagan,who said the action wasneededto protect U.S. citizens there. In1994, SusanSmith of Union, South Carolina, claimedthat a black carjacker haddriven off with her two youngsons (Smith later confessed to drowning the children in John D.LongLake, and was convicted of murder). In1999,golfer PayneStewart and five others werekilled when their Learjet flew uncontrolled for four hours before crashing in South Dakota; Stewart was 42.

Ten yearsago:U.S. military deaths in Iraq reachedthe 2,000 mark. Iraq's election commission declared that final results from theOct. 15 referendum showedthe new constitution was ratified by a huge margin, paving theway for elections. Five yearsago:Afghan President HamidKarzaiacknowledged receiving millions of dollars in cashfrom Iran, adding that Washington wasgiving him "bags of money" aswell because his office lackedfunds. In Indonesia, anearthquake triggered atsunami off western Sumatra that killed hundreds anddestroyed homes, mosques andother buildings. Oneyear ago:TheWorld Health Organization said more than 10,000 peoplehadbeen infected with Ebola and that

nearly half of themhaddied as the outbreakcontinued to spread. JackBruce, 71,the bassist and leadvocalist of the 1960s power trio Cream,died in London.

BIRTHDAYS Singer-actress BarbaraCookis 88. Actress Marion Ross is87. Basketball Hall of FamerBob Knight is 75. Political strategist James Carville is 71.Rock musician Matthias Jabs is59. Actress NancyCartwright (TV: "The Simpsons") is 58. Singer Speech is 47.Actor AdamGoldberg is 45. Actor CraigRobinson is 44. Rhythm-and-blues singer YoungRomeis 34. Pop singer Katy Perry is 31.Singer Ciara is 30. — From wire reports

NEED TO KNOW

I

erec asswor a seas oremem er A memorable combination of letters, numbers and

symbo ls that's tough

to crack is difficult for humans to come up with, but researchers have found a new, poetic solution that could make you more secure. By Ana Swanson

of which corresponds with a

The Washington Post

versity of Southern California may have finally come The first thing you learn up with the perfect solution. when you try to create a good Marjan Ghazvininejad and password is that your memo- Kevin Knight have published ry is pretty terrible. The sec- a paper with a novel solution ond thing you might learn is for creating with passwords that you' re really bad at being that are both extremely hard random. to crack and relatively easy to True randomness is hard to remember: randomly generatpredict; humans aren' t. Even if ed poems. you' re not one of the millions of The inspiration for Ghazpeople who use passwords like vininejad and Knight's study "12345678" or "password," you was actually a cartoon, created might still be making some by Randall Munroe of Xkcd, amateur mistakes. For exam- which showed how a password ple, using a common phrase made up of four random words as your password, but then re- — like "correct horse battery placing the "i" with a "1" and so staple"isfarm ore secure and a on. Or using common words lot easier for people to rememand phrases, and putting the ber than the typical jumble of characters and numerals at the random letters, numbers and end of the password, instead of symbols that most security exspaced randomly throughout. perts recommend. Or re-using passwords across Munroe's point is that, even sites, or not changing them of- if you pick a fairly uncommon ten enough. word, like "Troubadour," and In short, basically any tech- replace some of the letters with nique that would allow a hu- other symbols, this combinaman being to actually remem- tion might only take a computber a password. er seconds, minutes or hours OK, you say, but how do to guess. But a combination you possibly get around this? of four totally random words Any password that is going to is both hard for a hacker to be reasonably secure is also crack and easy for a person to going to be impossible to re- remember. member. And any password The secret here is that those you canpossibly remember is four random words are actuprobably going to be terrible. ally generated based on one That's just the law of pass- very large random number. words, right? That random number is then Two researchers at the Uni- broken up into segments, each

word in the dictionary. It's basically a form of cryptography. To guess the full random number, a computer might have to test billions and billions and

billions of possibilities before Thinkstock it hits on the right one, says Four-word poems that rhyme create secure, memorable passwords. Knight. But while Munroe suggested using this large number to pick create their poems by assignAnd teaches scripture bunfour random words, Ghaz- ing every word in a 327,868- galow or celebrate or Idaho vininejad and Knight hit on word dictionary a d istinct Ghazvininejad and Knight the idea of using it to create a code. They then use a comput- developed an online generator little poem. er program to generate a very for these little poems: http: // In their paper, Ghazvinine- long random number, break www.isi.edu/natural-language/ jad and Knight look at a few that number up into pieces, people/poem/poem.php They different methods for generat- and then translate those piec- caution that this site is just ing random passwords — the es intotwo shortphrases.The for demonstration — hackers Xkcd method of using four computer program they use could potentially download random words, as well as a ensures that the two lines end all of these and try them out, method of generating a ran- in words that rhyme, and that so don't use them for your dom sentence — but they find the whole phrase is in iambic password. that by far the most secure and tetrameter, like so: If you want your own litthe most memorable method Receiver Mathew Hallow- tle poem password, you can is creating a short rhyming een deliver cousin magazine enter your email here, and poem of random words. These passwords might their program will send you As the researchers point out, seem a little odd, but they' re ac- a secure one, which will then humans have been using poet- tually very secure — at current be deletedfrom theirserver: ry as a way to remember infor- speeds, they wo uldtakea com- http: //52.24.230.241/bc/passmation for thousands of years. puter programs many decades word — generation.php It's no accident that long epics, to crack. And they' re much Unfortunately, many sites like the 12,000-line "Odyssey," easier to remember than any these days limit the number or the 17,000-line "Canterbury string of characters that would of characters that you can use Tales," were written using be comparably secure. in your passwords, so most meter or rhyme. Most people If you read too many of of thesepoems are probably today can't recite the "Canter- these, they will make you feel too long. But perhaps one day bury Tales," but they' ve still a little crazy. But some of them soon you' ll be able to use these — more and more site s are had certain sing-songy rhymes are really fun to say: permanently burned into their The reigning Hagen jour- considering dropping the charmemory. n eyman b e lievers m i n i acter limit, since shorter passGhazvininejad and Knight m1111van words are a lot less secure.

I Qo

This image shows a combination of images captured by the New

Horizons spacecraft with enhanced colors to show differences in the composition and texture of Pluto's surface. The New Horizons

Take your money

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is on track to fly past a recently discovered,

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less than 30-mile-wide object out on the solar

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NASA'sNewHorizons on new post-Plutomission By Marcia Dunn The Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The spacecraft that gave

us the first close-up views of Pluto now has a much smaller object in its sights. NASA's New Horizons was

was the first; it was expected

to be several hours before con-

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Guaranteed for 5 years!*

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within Pluto. The team plans to formal-

Launched in 2 0 06, N ew for studying MU69. Scientists Horizons became Pluto's first promise a better name before visitor from planet Earth in showtime on Jan. 1, 2019.

"Although this flyby probJuly. The spacecraft remains in excellent health following a ably won't be as dramatic as 3 billion-mile journey and still the exploration of Pluto we holds a year's worth of sci- just completed," Stern wrote entific data for transmission in a blog earlier this month for back to Earth. Sky & Telescope magazine, "it

Meet with one of our CFS** 00

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will be a record-setter for the

most distant exploration of an in August as New Horizons' object ever made." next potential target, thus the Johns Hopkins designed nickname PT-1. Like Pluto, the spacecraft, about the MU69 orbits the sun in the size of a baby grand piano, frozen, twilight zone known and has been operating it for

Guaranteed for 7 years!*

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times larger and 1,000 times

ly ask NASA next year to that everything had gone welL fund the mission extension

as the Kuiper Belt.

00

the Hubble Space Telescope in 2014. It beat out a few other candidates because it will take less fuel to get there.

trollers received confirmation

NASA and the New Horizons team chose 2014 MU69

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The extremely r emote, faint object was spotted by

programmed to fire its thrust- more massive than average ers Thursday afternoon, put- comets, including the one beting it on track to fly past a ing orbited right now by Eurecently discovered, less than rope's Rosetta spacecraft. On 3 0-mile-wide object out o n the other end, MU69 is barely the solar system frontier. The 1 percent the size of Pluto and close encounter with what' s perhaps one-ten-thousandth known as 2014 MU69 would the mass of the dwarf planet. occur in 2019. It orbits nearly 1 So the new target is a good billion miles beyond Pluto. middle ground, according to F light controllers at t h e scientists. Johns Hopkins University Lead scientist Alan Stern Applied Physics Laborato- said flight controllers still are ry in Laurel, Maryland, sent working out just how close commands in advance for New Horizons will be able to the course change. In all, four zoom past MU69. The goal maneuvers willbe needed, is to get closer than the 7,770 carried out over the next two miles (12,500 billion kilomeweeks. Thursday afternoon's ters) that the spacecraft came

to new heights with a fixed annuity.

• •

.

• •


A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

Cap consumercopayments

Prescription Continued from A1 Both proposals are getting an airing in Washington and on the campaign trail, pushed

The growing number of insurers placing certain highcost drugs in categories in which consumers have to pay a percentageofthe cost— often

p coaar )f~ rasir frrffrr

s

7

submitted by drugmakers to the Food and Drug Administration — but are less effective against other types. For

instance, the drug Tarceva, when given for non-small cell upward of 30 percent — has lung cancer, prolongs life an caught the attention of law- average of 5.2 months, a big makers in a handful of states, advance forlung cancer treatincluding Montana, California ments, said Steve Miller, senior and Delaware. They' ve passed vice president and chief medlaws capping the amount in- ical officer at Express Scripts.

by D emocratic p residential

candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. Opposition is heavy, particularly to Medicare negotiations, and neither is likely to gain much traction. Drugmakers and s o me economists argue that price controls or other efforts aimed at slowing spending by targeting profits mean cutting money that could go toward develop-

sured consumers must pay at

But, when the $6,200-a-month

drug is used to treat pancreatic cancer, it prolongs life an averThe pocketbook cost for pa- age of only 12 days. tients is still high, ranging from Under the new program, $100 a month to $250, depend- insurers would pay the drugthe pharmacy counterastheir share of a drug's cost.

ing the next new cure. Because

Craig Ruttle /The Associated Press file photo

ing on the state. Still, that's less

maker less when the treatment

than whatconsumers current- is given to pancreatic cancer ly pay for some drugs in many patients. "We' re trying to slow leave the lobby of a New York building during a protest highlighting health insurance plans. While the rising cost of treating canpharmaceutical drug pricing earlier this month. Turing Pharmeceu- such laws could help consum- cer," said Miller, who said if it

many pharmaceutical compa- Carrying an image of Turing Pharmaceuticals CEO Martin Shkreli nies spend more on marketing in a makeshift cat litter pan, AIDS activists and others are asked to than research, some lawmak-

ers counter that the industry could spend less on promoting ticals sparked an angry backlash after it raised the price of Daraits products. Health insurers, prim, the only approved treatment for a rare, life-threatening in turn, blame drugmakers for parasitic infection, by more than 5,000 percent. high prices, even as they shift more cost to consumers, who then fear they won't be able to and advertising their products. to invest a certain amount of afford their medications. Proponents say public disclo- their own revenue in research Aside from t h e p e renni- sure would force companies to and development. al ideas, what else is being justify their pricing. Skeptics Some economists say the tried to combat rising prices say disclosure alone may not state and national effort is misor at least bring some relief to be enough, so some proposals guided. Research costs aren' t consumers'? go further. Massachusetts, for a good way to justify a drug's example, would gather price ultimate price, they say. LookDisclose drug information on a set of drugs ing at a single drug produced development costs deemed critical to the state by a company ignores the Lawmakers in sev e r al — and create a commission states, including New York, that could set prices for drugs

huge amounts spent on other

products that failed but still Pennsylvania and Massachu- deemed too costly. None of the provided clues for the product setts, have introduced "trans- measures have passed. On the that did succeed. And, some parency" measures that would national front, Clinton propos- economists say, such rules force drug companies to pro- es to require companies that might simply foster more monvide details on how much they benefit from f ederal invest- ey spent on research that isn' t spend researching, making ment in basic science research needed.

fund the city of Bend are used to support everything from Continued from A1 the police and fire departments to the city's expansion Property tax rates of its urban growth boundary. Because of two measures City staff describe the budgetapproved by voters in the ing process as a balancing act, '90s, Bend's property tax rate

is locked in at $2.80 per every $1,000 in assessed value. In other words, the owner of

a home assessed at $100,000 pays $280 to the city, where the money is put to use fund-

ers with out-of-pocket costs, it

works with a small set of can-

doesn't affect the underlying price of those drugs.

cer drugs, the firm may look to expand to other types of

Critics say in some cases,

alternatives.

said it is in talks with insurers

about varying payments based

Pay up

if the product delivers A drug'spriceshould refl ect its effectiveness, according to new efforts underway. Benefit

m anager Express Scripts,for example, next year will pay varying amounts for a small set of oncology drugs based on how well the products perform on different types of cancer.

Does tax rate hinder roadmaintenance?

.— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .— .ing police officers, engineers, One solution has been to 10'/ -. — city attorneys and the like. propose a gas tax, the revenue 9%-

That rate is not based on

of which could be dedicated to

support roads without having to take anything away from police or fire. Two counties and 23 cities in Oregon have gas taxes

value of homes in the 1995-96

ranging from 1 cent to 5 cents

fiscal year. For Bend, 1997 was per gallon. In Bend, the City a year light on levies, resulting Council would have to decide in its rate of $2.80. Complicat- to put a gas tax to the voters,

ing matters, assessed values who would have the final say. "Measures 5 and 50 set us are requiredto be at or below a home's actual market value,

8%-

6%5%4%3%2%-

1%-

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lated, cities across the state how revenue is used." find t hemselves i n d r a sti- In Bend, more than 80 per-

Source: City of Bend

cally different situations. In

cent of the city's discretionary Redmond, the rate was set at funding, known as the general $6.16, meaning a home worth fund, goes to police and fire. $100,000 would bring in $616. Since the end of the recession,

partment of Transportation,

we want to do is not just stop

aretiedto a number offactors,

the bleeding, but to change course," King said.

Eugene's rate was set at $7.01,

a gas tax is the solution, as it able to compete for the city' s would allow the city to fund

while in Springfield, Albany, Salem, Beaverton, Corvallis

the amount of money dedicated tostreet work has trended

above $4. "Bend has been especially

upward in both absolute terms and as a percent of the general fund. Nonetheless, the city says

hard hit by Measures 5 and

its roads will

just do the nuts and bolts of

Abbas, who oversees the city' s

and Medford,rates were set

c ontinue de-

50," said Bend City Manag- clining unless funding jumps er Eric King, referencing the to about $7 million annually two measures that c reated from around $3 million, where Oregon'scurrent tax system. it's projected to be in coming "It's an anemic rate, we can years. The issue, says David government." The rate, however, is only

roads, is that not only have the miles of roadway managed by one side of the equation. A city the city increased by 30 perwith neighborhoods of tony cent over the last 10 years, but homes can generate more rev- the cost of maintenance has enue than one with lower val- alsojumped by 300 percent. ue houses, even if the tax rate Those cost increases, which is higher in the second city. are backed up by an index While Bend has more than its published by the Oregon Defair share of upscale housing,

including fluctuating material

Pete Smith I The Bulletin

costs and a limited number of available contractors who are

Mayor Jim Clinton thinks

c ontracts. Additionally, t h e

roads without detracting from

city has agreed to make curb ramps accessible when fixing up roads. Over time, King says, Bend's rapid growth, which results in a bigger tax base and generates greater revenue, "has been able to mask our structural funding problem." As costs have outpaced growth, however, the city' s roads have slowly begun deteriorating, and the worse shape they' re in, the more costly repairs become.

it takes in per capita is only $323, lower than in most similarly sized cities, such as Beaverton, Corv allis, Hillsboro

and Medford. The situation in Redmond,

where the permanent rate is now $4.41, with an additional

$1.75 set aside for fire service, B end's situ-

ation. Everything included, taxes in Redmond break down

to about $414 per capita. That number, however, includes about $57, which the city uses for parks. While Bend's rate is low,

Partners In Care helped us cope.

none of its money is spent

on parks, because the Bend Park & R e creation District has its own dedicated tax rate

of $1.65. That the district is separate from the city is only known by about 37 percent of

price and how to determine if it was the drug — or something else — that led to fewer

hospitaliz ation s. Meanwhile, consumer groups are cautious, saying such "pay-for-value" ideas hold promise, but only if pa-

level of service provided by the police and fire departments

— From wire reports

Mayor Clinton says he supports having "some limits on

and the amount of work being done to fix curb ramps. He believes those can largely be maintained while also directing more funding to roads. C hudowsky argues t h e city hasn't done the work to justify needing new revenue and needs to go through the budget more thoroughly. In

property taxes," but says the

part, he thinks the city has been "too conservative" in its

bate over whether growth is good or bad, it's true growth

two measures were poorly designed. Clinton criticizes the arbitrariness of B end's tax rate and emphasizes that

the city's growth has resulted in new needs that a smaller

city, as Bend was in the '90s, doesn't have to deal with. "Without getting into a de-

which taxes hotel guests.

amount to pay for the additional costs that come with

stronger case, it needs to look under the cushions," he said. "We haven't done that yet." As an illustration, Chudowsky often points to a committee

growth," he said.

he served on that was tasked with finding more funding for the fire department during the recession. After scouring budgets, the group recommended the department ask voters to approve an operating levy, a tax that expires after five

years. "I'm happy the fire levy passed, and it's possible we could come up with the same conclusion here," he said. "But

Balancing needs Differing from Chudowsky, Clinton says he does not think

it's possible to preserve the quality of emergency services in Bend and to improve the

quality of the city's roads. Councilor Russell agrees with Clinton, and said part of

the issue is one of perception. "Nobody thinks of Bend as being an anomaly, you w ouldn't

i n t u itively t h i n k

Bend has significantly less revenue to work w it h t h an

other cities," Russell said. "As

I'm disappointed we

d i dn' t a result, the average Joe on look closer at the budget." the street may not understand

Councilor Roats said he why we have to go out and ask "likes lean budgets" and be- for additional sources." lieves Measures 5 and 50 Russell said the city has put " have forced our city to b e off funding streets for too long.

police, fire or other city ser- more innovative, and I give If it had sought more revenue vices. At the same time, he city staff and Eric King a lot of sooner, the city likely could says, it makes those who use credit for that." have saved money, she sugthe roads, including visitors, One thing Roats pointed gested, by keeping the roads in responsible for their upkeep. to is the city's staffing levels. goodshape. "When I first got to counIn 1990, the city had about 11 Gas tax opposition full-time employees for every cil, it blew me away how little A majority of the council 1,000 residents. During the m oney there is to address so has backed putting a gas tax recession, thatnumber dipped much that our community exto voters, but two members of down to five, and currently pects us to do," she said. "Peothe council, Victor Chudows- rests at around 6.5. ple don't want water mains exky and Casey Roats, are more However, Roats also said, ploding in front of their house, skeptical. A citizen committee "There's no limit to the num- and want the police to be there is currently evaluating other ber of things the city could when they feel threatened. We funding options beyond a gas dream up to do." need moreaff ordable housing "It's u nrealistic t o t h i n k tax. "If the city had access to all too, and how are we going to we can find more revenue for Chudowsky, who thinks a the money possible to do this get there'?" streets without looking out- gas tax is unnecessary, says and that, don't doubt we'd use — Reporter: 541-633-216O, side the general fund, if what he's happy with the current it all," he added. tleeds@bendbuIIetirt.corn

the amount of property taxes

contrasts with

such as how to set the right

"The city should have a

$6.57

@0 e% %e

prevents hospitalizations. Both pricing plans face obstacles,

ing Pharmaceuticals chief executive Martin Shkreli found himself in the middle of a media firestorm last month asheadamantly defended his company's 5,000 percent drug price hike as "altruistic." Now, another company will offer a Daraprim alternative, at just $1 a pill. It's not an exact replica of Daraprim. SanDiego-based Imprimis Pharmaceuti calsannounced Thursday that it is selling pills containing a "customizabl ecompounded formulation" of pyrimethamine and leucovorin, both ingredients in Daraprim. Imprimis chief executive Mark Baumspecifically referenced the price hike by Turing, saying the company has a right to charge patients "whatever it believes is appropriate." "It is indisputable that generic drug prices have soared recently," Baum said in a statement. "While we have seen anincrease in costs associated with regulatory compliance, recent generic drug price increases havemadeus concerned andcausedus to take positive action to address an opportunity to help a needypatient population."

projections of future revenue brings in m o r e t a xes, but from the transient room tax, t hey' re not s u fficient i n

up to demonstrate a need to

and the assessment can only voters," King said. "That forcgrow at 3 percent per year. es transparency, which is a Because of the way per- good thing. It forces us to be manent tax rates were calcu- more specific and exacting of

on how well its new heart drug

The plan will target drugs that work well on one type of can- tients aren't kept from needed cer — based on dinical data medicines.

Measures passed byvoters in the 1990s froze property tax rates in Oregon cities. While local voters are able to approve short-term bonds and create newtaxing districts, rates are largely held in place. Because of how the permanent rates werecalculated, they vary widely across the state. The rate in Bend is one of the lowest for a city its size, which some members of the City Council say is the reason agas tax is needed to and in this cycle, street main- support road maintenance. tenance seems to have fallen out of balance, with the city EFFECTIVETAX RATES IN SELECT OREGON CITIES facing $80 million in deferred & Permanent Property Tax Rate per $1,000 taxable assessed value road work. %Fire district %GO bond & Park district & Local option levy The gas tax proposal

the city's needs or any recent decision by voters, but derives from a formula pegged to what leviescities across the state had in effect in 1997 and the

treatments.

such rules may encourage Variations on the theme are greater use ofcostly drugs for being explored by others, inwhich there are less expensive cluding Novartis, which has

$1 alternatiVe — Tur-

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.

Bend residents, according to a district survey. As a result, per capita, the district receives

Central Oregon's choice for hospice care.

about $175, almost three times more money than goes to parks in Redmond. The property taxes that

(541) 382-5882

p a r t n ersbend.org

Hospice j Home Health j Hospice House j Transitions j Palliative Care


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A5

Licenses Continued fromA1 In 1975, an annual resi-

dent hunting license cost $5 and a fishing license cost $6, according to Fish and Wildlife data.

The cost of an annual resident hunting

l i cense

and fishing license have increased eight times since then.

The agency relies in part on license fees for funding, Jenkins said. By increasing fees, he said the department tries to keep up with infla-

Mauricio Lima/The New YorkTimea

tion and expenses.

LEFT: Refsnes Gods is a luxury hotel inside a 19th-century mansion many believe is haunted, near Moss, Norway. ABOVE:Martin Ormen, who busts ghosts with homemade equipment, stands with Birgitte, a like-minded friend, in Moss. Belief in ghosts and spirits is surging in secular Norway; Ormen and friends post videos of their findings — always invisible — online. "It is bad and sad that

"The cost of doing business is always edging up," he said. Although the price of hunting and fishing licenses may have stopped some people from buying

society just says, 'If we can't see it, it doesn't exist,'" Ormen said. r

them, other reasons for the

Ghosts

decline have been more prominent in surveys, said Michelle Dennehy, spokes-

Continued fromA1

woman for Fish and Wild-

Ghosts, or at least belief in

life in Salem. A 2008 report by Responsive M a n agement, a public opinion polling company, and the National

Shooting Sports Foundation showed the top reasons cited by people who have stopped hunting: amount of free time, family and work

them, have been around for centuries but they have now found a particularly strong following in highly secular modern countries like Norway, places that are otherwise

in the vanguard of what was once seen as Europe's inexorable, science-led march away from superstition and religion. While churcheshere may be largely empty and belief in God, according to opinion polls, in steady decline, belief

obligations. Costs of licenses came in 16th.

But Thrasher and his counterpart in Bend, Bill Littlefield, both c onsider

in, or at least fascination with,

license cost to be a bigger

ghosts and spirits is surging. Even Norway's royal family, which is required by law to belong to the Evangelical Luther-

issue than the poll showed.

Cost could be a factor when people weigh whether to go hunting or fishing versus spend time with their fam-

an Church, has flirted with

ghosts, with a princess coaching people on how to reach out

ily or take a vacation from work. Littlefield is the Bend

to spirits.

chapter president of the Or-

Changing beliefs

egon Hunters Association. Like Thrasher, Littlefield

"God is out, but spirits and ghosts are filling the vacuum,"

said he has seen license costs go up significantly. He said other reasons why people lose interest in hunting include kids spending more time playing team sports and more folks liv-

said Roar Fotland, a Methodist

preacherand assistantprofessor at the Norwegian School

of Theology in Oslo. Instead of slowly eliminating religion, as Sigmund Freud,Karl Marx and other theorists predicted, modernity has only channeled religious feelings in unexpected ways, Fotland said. "Belief in God, or at least a Christian God, is decreasing but belief in spirits is increas-

ing in cities rather than the country.

"And, just society doesn' t

value it like it used to," Lit-

tlefield said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.corn

ing," he added, describing this as part of a general resurgence of"premodern religion." Tom Hedalen, a road engineer and committed atheist who is chairman of Norway's

"It is very hard to say this is all just garbage. This is for real," he said, recounting how he had visited many homes where things happened that "defy all physical laws." Humanist Association, insisted Even courts have been that religion is still on its last dragged into adjudicating on legs and that the grip of ghosts phenomena that nobody can on rational, modern minds actually see. Two years ago, merely reflected the successof when a homebuyer in the town charlatans at playing on peo- of Vinstra, 160 miles north of ple's fears. Oslo, came to believe that the The Humanist Association, house he had agreed to buy which ran a national campaign was haunted, he tried to get the under the slogan, "Don't Let purchase canceled, arguing Yourself Be Cheated," does that he should have been told "not believe in God, trolls or about the ghost problem. Santa Claus," Hedalen said. A court ruled that the buy"In the end, all religion will die er had to go through with the out," he added. transaction regardless. Its verThat could be some way off dict said that the seller had no yet. The appeal of ghost stories obligation to disclose the exishas helped fuel the unexpected tence of something that is "not popularity of a television series generally accepted as existing called "The Power of Spirits," at all." The court said it could now in its 10th season. The not accept that "alleged mystishow has around half a million cal events in the form of ghosts viewers each Sunday, a huge fulfill the criterion of being a audience in a country of just 5.1 defect in the property." million people and more than Also deeply skeptical is twice the number of regular Velle Espeland, a folklorist at churchgoers in Norway. Norway's national library and "We are bigger than the Nor- author of a book on the history wegian church," the show's of ghosts. "We create ghosts to presenter, Tom Stromnaess, explain the inexplicable," he said. He said he did not believe said. "Ghosts are just the name in ghosts as "creatures with we use for something we don' t white sheets and black eyes" understand." but, though initially very skep-

tour" led b y

V i b ecke Gar- even the Lutheran Church, naas, a woman who used to to which most Norwegians work at the "haunted" trav- formally belong, has adopted el agency and who has now a so-called "ghost liturgy" become a professional medi- for use by preachers who get um who charges an hourly asked by parishioners to help rate of 800 Norwegian kro- cleanse haunted houses. ner (around $98) for ghost Unn B oh m T v eito, a l so "cleansing" work. from Moss, recalled how " I can't guarantee it w i l l she had never believed in or work" she said, explaining even thought about ghosts that she tries to "convince the until she started working as energies to leave the premis- the manager of the town's es but they have free will just tourism information office. like we do." She kept noticing that Gerb r o chures Another local ghostbuster man-language is Martin Ormen, a 19-year- always ended up being the old science student from Moss most prominently displayed, who believes that ghosts emit which was odd since few electromagnetic pulses that tourists who visit Moss speak can be detected with a simple German. piece of equipment. In 2013, she raised the isAlong with a g r oup of sue with other staff members, friends, he travels around the who said they had noticed the region hunting for traces of same thing. "Ghosts are not ghosts and then posts videos the first thing you think of, of their findings — always in- but we decided that this could visible — on the Internet. not be explained in a normal "It is bad and sad that soci- way," she said. ety just says, 'If we can't see A clairvoyant sent by the it, it doesn't exist,'" he said. ghost television show, she Arild Romarheim, a Luther- said, solved the mystery: a an priest and recently retired dead German soldier who theology lecturer, described had worked in th e same the conviction of well-educat- building during the 1940-45 ed atheists and agnostics that Nazi occupation of Norway ghosts exist as "the paradox was still o n t h e p r e mises of modernity" — a revival of and kept messing with the old beliefs to slake an innate brochures. " Whether you c al l t h em human thirst for a spiritual tical about paranormal phe- Who you gonna call? life left unsatisfied by the de- ghosts or spirits or something nomena, he has come around The town of Moss has had cline of the church. else, they exist," Tveito said. to the view that forces exist that so many ghost stories that Belief in ghosts, he said, The dead German, she added, cannot be seen or understood. City Hall organized a "ghost has become so strong that has now moved on.

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL

QUEsTIoN:I have been doing Kegels for years and they don' t help. Are Kegel exercises good for everyone?

QUEsTION: /Kith flu season approaching and lots of people already coming down with symptoms, how do I keep myself healthy? Are there alternatives to aflu shot?

ANswER: Often people begin K e gel exercises to o v ercome

symptoms of urinary leakage or other pelvic floor dysfunction. If you have been doing Kegel exercises and they are not helping, there is a chance you are performing them incorrectly or they are not the appropriate exercise for your symptoms. Research shows that not all patients can perform a Kegel properly, so Joyce Steele y o ur years of effort may have been in vain, secondary to a faulty technique. Research also supports that not all people should perform Kegels. For example, if you are a person who has a painful or shortened pelvic floor, Kegel exercises may be inappropriate. A pelvic floor physical therapist can help determine if Kegels are suitable for you and if you are performing them correctly, making your efforts productive.

At Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, our pelvic physical therapist is trained in both internal and external evaluation and treatment techniques for women with

pelvic floor dysfunction. Our 1:1 hour-long sessions provide compassionate, professional, and individualized attention in treating your symptoms. Our goal is to work with you every step of the way!

ANswER:There are a few products available that may help reduce and

protect against the development of flu symptoms: homeopathics such as Influenzinum prepared from commercially available inactivated influenza virus vaccine; Oscillococcinum prepared from duck liver, which is considered the vector of flu viruses; Flu Plus/GUNA Flu

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Dr. Kerie Raymond Naturopathic

The se preparations are recommended for the relief of symptoms of flu a n d colds, chills, fever, nausea, body aches and fatigue, as well as fo r p revention.

• Take immunity-boosting supplements like vitamin C,vitamin Di, vitamin A, and zinc and immune-enhancing herbs such as echinacea, commiphora

myrrh, ligusticum (osha), larix (larch), and hydrastis (goldenseal). • Remember to wash your hands frequently and use tissues when sneezing or coughing. • Eat very lightly or not at all when you are feeling sick, get rest as soon as possible, and drink plenty of fluids — water, soup, and herbal teas. • Give yourself a home hydrotherapy treatment: sweat it out (fever treatment, warming

socks, etc.). For information on all these alternatives, please call our clinic to schedule an appointment.

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QUEsTIoN: I ha v e a m e d ical c o ndition t h at r e q uires monitoring with MRIs occasionally. If I have permanent makeup is there anything I need to be aware of as future problems from the tattoo? ANswER: The possibilities of h a ving any p r o blems or reactions from permanent makeup procedure are almost nonexistent with t oday's health standards. Technicians must be licensed b the state of Ore gon and follow strict regulations that conform to OSHA and CDC standards. cosmetic professional Numerous studies have shown that e ven people with larger body tattoos have very little potential for irritation r esulting from an M R I t e st. Th e small amount o f i r o n o x ide in t h e pigment has fewer metallurgic components than dental fillings! For more information on tattoo implications in MR I r esults, visit www.mrisafety. corn. Please call with any other concerns or to schedule a free consultation.

QUEsTloN: With every passing year, I have morefat under my chin. Can I Coolsculpt the fat under my chin? ANswER: Yes, you can! Double chin, tech neck, or submental

fullness all refer to the extra fat that forms under the chin. Coolsculpting this fat, or submentum, was FDA-approved in September 2015 and is now available with a specialized new applicator called the CoolMini! Coolsculpting the fatty neck at the Leffel Center is done in the oflice by applying controlled cooling with the CoolMini over the fatty deposits. Your body

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w i l l clear the destroyed fat over the next 2 to 4 months. If you have excessive fat, you will benefit from a second Coolsculpting treatment 2 months later. The fat under the neck can also be

treated with injections of FDA-approved Kybella, which is a drug that dissolves the fat. Kybella injections are performed under local anesthesia in our office and require 2 to 4 sessions spaced 4 to 8 weeks apart. Patients treated with Kybella have

significant swelling for 3 to 7 days after treatment. If you have significant extra fat and skin in the neck, surgical options, such as liposuction or a neck lift, are a better alternative. With all these options, patients should consult with a board-certified

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Ask one of our Health Professionals in the following categories: Dentistry • Urology • Eye Care • Plastic Surgery • General and Specialty Surgery Dermatology • Ho listic Medicine • Physical Therapy • Pain Management

Chiropractic • Health & Beauty Send your questions to: Ask a Health Pro fessional The Bulletin Fax: 541-385-5802 • Email: kvigeland@bendbulletin.corn Mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, Oregon 97708 My question is:


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A7

IN FOCUS:VATICAN SYNOD

A more welcomingCatholic Church? By Anthony Faiola

expectations," said Cardinal

The Washington Post

Donald Wuerl, the archbishop

VATICAN CITY — Divided clerics at a landmark Vatican

summit echoed the inclusive tone of Pope Francis on Sat-

urday, extending a more welcoming handto divorced and unmarried couples while stopping short of calling for dear alterations in church policies and leaving the ground-breaking pontiff as the ultimate authority on change. The t h ree-week summit,

known as a synod, marked the end of a two-year process to recalibrate the faith's approach

to families in the 21st century. Under Francis' direction, bishops and cardinals set a new

precedent by tackling issues once considered taboo in the Roman Catholic Church.

Yet the still significant opposition in the synod to rapid changes in rules also suggested how far off Catholics may yet be from seeing Francis' revolutionary style turned into

practice. The document,in some respects, went further than some

believed earlier in the week. But even top clerics conceded that liberal Catholics with high

expectations of change under Francis might still come away disappointed. "We have to be always cautious that there aren't false

heart in the fact that it does not

explicitly call for one. Such a of Washington. "One false ex- change,however,would refl ect pectation is that Catholic teach- a practice already happening ings would be changed. That is on the ground, where some not going to happen." parish priests have decided to While a major bellwether of offer communion to such couthe hierarchy's thinking from ples despite church policy. their most heated gathering In a church that teaches hosince the reforming Second mosexuality is "intrinsically Vatican Council in the 1960s, disordered,"the document the synod's final communi- also recognized the "dignity" que amounts only to a list of of gays and lesbians. But it recommendations for Francis. stopped far short of endorsing Rather than overhaul church the most liberal proposals on doctrine — or the fundamen- same-sex couples, including tal truths and teachings of the one by a Belgian bishop to recchurch — the question largely ognize the spiritual value of facing Francis is whether to such unions. In fact, the synod alter procedures and empow- declaredthatsame-sex unions er bishopsand prieststo m ake of any kind could not "remotemore independent decisions on ly" be compared with "God' s the ground. design for matrimony and In perhaps the most signif- family." icant pronouncement, clerics The synod was more emsought to find more ways for bracing of cohabiting heterodivorced Catholics to par- s exuals, stating t hat s o me ticipate in church life. Yet to couples may not marry in the assuage the concerns of con- church forcultural or ecoservatives, the key question nomic reasons. Their bonds, of whether a door should be the synod concluded, could opened for divorced and re- nevertheless involve the kind married Catholics — who the of "lasting" and "reliable" ties church teaches are technically that can eventually lead to living in a state of adultery — to marriage. take communion at Mass was In a candid speech after left purposely vague. receiving a list of 94 recomLiberals argued the lan- mendations from the synod of guage implicitly paved the way bishops and cardinals, Franfor Francis to endorse such a cis acknowledged the rifts shift, while conservatives took between clerics, noting that

differences of opinion were freely expressed and "at times, unfortunately, not in entirely

well-meaning ways."

He noted the massive task

ahead as he seeks to find a Solomonesque way to bridge those differences, particularly given the cultural gulfs between the world's more than 1

Andrew Spear/The New York Times

billion Catholics. They include

Allison Pitt, a third-grade teacher, helps Charles Swank at West Broad Elementary School in Columbus, Ohio, last month. Faced with mounting and bipartisan opposition to increased testing in the nation's public schools, the Obama administration declared

those living in the most liberal

parishes of Western Europe and the United States as well

as far more conservativeones, often based in parts of the developing world where the Catholic Church is growing most. "We have seen that what

Saturday that the pushhad gone too far, and urged schools to make examslessonerous and more purposeful.

Tests

actly, counts as a test.

"What happens if somebody puts a cap on testing,

is normal for a bishop on one continent is considered strange

Continued fromA1 "I still have no question

and to meet the cap ends up

and almost scandalous for a

that we need to check at

bishop on another," he said. Yet the ambiguity of the synod also puts Francis in a highly difficult position. If he fails to change the status quo enough, he risks disappointing liberal Catholics — as well as many

least once a year to make

eliminating tests that could actually be helpful, or leaves

non-Catholics — wh o

h a ve

heralded him worldwide as an agent of change. But going too far beyond the synod's recommendations

could alienate many in his divided hierarchy, triggering an even stronger backlash among conservati ves,some of whom are already openly questioning the direction of his papacy.

sure our kids are on track the redundancy in the test or identify areas where they and gets rid of a test that n eed support," said A r n e will leave office in December. "But I can't tell you how

many conversations I'm in with educators who are un-

derstandably stressed and concerned about an overemphasis on testing in some places and how much time testing and test prep are tak-

us, at , is irritate an invi orate ite ouse race .

By Jonathan Martin and Matt Flegenheimer

Former Pres-

New York Times News Service

H.W. Bush throws out

elder Bush but requested an-

ident George

onymity to avoid betraying a confidence, said Trump had revived painful m emories the ceremoni- among the Bushes of another al first pitch to blunt populist: H. Ross Perot. the Houston The family has long believed Astros' Jed Perot's third-party candidacy Lowrie before helped Bill Clinton capture

He has given up his "CSI" reruns, consuming campaign coverage on Fox News — intently but fretfully — when he is perched in front of the tele-

vision in his Houston home. He reads three print newspapers daily, dials into briefings given by advisers to his son Jeb's presidential campaign and stays up late to watch prime-time debatesafter sitting through the so-

had led the opposition on the a victory. "Parents, students,

evaluate teachers in part on

how bad Trump is for the country, said people who have

test scores.

di d n ot

But the administration's " testing a ction p l a n"

called undercard, too.

Royals earlier

want to be quoted revealing

which guides school dis-

Former President George Bush, 91 and frail, is straining

this month in Houston.

private conversations. An d

tricts but does not have the forceof law — also risks cre-

„OWHI

to understand an election sea-

son that has, for his son and the Republican Party, lurched sharply and stunningly off script. And he is often bewildered by what he sees. "I'm getting old," he tells friends, appraising today's politics, "at just the right time."

These are c onfounding days for the Bush family and the network of advisers, do-

nors and supporters who have helped sustain a political dynasty that began with the Senate victory by Prescott

Bush, the older Bush's father, in Connecticut 63 years ago.

They have watched the rise of Donald Trump with alarm, and seen how Jeb Bush, the

onetime Florida governor, has languished despite early advantages of political pedigree and campaign money. On Friday, the Bush cam-

paign said it was slashing staff salaries and positions after disappointing polls and lackluster debate performances,

a recognition that a vast operation built when Bush was leading the pack early this year cannot be maintained. No one, it seems, is more

perplexed than the family patriarch by the race, and by what the Republican Party

has become in its embrace of anti-establishment outsiders,

Tfllmp'S Btt8CkS —Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump mocked former Florida Gov.JebBush in his own state on Saturday, saying recent campaign cuts show he's not ready to be president. "Here's a guywho wants to run our country, and hecan't even runhisowncampaign.Andyouknow what?He'scuttIng back big," Trump told a raucous crowd of thousands gathered along the riverfront of one of Florida's most conservative cities. Trump said Bush, the sonandbrother for former presidents, is "losing badly andembarrassing his family." "Bush has nomoney. He'scutting. He's meeting today with mommy anddaddy andthey' re working on their campaign," Trump said. He chastised Bushfor paying his finance director more than $1 million and said that if campaign staffers were wIIIIng to work for lower pay, heshould have madethat deal whenthe campaign started. "You don't wait till you' refailing," he said. By contrast, Trump said he's only spent about $2 million on his campaign andhe's leading in polls. TheBushcampaign respondedbysaying peoplearegetting tired of Trump. "DonaldTrump needsanew schtick.Launchingabsurdattacks at his opponents to distract from his lack of ideasand liberal record is beginning to wear thIn with voters. Donald Trump is Increasingly showing eachday that he is not aserious enough person to be commander in chief and leadthe world's most powerful milItary," Bush spokeswomanKristy Campbell said in anemail. Bush wasn't the only rival Trump targeted during a speechthat lasted about an hour and 20minutes. Florida's junior senator, Marco Rubio, and retired neurosurgeon BenCarson also took hits.

"You' vegot Rubio doing poorly, and hesweats like a dog," Trump said. "You' vegot Carson. I don't know what the hell's going on there. I don't get it." — The Associated Press

Trump. In July, even after breaking elder Bush was fuming at the news of the day: Trump had belittled Sen. John McCain of

Arizona for being taken prisoner in Vietnam. "I can't u nderstand how

somebody could say that and still be taken seriously," said

Bush, himself a naval aviator in World War II, according to his longtime spokesman, Jim McGrath, who

h a d v i s ited

him. This weekend, generations of Bush loyalists planned to descend on a Houston hotel for a gathering for Jeb Bush's campaign featuring b oth

The former reality TV s t ar has in recent weeks taunted

bothformer President George

especially the sometimes rude a vertebra in a fall that left him hospitalized in Maine, the

David J. Phillip/ The Associated Press filephoto

federal, that it doesn't lead to

ministration and intensified a spirational names — N o

educators, your voice mat- Child Left Behind, Race to ters and was heard," said the Top — were respondRandi Weingarten, the pres- ing to swelling agreement ident of the American Feder- among Democrats and Reation of Teachers. publicans that higher expecAnd even some propo- tations and accountability nents of newer, tougher tests could lift the performance said they appreciated the of U.S. students, who chronadministartion's acknowl- ically lag their peers in other edgment that it had helped countries on i n ternational create the problem, saying measures, and could help it had done particular dam- close achronic achievement age by encouraging states to gap between black and

also vented privately about

their father has been highly irritated by Trump's ridicule.

Michael Petrilli, the president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute and one of the

left to the amount of testing, under President Barack declaredthe reversal ofsorts Obama. Programs w i th

League Division Series

s poken to him bu t

districts.

problem in implementation. unintended consequences." We can and will work with The adm i nistration's states, districts and educa- move seemed a reckoning tors to help solve it." on a two-decade push that Teachers unions, which began during the Bush ad-

the White House from Bush in 1992.

against the Kansas City

of the Great City Schools, an organization that represents about 70 large urban school

most vocal proponents for higher standards and tougher tests, said, "There's plenty of agreement that there' s too much testing going on." al, state and local level, we But, he added, "we have to have all supported policies be careful, as with anything

Game 3 of baseball's American

Jeb Bush's brother Neil has

utive director of the Council

ing from instruction. "It's important that we' re all honest with ourselves," he continued. "At the federthat have contributed to the

core .

teachers can use to inform

Duncan, the secretary of their i n s truction'?" asked education, who has said he Michael Casserly, the exec-

ating fresh uncertainty on the role of tests in America' s

schools. Many teachers have felt whiplash as they rushed

white students. The administration said

it would issue "clear guidance" on testing by January. Some of the language of the announcement S aturday was general; it said, for example, that tests should be "worth taking" and "fair." Like new guidance from many states, it underscored that academic standards

W. Bush and Jeb over the Sept. 11 attacks.

to rewrite curriculum based

"He is throwing shoes at the

on new standards and new assessments, only to have

a nd curriculum are to b e

TV when his son gets attacked

politicians in m any states

and insulted by our favorite candidate," Jeb Bush joked,

pull back because of political pressure.

But it also said that tests should be "just one of mul-

referring to hi s f ather and

Some who agreed that

fleshed out locally. tiple measures" of student achievement, and that "no

Trump, at a campaign stop in New Hampshire. "They' re all challenged by what's going on," Andrew Card said about the Bush fami-

testing has run rampant also single assessment should urged the administration not ever be the sole factor in to throw out the No. 2 pen- making an educational decicils with the bath water, say- sion about a student, an eduing tests can be a powerful cator or a school."

ly, referring to the "roller-coast-

tool for schools to identify

er ride" of a campaign. But Card, who served key

weaknesses and direct re- the administration was not sources. They worried that backing away entirely from

roles in both Bush administra-

the cap on time spent testing — which the administration

tests: Th e

Points of Light foundation cel-

to enshrine in legislation-

standards" and elicit "com-

ebration, said that though the current race had not gone as

would only tangle schools plex student demonstrations in more federal regulations or applications of knowledge and questions of what, ex- and skills."

tions and was with members of the family last week for a

planned, it had been a boon

Still, it emphasized that a n n ouncement

said tests should cover "the said it would ask Congress full range of relevant state

for the first President Bush. "It's keeping him young," Card said. Jeb Bush echoed that statement, calling the campaign rejuvenating for his father. And the elder Bush has long

oirsrrr

had a particular attachment

to Jeb and his aspirations, once publicly weeping as he recalled his son's grace in defeat during a 1994 run for governor. M ore is at s t ake i n t h i s race than Jeb Bush's political

career,friends of the family say. The Bush name has been

House chief of staff. "It is not prominent in national politics Strategists were eager to re- responding the way it used to. for three decades, and a reassure them and highlight the Their priorities are so differ- jection of the younger son by campaign's relative organiza- ent that if I tried to analyze it the electorate, especially in tional strength, fundraising I'd be making it up." the primary, could be deeply capacity and ability to endure Sununu, like many estab- wounding to a family proud of a delegate battle that could lishment-aligned R e publi-its role in American history. last well into spring. cans, is especially mystified But the Bushes do not talk But those who have long by Trump's appeal. much about losing. George W. "He supports single-pay- Bush, who has become a regbeen in the Bush family orbit are alsobeing forced to reck- er federalhealth care and he ular on the fundraising circuit on with a party that seems to loves eminent domain, and for his younger brother, tells be moving on from them. the tea party hates both of audiences that he and his fa"I have no feeling for the those things," he said. "So ther have developed a routine. e lectorate a n y more," s a i d explain to me how people are The elder Bush asks his son, "When is the inauguration?" John Sununu, the former New voting on issues." Hampshire governor who Contempt for Trump runs George W. Bush reminds him h elped the elder Bush wi n deep in the clan. Two people that it is January of 2017. "I' ll be there," the father the 1988 primary there and i nterviewed, who are in d i went on to serve as his White rect communication with the replies. the 41st and 43rd presidents.

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

BRIEFING Hikers rescued on BrokenTop Two hikers wholost their way Fridaynight on the northeast side ofBroken TopMountain were rescued byDeschutes County Sheriff's Office Search andRescueteam members early Saturday. Nikki Nguyen,20, of Happy Valley,called 911 at 9:40 p.m.Fridayafter she andherfriend, Hoang Ly, 21, ofBiloxi, Mississippi, becamelost in the dark on their hike toNo Name Lake,according to a releasefromthe sheriff's office. Thepair left on the hike at about 4:30

p.m. with light jackets, but no lights excepttheir cellphones. The sheriff's office determined aGPSlocation about three-tenths of a mile south ofBroken Hand andabout threetenths of amile southeast of No Name Lakeafter calling Nguyen'sphone. The office texted a map toNguyen's cellphone, butthepair couldn't find their wayin the darkness.Thehikers told the office theywould wait for help. Search andRescue sent a teamof threeon foot from theBrokenTop trailhead at12:32a.m. Saturday, andthey found

ousin s orta eta in ato onmenta i in entra re on • Deschutes Countycan help with rent — if a place tostaycan befound

doesn't have housing, you can imagine what the impact would be." "I think this is something

through a state grant. It also pays for temporary housing for clients with state funds. The housing barriers can

By Ted Shorack

can be the stigma attached

community mental health

lead some to a life of home-

The Bulletin

to someone who has been

lessness. Not everyone on the

The lack of housing might be dire in Central Oregon,

treated for mental illness and who may have minor criminal

providers acrossthestateare struggling with," said DeAnn Carr,deputy director ofcoun-

but the situation is even more

offenses as a result of their

is dealing with mental illness, but there tends to be a

so for those who experience mental illness.

health condition.

Housing exists in the form of residential treatment fa-

folks we see just need regular housing in the community-

cilities and temporary motel stays, but long-term housing options are often few and far between. One of the biggest barriers

an apartment or house," said

"The vast majority of the

Nancy Tyler, program manager for adult treatment with Deschutes County Behavioral Health. "When someone

to their mental health issues

ty behavioral health. "For clients to be successful, it's just the basic needs. When those

tance for mental health clients

street or in homeless camps correlation. "Those folks that don' t

resources aren't available, that can exacerbate the mental health challenges." Tyler said the biggest issue right now is simply the lack of

present very well, are a little

availability. Deschutes County

gon Veterans Outreach. SeeHousing/B2

is able to provide rental assis-

odd or eccentric, that probably

plays a role in the competitive rental market," said Cody Standiford, with Central Ore-

Merkley (D)...................... N VVyden (D) ......................N

Nore briefing, B6

— Sheila G. Miller, The Bulletin

Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!

STATE NEWS

The Bulletin Call e reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond.............. 541-617-7829 Sisters....................641-617-7831 La Pine ...................541-617-7831

Sunriver .................541-617-7831

Photos by Jarod Opperman / The Bulletin

Harvest Haydownattendees admire Hank, a Clydesdale, at Equine Outreach in Bend onSaturday.

• Harvest eventraisesmoneyfor nonprofit By Kailey Fisicaro

Email: letters@bendbulletin.corn Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-633-2117

• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation fo news@bendbulletin.corn, with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, and include acontact name and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0367

• School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneral interest to news@bendbuiietin.corn. Email announcementsof teens'

The Bulletin

Horse lovers and newbies gathered to fundraise the old-fashioned way at Equine Haydown on Saturday in

painting, fresh baked goods for sale, live music in the hay

Bend.

barn, horse-drawn cart rides

Outreach Inc. for the Harvest

"It's kind of like a 'friendraiser,'" said Joan Steelhammer, founder of the nonprofit.

"I think this is less about making money than it is making friends." Although the event had a relaxedatmosphere,there was a lot to see and do:

hayrides, a cake walk, face

• Obituaries, DeathNotices: Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits©bendbulletin.corn

• Community events: Visit bendbulletin.oem/events and click tAddEvent" at ieast10 days beforepublication. Details on the calendarpageinside Local andGO!Magazine. Contact: 641-383-0361, communitylffe@bendbuiietin.corn

• Engagements,weddings, anniversaries, birthdays: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Forms areavailable online at bendbulletin.oem/milestones. Contact: 641-633-2117, miiestones@bendbuiiefin.corn

• Roseberg:Relief fund distributes $145K,B3 • Klamatb Falls: Students learn about concrete at projectbased school,B3 • Albany:Man runs brewery out of his garage,B4

Well shot! Readerphotos

To see video coverage of the event, visit bemlbeRetie.corn

Send us your best outdoor photos at bendbelletie.com/ reederpbotos.Your entries will appear online, and we' llchoose the best for publication in the Outdoors section.

and, of course, the opportunity to get nose-to-nose with

some of the friendly animals under Equine Outreach's care. At the pen of Hank, a

Clydesdale, Sophie Eisler and Theresa Wellington, both 9 and of Bend, oohed and awed

over the giant creature. Leslie Tonge andMarcusWalker pet a donkey during the Harvest See Haydown /B6 Heydown. The event raised money for the equine nonprofit.

academic achievements to youth@bendbulletin.corn. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info to buiiefin@bendbulietin.corn. Contact: 541-633-2117

VValden (R) ......................Y Bonamici (D) ...................N Blumenauer (D)............... N DeFazio (D)......................N Schrader (D).................... N

U.S. SENATEVOTE

a.m. NguyenandLywere in good condition but very cold. The rescuerswarmed them up with moreclothingandhelpedthem back to the trailhead,where they arrived at3:05a.m. The sheriff's office reminds hikers to bring the "10 essentials" for survival, including: navigation, sunprotection, insulation, light, first aid, fire and repair tools, food, water andshelter.

Submissions • Letters andopinions:

U.S HOUSEVOTE • The U.S. House of Representatives last week passed the National Strategic and Critical Minerals Production Act of 2015, which would require the secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture departments to do more to develop domestic sources of minerals. The bill passed along party lines, with eight Democrats joining 246 Republicans in voting for and 177 Democrats voting against the bill.

• The Senate advanced a cybersecurity bill Thursday called the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act. Reuters reported that supporters say the bill would encourage companies and the government to share information that could stop high-profile cyberattacks. Some tech companies, as well as Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., oppose the bill, according to Reuters, because they say it doesn't protect users' privacy. The bill moved ahead after a procedural motion passed 8314, with 12 Democrats, Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Ver., and RandPaul, R-Ky., coming out against the bill. The Senate then began to consider amendments to the act, which is likely to pass this week, according to Reuters.

the hikers at about1:40

Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem .................. 406-589-4347 Business............... 541-617-7815 Education..............641-617-7831 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands.......... 541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

WASHINGTON WEEK

Submission requirements. Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution fat least6 inches wide and 300 dp0 and cannot be altered.

YESTERYEAR

CampAbbotsite developmentplansunderwayin Sunriverin 'l965 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies of The Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.

in other additions of equal distance from the business center. Lots 40x 105 — $60 for in-

side, $75 for corners

100 YEARSAGO

Lots 50 x 120 — $75 and

$100 for inside

in real estate when you buy right. You can buy right from me — J.A. Eastes

School drills(editorial)

In Portland the suggestion For the week ending Lots 50 x 125 — $100 and has been made that volunteer Oct. 24, 1915 $125 for corners military organizations be $5 cash and $5 monthly, six started in the schools. Such Real estate advertisement: percent interest. boys as desire may join school SPECIAL! LOTS LOTS Mr. Householder, cheaper to companies, which will receive LOTS buy and build than to pay rent. military training and drill inWe are selling lots at less Young man or young wom- struction at the hands of offithan half the price asked an, it pays to put your money cers of the Army and National

Guard. It is a sensible thing to do. The training would be good for the boys and give them just the sort of discipline which

tion, assuming that the move becomes general — as seems probable — is apparent. For indeed it would be worthwhile

is useful no matter what the

thousands of boys graduated eachyearfrom theschools with some knowledge of the

future course of their lives. It also would be healthful and interesting. Not being compulsory, only those who are sincerely interested and whose parents have no objections

need participate. Of course the ultimate

secondary benefit to the na-

for the government to have

rudiments of drill and disci-

plinary requirements. It can do no harm and would be of

benefit certainly individually and very possibly collectively in later years.

SeeYesteryear/B4


62

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

"People notoriously

Housing

E VENT

ENDA R

Submit an event: bendbulletin.corn/events and click 'Add Event."

Continued from 61 "People notoriously fear what they don't understand,"

said Tory Flory, outreach co-

TODAY

541-388-3300. "THE ROCKYHORROR SHOW": A

DD RANCHPUMPKIN PATCH& MARKETPLACE:Featuring a farmers market, crafts, live music, a pumpkin patch, a pettingzoo,ahay maze and more;10a.m. to5 p.m.;DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith RockW ay, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. "ED SHEERAN:JUMPERS FOR GOALPOSTS":A showing of a concert documentary on the XTour at Wembley Stadium; 12:55 p.m.; $16; Regal Old Mill Stadium16and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.cornor 844-462-7342. AN AFTERNOON WITHEDGAR ALLEN POE: Learn about Edgar Allan Poe; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY FALLCONCERT:Featuring guest German cellist Claus Kanngiesser, performing Lalo's Cello Concerto in D Minor, also including TheSecret of Suzanne Overture byWolf-Ferrari and Symphony No. 4 byBrahms; 2 p.m. free, ticket required; BendHigh School, 230 NESixthSt.,Bend;www. cosymphony.corn or 541-317-3941. "I LOVE A MYSTERY": Featuring episodes from "The Whistler," "Lux Radio Theater," and "TheHaunting Hour"; 2 p.m.; $15, $10for 18and under, Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-588-2212. "TCM PRESENTS:DRACULA DOUBLE FEATURE": Featuring a showing of the classic 1931 version and the Bela Lugosi version; 2 and7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.corn or 844-462-7342. "EVILDEAD, THE MUSICAL": A play about five college students who visit an old abandonedcabininthewoods and unleash anevil force; 3 p.m.; $22, $19 for students and seniors, $28 for the Splatter Zone; 2ndStreet Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.corn or 541-312-9626. "COMING TOLIGHTEDWARD S.CURTISANDTHE NORTH AMERICANINDIANS" DOCUMENTARY SCREENING: A documentary that tells the story of Edward S. Curtis, his monumental work, and his changing views of the

performanceofthe classic musical,

people hephotographed;7 p.m.; $6,

registration required; Atelier 6000, 389 SW ScalehouseCourt, Suite 120, Bend;541-330-8759. CHRISTOPHERPAUL STELLING: The singer/songwriter performs; 7 p.m., fundraising dinner at 5:30 p.m.; $15, $10 for 18 andyounger, $10 for dinner; The Belfry,302 E. MainAve., Sisters; www.belfryevents.corn or 541-815-9122. "CHASINGSHADOWS":A showing of the 2015 Warren Miller ski film, first 100 attendees receive a lift ticket to Mt. Bachelor; 5 and 8p.m.; $20 plus fees; TheTower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend; 541-317-0700.

MONDAY "THE ONE":A film about Daniel who makes a one-time "mistake" with his gay college friend, presented by LGBT Stars and Rainbows; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. "COMING TOLIGHTEDWARD S.CURTISANDTHE NORTH AMERICANINDIANS" DOCUMENTARY SCREENING:A documentary that tells the story of Edward S. Curtis, his monumental work, and his changing views of the

people hephotographed;7 p.m.; $6, registration required; Atelier 6000, 389 SW ScalehouseCourt, Suite120, Bend;541-330-8759. "ED SHEERAN:JUMPERS FOR GOALPOSTS":A showing of a concert documentary on the XTour at Wembley Stadium; 7:30 p.m.; $16; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.cornor 844-462-7342. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY FALLCONCERT:Featuring guest German cellist Claus Kanngiesser,

performing Lalo'sCelloConcertoin D Minor, also including TheSecret of Suzanne Overture byWolf-Ferrari and Symphony No. 4 byBrahms; 7:30 p.m. free, ticket required; BendHigh School, 230 NESixthSt.,Bend;www. cosymphony.corn or 541-317-3941.

TUESDAY CODE BLUE:REVIVING THE DESCHUTES RIVER:Steven Hawley speaks on measures to restore the health of the Deschutes watershed; 6:30p.m.;Old StoneChurch,157NW Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-280-0802. HISTORYPUB:"NEWBERRY VOLCANO ANDCENTRAL OREGON'SANCIENT CULTURAL HERITAGE":TomConnolly, director of research for the UOMuseum of Natural 8 Cultural History 8 State Museum of Anthropology; 7 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www.

by Lurking Squirrel Productions; 8 p.m.;$25to$36 plusfees; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. NASHVILLEUNPLUGGED: Featuring Travis Howard, Aaron Benward and Earl Bud Lee; 9 p.m.; $10 plus fees

in advance,$30for a table, $40for VIP table; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-382-4270.

SATURDAY Andy Tullis/ The Bulletin

DRESS DASH:CHARITY WEDDING DRESSSALE:Usedwedding dresses for sale, to benefit Brides them play at2p.m.today and 7:30 p.m.Monday. for a Cause; 7 a.m. to10 a.m.; FivePine Lodge & Conference Center, 1021 E. Desperado Trail, Sisters; mcmenamins. or cn or541-382-5174. FRIDAY www.bridesforacause.corn or "CHONDA PIERCE: LAUGHING 503-282-4000. IN THE DARK":Alook at the bestROALDDAHL'S "THEWITCHES": A The selling female comedian's life; 7 p.m.; performance of Roald Dahl's family- TRICK-OR-TREATING: businesses of Brookswood $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 friendly story "The Witches," adapted and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse by David Wood; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; $10, Meadow Plaza participate in Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.corn $5 for kids and seniors; Summit High trick-or-treating; 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19530 or 844-462-7342. School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; www. MADCHILD:The hip-hop band Bend; www.bend.k12.or.us/shs or brookswoodmeadowplaza.corn or from Vancouver, British Columbia, 541-355-4190. 541-323-3370. performs, with Demrick andJay "EVILDEAD, THE MUSICAL": A play "FROM THEVAULT" EXHIBIT Tablet; 8 p.m.; $12 plus fees in about five college students who visit OPENING:Featuring rarely displayed advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic an old abandoned cabininthewoods volumes of "The North American Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, and unleash anevil force; 7:30 to Bend; 541-323-1881. 10:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for students and Indian" from the inaugural exhibition, through Oct. 31; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; $15, seniors, $28 for the Splatter Zone; $12 for seniors, $9for ages5to12, WEDNESDAY 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette free for 4 and younger; High Desert Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, "TCM PRESENTS:DRACULA corn or 541-312-9626. Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.corn DOUBLE FEATURE": Featuring a "BOBBY GOULDINHELL":Featuring or 541-382-4754. showing of the classic 1931 version the one-act play by David Mamet; and the Bela Lugosi version; 2 and7 DD RANCHPUMPKIN PATCHA p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 7:30 p.m.; $10; Volcanic Theatre MARKETPLACE:Featuring a farmers Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse market, crafts, live music, a pumpkin Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.corn www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or patch, a pettingzoo,a hay maze 541-323-1881. or 844-462-7342. and more;10 a.m.to5 p.m .;DD NEW YEARSDAY:The band "SEARCHINGFORAZTLAN": Ranch, 3836 NE Smith RockW ay, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net or Featuring a live performance, written performs, with Get Scared, EyesSet To Kill, The RelapseSymphony, and 541-548-1432. and directed by Latino playwright Darksiders; 8p.m.;$13plusfeesin Lakin Valdez andperformed by MONSTERDASHANDLITTLE advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic Teatro Milagro's National Touring MONSTERMILE: Featuring a 5K, Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Productions; 5 p.m.; Hitchcock a10K and a Little Monster Mile, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.corn costumes are encouraged, face Auditorium, Pioneer Hall, Central or 541-323-1881. Oregon Community College, painting, games andmore, to benefit 2600 NWCollegeW ay,Bend; MONSTER BALL: A Halloween party Younity, an organization providing 541-318-3726. with costume contests, live music bully-prevention to Central Oregon and more; theme is "Star Wars"; THEN ANDNOW:EDWARD Schools; 10 a.m.; $30 for10K, $25 8 p.m.; $20 plusfeesinadvance, for 5K, $10 for Little Monster Mile; CURTIS, EARLY20TH CENTURYPHOTOGRAPHY $35 for combo pack; Midtown Highland Elementary School, 701 Ballroom, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., NW Newport Ave., Bend; www. 5 CONTEMPORARY NATIVE AMERICANPHOTOGRAPHERS' Bend; www.bendradiogroup.cornor fleetfeetbend.corn or 541-389-1601. RESPONSES:Dr. Dolan will discuss Edward Curtis' photography within the larger context of early 20th Century photography andworks by contemporary Native American photographers that directly respond to his work; 6:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway 97, Bend; www.cocc.edu/foundation/vsp or 541-383-7257. THE LIL' SMOKIES: Thebluegrass band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or 541-382-5174. "MOTO 7THEMOVIE": Featuring the biggest jumps, tracks and some of the most remote locations a motorcycle has ever touched in this motocross action sports film; 7:30 p.m.; $15 plus fees; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. Central Oregon Symphony members Tim Lynch, left, and Andreas Lang play French horn during a rehearsal for the Fall Concert. See

ordinator with COVO. "One

of the most misunderstood conditions that we have out there is mental illness."

The veterans outreach group visits homeless camps in the region offering information about social services and clothing, propane, food and other basic needs. Standiford said the mental

health issues they encounter can range from "mild anxiety to full blown psychosis." Some may be "self-medicating" as well with drugs and alcohol, he said. Mental health housing received attention during this

fear what they

don't understand. One of the most misunderstood conditions that we

have out there is mental illness." — Tory Flory, outreach coordinator with COVO

understanding is of the needs of those with mental illness." Bids to receive the hous-

ing money will begin being accepted next spring, said Bouneff.The money is expected to be awarded to housing projects by fall 2016. The type of housing could include long-term treatment as well as independent living opportunities. Some of the funding could

year's Oregon legislative session. The Legislature approved a $20 million budget item earmarked forprojects reach Central Oregon, but in that will create housing for

the meantime, housing avail-

Oregonians dealing with addiction disorders or mental illness. An advisory group was formed to create criteria for the housing projects. The money was allocated by the Legislature to the state Housing and Community Services department. Chris Bouneff, executive

ability will remain an issue.

director of the National Al-

success," said Elger.

liance on Mental Illness in Oregon, said the housing

Standiford, with C OVO, said the organization and its

money is a major investment

partners need to continue to advocate for vulnerable pop-

for a population that is traditionally underserved. "While it is not going to come close to the need, it's a fantastic step forward," said

Be cky Elger,

been one solution.

"We greatly appreciate that because that helps their stability and their long-term

ulations knowing that state

funding often goes to more urban high-population centers in the state.

Bouneff. "It really u nder-

scores how much better our

— Reporter: 541-61 7-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.corn

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THURSDAY ROALDDAHL'S"THEWITCHES": A performance of Roald Dahl's familyfriendly story "The Witches," adapted by David Wood; 6:30 p.m.; $10, $5 for kids and seniors; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.bend.k12.or.us/shs or 541-355-4190. IGNITE BEND 13: Featuring 10 local speakers, sharing their passion in five-minute talks; 7 p.m.; $5suggested donation;The Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.ignitebend.corn or 541-317-0700. ASHERFULEROBAND: Thefunkrock band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. mcmenamins. or cn or541-382-5174. "EVILDEAD, THE MUSICAL": A play about five college students who visit an old abandonedcabin inthewoods and unleash anevil force; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for students and seniors, $28 for the Splatter Zone; 2ndStreet Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.corn or 541-312-9626. "BOBBY GOULDINHELL":Featuring the one-act play by David Mamet; 7:30 p.m.; $10; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. BEATSANTIQUE:Theeletro-dance

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group performs; 8p.m., doors open at p. 7 m.;$25 plusfeesin advance, $28at the door; Midtown Bend, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend;www. bendticket.corn or 541-383-0800. RAINBOW GIRLS: TheAmeri canafunk band performs, with gBots and theJourneymen;9 p.m.;$5 plusfees in advance, $10 atthe door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

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intensive

community services supervisor with Deschutes County, said building relationships with landlords willing to rent to mental health clients has

EnergyTrust of Oregon


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

OSe Ui' S OOIA ROSEBURG — Nonprofits

in Roseburg have distributed the first round of money that

UA

Eugene kidnlPPillg —Eugenepolice said amanheld a23-yearold woman in his car, but sheescapedwhen hehadto slow down for traffic. Police said the womanmetthe manat a bar Friday night and asked him for a ride home.Shetold police shewas uneasywhen he did not immediately take herhomeandasked to be let out. Theman sloweddown,butwhenthewoman wasabouttogetout,helocked the doors, sped upandtold her he was going to take her to the river.

Oi' I'e Ie

isi'i ues The Associated Press

AROUND THE STATE

"We' re able to bless them with some financial

assistance, but at the same time they want their loved ones back. Money can't replace

forts also are underway. One local man, Justin Troxel, is selling steel signs in the shape of Oregon, with a heart cut out over Roseburg. His

flowed into a relief fund fol- that.... We met with one mom and she said lowing the mass shooting at 'All I want is my child back.'" fund has raised more than Umpqua Community College. $500,000 so far. — Bryan Trenkle, United Way director Organizers from the UCC The organizers of the UCC Strong Fun d d i s tributed Strong Fund said they will $145,000 to victims, their famalso work to ensure that families and the Salvation Army Distributing the money has 'All I want is my child back.'" ilies continue to be aided in last week. brought out mixed emotions, Members of the organi- the future and will work with The f u n d w a s cr e a ted United Way director Bryan zation went to the homes of administrators of other beneby Greater Douglas United Trenkle told the (Roseburg) 24 families to hand-deliver fit funds to avoid duplicating Way, the UCC Foundation, News-Review. money. efforts. "We' re able to bless them "There are more victims Umpqua Bank and the Ford Contributions came from Family Foundation after the with some financial assis- all 50 states, Trenkle said. The and people impacted than Oct. 1 shooting. A gunman tance, but at the same time fund administrators plan to just the people in the room or killed nine and injured nine they want their loved ones distribute money in several even the people on campus," others before killing himself back," Trenkle said. "Money more waves, but details are said Brian Prawitz, who helps f ollowing a s h o otout w i t h can't replace that.... We met still being worked out. oversee communications for police. with one mom and she said, Separate fundraising ef- the fund.

Concrete learning at project-basedschool By Samantha Tipler

while when he sees things being built. "Engineering is a profession," he told the EagleRidge students. "It's a profession equal to being a doctor or a lawyer."

(Klarnath Falls) Herald and News

KLAMATH FALLS — Engineering tech Brian Pisan likes

to make things.

"I' ve always been into build-

ing things. When I was younger I loved playing with Legos," said the Oregon Tech graduate who works at Adkins Consulting Engineering. "Seeing something come from an idea, to plans and specs, to someone out there hammering a nail, or pumping the concrete or erecting steel and iron. I like

FarmhOuSe fire —The Eugene/Springfield Fire Department said a woman was injured in a fire at anold farm housethat was converted into five separate units. Thewomanwas taken to a hospital with injuries from smoke inhalation. Her injuries are not life-threatening. Firefighters said the blazeSaturday morning causedextensive damage to two units but they wereable to prevent it from spreading to the others. The fire's cause is under investigation by police and fire marshals. Hynix plant —A data center developer who tried to purchase the former Hynix manufacturing plant in Eugene iscalling for the identity of whoever outbid him. Auction.corn oversaw theauction last week that started with a $3 million bid and closed with $21 million. Simon Tusha said hehas beenasking Auction.corn for more details. The site has 30 days to reveal more information about the auction. Hynix was one of the Eugene-area's largest private employers from late 1998 until 2008, manufacturing computer memory chips. Theplant closed amid the economic crash of 2008. Tushasaid if he had won the auction, his investment group would work to turn the 1.2-millionsquare-foot former computer-chip manufacturing complex into a business park. TaX diSpute —The Benton County Board of Commissioners is working to write Hewlett-Packard the last check it owes from a long-running dispute over property taxes. Thecommissioners voted this week to set up areserve account to collect the remaining money owed to HP.Thecounty still owes almost $1.2 million in interest on over collected property tax payments. Officials said about $733,000 has already beenset aside and$450,000 will be withheld from taxing districts after next month's property tax collections. In August, the Oregon SupremeCourt upheld a 2013 state TaxCourt decision that found HP's Corvallis site had beenovervalued by the Oregon Department ofRevenuebetween2008 and2010.TheCountywasordered to pay nearly $9.4 million. — From wire reports

Find It All Gnline bendbulletin.corn

that kind of stuff. That's what makes it for me."

Pisan told this to a senior engineering dass at EagleRidge High School a few weeks ago when they visited Adkins on a field trip. Learning while building something is key to the charter school's underlying philosophy. It's called project-based learning. "Everything they learn is based on a project Everything has a tangible result, whether it's a presentation or a con-

Pacific$ource Medicare is your plan for more coverage and no deductibles. AAedicare Free Medicare Seminar November 4, 1:30 p.m. Advantage Wednesday, Bend Senior Center Plans 1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend starting 541-241-6926 i 800-735-2900 (TTY) at $25 www.Medicare. PacificSource.corn

Samantha Tiper l / (Klamath Falls) Herald and News via The AssociatedPress

crete object," said EagleRidge TOP: EagleRidge High School students Christopher Lopez, left, science teacher Mark Ferrara. Micah Metzger, center, and Michelle Cox build a small-scale con"We do a lot of hands-on activi- crete suspension bridge during anengineering class in Klamath ties in our school."

Falls. ABOVE: Students form concrete into molds.

Project-basedlearning "Project-based learning is "Just because it's challengour model here at EagleRidge," ing," Micah said. "It's not borsaid school director Donald ing. It's more hands-on." Peters en. She explained how the conThe classi c schoolmodel for crete molds were designed with learning starts with teaching spotsfor a suspension chain to and interacting with students. pass through and latch on. Two Then students do some work, sides were A-frame supports likeaworksheetorpaper.Last- and one slab made the roadway. ly the students take a test to

show what they' ve learned. "We have the same standards, but we put our standards

"It's the measurements we

said.

Next is college. After earning a four-year degree, as he did at Oregon Tech, engineers take an eight-hour

3 paci ficSource

test to cover everything they' ve

lNDlvlouAl. l aR Dul' i

learned. And then they' re still not

standards. And when it comes to state

said. "You get to learn more, not

testing and evaluations, the

ect the next week." "It really helps a lot because

just jumping onto another proj-

MediCare

For accommodationOfpersonswith special needsat sales meetings call 541-241-6926or 711TlY. PacilicSourceCommunity Health Plans isan HMO/PPOplan with aMedicare conlract Enrollment in PacificSoutce Medicaredependsoncontract renewal. A salesperson wil be present with informationandapplications. Youmustcontinueto payyour Medicare Part Bpremium.Limitations, copaysandresbicfionsmayapply.Benemsandpremium maychangeonJanuary1ofeachyear.Y0021 MRK3332 CMS Accepted

an engineer. After that is four

need to keep it stable," she said. years of training and then anHer partners agreed, proj- other exam. ect-basedlearning works for But masan said it's all worth-

into a project," Petersen said. them. "It's easier to c oncentrate "The kids create something. They demonstrate to the teach- when you focus on a project, er that they understand the one step at a time," Michelle

210 students at EagleRidge still have to take the same tests as

is graduating high school," he

CREATE OPPORTUNllY

we actually get to experience the other schools and meet the what works and how everysame benchmarks. thing goes together, instead of "We teach standards. The just sitting there," Christopher kids have to know the stan- said, comparing making somedards. They have to pass the thing to studying something. tests, just like any other school," "We' ll see through our experiPetersen said. ence how it all goes togetherall the concrete and aggregates Hands-on and water, how it all comes Ferraradecided to teach his together. It will cure and bestudents about engineering by come pureconcrete.Ifwewere getting hands-on with concrete. just sitting there learning, we First they visited Knife River

wouldn't be able to experience

to see how concrete was made. that." Then they went to Adkins to Jose Corona, 17, took the test the concrete. engineering dass as an opporThere, Pisan put concrete tunity to study carbon sequescylinders into a pressurized tration, which he researched as machine, testing how much part of his project. "With every ton of concrete weight it could take. "This little 4-inch cylinder will break at made, half a ton of carbon is several thousand pounds per taken out of the air, reduced," square inch," he said. "That' s he said. multiple, multiple pickups if He studied how power plants you couldbalance them on top can pump emissions into conof this tiny little cylinder before crete to store it in the earth and it would break. Or you could capture it. "I think it's cool," he said. think several elephants." Next the students used concrete for their own projects.

Way to a career

In Ferrara's classroom, MiBack at Adkins engineering, cah Metzger, 16, Michelle Cox. Pisan outlined the way to be16, and Christopher Lopez, 17, come an engineer. It's not an

made miniat a ure concretesus- easy road. "The first step, obviously, pension bridge.

EDUCATION. INCOME.HEALTH. special thanks to United way me dia sponsor The

Builetm

PO Box 5969 Bend, OR 97708 541-389-6507 www. liveunitedco.org

United ~~~>

Way ~

United Way of Dest:hutes County


B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

A anymanta es eer o to t e next eve wit rewery

BITS FEATURED OBITUARY

By Steve Lathrop Albany Democrat-Herald

ALBANY —

O' Hara

W h e n K l i nt

Sheets began brewing beer, it was all about fun.

"I started this like a home brewery, just like a lot of breweries start," Sheets said. "I thought this could be an enjoy-

played strong beauties

able retirement." It's become a l ittle more.

Sheets and his wife, Beth, officially opened 3 Sheets Brewery in North Albany in May. It's a small in-home brewery but its popularity seems to be gaining momentum at pubs around the area. To feed his home brewing hobby, Sheets built his brewing facility to the side of his house in a 16-foot-by-32-foot garage. He ventedand plumbed the building specifically for brewing. It indudes a cold room for storage. Encouraged by friends and

Mark Ylen/Albany Democrat-Herald via The Associated Press

By Anita Gates

Klint Sheets talks about his home brewing business in his garage

New York Times News Service

in Albany. The police officer has taken his hobby of brewing beer

M aureen O' Hara, t h e spirited Irish-born actress

and opened 3 Sheets Brewery, which is operated out of the garage.

who played strong-willed, tempestuous beauties op-

ing produced at 3 Sheets cur- Brewing Supply. His signage rently, but Sheets has recipes was designed at No Dinx in for more than 20 varieties. Albany. "It was important to keep evBeth is responsible for many of those recipes,Sheets said. erything local," Sheets said. "A family, Sheets moved to the Sheets said his beers have lot of people walked hand-innext level. four main ingredients and lean hand with us to help make this "I call it a home brewery on toward German and Ameri- work." steroids," said Sheets, 42, who can-style brews. 3 Sheets has created enough has been with the Lebanon Po- "Beth is always working demand in its short existence lice Department for 10 years. with new flavor combinations," to call for deliveries once a His brews are featured at Sheets said. week. And Sheets is looking at the Growler Cafe and Duffy's The most popular brands eventual expansion, both of his Tavern in Lebanon and at the from 3 Sheets right now are his brewery and his customer base. Growler Garage in Albany. IPA and a strawberry cream Right now his beer is in kegs "Tap houses and pubs where ale. only, but he would like to add we are most prominent," Sheets Production time i s a b out to that by bottling his brews in said. "Someday I would like to three weeks from grain to glass the future. He is looking to find have a little brew pub." because it takes time to fer- more outlets in the mid-valley Sheets said his beers tend to ment. Sheets said everything at as well. Corvallis and perhaps be more traditional. There are the brewery is produced locally. Marion County could provide four or five different beers be- Grains are bought at Corvallis potential customers.

posite all manner of adventurers in escapist movies of the 1940s and '50s, died

Saturday at her home in Boise, Idaho. She was 95. O' Hara was called the

Queen ofTechnicolor,because when that film process first came into use,

nothing seemed to show off its splendor better than her rich red hair, bright green eyes and flawless peaches-and-cream complexion.

Continued from B1

50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Oct. 24, 1965

75 YEARSAGO

Speculation isunderway on location of major Oregon

For the week ending Oct. 24, 1940

British planning more night raids

college neededby1980 (editorial Two factors bear most of the

Plans announced today in

responsibility for the great upLondon for a new and more surge in college enrollment in intensive air offensive against Oregon this year. G ermany come at a t i me One factor is the rapid jump when the long winter nights in the number of college-age will give the British aviators youths. The "war babies," born an opportunity to demon- in the first year or so after the

Properties, Inc., former Camp

Abbot site on the upper Deschutes River, is well underway. Allen J. Grant, Bend, general

manager, said the target date for first site improvement is spring of 1966. "Sunriver is being planned as a resident-resort community which will indude recreation facilities, r esidential a r eas,

commercial businesses, community-social activities, shops,

stores and services, as needed," Grant said. The siteincludes 5,485 acres.

This is roughly twice the area of the city of Bend.

strate their superior training

end of World War II, have fi-

for flying blind and reaching their targets in the dark, with

nallyreached collegeage.The an Oregon corporation, solely second is the growing realiza- owned by three equal sharetion on the part of youngsters and their parents that a college holders, Donald V. McCallum, education is well worth the sac- president; John D, Gray, vice president, and Lee Evans, vice rifices required. College and university en- president. Gray developed Salrollments have been growing ishan Lodge, a new resort on steadily ever since World War the Oregon coast. II, even before the "war babies"

trivial losses. Not until next

year will British numerical weakness in planes be sufficiently overcome to allow

development of large scale attacks. New types of long distance and speedier bombers,

Sunriver Properties Inc., is

however, will permit night assaults on a scale much greater started attending classes. 25 YEARSAGO than the Germans have yet A larger and larger percentexperienced. age of a larger population goes For the week ending The Germans scoffed at to college each year. In another Oct. 24, 1990 night flying before the war, 15 years the total enrollment Book's Elvisreturns because of their overconfi- figure in this state will be much dence inthe superior number of their planes to demolish the

more impressive, or horren-

dous, depending upon your British air force in daylight at- point of view. tacks. Only recently have the Germans been forced to admit

There is a need for another

astrucker

He's 55 with a slight paunch, salt-and-pepper hair and a penchant for bologna sandwich-

the futility of their pre-war reliance on daylight operations because of their enormous losses and have had to con-

major college in Oregon. Some es and cowboy hats. He's in time in the next 10 to 15 years the federal witness protection the schools at Eugene, Corval- program ... or maybe produclis, and Portland will not be ing movies ... or driving an able to handle the enrollment 18-wheeler.

centrate on night attacks.

demands.

He's Elvis in the 90s.

It is very rare for a British So far, two theories have Or so says Gail Brewer-Giorplane to be brought down over been used to project the loca- gio, author of the best selling "Is Germany in the dark. tion of the new college. One Elvis Alive?" She's back with would have the state expand "The Elvis Files," her latest look German planesresume Southern Oregon College at at the phenomenon she's helped attack Ashland. The other, suggest- create about Elvis Presley and German air fleets resumed ed by JW. Forrester who is a his (alleged) death 13 years ago. heavy attacks on Great Brit- leading member of the State She goes so far as to guess ain today. About 60 raiders Board of Higher Education, (via a letter from one true besmashed through London's would have the state take over liever) when Elvis will make his defenses, butwere driven off operation of one of the present comeback — Aug. 16, 1993. two-year colleges and expand by Royal Air Force fighters. Brewer-Giorgio is right bout Two bombs were dropped its curriculum. Forrester men- one thing: She's not alone. Sevon the capitol, but B r i tish tioned the schools at Bend and en percent of Americans in a fighters appeared to have Coos Bay as being the best 1989 CBS News poll said they attacked so effectively and bets. believed Elvis was alive, most swiftly that the first air raid It was discussed that Central of them, apparently, sent the a larm of th e day passed Oregon College might, some author unsolicited accounts of without serious damage to day, become a four-year school. their first-person encounters London. There would be some problems with the king of rock 'n' roll. involved in turning over opSupremacy inair predicted eration to the state. Would the There were many personal sightings and conversations by Churchill state absorb the present faculPrime M i n ister

W i n ston ty, or would it insist on different

with Elvis.

One says he hangs out in standards than have been apWashington D.C. plied in faculty selection? This ties in with one of Brewcommand of the air from GerRegardless of the problems, many next year. it seems certain Oregon will er Giorgio's pet theories: Elvis, Churchill, scoffing at Ger- have another four-year school. like "Wiseguy" Henry Hill, was forced into the federal witness man invasion threats, was ve- From a standpoint of central protection program for his own hement in his denunciation of geographic location, this is the Adolf Hitler who — he warned best place in the state to locate safety. But the last word comes France — was plotting the it. But don't start buying real permanent disintegration of estate or building rental units from a woman who asked her Churchill predicted tonight

that Great Britain will seize

the French nation and French

in the belief that it will come

culture.

here soon, or easily.

"We are on Hitler's track,"

local postmaster to explain

why there was no Elvis Presley stamp. The anonymous federal employee provided this ominous response: "For a person to be on a postage stamp, he has

ocean. If he cannot destroy

Plans fordevelopment of Camp Abbot underway, by Phil F. Brogan

us, we surely will destroy him and all his gang."

Master planning in advance to be dead. The government is of development of the Sunriver not sure Elvis is dead."

said Churchill, "so are our friends across the Atlantic

Arlene Marie Zerbe went home to be with her Savior on October 8, 2015, after a brief stay in a Bend hospital. She was born on May 28, 1926, in Wallowa, Oregon, the only -- child of Frank and Hazel Masengil. She lived her early years in Wallowa and La Grande before moving to Eugene, whereshe graduated from Eugene High School in 1944. She married Wayne Hunter onJuly 2, 1947, and their daughter Sherry was born a year later. After her daughter was in high school, Arlene went to work as a tailor and a seamstress and later became a drapery fabricator. In 1982 Arlene and Wayne moved to Sisters, where they opened a gift shop and owned a drapery business. After her husband' s death in1996, Arlene married Don Zerbe on February 14, 1997. Don and Arlene literally made beautiful music together and always delighted their friends and family with lovely piano duets and accompaniments. 'Ihey also enjoyed traveling and cruising to many exciting destinauons. Until the time of her death, Arlene was still enjoying her family, traveling with Don, playing the piano for her church, and fabricating draperies for a local window decorating store. She loved her family and also her cocker spaniel, Leilani.

Arlene is survived by her husband Don of Sisters, her daughter Sherry Scales(Vaughn) of Dexter, her daughter Ruth Brown (Dennis) of Deer Island, and her daughter Patty Pearson (Russ) of Sandy. She is also survived by 14 grandchildrenand three great-grandchildren. A memorial service win be held on Satur ay, Octob 31, 2015, at 2 p . m. at t he Episcopal C c h o f e Transfiguration, 68825 Brooks C p Ro S is e I n lieu of flowers, contributions m e se t ideon s International, P. O. Box7672, Bend,

)5 'I

Arrangements entrusted to Niswon r-Reynolds tn Bend;

Even the creators of the

process claimed her as its best advertisement. Yet many of the f i lms

ANNE WILLITS MASTERSON

thatmade theyoung O'Hara a star were in black and

white. They included her first Hollywood movie, " The Hunchback of N o -

Yesteryear

Arlene Marie Hunter Zerbe 1926-2015

tre Dame" (1939), the Oscar-winning "How Green Was My Valley" (1941), "This Land Is Mine" (1943) and "Miracle on 3 4th Street" (1947). Perhaps the best remembered of her color films was director John Ford's "The Quiet Man" (1952), the second of five movies in which O'Hara starred opposite John

Wayne. As film historian David Thomson once observed

of her s creen persona throughout her career, she was "inclined to thrust her

hands on her hips, speak her mind and be told, 'You' re pretty when you' re angry.'" Those hips were likely to be dressed in the fashions of another era. Of

the more than 50 films she made, about half were peri-

od pieces. Wayne once paid her what he

c onsidered the

highest compliment. "I' ve had many friends, and I prefer the company of men, exceptfor Maureen O'Hara," he said. "She is a great Maureen

Fi t z Simons

was born on Aug. 17, 1920, in Ranelagh, Ireland, on the outskirts of Dublin. She

began appearing in school plays as a child and was accepted as a student at the Abbey Theater in Dublin when she was 14.

Her Hollywood movie career almost did not happen. After she appeared in two British musicals in 1938, a screen test was ar-

ranged by a British studio. O' Hara was horrified by the results. Continued next page

May 29, 1981 — October 15, 2015

Anne Willits Masterson of Bend, Oregon, passed away peacefully on Thurs d ay, October 15th. She was active and fully engaged in life until she experienced heartfailure ~ ='j a few days before her passing. A Celebration of L i f e a n d reception will be held Sunday, November 8, at 2:00 pm at Aspen Hall i n Shevlin Park, 18920 NW Shevlin Park Road in Bend. Anne was born to Mr. and Mrs. John McGregor Willits in Evanston, IL on May 29, 1931. She grew up primarily in Crystal Falls, MI, and Pontiac, MI, and graduated from Pontiac High in 1948. She graduated with honors from the University of Michigan in 1954 with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing. She remained closeto her classmates from the Nursing School, faithfully attending reunions every five years through 2009. After college graduation, Anne moved to Denver, CO, where she worked as a nurse in multiple departments at Denver General Hospital and helped set up Colorado's first pediatric ICU. While in Denver, Anne skied in the Colorado Rockiesevery chance she could get. It was in Denver that she met and married her husband, John Masterson, in 1960. The couple moved to John' s hometown of Eugene, Oregon, where their two sons were born. Her husband'steaching career took them to Vancouver, WA, Ames, IA, and Anchorage, AK, where Anne volunteered at the Alaska Native Hospital while raising their two sons. Anne and herfamily returned to Oregon in 1975 when they purchased a working farm in Yamhill County. She worked full time as a nurse at Physician's Medical Center in McMinnville, OR, while helping her husband with every aspect of running a wheat, hay and sheep farm. In the mid-1980s, Anne and John settled in Central Oregon, first in Sunriver and later, Bend. Anne loved skiing, music, gardening and golf, which she played into her80s. She formed many friendships in the area, primarily through numerous sporting and community activities. Anne is survived by her husband of 55 years, John; her sons, Guy of Camano Island, WA, and Kevin (wife Toni) of Bend,OR; her beloved grandson, Jackson; her sisters, Judy Sabo of Seattle, WA, and Caroline Peters of McLean, VA; brother, Ward Willits of Shelton, WA; and several caring nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents, her brother, John Willits, and sister, Jane Willits. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions in her name can be made to the American Heart Association http: // www.heart.org/HEARTORG/ and the Sunriver Music Festival http: //www.sunrivermusic.org. Autumn Funeralsis honored to serve Anne's family. Please visit http: //obits.autumnfunerals.corn to share condolences and sign our on-line guestbook.

Jack E. MacDonald ~r i l g7, 1924 — October'',19', 2015 JatS E. Mrcoonald or Bend, pregon, passed away peacefully at his; 'honle with his loving familyat aside on October 19, 2935. He was 91 g Jack was bor pgril 27, 1924, in llingham, Washington, to Roderick and Mame (Scott) Mat;Donaldr He was rais]d in Ferndltle, WA;where his love for his parents,'triste'r, and the town of Ferndale~altfelong. W Jack proudly served in,ke US Army'during World War II with the 15thAirforce Division as a turret gunner and radloioperator.From 1943 to+945, he flew 50 missions in the Medttejfanean Theater of Operation@After returning hotfte from the War,Jack met and marrie , Bettje JeanWilson, the love of his life, in 1949. They had three children. University of Washington virith a tn 1950, Jack~aduated l' bachelor's degreein BusinessAdnunistrgon and spent his car' eer asa sales and marketing executive with the Carnation Cbmpan'y tn the Pacific Northwest and California. )hi 1984 Jack ahd Bettie retired in Sunriver, OR, later settling in Bend; Jack loved life~his fatnily, friends, and country. He was ane nth usiasticspotter of wild animals, an ace bridge player, and an avid football fan — go Huskies!~e had many other passions as well, including 'golf and hunting. Jack and Pettie pursued theirdove of travel up until last month on an Alaskan 'cruise with dear friends. His sense of humor was with him to the end 'of his lengthy, full life. Jack is survived by his lo'ying and devoted wife, Betlie MacDonald of Bend; their daughters, Jan MacDon+ of Seattle, WA, and,Laurie (husband Richard Shelton) MacDonald of Los Angeles, CA; and hisdearsister,D eanie DeCraaff. He was preceded in death by both parents and a son,'Roderick John MacDonald. All who kneW Jack will remember him for his honesty, devotion to family and friends, and contagious sense of humor Xe knew no strangers and was never ata lossforw ords or a good story. Memorial contributions in Jack's memory can be made to Burned Children Recovery Foundation,' 409 Noo'd Place, Everett, WA 98203, www.burnedchildrenrecovery.org; or Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org. D eschutes Memorial Chapel and Gardens is honored to care for the family,(541) 382-5592.Please visit our online register book at deschutesmemorialchapeLorg.~

+

+

roche

H osp ice,


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B5

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES

Lorin Donald

Myring

Mary Ann Maniey, of Terrebonne

Verna I,ee(I,auner) Bellus

April 18, 1925- Oct. 3, 2015

December 9, 1935 - October 18, 2015

May 28, 1931 - Sept. 26, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsREDMOND www.autumnfunerals.net 541-504-9485 Services: Celebration of Life

,

(followed by reception)

Saturday, October 31, 2015, 11am-4pm, Terrebonne Grange Hall, Terrebonne, OR. Contributions may bemade

Ellis R. Bosworth/The Associated Press file photo

to:

Actress Maureen O' Hara displays a passport in 1957. The Irish beauty known as the Queen of Technicolor died Saturday. She was 95. L orin My r i n g p as s e d away p e a cefully i n hi s From previous page Hitchcock's last British projh ome at S t one L o dge o n But Charles Laughton hap- ect before moving to HollyOctober 3, 2015. He was 90 years old. pened to see the test and, he wood. O' Hara ended up movL orin w a s b o r n i n D e - said, liked something about ing, too. troit L a k e s , M i n n e sota, her eyes.He promptly cast O' Hara was married three later moving to Minneapo- her in the crime adventure times. She is survived by her l is. H e l e f t h i g h s c h o o l "Jamaica Inn" (1939), of which daughter, Bronwyn FitzSiwhile in the eleventh grade he was a producer as well as mons, a grandson and two to join th e M a r in e C orps. the star. The film was Alfred great-grandchildren. He served in WWII and the K orean W ar . Du r i ng WWII, he fought and survived t h e b a t t l e o f Iw o Jima and was awarded the Purple Heart medal. After s erving o u r c o u n t ry , h e Death Notices are freeand Deadlines: Death Notices are worked for 32 years in the will be run for oneday,but accepted until noon Monday c riminal j u s t i c e s y s t em , specific guidelines must be through Friday for next-day with 20 of those years as a followed. Local obituaries are publication and by4:30 p.m. Minneapolis police officer, paid advertisements submitted Friday for Sundaypublication. followed by 12 years as an by families or funeral homes. Obituaries must be received i nvestigator fo r t h e H e n Theymay besubmitted by by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough n epin Cou n t y pu bl i c Thursday for publication on defender's office. He marphone, mail, email or fax. The ried Loraine Peterson and Bulletin reserves the right to the second dayafter subhad three daughters. Lorin edit all submissions. Please mission, by1 p.m. Friday for a nd h i s w i f e mo v e d t o include contact information in Sunday publication, and by B end, Oregon, after r et ir all correspondence. 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday ing in 1988. For information on any of these publication. Deadlines for Survivors i n c l u d e tw o display ads vary; pleasecall services or about the obituary d aughters, L o r e le i ( R i c k for details. L owen) of M el b o u r n e , policy, contact 541-617-7825. A ustralia, a n d L or i n e t t e

Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd, Redmond, OR 97756.

Virginia Noffsinger, of Redmond Oci. 29, 1922 - Oct. 22, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Redmond is honored to serve the family. 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private service will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made

Obituary policy

to:

Brightside Animal Center, P.O. Box 1404, Redmond, OR 97756, or The Wounded Warrior Project, 4899 Belfort Road, Suite 300, Jacksonville, Florida 32256.

Marilyn Lucille Prevost, of Bend Feb. 24, 1933 - Oct. 8, 201 5 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No Services will be held at this time.

(Mark Gars cia) of Glen-

dale, California, six grandc hildren a n d t w o gr e a t grandchildren. He w as p receded in d e ath b y h i s wife, L o r a i ne , d a u g hter, L ee, parents and tw o s i sters. Lorin attended New Hope C hurch fo r 2 6 y e ar s a n d was a lifetime member of: • Veterans of Foreign

Ronald Gene

Rog erson

Aug. 5, 1%0- Oct. 18, 2015

Wars (VFW)

Ronald G en e R o g ers on passed away o n O c t o b er 18, 2015 at 75 years of age in Y u cca, A Z . He w as b orn t o G l en n a n d R u t h R oger son o n A ug u s t 5 , 1940 in S i s t ers, O r egon. He married his lovely wife, Theresa Charlene Miller in Reno, Nevada on N o v ember 2, 1963 and they were h appily m a r r i e d f o r 52 wonderful years. Ron g r a d u a te d f r om Bend Senior High i n 1 958 w here h e w as a Stat e Champion w r e stler . He was q u i t e t h e p r a c t i c al j oker a n d w a s v e r y r e s ourceful. H e w a s k n o w n for "making a r t o u t o f junk". H e l oved to restore and re-invent classic cars. H e was very p r oud of h i s Diamond T t r u c k . He h olds th e r e c or d f o r t h e highest d r y - l aunch o f a boat that he drug up South Sister Cascade M o u ntain w ith f rie nd s in t he mid-1960's. R on i s s u r v i ved b y h i s wife, Theresa Rogerson of Y ucca, A Z ; s o n s , S h a n e

Rogerson (Renee) of Price, UT and R onald R ogerson

( Janice) o f

Al t us, O K ;

daughter, Ronda Lee King of MS; brothers, Jack Rog-

erson (Nancy) of Y u cca,

AZ an d L o u i s R o g ers on (Jan) of Bend, OR; sister,

Pat Henkemeyer (Gene) of

Redmond, OR; five grandchildren and si x great-grandchildren. He is survived b y h i s p a r e n t s, Glenn and Ruth Rogerson and brother, Melvin Rogerson. R on h a d a w on d e r f u l s ense of humor . H e w a s loved by many and will be missed very much. S ervices will b e h e l d a t The Church of Jesus Christ o f L a t t er-day S a i nt s o n Saturday, October 24th at

I pm.

S ervices were p l aced i n the care of Lietz-Fraze Fun eral H om e a n d C r e m a t ory. T h o u g ht s an d c o n d olences may b e s en t t o the family at www.lietz-frazefuneralhome.corn.

• Military Order of the Purple Heart • Marine Corps League • Marine Corps Association • 5th Marine Division Association • National Association of Atomic Veterans • Bend Band of Brothers • Minnesota Police 8z Peace Officers Association • Hennepin County Legal Investigators Professional Association • Minneapolis Retired Police Association • National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund L orin w i ll b e dear l y m issed by hi s f a m il y a n d friends. Services: O n S a t u r d ay, Nov. 7, 2015, there will be a graveside service at Deschutes Memorial G a rdens at 9:30 a.m., followed by a Celebration of Life at New Hope Church at 11:00 a.m., l ocated a t 200 8 0 Pi n e brook B l v d , Be n d , OR 97702, (541) 389-3436 Arrangements are u nder the care ofAutumn Funerals, Bend (541) 318-0842. P lease vi si t o u r o n l i n e estbook for the family at ttp://obits.autumnfunerals.corn In lieu of flowers, memor ial contributions in L o r i n Myring's name may be directed to: The Bend Band of Brothers: make checks payable toOregon Band of B rothers-Bend Ch ap t e r (OBOB-Bend Chapter) and m ail t h e m t o : B a n d of Brothers c/o Ray H a r tzell 63460 Vogt Rd., Bend, OR 9 7701; The N a tional L a w Enforcement Officers M emorial Fund, www.nleomf. . corn. M ak e c h e ck s p a y able to: NLEOMF and mail to: National Law E n f orcem ent O f f i c er s M e m o r i al Fund S u p p orter Services, 9 01 E S t r eet, N W , S u i t e 100, W as h i n g ton , DC 20004-2025.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deathsof note from around the world: Arnold Klein, 75: Dermatolo-

gist to the stars. Died Thursday in California. — Fromwire reports

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •

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Verna Lee Bellus of Bend, Oregon, passed away p eacefully s u r rounded er .',a by her familyon October 18, 2015, at ls>' Hospice House in Bend. She was 79. Verna was born December 9, 1935, g~, i n Washington State, t o V er n a n d I Nathalie (Lawson) Launer. She grew up in Washington and later, moved to Northern California, where she m et Loid Delbert Bellus. 'Ihey were married January 26, 1952, in Eureka, CA, and later, moved to Redding, CA. First place in Verna's heart was her family and it was well known by all. She also had a love for playing bridge and earned her Silver Life Master. Her bridge partners nicknamed her "The Queen of 3 No Trump". She was active in the Senior Community, working in the library. Verna is survived by her five daughters, Colleen, Cyndie, Vernell, Debbie and Pattie. Other survivors include her brother, Jimmy Launer and sister,LesLee Launer; ten grandchildren and 15 greatgrandchildren. She is preceded in death by her husband Loid Bellus. She will be laid to rest next to her beloved + husband, Loid, at E agle Point National Cemetery in Eagle Point, OR. M emorial Co n t r i butions in Verna's memory may be made to Partners in Care Hospice House, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.

TheBulletin

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708

Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits©bendbulletin.corn Fax: 541-322-7254

Patricia (Muir) Gibson July 30, 1927- August 24,20/5 Patricia(Muirj Gibson passedawayAugust 24, 2015, with her daughters present. She was born July 30, 1927, to Gladys (Hutchinsonj Muir fit' Maurice Muir in Pilot Rock, Oregon, and was raised by her maternal grandparents following the death ofher mother. She graduated from Crook County High School in 1945 and married Darrell R. Gibson of Bend, on January I, 1946. In 1955, they moved from Central Oregon to follow Del Webb construction work in Arizona, New Mexico, New York, LasVegas, California and Alaska, returning to Bend in 1971. She worked for Rod Smith at Economy Drug and as abookkeeper for 17 years. Sheretired in 1989. Patricia was a lifetime member of the VFW Auxiliary, enjoyed gardening, oil painting and family. She is preceded in death by Darrell in 1996 and hersister, Colleen, in 2015. She is survived by her daughters,Joyce Boucher and Beverly Wright, and 3 grandchildren, Tysoft Boucher, Debra Wright andJefFrey Keetch. She requestedthat there benoservices, but the family welcomeswell-wishers at the placement of her ashesat Greenwood Cemetery on November 14 at 1 I a.m. Arrangements arebeing made by Niswonger-Reynolds inc. In lieu of flowers, tax deductible donations can bemadeto: Serendipity Center Inc.

P.O. Box33350 Portland, OR 97292

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v MRNA

I 9 2 5 - O C CObCE' 2OI5

Verne V i c t o ri a G o o d m an 'Grandma Good' passed in peace on Thursday, October r5, aors, in Bend, Oregon. S h e was 90 years, 7 months and a days old. a Corinthians 5. V erne was born on M a r ch I r3, rezrf, in H e m et, California to Essie Ione Burden Truan and William Joseph Truan Sr. Verne was one of rr children, 9 sisters and a brothers. Dorothy, William 'Bill', Pauline, Irine, Frederic 'Fritz', Vera, Eunice, Betty Jane, Delores, and Joan. After growing up in L ong Beach, California, Verne married James 'Jimmie' W i l burn G o o dman d u r i ng wartime. Married for ufo years, Verne and Jimmie raised 3 children, James 'Jim', Greg, and Victoria 'Vickie' in V ictorville, California. The f amily l ater m o ved t o a lovely home in the seaside community of San Clemente, California. Here, Verne attended Beauty College and became an owner and operator ofTouch of Beauty College in Mission Viejo, California, where she lead thousands of students onto successful careers in Cosmetology. After retiring, Verne and Jimmie moved to Burney Falls, California, Brookings, Oregon and Bend, Oregon, in search of the perfect retirement location. Verne was a gifted artist who enjoyed painting and quilting. She had an amazing talent for color and a flair for adding sparkleto her work. She loved reading and listening to m u sic; some of he r f avorites were, Tom Jones, Andy Williams, Neil Diamond, Mario Lanza and, of course, Josh Groban. She hosted wonderful holiday celebrations,preparing good food and creating fond memories. Verne is preceded in death by her mother, father, all ro of her siblings, her husband of 5o years, James W: Goodman Sr., her son, James W. Goodman Ir., and her son, Greg F. Goodman. Verne is survived by her daughter, Victoria (W'ayne) Baker of Brookings, Oregon, rr grandchildren, r4 greatgrandchildren, r great-great-grandchild, and many nieces and nephews. Verne will be laid to rest alongside he husband in Victor Valley Memorial Park followed by a celebration of her life at a later date. The family would like to extend our gratitude to all the staff at the Cobblestone House in Bend, Oregon, for their attentiveness and care during her time there. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Gary Newman December 5, 1946 — October 19, 2015 Born to Meribe R Walter Newman in San Paulo, CA, and raised in Washington State on the banks of the Columbia River, Gary attended Kelso High School and just recently celebrated his 50th class reunion. l ~

¹

"

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":

He pursued his bachelor's in journalism from the University of Oregon, which was interrupted on several occasions by voluntary service with Catholic charities, the Peace Corps — Paraguay 19691971, and the United States Army — Berlin. Gary had a boundless appetite for learning and discovery, which was evident in his pursuit of adventure in th e outdoors and the diligent creation of poetry, photography, and prose. His early career in Central Oregon included being a ski lift operator on Mt .

B a c h e lo r b e f o r e c o n t i n u i n g h i s j o u r n a l is m c a r ee r a t t he

Redmond Spokesman in the 19908. He diligently recorded the news and times of Central Oregon happenings, first as a sports reporter and photographer, then later as the Spokesman editor. During his time with the Spokesman, he was synonymous with the sports community, building relationships on and off the field with the athletes and families of Redmond High School. Gary is survived by his family, including his wife, Judy, and children Zen and Zoic, as well .'. •

as his mother, Meribe, and sister Lora. He was

much beloved by his coworkers and friends in the community. His memory endures as a strong and soft-spoken man with a gentle spirit. His time with all of us will be remembered and cherished with love.

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

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

i

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i

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I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT i

HIGH 56'

ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record e4 45'

58 32'

81' i n 1929 14' i n 1956

PRECIPITATION

Full

Mon.

7:32 a.m. 6:06 p.m. 5:18 p.m. 5:06 a.m. L ast Ne w

7:33 a.m. 6:04 p.m. 5:55 p.m. 6:22 a.m. First

u'

OREGON EXTREMES Co 6 YESTERDAY

N ov 11 N ov 19

Tonight'8 shy:Monday,the conjunction of Venus andJupiter will be within one degree in the early morning eastern sky.

Low: 23' at Sunriver

60/

Bro ings 60/5

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

~ Z

i

The highertheAccuWsather.rxrmey Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyeaudskin protscguu.0-2 Low, 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems.

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

63/50

Gra 61/ a Gold ach ®

0'

Wee ds Abs e nt

As uf 7 s.m. yesterday

54 112 2

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

Not available Not available Not available Not available Not available

Source: USDA Forest Service

Riley 67/34 65/39

• Ch ristmas alley Silver 59/39 Lake 52/35 58/39 • Paisley • Chile quin 60/36 56/35 Beaver Marsh

Klamath 'Falls

• Lakeview

59/33

61/37

Jordan Vgey

Frenchglen

65/38

68/40

• Burns Juntion • 69/38

Rome Fields • 68/36

Yesterday Today Monday

70/39

McDermi 64/35

Yesterday Today Monday

Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-parffycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data ssol 5 p.m. yesterday

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108 ~ g s

~g s

~t gs

~ 208

Seattle

,0,

~s g s ~40 s ~ 50 s ~e g a ~7 0 8 ~ ag s Calgs 48/31

SS/52

Billings

I hlpug

45 7

asked Tim Rametes, a volunteer at Equine Outreach,

Continued from B1 "18 hands!" Sophie said with surprise, reading a description of Hank while he munched on hay. An average

who recently became Hank's

57/40

Ttfander Bay 447

eggs ~100s ~ TTOs idustr %so/ash

Bismarck 53/31

i Hs

9 M ne /46

Mostly cloudy with a passing shower or two

ronto /3 ullalo

Yesterday Today Monday City Hi/Lo/Prac. HiRo/W Abilene 68/57/0.06 69/43/pc Akron 66/52/0.13 57/36/pc Albany 50/28/0.02 57/35/pc Albuquerque 65/50/Tr 66/46/s Anchorage 48/37/0.01 46/36/c Atlanta 76/59/0.00 76/63/pc Atlantic City 59/45/0.00 67/46/pc Austin 77/65/3.88 66/55/c Baltimore 59/39/0.00 69/40/pc Billings 62/38/0.00 57/40/pc Birmingham 81/67/0.00 78/63/c Bismarck 62/32/0.00 53/31/pc Boise 66/46/0.00 68/47/pc Boston 49/38/0.00 62/41/sh Bridgeport, CT 54/38/0.00 65/41/pc Buffalo 62/41 /0.06 53/34/pc Burlington, VT 50/28/0.02 55/32/pc Caribou, ME 47/25/0.00 51/25/sh Charleston, SC 78/56/0.00 81/63/pc Charlotte 73/58/0.00 77/56/pc Chattanooga 75/57/Tr 75/61/c Cheyenne 61 /30/0.00 66/37/pc Chicago 66/56/0.37 60/42/s Cincinnati 71 /60/0.22 63/40/pc Cleveland 70/53/0.24 55/38/pc ColoradoSprings 60/37/0.07 66/42/pc Columbia, MO 60/57/0.00 66/42/s Columbia, SC 77/53/0.00 81/60/pc Columbus,GA 81 /57/0.00 79/64/pc Columbus,OH 66/58/0.17 60/38/pc Concord, NH 45/22/0.00 60/30/sh Corpus Christi 77/66/2.08 74/59/1 Dallas 69/60/1.65 64/54/r Dayton 70/59/0.14 62/38/pc Denver 65/35/0.00 69/42/pc Des Moines 62/52/0.13 64/41/pc Detroit 71/51/0.44 59/38/pc Duluth 54/45/0.09 50/35/sh El Paso 72/55/0.00 72/48/s Fairbanks 36/25/0.00 36/24/c Fargo 58/37/0.04 55/34/c Flagstaff 59/33/0.00 61/36/pc Grand Rapids 69/51/0.54 58/38/pc Green Bay 63/51 /0.37 58/40/c Greensboro 71 /52/0.00 73/51/pc Harrisburg 61 /39/0.00 65/39/pc Harffurd, CT 50/29/0.00 63/34/c Helena 56/29/0.00 57/34/pc Honolulu 87/75/0.04 89n4/s Houston 77n1/1.74 68/60/r Huntsville 80/66/0.01 76/61/c Indianapolis 73/63/0.1 2 63/41/s Jackson, MS 82/67/0.00 74/63/I Jacksonville 83/61 /0.00 82/67/ah

Hi/Lo/W 70/45/pc 59/39/pc 51/31/s 68/45/pc 44/36/c 64/53/ah 58/46/pc 74/52/pc 59/38/pc 57/39/c 69/59/sh 53/38/pc 61/38/pc 52/39/pc 57/39/s 54/38/pc 48/32/s 39/23/pc 73/61/c 60/49/pc

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

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

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix

55/35/c

62/47/pc 65/48/s 59/41/pc 62/37/c 66/50/pc 66/56/c 70/59/c 62/43/pc 52/26/pc 78/57/pc 72/54/c 64/44/pc

Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Rene Richmond Rochester, NY

Sacramento Sl. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego Sau Francisco San Joss Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington,Dc

63/39/c 65/47/s

60/44/pc 48/37/sh 75/52/pc 36/26/c 54/41/pc 62/31/s 60/43/pc 58/43/pc 59/47/pc 59/35/s 56/31/s 57/35/c

89/75/pc 69/58/r 70/59/c 65/47/s 72/65/r 80/68/c

Wichita

Yskims

Turns i

Amsterdam Athens

55/43/pc 58/45/pc 67/58/s 70/58/pc 64/53/pc 64/55/pc 94n2/pc 94/71/c 91/78/s 92/78/s 60/47/pc 59/41/sh 82/69/1

79/69/1

54/39/pc 53/40/pc 68/48/1 67/48/c 57/41/pc 58/39/pc 66/58/pc 74/58/pc 87/67/s 88/68/s 83/67/pc 80/66/pc 48/31/c 53/29/c 87/76/pc 87/73/pc 55/48/ah 57/51/r 53/41/pc 54/44/pc 61/46/pc 62/45/s 87/55/s 89/59/s 84/76/pc 83/77/c 63/56/pc 64/55/s 78/63/c 70/58/1 86/58/1 83/56/pc 73/66/pc 75/65/pc 70/59/pc 69/56/t 54/44/pc 61/54/pc 69/52/pc 63/54/1 89/78/pc 89/78/s

Yesterday Today Monday

City

68/57/ah

sn

55/50/0.24 im P 63/59/0.30 • 68/47 uke 59/3 Auckland 60/59/0.01 6/ Baghdad 93/70/0.00 v or v uw York Che Bangkok 91 /81/0.00 66/45 d4/41 ea/3 Beijing 68/48/0.00 Co mbus C csgo • ee Beirut 86n4/0.00 an ncivco S a lt Lake ivy hilsdelphis Omah st. uls ee 42 • Dun 71/51 Berlin 57/39/0.00 49/58 9/44 was ntrpr ee/ 66/4 L oa udi LavV sv Bogota 68/45/0.13 69 C 79/6 Kansas City Budapest 54/34/0.00 ee/40 Buenos Ai r es 59/41/0.02 6 Los An les d d d Cabo SsnLoess 86/66/0.00 ea/544s s 4 Cairo 90/71 /0.00 Phoen Ch otic Anchorage Albuque ue Calgary 45/28/0.00 • 89/47 7 6 46/3 II 0 66/46 e d d d d Caucus 86n7/0.12 d+tfdis d d Juneau al pa ai ingha Dublin 50/45/0.14 dfdrfd d d 2/ Edinburgh 51/50/0.08 46/33 Geneva 61/41/0.00 a d' ' Harsre • dssdo 84/58/0.00 Q dr t 4O Orleans • S2X Hong Kong 86/74/0.00 Honolulu Chihuahua ( Istanbul 57/54/0.12 89/74 70/45 Jerusalem 85/66/0.00 Johannesburg 83/60/0.05 v v v v' Lima 71 /65/0.00 Lisbon 63/61/0.15 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 57/53/0.14 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 70/50/0.00 Manila 88/77/0.00 Bois

HaydOWIT

adult horse is 14 to 15 hands,

53/35

• Burns Juntura 68/42

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 65/51/0.00 60/52/sh62/45/sh Ls Grande 63/39/0.00 67/43/sh 56/28/pc Portland 69/4 9/0.0058/52/sh 62/45/ pc 57/33/0.00 65/37/pc 56/27/sh La Pine 63/35/0.00 53/37/sh 54/28/pc Prinevige 68/ 37/0.0060/39/ah54/28/pc Brookings 60/54/0.00 60/50/r 62/49/pc M e dlord 68/4 5/0.00 63/46/r 6 8/40/pc Redmond 63/ 37/0.0059/36/sh58/23/ pc Gums 64/33/0.00 67/34/sh 60/21/pc N ewport 61/5 0/0.00 60/52/r 5 9/46/pc Roseburg 70 / 49/0.00 63/50/r 67/43/pc Eugene 69/45/0.00 60/49/r 65/38/pc N o rth Bend 6 4 / 52/0.00 64/51/r 63/47/pc Salem 68/46/0.00 59/51/r 63/41/pc Klsmath Fags 62/34/0.0059/33/sh 61/28/s Ontario 61/41/0.0069/45/pc 65/33/pc Sisters 60/38/0.00 55/39/r 56/26/pc Lakeview 66/30/0.00 61/37/pc60/28/s Pendleton 56/42/0.00 60/48/pc 61/39/pc The Dages 6 1 /46/0.00 58/47/sh63/40/ pc

Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 269 7 1 49% EXTREMES (for the Wickiup 37404 19% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 4 9 0 86 56% 4S contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 10065 23vo National high: 95 Prinevige 43362 29Vo at Burbank, CA River flow St a tion Cu. ft./aec. National low: 17 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 144 at Olney, MT Deschutes R.below Wickiup 26 Precipitation: B.OS" Deschutes R.below Bend 376 at Weslaco,TX Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 452 Little Deschutes near LaPine 51 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 29 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 9 Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.

Greecet • 57/36

63/46 • Ashl nd 63/

Yesterday Today Monday

Reservoir C rane Prairie

Crooked R.below Prineville Res.

Medfo

Fort Rock

City Asturis Baker City

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

WATER REPORT

50

Roseburg

62/54

UV INDEX TODAY 1 5~ 2

3

Bandon

at Roseburg

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

10 a.m. Noon

Grove Oakridge 60/51

Mostly cloudy andcooler with a shower

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. EAST:Sunshine and patchy clouds, a Umatiaa Seasid Hood 61/49 shower arriving in the 60/55 River Rufus • ermiston afternoon. Showers Cannon /46 lington 6'I/49 Portland Meac am Losti ne continue tonight 60/55 7/ 6 /51 • 67/42 Enterpds across the north. dl9ton 64/4 • • • he Daa 5 7 • 6 5/42 Tigamo • 60/ CENTRAL: Some andy e 58/47 59/53 Mc innvW 7/50 „•• Hap pner grande • sunshine mixing with t • „ ., • Condon /46 67 43 clouds. Acouple of Union Lincoln 51/ showers arriving in the 60/55 Sale • pray Granite e afternoon. Showers 59/5 • /44 'Baker C Newpo 64/39 continue tonight. • 56 ~ 9/51 60/52 • Mitch U 65/37 Camp Sh man Red WEST:Mostly cloudy 63/41 n R eU Tach 64/41 • John and breezy with peri- 59/54 60/49 • Prineville Day /41 tario ods of rain. A little rain 60/39 • Pa lina 70/47 45 at times tonight. Floren e • EUgelle • Re d Brothers 6 41 Valee 61/55 60/49 38 Su Were 56/36 67/44 e 5 4/ 7 • La Pine Ham on c e High: 70

Oct 27 Nov 3

Partly sunny

24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.55" in 1919 Month to date (normal) 0.8 2" (0.41 ") Year to date(normal) 7.74 " (7.58") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 4"

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

Partly sunny

O

38'

35'

Mostly cloudy with a shower in places

THU RSDAY

55' 32'

55

SUN ANDMOON Today

WED NESDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

High Low

TUESDAY

5$'

LOW 36'

Cooler; a passingafternoon shower

I f' I

MONDAY

I

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 46/39/0.01 46/33/pc 45/33/pc 63/54/Tr 66/40/s 65/48/pc 70/51/0.25 81/59/0.00 69/59/0.31 65/49/Tr 72/68/0.34 90/63/0.00 70/66/0.22 61/53/0.74 77/68/0.04 85/73/0.16 66/54/0.01 57/48/0.61 74/65/0.04 83/73/Tr 55/40/0.00 57/39/0.00 67/56/0.00 61/56/Tr 63/50/0.00 86/64/0.00 91/67/0.00 67/62/Tr 64/43/0.00 90/64/0.00 67/48/0.08 47/29/0.00 50/37/0.00 71/51/0.00 64/30/0.00 71/40/0.00 65/46/0.00 57/36/0.02 81/52/0.00 71/66/Tr 68/46/0.00 78/68/4.06 85/65/0.00 70/53/0.00 79/52/0.00 59/43/0.00 82/55/0.00 59/48/Tr 58/41/0.00 51/37/0.00 60/57/0.00 88/68/0.00 85/53/0.00 67/58/0.00 62/47/0.00 64/51/0.00 61/43/0.00 92/69/0.00

57/35/pc 59/41/pc 79/60/pc 82/57/s

65/46/c 67/38/pc 62/56/r 87/63/pc 68/47/c 59/38/pc 66/59/r

74/52/c 61/53/pc 69/44/pc 68/49/c

66/41/pc 64/44/s 85/68/pc 84/69/pc 90/65/pc 93/64/s 65/42/s 67/48/s

69/44/pc 61/42/s

89/67/pc 89/63/s 57/37/pc 58/40/pc 60/33/sh 51/29/pc 63/38/c 55/35/pc 76/52/pc 62/50/pc 59/34/pc 47/31/r 71/37/pc 73/37/s 72/44/c 61/44/c 53/33/pc 53/35/pc 79/51/pc 79/49/s 66/45/s 68/53/s 71/51/pc 66/42/pc 69/57/c 77/54/pc 82/65/pc 81/65/s 69/58/pc 70/56/pc 73/54/pc 77/54/pc 62/39/s 64/36/pc 82/64/pc 75/62/c 61/51/c 60/47/c 63/42/pc 60/41/pc 62/44/pc 53/37/sh 67/41/c 69/53/pc

87no/pc 86n2/pc 86/61/pc 85/56/s 71/43/pc 71/50/pc 69/46/pc 61/44/pc 69/40/s 68/49/pc 63/44/pc 66/36/pc 91/66/pc 92/65/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

103/73/0.00 102/78/s 74/58/0.56 72/55/1 Montreal 50/34/0.04 53/26/c Moscow 43/35/0.07 43/38/sn Nairobi 79/64/0.08 79/58/pc Nassau 86n5/0'.01 86/72/pc New Delhi 91/62/0.00 91/68/s Osaka 76/57/0.00 64/48/s Oslo 49/32/0.32 55/44/s Ottawa 50/28/0.03 50/27/c Paris 59/46/0.00 57/47/pc Rio de Janeiro 82/73/0.00 76/69/c Rome 70/46/0.00 68/48/pc Santiago 70/48/0.00 74/48/pc Sau Paulo 70/63/0.02 68/61/1 Sap pore 61/47/0.69 45/42/sn Seoul 70/52/0.00 69/50/c Shanghai 78/63/0.00 75/62/pc Singapore 90/82/0.03 89n9/c Stockholm 52/32/0.02 53/34/pc Sydney 72/55/0.00 79/64/s Taipei 82/75/0.08 82/72/pc Tel Aviv srno/0.00 86n2/1 Tokyo 74/58/0. 00 67/53/s Toronto 55/43/0.11 53/33/pc Vancouver 54/41/0.00 58/48/pc Vienna 57/36/0.00 58/43/pc Warsaw 52/45/0.00 53/41/c

h o rse,"

Rametes said, adding that Hank is curious.

but at 2,000 pounds, Hank In the round pen, a table of lives up to his Clydesdale cakes and cupcakes sat in the breed. middle of the arena, where Theresa and Sophie patted people took turns participatthe horse, admiring his sweet ing in cake walks every few temperament. The girls came minutes. Other tables at the with their moms to the event ranchoffered apple cider,and Saturday and just happened for the adults, Worthy beer. to run into each other.

They met at horse riding lessons they take in Tumalo,

The mishmash of

a c t iv-

ities gave the fundraiser a homegrown feel, which Steel-

so it wasn't a huge coinci- hammer compared to church dence that both were attend- socials of days gone by. Voling an equine event. unteers, she said, put everyNeither of the girls live on thing together entirely for the a ranch or anything close, but benefit of the nonprofit. All each of them were interested she had to do, Steelhammer in stepping into that world. said, was make a run to the "I always liked horses," So- store for the apple cider. She's glad others, even phie said, grinning. The theme is the same at those new to interacting with Equine Outreach — people horses, see the bonds they can from all walks of life come to create with humans. Whethvolunteer with the animals, who have sometimes been

er volunteers who come in

are living with life-threatenneglected by a past owner. ing diseases or going through Steelhammer said she has family issues, they all leave d edicated v o lunteers w h o feeling one thing from the come from as far as Portland, horses, Steelhammer said: but plenty of Bendites too. encouragement. "We do itfor the horses, At the event, it was clear attendees had varying expe- and the horses just give it rience with horses. back t o u s , " S t eelhammer "What's t h e d i s p osition said. of horses, are they general— Reporter: 541-383-0325, ly pretty easygoing?" a man IzfisicaroCmbendbulletirLcom

Heather Hansen, MD St. GhaIleS RheumatOIOgy St. CharleS MediCalGrOuPiS PleaSed to WelCO me Heather HanSen,MD, to oijr team of PrOViderS. BOard Certified in bOth rheijmatology and internal mediCine,

Dr. Hansenattended medical school atWakeForest University and the UniVerSity of NeWMeXiCO.She COmPleted her reSidenCy at the UniVerSity of NeW MeXiCOand her rheijmatology fellOWShiPat the UniVerSity of AriZOna. In additiOn to general rheijmatology, Dr HanSen'SintereStS inClude rheumatOid

arthritis, Sjogren'ssyndromeand lupus. Dr.Hansenand her acres, which will takeseveral days to burn. Signs wills beposted along Continued from Bf Highway 26, wherefire managers expect smokemaydrift north into Mill CreekValley. Burn in Ochocos If conditIons aretoo wet nearthe will de tried again meadow againMonday,firefighters Fire managersareplanning will start a controlled burn in the another controlled burn Monday 1,000-acre UpperBeaverburn unit, In the OchocoNational Forest, but just south of BlackCanyonWilderthe exact location depends onhow ness and just west of MudSprings much it rains this weekend. campground. If conditions In theOchocosare The purpose of theburns is dry enough Monday,firefighters to reduce the risk of anintense will do the Spears 1burn near wildfire and improvewildlife habitat Spears Meadow,westofU.S.High- there, according to thenational way 26 andeastofRockyButte forest. along Forest Road3300500, about Last week firefighters burned In 17 miles east of Prineville, accord- the Willow PineUnits onthe drier, ing to a releasefrom the national eastern side of thenational forest, forest. Fire managersattempted a about 5 miles south of Frazier controlled burn nearthemeadow Campground nearPorcupineand last week, but it wastoo wet. Sunflower creeks.

LOCAL BRIEFING

The Sp ears' unit is about1,200

— Bulletin staffreports

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aCtiVe family lOVe to Ski, CyCle, PlaySOCCer and Paddle bOard With their dog, Summit. She iSalSOfluent in SPaniSh. The St. CharleSRheijmatology CliniCOfferSCOmPrehenSiVe SerViCeS fOr PatientS With a Variety of rheijmaiology-related diagnOSeS. ToSChedule an aPPOintment, Call 541-706-7735.

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IN THE BACI4 ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT W Travel, C2-5 Puzzles, C6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/community

SPOTLIGHT

OperaBendseeks hosts for artists

If you' ve always wanted to host an opera singer in your home during the holidays, it so happens that OperaBend is seeking six hosts for guest artists coming to Bend for its New Year's production of "Die Fledermaus." Help OperaBend keep ticket costs down by hosting one of its guest artists who will be coming from Seattle, Portland and Arkansas for rehearsals starting Dec. 14. They' ll wrap up their stays on Jan. 2 or 3. While those who serve as hosts aren' t obligated to feed or entertain the performers, just imagine having an ace soprano or baritone around when it comes to putting your neighbors' caroling efforts to shame. Contact: operabend©bendbroadband. corn.

0-® Crisp air has rolled into Central Oregon reminding us winter is nigh

Light ijp Bend event scheduled

as are the holidays celebrated in its midst.

A trio of local holiday light installation firms will compete against each other and the clock during the inaugural Light Up Bend event on Saturday, Nov. 7. Christmas Lights R Us, Fireside Lighting and Holiday Help will each decorate two buildings housing families or organizations nominated by local residents. The six recipients will be chosen by random drawing at the beginning of the day. "Thus far, most of the folks that have been nominated are nonprofit organizations," lead organizer Brennan Morrow said. "This being the first year, we' re trying some things to see what works long term." Each display will have the same budget to use on materials, all donated by Ewing Irrigation. After the installations, people can vote online for their favorites. For more information or to nominate a family, business or other structure for the contest, visit www. lightupbend.corn or call

Before long, bedazzled cookies will become a regular nosh, carolers could come knocking at your door and lights will be strung from corner to corner. Unless you' re a workaholic with a Martha Stewart know-how, doing it all will be impossible.

OO A one-stop shop might help ease the holiday crunch. Head to a holiday bazaar to find traditional baked goods, gifts, home decor and creative crafts to make your holidays a bit easier and brighter. With your holiday list in hand, grab a to-go mug of spiced cider and find the holiday bazaar for you. The following is a full list of holiday boutiques and bazaars submitted to The Bulletin. If your organization's bazaar does not appear here, visit bendbulletin.corn/events. A full holiday bazaar listing is also available online or check Friday in GO! Magazine for a list of each week's bazaars.

541-390-5976.

Howl-o-ween Pet Costume contest Trick out your pet in a costume to win treats and prizes at the Humane Society of Central Oregon's Howlo-ween Pet Costume contest Saturday. Any companion animal can participate and costumes can be purchased or handmade. Unleash your creativity, as prizes will be awarded to the best entries. Just make sure your furry, feathered or scaled friends are comfortable, can move freely and can see in their costumes. Festivities start at 3

p.m. near Greg's Grill at the Old Mill District

(395 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend), with contest registration and pet treats provided by HSCOstaff and volunteers. Entry in the contest is free and judging begins at 4 p.m. Professional photos of pets in their costumes will also be available. Contact: www.hsco. org or 541.330.7096 — Bulletin staff reports

Lane, Bend; 541-815-2590.

Nov. 1 ANNUALJUDAICAAND CHANNUKAH GIFTSHOP: Featuring gifts imported from Israel, complete Judaica inventory for Jewish holidays and Sabbath;candles, menorahs, lilly art glassware, jewelry, tallasim, mezzuzahs and more; 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; Shalom Bayit Synagogue, 21555 Modoc

Nov. 6 HOLY REDEEMER HOLIDAY BAZAAR:Featuring homemade gift items, baked goods, crafts and more; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Holy Redeemer Catholic Church, 16137 Burgess Road, La Pine; 541-536-3571. ACOUNTRYCHRISTMAS BAZAAR:

Featuring handcrafted items, holiday decor and gourmet foods; 9a.m.-4p.m.;private home,69427 Crooked Horseshoe Road, Sisters; 503-534-1206. THE CHRISTMAS GOOSE BOUTIQUE:Featuring pottery, jewelry, hand-knitted items, fused glass items and more; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 NENeff Road, Bend; 541-408-7110.

SNOWFLAKE BOUTIQUE: Featuring crafts and items for the kitchen, kids, pets and more, including Christmas gifts, to benefit Family Access Network; 1 p.m.-8 p.m.;

$3.50 entrancefee; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.snowflakeboutique.org or 541-923-6535.

SeeBazaars/C4 Carli K rueger/The Bulletin

a n raveers oin e

i r n roue

By Virginia Linn

expensive cities or communi-

That's not to say the ser-

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

ties where there is a dearth of

Forty million guests, 34,000 cities, 1,400 castles

affordable hotel rooms. And now the service is reaching

vice hasn't had its horror stories. In July, a 19-year-old

and 190 countries. These are the latest stats

out to business travelers to

for Airbnb, the home-sharing lodging site founded in

find homelike accommodations while on the road.

Airbnb host in Madrid. And

— from Providence, Rhode Island, to Orlando, Florida, to New York City to Paris and Berlin — and for the most

abound with stories of absent

part the experiences have been positive. I welcomed

and profile descriptions that misrepresent the place. On

the chance for short-term stays in full apartments with

the flip side, hosts have found

Pam Panchak 1 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via Tribune News Service

For many travelers — and

not just those in their 20s and 30s — Airbnb is providing more choices, particularly in

family or friends instead of cramped,overpriced hotel rooms.

their homes wrecked by disruptive guests or personal

Kate and Nik Stoltzfus are among the hundreds of Pittsburghers who use Airbnb to rent out rooms, apartments or homes. They rent out a mother-in-law apartment in Garfield and screen potential

2008 that now has 1.5 million

listings worldwide. It looks like the $25 billion service is here to stay, at least until

something more innovative comes along to provide alternatives to the traditional

hotel industry.

make it easier for them to I' ve stayed in five Airbnbs

Massachusetts man report-

ed he was held captive and sexually molested by his websites such as airbnbhell. corn, Trustpilot and Quora hosts, last-minute cancellations, filthy rooms, apartment doors that don't lock

items stolen.

SeeAirbnb/C6

guests carefully.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

Xmar t es ot oruni ueSanFranciscoma s o By SamMcManis

The other is the first map of

The Sacramento (Calif) Bee

yond the iron gates at 1435

Mission San Jose (in what is now Fremont), drawn in 1868 by Bay Area survey-

Grant Ave., in the heart of

or W.F. Boardman, whom

San Francisco's North Beach neighborhood, worlds await.

Jimmie speaks of almost in

SAN FRANCISCO — Be-

Or, more precisely, intricate

reverence. Marti has her favorites, too.

and painstaking charting of

One is James Whistler's-

the world as we have known

yes, he of "Whistler's Moth-

er" artistic fame — depiction of Anacapa, one of the

it, fluid and ever evolving. More than just paper-and-ink renderings, really, you' ll find

Ii,

nothing less than the story of

'g

'i' ,

our physical and emotional landscapes, writ both large and very, very tiny. To call Schein 8 Schein merely an antique map and print shop fails t o

i'

Channel Islands in Southern

I i, I

I

California, for the government in 1854. Etched into the otherwise s t r a i ghtforward

steel-engraving were a tiny flight of birds. Turned out, his employer wasn't thrilled with the artistic flourish and fired

c apture c

the scope of its breadth and appeal. What spouses Jim-

Whistler, who fled to England

t

and became established as an artist.

mie and Marti Schein sell are

"I could just picture him saying to the government, 'You' re stifling my creativi-

history and memories, guides to where we came from and,

perhaps, where we' re going. As soon as yo u c ross t he t h r eshold, y o u transported.

ty,'" Marti said.

fee l

A form of art

It's not just the burnished f loor-to-ceiling shel v es

The Scheins consider maps a legitimate art form. Jimmie,

crammed

in fact, holds many so dear to his heart that he sometimes

with

ove r sized

atlases that can be plucked from on high only by way of

has a hard time letting go, though he jokes that some customers give him visitation rights.

ladders set on tracks and roll-

ers. Nor is it the muted overhead lighting, augmented by a few laser-focused spotlights, that gives the setting an almost sepia tinge. Nor is it the air of orderly chaosmaps and vintage photos in

"Now, he just hides some

things away, but in the beginning, people would say, 'OK, I want to buy this,' and

Jimmie'd say, 'Oh, yeah, that' s

protective sleeves sprouting

not for sale,'" Marti said. "I'm

from old produce crates,or rolled into tubes or placed in t hin-drawered d e sks

with

Sam McMania /The Sacramento Bee

Schein & Schein antique map shop owner Jimmie Schein formerly handled logistics for bands that included Metallics. He and his wife,

hand-scrawled cards denot- Marti, own an antique maps store in San Francisco's North Beach. ing regions and period. There's simply an air of reverence and preservation- at a n tiquarian b o okstores 'We are maps' " Without getting too e x nothing musty or sepulchral from Auckland to Zurich and here, despite some cracked many a middling American istential," said Jimmie, who bindings and weathered pag- town. When, 12 years ago, then proceeded to wax exises that must be turned with he decidedthe romance of tential, "maps are hard-wired utmost care — that permeates

the road was waning, he took

the place, personified by the hyper-intense, f ast-talking

a buyout from his company and donned his rectangular

infectious zeal o f

J i m m i e, s pectacles to peer h ard a t

52, who found his way in life

lines on grids and share his through the collection, study passion with the public. and ultimately sale of maps. And the public, he and Marti say, has responded. Diverse background The couple doesn't make Here's a guy with an in- a killing, no expansion of teresting backstory —

as

Schein 8t Schein is in the off-

taking him aside and going, 'I know it's hard, but you' ve got to part with it.' This is a business."

It is a business that survives, but for how long? Jim-

own backyard. It shows them most of w h at's charted on who they are." the hundreds of maps fillQuite a soliloquy for an ing cabinets, boxes, shelves ex-roadie, you might think. and lining the walls. Prices But Jimmie lifts with his head rangefrom $5 to $50,000,but into who and what we are. We as well as his knees. He grew Jimmie doesn't like to dwell are maps. We d i fferentiate up the son of academics. One on monetary concerns. That ourselves through language. brother, Richard, is the chair- cheapens the intrinsic value What were the first things we man of the geography de- of each map, though there

m ie wistfully

discussed? Where we were.

mass-produced world of the trite and the digital," he said.

partment at the University of

are a few that, he says, "re-

Where was danger. How we got there. How we got here. This is mapping. This is, in technical terms, the use of the hippocampus, the part of

Kentucky. His other brother, ally belong in the Bancroft" Chris, is a landscape archi- (Library, at the University of tect in Baltimore. Jimmie is California, Berkeley). a proud, roll-up-your-sleeves Two such maps, framed, autodidact. hang over the cash register. "They did the hard grind of One depicts a faded drawthe brain that in fact is spatial memory and memory that al- 10 or 15 years writing doctor- ing of Sausalito from 1868, lows us to recall both through al theses and all that," he said, with the cursive quill annot he directional as w el l a s smiling slyly. "Me? I toured." tations by Navy Adm. George the olfactory. All these tanAnd collected maps F. Emmons, who signed the gential associations support mostly maps of California surveyor map a few months mapping. and the United States, though after witnessing the Alaska "That's the l i zard-brain his stash also encompasses Purchase signing on his ship. stuff. We' re talking way back vast swaths of Europe, Asia, in our e v olutionary chain. Africa and even the polar re-

manager of a music logistics ing,but,yeah,they do OK. company, he toured for years E ven in t h i s e r a w h e n with rock and j azz artists, digital trumps analog in doing everything from tun- all things, there apparenting instruments to driving a ly is still interest in poring truck — who'd much rather over the physical and tactile enthuse about German li- details of streets and landthographers Charles Kuchel marks, either still around or and Emil Dresel than tell sto- long since plowed under. The ries about hanging with Me- mutability of borderlines, be With that, then, we have a tallica and Miles Davis. No it cities, states or countries, love of maps. Maps provide rock star excesses, even by tell a story that travels far be- security. Maps provide perproxy, for Jimmie. He spent yond pixels on a screen show- spective. Maps provide a his $800-a-week per diem ing you the best route to San sense of place. Besides, evhunting down vintage maps Mateo. erybody wants a map of their

gions. But it's San Francisco,

Sacramento and the Sierra regions that drive sales and engross Jimmie th e

m o st.

He can deliver disquisitions, mainly from memory, on

g

I'r I

r e called t h e

days when "in every city, there were two or three plac-

es like this," to scavenge for maps. He does not despair, though, when looking ahead. "The youthful population is looking for the unique and the individualized in a "They use maps more than you and I ever did — on their

phone. But that's ephemeral and not worthy of the paper

you'd print it on. But I do find they' re interested in conceptual mapping, geo-spatial mapping or statistical overlays, like where the sewer lines run, or three-dimension-

al paradigms. Maps won't go away. They' ll just change."

e

I

• g s•

For those traveling on a tight u get, t eseneces sitiescan e a ala uc

(Befter than Botox) only 09/rrnitptUs $100 Gift Card For Next Treatment.*

$100 Oii'

ByMyschaTheriault

discovered how many dirtGrooming: When it comes to packing everything but the cheap support supplies were to basic grooming supplies, kitchen sink. Dollar Tree has Juvederm8 Belote o Getting excited about an available at the various dol- i t's tough t o b eat t h e m i - everything from $1 packs of upcoming trip can lead an larstores around the country. cro-sized products in the toi- pain relievers and adhesive enthusiastic traveler to over- Eyeglass repair kits stream- letry section of your favorite bandages to antibiotic ointspend on basics such as or- lined for purse storage, micro- department store. Multipacks ment and my husband's faganizing b ags, t o iletries, fiber cleaning cloths, small of razors for 97 cents, $1 re- vorite little tins of Carmex lip personal care products and bottles of spray solutions fillable bottles of mouthwash balm. Theyeven have foam more in the interest of being and even the neck straps and and the toothbrush and tooth- ear plugs,kid-sized reusable prepared for any situation. chains to keep them in place paste combos available for a cold packs and small packs of While it's fine to pack like while you enjoy a walking buck are some of my favor- wet wipes. Everyone's musta Boy Scout if that's what tour are all available for a ites. I'm a fan of the mini liq- have list of medical items for CALL NOW makes you feel secure, there' s dollar. uid hairspray offerings that travel is slightly different, but To Schedule YourAppointment!!! EIMHAlMCE c certainly no need to pay top T his leaves extra f u n ds only cost a dollar as well, most of us can agree on the 5 41-3 $ 9 - S F 1 4 dollar for the basics. I' ll be available fo r s o m e s w e et since I also press them into basics and they are certainPROACTIVE HEA LT H *Offer goodonly on Friday, October 3IIth the first to throw down good frames if you' re so inclined. service for ink removal and ly affordable to purchase at * MinimumpurchaseREQIIIRES money for high-performance Since most of these support to scrunch into the ends of my thesetypes ofstores. active wear and quality cos- supplies are also streamlined, hair in place of geL metics, but when i t c o mes they are perfect for light However, for basic cosmetto simple incidentals I try to packers and daily commuters ic storage I skip the $10 printkeep my price point per item on a budget. ed fabric bags at the larger at $5 or less. Often, I'm able to Tech: Electronic i n ciden- retail venues and head back score much of what I need for tals can add up quickly. I'm to the dollar store in search as low as a buck. all about spending necessary of $1 zippered pencil pouchA great deal of those items funds on good equipment, es. They have two-packs of can be had in the travel toi- and find the money to do so m ulticolored ones that a r e letries section of the nearest by opting for more afford- fun if you like to keep nail b argain d e partment s t o r e able accessories when ap- and cosmetic products sepIf you would liketo receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or such as Target or Walmart. propriate. At our neighbor- arate, glitter pouches for the anniversary, plus helpful informationto plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, Quite a few others can be hood dollar store, I' ve seen ultimate girly girl and more. pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) scored at your neighborhood travel-sized tablet styluses, My favorite ones are the thin or from any ofthesevalued advertisers: dollarstore.The nearest one protective film for electron- canvas pouches with a clear AAA Travel Meadow Lakes to me happens to be Dol- ics screens, electrical product front, zippered top, extra Nicole Michelle Awbrey Glen Golf Club lar Tree, but there are oth- wipes, car charger adapters front pocket and grommets Northwest Medi Spa er chains out there offering and even audio cables. along oneedge.They let me Bad Boys Barbecue Phoenix Picture Framing similar deals on travel-sized By purchasing replacement see what's inside, and attach Bend Park 6t goodies. Following are some itemshere,the savings addup easily with carabiners to the Professional Airbrush Tanning Recreation District of my favorite items to pick up overtime for those pieces of outside of my pack if I need to Revive Skin Services Bend Wedding S. Formal before hitting the road. gear where buying something put on makeup while I wait at Salon Je' Danae Vision: My husband has cheaper isn't necessarily the a remote bus stop. At a buck a SHARC Aquatic S. Recreation Center Cordially Invited Bridal had to travel with glasses his best idea. Camera lenses, lap- pop, what's not to love? The Bend Trolley whole life, while I' ve only tops and a decent smartphone Medical: Stocking a first aid Deschutes County FairIla Expo Center The Bridal Suite S. Special Occasion recently needed to start car- are all examples of purchas- kit doesn't have to break the Faith Hope 6t Charity Vineyard The Dress rying bargain store readers es where I make it a point to bank. Packing a few minor The Soap Box Illuminate Your Night along with my sunglasses avoid the cheapest option. supplies to get you through Widgi Creek Golf Club in order to read fine print. Cords and cleaning products? until you can reach a pharmaImagine my delight when I Bring on the bargains. cy is an affordable alternative Tribune News Service

The Bulletin

MI LESTONES

GUIDELINE


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

T eri twa,an wron wa,tore eem ourtrave rewar s By Jonnelle Marte

comes to travel?

The Washington Post

A • and points as curren- A cy and take into account how

For the average person flying coach from Italy to New York, the highlight of the nine-hour flight in a cramped airplane seat might be a hot meal or a good movie to pass the time. But when Brian Kelly flew home to New York from Milan

at the end of a two-week European vacation this summer, he had a bed, a shower and

bottle of Dom Perignon. The first-class flight on Emirates would typically cost about $5,000, but using travel miles, Kelly paid less than half that amount.

Kelly's self-described obsession withrewards programs began when he was a kid finding ways to use his father' s miles so that their family of

six could fly cheaply to the Caribbean every year. It grew during his 20s when he landed a recruiting job on Wall Street,

traveling the country and raking in a million miles a year. Now, making travel miles go a long way — literallyis Kelly's full-time job. On ThePoints Guy.corn, he analyzes rewards programs,

people might not know about? You can actually shop • through airline shopping portals. That means instead of going to Target.corn, Nordstrom.corn, never, never never go directly through those websites. Always click through a mileage portal. All the major airlines and hotels have these shopping portals where you actually get extra miles just for clicking through the portal.

You need to view miles

Q A

Q

They change the rules, they increase the amount of miles. There's blackout dates sometimes. You don't want to have

everything in one program because you don't have as many options when it comes time to redeem.

Q

Are there times that it

• makes sense for people

to save their points and just

pay for the flight' ? I just got back fromAfri-

A

• ca and I flew from Cape Town to Doha, Doha to New

York. It was $1,800 in business class but I paid for it because

it got me 20,000 miles, which I value at like $400. Plus it There's a lot of differ- got me 10 percent of the way

A fly one airline a lot you don' t

to elite status notification. So

ly.When you have a goal in mind it's easier to put a plan in

have to double down and then

miles, got closer to elite status

way back from there instead. It's thinking h olistical-

• ent factors. Even if you

I paid for it, accrued a ton of

place. I know people get over- also get that airline's credit and it was really comfortable. whelmed because they have card. A real tip is to diversify. When there's business-class miles in a million different ac-

You don't want to overexpose

counts. It's definitely good to

yourself to one currency be- ly pay for flights.

sales and other deals I' ll total-

• Decorative

Crosses

Vinyl Wall Art

WALL e TABLE.

• Decorative Spheres

Categories Listed

• Birdhouses & Wind Chimes • Men's Resin & Ceramic Decor

DOES NOT INCLUDESFASONALDEPARTMENT.

• Ceramic DecorSale

He recently spoke with The

FEATURING TABLETOP DECOR, PLATES, SERVING DISHES, PITCHERS, CUPS, SALT & PEPPER

Washington Post about his travels — he says that he's now

WALL 8 TABLE.

AND OTHER CERAMIC DECOR DOES NOT INCLUDE

been tomore than 60 countries

+ CIOCkS wALL & TABLE.

DECORATIVE DRAWER PULLS.

— and the right way for people to earn and redeem rewards

• Lamps & Lampshades

Q

FEATURING FINIALS, CANDLEHOLDERS, BOXES & BOWLS. INCLUDES FLORAL PLANTERS, VASES AND OTHER POLYRESIN & POTTERY DECOR.

ITEMS PNCED$4.99 4 UP. DOES NOT INCLUDE CANDLE FX™, TEALIGHTS, VonVES, VALUEPACKSOR FRAGRANCEWAX 8cOILS.

• Pillows, Rugs 8 Throws

A

Polyresin & Pottery Decor Sale

C8ndles,Flameless LED Candles, Fragrance Warmers & Diffusers

• p jf'ygy5 vvALL s,T

points. This interview was ed-

universities. I was putting it all on my corporate card and raking in more than a million miles a year. And even though in 2008, 2009 working for a

the programs all th e t i me.

What c atches should

A

What is the best way to

Q

Q

causethe airlines do change

business-class flights. It's like • people watch out for buy low, sell high. You try to get when they redeem their miles? the miles as cheaply as possible When yo u re d eem and then you try to redeem • miles, for the most part, them for as much as possible. you can't upgrade. So sometimes it makes sense to pay Is it sometimes better to for an economy-class ticket • stock up on miles? To re- and then use miles to upgrade. deem, say 90,000, on one trip But always, always, always instead of three? triple check with the airline if I would put together a the fare is upgradable. Don' t • plan and goal. So pick just buy it online and assume your destination. Where do I'you' ll be able to upgrade) beyou really want to use your cause the airlines may have miles to go and then work changed the rules lately. your way back from there. See what frequent-flyer programs Does it make sense to are the best. Do a little bit of • focus on earning miles research and then work your with one airline?

• spend your miles so that Q you get the most value?

What are some other • ways to earn miles that

sharesstrategies for earning as many points as possible.

ning information sessions at

sive, international, first- and

much you' re earning for every purchase. For the sake of it, you' re earning one airline mile per every dollar spent on a credit card. There are severalcards thatpay you 2percent cash back for every dollar you spend. So for every $100,000 you spend, you could be getting$2,000 cash back from a There's a website, evreward. credit card. corn, which actually lists all If you' re not getting at least the shopping portals and how that in value from your airline many miles per dollar you can miles you should just switch to get. And this is in addition to cash back. And what I mean by using a credit card that earns that is if you travel domestical- miles. This is kind of like douly and you' re spending 50,000 ble dipping. You could use a miles for a $400 ticket you Delta card and shop through would be better off just getting an Ameican Airlines Nordcash back and then not even strom site and then you' ll earn dealing with miles so you could American and Delta miles. It' s just use that cash back to pur- unbelievable. It's a no brainer. chase whatever flight you want.

alerts readers to sales and

ited for length and clarity. When did you realize • you could make finding travel deals your full-time job'? In 2007 I got a job on • Wall Street doing all of the recruiting for high-tech computer grads. I was traveling a ton and then also run-

Generally, I re d eem have that goal. • miles for super expen-

ITEMS LABELED FALL,HALLOWEEN AND CHRISTMAS ARE NOT INCLUDED IN HOME ACCENTS SALE.

Christmas Decor

Fall Decor,Fall Pard,

Fall Crafts a Fall Floral

Christmas Trees

40~0FF ~

• 40~0FF

-40~0F:

DOES NOT INCtUDE FABRIC. NEEDLE ART, CANDY LIGHT SETS, LIGHT ACCESSORIES,

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A N Y T I M E © H O B BY L O B BY . C O M


C4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

o oweriswra e u i n istor,mar ean son By Marjie Lambert Miami Herald

From the parking lot, we could see the top of the Singing Tower peeking through the pines and moss-draped oaks, an elegant pink tower of marble and coquina stone that

houses a set of bells — a carillon — that plays short concerts every day. We were casual visitors, having stopped on impulse at Bok Tower Gardens on the drive

home from Central Florida to Miami. We knew little about it and thought we'd be in and out

in 30 minutes. We were wrong. There were unexpected bonuses: the gardens — designed by Frederick Law Olmsteadthat surround the Singing Tower, the gorgeous Gothic and Art Deco details of the structure itself and the view from

Bazaars Continued from C1

Nov. 7 LORD'S ACRE DAY: Featuring a craft sale, baked goods, live music, a BBQ dinner, an auction, a10K run and 5K walk to benefit Powell Butte Christian Church projects; 7 a.m.-2 p.m. free admission, $20 race registration, $25 day of; Powell Butte Christian Church, 8404 SW Reif Road, Powell Butte; www.powellbuttechurch.corn or 541-548-3066. ANGELFEST: Featuring handmade crafts by the congregation, proceeds benefit local and international missions; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW 19th St., Redmond; 541-548-3367. NEWCOMERS CLUBOF BEND ARTISANSHOWCASE HOLIDAY BAZAAR:Featuring hats, scarves, jams/jellies, paintings, hand-woven textiles, gift boxes and more; 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; Bend Elk's Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-678-5779. SNOWFLAKE BOUTIQUE: Featuring crafts and items for the kitchen, kids, pets and more, including Christmas gifts to benefit Family Access Network; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; $3.50 entrance fee; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.snowflakeboutique.org or 541-923-6535. HOLY REDEEMER HOLIDAY BAZAAR:Featuring homemade gift items, baked goods, crafts and more; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Holy Redeemer Catholic Church, 16137 Burgess Road, La Pine; 541-536-3571. ACOUNTRYCHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Featuring handcrafted items, holiday decor and gourmet foods; 9 a.m.-4p.m.;Privatehome,69427 Crooked Horseshoe Road, Sisters; 503-534-1206. THE CHRISTMAS GOOSE BOUTIQUE:Featuring pottery, jewelry, hand-knitted items, fused glass items and more; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 NENeff Road, Bend; 541-408-7110. CATHOLICDAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAS HOLIDAYBAZAAR: Featuring pastries, bread, Christmas wreaths, ornaments, a raffle and more; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-598-7332. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY MARKET HOLIDAYSHOWS: Featuring a holiday market; 10 a.m.4 p.m.; Bend Factory Stores, 61334 S Hwy 97, Bend; 541-420-9015. DESERT MEADOWS CHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Featuring Scentsy, Avon, handmade crafts, jewelry and more; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Private Residence, 520 NE Shoshone Drive, Redmond; 541-923-2198.

Nov. 8 ANNUALJUDAICAAND

the Lake Wales Ridge looking bird sanctuary. Only some of ience, that portrays birds, trees, west across orchards. the flowers were in bloom for flowers and other scenes of naThe 205-foot tower stands our visit in January, but gar- ture. A marble sundial was set atop 298-foot Iron Mountain, dens are known for their blaze in one exterior wall, a brass enthe highest point along the of spring color, when azaleas, trance door in another. Florida peninsula (there are camellias and magnolias are in The tower is known as Bok a few higher spots in the Pan- bloom. There are edible berries Tower and the Singing Tower handle). Edward Bok, a Dutch for the birds, duck ponds and for its carillon, which has 60 immigrant, author and pub- bird baths, and for humans, bells ranging in weight from lisher of Ladies' Home Journal, nooks for contemplation and 16 pounds to nearly 12 tons. We bought the land for a bird sanc- quiet conversation. did not get to go inside. Built to tuary. He commissioned OlmAs we made our way up the be appreciated from the outsted to design the gardens with gentle slope, the tower came side, the tower houses a library, the Singing Tower as its center- in and out of view through offices, water tanks, maintepiece, then opened the grounds the trees, until we came from nance area and of course the to the public. Bok, who died in behind a cluster of trees and bell chamber, but is not open to 1930, is buried at the base of the shrubs and saw it rising high the public. It is surrounded by a tower. It is now designated as a above us and in the reflecting moat. National Historic Landmark. pool before us. Where we had The tower and grounds are At the visitors center — there seen only pink from a distance, undergoing a $12 million exarealso a cafe and a giftstore now we could see the veins of pansion an d r e f urbishment with a wing just for plants- pink and coral and gray in that should wrap up next sumwe joined a guided tour that the stone, the stone sculpture, mer, most notably restorative took us on a leisurely, winding wrought iron and gorgeous work to the carillon and the path through the gardens and tilework, called ceramic fa- faces of the tower.

CHANNUKAHGIFTSHOP: Featuring gifts imported from Israel, complete Judaica inventory for Jewish holidays and Sabbath;candles, menorahs, lilly art glassware, jewelry, tallasim, mezzuzahs and more; 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; Shalom Bayit Synagogue, 21555 Modoc Lane, Bend; 541-815-2590.

The Bok Tower stands 205 feet tall atop Iron Mountain in Lake Wales, Florida. Mariie Lambert The Miami Herald

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FESTIVAL:Featuring arts, crafts, antiques and live entertainment with a candy land and maze leading to Santa to benefit Faith Harvest Helpers Food Bank; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; $4 with a canned good for charity; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, South 8 Middle Sister Buildings, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; 541-420-0279.

COUNTRYCHRISTMAS: Featuring art, crafts, jewelry, toys and more; Scandinavian breads and desserts, baked goods and more, donations 10 a.m.4 p.m.;$5 admission, soup and bread, pie and more; 9 of nonperishable foods for church free for children 12 and younger; a.m.-2 p.m.; Our Savior's Lutheran food bank appreciated; 9 a.m.-4 Deschutes County Fair & Expo Church, 695 NW Third St., Prineville; p.m.; Smith Rock Community Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, 541-447-6751. Church, 834411th St., Terrebonne; Redmond; www.hfgf.corn/Redmond COUNTRYCHRISTMAS: Featuring 541-419-8637. or 503-643-8299. baked goods and more, donations GINGERBREAD BAZAAR:Featuring of nonperishable foods for church Nov. 27 place mats, napkins, table runners, food bank appreciated; 9 a.m.-4 towels, hotpads, scarves, bibs CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY Nov. 13 p.m.; First Baptist Church, 450 and more by the Common Thread MARKET HOLIDAYSHOWS: SE Fairview Ave., Prineville; Nov. 20 A HOLIDAYAFFAIR BAZAAR: Quilters of Redmond; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Featuring a holiday market; 10 a.m.- 541-480-8469. Featuring handcrafted items, holiday COUNTRYCHRISTMAS: Featuring Private Home,4410 SW Ben Hogan 4 p.m.; Bend Factory Stores, 61334 THE BESTLITTLECHRISTMAS decorand gourmetfoods;9 a.m.-4 Drive, Redmond; 541-279-0635. S Hwy 97, Bend; 541-420-9015. baked goods and more, donations BAZAAR:Featuring handcrafted p.m.; private residence, 2603 NE of nonperishable foods for church BEND SENIORCENTER HOLIDAY 14TH ANNUAL SUNRIVER personal, pet, home decor, Meadowcrest Drive, Prineville; food bank appreciated; 9 a.m.-7 CRAFT 8 GIFT BAZAAR:Featuring RESORT TRADITIONSHOLIDAY seasonal, and baked items;9 503-534-1206. p.m.; Smith Rock Community over 65 local artisans, crafters and MARKETPLACE:Featuring regional a.m.-4 p.m.; MadrasRanchos,686 Church, 834411th St., Terrebonne; gift sellers, handmade items and HOME FORCHRISTMAS artists and pottery, jewelry, fine arts, SE Tumbleweed Lane, Madras; 541-419-8637. BAZAAR:Featuring holiday crafts, baked goods; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Bend textiles, metalwork, woodworking, 541-475-6746. decorations, linens, homemade stained glass and more; 10 a.m.-4 GINGERBREAD BAZAAR:Featuring Senior Center, 1600 SEReed Market ANNUAL baked goods and more; 9 a.m.-4 Road, Bend; 541-388-1133. p.m.; Sunriver Resort — Homestead GRANDMA'S HOUSE place mats, napkins, table runners, HOLIDAYBAZAAR:Featuring p.m.; private residence, 61481 Fargo towels, hotpads, scarves, bibs Building, 57071 Great Hall Loop, LEFSE SALE:Featuring traditional Lane, Bend; 541-480-0031. Sunriver; www.sunriver-resorbcom handcrafted items, antiques and and more by the Common Thread Lefse flatbread, holiday baked more, to benefit Grandma's House or 541-593-4405. Quilters of Redmond; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; goods and more; chili lunch served Nov. 14 of Central Oregon; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Private Home, 4410 SW Ben Hogan 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday; 9 a.m.-4 Nov. 28 Private Residence, 1600 NERumgay Drive, Redmond;541-279-0635. HOLIDAYBOUTIQUE AND BAKE p.m.; Grace First Lutheran Church, Lane, Bend; 541-383-3515. 2265 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; SALE:Featuring crafts, decorations, CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY LA PINE SENIORCENTER'S ZION LUTHERANCHURCH 541-382-0454. baked goods and more to benefit MARKET HOLIDAYSHOWS: ANNUAL HOLIDAYCRAFTFAIR: local nonprofits; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; First Featuring crafts from local artisans; CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY Featuring a holiday market; 10 a.m.- CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Featuring United Methodist Church, 680 NW 4 p.m.; Bend Factory Stores, 61334 Christmas items and food for sale, a 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Senior MARKET HOLIDAYSHOWS: raffle for a quilt, and more; 9 a.m.-2 Bond St., Bend; 541-647-2260. Center, 16450 Victory Way, La Pine; Featuring a holiday market; 10 a.m.- S Hwy 97, Bend; 541-420-9015. p.m.; Zion Lutheran Church, 1113 541-536-6237. PRINEVILLESOROPTIMIST 4 p.m.; Bend Factory Stores, 61334 14TH ANNUAL SUNRIVER SW Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; S Hwy 97, Bend; 541-420-9015. CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Featuring RESORT TRADITIONSHOLIDAY HOLIDAYFOOD AND GIFT 541-923-7466. holiday items for sale; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; FESTIVAL:Featuring gourmet food, MARKETPLACE: Featuring regional BOUTIQUEANDBAKESALE: Prineville Senior Center, 180 NE art, crafts, jewelry, toys and more; Featuring handcrafted items, knitted artists and pottery, jewelry, fine arts, CHRISTMAS ATTHE LODGE: Featuring local artisans and Belknap, Prineville; 541-447-5502. textiles, metalwork, woodworking, 10 a.m.6 p.m.;$5admission, accessories, quilted items, gifts for vendors, andbakedgoods; 10 stained glass and more; 10 a.m.-4 free for children 12 and younger; children, Snow Village collectibles, A HOLIDAYAFFAIR BAZAAR: a.m.-3:30 p.m.;Mt.LaurelLodge, p.m.; Sunriver Resort, Homestead Featuring handcrafted items, holiday Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo baked items, homemade food gifts 990 SW Yates Drive, Bend; Building, 57071 Great Hall Loop, Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, and more; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; SL Helens decorand gourmetfoods;9 a.m.-4 Sunriver; www.sunriver-resorbcom 505-980-1 097. Redmond; www.hfgf.corn/Redmond Hall, Trinity Episcopal Church, 231 p.m.; private residence, 2603 NE or 503-643-8299. NW Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-728-1224. or 541-593-4405. Meadowcrest Drive, Prineville; Dec. 6 503-534-1206. HOLIDAYSAND HAPPENINGS' LA PINE SENIORCENTER'S Dec. 4 A BIG DEAL:Featuring a craft fair ANNUAL HOLIDAYCRAFT FAIR: ST.THOMAS ALTAR SOCIETY SIXTH ANNUALCRAFT FAIRE: and bazaar ,tackand equipment COUNTRYCHRISTMAS: Featuring HOMESPUN HOLIDAYBAZAAR: Featuring handcrafted gifts from Featuring crafts from local artisans; sale and a rummage sale, to benefit baked goods and more, donations 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Senior Featuring a country store, Oregon vendorsand more;1 Deschutes County 4-H; 10 a.m.-3 Grandma's Attic, handmade items p.m.-6 p.m. freeentrancewith one Center, 16450 Victory Way, La Pine; of nonperishable foods for church food bank appreciated; 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; $1 entry or a nonperishable and more; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; St. Thomas nonperishable food item; Grace First 541-536-6237. food item; Deschutes County Fair & p.m.; First Baptist Church, 450 Parish Center, 1720 NW19th St., Lutheran Church, 2265 NWShevlin LADIES OFELKSANNUAL SE Fairview Ave., Prineville; Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; 541-923-3390. Park Road, Bend; 541-610-7589. HOLIDAYBAZAAR:Featuring more 541-480-8469. Redmond; 541-548-6088. HOME FORCHRISTMAS than 40 local vendors, to benefit LEFSE SALE:Featuring traditional THE BEST LITTLE CHRISTMAS scholarships/local charities; 10 BAZAAR:Featuring holiday crafts, Lefse flatbread, holiday baked Dec. 11-12 BAZAAR:Featuring handcrafted decorations, linens, homemade goods and more; chili lunch served a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; personal, pet, home decor, CRESCENT COMMUNITYCENTER baked goods and more; 9 a.m.-4 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday; 1 p.m.-4 360-420-4763. seasonal, and baked items; 9 CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Featuring p.m.; private residence, 61481 Fargo p.m.; Grace First Lutheran Church, a.m.-4 p.m.; Madras Ranchos, 686 knitting, sewing, bread, jewelry, Lane, Bend; 541-480-0031. 2265 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; THANKSGIVINGFOODFAIRE: SE Tumbleweed Lane, Madras; art and more; 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; 541-382-0454. NATIVEAMERICAN ART MARKET: Featuring local food, including free 541-475-6746. Crescent Community Center, 410 range turkeys, breads,seasonal Featuring Native American arts and Nov. 21 Crescent Cut-Off Road, Crescent; crafts including bead work, jewelry, fresh produce and local wines, beers Dec. 5 541-815-5085. and spirits; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central weaving and more; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; REDMOND ASSEMBLY OFGOD The Museum at Warm Springs, Oregon Locavore, 1216 NEFirst St., TOPS COMMUNITYBAZAAR: HOLIDAYBAZAAR: Featuring Dec. 12 2189 U.S. Highway 26, Warm crafts and items from more than 40 Bend; www.centraloregonlocavore. Featuring handcrafted items, Springs; 541-553-3331. jewelry, gift items, decorations and SCANDINAVIANCHRISTMAS vendors; 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; Redmond org or 541-633-7388. more; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Culver City BAZAAR:Featuring Scandinavian Assembly of God, 1865 W.Antler HOLIDAYFOOD AND GIFT OLD FASHIONEDCHRISTMAS Hall, 200 West First Ave., Culver or items for sale and a bakesale; Ave., Redmond; 541-548-4555. FESTIVAL:Featuring arts, crafts, FESTIVAL:Featuring gourmet food, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Sons of Norway art, crafts, jewelry, toys and more; 10 541-546-4502. antiques and live entertainment HOLIDAYBAZAARANDBAKE Fjeldheim Lodge, 549 NWHarmon with a candy land and maze leading SALE:Featuring home baked goods, a.m.-6 p.m.; $5 admission, free for A BIG DEAL: Featuring a craft fair Blvd., Bend; 541-382-4333. children 12 and younger; Deschutes and bazaar ,tackandequipment to Santa to benefit Faith Harvest handmade holiday decorations, Helpers Food Bank; 10 a.m.-6 County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW sale and a rummage sale, to benefit ornaments and table decor, kids 40TH ANNUAL WARM SPRINGS Airport Way, Redmond; www.hfgf. Deschutes County 4-H; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; $4, with a canned good for craft table from 10 a.m.-2 a.m., to CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Featuring charity; Deschutes County Fair 8 p.m.; $1 entry or a nonperishable handcrafted jewelry, baked goods, benefit local charities; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; corn/Redmond or 503-643-8299. food item; Deschutes County Fair 8 art and more; 10a.m.-4 p.m.; Expo Center, South & Middle Sister Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Nov. 22 Buildings, 3800 SW Airport Way, Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Community Center Gym, 2200 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Redmond; at gate or 541-420-0279. Road, Sunriver; 541-678-3908. Redmond; 541-548-6088. HOLIDAYFOOD AND GIFT Hollywood Blvd., Warm Springs; CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY FESTIVAL:Featuring gourmet food, FOOD FAIR:Featuring traditional 541-553-3243. HOLIDAYSAND HAPPENINGS' MARKET HOLIDAYSHOWS: SIXTH ANNUALCRAFT FAIRE: Featuring a holiday market; 10 a.m.- Featuring handcrafted gifts from 4 p.m.; Bend Factory Stores, 61334 Oregonvendors andmore; 9 S Hwy 97, Bend; 541-420-9015. a.m.-4 p.m. free entrance with one nonperishable food item; Grace First Nov. 15 Lutheran Church, 2265 NWShevlin Assistance League® of Bend Presents OLD FASHIONEDCHRISTMAS Park Road, Bend; 541-610-7589.

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GARDEN VACATIONS THURSDAY OCTOBER 29™ 6:00 PM j AAA Travel 20350 Empire Blvd., Suite A-5, Bend RSVP: 541.383.0069 Join AAA and our guest, Ben Stanford of AAA

Member Choice Vacations, as we explore inspiring Royal Horticultural Society gardenthemed vacations in the U.S. and around the world. These botanical tours feature classic and private gardens, flower shows, natural wonders, and rich cultural interests.

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Friday, November 20th asaetenraleague Bend SIIVlhr DINhlHSSCOlllll

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6:00pm Ri verhouse Convention Center

eesietanra league'

Tickets $100 per person For more information or to purchase tickets, visit assistanceleaguebend.corn or ca I I541-389-2075 Proceeds from this event will help clothe children in Deschutes County.

All events are open to the public and free to attend, but spaceis limited. Please RSVP.

KEEP LIFE GOING'"

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By Kathy Antoniotti «Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal

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unter Pate and Dr. Sheldon Cooper share an obsession. The 9-year-old from Chicago

„of,

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and the famed, fictional physicist from the popular television series "The Big Bang Theory" are captivated by trains. It's not a recent infatuation, said Hunter' s mother, Melinda Pate. He has been able to fire off statistics about famous and not so famous train cars in the same fashion as the character in the sitcom played by actor Jim Parsons. "He's been fascinated with trains since he was

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little," said his mother while they rode in a firstclass dining car of the Great Smoky Mountain Railroad in May. It was the family's second trip on the railroad, and the second year in a row

Photos by K athy Antoniotti/Akron (Ohio) BeaconJournal

Bluegrass musicians entertain guests at one of the stops on the Great Smoky Mountain Railroad at the Natahala Outdoor Center.

that Hunter's birthday wish was to spend the day in the refurbished car as it traveled through the mountains at the eastern entrance of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Western Nort h

C a r olina of restored coaches, crown

was an isolated region in the 1840s, and the Great Smokies blocked travel to the north

and west. To the south, the

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coaches, club cars, dining cars, open cars and cabooses. The train travels 53 miles of track, two tunnels and 25

bridges over river gorges, off travel, as did the Appala- across valleys and through chian Highlands to the east. mountains. But it wasn't until 1845 when Guests are offered daily Blue Ridge Mountains cut

a famine hit the region that

and seasonal excursions, in-

residents realized how isolated they really were, and put pressure on the state Legislature to establish a railroad. In

cluding the Nantahala Gorge Excursion and the Tuckasegee River Excursion, as well special trips for Halloween

1855, the Western North Car-

and New Year's Eve. More t han 7 0 ,000 p e ople r o d e the train during the Christ-

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SOLUTION To TODAY'S JUMBLE

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People enjoy the Natahala River at the Outdoor Center, the turning point on the Great Smoky Mountain Railroad.

If you go

olina Railroad was chartered for a line that would connect mas-themed Polar Express A porter sets the table in a dining car. Guests can travel in various Salisbury with Asheville. The Civil War slowed con- in 2014. Moonshine and wine classes, some with dining, others in open-air cars. struction, but in 1869, a por- excursionsare quit e popular, tion of the Murphy Branch too. imes and line was finished from AsheGuests can travel in vari- Throughdecades of changing t ville to Old Fort and com- ous classes, some with din- turbulent conditions, the railroad struggled to pleted by 1879, after difficult ing, others in open-air cars. construction through moun- F irst-class s eating c o m e s exist and the need for railroads slowed. The tainous terrain that required with souvenir tumblers and North Carolina Department of Transportation steep grades. unlimited soft drinks in all purchased it in 1988 for $650,000 and after Through decades of chang- cars an d a n e m b r oidered ing times and turbulent con- GSMR tote bag. On class- 100 years, the state again owned a railroad. ditions, the railroad strug- es that don't serve meals, a gled to exist and the need for boxed lunch is available. railroads slowed. The North On the 4/2-hour Nantahala Bridge to Fontana Lake and with a full-service bar. Carolina D e p a rtment of Gorge Excursion, we traveled into the beautiful NantahaGuests on the warm spring Transportation purchased it 44 miles through the country- la Gorge, where the Outdoor day in early May could order in 1988 for $650,000 and af- side and along the Nantahala Center is famed for zip-lining pot roast, fire-braised chickter 100 years, the state again River in the Harper, formerly and whitewater rafting activ- en salad, beer-battered cod, owned a railroad. called the Dixie Flyer, built ities, also offered with rail- veggie lover's delight and A ne w c o mpany w a s in 1949 for the Pennsylvania road excursions. of course a dish the South is formed called th e G reat Railroad. Along the route, conThe Harper, used as a bar famous for, pulled pork barSmoky Mountains Railway ductor Bruce Edwards of Ela, lounge when the New York becue. Desserts included a Inc. and started operations at North Carolina, kept guests Central Railroad and Penn- decadent death by chocolate the eastern threshold to the entertained a n d i nf o r med sylvania Railroad merged, cake, cheesecake and other park with two diesel engines. with a running account of was purchased by the Great delicious items. Today, the railroad, which the industries that developed Smoky Mountain Railroad In a one-hour layover at is only 15 minutes away alongside the railroad, and the in 1994 and refurbished into Nantahala Outdoor Center, from the Cherokee Indian folklore and people of each re- a first-class family dining car visitors can grab a bite at Reservation, operates with a gion we passed through. half-dozen engines and pasThe railway l in e t r avels senger equipment consisting over th e h i s torical T r ellis

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU

/

Fares: Adult fares range from $104 for first class with What:Great Smoky Mountain dining, to $55 for coach and Railroad open air. Child prices range Where:Bryson City, North from $54 for first class, to Carolina $31 for coach and open air. Seating choices:Adult First Excnrsions:Nantahala Gorge Class (over 21) with dining; Excursion, 44-mile round trip Family First Class, with dining; lasting4t/2hours; Tuckasegee Adult Premium OpenAir Gon- River Excursion, 32-mile round trip lasting 4 hours. dola with first-class service; Crown Class; Standard Coach Information:www.gsmr.corn, Class and OpenAir Gondola. 800-872-4681. It's the law, explained the

the River's End Restaurant

or Big Wesser BBQ & Brew. conductor, and it's a long The NOC Outfitter's Store walk back to Bryson City. carries sporting supplies for Edwards warned, "If you can whitewater canoes, kayaks, find a local willing to drive stand-up paddleboards, plus you, it can cost you $100, or gear, apparel, footwear and more." accessories. Watch the clock carefully: Five minutes after the warn-

ing whistle blows, the train pulls out of the station whether passengers have returned or not.

www.AgateBeaohMotel.nom Private,vintage,oceanfront getaway N wport, O tR 1 ot ' 755-- 74

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She bought a new wristwatch-

FROM TIME TO TIME JUMBLE IS ON CB • •

SOLUTION To TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD V I R U S

W A L D

A C T S S A D

M AS T I C O L C A N O L L E G A L A I N S DW RG E S H S A I M N O T Y P E A N O S O A P OR L D S L F L PH E I S K L A E P U T I E S B A R B A SH CB S HA L K Y H O B E Y O OA K T O T T N A S T R P E 0 F G O O A R N I T D R O O T S S

A T E WO D E N V E L R H Y M E D E O F P A S S I O N S L I P O R P J I M S A A R E O O K A S T E P I L E E S S E N E S P I L L F R O S E R E AR S A I L I N G A S E C A K E WA L K U S Z C A R S B P O E L EO N E OR G R Y O A S T S T A S I S V A L L I N T E S T S EY E D S E L R A N G E R U S H E F S S O R N O T M S R P S L I D E R M A R I A D H O P E A G I LE LY O U S E D L I N T E L S T E ED ST EAD Y

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C6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

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by David L Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

Airbnb

An important caution is that Airbnb does not

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Unscramble these six Jumbles one letter to each square,

The New York full apart-

to form six ordinary words.

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ment we booked had a great location near Times Square

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and its room photos depicted

the place fairly accurately (it was clean and had strong WiFi). Yet our stay was disrupted by a ridiculously loud party in

CASOMI QUETEA

an apartment next door. The

do background checks on hosts or guests. This can pose a risk for both parties. Airbnb did not make any official available for comment or questions, but on its website the company believes it has put in place checks and balances in the form of reviews and verified ID and customer profiles.

pounding music didn't end unPABUTE

til 3:30 a.m.

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In Berlin in August, we loved our large, two-bedroom apartment, which was airy and modern and just footsteps

SHE SOUGHT A NETV WRISTWATCH-

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Now arrange the circled letters

to form the surprise answer, as

suggested by the above cartoon. PRINT YOUR ANSWER INTHE CIRCLES BELOW

DIFFICULTYRATING: *** *

* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C5

SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C5

DAILY BRIDGECLUB

Sunday, October25, 2015

Placing the cards By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency C)

A reader wants t o k n o w t h e chfference,if any, between "cardreading" and "card-placing." Cardreading refers to using counting, inference and logical reasoning to visualize your opponents' hands. Card-placing involves th e s ame skills, but the term implies making necessary assumptions about how the missing cards lie. In today's deal, West led the ten of spades against 3NT. East followed with the three, and South's jack won. South next let the jack of clubs ride, and East took the queen and shifted to the queen of hearts. When South played low, East continued with the jack of hearts. South retreated into a mull, trying to gauge his opponent. Finally, he covered with the king, and West won and returned his last heart for down

that East has the king. But East didn' t open the bidding and has shown the king of clubs and Q-J of hearts, so South can't give East the ace of hearts. That's card-placing. To have a chance, South must play low on the second heart. He must assume that West has A-x-x in hearts and East has the king of diamonds. North dealer Both sides vulnerable

two.

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"If I'd played low on the second heart, and theman had heldA-Q-J-x," South shrugged, "he would have owned me forever." Could South logically find the winning play? When East played the three on the first spade, South could infer that West had led from the queen. That' s card-reading. But South must also assmne a lie of the East-West cards that will let him make the contract. If the diamond finesse loses, South will be down for sure, so he must assume

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79 Bikini blasts, 111 Energetic mount briefly 112 Reliable ACROSS 80 Like some f Varnish resin DOWN protein drinks 7 Online cash- 82 Vocalized f Canine cousins "Psst!" back deal 2 Backtalk in the 12 Godforwhom 83 Ford flop Everglades? Wednesday 84 Maguire Of 3 Crime "spider-Man" was named 4 Facebooklinks 17 Peru'S El Misti, 85 Citrus high? 5 Like e.g. 90 Waffle center? Beethoven's 18 Submit servilely 93 Permeate SymphonyNo. 19 Sounded alike 94 Alternatives to 7 21 Not kosher fries e winter time 22 Coleridge love ee Ripley's closing 7 PoftNEof poem? WOrdS Canton, OH 24 Problems for 97 GM sticker 8 B-47, for One parades datum 9 Madison et aid 25 Nerds 98 RR stop Abbr. 27 Quick way to 99 CeleStial SCI. 10 Racer Fabi reduce fat? 100 Little burger 11 Diminutive 28 N.Y. 101 Natalie'SmWSSt 12 Deli offerings engineering side story" role 13 Very Sch. 102 Encouraging 14 Start to 29 Yen simian? function? 30 Form 105 How gazelles 15 Dubai-based 31 NFL great bound airline 107 "Dang!" Brown and 1e synthetic used meteorologist 108 Put Out to insulate wet Canto re 109 Mistletoe may SUltS 32 Bern'S riVer hang from them 17 Bug 33 Fed. benefits I 2 3 4 5 6

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not backed up by e xamples, or generally unsociable behavior." It doesn't censor, but "we

may take the extraordinary step of disallowing or removing reviews or review responses. We reserve the right to remove reviews that violate

review guidelines." In July 2014, Airbnb made a change to its review policy, in which reviews are revealed to the hosts and guests simultaneously. It also offers a place

forprivate messages so guests can share concerns about their stay.

So how do you know whether you' re getting a great place or a dud'? Like anything, travelers should do their homework on each booking. George Hobica, founder of the website

Airfarewatchdog.corn, r e commends talking to your host

extensively before you arrive and asking a lot of questions. "It's just like online dating. If you get a queasy feeling, w back out. Airbnb is not for everyone, and for all the positives, there

will be negatives, as in every v acation experience. But i t

does provide travelers with more choices on where they stay and how they spend their money.

1 in 8 Women ffected By BreastCancer

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cars ee Like an ideal negotiation ee No tc urnal Indian 87 Complained 35 Ft. Or ilk primate 88 Done 3e Essential 57 Powder 89 Sturgeon 37 IR uniSOn holders delicacy 39 Haute couture 59 Hero 91 Ruffled monogram eo pink Nintendo 92 Renders 4f composer satie icon unproductive? et al. e1 Ardor 94 SOme NCOS 42 Free, SS a e2 Mozart's " fan 95 Plains tribe checking tutte" 97 European island account e5 Like paint when nation it's nearly dry 99 HaVe: ICSS it 43 Hall of Fame linebacker ee Texter's guffaw 100 "Adventures in Junior ee KQA users BabySittingo CO44 Mountain route 70 Sisterhood star 45 Where name in a 101 cry under a Gubbeen RebeccaWells POP UP CheeSe is novel 103 plastic Band 71 Regs. 104 Ellipsis element made: Abbr. 46 Highway 72 RadiO hOSt foe "scram,ya warning John VSRTtint!"

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conversation. Therefore, we ask for reviews that are truth-

(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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Fridays InTheBullettn

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Weekly Arts Sr Entertainment

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24

I first tried Airbnb in Prov-

profile didn't mention was that idence a couple of years ago it overlooked a cemetery. That to visit my children at college. didn't bother us, but it could Even the cheapest hotel room — with fees and taxes — tops have spooked others. Guests can have bad experi- $200 a night. ences in hotels, too. I' ve stayed I found a place for $70 a in a pricey boutique hotel in night, a bedroom with private New York City that was infest- half-bath in a duplex along a ed with bedbugs and a historic 1.6-mile linear park perfect for resort in Central Pennsylva- my morning jogs. The owner nia that charged 5-star prices was a doctor who quit after but delivered 2-star service. two years to study art; her husClearly you' ve got to be an band was a composer. They intrepid traveler to give Air- made me feel welcome and the bnb a go. My 20-something stay overall was what I needkids are frequent users and ed — affordableand where I haven't yet had any problems, wanted it. but I always hold my breath A n i mportant caution i s when I click the button to book that Airbnb does not do backa place. ground checks on hosts or I do get a thrill when it turns guests. This can pose a risk out to be a gem. I was delight- for both parties. Airbnb did ed with the breakfast of home- not make any official availmade granola, yogurt, fruit able for comment or questions, and French-press coffee that but on its website the compamy host prepared each morn- ny believes it has put in place ing during my stay near Orlan- checks and balances in the do. She had a lovely designer's form of reviews and verified home full of modern artwork, ID and customer profiles. and I had a whole wing of the Like other sites in the sharhouse to myself. She and her ing economy, guests rate the Scottish husband, empty-nest- host and the host rates the ers, opened up their home guest. A writer for Business to Airbnb travelers because Insider recently complained they loved meeting interesting that because the reviews are people and had hosted guests not anonymous, guests would from New Zealand to Nova feel pressured to write just Scotia. It was $77 a night (plus positive reviews because they cleaning and booking fees) in- feared they might be rejected stead of the $240 I would have by future hosts. paid for a hotel in the same Indeed, a spot check of reneighborhood. views of Airbnb bookings Then there was the owner shows mostly glowing deof our lovely and meticulous- scriptions. "The property ly clean Paris apartment this was exactly as described and past August, who spent a half- in the pictures." "Gorgeous hour explaining the neighbor- apartment, even better than

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agency 34 Knighrs commentwhen he was miStakenly Put in the corner? 37 Words after lost or missed 38 Hardly laid-back

from a U-Bahn stop. What the

hood and all the local sites. He description." "Lovely place, even arranged a cab for us for would stay again!" our early-morning departure In explaining its review the day we left. policy, Airbnb w r ites: mOur

©2015 Tribune Content Agency,LLC.

CentralOregon 8 100 ASSOC., I.C. 541.382.9383 www.cora pc.corn


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C7

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

' ousewives' ivein orei ion, esus TV SPOTLIGHT

I

Last week, that was Tamra's

baptism. She gathered everyone around at a hotel swimming pool with a pastor so she could "wash away" her sins, and read a speech about her new sense of religion — and how she forgave her ex-husband for making her life so terrible. She was dunked under the water wearing a long white dress. When she emerged, a church choir was singing.

) II''1'

"The Real Housewives of Orange County"

t

9 p.m. Mondays, Bravo

By Emily Yahr The Washington Post

If you thought "Real Housewives" didn't go deep, you clearly haven't watched in awhile. For those who tuned in to

Bravo's "Real Housewives of Orange County" reunion on Monday night to get answers about whether Vicki Gunvalson's ex is faking cancer (long Vivian Zink I Courtesy Bravo via The Washington Post story), the show didn't actual- VickiGunvalson, Meghan Edmonds, Lizzie Rovsek, Heather Duly get around to that. Instead, brow,Shannon Besdor and Tamrs Judge argue atTamra's baptism the first part of the reunion on a recent episode of "The Real Housewives of Orange County." focused on turmoil in the cast

member's lives, especially Tamra Judge. And things got emotional.

Tamra has been a wreck this season thanks to a nast y custody battle w it h

her

ex-husband, Simon Barney. Tamra opened up about the emotional details on the re-

union, starting with how her daughter Sidney now lives with her dad, and even tes-

tified in court against her. "When your child turns their

back on you, it's humiliating," she sobbed, when host Andy Cohen asked why she didn't bring this up during the season. Another major theme was how Tamra turned to r e li-

gion this season to help her through her struggles. Won-

Meanwhile, th e

harasser. But over time, view-

ers saw that although I'm far from perfect, and regardless of my bra size, my love for people and my non-backstabbing showed through. And in fact I do love Jesus, which

is why I cannot sit back and

b a p tism watch a mockery be made of

also served as a venue where

my savior. The greatest part

the othercast members could confer about whether Vicki

of a walk with God is that he

loves you where you are. You is lying about whether her don't need to be perfect. Howboyfriend Brooks has cancer. ever, that doesn't give you a It turns into quite the spat, as hall pass to become baptized no one is sure what to believe. and then continue your old unYes, in the same breath as kind and manipulative ways. baptism, you have "possibly Someone's faith is not for endering how one of the most At the same time, she gives fake cancer." tertainment, it's their sole reasordid reality shows around soundbites like this: "I think 3) Just the topic of religion son for existence. Sincerely handles such a sensitive topic? that God speaks to every- can result in drama. and forever, Jesus Barbie." I) The show takes it some- body at different times. And Obviously! This is key. In Luckily, Tamra came to this what seriously ... but it's still when he got me down to my fact, former "Real House- show prepared with a zinger. "Real Housewives." lowest that I could possibly wives of OC" star Alexis "She's the type of Christian Tamra announced earlier be, he brought me back up," Bellino emailed Andy Cohen that gives Christians a bad this season that she found Je- Tamra said in one on-camera with a special message to read name," she shot back. "All I sus, and it wasn't just a pub- interview. "And here I am to to Tamra on-air during the can say to her is I'm sorry you licity stunt. On the reunion, say that I'm saved! And if you reunion. A quick reminder: feel the way you do, I will pray she tearfully explained how it don't like it, you can suck it." Alexis, also open about her for you. And this is my jourhappened: During her custody 2) A baptism can serve faith and Christianity when ney, not hers. She has no idea battle, a woman approached as an emotional event and she was on the show, was what's going on. her at work and said, "I' ve gathering spot where all the occasionally known as "JeAnd if she was a good kind of seen some things go- cast members get together to sus Barbie." As a reference to Christian, she probably would ing on and was wondering if argue. Alexis' breast implants, Tam- not be judging me right now," It's a rule on the "House- ra called her "Jesus Jugs." Tamra added. "That's one of you want to go to church with me." Tamra went to church wives" franchise that there (Again ... this is "Real House- the reasons, actually, Andy, with the woman and said she always has to be a big event wives.") Here's Alexis' com- I always made fun of her. Bejust sat there sobbing. "It just w here everyone is in t h e plete email: causeshe contradicted herself "When I became a cast as a good Christian, but yet kind of felt right," she said. "It same place; inevitably, camera-ready fights break out. member of 'Real Housewives she would do things like that." gave me what I needed."

Decision to oin re i ion s ou come roma aceo aut entici if you join a religion and must pray "Oh, I KNOW when you walk your to a deity you don't believe in in or- dog." (Is that creepy or is it me?) Frankly, I fe e l un c omfortable der to "fit in." Abby, we have nothing to hide, when religion is brought up. All While many churchespromote but our life is none of her business. my friends are firm church-related youth I' ve been neighborly to her, but it Dear Abby: I am a 16-year-old girl who doesn't believe in God.

believers of Christi-

anity and attend Bi-

of Orange County' five years ago, I knew that I would be judged because of my appearance and my love for Jesus, with Tamra being my biggest

activities, you should

seems like she wants too much

explore what non- information about us and has no sectarian activities problem telling us all her business ABBY with other things at are available in your and how much she spends. She's single and friendly with all theirchurch. c ommunity. I f t h e My parents and boy you like cares the neighbors, as are we. I haven' t b rothers don't b elieve i n G o d . about you, he will like you even if asked if they experience the same When I say I'd like to be a Chris- you aren't religious, and you will thing or if we' re the "lucky ones." tian, my brothers make fun of me. have your self-respect. It's not easy How should this be handled' ?

OPER

When they do, it makes me feel

ashamed of myself. I want to be a Christian because it would be nice to feel like I belong, and most Christians aren't accepting of atheists — especially other girls my age. They might be polite, but they' re distant. It also doesn' t

feeling different, but sometimes it' s worth it.

Dear Abby:We are not sure what to do about a nosy neighbor I' ll call

— Fed Up in Utah

Dear Fed Up:Continue to be polite to your neighbor, but when she asks questions you would rather

"Myrtle." She's nice to talk to, but

help that the boy I like comes from a

not answer, instead of answering quite honestly, I suspect she must her directly, respond with anothbe watching us with binoculars er question: "Myrtle, why do you because she told me what brand of ask?" If she presses for an answer, wine wedrink. When my husband without being confrontational say,

religious family. What should I do?

sends me flowers, she calls me to

— Outsider in Alabama

Dear Outsider: Ithink you should

"It's personal," and change the sub-

find out why. If we have a party, she ject. Be sure to keep your shades calls to find out what it's about!

drawn on windows that face her

A few years ago, I was talking house, and when you walk your you really are. Let me point out that to Myrtle in front of her house and dog, take a different route. if you' re feeling isolated now, con- mentioned that I usually walk my — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.corn sider what a fraud you will feel like dog in the morning. She responded, or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069 continue being true to the person

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, OCT. 25, 2015:This yearyou seemto

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE

be unusually fortunate in that you tend to By Jacqueline Bigar stumble into the right place at the right time. Your daily and social life might not always play out as you'd like, but ultimate- appear to be closed off. You have an ly everything will work out for the best. innate warmth that still comes out, even If you are single, your upbeat personality when dealing with this person. Tonight: draws many people toward you. You will Surrounded bypeoplewherever youare. find yourself in a CANCER (June21-July 22) Stars showthe kind very social group, ** * A boss, parent or older person will where you are like- becomedemanding,andyoum ightnot of dsy yos'Bhsvs ** * * * D ynamic ly to meet somehave the flexibility you would like to have ** * * p ositive one quite special. at the moment. A power play could arise. ** * Average If y o u are attached, Know how to gracefully slip out of this

** So-so

you are focused

* Difficult

on your long-term

goals as acouple.

In fact, you are likely to make one of them a reality this year. ARIES has atemper like you, only he or she is more volatile.

ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You might seem like a changed personto some. Youhavem ore vigorand enthusiasm than you have had in a while. You might try to slow down so that others can keep up with you. Opportunities could come in from out of left field. Tonight: An older person gets pushy.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * Take your time when making decisions. You might not be happy with what someone issharing.Youcould be uncomfortable at this point. A discussion approached creatively might clear the air. You might need to revise your thinking. Tonight: Keep it confidential.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * * Z ero in on what you want or need. You are full of energy and driven to hang out with friends. A loved one could

** * * * You could be put off by news that heads your way. You might be uncomfortable with what you are hearing. You' ll decide to play the day low-key in order to keep plans flexible. You have alot on your mind, and you'd like to clear out some thoughts. Tonight: Make it early.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * * Be sure of your choices and

allow a child to have some part in deciding whatyour plans will be. A loved one might want to join you. Don't push others, but be open to their suggestions. As a result, everyone could be beaming about time control game. Tonight: Get a head start on spent together. Tonight: Let the party go tomorrow. on.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)

** * * * A ccept a spontaneous invitation that will pull you away from your daily life. Wherever you end up, you will gain enough perspective to look at your life differently. You might be more discreet when handling money in the presence of others. Tonight: Tumble into bed.

** * You might want to slow down and take an assessment of what is going on around your home. You have beenvery busy lately, but there is a need to spend some time at home with your roommates or family. Tonight: Order in.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * * * Y ou' re likely to say what is on your mind. Don't be surprised by a loved

** * * * Q ne-on-one relating is likely to draw you and a friend or loved one closer together. Your imagination peaks with wild ideas when you are around this person. In fact, you spontaneously might draw in others as well. Your creativity soars. Tonight: Say "yes" to a discussion.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb.18) one's response.This personlikes your

openness, and he or she finds you to be even more likeable when you are direct. Try not to let your imagination go hog wild. Tonight: At a favorite place.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20)

** * * You could be taken aback by ** * * * You could be uncomfortable what is going on with your finances. You when dealing with a somewhat wild might be allowing money to slip through person in your life. This individual often your fingers. Tighten up your financial surprises you,forcing you to regroup. Re- habits. Start counting your change and member that you like the excitement. Your marking down each expenditure. Tonight: mind will be working overtime. Tonight: A friend presents a problem. Defer to someone else. © King Features Syndicate

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0 and IMAX movies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. r

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) 12:10, 3:20, 6:30, 9:40 • CRIMSONPEAK(R) 12:20, 3:10, 6:20, 9:10 • CRIMSONPEAKIMAX (R) 1:05, 4, 6:55, 9:45 • DRACULA (No MPAArating) 2, 7 • EDSHEERAN: JUMPERS FOR GOALPOSTS (R)12:55 • EVEREST(PG-!3) 7:15 • GOOSEBUMPS(PG)f:10,3: 40,6:40,9:30 • GOOSEBUMPS3-D(PG)1:40,4:20,7:20,10:20 • THE INTERN (PG-13) I:30, 4:30, 7:40, IO:30 • JEM ANDTHEllOLOGRAMS(PG) 12:15, 3:30, 7:10, 10 • THE LASTWITCHHUNTER(PG-13) 12:30, 3:25, 6:50, 9:35 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 12:40, 3:50, 7:05, 10:15 • THE MARTIAN 3-D (PG-13) 1,4:10, 7:25, 10:35 • MAZERUNNER:THE SCORCH TRIALS (PG-l3)3:45, 10:40 • PAN(PG)1:20, 4:05, 6:45, 9:25 • ROCK THE KASBAH(R) noon, 2:40, 6:10, 9:20 • SICARIO(R) 10:05 • STEVE JOBS (R) 12:05, 2:55, 7:20, 10:10 • WOODLAWN(PG)12:45,7:45 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 6 p.m. on NGC,"Brain Surgery Live with Mental Floss" — Surgeons at University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland perform deep brain stimulation — an elective surgery sometimes used to treat symptoms of Parkinson' s disease — on a patient who remains awake and lucid during the procedure in this two-hour special. The neurosurgical team includes Dr. Jonathan Miller, Dr. Benjamin Walter and Dr. Jennifer Sweet. Bryant Gumble hosts the special, which also features running commentary from other medical experts. 8 p.m. on 6, "Madam Secretary" —The schism between Elizabeth (Tea Leoni) and President Dalton (Keith Carradine) widens when she disagrees with his response to escalating tensions with Russia and subsequently finds herself pushed out of the inner circle. Nor are things better on the home front, where Elizabeth and Henry (Tim Daly) struggle to protect reckless daughter Stevie (Wallis Currie-Wood) from the media after incriminating photos of her with first son Harrison Dalton come to light in the new "Waiting for Taleju." Christine Ebersole guest stars. 8 p.m. on10, "The Simpsons" — In this season's typically surreal Halloween special "Treehouse of Horror XXVI," Sideshow Bob (voice of Kelsey Grammer) finally makes good on his oft-repeated threat to kill Bart (voice of Nancy Cartwright), then proceeds to reanimate the corpse. In another tale, Homer (voice of Dan Castellaneta) wakes up with short-term memory loss, then, finally, radiation

exposure bestowssuperpowers

on Lisa (voice of Yeardley Smith), Bart and Milhouse (voice

of PamelaHayden). 8 p.m. on7, "Masterpiece Clas-

sic"— In the new "Episode 4" of "Home Fires," Claire (Daisy Badger) makes a discovery about Spencer (Mike Noble) that leaves her shocked, while David (Will Attenborough) decides to enlist, against his mother's wishes. Alison (Fenella Woolgar) sacrifices a chance to go to America to stay behind and teach farmgirl Steph (Clare Calbraith) how to read. Joyce (Francesca Armis) nearly quashes Frances' (Samantha Bond) proposal to create a communal air-raid shelter, then decides to house it in her own basement. cr zap2it

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUCTION

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • INSIDE OUT(PG)11:30 a.m., 2:30 • JURASSICWORLD(PG-13) 5:30 • THEMAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)9 • Younger than 21 may attend all screenings if accompanied by alegal guardian.

803 SW Industrial Way, Bend, OR

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • GRANDMA(R) 3:45, 7:45 • PEOPLEPLACESTHINGS (R) 5:45

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures.

I

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CRIMSONPEAK(R) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 • GOOSEBUMPS(PG)noon,2:15,4:30,6:45,9 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEGHOST DIMENSION (R) 11:30 a.m., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) 1:15, 4, 6:45 • HOTELTRANSYLVANIA2 (PG)2:I5 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 1, 3:45, 6:30 • ROCK THE KASBAH(R) 2, 4:30, 7 • SICARIO(R)4:15, 6:45 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CRIMSONPEAK(R) 1:30, 4: I5, 7:20 • GOOSEBUMPS(PG)noon,2,4:45,7:05 • JEM ANDTHEllOLOGRAMS(PG) 1:30, 4:10, 6:50 • THELAST WITCH HUNTER (PG-13) l2:05,2:25,4:50, 7:15 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEGHOST DIMENSION (R) I2:30, 5, 7:10 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEGHOST DIMENSION 3-D (R) 2:50 •

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Scoreboard, D2 M o tor sports, D3 Sports in brief, D2 Preps, D6 Tennis, D3 NFL, D6

© www.bendbuiietin.corn/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

PREP FOOTBALL

NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Outlaws, Cowboys in 4A postseason Two Central Oregon Class 4A football teams have added at least one more game to their schedules. Sisters (4-0 Sky-Em, 7-0 overall, the lone unbeaten team in the classification, claimed its first Sky-Em League title since 2007 to earn an automatic berth in the first round of the state playoffs, which are scheduled to begin Nov. 6. Crook County qualified for the play-in round and has achance to advance to the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time since 1987-88. Conference champions from the seven 4A leagues, aswell as an at-large team, earn spots in the first round of the state playoffs. The second- and thirdplace finishers in each conference, and two at-large teams, qualified for next week's play-in round. Crook County, which went 3-1 in the Tri-Valley Conference (5-3 overall) to place second, ranks 13th in 4A and will host Henley

'o

Timothy J. Gonzalez/The Associated Press

Oregon State quarterback Nick Mitchell is tackled by Colorado's Jered Bell in the first half Saturday night in Corvallis. Mitchell started in place of Seth Collins.

i eren si a oss • Redshirt freshman Nick Mitchell starts in Oregon State's homelossto Colorado

of Klamath Falls. The

Hornets took third in the Skyline Conference with a 3-2 league record and a 4-4 overall mark. The date and time of this game hasyet to be scheduled. — Bulletin staff report

By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

eP

:pi

CORVALLIS — The victory secured,

4

[N'' e)

Colorado's players dashed en masse to a corner of Oregon State's field where they led a small group of visiting fans in a loud rendition of their school's fight song. The streak was finally over. The Buffaloes snapped a 14-game losing

,

NHL Ovechkin nears Russian record

streak in the Pac-12 with a 17-13 victory

over the Beavers on Saturday night. Colo-

With four more goals, Alex Ovechkin will pass Sergei Federovas the most prolific Russian-born goal-scorer in NHL history. NHL roundup,D3

rado's last league win was on Nov. 16, 2013, when the Buffs beat Cal 41-24 in Boulder.

The vict ory overtheBeaversalsosnapped a 13-game losing streak on the road against conference foes, with the last coming on Sept. 22, 2012, at Washington State.

The Bulletin illustration from The Associated Press and Thinkstock photos

"It was a total relief," Colorado coach

Mike MacIntyre said. "It was just joy from my toes to the top of my head for our kids, for our coaches, for our fans, for my family, for everybody." See Beavers /D4

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Inside

PAC-12 outhern No. 3 Utah

24

Washington

14

Oregon St.

ol d

1 13

Arizona

42

• Blazers presidentNeilOlsheymadea ton of offseasonmoves, including replacing 4startersfrom a playoff team. Butwerethey the right moves? aul Allen cringed at the question, one I felt needed to be asked.

Rutgers

During an offseason that saw the

7

No.2Bayl r iowa St.

45

W. Kentucky

20

27

N o. 6 Clemson Miami

departure of four starters from last year' s

GRANT

Portland Trail Blazers squad, including

LUCAS

the Blazers filled this season's training camp roster with six returners

0

14

eorgia Tech N o. 9 Florida St. 1 6 No.14 Oklahoma St. 58 Kansas 10 No. 24 Mississippi 23

No. 15 TexasA&M 3 Texas Tech

27

No. 19 Toledo

51

M assachusetts

35

No. 21 Houston Cent. Florida

10

and 11 new players, including four rookies and nine others who have been in the NBA no more than three years. Only 12-year veteran Chris Kaman is older than 27. Aside from Kaman andall-NBA pointguard Damian Lillard, no other Trail Blazerhas been an All-Star or been named to an all-NBA team.

23 20

First up

become all too familiar with this

New Orleans at Portland When:7 p.m. WednesdayTV:BlazerNet

season. With low expectations

Radio:KBND 1110-AM;

room for pleasant surprises. With

KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM So, on the first day of training camp last month, with those young Blazers going through the first this year. So to see how they take organized workouts of the season advantage of that and embrace nearby the media serum surround- it and improve, that's an exciting ing the Blazers' owner, I asked prospect, I think, for all of us." Allen: Did his team president of Before responding, Allen had basketball operations, Neil Olshey, cringed. Maybe because he was settle on these players' ? trying to hear over the clamor of "Again, I just compliment Neil on the training camp action finding the guys he found," Allen nearby. Maybe because he said. "I think the interesting thing did not like my question. is with all the ... a lot of these guys Whatever the cause, haven't experienced the kind of

Virginia Tech 43 (40T) Syracuse

WILLIAM C.

franchise cornerstone LaMarcus Aldridge,

8

No. 7 Michigan S . Indiana 26

N o. 25 Pittsbur h

• No. 2 Baylor • Portland wins, but State wins loses QBto on late FG, neck injury. D4 Top 25 roundup,D4

WORLD SERIES

TOP 25

Tennessee

• Southern Cal upsets No. 3 Utah at home. Pac-12 roundup,D4

playing time they' re going to get

his reaction was one Trail Blazers fans will

(Las Vegas odds peg the team's over-underforvictoriesthisseason at 29/z), perhaps there is plenty of a roster loaded with youth (Portland is the third-youngest team in the NBA), there are high, yet possibly reachable, ceilings. There won't be much middle ground for Portland fans. This season will

either be fun to watch — like when the Blazers built a 35-point lead against the Los Angeles Clippers in a preseason game Thursdayor it will be cringe-worthy — like when they blew that 35-point lead

in a 115-109 loss. — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.corn.

Inside

Monday

• Five questions for the Trail Blazers to answer, including players that need to step up to support All-Star guard Damian Lillard. Take la ook at Moe Harkless (right), DS

• A closer look at the Eastern andWestern conferences.

RHODEN

By putting team first, playersput themselvesat risk EW YORK — New York Mets man-

N

ager Terry Collins raised eyebrows Friday when he suggested that his

star pitcher Matt Harvey could start three times during the World Series. Noting that

Jacob deGrom looked "like he could use some time," Collins, asked about the possibility of giving Harvey an extra start, said, "There's a possibility, yeah." Really? Must be World Series fever, when ego and"manning up" overtake common sense and pragmatism. SeeWorld Series/D3

WorldSeries ROYALS VS. METS Tue at KansasCity 5:07 p.m. Wed at Kansas City 5:07 p.m. Oct. 30 at N.Y. Mets 5:07 p.m. Oct. 31 at N.Y.Mets 5:07 p.m. x-Nov. 1 at N.Y.Mets 5:15 p.m. x-Nov. 3atKansasCity 5:07 p.m. x-Nov. 4atKansasCity 5:07 p.m. x-if necessary


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

ON THE AIR

COHEBOAHD

TODAY SOCCER Time TV/Radio England, Sunderland vs. Newcastle United 5 a.m. N BCSN England, Manchester United vs. Manchester City 7 a.m. N BCSN Germany, Borussia Dortmund vs. Augsburg 7 :20 a.m. F S 2 England, Liverpool vs. Southampton 9 a.m. NBC Germany, BorussiaMonchengladbachvs. 9 :30 a.m. F S 1 Schalke 04 Men's college, Ohio St. at Rutgers 10 a.m. Big Ten Women's college, Florida St. at Virginia 10 a.m. ESPNU Women's college, Colorado at Southern Cal 11 a.m. Pac-12 Women's college, Oregon atArizona St. 11 a.m. Pac-12 U-17 World Cup,Francevs. Syria 1 1:55 a.m. F S 2 Women's college, Indiana at Michigan St. noon B i g Ten Women's college, Mississippi St. at Alabama noon E S P NU Women's international friendly, U.S. vsBrazil noon FS1 Women's college,KentuckyatTennessee 2 p.m. SEC MLS, D.C.United at Columbus 2 p.m. FS1 U-17 World Cup,Costa Rica vs. North Korea 2 :55 p.m. F S 2 Men's college, UCLA at California 3 p.m. P a c-12 MLS, Los Angeles atSporting KansasCity 4 p.m. E S PN MLS, Colorado at Portland 4 p.m. Roo t Women's college, Stanford at Washington 5 p.m. P a c-12 FOOTBALL

NFL, NewOrleans at Indianapolis NFL,OaklandatSanDiego NFL, Dallas at N.Y.Giants NFL, Philadelphia at Carolina

10 a.m. Fox 1 p.m. CBS 1 :25 p.m. F o x 5:20 p.m. NBC

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Talladega Formula One,United States GrandPrix GOLF PGA Tour,Shriners Hospitals for Children Open TENNis WTA Finals

11:30a.m. NBCSN noon NBC 2 p.m.

Golf

1 a.m. (Monj Tennis

MONDAY FOOTBALL

NFL, Baltimore at Arizona SOCCER Men's college, SanDiegoSt. at Stanford TENNis

5:15 p.m. ESPN

WTA Finals

10 p.m. Tennis

7 p.m.

P a c-12

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL WCL adds franChiSe in GreSham — After losing aleague member to the newly formed summercollegiate baseball Great West League, theWest Coast Leagueannouncedthis week theaddition of a new franchise in Gresham.Last month, the Medford Rogues, aWCL member since 2013,announcedthey would be joining the Great West League, which will debut in summer2016. Theyet-to-be nicknamed Gresham teamwill replace the Roguesandthe Klamath Falls Gems, who will also not be playing in theWCLnext summer. Gresham, whose owners also own theshort-season single-A Salem-Keizer Volcanoes andthe Gems, will play its home gamesat Mt. Hood Community College's Oslund Field.

FOOTBALL NFL to fund COnCuSSianStudy fOr jOCkeyS —TheNFLsaid Saturday it will help fund newresearch on thesuspected link between sports-related concussions and long-term brain degeneration. The agreement with the London-based International Concussion and Head Injury Research Foundation will focus on retired jockeys, who suffer far greater rates of brain trauma thanevenfootball players. The research starting in January would investigate the suspected link between concussions andthe onset of an incurable brain degenerative disease called CTE,short for chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which can bedefinitively diagnosed only after death.

GYMNASTICS U.S. raCeS to huge lead at WOrldS — TheUnited States women's gymnastics teamdazzled during qualifying at the world championships Saturday in Glasgow,Scotland, posting the top overall score to cement its status as heavyfavorites for a repeat. The group, led by two-time defending all-around champion SimoneBiles and reigning Olympic champion Gabrielle Douglas, finished with a total 236.611 points, well ahead ofsecond-place Russia to secure a spot in Tuesday's team final.

SOCCER SOuth AfriCan TOkyO SOXWale to run fOr FIFA PreSident

— An apartheid-era political prisoner turnedmulti-millionaire mining tycoon joined theraceto be FIFApresident on Saturday. South African Tokyo Sexwaleannounced his intention to run in nextyear's emergency election to replaceSeppBlatter after receiving the endorsement of the South African Football Association. The62-year-old Sexwale's varied credentials includebeing acurrent FIFAanti-racism adviser, a former prisoner onRobbenIsland alongside Nelson Mandela,andthe previous host of South Africa's version of "TheApprentice" television show.

TharnS Star Margan remainS mum Ontrade — If AlexMorgan is on theverge of joining the National Women's Soccer League's new expansion team inOrlando, shestill is not ready to say sojust yet. Sports illustrated first reported the potential deal that would send Morgan andCanadianKaylyn Kyle to Orlandofor the Pride's first pick of the NWSLdraft, two international slots, and the U.S. national team defender MeghanKlingenberg, currently with the Houston Dash. "Nothing is confirmed right now," MorgansaidSaturday. "So I can't really speak onthat. My agent is dealing with all of those negotiations."

SKIING

LPGA ToLg g' LPGA Taiwan Championship Monday Saturday aMiramar Resort and CountryClub, Boyssoccer:Culverat BendJV,4p.m. Taipei, Taiwn a Yardage: 6,450;Par: 72 Tuesday Third Roun d Boyssoccer:BendatRedmond,4:30p.m.;Mountain a-amateur View atSummit, 7 p.m.;CrookCounty at Madras,4 LydiaKo 69-67-67 —203 p.m.;Creswell atLaPine, 4p.m. Ji 66-69-72 —207 Girls soccer:MountainViewat Summit, 5p.m.;Bend Eun-Hee 68-69-71 —208 Hull atRedmond,3p.m.;MadrasatCrookCounty,4p.m.; Charley S o Yeon R y u 7 0-69-70 —209 CentralLinnatLaPine,4:30p.m. Catriona Ma t h ew 7 2-70-68 —210 Volleyball: 5Aplay-in, Libertyat Bend, 5p.m.;5Aplay- SuzannPettersen 74-66-71 —211 in, Ridgeviea w tSandy, TBD;SistersatMarist, 6p.m.; AnnaNordqvist 70-70-71 —211 ia Pine at Harrisburg, 6p.m.;1Afirst round,TBDat Xi YuLin 67-70-74 —211 TrinityLutheran,TBD S hanshan F en g 7 0-76-67 —213 Girls water polo: Mountain Viewat Ridgeview, 3:30 HeeYoungPark 71-72-70 —213 p.m.;SummitatBend,6:30p.m. 69-73-71 —213 Icher Boys water polo: Mountain Viewat Ridgeview, 4:30 Karine 69-72-72 —213 Jenny Shi n p.m.;Summit atBend,7:30p.m. 68-71-74 —213 SunYoungYoo 77-71-66 —214 BrittanyLang Wednesday P aula Cre am er 7 1-73-70 —214 Volleybalh1Afirst round,TBDatTrinityLutheran,TBD CarlotaCiganda 70-74-70 —214 Mirim Lee 71-72-71 —214 Thursday AmyYang 69-73-72 —214 Girls water polo: Mountain Viewat Madras, 5p.m Pornanong P h at l u m 7 5-71-69 —215 Summiatt Redmond,3:30 p.m. 73-73-69 —215 Jessica Korda Boys water polo:Moun tain Viewat Madras, 6 p.m Lee-Anne Pace 75-70-70 —215 Summiat t Redmond,4:30p.m. 7 2-73-70 —215 MinjeeLee 72-71-72 —215 Ariya Jutanuga rn Friday Hsu 74-73-69 —216 Football: Bend at MountainView,7p.m.; Ridgeviewat Wei-Ling Hsieh 73-74-69 —216 Redmond, 7 p.m.;Summit atNorth Salem,7p.m.;4A Yu-Ling Michelle Wi e 7 3-73-70 —216 play-in,HenleyatCrookCounty, 7p.m.;Pleasant Hil Hyo Joo Ki m 7 4-70-72 —216 at LaPine,7p.m.;CulveratStanfield, 7p.m. Kim 73-71-72 —216 Girls water polo:Ridgeviewat Redmond, 3:30p.m.; Christina Pei-YingTsai 73-71-72 —216 BendatMountainView,6:30p.m. I.K. Ki m 7 4-69-73 —216 Boyswaterpolo:RidgeviewatRedmond,4:30p.m.; Mika Miyazato 69-74-73 —216 BendatMountainView,7:30p.m. 69-73-74 —216 HaruNomura 7 6-72-69 —217 Min Lee Saturday 76-71-70 —217 Moriya Jutanug arn Volleyball: 5A first round,TBDat Summit; 4Afirst SakuraYokomine 70-74-73 —217 round,TBDat Sisters; 4Afirst round,TBDat Crook MorganPressel 68-75-74 —217 County;2Afirst round,TBDatCulver Lizette Sal a s 69-71-77 —217 Cross-coun try: Slatechampionshipsat LaneCommu- Sei Young K i m 7 8-69-71 —218 niiy College inEugene:Class5A,I:15 p.m.;Class4A, CarolineMasson 74-72-72 —218 11:15a.m. Pernilla Lindberg 71-75-72 —218 69-74-75 —218 BrittanyLincicome 75-74-70 —219 DandieKung BASEBALL 68-79-72 —219 SandraGal 7 4-72-73 —219 AzaharaMunoz MLB playoffs Na Yeon Choi 74-70-75 —219 Mo Martin 73-71-75 —219 MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL AustinErnst 71-72-77 —220 All TimesPOT a-Ya-Chun Chang 73-69-78 —220 WORLDSERIES StacyLewis 77-72-72 —221 (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Mi HyangLee 74-75-72 —221 Tuesday'sGame JenniferSong 70-79-72 —221 74-73-74 —221 N.Y.Mets(Harvey13-8) atKansasCity, 5:07p.m. Mariajouribe 75-71-75 —221 Wednesday'sGame Kim Kaufm an 75-71-75 —221 N.Y.Mets(deGrom14-8) at KansasCity, 5:07p.m. lheeLee 7 2-74-75 —221 Friday's Game ChellaChoi 72-73-76 —221 Kansas CityatN.Y.Mets(Syndergaard9-7), 5:07p.m YaniTseng JulietaGranada 78-71-73 —222 Saturday,Oct. 31 AlenaSharp 76-73-73 —222 KansasCityatN.Y. Mets (Matz4-0), 5:07p.m. Sunday,Nov.1 DanielleKang 74-79-70 —223 x-KansasCityat N.Y. Mets (Harvey 13-8), 5:15p.m. Kelly WShon 75-74-74 —223 73-74-76 —223 Tuesday,Nov.8 JayeMarieGreen 7 1-74-78 —223 x-N.Y.Mets(deGrom14-8) atKansasCity,5:07p.m. MarinaAlex 72-77-75 —224 Wednesday,Nov.4 Ai Miyazato 75-78-72 —225 x-N.Y.Mets(Syndergaard9-7) atKansasCity, 5:07p.m Tzu-ChiLin PhoebeYao 73-77-75 —225 Ya Huei Lu 75-74-76 —225 GOLF MengChuChen 72-77-77 —226 0 Back 75-77-75 —227 Ai-ChenKuo 75-77-75 —227 PGA Tour H sin-Ning Ye h 75-78-76 —229 ShrinersHospitals for Children B eatriz Re c ari 75-80-75 —230 Saturday at P TC Summerl in,LasVegas Huei-JuShih 75-78-77 —230 Yardage: 7,266;Par: 71 a-MikeLiu 78-77-76 —231 Third Round 75-80-76 —231 Sydnee Mi c ha el s 66-66-68 —200 Szu-HanChen BrettStegm aier 80-75-78 —233 MorganHofmann 66-66-6M201 AlisonWalshe 79-79-78 —236 KevinNa 68-66-68 —202 I-WenChen 81-77-79 —237 JimmyWalker 66-67-69 —202 Hsuan-PingChang 82-75-80 —237 ChadCampbell 65-67-70 —202 Yen-LingPan 78-81-81 —240 AlexCejka 67-70-66 —203 Pei-LinYu 79-78-84 —241 66-70-67 —203 NickTaylor S hu-Huai Hu a ng 86-87-87 —260 68-66-69 —203 JasonBohn 68-65-70 —203 Cameron Tringale TylerAldridge 64-68-72 —204 HOCKEY BenMartin 70-68-67 —205 RusselHenl l ey 68-69-68 —205 JamieLovemark 70-69-66 —205 NHL 68-65-72 —205 DanielSummerhays NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE 67-66-72 —205 NickWatne y All Times PDT MichaelKim 70-67-69 —206 Scott Stallings 68-71-67 —206 EasternConference KevinKisner 68-71-67 —206 Atlantic Division CamiloVilegas 67-69-70 —206 GP W L OT Pts GF GA KevinStreelman 68-67-71 —206 Montreal 9 9 0 0 18 35 12 69-66-71 — 206 Si Woo Kim 64-70-72 —206 TampaBay 9 5 2 2 12 27 24 DavidHearn 64-70-72 —206 Florida 8 4 3 I 9 26 17 MarkHubbard RyanPalmer 65-69-72 —206 Detroit 8 4 3 I 9 21 21 PattonKizzire 65-69-72 —206 Ottawa 8 3 3 2 8 24 26 TonyFinau 69-71-66 —206 Boston 7 3 3 I 7 27 29 7 1 4 2 4 16 24 BrendondeJonge 67-66-73 —206 Toronto 70-68-69 — 207 CharlesHowell III Buffalo 8 2 6 0 4 16 26 67-71-69 —207 Roberto Castro Metropolitan Division 72-65-70 —207 RickieFowler GP W L OT Pts GF GA FabianGomez 69-68-70 —207 Washmgton 7 6 1 0 12 29 18 SmylieKaufman 67-72-68 —207 N.Y.Rangers 9 5 2 2 12 24 19 PatrickRodgers 65-71-71 —207 N.Y.Islanders 8 5 2 I 11 27 22 J.J. Henry 67-72-68 —207 Philadelphia 7 4 2 I 9 16 18 ScottPiercy 72-67-68 —207 NewJersey 8 4 3 I 9 20 23 70-65-72 —207 JohnSenden Pittsburgh 8 4 4 0 8 13 16 65-70-72 —207 Carolina Shane Bertsch 8 2 6 0 4 14 25 70-68-70 —208 Columbus 9 Scott Pinckney 1 8 0 2 19 40 PeterMalnati 70-67-71 —208 WesternConference WilliamMcGirt 66-73-69 —208 Central Division SteveMarino 66-71-71 —208 GP W L OT Pts GF GA RickyBarnes 65-71-72 —208 Nashville 8 6 1 I 13 25 16 67-70-71 —208 SteveWheatcroft Dallas 8 6 2 0 12 27 21 69-71-68 —208 Minnesota RyanMoore 7 5 1 I 11 20 17 D.H.Lee 65-75-68 —208 St. Louis 8 5 2 I 11 23 20 RorySabbatini 66-72-71 —209 Chicago 8 5 3 0 10 18 16 Ryo Ishikawa 65-72-72 —209 Winnipeg 7 4 2 I 9 23 17 ChrrsStroud 66-71-72 —209 Colorado 7 2 4 I 5 19 21 JasonKokrak 69-70-70 —209 Pacific Division 71-68-70 —209 Martin Laird GP W L OT Pts GF GA 68-71-70 —209 AngelCabrera 8 5 3 0 10 23 18 Ollie Schniederjans 68-67-74 —209 SanJose Arizona 8 4 3 I 9 23 19 Martin Piler 70-70-69 —209 Vancouver 8 3 2 3 9 20 17 Michae lThompson 64-73-73 —210 Los Angel e s 7 4 3 0 8 13 15 TyroneVanAswegen 68-70-72 —210 8 3 5 0 6 19 24 WesRoach 66-72-72 —210 Edmonton Calgary 7 2 5 0 4 15 27 69-70-71 —210 Shawn Stefani Anahei m 7 1 5 I 3 6 20 67-70-73 —210 KyleStanley 71-65-74 —210 Spencer Levin Saturday'sGames BrianHarm an 68-67-75 —210 GregOwen 65-74-71 —210 Philadelphia3, N.Y.Rangers2,SD Minnes o t a 3, An aheim 0 Jhonattan Vegas 70-70-70 —210 KevinChappel 69-71-70 —210 NewJersey4, Buffalo 3 Montreal5, Toronto3 70-69-72 —211 FreddieJacobson Arizona4, Dttawa1 69-68-74 —211 ChezReavie 71-68-72 —211 N.Y.Islanders3,St. Louis2, OT StewartDink Pittsburgh2, Nashvile1, DT RusselKnox l 69-70-72 —211 ChadCollins 70-69-72 —211 Florida 6,Dalas2 Chicago1,TampaBay0,DT ChessonHadley 68-71-72 —211 4, Colorado 3 WebbSimpson 71-69-71 —211 Columbus 69-71-71 —211 Detroit 3,Vancouver2, OT TomHoge 72-68-72 —212 SanJose5, Carolina2 HunterStewart Today'sGames 68-69-76 —213 DavisLoveIII 68-71-74 — 213 Minnesota at Winnipeg, 3p.m. Scott Brown Hiroshilwata 67-73-73 —213 Calgaryat N.Y.Rangers,4 p.m. WheeKim 71-68-75 —214 LosAngelesatEdmonton,6:30p.m. Jin Park 68-72-74 —214 Monday'sGames 72-67-77 —216 Calgaryat N.Y.Islanders, 4p.m. Alex Prugh 71-69-77 —217 Colt Knost ArizonaatToronto, 4:30p.m. 68-71-83 —222 Steven Bowditch Anahei m atChicago,5:30p.m.

ON DECK

FOOTBALL

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Talladega lineup After Saturdayqualifying; racetoday at Talladega(Ala.) Superspeedway Lap length: 2.66miles (Car number inparentheses) 1.(24) JeffGordon, Chevrolet, 194.5. 2.(5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 193.638. 3.(48) JimmiJohn e son, Chevrolet, 193.584. 4.(20) MattKenseth, Toyota, 193.58. 5.(88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 193.162. 6.(6) TrevorBayne,Ford, 192.777. 7.(4) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 192.599. 8. (11)DennyHamlin,Toyota,192.533. 9. (21)RyanBlaney,Ford,192.509. 10. 22)JoeyLogano,Ford, 192.498. 11. 2) Brad Keselowski, Ford,192.212. 12. 14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 192.116. 13. 27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet, 192.486. 14.(41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet, 192.32. 15.19Carl Edwards,Toyota,192.32. 16.I18I KyleBusch,Toyota, 192.197. 17.(17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,191.981. 18. (31)RyanNewman, Chevrolet,191.938. 19. 16) GregBiffle, Ford,191.846. 20. 10) DanicP aatrick, Chevrolet, 191.812. 21. 9) Sam Homish Jr., Ford,191.75. 22. 55)DavidRagan, Toyota,191.739. 23. (42)KyleLarson,Chevrolet,191.727. 24. (I) JamiMc e Murray,Chevrolet, 191.593. 25.43) AricAlmirola,Ford,191.512. 26.(3) AustinDilon, Chevrolet,191.486. 27. (95)MichaelMcDowell, Ford,191.226. 28. 13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 191.157. 29. 15) GlintBowyer, Toyota, 191.103. 30. 26)J.J. Yeley,Toyota, 190.962. 31. 47) AJ Allmendinger,Chevrolet, 190.837. 32. (62)TimmyHil, Ford,190.582. 33. (98)MichaelWaltrip, Toyota,190.234. 34.35) ColeWhitt, Ford,190.158. 35.(32) Bobby Labonte, Ford,189.815. 36.(83)MattDiBenedetto, Toyota, 189.519. 37. (7)AlexBowman, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 38. 38)DavidGililand, Ford,owner points. 39. (51)JustinAllgaier, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 40. (34)JoshWise,Ford, owner points. 41. (40)LandonCassil, Chevrolet,ownerpoints. 42. (33)TravisKvapil, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 43. (78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, ownerpoints. Failed to qualify 44. (23)Jebburton, toyota,188.634. 45. (46)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet,188.4.

TENNIS WTA Tour Kremlin Cup Saturday atMoscow Championship Svetlana Kuznetsova,Russia,def. Anastasia Pavly uchenkova, Russia, 6-2, 6-1. LuxembourgOpen Saturday atLuxembourg Semifinals Mone Barthel, Germany,def. Stefanie Voegele Switzerland,6-2,6-3. MisakiDoi,Japan,def. AlisonVanUytvanck, Belgium,6-4,0-0, retired.

ATP World Tour Kremlin Cup Saturday atMoscow Semifinals Marin Cilic (1), Croatia,def. EvgenyDonskoy, Russia,6-3, 6-1. RobertoBautistaAgut (2), Spain, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber (4), Germany, 6-4, 6-4. Erste BankOpen Saturday atVienna, Austria Semifinals SteveJohnson, unitedStates, def. ErnestsGulbis Latvia,6-3, 7-6(4). David Ferrer(I), Spain, def. GaelMonfils (6) France, 7-6(5), 7-5.

Stockh olm Open Saturday atStockholm,Sweden Semitinals Tomas Berdych(1), CzechRepublic, def. Marcos BaghdatisCyprus, , 6-1,0-0, retired. JackSock(7), unitedStates,def. RichardGasquet (2), France, 6-4, 6-2.

NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All TimesPDT

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA 50 0 1.000183 103 4 I 0 . 8 00 129 75 33 0 . 500 145 139 23 0 . 400 103 111 South

W L T P ct PF PA 33 0 . 500 126 147 24 0 . 333 128 155 I4 0 . 2 00 112 129 I5 0 . 1 67 113 176 North W L T Pct PF PA 60 0 1.000182 122 42 0 . 667 145 108 24 0 . 333 141 158 I5 0 . 167 143 162

Indianapolis Houston Tennessee Jacksonvile

West

W L T Pct PF PA Denver 60 0 1.000139 102 Oakland 23 0 . 400 107 124 SanDiego 24 0 . 333 136 161 Kansas City I5 0 . 167 127 159 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 33 0 . 500 144 110 N.Y.Giants 33 0 . 500 139 136 Dallas 23 0 . 400 101 131 Washington 24 0 . 333 117 138

South W L T 50 0 5I 0 23 0 24 0 North W L T 60 0 3 2 0 24 0 I5 0 West

Carolina Atlanta TampaBay NewOrleans

GreenBay Minnesota Chicago Detroit

Arizona Seattle St. Louis SanFrancisco 2

W L 42 34 2 3

Pct PF PA 1.000135 94 . 8 33 183 143 . 400 110 148 . 333 134 164 Pct PF PA 1.000164 101 . 6 0096 83 . 333 120 179 . 167 120 172

T 0 0 0

P ct PF PA . 667 203 115 . 429 154 128 . 400 84 113

5 0 .2 86 103 180

Today'sGames Buff alovs.JacksonvilleatLondon,6:30a.m. Atlantaat Tennessee,10a.m. Pittsburghat KansasCity,10 a.m. Cleveland atSt. Louis,10a.m. TampaBayatWashington,10a.m. MinnesotaatDetroit,10 a.m. Houstonat Miami,10a.m.

NewOrleansat Indianapolis, 10a.m. N.Y.Jetsat NewEngland,10a.m. Oakland at SanDiego,1:05 p.m. Dallas atN.Y.Giants 1:25p.m. PhiladelphiaatCarolina, 5:30p.m. Open:Chicago,Cincinnati, Denver,GreenBay Monday'sGame Baltimoreat Arizona,5:30p.m.

America's Lin HOME TEAMIN CAPS NFL

Favorite Open Current 0/u Today Bills 4 4 '/ ~ 4 1 RAMS CHIEFS DOLPHINS PATRIO TS Vikings Falcons REDSKINS COLTS CHARG ERS GIANTS PANTHE RS

5

BN 4 1N

3 4'/r 4'/ r

4 31/2 4 4 '/2

9 2

48' / r 44N

9 1

Underdog

Jaguars Browns Steelers Texans Jets LIONS

3'/~ 6 4 7Y r TITANS 3 r/r 3 42d Buccanee rs Sr/r 4r/r 52r/r Saints

4'/~ 4 3

CARDINALS 7

47 45N 46

3 Monday 8 ' / r 49

Raiders Cowboys Eagles

Ravens

DEALS Transactions BASKE TBALL

RationalBasketballAssociation ATLANT AHAWKS— Waived CEarl BarronandF SOCCER DeQuan Jones. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES— WaivedFSampsonCarMLS ter, G/FYakhoubaDiawara,G LazericJonesandF/C MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AlexStepheson. All Times PDT MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES— WaivedGLorenzo Brown,FforwardNick WigginsandCKleon Penn. EasternConference PHOENIXSUMS— WaivedCHenrySims. W L T Pts GF GA WASHING TONWIZARDS—Waived CJosh Hary -NewYork 17 10 6 5 7 6 0 4 2 rellson, GJaronJohnson, GToureMurry, CJaleel x -D.C. United 1 5 1 2 6 5 1 4 3 4 0 RobertsandGIshSmith. x -Columbus 14 1 1 8 5 0 5 3 53 FOOTB ALL x -Toronto FC 1 5 1 4 4 4 9 57 56 NationalFootball League x-Montreal 14 13 6 48 46 43 NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— ActivatedWRBranN ewEngland 1 3 1 2 8 4 7 4 5 46 don Lafelfrom l thePUPlist. O rlando city 12 1 3 8 4 4 4 6 5 5 NEWYORKJETS—Signed PSteveWeatherford. NewYorkcityFC 10 16 7 3 7 48 55 Waived-injured SJaiquawnJarrett. P hiladelphia 9 17 7 34 4 1 5 5 OAKLAND RAIDERS— SignedDEShelby Harris Chicago 8 19 6 3 0 42 56 from thepracticesquad.WaivedSTevinMcDonald. WesternConference PllTSBURG HSTEELERS—SignedQBTyler MurW L T Pls GF GA phy fromthepractice squad. PlacedCBCortezAllen y-FCDallas 17 10 6 57 50 38 on injuredreserve. x -Los Angele s 1 4 1 0 9 5 1 5 5 44 TENNESSEETITANS— Signed WR Rico Richx -Vancouver 15 1 3 5 5 0 4 2 36 ardsonfromthepractice squad. Waived TEChase Portland 1 4 11 8 5 0 3 7 38 Coffman. 1 4 13 6 4 8 4 1 35 Seattle HOCKE Y Sporting KansasCity 13 11 9 48 46 44 NationalHockeyLeague SanJose 13 12 8 47 40 37 ANAHEIMDUCKS— PlacedD JoshMansonon Houston 11 13 9 42 42 46 injuredreserve.Recaled DJoe PiskulafromSan DiR eal SaltLake 1 1 1 4 8 4 1 3 7 4 5 ego (AHL ). Colorado 9 14 10 37 32 39 DETROITRED WINGS — Rec alled D Alexey x- clinched playoffberth Marchenko from Grand Rapids (AHL). PlacedCBrad y- clinched conference Richardsonseven-dayinjured reserve. NASHVILLE PREDATORS—Sent DAnthonyBitetToday'sGames to to Milwaukee (AHL) onaconditioning assignment. NewEnglandatNewYorkCity FC,2 p.m. TorontoFCat Montreal, 2p.m. OrlandoCityatPhiladelphia, 2p.m. FISH COUNT D.C.Unitedat Columbus,2 p.m. RealSaltLakeatSeattle, 4p.m. upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCoColoradoat Portland,4p.m. Los AngelesatSporting KansasCity, 4p.m. lumbiaRiverdamslast updated Friday. SanJoseatFCDallas,4p.m. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Houstonat Vancouver, 4 p.m. Bonneville 2,118 20 8 188 48 NewYorkatChicago,4p.m. The Dalles 1,704 25 2 3 9 1 154 End ofregular season JohnDay 1,575 164 3 4 4 126 McNary 97 2 330 488 223 PLAYOFFS upstreamyear-to-date movement ofadult chinook, Knockoutround jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected Oct. 28-29 ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedFriday. Dne-le gplayoff:No.6seedsatNo.3seeds,No.5 Chnk Jchnk Sghd Wstlhd seedsatNo.4seeds Bonneville 1,325,333 112,419 263,720 95,782 Semifinals The Dalles 944,422 114,005 214,597 74,984 First leg,Nov.1 John Day 799,698 81,921 177,271 63,477 Second leg,Nov.8 McNary 741,654 69,227 174,017 58,608

GOLF ROUNDUP

Birdie on18 givesStegmaier 1-stroke lead

Brignone earnS1St WOrldCBPWin —Federica Brignone earned her maidenWorld Cupwin Saturday, ending anearly eight-year wait by the Italian women's teamfor a giant slalom triumph. In the season-opening race on sun-soaked a Rettenbachglacier in Austria, Brignone held on to acommanding first-run lead to beat defending champion MikaelaShiffrin of the United States by 0.85 seconds.

TENNIS KBZnetsOVa WinS Kremlin COP —Svetlana Kuznetsova swept aside a tired Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova6-2, 6-1 to win the Kremlin Cup on Saturday.Pavlyuchenkovaadmittedbeing exhaustedasshe played her 10th match in12 days. Forthetwo-time Grand Slamwinner Kuznetsova, it is her first title in her homecountry and comes at her 11th attempt at the Kremlin Cup. — From staff anwirereports

The Associated Press

in-one on the 212-yard 17th in a 66 that left the 44-yearlead. old Las Vegas resident at 10 Morgan Hoffman was sec- under.

second-round 66 on Saturday LAS VEGAS — Brett Steg- morning for a share of the

maier birdied the final hole Saturday for a 3-under 68 and

a one-stroke lead in the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. Making his fifth career

ond after a 66. After making four birdies in a four-hole

other birdiefor a 5-Under 67

in windy conditions at rainsoaked Miramar. She would jump from second to first in

Also on Saturday: the world with a victory or Ko takes four-stroke lead in second-place finish today. stretch, he hooked his drive T aiwan: TAIPEI, Taiwan Bjerregaard, Rose tied in on 18 into the desert rocks Lydia Ko took a four-stroke Hong Kong: HONG KONG PGA Tour start, Stegmaier and ended up saving bogey lead in t h e L PGA T a iwan — Denmark's Lucas Bjerrerebounded for a bogey on with a 10-foot putt. Championship, putting the gaard shot a 6-under 63 for a the par-3 17th with a 13-foot Jimmy Walker, f ormer 18-year-old New Zealander share of the Hong Kong Open birdie putt on the par-4 18th UNLV player Chad Campbell in position to regain the top lead with England's Justin to reach 13-under 68. The and 2011 winner Kevin Na spot in the world ranking. Ko Rose, who had a 64 to match 32-year-old former University were tied for third at 11 under. had four birdies in a five-hole Bjerregaard at 15-Lmder 195 of Florida player completed a Alex Cejka had a hole- stretch and closed with an- at Hong Kong Golf Club.


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

NHL ROUNDUP

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

a i as'

incoses inon ismen or'srecor Bulletin wire reports VANCOUVER, British Co-

lumbia — It is a season of milestones for Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin. He

crackedthe 900-point barrier against the Calgary Flames on Tuesday, and he needs only four more goals to achieve

Gordon leadsHendrick qualifying dominance The Associated Press

in the Chase field, qualified

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Jeff Gordon led a Hendrick Mo-

fourth. Like Earnhardt, he

torsports rout in qualifying Saturday to win the pole for his final race at Talladega Superspeedway. Gordon led teammates Kasey Kahne and Jimmie Johnson in a sweep of the top three starting spots for

move into the third round.

the race today. Dale Earn-

happens."

hardt Jr. qualified fifth to put the four Hendrick drivers

his next mark: becoming the

in the first three rows at the

leaderin goalsamong Russian NHL players.

2.66-mile superspeedway.

they'd want to share it, but

that's not how it works," said Nicklas Backstrom, who has often centered Ovechkin in

Washington. Ovechkin, a five-time winner of the Maurice Richard Darryl Dy ck / The Canadian Press via The Associated Press

Washington's Alex Ovechkin celebrates after scoring against Vancouver on Thursday night. Ovechkin has 480 career goals, just three shy of the NHL record for a Russian-born player, held by former Capitals teammate Sergei Federov.

seeing Ovechkin supplant his mentor.

"He always did good things a lot from him. I was lucky to for the team," Ovechkin said. play with him. It's going to be "He was the best on the ice, I an honor to beat his record." think. He was an all-around No other a ctive Russian player. He could play defense, player is even dose to Ovech- center, wing. And his expekin. E n tering S a turday' srience — how many games games, Evgeni Malkin of the he played, how many StanPittsburgh Penguins had 271 ley Cup rings he had. You just goals, followed by Alexander watched how he prepared for Semin of the Montreal Cana- the games and his routines. It diens with 239 goals. wasunbelievable." Fedorov, 45, ended his proA Moscow native, Ovechkin fessional career in 2012 after is in the eighth year of a 13-year, three seasons with Metallurg $124 million contract. He enMagnitogorsk of the Konti- tered this season with a goalsnental Hockey League, and he per-game averageof 0.625.If serves as the general manager he were to maintain that rate of CSKA Moscow. of production through the end "I'm glad that it is Alexan- of his contract, he would get der Ovechkin who will break close to 300 more goals by age my NHL record among Rus- 36. That would put him behind sian players," Fedorov said in only Wayne Gretzky (894) and an email. "We arefriends for Gordie Howe (801) — and posa long time, played shoulder to sibly Jaromir Jagr (727), who shoulder in Washington and is still producing at age 43 with Team Russia. We discussed the Florida Panthers. "It's within reason that he playing the game a lot, and I'd like to believe that my advice could potentially challenge for helped him somewhere." the all-time goal-scoring reOvechkin a n d Fe d o rov cord,"Capitals center Brooks played together with the Cap- Laich said. "That's incredible itals during Fedorov's final to say in this day and age, with two NHL seasons, 2007-8 and how tight the league is. He' s 2008-9. With the Russian na- got the best shot in the world. tional team, they won the gold He gets four or five good looks medal at the 2008 world cham- at the net every night. He can pionships and silver at the 2010 score in so many ways: individtournament. They also teamed ually, with traffic in front of the up at the 2010 Olympics. So net, with deflections. He can there is a certain symmetry in score from anywhere."

In Saturday's games: overtime, an d P i t tsburgh Canadiens 5,Maple Leafs h anded Nashville it s f i r s t 3: MONTREAL — P.K. Sub- home loss. ban and Max Pacioretty each Flyers 3, Rangers 2: PHILhad a goal and an assist, and ADELPHIA — Sam Gagner Montreal extended its sea- and Claude Giroux scored in son-opening winning streak a shootout to lift Philadelphia, to nine games — all coming which got37 saves from Steve in regulation. The Canadiens Mason. are a victory away from tying Coyotes 4, Senators 1:OTthe NHL record set by Toron- TAWA, Ontario — Mikkel to in 1993-94 and matched by Boedker scored three goals, Buffalo in 2006-07. Montreal and Arizona snapped a foursetthe league record for most game losing streak. wins in regulation to open a Blackhawks 1, Lightning 0: season. CHICAGO — Jonathan Toews

~pe

scored in overtime and Detroit

beat Vancouver to end a fourgame losing streak. Blue Jackets 4, Avalanche 3: DENVER — Ryan M ur-

ray and Brandon Dubinsky scored goals early in the third period and Columbus came back to beat Colorado for its

first win in nine games this Kessel scored 41 seconds into season.

Finals. The Associated Press file photo

short.

But Williams, by her own choice, is not playing at the Women's Tennis Association

Finals this week in Singapore. even Steffi Graf in 1988, when In her absence, that elite tour- she completed the so-called nament feels less like a fitting Golden Slam by winning the end to a fascinating season and four major singles titles and the more like a spectade unto itself. Olympic singles gold medal. "Not that Graf felt tons of loyThere is no sugarcoating Williams' withdrawal. alty to the tour, but she played

prompted by physical problems or how much the emotional fallout of her unsuccessful run to

the Grand Slam played a role. She cited both as factors in her withdrawal an n o uncement, which came more than three

weeks before the Finals.

but it's not a major," Shriver

be great to have her back in '16, and we hope she's coming back as energized and excited as she

says she'so ging tobe ."

What is awkward for the WTA, though, is that Williams,

in fact, plans to resume competing in 2015. She is scheduled to play in two stops of the International Premier Tennis League, which has teams in five Asian

cities, induding Singapore, later this year. Her seven-figure fees for participating will certainly help compensate for her losses from missing the Finals, which could indude a $125,000 fine if she does not make an appearanceand do promotional

said. "I totally get it. Serena is 34, and given her year, and the fact that she feels physically, emotionally and any other way tired from the effort, I get that, work for the event. "We' ve got the Singaporean too." that year and would have been Singapore, in the second government investing huge Grand Slam tired," said Pam year of a five-year dealto host amounts of resources to bring Shriver, the former U.S. star the Finals, had to make do last the best of women's tennis to who beat Graf in the semifinals year without Chinese star Li Singapore, and having the of those 1988 championships in Na after she retired. Now it IPTL in the region a little bit latNew York. "Generally, when I must do without Williams. er is perhaps not the best for the "Anytime you don't have Ser- sport," said Micky Lawler, the think back, Martina, Chrissie and the players I played with ena, that's not a good thing," WTA president. — everybody sucked it up and said Steve Simon, the new chief "I think she's injured, no played the tour championships. executive of the WTA Tour. doubt about it, and I think that So to me, it's a little bit that this "But she's not right right now if your body is already hurting, generation doesn't quite feel the and ready to play, and she has to fly to the other side of the same sense of commitment to to be to go on the court, and if world makes little sense," Lawshe's not, then she shouldn' t. ler said. "What makes it hard the tour." Graf, it should be noted, was 19 when she ended her 1988

And she's not going to. I think,

is that at the end of the year,

season. But plenty of Williams' illustrious predecessors managed to play in tour championships to dose out draining seasons, including Martina

run. Williams turned 34 last

right now, she is trying to get she's going to want to get some readyfor2016, and her mindset match practice and play a few

month, and she was seen fa-

is that she wants to come back

sets here and there, and that is

voring her right elbow during practice at the U.S. Open.

as strong as ever."

perceived by the public not in

Navratilova, Chris Evert and

pore is a major for the tour,

It was no doubt a draining

He added: "Maybe she wants

"I mean, let's face it, Singa- to go after that Slam again and

see if she can do it. But it will

World Series

to high school, college to the

Continued from 01 If Harvey really is called

brand of selflessness that

upon to pitch three times,

pros, athletes are taught a bonds them to their teammates, though one that ul-

reinjury — and prepare to pitch two, perhaps three

San Jose end a three-game losing streak with a victory

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Phil

en's Tennis Association

ing. Championship leader

in Harvey's case, potential

over Carolina.

Ward had a hat trick to help

Islanders 3, Blues 2: ST. Red Wings 3, Canucks 2: LOUIS — Mikhail Grabovski V ANCOUVER, British C o scored his first goal of the sea- lumbia — Gustav N yquist

ing Wom-

had the fastest lap, topping Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel.

Matt Kenseth, who is last

tice session Saturday morn-

The overriding i n stinct

fourth straight.

season-end-

Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes

ready to go."

to be called off. Drivers completed a wet, hour-long prac-

for most players is to take

Sharks 5, Hurricanes 2: SAN JOSE, Calif. — Joel

r

to race really well and just

Friday afternoon's practice

quently asked reliever Armando Benitez to give him

victory.

Williams will not play in this week' s

Americas for tw o d ays. Lightning already forced

managed the Mets,he fre-

games. Devils 4, Sabres 3:BUFFALO, N.Y. — Adam Henrique scored twice and added an assist, and New Jersey won its

Serena

ladega, and Earnhardt won the spring race here. "It is good enough," Earnhardt said about his starting position. "Some of the guys had a little more speed, but we feel like our car is going

Boras had it right during the summer when he raised the issue of an innings limit for Harvey and his surgically repaired elbow. Harvey, he suggested, would not be overused or misused. The message was clumsi-

its sixth loss in the first seven

LAS — Nick Bjugstad had a goal and an assist after moving up to the top line to lead Florida, which snapped Dallas' five-game winning streak. Penguins 2, Predators

of torrential rain. Rain has pounded the Circuit of the

it to happen.

of his career to lead Minne- season and 13th of his career sota, which sent Anaheim to in Chicago's third straight

son 4 minutes into overtime to lift New York. Panthers 6, Stars 2: DAL-

12-driver field. Both drivers are six-time winners at Tal-

saves for his first shutout this

shutout this season and 15th

New York Times NewsService

British player who is now a tele-

Timothy Peters wins Truck race: TALLADEGA, A l a. — Timothy Peters won the

and Corey Crawford made 21

stopped 15 shots for his first

By Christopher Clarey

vision analyst. "It does devalue the event." It remains unclear to what extent Williams' decision was

Also Saturday:

timately benefits the insti-

scored his first goal of the season 17 seconds into overtime,

Sans Serena, ananticlimactic end to a great season

" A terrible blow f o r t h e WTA," said Jo Durie, a former

for the race and see what

either his agent, Scott Boras, should drop Harvey as a client, or Harvey should cut ties with Boras for allowing

Wild 3, Ducks 0: ST. PAUL, Minn. — D evan D u bnyk

TENNIS

In victory or defeat, this ten-

"One thing about Talladega is you always have to expect the unexpected, so who knows what's going to happen," Kenseth said. "Just anxious to get lined up

Truck Series race at Talladega Superspeedway for the the only two Hendrick driv- second consecutive year. Peers still in the Chase for the ters became the third driver Sprint Cup championship in series history to win confield. Both need strong runs secutive races at Talladega, — Earnhardt may actually joining Todd Bodine (2007, need a victory — to advance 2008) and Kyle Busch (2009, into the third round of the 2010). playoffs. Rain pushes U.S. GP qualFour drivers will be cut ifying to today: AUSTIN, from the Chase field follow- Texas — The United States ing the race. Gordon is sev- Grand Prix has postponed enth in the standings, while qualifying until this mornE arnhardt i s 1 1th i n t h e ing before the race because

have to surpass his former teammate and longtime friend Sergei Fedorov. "For Ovie to break his record, I'm sure if they could,

nis season belonged to Serena Williams. She sparked global chatter throughout, chasing the Grand Slam all the way to the final Friday of the U.S. Open in September, when Roberta Vinci shockingly stopped her

likely needs to win today to

It was the best outcome for Gordon and Earnnhardt,

But for that record, he will

Trophy as the league's top goal-scorer with the Capitals, has 480 career goals in 766 games. Fedorov left the NHL in 2009 at age 39 with 483 goals in 1,248 games. "He was my best teammate I' ve played with, obviously, with his skill and personality," Ovechkin, 30, said. "I learned

D3

the most positive light. We understand it. Yes, we don't like it, but we understand it."

tution. They are routinely

asked to go the extra mile. When Bobby Valentine

one more inning. Benitez

neverrefused. We see it in all sports, every season: athletes strug-

gling to balance the business of the game with their ly delivered, but the under- passion for it. They walk the lying idea was correct then thin line. and continues to be: If the For Price and Harvey, ego player does not look out for and a sense of responsibility himself, he certainly cannot to the team compelled them count on the team to do so. to ignore fatigue — and, care ofthe team, take care of teammates, do whatever it takes to win.

For Harvey, vilified when h e seemed to back h i s agent's assertions, this may mean pitching three times

times, if necessary.

Price, 30, understands the urgency of the moment. Legacy also figures into the equation. Price has 104 reg-

in the World Series, even if

ular-season victories since 2008, but only two wins in

it means putting his career

the postseason.

at risk.

Fans are all about performance in the here and now.

But if an injury occurs while he goes the extra mile, will the franchise go the extra mile for Harvey and offerhim a rich contract for damaged goods'? Of course not.

Nostalgia comes much later. Players play in the mom ent, teams plan for t h e

future. A sports industry driven

by fans thrives on fantasy But this is the World Se- and false heroism: We ask ries, and all bets are off. players to play hurt, we ask Duty to team trumps duty to pitchers to risk their arms, one's self. Teams rent play- to be available. We make heers' bodies. They pay many roes out of those who do and millions for the use of strong vilify those who do not. arms, powerful legs, broad During the Mets' Nationshoulders. Brains. You play al League Division Series when hurt or pitch on short against the Los Angeles rest, and in critical moments Dodgers, Collins predicted like the World Series, you

that whatever ill w il l f ans

pitch three games when you had for Harvey would disshould pitch only two. sipate if he won. "One thing T oronto's D a vi d P r i c e about our society, people started the Blue Jays' Game have short memories when you' re out there having suc6 defeat to Kansas City on Friday. A game earlier, Price cess," he said. warmed up in the bullpen By going 7/s i n nings and said he was ready if against the Cubs in Game needed. " At this point o f 1 of the NL Championship the season, you' ve got to be Series, Harvey successfulready for whatever," he said. ly recaptured much of the This from a pitcher who will credibility he lost when Bobe afreeagent afterthesea- ras told the Mets to "cool it" son and will very likely not with Harvey. be with Toronto in 2016.

But that was last series.

"He came and said, 'Hey, Any player who studies hisI can pitch out of the pen tory understands that even today,'" Blue Jays manager stars, for all of their dedicaJohn Gibbons said before tion and courage in playing Game 6, responding to criti- hurt or risking injury, will cism that the team was over- be discarded by teams and using Price. "It wasn't like fans alike if they can no lonputting a gun to his head." ger perform at the elite level. Price was doing what Players like Harvey and professional athletes are Price should not be blamed trained to do. This is why, for being caught up in the in Harvey's case, there was moment. It is sometimes up such frenzied c r iticism, to people like Boras to make mostly from fans but fueled sure they are not swept by the news media, when away. Boras made the stand for his — William C. Rhoden is a client.

From elementary school

sports columnist for The New York Times.


D4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

OLLEGE FOOTBALL COLLEGE FOOTBALL

SCOREBOARD

PAC-12 ROUNDUP

ro'ans et stwinun erinterimmac

All TimesPOT

FBS PAC-12 North

Conf Overall L W L PF PA 0 6 1 262 144

W 5 3 2 2 1 0

Stanford Washington St California Oregon Washington Oregon St.

1 2 2 3 3

5 5 4 3 2

South Conf W L W 3 1 6 2 2 5

Utah UCLA ArizonaSt.

2 2 2 1

SouthernCal Arizona Colorado

2 2 3 3

2 255 217 2 265 187 3 275 252 4 168 132 4 130 201

Overall L PF PA

4 4 5 4

1 243 159 2 249 190 3 204 191 3 272 152 3 334 259 4 238 206

Saturday'sGames

LOS ANGELES — In less

than two weeks, Southern C alifornia w ent

from t h e

depths of a coach's firing to the heights of a wild celebration after beating the No. 3 team in the nation.

Most of these Trojans have been on a roller coaster from

the day they joined this storied but troubled program. This particular p eak

WashingtonSt.45, Arizona42 SouthernCat42,Utah24 Colorado 17, OregonSt. 13 Stanford 31, Washington 14

s ent

Utah. Cameron Smith returned

the second of his three interMark J. Terriii /The Associated Press ceptions54 yards foratouch- Southern California linebacker Jabari Ruffin, center, celebrates down, and USC knocked the

third-ranked Utes from the

Colorado17, OregonSt. 13 3 7 0 7 3 0

First Ouarter Col — FGGonzalez21,6:26.

with his team after the Trojans defeated Utah 42-24 Saturday night in Los Angeles.

unbeaten ranks with a 42-24

Saturday'ssummary

7 — 17 3 — 13

OrSt —Nall1run (Owenskick),2:58. SecondQuarter Col — Spruce15passfromLiufau(Gonzalezkick),

victory Saturday night. Ronald Jones II, Justin

ton in his debut game at the they' re a very hard football

Davis and

Coliseum.

team to beat. There's a lot of

team they are," Helton said.

264 yards and a touchdown

f u l lback Soma

Vainuku rushed for scores to help the Trojans (4-3 overall, 2-2 Pac-12) snap their twogame skid and earn a victory for interim coach Clay Hel-

ter had eight catches for 143 for 290 yards and two scores yards and a fourth-quarter for the Cardinal (6-1, 5-0). TD that wrapped up the win. They have topped 30 points After Helton took over from in each game since a seaformercoach Steve Sarkisian son-opening loss to Northforlastweek's narrow loss at western. Backup quarterback Notre Dame, he became the K.J. Carta-Samuels completeighth straight USC coach to ed just 9 of 21 passes for 118 win his first home game. yards as Washington (3-4, "It's been tough, and these 1-3) didn't even cross midfield guys have been pushed to the until the third quarter. limit, but (Helton) has kept Washington State 45, Arieverything together," Kessler zona 42: TUCSON, Ariz. said. "He has kept us family. Luke Falk threw for 514 yards It was a great win, but that' s and hit Gabe Marks on four what we expect." of his five touchdown passBritain Covey caught two es to lead Washington State. touchdown passes for the The sophomore for the CouUtes (6-1, 3-1), whose eight- gars (5-2, 3-1) completed 47 game winning streak ended. of 62 passes and had the most Also Saturday: passing yards ever against No. 10 Stanford 31, Wash- Arizona, breaking the mark ington 14: STANFORD, Ca- of 511 yards set by Arizona lif. — Christian McCaffrey State's Ryan Kealy in 1998. caught a touchdown pass, ran Arizona (5-3, 2-3) pulled to for another score and gained w ithin three points in t h e 300 all -purpose yards to lead fourth quarter after Jerrard -

them soaring over mighty

Thursday'sGame OregonatArizonaSt., 7:30p.m. Saturday,Oct. 31 Coloradoat UCLA, noon OregonSt. atUtah,4p.m. Stanford at Washington St., 7:30p.m. Arizonaat Washington, 8p.m. SouthernCalatCalifornia, TOA

Colorado OregonSt.

The Associated Press

"These guys want to prove talent in that room." to everybody what type of Cody Kessler passed for

"When we play t ogether and rushed for another score, Stanford to its sixth straight and play like we did tonight, while Ju Ju Smith-Schus- victory. Kevin Hogan threw

Randall replaced Anu Solo-

mon at quarterback.

9:11. OrSt — FG Owens42,5:44.

Fourth Quarter Col — Liufau4run(Gonzalez kick),12:31. OrSt —FGOwens34, 9:12. A—36,977. Col 20

First downs Rushes-yards Passing Comp-Att-Int ReturnYards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

O r St 17

45-188 41-202 1 40 199 16-23-0 13-32-1 0 0 6-42.0 3-36.7 1-0 1-0 9 -80 8 - 65 33:44 26:16

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Colorado: Lee8-55, Lindsay9-51, Liufau 18-44,Powell 7-33,Carr2-7r Team1-(minus 2). OregonSt.: Nag20-122, Collins 9-50,Brown 5-42, 8olden1-5, Barrs-Woods1-1, Haskins1-0,

N.Mitchel)4-(minus18). PASSING —Colorado: Liufau 16-23-0-140.Oregon St.: N.Mitchell 9-24-1-122,Collins4-7-0-77,

Team 0-1-0-0. RECEIVIN G— Colorado: Spruce 6-60, Robo 2-14, Lindsay 2-14, Lee2-8, Mactntyre 2-3, S.irwin 1-22, Ross 1-19. OregonSt.: Villamin4-65, Guyton 4-56, Golden 3-60, N.Mitchell 1-11, PLucas1-7.

Saturdav'sGames EAST Buffalo41,Ohio17 Navy31,Tulane14 OhioSt.49,Rutgers7 Pittsburgh23,Syracuse20 Toledo51,UMass35

SOUTH Alabama19,Tennessee14 Clemson 58,Miami0 Duke45,Virginia Tech43,4OT FIU 41,OldOominion12 GeorgiTec a h22,Florida St.16 Houston 59, UCF10 LSU48, W.Kentucky 20 LouisianaTech45,MiddleTennessee16 Louisville17,BostonCollege14 Marshal30, l NorthTexas13 Mississippi23,TexasA&hi3 MississippiSt.42,Kentucky16 NC State 35, WakeForest 17 NorthCarolina26, Virginia13 PennSt.31, Maryland30 SouthFlorida38,SMU14 Southern Miss. 44,Charlotte10 Vanderbilt0, 1 Missouri 3 MIDWEST BowlingGreen48, Kent St.0 Cent.Michigan23,Ball St.21 Cincinnati37,UConn13 MichiganSt.52, Indiana26 N. Illinois49,E.Michigan21 Northwestern30, Nebraska28 W. Michigan 35,Miami(Ohio) 13 Wisconsi24, n llinois13 SOUTHWE ST Arkansas 54,Auburn 46,40T Saylor45,iowaSt.27 Oklahoma63,TexasTech27 Oklah omaSt.58,Kansas10 Rice38,Army31 Texas 23, KansasSt. 9 TexasSt.36, SouthAlabama18 UTEP27, FAU17 FARWEST Air Force 42, FresnoSt.14 BoiseSt. 34,Wyoming 14 BYU70,Wagner 6 Colorado17,Oregon St.13 Idaho27,Louisiana-Monroe13 Nevada 30, Hawaii 20 SanJoseSt.31, NewMexico 21 Stanford31, Washington 14 SouthernGal42,Utah 24 Troy52,NewMexico St. 7 WashingtonSt.45, Arizona42

FCS

Beavers

Oregon State's Victor Bolden makes

Continued from 01

a catch past a Colorado

S efo Liufau threw f or

140 yards and a touchdown, and ran for another

defender in the first half

score for Colorado (4-4, 1-3), which had lost three straight going into the game. Ryan Nail ran for 122 yards and a touchdown for the Beavers (2-5, 0-4)

of Saturday night's game in Corvallis. Timothy J. Gonzalez / The Associated

Press

who are the last team in the Pac-12 without a conference win. The Beavers

have lost four straight. Oregon State was expected to struggle this season as new c oach Gary Andersen installs his new system. The Bea-

vers were picked in the s preseason me-

ldia eague' poll to f i nish last in

the Pac-12 North, while

Colorado was picked to finish at the bottom of the

South.

"It's tough, no question about it," Andersen said.

"I don't have a bunch to say." The Beavers shook things up a bit, starting r edshirt f r eshman N i ck Mitchell at q u arterback,

handing off to usual starte r Seth C ollins o n

the

team's first offensive play. Collins re-took the reins on the next play, but the two r o tated t h r oughout

the game. Mitchell was the Bea-

vers' third-string quarterback, behind Collins and Marcus McMaryion, at the start of the season.

But he has impressed the coaches in practice and

this week moved up the depth chart.

Late meldgoal gives PortlandStatewin

Next up

Oregon State reported he

Oregon St.

was moving his extremities.

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif.— Alex Kuresaaccounted for four

at No. 3 Utah

touchdowns andJonathan Gonzales kicked a27-yard field goal with 33 seconds left to lift Portland State past GalPoly 38-35 Saturday night. Kuresa completed 16 of 25passesfor 232 yards andtwo touchdowns andadded101 yards rushing and two morescores. Gonzales addedfield goals of 35 and 36 yards in the first quarter. Touchdown runs of 40and 15yards — less than three minutes apart — by KuresagavePortland State (6-1, 3-1 Big Sky) a28-21 lead with 3:57 left in the third quarter. Kyle Lewis scored on a29-yard run to tie it with 2:34 to play for Gal Poly, setting UpGonzales' kick to win it.

When: 4 p.m.

— The Associated Press

Andersen said the du-

al-quarterback system would continue g oing ing drive, true f reshman y ard pass to Mitchell before On the Beavers' open- Collins also completed an 11- Ryan Nail's 1-yard scoring

forward.

Oct. 31 TV: Pac-12 run put Oregon State up 7-3.

Andersen said D ecoud was back in the locker room following the game. Receiver Nelson Spruce pulled down a 15-yard scoring pass from Liufau to give the Buffaloes a 10-7 lead, be-

Colorado took the early lead with Diego Gonzales' fore Oregon State's Garrett 21-yard field goal on its first Owens kicked a 42-yard field drive of the game. goal to tie it. Beavers starting cornerThe Buffaloes leaned on back Treston Decoud w as Spruce in the absence of injured when he was inad- Shay Fields, who led the vertently hit by a teammate team w i t h 5 0 4 r e c eiving early in the second quarter yards, because of a high-anand had to be taken from the kle sprain he sustained on field by ambulance. He was a late t o uchdown a g ainst taken to a local hospital and

Arizona.

BIG SKY

Saturday'sGames Montana 42, North Oakota16 E. Washington 43,N. Colorado41 Montana St. 63,East TennesseeSt. 7 S. Utah 34, UCDavis 6 N. Arizona 52,Weber St.36 Sacramento St.38, IdahoSt. 13 PortlandSt.38, CalPoly35 Saturday,Oct. 31 MontanaSt. atNorth Dakota, 11a.m. WeberSt.at E.Washington, noon Montana at Portland St.,2 p.m. N. ColoradoatN.Arizona,2 p.m. Cal Polyat S.Utah,2p.m.

Division II GREATNORTHERN

Saturday'sGames HumboldSt. t 42,Cen.Washington,17 W. Oregon 37,SimonFraser26 AzusaPacific 56,SouthDakotaMines27 Saturday, Oct. 31 Dixie St.at SouthDakotaMines,1p.m. SimonFraserat Humboldt St., 1p.m. AzusaPacific atW.Oregon,1p.m.

Division III NORTHWES T

Saturday'sGames

Linfield 52,Whitworth10

PugetSound38, Lewis &Clark7 Pacific (Ore.)29,Wilamette24 PacificLutheran28, GeorgeFox27 Saturday, Oct. 31 PacificLuteranat Puget Sound,1p.m. Lewis 6ClarkatWilamette, 1p.m. Pacific (Ore.)atWhitworth, 1 p.m. Linfield atGeorgeFox, 1:30p.m.

NAIA FRONTIER

Saturday'sGames Carroll 42,MontanaTech7 E. Oregon 72,MontanaSt.-Northern 30 Montan aWestern27,RockyMountain26 S. Oregon 63, Colege ofIdaho21 Saturday,Oct. 31 MontanaWesternat College of Idaho, 11a.m. S. Oregon at RockyMountain, 11a.m. Montana St.-NorthernatCarroll, noon E.OregonatMontanaTech,noon

TOP 25 ROUNDUP

Baylor star QBRussell fractures neck inwin over IowaState 7: PISCATAWAY, N.J. — JT. WACO, Texas — No. 2 Bay- Barrett threw t h ree touchlor's 45-27 victory over Iowa down passes and ran for two State may have come at a high scores in his first start of the

Bulletin wire reports

price Saturday. Bears quarterback Seth Russell, who began the game as the national leader in passing efficiency (210 rating) and touchdown passes (27) among FBS quarterbacks, left the game in the fourth quarter

for 398 yards and four touch-

downs for Michigan State (8-0), which outscored the Hoosiers 24-0 in the fourth

chusetts 35: FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Phillip Ely threw four

No. 14 Oklahoma Stale 58, Kansas 10: S T ILLWATER,

in the second half as Toledo No. 21 Houston 59, UCF 10: ORLANDO, Fla. — Kenneth Farrow ran for 167 yards and t hree touchdowns t o l e a d

of his five touchdown passes

season to lead Ohio State (8-0). quarter. (7-0) overcame an 18-point No. 5 LSU 48,Western KenNo. 8 Atabama19, Tennessee Okla. — Backup quarter- deficit. tucky 20: BATON ROUGE, La.

14: TUSCALOOSA, Ala.

back J.W. Walsh ran for three

— Brandon Harris passed for a career-high 286 yards, with two of his three scoring passes going for more than 50 yards,

Derrick Henry had a 14-yard

touchdowns and passed for two more scores to help Oklahoma State (7-0) win hours after four people were killed by a suspected drunk driver near

and Leonard Fournette ran for

touchdown run with 2 minutes, 24 seconds left to lift Al-

abama (7-1). Georgia Tech 22, No. 9

150 yards for LSU (7-0). Florida State 16: ATLANTA ing tackled on a 4-yard run. No. 6 Clemson 58, Miami 0: — Lance Austin returned a Postgame x-rays and a CT MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. blocked field goal 78 yards for scan revealed a fracturein D eshaun Watson t hrew a a touchdown on the final play one of the bones of his neck. touchdown pass and ran for of the game to life Georgia He will see a specialist next another score to help Clem- Tech (3-5). Roberto Aguayo, week. son (7-0) hand Miami its worst one ofthe most accurate kickShock Linwood ran for 171 loss in the program's 90-year ers in the country, attempted yards and a touchdown and history. Until Saturday, the a 56-yard field goal to win the caught a pass for another worst loss in Miami history game for the Seminoles (6-1) score as the Bears (7-0) won was a 70-14 defeat to Texas with 6 seconds remaining. But their FBS-best 20th straight A&M on Dec. 8, 1944. the kick was blocked. While home game. No. 7 Michigan State 52, In- most of the Georgia Tech playAlso Saturday: diana 26: EAST LANSING, ers celebrated, Austin went No. 1 Ohio State 49, Rutgers Mich. — Connor Cook threw back to retrieve the ball, rollwith a strained neck after be-

ing along inside the 25 and returned it for the winning score.

the stadium during homecom-

Houston (7-0). No. 23 Duke 45, Virginia Tech 43: BLACKSBURG, Va.

ing festivities. — Thomas Sirk threw four No. 24 Mississippi 23, No. 15 touchdown passes and ran for Texas A&M 3: OXFORD, Miss. — Chad Kelly threw for 241

a two-point conversion in the fourth overtime to lift Duke

yards and two touchdowns, and Mississippi (6-2) handed Texas A&M (5-2) its second straight loss. No. 17 Oklahoma 63, Texas

(6-1) in the longest game in

Tech 27: NORMAN, O k la.

Atlantic Coast

C o nference

history. No. 25 Pittsburgh 23, Syracuse 20: SYRACUSE, N.Y. A fake punt for a first down -

— Samaje Perine ran for 201 helped set up Chris Blewitt's yards and four touchdowns to 25-yard field goal on the final lead Oklahoma (6-1). play of the game to lift PittsNo. 19 Toledo 51, Massa- burgh (6-1).


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TRAIL BLAZERS PREVIEW

D5

The Bulletin's Grant Lucas breaks

down the upcoming season.

5 games to watch 5 p.m. CSN N W Mon,Nov.2 at Minnesota America's Line gives theTrail Blazers an over-under of 29~/2 wins; Minnesota is one of just three teams to have alower number (27/2). The Timberwolves haveloads of youngtalent, including 2015 No. 1overall pick Karl-Anthony Towns, 2014 No. 1overall pick Andrew Wiggins, a still-only-25-years-old Ricky Rubio —andold men Kevin Garnett and Andre Miller (both 39 years old) to show them the ropes. This will be agood early test for the jelling Blazers.

1. Whatis the lineup going to looklike?

Thu, Nov. 5

So many unknowns surround theTrail Blazers' starting lineup and rotation. Damian Lillard is a lock asthe starting point guard. But then what? DoesPortland coachTerry Stotts complete the backcourt with C.J. McCollum, who displayed himself as aconsistent scorer during the first round of the playoffs last season? DoesMeyers Leonard, a Blazers first-round draft pick three years ago, earn aspot in the starting five? Onething general manager Neil Olshey did well this offseason wasfill out the depth at each position. Because of that, Stotts has said hewill be more flexible with his rotation than hehad been in his first three years as the Blazers' coach. McCollum (shooting guard andpoint guard), Leonard (center) and newcomer MasonPlumlee (center) started all sevengamesduring the preseason (Lillard missed two games with a sprained left ankle but started the other five). If that sample size isanyindication, it appears that Stotts is still seeking a starter only at small forward. The battle seems to bebetween Allen Crabbeandfirst-year Blazer Al-Farouq Aminu, as Gerald Henderson is still recovering from offseason hip surgery. Crabbemadethree starts at small forward during the preseason, averaging just more than 10 points per game on51.9 percent shooting, including a lackluster 22.2 percent clip from 3-point range, but Aminu proved more versatile by averaging 12.7 points and six rebounds per contest while totaling four blocks. Crabbeseems morecomfortable — and moreeffective — aspart of the first unit off the bench, with which he averaged 29.8 minutes and nearly15 points over three games. Fill out that platoon with athletic bigs EdDavis, Moe Harkless (who could also vie for the starting spot at small forward) and Noah Vonleh as well as point man Tim Frazier, andthe Blazers could boast a catalytic first / pj' reserve squad, onethat could do no worse with rookie swingman PatConnaughton. A4 '

2. Who will make his stattuzn?' At the Blazers' media daylast month, no player stepped off stage without having emphasized theopportunity to break out. On a team with so many unknowns, this could be thespringboard for several Blazers to leap into the limelight. McCollum hasalready garnered high praise from teammates andcoaches. Crabbe showed flashes of brilliance during the preseason. AndLeonard, under the tutelage of12-year pro Chris Kaman, has begun to blossom as apotential double-double regular. Yet if an instant fan favorite emerges, it could be from amongthe newcomers. Thejaw-dropping athleticism of Harkless quickly grabbed the attention of Blazers players andcoaches. Harkless was the 15thoverall pick by the Philadelphia 76ers in 2012 before being traded to theOrlando Magic soon after. Heaveraged 8.2 points and 4.4 rebounds pergame inhis rookie season, and though his numbers tapered off the last two years, Harkless, who suffered a concussion during the preseason and rolled his right ankle in Thursday's preseason gameagainst the Los Angeles Clippers, still averaged 10points per game on51.4 percent shooting. At 6 feet 9 inches, Harkless, oneof Portland's better 3-point shooters this preseason Moe (41.7), is poised to fill a vacancy left by the hardHarkless~ nosed Wesley Matthews, who signed with the Dallas Mavericks in the offseason.

Memphis 7 :30 p.m. T N T The Blazers' first game onnational television will be against the teamthat knocked them out of the playoffs in five gameslast season. A healthy point guard in MikeConley should help the Grizzlies in the difficult Southwest Division.

Wed, Nov. 11 San Antonio 7:30 p.m. B l azerNet This will be the first trip back to Portland for LaMarcus Aldridge, who spent the first nine Ffg yea rs of his career in the Rose City. He chose to chase achampionship with Gregg Popovich, Tim Duncan andtheSpurs instead of going through a rebuilding project. The all-NBAforward should get awarm reception from the ModaCenter crowd. Sat, Dec. 26 Cleveland 7 p.m. Bla z erNet The Cavaliers will be coming off a Christmas afternoon gameat GoldenState, so maybethey will rest their big namesafter a rematch of last fj year's NBA finals. LeBron James is6-5 all-time playing in Portland andaverages 27.9 points a game at ModaCenter. And Kevin Lovewill be playing close to his hometown of LakeOswego. 7 p.m. CSN N W G o lden State The Trail Blazers should havetheir defensive systems pretty well set by the time they first meet the NBA'sdefending champions, and this tlI IL%K K L~ is as good a test as any. Then again, Stephen Curry and KlayThompson might just shoot over the defense. If the Warriors are anywhere near as entertaining as theywere last year — look out. Fri, Jan. 8

I

/

3. Whatis the ceiling? The hasement? Rebuild, retool, (additional coachspeak), call it what you wish. Theunderlying message is that the Blazers are not contending for the NBA,Western Conference or eventhe Northwest Division title this season, barring some ridiculous run behind someabsurd play by this unproven team. The Blazers have never had ahistory of tanking — at least in the draft lottery era. Nobody enjoys losing (hear that, 76ers fans?) or wants to beexcluded from the playoffs. But as the No. 7 or 8seed in the West, what is there to gain? If Portland finishes there, it is out of the lottery in what could be a talented, though fairly top-heavy, 2016 NBA draft class. At the top of the prospect list are one-and-done big men BenSimmons, from LSU, and Skal Labissiere, from Kentucky. There is theaggressive Jaylen Brown, a wing from California, and high-flying 6-9 Duke freshman Brandon Ingram, who boasts a 7-3 wingspan (andwhoseexplosiveness off the floor went viral in a video depicting his hand reaching ABOVEthe top of a backboard during a workout this summer). MaybeOlshey is content with the youth on this roster, which will gain plenty of NBAexperience this season. But if any of these college prospects play to anywhere near the hypesurrounding them, the Blazers should try to snatch one of them up in the lottery.

4. How far can LillaId cany the team? Lillard is the sole face of the Blazers now. He has the richest contract in franchise history, at $120 million over five years, to prove asmuch. In his rookie season (2012-13), Lillard was third in the leaguewith 38.6 minutes played per game, and hehasaveraged morethan 35 minutes per contest in the two years since. Surely hewill be shouldering Damian much of the loadagain this season, on and off the Lillard court. He is THE leader nowfor the Blazers. And he is well aware of that. Hewill be looked to by rookies and veterans alike. Hewill be mentoring McCollum andFrazier while being the player to answer to all of Portland's expected struggles this season. Is Lillard up to it? Is he up toen..j.:::.'-;::: ' ":"during a rebuilding/retooling 2015-16season (maybe more) while trying to return this franchise to relevance? Hewould not have re-upped with the Blazers this offseason if hewasn' t. There is arguably no other team in the leaguerelying so much on asingle player as the Blazers. But they need to further reward their All-Star guard by reducing his playing time atouch, saving Lillard's back a few extra years — because it will surely be getting sore this season.

(

'+,jg@~+)A

5.Is Olshey's job safe? Olshey should banksomecredit after deciding this offseason to not quick-fix the rebuilding Blazers with veterans just to try to secure alow seed inthe NBAplayoffs. Instead, he chasedyouth, locking up players with high ceilings in hopes of turning the franchise back into a 50-win teamwithin a few years. He re-signed Lillard to that massive deal over the summerandpicked up five other players whowere firstround draft picks within the past five years. Still, the inexperience of these players is astounding. Gerald Henderson, at 27years old andwith six years of NBAtenure, is the wily veteran who hasstarted 262 of his past 280 gamesplayed. Kaman, at 33, is in the twilight of his career. At media day, asOlshey took his position to answer reporters' questions, the first query, from the last row, camefrom a seemingly joking Stotts: "Why didn't you sign LaMarcus?" Stotts is safe. Hehas to be. This roster was built by Olshey, the manwhoseseat at the headtable could be progressively getting warmer asthe season moves forward.

2025-26 Ti;ail Blazers schedule Oct. 28 New Orleans 7 p.m. Jan. 15 at Brooklyn 4:30 p.m. Oct.30 atPhoenix 7:30 p.m. Jan. 16 at Philadelphia 4:30 p.m. Oct. 31 Phoenix 7 p.m. Jan. 18 at Washington 11 a.m. Nov.2 atMinnesota 5p.m. Jan. 20 Atlanta 7: 3 0 p.m. Nov.4 at Utah 6p.m. Jan. 23 L.A. Lakers 7:30 p.m. Nov.5 Memphis 7 : 30p.m. Jan. 26 Sacramento 7 p.m. Nov.8 Detroit 6 p.m. J an. 29 Charlotte 7 p. m . N ov.9 at Denver 6 p.m . J an. 31 Minnesota 6 p . m. Nov. 11 SanAntonio 7:30 p.m. F eb.2 Milwaukee 7p. m . Nov. 13 at Memphis 5 p .m. Feb.4 Toronto 7p.m. Nov. 15 at Charlotte 2 p . m. F eb.6 atHouston 2p. m . Nov. 16 at SanAntonio 5:30 p.m. F eb.8 atMemphis 5p . m. Nov. 18 at Houston 5 p . m. Feb. 10 Houston 7 : 30 p.m. Nov. 20 L.A. Clippers 7 p.m. Feb. 19 Golden State 7 p.m. Nov. 22 at L.A. Lakers 6:30 p.m. Feb.21 Utah 6 p.m. Nov. 24 Chicago 7 p.m. F eb. 23 Brooklyn 7 p. m . Nov. 28 LA. Lakers 7 p . m. F eb. 25 Houston 7 p.m . Nov. 30 at L.A. Clippers7:30 p.m. F eb. 27 at Chicago 5 p . m. Dec.1 Dallas 7 p.m. F eb. 28 at Indiana 3p . m . Dec.3 Indiana 7p.m. March 1 at New York 4:30 p.m. Dec.5 atMinnesota 5 p.m. March2 atBoston 4:30p.m. Dec. 7 at Milwaukee 5 p.m. March 4 at Toronto 4:30p.m. Dec.8 atCleveland 4 p.m. M arch6 atDetroit 3p. m . Dec. 11 at Phoenix 6:30 p.m. March8 Washington 7p.m. D ec. 12 New York 7 p . m . March11 atGoldenStale 7:30p.m. Dec. 14 New Orleans 7 p.m. March 12 Orlando 7:30 p.m. Dec. 16 at OklahomaCity 5 p.m. March14 at0klahomaCity 5p.m. D ec. 18 at Orlando 4 p . m. March17 atSanAntonio 5:30p.m. Dec. 20 at Miami 10 a .m. March18 at New Orleans 5 p.m. D ec. 21 at Atlanta 5 p. m . March 20 at Dallas 1 p . m. Dec. 23 at NewOrleans 5 p.m. March23 Dallas 7:30 p.m. D ec. 26 Cleveland 7 p . m . March 24 at LA.Clippers7:30p.m. Dec.27 atSacramento 6 p.m. March 26 Philadelphia 7 p.m. Dec. 30 Denver 7 p.m. March28 Sacramento 7 p.m. Dec. 31 at Utah 6 p.m. M arch 31 Boston 7 p. m . J an.3 atDenver 6 p.m . April2 Miami 7 p.m. J an.4 Memphis 7 p.m . April 3 at Golden State 5 p.m. Jan.6 L.A. Clippers 7 p .m. April 5 at Sacramento 7 p.m. Jan.8 GoldenState 7p.m. April 6 Oklahoma City 7 p.m. Jan. 10 Oklahoma City 6 p.m. April 9 Minnesota 7:30 p.m. Jan.13 Utah 7 p.m. April 13 Denver 7 : 30 p.m.

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Roster No.. .::Name 0j :::Damian Lillard

Pos, :Ht G: 6 -3

3 : :'C.J.McCollum GI ::6-4 4 . ::'Maurice Harkless F: :6-9 5 : :'PatConnaughton G : 6 - 5 8 . ::'Al-FarouqAminu F : 6-9 9 , ::'Gerald Henderson G, :6-5 10 . ::'TimFrazier G: :6-1 11 : :'Meyers Leonard CI ::7-1 F: :6-10 17 , ::'EdDavis 21 : :'NoahVonleh F: 6 -10 23 . ::'Allen Crabbe F : 6-6 24 : '.MasonPlumlee C-F . :6-11 34 . ::'Cliff Alexander F: :6-8 35 . ::'Chris Kaman CI ::7-0 44 , ::'Luis Montero G 6- 7

Wt , ::'Yrs College 195 , ::'3 200 . ::'2 215 , ::'3 206 . ::'0 215 , ::'5 215 , ::'6 170 . ::'1 245 . ::'3 240 , ::'5 240 . ::'1 210 . ::'2 235 , ::'2 240 . ::'0 265 . ::'12 185 . ::'0

2014-15 team: :2014-15statsandnotes : Made All-Star team for second straight season. Weber St Portland :21.0 ppg,6.2apg,4.6 rpg,35.7min/game. : Lehigh Portland 62 GP, 3starts. 6.8 ppg. : 45GP,4starts.3.5ppg,2.4rpg. St. John's (N.Y.) Orlando Notre Dame Notre Dame Wake Forest Dallas : 74 GP, 3starts. 5.6 ppg, 4.6 rpg. Duke Charlotte : 72starts,12.1 ppg,3.4rpg,2.6apg Penn St. Portland , Acquired midseason.4.6 ppg in 5GPfor Blazers : :55 GP, 7starts. 5.9 ppg, 4.5 rpg, 47-of-112 3pfg illinois Portland North Carolina L.A. Lakers : :79GP,24starts,8.3ppg,7.6rpg,60.1 fg% Indiana Charlotte : 10.4 min, 3.3 pts/game in 25 GProokie year California Portland 51 GP, 9starts, 3.3 ppg. Duke Brooklyn : 45startsin82GP,8.7ppg,6.2rpg. Kansas Kansas 7.1 ppg, 5.3 rpg, 56.6 fg% Cent. Michigan Portland ::13 starts in 74 GP;8.6 ppglowest sincerookie year Westchester (N.Y.)CC None Sat out due to academic ineligibilty

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

Bu o swinCoum iaBasinvo ey a tournament gym." Bulletin staff report CULVER — Playing as host Lynze Schonneker led Culfor the Columbia Basin Con- ver with 24 kills and 16 digs. ference volleyball tournament, Jenny Vega finished with 20 Culver defeated Weston-McE- kills, 6 digs and three blocks, wen in t h e c hampionship and Emma Hoke had 28. Marmatch 24-26, 25-18, 21-25, gie Beeler had six aces and 57 26-24, 15-7 to earn the confer- assists for the Bulldogs, who ence's top seed in the Class 2A will host a first-round match state playoffs. in the Class 2A state playoffs The Bulldogs trailed 5-0 at the start of the decisive fifth

set but rebounded to storm back for the win.

next Saturday.

Also Saturday:

Volleyball

"They caught us off guard defensively," said Culver coach Randi Viggiano. "My girls had a lot of fight though. They weren't going to let another

Saints fall in tourney championship: Trinity Lutheran fin-

team take first place in our

sanna Christian of K lamath

round match Wednesday in the

aces and 32 assists.

Boys soccer

Crescent Valley 1, Summit of the Mountain Valley League 0: The Storm gave up a secchampionship, losing to Ho- ond-half goal to lose the non-

With wife, Giants LB tack es domesticvio ence avoid when they met as Boston

New York Times News Service

College students in 2009. EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. Danielle was protecting a — New York Giants lineback- family secret, fearful of being er Mark Herzlich grew up in seen as a victim. Mark had locker rooms, from peewee recently learned he had a rare football to the NFL.

and life-threatening bone can-

and 100 percent male," Herzlich said.

was told by his doctors that

goals and had two steals to

Girls water polo

goals to help the Cougars to a Central Valley League win. Maya Hatch scored twice for Mountain View, and Sarah Porter and Alii Cox each had

a goal. Cassidy Evans finished with four assists, and Catherin Bowen added three. Al-

Class 1A state playoffs. Mariah lead the Cougars to a Central Mountain View 10, Madras yssa Cannon had four steals, Murphy led the Saints with 23 Valley League victory at Ju- 6: Sisters Chelsea and Cas- and Bowen finished with 12 kills and seven aces. Emily Ei- niper Swim & Fitness Center. sidy Evans each had three blocks. dler had 38 kills, and Serena Scomparin finished with six

ished insecond place as hosts

NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE

By Bill Pennington

(5-5-3 overall) plays its reg- Trevor Fox had the other goal ular-season finale Tuesday f or M ountain V i ew, w h i l e final by beating Prospect (25- against Mountain View. Taiton Fox finished with four 13, 25-10, 25-13) and Butte Falls steals. Micah Rodriguez was (25-20, 25-11, 25-8). Trinity Lu- Boys water polo credited with six blocks for the theran finished as the MVL's Mountain View 9, Madras 4: Cougars. No. 2 seed and will host a first- Alex Pitcher erupted for eight Falls 28-26, 25-10, 25-13. The Saints of Bend reached the

Fin It All

n l ine

bendbulletin.corn

league home match. Summit

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"It's a very unusual work cer, Ewing's sarcoma. Mark, environment — a small space an all-American football star,

his football career was very Locker to locker, the setting likely over. He might never run is marinated in m a chismo, again. Chemotherapy soon with a lineup of employees cel- robbed him of his hair and ebrated for their toughness. weakened his muscular, ath"We play a rough game on letic frame. TV," Herzlich said. "People see "I lost my identity," Mark us and say: 'Man, look at that

,0

q•

i

)0

said. "But the worst was peo-

dude. That's a guy right there.'" ple looking at you and seeing In recent seasons, as the only someone with cancer." NFL was shamed by multiple Since he was already bald, domestic violence arrests and Mark decided to dress up for a the incendiary video of run- Halloween party as Mr. Clean, ning back Ray Rice punching a costume he made complete his then-fiancee in an elevator,

with a white shirt and white

Herzlich knew it was crucial

pants. At the party, he met

that he work to change the culture of the locker room.

Danielle, who had heard of the football star Mark Herzlich but

call people out and tell them

to that Mark Herzlich.

that something they saidlocker room talk — wasn' t really funny," Herzlich said last week, sitting on the living room couch of his New Jersey home. "There would be jokes or something denigrating to women. It would be the kind of thing they would never say in front of a woman, but since it's all men, they thought it was

tion because he talked about

Wed~~gay

"In the beginning, you' d did not know she was talking

OK." It was not OK with Herzlich,

"Football never came up; I got to know this person named Mark," she said. "He was going through so much with his illness, and there was a connecnot wanting to be viewed as a cancer victim. I could relate to that."

The couple married during this past offseason. Mark made a remarkable

recovery and played one last and he had a specific reason. season at Boston College in Five years ago, his then-girl- 2010. Although he was free of friend and future wife, Dan- cancer — and has remained ielle, sat him down and re- so — his stock with NFL teams vealed something she had kept dropped precipitously. Once hidden. Danielle explained considered a potential firstthat she had been physically round draft pick, he was not and emotionally abused by her selected by any NFL team and father from age 9 until she was signed with the Giants as a 15. free agent, making him a long "It was very serious phys- shot to make the roster. ical abuse — punched in the But Herzlich played in 11 face and beaten up," Danielle games as a rookie in 2011, a said as she sat at home next to Super Bowl-winning season. Mark and spoke publicly about His story was chronicled by the abuse for the first time. "It did not stop until my father

"60 Minutes" and other media outlets. Now a valued veteran

was arrested and jailed, which

presence on the field, he has played in 53 games.

was the last time I saw him." Efforts to contact Danielle's

/ 'I

"Mark taught me that it' s

father were unsuccessful.

OK to be proud of being a sur-

Danielle's revelation was a thunderbolt to Mark, who in

vivor," Danielle said.

one of the NFL's more forceful

that included Giants coaches,

At a My Sisters' Place dinthe years since has emerged as ner in 2013, before a gathering advocatesof raising players' executives and many of the awareness of domestic abuse. team's players, Mark delivered "I thought domestic vio-

a speech that explained what

lence was something rare that happened to other people," he said. "Danielle's story changed my entire outlook. Yes, the majority of men don't commit

Danielle had gone through. "There must have been 50 peoplewho came up to me afterward and told me they were abused," Danielle said.

violence against women, but

"It was heartbreaking, but at

men overall need to stand up the same time, you could feel to other men. Don't just hold the power of having made that yourself a ccountable. H old

connection."

others accountable to treat Mark saidscores of teamwomen how they deserve to be mates have since talked to him treated."

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about the meaning and impact

Mark and Danielle Herzlich of his speech. It seemed all have become volunteers for a variety of domestic violence

the more relevant last season when the NFL faced bitter crit-

awareness groups, with Mark icism for the transgressions of starring in public service an- multiple players. "Last year, it was a tragenouncements for the domestic abuse awareness campaign dy that was happening in our No More. league," Herzlich said. "And "It's imperative that the is- sometimes tragedies open a sue is out in plain sight instead gate to call attention to a probof keeping it behind closed lem. It is important that a footdoors," Danielle said. "We ball player stands up and says have to change the culture. we have to do more to protect I know I did not want to talk about it for so long. I did not

w ant people to feel sorry for me." Pity is what Danielle and

Mark were both trying to

women.

"Whether the guys realize it or not, we have an opportunity. We can show people that

we have a tough job but that isn't what shapes you inside."

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E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

BUSINESS MONDAY QuickBooks Online Beginning: Do your ownbookkeeping usingthe QuickbooksOnlineversion, set up new customerandvendor accounts, create invoices, record salesandenter payments, through Nov.2;$89;6 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600NW CollegeWay,Bend;541-3837270 or www.cocc.edu/continuinged/ software/.

TUESDAY SCORE Business Counseling: Businesscounselors will conduct free one-on-oneconferencesfor local

E ND

entrepreneurseveryTuesdaynight; free; 5:30p.m.; DowntownBend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-706-1639.

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: businessibendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0323.

Hotel & ConventionCenter, 3075N. U.S. Highway97,Bend;541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org.

FRIDAY

WEDNESDAY

A class to prepare you for the statemandated Oregon construction contractor licensing test; $359; 8 a.m.; COCC Redmond CampusTechnology Education Center, SE College Loop, Redmond, 541-3837290 or www.cocc.edu/ccb. Mt. Bachelor Job Expo: Apply for seasonal jobs and speakwith hiring managers; free; 9 a.m.; Mt. Bachelor Ski Area —WestVillage Lodge, 13000 SWCentury Drive, Bend; 541693-0942 or www.mtbachelor.corn/ jobs.

Contractors CCB Test Prep Course: Best In Business Showcase: Featuring A class to prepareyou for the stateawards, exhibitors andnetworking mandated Oregonconstruction opportunities; free;Exhibitors pay$295 contractor licensing test; $359; 8 as nonmembers,$195asmembers;4 a.m.; COCC Redmond Campusp.m.; Bend Chamber ofCommerce,777 Technology Education Center, SE NW Wall St., Suite200, Bend;541-382College Loop,Redmond,541-3833221 or bendchamber.org 7290 or www.cocc.edu/ccb. Bestin Business— Bend Chamber Nov. 2 Showcase: A tradeshowand networking event;$195-$295 members, SATURDAY Career in Real Estate Workshop: $165 newmember,$165nonprofit, $295 community; 4 p.m.;TheRiverhouse Contractors CCB Test Prep Course: Explore how acareer in real estate

may be perfect for you; 6 p.m.; Exit Realty, 354 NEGreenwood Ave. Suite 100, Bend; 541-480-8835.

Corporate Culture Clash and Professionalism in the Workplace: Learn about professionalism in communications in the workplace

and how corporate culture impacts performance; $50, registration required; 7:30 a.m.; Hampton Inn, 730 SWColumbia St., Bend; 541-382-3221. Financial Planning & Ililoney Management Workshop: A financial planning and moneymanagement workshop; free; 5:30 p.m.; Bend Neighborlmpact, 20310Empire Ave., Suite A100, Bend; 541-323-6567 or www.neighborimpact.org/. Business Startup Class: Learn the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you; $29; 6 p.m.; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend;541-383-7290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc.

• Robert E. and Laura L. Beasley to Stephen P. Herzig, trustee of the Stephen PaulHerzig 2006Revocable Trust, and BonnieHerzig, NorthWest Crossing, Phases9-10, Lot 417, $795,000 • Renee P. Alexander, who acquired title as ReneeP.Kroupa, to Jeremiah J.and Sarah E.Bascue,Timber Ridge,Lot 6, Block 3, $324,900 • Kelly C. and Mindy M. McHugh, trustees of theMcHugh Family Trust, to Angie K.Wilder, Village, Phase3, Lot 22, $255,000 • John P. andCrystal Downing to Kimberly A. Rufenerand Linda A.Jones, Vista Dorado, Lot39,$176,000 • West BendProperty Co. LLCto SalvesenHomesLLCandJim St. John Construction LLC,NorthWest Crossing, Phase 25,$177,000 • West BendProperty Co. LLCto Jim St. John Construction LLC,NorthWest Crossing, Phase 25, Lot920, $158,000 •Tetherow Glen58 LLCtoCobyD.and Heidi V.Horton, trustees ofthe Horton RevocableTrust, Tetherow, Phase2, Lot 62, $258,950 • OWB REO LLCto Jamie Erlicht, NorthWestCrossing, Phases9-10, Lot 427, $600,000 • West BendProperty Co. LLCto Heritage HomesNWLLC,NorthWest Crossing, Phase 25, Lot916,$160,000 • Joy J. Garrick andClayton Coeto Hyacint hHousing LLC,Kenwood,Lots 15-16, Block12, $318,000 • David F. andZaida E.Lundeento Larose V. Christie, NorthCanyonEstates, Lot16, Block1, $310,000 • Duane A. Myersand Stacey B.Riceto Dana Olson,Ski HouseCondominium

Section Mt. BachelorVillage, Unit 22, $220,000 • George D.Leppand Kathryn L. Vincent to Steven J.Michel, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 26, Lot11, Block25, $875,000 Crook County • Michael D.and Nancy L.Durbin to Daniel J.Lay,Fourth Addition to Prineville, Lots 3-4, Block 4, $249,000 • Gordon J. Sproulto LauraBrown, Prineville Lake Acres, Lots13, 29-30, Block 30,$177,500 • Federal Home LoanMortgage Corp. to WesleyandVictoria Long, Conifer Heights Subdivision Phase1,Lot1, $354,575 • Lee InvestmentInc. to Marvin L and Janet L Pitzer,SaddleRidgeRanch P.U.D.,Lot15, $339,500 • Maria Stafford to DonaldM.andGloria E. Munger,CrystalSpringsSubdivision, Phase 2,Lot44, $263,000 • Secretary of HousingandUrban Development toJackC.Benedict, Partition Plat2005-33, Parcel1, $183,027 • Edna F. Roberts to David W.and Linda M. Kirkeby,AspenHeights Subdivision, Phase 2,Lot13, $172,000 • Lawrence E. and Joan K.Adamson to Shawn Adamson,Township14, Range 15, Section 24,$273,000 • Chera M. Elliott to Elizabeth StarksWright, GoldenHorseshoeRanch Homes, Lot 7,Block11, $201,000 • Crook County to Apple Inc., Partition Plat 2014-06, Parcel 2,$1,955,000 • Crook County to Apple Inc., Partition Plat 2014-06, aportion of Parcel 1, $1,632,000

Nov. 3 SCORE BusinessCounseling: Business counselors will conduct free one-on-one conferences for local entrepreneurs every Tuesdaynight; free; 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-706-1639.

Nov. 4

DEEDS Deschutes County • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Hilary L and JoshuaM.Wyma,BridgesatShadow Glen, Phase 2A, Lot130, $321,550 • Moira Roundsto Emily V.Jones, Wiestoria, Portions of Lots15-16, Block 24, $260,000 • Kimble J. Clark, trustee of the Kimble J. Clark and Joanne M. Clark Trust, to Jarrad E.Webband Patricia K. Mayfield, Meadow Village,Lot 5, Block16, $285,150 • Jack D. Barringer, trustee of the Jack D. Barringer RevocableTrust, to Dirk E. andLeslie Hmura,Golf Course Homesite11th Addition, Lot165, $485,000 • Bank of America N.A. to Ronald D. and Kathleen C. Lemon, EastsideThird Addition, Lot1, Block 5,$223,250 • Kelly M. and Betty K. Crider, trustees of the CriderFamily Trust, to DeanB. and Sunday K. Altenhofen, trustees of the Dean B.Altenhofen Family Trust, River RidgeOneCondominiums of Mt. Bachelor Village, Unit 314,$380,000 • Glenn J. VanCise,personal representative of theEstate of Lynn M. VanCise, toDouglas F.McDonald, Nolan's Addition, Lot 25,Block1, $169,000 • Wood Hill HomesInc. to SageStreet LLC andNoraConser, Ironstone, Lot8, $285,950 • James M. Harris to Darci andJames Anderson, Hollow PineEstates, Phase 5, Lot86andaportionofLot87, $450,000 • Tetherow Glen58 LLCto Cloninger CustomHomes LLC,Tetherow,Phase 2, Lot 55, $213,000 • Everett W. and Jean Goin to Steven E. and Katherine F. Hansen, Fairway Point Village II, Lot 4,Block 9, $425,000 •EugeneLewistoMichaelKozak, Stonehaven,Phase1, Lot 32,$305,000 • Brian A. and GinaM.Luceroto Brian

K. and Alecs C. Garrett, Village at Oaktree, Phase2, Lot 11,$329,000 • Lawrence A.and DianaL. West to Albert D.andCheryl J. Taylor, Windsong, Lot 5,$259,000 • Laura B. andPaulC.Taylor, trustees of the Laura B.Taylor RevocableTrust, to Kathleen S.Green, trustee of the Kathleen S.Green Declaration of Trust, Pine Canyon,Phase2, Lot13, $665,000 • Christopher Nelson to RhiannaL and Jon D.Kunkler, Glacier View First Addition, Lot 21,Block 2, $800,000 •James E.and LindaA.Bennettto Kermit R. KumleandAmy Love-Kumle, North CanyonEstates, Lot13, Block1, $225,000 • Christopher S. and Keyrrah Jones to Joseph E.Stutler, Homestead, Phase3, Lot17, Block 2,$310,000 • Christina Ellis to GinaM.and Brian A. Lucero, McCall Landing, Phase 1, Lot 108, $418,000 • Holliday Properties LLC to Christina Ellis, Holiday ParkThird Addition, Phase 3, Lot 43, $299,900 • Jeffrey L. andNaomiS. Dement, trustees of theJeffrey L. and NaomiS. Dement Trust, andMarsha M. Ford,to Dan andDarcie J. Despain, Boulevard Addition to Bend,Lot11, Block17, $370,000 • Alva L. Pelayo to Karen I. Stillwell, Summit Park, Lot 3,$251,400 • Sheri Spores-Schriver to Sheryl L. Meissner, SouthDeerfield Park, Lot 58, $350,000 • Kimberly Johnson to Travis Coons, Summerfield, Phase3, Lot 5, Block 6, $190,000 • Earl D. andLorraine G.Bell to Kit Kerson andDolores M.Hague,Tall Pines Fifth Addition, Lot 1,Block 31, $304,000 • Alice M. Balderston to JohnM.and Sharon L. Nelson,RedBar Estates, Phase 2,Lot 65, $199,900

• Hackbarth Builders Inc. to DavidL. Prybylowski andSusanne C.Eckhardt, NorthWest Crossing, Phase24, Lot 881, $589,900 • West BendProperty Co. LLCto Leader Builders LLC,NorthWest Crossing, Phase 25,Lot922, $175,000 • Russell L. and TeresaL. Mireles to Karl J. and Cynthia J.Reich, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 7,Block BB,$235,000 • West BendProperty Co. LLCto Salveson HomesLLC,NorthWest Crossing, Phase 25, Lot 918, $162,000 • Reid Family Trust to Clinton D. Prescott III andSusanneC. Prescott, Seventh MountainGolf Village, Lot103, $775,000 • West BendProperty Co. LLCto Meloling Construction LLC,NorthWest Crossing, Phase 25, Lot 930, $176,000 • John L and DebiCorso, trustees of the John L.andDebi Corso Revocable Trust, to William S.Getty Sr. andJulie A. Getty, Majestic, Phase1, Lot2, $220,000 • West BendProperty Co. LLCto B&C Building LLC,NorthWest Crossing, Phase 25,Lot914, $158,000 • Glen andClaraJ. Kelsoto Jeff and Tina McAlister, OregonWater Wonderland, Lot 24, Block31, $280,000 • Steve andSally Michaelis to Donald F. Stanaway IIandCrystal H. Stanaway, Crosswater, Phase 3, Lot69, $990,000 • Jeremy B. andJuanaC.Beedeto Joshua P. and Alia J. Hagenbach, Sun Country Estates, Lot 9,Block1, $255,000 • West BendProperty LLC to Stonebridge HomesNWLLC, NorthWest Crossing, Phase25, Lot 925, $174,000 • Reverse Mortgage Solutions Inc. to Barrett and JodiFord, Roaring Springs, Lot 6, $300,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Brian D.and Patti J. McCullough, River's Edge

Village, Phase15, Lot 37,$479,950 • Kenneth G.and MaryLeaM. Harris to Evan Livseyand Heather Rill, South Point, Lot 24,$319,900 •RuthM.andJoeR.DeLaFuenteto Rudolph R.Flores, StonehedgeOnThe Rim, Phase 1,Lot 8, $224,900 •DeschutesCountytoJamesP. Pentz, Partition Plat 2011-11,Parcel1, $153,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc.to Paul A. Wilson, McCall Landing, Phase2A, Lot176, $285,000 • William H. andGeorgia A. Moe, trustees of theWilliam H. Moeand Georgia AnnMoeRevocable Living Trust, to Scott D.andPauline K. Decker, Township17, Range12,Section 20, $785,000 • Carol W. Trump,trustee of the Trump Revocable Living Trust, to Randall L. and Ellen E.Walberg, trustees of the Walberg Trust, RidgeAt EagleCrest19, Lot 105, $525,000 • William G. Wilitts, trustee of the William Grayand EldaT.Wilitts Residual Trust, to Eric T.Wagner, trustee of theEric T.Wagner Revocable Trust 2001,Township14, Range11, Section 7,$200,000 • West BendProperty Co. LLCto Wade J. and Jennifer L.Westhoff, trustees of the Westhoff FamilyTrust, NorthWest Crossing, Phase24, Lot 904,$293,000 • Marilyn Haslam to Jean A. Pozzi, Empire Estates, Lot64, $238,000 • Gary J. Wilson to DuaneR.Fridley, Timber CreekII, Phase4, Lot 61, $331,000 • Leslie G. andJoan M.Schultz to Dale L and Marilyn K.Smith, Homestead, Phase 4,Lot 9, Block10, $295,000

The Bridge Continued from E1 Van Schoessler, sales manager for t he outdoor-productcompany Stanleyand a member of Oregon Outdoor Alliance's board of directors,

fi ~

' gj ~ FI

said the duster currently has

around 300 members. Bracelin added that the organization's bimonthly meetingsfunctionin the same way that EDCO's Pub

Talks function for the techindustry, allowing outdoor industry members to meet and network in a casualenvironment. "Outdoor peopleare kind of under the radar; they kind of do their ovvnthing," Bracelin added. "There's a lot of talent here, but it wasn't necessarily

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Austin Britts, left, co-founder of Zealios, and Andrea Bourn, co-founder of Radventure, work in their respective offices next to

the shared break room in The Bridge.

15,214-square-foot co-working space was the access it prospace dedicated prima rily to videsto other companies in the connected." outdoor-oriented c onsumer industry. "The networking has been Elsewhere in Oregon, out- goods companies. door productsare big business. Schoessler said Beach devel- fantastic," Boumasaid. According to information pro- oped the spacepartially as a Radventure competed in the vided by the Outdoor Industry way to get small startups out of early-stage competition of the Association, outdoor recre- theirgarages and into a space BVC in 2015. Becauseof that, ation, which includes both out- wherethey can network. Bouma saidhaving a com"What we wanted to do was pany like Cairn Outdoors, an door recreation product sales tage company the year and travel-related spending, create a workspace and an at- early-s generates$12.8billion in con- mosphere where people could before, was valuableto herand sumer spending and around thrive,"Beach said. her team. "I like to think of (Cairn 141,200 jobs in Oregon alone. He added that the space curFor all of the progressthe rently has 11 companies,and founder) RobLittle as our big industry has made in Bend, said all of the available space brother,"Bouma said. however, it still faces problems. is either occupied or commitCairn is an outdoor startup Schoessler said Bend lacks a ted to companiesthat are plan- that mails subscribers curatlarge-scale company inthe in- ning to move intothe building. ed monthly boxesof outdoor dustry, like Nike or Columbia Bracelin added that one of the suppliesthat range from hikSportswear, that can provide strengths of The Bridge is that ing gear to energy bars. Tosteady jobs for hundredsof it features a variety of different day, Little said, the company employees. typesofspace for companies, ships 10,000curated boxes per Robyn Sharp, Bend-area ranging from warehousespace month. manager for EDCO, wrote in to single desksfor startups. Little said the company "It's hard for small compa- moved intoThe Bridge in late an email that of the 104 Bend firms that EDCO identifies as nies to bridgethat gap of work- spring. As aveteran ofthe Bend outdoor-product companies, ing at their living room table Outdoor Worx program, Little only 16reported having more or garage,to actually paying saw firsthand the value ofconthan 10 employees. rent and having employees," necting with like-minded peo"You cancount on one hand Bracelin said. "So having that ple within theindustry. the companiesthat are doing kind of flex spaceusage is Little saidhe thought the insome volume, and it's just get- fantastic." dustry still had room to grow ting moreof them to get to that Beach said companies at The in Bend. Bend's isolation can sustainable, successful level," Bridge have access to shared make importing and exportBmcelin said. amenities like a trade show ing products more costly and Given the challengesof en- booth and a forklift. The com- time-consuming than it might couraging large companies paniesinthe spacerange from be in other markets. Still, he to uproot and move to Bend, Bend Outdoor Worx to Rad- said the myriad resources that the most likely way to address venture, a startup that created outdoor companiescan find in -peer m arketplace for Bendare helpful to companies this gapis to grow and develop a peer-to homegrown companies. adventure tourism. Radven- like Cairn. "Bend'sa mecca for outdoor In February,developer Mark ture co-founder Andrea BouBeach bought a former com- ma saidthe company rented a recreation; it should be a mecmercial kitchen on SE Bridge- single deskat The Bridge after ca for outdoor products," Little ford Boulevard and converted becominga company in July. said. it and the surrounding ware- Bouma said one of the most — Reporter: 541-617-7818, house space intoThe Bridge, a valuable components to the shamway@bend bulletin.com

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O


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN E 3

owoneai-o manover catt eo s, oun ao By MaraLee eHart ford Courant

they had higher wages in past jobs than younger candidates. Rohrig said he absolutely believes that his age was a big

he felt he was running out of places to try. He'd already talked to every printing and mailing company in the region. part of why he was out of work But retiring early wasn't an for so long. option. Rohrig only started "They can't say it, but you saving for retirement in his 50s, just know," he said. "Some- and he liquidated that 401(k) one cheaper, someone young- during his long unemployment. er, more energetic, is more When his children were attractive." young, he was paying MontesAccording to a scientific sur- sori school tuition, and when vey published by Rutgers in they were older, he was helping

HARTFORD, Conn.y almost any measure, the odds were against Bob Rohrig after he lost his job as an account manager for a printing and direct mail company in 2011. He was nearly 61 years old. The commercial

September 2014,46 percent of

printing industry was, and still is, in decline. The unemployment rate in Connecticut was above 9 percent. Some people in that position might have collected unemployment until they turned 62, resigned to rely on Social Security and entered an early retirement.

~ «nHO •

\ •

But Rohrig had barely begun saving for retirement when he was laid off. He was determined to get back to work — and not in a part-time retail job. Stephen Dunn / Harfford (Conn.) Courant

"My mother always used to when one of the major dients Bob Rohrig, 65, was laid off from the printing industry when he tell me, 'Sometimes you have switched to another company was almost 61. After three years and four months, he found fullto grit your teeth and march to save on postage, he was no time work again as an estimator at Minuteman Press of Hartford in forward,'" Rohrig said, sitting longer needed. Glastonbury, Connecticut. in the H a rtford-area apartHe had been making bement that he shares with his tween $70,000 and $80,000 wife, where the neutral apart- when he lost his job. His new himself out of funks brought too expensive, even though he' d ment-complex standard carpet job pays far less. on by the grind of unemploy- taken steps back in pay other " I didn't l i mit m y self t o ment. He sent in applications times in his career. His peak and paint contrast with the decor of antiques and photos of printing and mail industries," and Iomed support groups. earning year was 1995, when old houses. Rohrig said. He applied to Federal data show that peo- he earned more than $90,000. In June last year, Rohrig re- manufacturers, warehouses, a ple 55 and older were the most turned to full-time work in the fuel oil company, a nursery and likely to end up out of work for 'They can't say it' same industry — three years many others. more than a year during the According to a paper puband four months after he lost Soon after he lost his job, he time when Rohrig was looking. lished by the Federal Reserve his job — and he's still in the attended a 6-month, 20-hours- In May 2014, the last month Bank of San Francisco, "A position. a-week, government-financed that he was jobless, the aver- sharp downturn gives emThere were days in those training program in quality age length of unemployment ployers cover to engage in age threeyears and four months management. But it didn't help for that demographic was 51 discrimination." — he always includes the four him switch to manufacturing. weeks, according to the Bureau A report from the Congresmonths when he talks about

it — that he couldn't bear to make another call to a printing executive. When he saw others

getting jobs and he hadn't had an interview in months. "Certainly I had moments when I thought, 'Man, this isn' t

going to happen.'" And, in fact, the vast major-

ity of people like him — those who were out of work for a long time, even well after the

recession ended — still weren' t working more than a year later, or were working only part time, or in temporary jobs. Among Americans who had been out of work a half-year or more in March 2013, just 28 percent of them were back

working full time for at least three months by June 2014, according to a paper by Federal Reserve economists. And that

doesn't even single out people older than 60, who, by many accounts, face a bias in the workplace. But Rohrig was steadfast.

400 business cards

them with their college loans.

all those who had been unem- In hindsight, he realizes that ployedsince 2009 had to take a he and his wife could've found pay cut when they got back to $100 a month to put away in work. And data suggest that their30s and40s. "Maybe we weren't as smart the older you are, the bigger the pay cut. about money as we should've It was hard keeping his been," he said. "I'm encouragspirits up as one year of un- ing my son and daughter now" employment dragged into two. to save for retirement. He went swimming every day, In late 2011, he had met starting in the middle of 2012, with the owner of a couple of and lost more than 15 pounds. Minutemen Press franchises, He went to weekly meetings and had a good networking with other unemployed people, meeting, but there was no job. which sometimes made him In April 2014, he thought he more down, but sometimes should call that owner again. "I' ve just started looking for made him feel useful. "There were days when I an estimator," the man told read the paper and watched him. "We met for two hours, and TV and I didn't do anything. It's very easy to say I don't have he hired me," Rohrig said. the energyto make one more Rohrig now earns about call," Rohrig said. But he never 55 percentof what he made let himself stay stuck for long. at Data Mail, but he doesn' t He'd say to himself, "OK, I'm express even a smidge of bitgoing to call these five people." terness. He says simply that u You have to have a strategy

he knew he wouldn't be able

for working your way out of it," to earnthe same amount, and Rohrig said. expected to land a job that paid In 2013, he l a nded a less than $50,000. 2t/2-month consulting assignment with a former client — he

He intends to work until 70 so he can build some retire-

had been a consultant from

ment savings. "I love going to work every The temp work made it pos- day. I love it. Not only going to sible for Rohrig and his wife to work, but the job itself. It's a lot pay for a move from the house of fun. It's not that stressful." they were renting to the apartment where they live now. Visit Central Oregon's By early 2014, Rohrig had seen other unemployed people get back to work, but he just told himself: "I'm doing all the right things." He said that "I felt bad about that," he of Labor Statistics. sional Budget Office said inter- although statistics suggested said. But he understood why Because u n employment views with workforce profes- the economy was improving, See 100 life-sized samples of c lassmates who h a d b e en was so high, he was eligible sionals found that employers he wasn't getting any more inthe latest innovative and downsized from factories for unemployment checks for steerclear ofolderworkers be- terviews. "For people who are stylish Hunter Douglas were get ting job offers and he 63 weeks, not the half-year of cause they believe that they' ll unemployed post-55, it's still window fashions! wasn' t. normal times. When he turned raise the cost of the company's tough as hell," he said. "I don't care what they tell 62, he applied for Social Secu- health insurance and because And even with networking, See us also for: you, everybody wants some- rity, which means he' ll receive • Retractable Awnings body from their industry," he 25 percent less than he would • Exterior Solar Screens sard. have if he had waited until 66, But when he did networking full retirement age. • Patio Shade Structures "It enabled us to keep our in the printing industry, he was TOUCHMARK 541-54$-2066 constantly reminded of how head above water, pay our bills SINC8 1980 troubled it was. A company and get somewhat out of debt," would say they'd been stagnant he said. for three years. Another comIt didn't make him try any COVERINGS pany would say they were lay- less to find a job, however. ing off, not hiring. Although he dedicated him1465 SW Knoll Avenue, Bend $INCe One small printing compa- self to networking — he met so www.classic-coverings.corn ny's owner told him "within many people, he had about 400 TREss six weeks, I' ll be sitting on business cards filed in booksG allery-Be n d •• g ) yoursideofthetable,"because he found most of the dozen in541-330-5084 his business was about to go terviews he had were from reunder. sponding to job ads. He was in1999 to 2005.

HunterDouglas

%ILSONSo fRedmond

sya c,~ssIc

le'

541-647-2956

It took him more than six

terviewed in Dayton, Ohio, and

months to get his first real in- Cleveland at printing firms. terview. At the time, he was

spending thousands of dollars

Locally, he interviewed with four companies outside print-

on an e x ecutive placement ing and a handful of printing firm in a last-ditch effort to re- firms, too, including the giant

turn to a general manager level printing firm R.R. Donnelly. he'd achieved decades before. Four of the companies he in-

Before his layoff, he had been working for Data Mail, an 800-personcombined printer/mailer in Connecticut, for nearly four years. He had been a senior account manager, and

All for nothing.

Seasonal

and delight them, and get them to buy something."

terviewed with never told him

But Rohrig kept networking, why they didn't offer him a armed with the support of his job. In other cases, he said, the wife — whom he's known since company decided to go with high school in Elmira, New someone local, changed the job York — and the ability to talk description or told him he was

Continued from E1 Economist Joel Naroff of "If coverage plans aren' t Naroff Economic Advisors there, you are in a potentially Inc. in Holland, Pennsylvania, bad place because you can' t who writes a bimonthly businavigate that many customers ness column for The Philadelor adjust your schedule with phia Inquirer and Philly.corn, your crew on the fly," he said. said holiday hiring doesn' t Retailers want them typical- artificially lower the seasonly in place two weeks before ally adjusted unemployment Thanksgiving. rate, now 5.1 percent nationalPhibbs said memories lin- ly, because the U.S. Bureau of ger ofthe recession of 2008, Labor Statistics accounts for when no one was shopping, these workers. "We are talking about beprices were slashed and retailers stopped hiring. ing off by maybe 0.1 percent"Stores were empty, and the age point even in the crazy argument was whether (re- months of seasonal hiring and tailers) cut temporary help too firing," Naroff said. much," he said. "We are just He described the swell in coming back to what is consid- the payrolls, albeit short-lived, as "a good thing." ered normal." "It p r ovides temporary S ocial m e di a h a s a l s o changed the retail game. work for large numbers of Customers "will take pic- people who desire to work eitures in the dressing room," ther part time, or only during Phibbs said. "If you have a portion of the year," Naroff clothes all over the floor, and said. "It also provides opportuthey post them on Facebook nities for people who are lookand Twitter and warn others ing for jobs to get their foot in to never go there, it will hurt the door." you. From the shopper's point "You have to take the threat of view, "it becomes a must seriously," he said. "If they this time of year," said David walk out of your store without Chapman, 35, a consumer buying anything, they prob- recruitingsupervisor,as he ably aren't coming back. You shopped for shoes at a downonly have one shot to surprise town Philadelphia Macy's last

KSK48 K > M K E Ã 8 "

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

week. "Everybody wants to get involved in the gift giving and receiving. It gets crazy." Terry Lundgren, CEO of Macy's Inc., touted the 85,000

temporary jobs, the same as last year' s, and representing half of Macy's year-round workforce of 170,000. The seasonal hires will staff all Macy's and Bloomingdale's stores, as well as call centers, distribution centers and online fulfillment centers.

"They fill a n i m portant niche in the employment spectrum," Lundgren said. For the third straight year, Target is hiring 70,000 "team members to take on important holiday roles," chief stores officer Tina Tyler said. They include unloading t rucks, stocking shelves and setting up signs and holiday displays. Pat Ficarotta started her

C hristmas shopping

this

month at a Kohl's. She said

she likes expanded holiday store hours because she teaches yoga in the mornings and early evenings. Huge turn offs: long checkout and return lines.

KIDS Center

a child abuse intervention center

"That's why they need to

have enough (workers) around to keep the lines moving," said Ficarotta, 53. "When I see how

fast the lines are moving, it makes me want to come back."

Sign up at kidscenter.org


E4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

WT Consolidated Stocks NYSEand Nasdaq For the weekending Friday, October 3, 2 2015 WK YTD NAME

DIV LAST

CHG %CHG

ABB LM .57e 18.60 v.34 ACE Ltd 2.64e 114.83 +5.88 AES Corp .40 11.05 +.27 AFLAC 1.56 63.45 v2.11 AK Steel 2.66 -.20 ATST Inc 1.88 33.74 -.09 AU Optron .16e 2 . 97 -.21 AbbottLab .96 43.60 +1.38 Abbyie 2.04 d50.34 -6.19 Accenture 2.12e u107.99 +4.98 Achillion 8.10 +.57 ActivsBliz .23f u34.90 (..73 AdobeSy u87.86 -.81 AMD 2.21 +.27 Aegon .26e 6 . 14 -.11 Aercap 41.34 +2.03 Aeropostl .77 +.30 AEtern g h .06 -.00 Aetna 1.00 105.89 -7.10 Agilent .40 37.11 v1.33 Agnico g .32 29.06 -.14 Ahern lf 625.92 -3.43 Alcoa . 12 9 . 14 -.41 Alibaba 75.62 +3.63 AHegTch .72 614.56 -2.88 Allergan 268.55 -9.58 AllscriptH 14.02 +.77 Allstate 1.20 61.68 v.48 AllyFincl 19.99 -.51 Alphabet C ... u702.00 +39.80 Alphabet A ... u719.33 +24.01 AlpAlerMLP1.18e 13.18 -.86 Alteracp If .72 52.57 -.16 Altria 2.26f u61.05 +2.33 Amazon ... u599.03 +28.27 Ambev .45e 5 . 04 +.05 AMovilL .69e 17.23 -.15 AmAirlinas .40 45.67 +1.96 ACapAgy 2.40 19.18 +.02 AEagleOut .50 14.93 -.98 AEP 2.24f 57.48 -1.06 AmExp 1.16 d74.59 -2.62 AmlntlGrp 1.12f 61.28 +1.28 AmeriBrgn 1.16 93.13 -1.93 Amgen 3.16 155.75 +3.14 Amicus Th 6.59 -.45 Amphenol .56f 53.53 +.22 Anadarko 1.08 72.03 -1.36 AnalogDev 1.60 63.62 +3.43 AnglogldA 9.04 -.30 Annaly 1.20 10.18 +.04 Anthem 2.50 140.95 -6.10 Apache 1.00 46.49 +.22 ApoHeEdu (17.42 -2.92 Apple inc 2.08 119.08 v8.04 ApldMatl .40 16.44 +.61 ArcelorMit . 20 6 . 0 1 -.38 Arch Dan 1.12 46.89 v.93 ArenaPhm 2.34 +.03 AriadP 6.80 -.23 ArmHld .35e 49.16 +3.96 AstraZen s1.40e 31.36 -.99 Atmel . 16 8 . 6 2 -.06 AtwoodOcn1.00 17.45 -.37 Autodesk 52.39 +.35 AvagoTch 1.68f 129.58 v8.51 Avon . 24 3 . 7 6 +.04 888T Cp 1.08 37.66 +1.17 BP PLC 2.40 35.72 -.14 Baidu 157.60 +6.60 BakrHu .68 53.93 +.10 BcoBrad s .44e 5 . 48 -.27 BcoSantSA .48e 5 . 80 -.01 BkofAm .20 16.52 +.40 BkNYMel .68 42.25 +1.76 Barclay .41e 15.51 -.08 8 iPVixST 18.63 -1.06 BarrickG .08m 7 . 75 -.10 BasicEnSv 3.80 -.18 Baxalta n .28 33.41 (..45 Baxter s .46 35.40 +1.48 BaytexE g 4.40 -.20 BerkH 8 137.78 +3.97 BestBuy .92a 35.20 +.50 Biogen 276.99 v4.62 BioMedR 1.04a 23.28 -.12 BlackBerry 7.32 +.21 Blackstone2.68e 34.43 +.40 BluebBio 83.10 -2.47 Boeing 3.64 146.70 v9.10 BorgWarn .52 43.66 +.02 BostonSci 16.73 -.34 Brandyw .60 13.56 v.64 Brinker 1.28f 646.85 -3.88 BrMySq 1.48 65.16 +.67 Broadcom .56 53.13 v1.37 Brcdecm .18 10.54 +.32 Brookdale d21.29 -2.27 CA Inc 1.00 27.75 -1.17 CBREGrp 34.92 +.54 CBS 8 .60 44.49 v1.31 CIT Grp .60 645.76 +5.07 CSX .72 28.37 +.94 CVS Health 1.40 103.95 v.92 Cabelas 633.60 -10.05 CblvsnNY .60 32.71 -.30 Cabot0&G .08 d21.10 -2.11 Cadence 21.40 +.05 CalifRes n . 04 4 . 0 5 -.43 CallonPet 8.35 -.41 Calpine 15.19 -.98 Cameron u68.10 v2.69 DampusCC 6.58 +.90 CdnNRsgs .92 23.59 -.43 CapOne 1.60 81.12 v6.45 CardnlHlth 1.55 80.14 +.01 Carnival 1.20 53.58 +2.48 Caterpillar 3.08 71.75 v2.84 Celgene 120.08 +2.20 Cemex .401 6 . 98 -.92 Cemig pf .56e 1 . 97 +.08 Oempra 18.00 -1.29 CenovusE .64m 15.09 -1.50 Centene s 57.25 -.85 CenterPnt .99 18.62 -.08 CentAI 4.48 -.77 CntryLink 2.16 28.02 +1.21 Cerner 64.63 -.62 CheniereEn d46.43 -1.46 ChesEng 7.83 -.57 Chevron 4.28 91.24 -.05 Cigna .04 132.54 -8.20 Cisco .84 29.35 +1.10 Citigroup .20 53.64 v.95 CitizFincl .40 24.22 +1.00 CitrixSys u81.14 +5.67 CliffsNRs 2.65 -.16

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C oach 1. 3 5 30.13 +.44 -19.8 CobaltlEn 7.66 -.62 -1 3.8 Cocacola 1.32 42.79 +.77 +1.4 Coeur 3.06 -.06 -40.1 CognizTch 68.83 +3.93 +30.7 -.4 ColgPalm 1.52 68.94 +2.20 Comcast 1.00 61.98 +.66 +6.8 CmtyHlt 628.71 -13.21 -46.8 ConAgra 1.00 41.28 -.41 (.I 3.8 ConocoPhil 2.96 54.61 -.62 -20.9 Cons olEngy .04m 9.50 -1.50 -71.9 ContlRescs 34.14 -1.88 -1 1.0 C orning . 4 8 17.60 +.71 -23.2 CSVLgNGrs (I4.72 -.93 -76.3 9.46 -2.13 -80.7 CSVLgcrdrs CSVlnvNG u10.13 +1.51 +26.0 CSVellVST 31.53 +.80 e1.3 CSVixShrs 6.18 -.91 -77.6 -.9 CredSuiss .72e 24.85 -.93

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Medtrnic

81.12 +6.02 -19.3 PrUHPQQQ .03e 117.88 +13.57 73.69 -.42 +2.1 PUltSP500 s .15e 65.96 +3.91 27.74 -4.18 21.42 -2.86 d9.67 -.14 -14.4 ProShtVix 61.72 +1.56 -5.7 50.98 +2.14 ProctGam 2.65 77.03 +2.79 38.53 -1.75 -48.7 Progsvcp .69e u33.05 +.53 17.24 -1.26 -50.8 Pro UShSP 19.74 -.90 u52.87 +5.36 +13.8 PrUShDow 20.13 -1.06 47.00 -2.91 e1 5.9 PUSIItQQQ d29.91 -2.72 46.53 +.68 e28.1 PShtQQQ 618.98 -2.69 91.36 +1.39 -23.5 PUSIItspx d31.41 -2.18 32.62 -1.33 -I 5.9 P SEG 1. 5 6 42.66 -.81 35.62 +.69 -22.0 P ulteGrp . 3 2 d18.34 -.75 28.35 -.60 -43.9 QEP Res .08 15.51 -.59 d40.96 -2.59 -27.3 QlikTech 30.80 -5.97 d14.02 -1.00 -48.0 Qualcom 1.92 60.73 +.82 96.09 +2.87 +25.8 QuantaSvc d19.48 +.74 10.53 -.10 -1 8.9 RadianGrp .01 15.98 -.73

1.52

Melcocrwn .17e 18.39 -.01 -27.6 PUVixSTrs Marek 1.80 52.88 +1.40 -6.9 PrUCruders MerrimkP MetLife 1.50 MKors

Micron T Microsoft 1.44f Mobileye Mondelez .68f Monsanto 2.16f MorgStan .60 Mosaic 1.10 MurphO 1.40 Mylan NV NRG Egy NXP Semi

.58

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.24 •

+21.0 -.5 -77.9

-58.7 +.9 -15.4 +22.5 -1 0.5 -7.5 -24.2 -36.4 -17.4 +3.0 -14.5 -23.3

-.3

-18.3 -31.4 -4.4

TO DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON IS A COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE

-2.2 -20.8 -.5 -I 2.7 +14.6

to places, events and activities taking place throughout Central Oregon during the year.

(.3.9

-5.8

(-I 2.2

-25.8 -78.2 (.7.9

-34.0 -45.5 -9.8 -32.6 -1.0 +6.2 -10.9 +2.7 -37.9 -12.8 e28.8 -60.0 -3.2 -6.3 -30.9 -3.8 -50.8 -30.4 -7.7 +4.1 +3.3 -40.9 -27.9 -45.8 -.3 -10.0 -73.5 -8.2 -9.7 -I 8.4 +8.1 -33.3 (.I.B

-9.4

(-I 2.9

-20.5 +26.3 -I 4.3 -20.2 +10.4 +22.6 -11.0 -41.9 -8.9 +2.0 -I 9.6 -4.3 -21.7 (.7.9

-36.3 +58.5 -28.7 +12.8 -26.5 +53.2 -31.4 e36.3 -10.0 -23.6 -1.7 -.7 +18.2 -21.6 +7.3 -28.8 -60.4 -23.4 -26.8 +I 0.3 -20.5 -81.6 -29.2 -34.0 -60.0 -I 8.7 +28.8 +6.2 -.9 -2.6 +27.2

-62.9

30. 1 6 +.58 +11.8 +15.2 37. 5 2 +.82 +12.9 +18.2

28.88 (..52 -1.2 29.12 (..53 -1.0 34. 7 6 (..22 (.4.9

+2.0 MeadJohn 1.65

62.06 +.80 85.83 +.55 31 6.28 +1.96 115.85 +.43 75.90 +.84 iShHmcnst .09e 27.91 +.54 I TW 2.20 f 90.59 +6.27 lllumina 147.43 -2.79 Infosys s .62e 18.62 v.58 IngerRd 1.16 56.58 v2.98 IntgDv u24.25 +1.06 Intel .96 34.90 +1.86 IBM 5.20 d144.68 -5.71 IntPap 1 . 76f 43.85 +1.72 Interpublic .48 22.40 +1.21 Invesco 1.08 33.90 +1.50 InvestBncp .20 u12.77 +.18 IronMtn 1.90a 31.06 -.54 i Sh UK . 7 0 e 17.70 +.06

112 WAYS

(.3.3

AmericanCentury

AMCAPA m 27.52 (..38 (.6.1 AmBalA m 25.04 (..43 (.6.9 BondA m 1 2 . 79-.01 +1.8 CaplncBuA m 58.37 +.46 +2.2 CapWldBdA m 19.32 -.21 -4.2 CpWldGrlA m 46.08 +.67 +3.0 EurPacGrA m 48.69 +.65 +3.8 FnlnvA m 5 3 .21 +1.28 +9.5 GrthAmA m 44.93 +.78 +9.6 HilncA m 1 0 . 03+.02 -4.1 IncAmerA m 21.14 +.36 +3.2 IntBdAmA m 13.60 -.02 +1.3 InvcoAmA m 36.90 +.71 +4.9 MutualA m 36.19 +.69 +4.9 NewEconA m 38.12 +.48 +7.3 NewPerspA m 38.67 +.79 +10.5 NwWrldA m 51.73 +.61 -5.5 SmcpWldA m 46.81 +.23 +7.4 TaxEBdAmA m 13.01 +2.7 WAMutlnvA m 40.84 +.96 +6.5

iS Eafe 1.70e IShiBxHYB 4.78 IShNsdqBio .06e iShR2K 1.68e iShREst 2.61e

-.82 -29.0 +4.65 +31.0 +1.54 -18.5 +2.5 -.85 +32.7 +.11 -6.2 -3.77 -13.8 +.26 +3.2 +.15 +2.7 -.83 -I 8.8 v1.57 e29.6 +.28 +3.5 +1.95 -26.8 -6.45 +13.2 +.39 +1.1

Available at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year-round and at The BuIletin.

e1 7.2 e11.6 +1.7 +7.8 -1.1 +11.2 +8.4 +I 5.6 +I 6.9 +2.3 +9.3 +0.9 +I 5.4 +I 3.0

The Bulletin:

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Cree Inc CrestwdEq .55 Crwncstle 3.28 Ctrip.corn C y Semi . 4 4

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.16 + . 4 MarvellT If .24 Eros Intl 614.65 11.77 -30.8 iShSilver ... 1 5.12 9.56 +.21 ExactSci h 7.92 -.07 -71.1 iShchinaLC .76e 40.37 +.61 -3.0 Masco .38 27.57 +1.15 ExcoRes 1.34 +.09 -38.2 iSCorSP5004.38e 208.66 + 4.33 + . 9 Mastercrd .64 u99.79 v2.15 Exelixis 5.79 01 +302.1 iShEMkts .84e 3 6.29 +.04 -7.6 M attel 1.5 2 24.74 v.85 E xelon 1 . 2 4 29.86 -.60 -19.5 iShiBoxlG 4.01 117.16 +.17 -1.9 Maximlntg 1.20f u37.95 -1.79 Expedia . 9 6f u125.41 1.97 (.46.9 iSh20 yrT 3.08 123.20 -.73 -2.2 McDrmlnt 5.53 +.15 ExpScripts 85.11 1.11 +.5 iSh7-IoyTB 1.97 107.48 -.55 +1.4 McDnlds 3.40 u112.59 +7.77 -1 0.2 iSh1-3yTB .48 8 4 .97 .03 + . 6 ExxonMbl 2.92 82.98 +.50 McKesson 1.12f 186.96 -8.25

22.99 +.04 11.87 +.10 19.70 +.10 For the weekending IntlSCol 17.93 e.12 Friday, October 23, 2D1 5 IntlValul 17.26 +.11 33.36 +.28 WK %RETURN RelEstScl NAV CHG 1YR 3YR TAUSCrE21 14.08 +.19 FUND USCorEq11 17.87 e.27 AMG USCorEq21 17.25 (-.22 YacktmanSvc d 24.22 +.41 +2.9 +11.8 USLgco 16.39 (-.34 AQR USLgVall 33.34 (-.32 M aFtStrl 10. 9 1 +.02 +15.0 +9.2 USSmVall 33.46 +.11 AmericanBeacon USSmalll 30.90 +.20 L gcpVlls 2 8 . 46+.44 +3.0 +I 4.4 USTgtVallnst 21.66 +.12

AmericanFunds

(-42.3

MutualFunds

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

HOA

Borrowing

Continued from E1

Continued from E1

Elected v olunteer b o ard

" For p e rspective, w e

members usuall y are responsible for association finances and enforcing the rules. The boards require dues to operate and maintain common areas,

need to break consumer credit into multiple parts,"

such as clubhouses and side-

in suburban M i lwaukee.

walks and, in some places, services such as snow removal and garbage pickup. They can levy fines and place liens on properties when homeowners

don't look very sustainable.

said Jacobsen,chief port-

folio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management "Autos and student loans are at record highs and

Courtesy Fotolia via Tribune News Service

More than 66 million Americans live in planned communities of

has exploded, climbing from

nois have the largest number

of associations. Ombudsmen say they' re making a difference by preventing conflicts from escalating into legal battles. But CAI, the trade group, questions whether ombudsman offices are necessary.

Mediating disputes Most ombudsman offices

are funded by homeowner associationfees;a few are sup-

ported by taxpayers. That's the case in Delaware, where the ombudsman is paid

for out of the attorney general's budget. Delaware legislators cre-

ated the office because they were seeing more homeowner complaints and the courts

were becoming clogged with

them, said Rep. Melanic

Mark Hoffman/ Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

card debt has increased in Tom Letizia owns Diamond Jim's Auto Sales in Greenfield, Wisthe course of this econom- consin. Letizia says shoppers are nowlooking at cars a step above ic recovery. That can show of what they were previously interested as consumer lending has consumer confidence and eased. support spending going

ber of associations in the U.S.

da, California, Texas and Illi-

constituents would call her of- hend the rules or why they' re fice and she would have to tell required to pay an annual asthem that their only recourse sessment. Some object to how was the legal system. a board spends their money or "They don't have the time say it failed to follow the byand money," she said. "There laws, such as having a quorum had to be someone who could for annual meetings. pick up the phone and talk to Occasionally, it's the board them, who could also mediate who complains to Curtin, such disputes between board mem- as when a homeowner has bers and homeowners." a disabled car parked on the That's exactly what Deputy street or is illegally operating Attorney General Christopher a business out back without a Curtin, the state's ombuds- permit. man, said he does. S ometimes it's n o t t h a t In Delaware, homeowners simple. with a complaint must first go This summer, for example, through an internal dispute a homeowner association in resolution process within their Sussex County threatened a association. If they' re not sat- resident with a lien because isfied with the result, they can his grass hadn't been cut, file a complaint with Curtin's although he had owned the office. He can investigate and property for only a week and make recommendations, refer hadn't moved in, Curtin said. it to another agency such as The same board had issued the insurance department, or fines and pre-lien notices to offer mediation or arbitration. residentsfornotproperly covHe also can issue subpoenas if ering their garbage cans, even there are allegations of fraud, though board members were theft or other violations of also violating those rules. Cur-

forward."

Jacobsen said credit card

institutions are seeing a rise

in home equity lines of credit, do anything with — n ow we' re seeing an uptick in line too.

adversely affect the auto industry, but the m agni-

quarter this year, funding of home equity lines of credit

we put on the books, but also

tude ofrate increase we're looking at in the next year is meager," he said. Jacobsen said student loan debt is very high, which can leave graduates who have big loans less qualified for car loans and home loans. "Instead of graduating

was up 31 percent at Associat-

lines that have been around.

ed Bank, Halechko said. "People who have lines

People are saying, 'You know what, money is not going to

with us — lines of credit that

get cheaper, so let's take ad-

they might have had for two

vantage of that.'"

From the first t o

car or getting a down payment, some of those life

Outgrown your current space~

stages will have to be post-

poned. I don't think those dreams of a new car or home will have to be aban-

Finding the right place for your business is not easy. Whether you are leasing or buying, let me put my knowledge and experience to work for you. Creative solutions and proactive representation are my specialty.

doned, just delayed," he sard. Still, Jacobsen said, "The

spending we have looks much more sustainable than the spending splurge of 2004 to 2007." Both Halechko and Ma-

gulski said their financial

p

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residents.

Smith, a lawyer, said she used to grow frustrated when

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Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS COMPANY

T ICKER

KLA-Tencor Corp KLAC eBay Inc E BAY Texas Instru T XN S anoisk Corporation SND K Swst Airlines LUV Microsoft Corp MS FT Dover Corp D OV Sprint Corp s Lam ResearchCorp L RCX Capital OneFncl C OF General Motors Co GM Keurig Green Mountn GMCR U td Technologies UTX M ead Johnson Nutrit MJ N CelaneseCorp CE

FRIDAY C LOS E

$CHG %CHG %CHG AW K 1W K 1MO

65.35 28. 1 6 58.98 78. 3 7 45.23 52. 8 7 64. 44 4.71 74. 5 7 81.12 35.95 55. 0 1 100. 6 2 81.12 69.41

12. 3 8 3.61 6.41 8.40 4.67 5.36 5.83 0.4 2 6.29 6.45 2.80 4.21 7.62 6.02 5.0 7

23 . 4 14.7 12.2 12.0 11.5 11.3 9 .9 9 .8 9 .2 8 .6 8.4 8.3 8 .2 8 .0 79

34.4 11.2 25.0 54.1 18.7 20.3 11.0 9.5 18.2 9.5 22.2 -0.9 15.3 13.4 15.3

% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y

TICKER

18.7 Energy Recovery 30.7 Weight Watchers 27.5 Bioscrip Inc -9.6 Higher OneHldgs 29.7 Flexsteel Inds 11.0 Seabridge Gold -13.9 Heritage-Crystal Cln 0.0 Bio-Path Holdings 2.4 Digirad Corp -1.9 Gigamon Inc 17.3 Gigoptics Inc -62.0 Northwest Biothera 1.1 PAM Transp -19.1 Quality systems 21.7 Bsquare Corporation

ERII

FRIDAY C L OS E

INDEX

$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR

7.39

4.93

200.4

2 31 . 4

76.8

WTW

15.75

8.96

132.0

1 45 . 3

-41.9

BIOS

2.31

0.63

375

1.5

-66.0

ONE

2.76

0.69

33.3

38. 0

15.4

FLXS

43.68

9.98

29.6

44.2

28.8

8.91

2.02

29.3

50.5

12.49

2.58

26.0

15.9

SA HCCI BPTH

1.57

0.32

25.6

52.4

DRAD

5.81

1.17

25.2

52.5

GIMO

27.23

5.22

23.7

23.7

GIG

2.43

0.46

23.4

33.5

NWBO

5.14

0.95

22.7

-23.2

PTSI

43.21

7.79

22.0

23.1

Qsll

15.05

2.63

21.2

1 8.4

BSQR

10.24

1.77

20.9

46.3

10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

V RX

116 . 1 6

-61.40

-34.6

-41.8

SRCL

1 2 0 .31 -29.17

-19.5

-14.1

E NDP

56. 6 0

-12.42

-18.0

-17.8

H OG

48.2 0

-7.21

-13.0

-10.5

W DC

69.3 4

-10.18

-12.8

-1.6

V FC

63.7 5

-9.18

-12.6

-9.0

A BBV

50. 3 4

-6.19

-10.9

-9.7

CMG

649 . 72

-72.98

-10.1

-11.0

UHS

115 . 95

-12.52

-9.7

-10.8

-15.58

-9.4

-6.4

PRGO 1 5 0.57

Globalmarkets

15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Valeant Pharma Stericycle Inc Endo Intl pic Harley Davidson Wstn Digital VF Corp Abbvie Inc Chipotle Mex Grill Universal Hlth Svc Perrigo Co pic

s econd utilization as well," Halechko said. "So it's not just new lines

and then getting the new

deliberately refused to accept

or three years that they didn' t

debt isn't very interest-rate sensitive, but auto debt is.

"A rise in rates could

George Smith, who sponsored the measure. In one bitter, decadelong state law. tin said it was a pattern of mislegal battle, a Delaware judge Curtin says he gets calls or interpretation and misappliruled that the president of a emails daily, and that home- cation of the bylaws. Several homeowner association had owners often don't compre- members ended up resigning. a couple's annual assessment check year after year, maligning them and calling them "deadbeats" in letters to other

y

If

tive.It'sthe firsttime credit

and pets. single-family homes, or in condominiums orco-ops, according to Over the decades, the num- the Community Associations Institute. 10,000 in 1970 to 333,600 in 2014, according to CAI. Flori-

I i

Revolving credit, like for credit cards, are just beginning to move higher. I actually view the increase in revolving credit as posi-

haven't paid their fees. And

they can regulate the exterior appearance of a home, and enforce rules that affect parking

E5

-14.7 Ocular Therapeutix 21.6 Eros Intl pic -18.6 Enanta Pharma -20.4 Genocea Bioscience -19.5 Westmoreland Coal 11.7 Neos Therapeutics -11.6 Repros Therapeutics 6.8 Strongbridge Biophm 6.5 Apollo Education Grp -1.4 PTC Therapeutics Inc

OCUL EROS

7.18

-9.12

-56.0

-53.5

14.65

-11.77

-44.5

-46.6

ENTA

24.01

-16.30

-40.4

-33.3

GNCA

4.47

-2.76

-38.2

-48.7

s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225

LAST 2075.15 10794.54 6444.08 23151.94 4923.64

FRL CHG +22.64 +302.57 +67.80 +306.57 +121.46 18825.30 +389.43

SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA

2.6 B uenos Aires Merval 1 1 329.28 +197.21 + 1 .77% X -28.6 MexicoCityBolsa 45010.24 +382.27 +0.86% Sao paolo Bovespa 4 7 596.59 -175.55 -0.37% T -38.2 Toronto S&P/TSX 139 53.66 + 75.55 + 0 .54%L 39.3 /AFRICA 97.7 EUROPE 112.1 Amsterdam 1.7 Brussels Madrid -0.6 Zurich -2.4 Milan 146.7 Johannesburg Stockholm 10.6

465.05 +7.08 3521.52 +59.22 'f 057.55 +11.55 8910.52 +121.60 22736.86 +119.96 54298.42 +1 004.44 1506.59 +22.12

+t 55'/ L +t 71'/ L +1.10% L +1.38% +0.53% +1.88% +1.49%

X

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+ 32.0 6 %

T

+4.32% -4.82% -4.64%

+s 56'/ +7 19'/ +1.45% -0.81%

L

t.19.59%

+9.10% +2.87%

ASIA

8.58

-4.47

-34.3

-37.9

NEOS

12.35

-6.19

-33.4

-35.7

Seoul Composite 2040.40 +1 7.40 Singapore Straits Times 3068.46 +30.35 -45.5 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 3 88.13 +88.53 -48.7 Taipei Taiex 8673.81 +65.35 -63.8 Shanghai Composite 3 4 12.43 +43.69 0.0

RPRX

5.19

-2.36

-31.3

-37.1

-13.2

SBBP

7.01

-3.04

-30.2

-30.2

0.0

APOL

7.42

-2.92

-28.2

-34.5

-72.2

PTCT

25.60

-9.65

-zz4

-1 2.6

-32.4

WLB

FRL CHG WK MO QTR YTD +1.10% L L +0.79% +2.88% L L +1Q 09'/ -1.86% +1.06% 1 34% 1 92% t15.23% +2.53% T +2.11% +7.88%

0.0

+0.86%

+6.52% -8.82%

+1.00% +1.67% +0.76% +1.30%

0 010/

-6.81% +5 50%

Quotable "It will be a huge money loser." — Bob Lutz,a retired General Motors vice chairman, on Silicon Valley companies' venture into making cars

Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).

Insider/&A

Volatility creates opportunity

Serena Perin Vinton Portfolio manager, Franklin Growth Fund

What's your timeline for investments? Our turnover rate equates to a 10- or 20-year holding period. We' re looking for businesses that we believe can grow faster than their peers and faster than the overall market at a sustainable pace.

management team is doing a great Iob of reducing costs and expanding into Mexico. They have markets that are growing, such as chemicals, autos and industrials. We believe that they are going to be able to grow their earnings at mid-to-low double digits. Are there companies that look like Our goal is to find stocks valued at long-term values? levels that provide downside protection. We' re six years into a bull market. And You can understand why people are we' re in uncharted waters when it comes nervous. There are worries about global What should we expect from the stock growth, China slowing down, U.S. to monetary policy. market nearing the end of the year? monetary policy and commodity prices that Texas Instruments sold off recently It's so hard to predict the future. What we have collapsed. But those concerns create because of concerns about the personal focus on are the fundamentals of companies opportunities. There are companies that computer and wireless markets. But and how they will react in a volatile have really good assets that have been hit they' re also focused on industrials and environment. The additional volatility has because of lower energy prices. autos. They have done everything right in been great for us. It allows us to invest in Consider Union Pacific. It's a railroad terms of managing their capital. They have businesses at valuation levels that are company.They've gotsome headwinds bought back 35 percent of their stock in interesting. because of coal, shale, agriculture. But the the last 10 years. They' ve done a The stock market has gotten choppy. Share prices have swung sharply, leading investors to worry about day-to-day ups and downs. But the volatility has created opportunities to make long-term investments, says Serena Perin Vinton, porffolio manager of the Franklin Growth Fund, which manages $11.6 billion. Shares of companies with strong potential for growth have fallen to levels that create buying opportunities.

phenomenal lob of returning cash to shareholders. Any other companies with strong growth potential? The sensor and connectivity companies TE Connectivity and Sensata Technologies. Investors became concerned about China and the automotive market rolling over, yet the underlying trends suggest that cars increasingly need sensors. Everything connected in your carwhether it's the dashboard, the seat, the airbag, the pressure in your tiresrequires sensors and connectors. Think about self-driving cars. How many sensors are you going to need in one of those? Interviewed by Joshua Boak. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, October 23, 2015

17,646 70

+

+430'73

NASDaa ~ 14 5 17 5,031.86

S&P 500

+

2,075.15

42 ll4

RussELL2000 ~ tJ66.O5 ~

+3. 75

WILSHIRE5000

21,614.06 +

~333 66


E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

UNDAY D

R

ew a e

m ore sure- oo eNot all replacement

bulbs are the same

By Terry Box The Dallas Morning News

Sideways might be the right way to conquer life's mean

By Brad Bergholdt

curves.

Tribune News Service

Q

Call me a low-plains drifter, but I find slithering tail-out

over the brass-colored ones for best performance and fewer

The dashboard light

• on my 1 9 98 B MW 528i indicated I had a light

through the corners of an empty road to be highly therapeutic — kind of like dancing with the devil on the way to work. But my brief moments of raggedy fun in the sun may soon be ending — thanks, as always, to technology and this silly no-

A» '

the dashboard 'light out' indicator remains. What can I

do to resolve this issue?

tion that we need

A • lights are controlled by a light control module, Your BMW's exterior

REVIEW t o b e protected i!rrl'r' " ;i/ii ' if, f;,'ltrr: r from ourselves. I offer the Jaguar F-Type R Courtesy Jaguar via Tribune News Service as Exhibit A: a slinky, snarl- The 2016 Jaguar F-Type is powered by s 5-liter V-8 engine snd is sll-wheel drive, a new trend among ing coupe that just a year ago luxury vehicles. promised lots of heart-stopping moments in curves and corners don't awaken gently, erupting if you got western with the loud The black interior in mine pedal. instead in a concerto of thick seemed a bit basic, but I thought Rear-wheel drive and 550 growls, snarls and pops. it fit the car's polished street heavily squeezed horsepower Base price:$103,600 All of that lyrical twist and fighter personality — sort of tend to act that way. shout is channeled through a high-end jeans and a $100 Astested: $131,895 Climb under the 2016 R, quick-shifting eight-speed auto- sweatshirt. Type:All-wheel-drive, though, and you will f i nd matic that then distributes it to The black leather-covered two-passenger sports fun-sapping differentials front all four wheels. dashboard curved gracefully coupe and rear as part of the F-Type's The system typically sends down onto a large center stack Engine: Supercharged new all-wheel-drive system. most of the power to the rear topped by a modest display 5-liter V-8 with 550 horseOnce thedomain of rockwheels but can quiddy appor- screen that didn't even rate as power and 502 pound-feet pocked Jeeps and mud-spattion more to the front wheels if much of a distraction. of torque tered pickups, all-wheel drive the rear starts to slip and slide. Although storage space and Mileage:15 mpgcity, is increasingly being fitted But the stiff-riding F-7ype elbow room were limited, the 23 mpg highway to high-end, high-horsepowstill corners flatly and confi- interior had some really nice er luxury vehides — everydently, able now to rely on im- touches. thing from Bentleys to Mermense all-wheel-drive grip. The dash, for example, was cedes-Benzes and Porsches. broad shoulders on top, and the Best of all, the Jag's two tons stitched on its edges, and the The silver F-7ype coupe I had F-7ype's unusual slim wrap- of mass don't weigh on the door panels were covered in recently still shimmered with around tail lamps terminated in steering, which remains light, subtle black suede. A flat-botthe ghostly genes of the fabu- a round main taillight — sort of very quick and nicely alive with tom three-spoke steering wheel lous E-7ype Jag, one of the most E-7ype meets F-7ype. sensations from the road. had a smooth leather cover, beautiful carseverconceived. As youcan imagine, acceler- while the black leather seats got Like the E-Type, the F-Type Getting started ation is stunning with 550 hors- suede centers. wears its long hood and powerAnd just in case you had any es and no wheel spin. Slam the To be honest, I'm still not sure ful curves really well. doubts about the R's virility, accelerator down and the Jag's about all-wheel drive. It adds Up front, a long, slinky hood four 3.5-inch exhaust pipes- dark snarl quickly becomes a density to the Jag's handling with a subtle power bulge in two on each corner — seemed howling, chest-mashing surge dynamics, making it more difits center slid gracefully down to spit gravel and fire with ev- of power that will shove you to ficult to tell what all four wheels onto a large, oval blacked-out ery blip of the throttle. 60 in a blazing 3.4 seconds, ac- are doing. I think I still prefer grille. As sweet as the F-Type R cording to Car and Driver. old-school rear-wheel drive, The overall impression, en- looks, the real pleasure arrives which feels lighter and more hanced by ataut carbon-fiber with a push of its starter button, Looking inside lively to me. top, was one of musde and stirring an energetic 5-liter V-8, Just don't expect a lavish inBut most reasonable people curves. The rear fenders, for supercharged to the hilt. terior to accompany the Jag's would have a quick retort to e xample, were fl ared w i t h The engine's 550 horses lofty price tag. slip-sliders like me: Get a grip.

2016Jaguar F-Type R coupe

• s

which also checks each

really expensive! I can't afford

the $1,000 the dealer quoted right now and can't believe this could be so expensive. Is there

another way to do this? Your Leaf's charge cou-

A

• pier is a Society of Auto-

lamp circuit cold (when not motive Engineers J-1772 stanin use) and hot (in use) for dardized component,which expected performance. The

is compatible with almost all

module is fussy about the EVs. With diligence, the coucorrect bulbs being used. pler can be found, purchased Substitutes can be similar,

and installed rather than re-

but not dose enough, causing a false alert for a failed lamp. I'm thinking you may have the base model instru-

placing the entire charging unit! A replacement coupler

no operation, or the bulb

best choice. However, cutting

can be purchased with cord or

without (search: replacement J1772 EVSE coupler, connector, ment cluster, which isn' t or plug). Since the damage is very specific about which confined to the coupler end of lamp might be at fault. In the cord and the EVSE may be many cases the high mount glued together or otherwise difbrake lamp bulb melts its ficult to disassemble, the $90connector, causing poor or $100 bare coupler is likely the simply burns out, and the off the cord and grafting the instrument duster display illustrates the fault as an

cord end to the coupler is not a DIY job. I renewed one of these

R-side lamp error. The high mount brake lamp is fairly easy toaccess from inside the trunk, and a replace-

awhileback and found thecoupler to be tricky to assemble. A

specialized terminal crimper is needed, and there can be some ment socket, if needed, can confusion regarding the corbe readily purchased for rect hookup of the proximity about $15. It plugs right into circuit within the connector. the wiring! The coupler contains five If the high mount light circuits/terminals: three large is OK, be sure to check all ones for the 120V or 240V powrear lamps, comparing side er and two smaller communito side, for identical bright- cation circuits. I'd search for an auto-electric ness. A bulb that isn't as bright, possibly due to a sub- repair shop that's into fixing stitute bulb or poor socket things as opposed to replacing or circuit connection, could them. If the person you speak trigger the warning display. w ith isn't familiar with t h e Seasoned BMW owners terms control pilot or J1772, prefer thesilver-based bulbs keep looking.

I

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Somehow the charger • handle was broken off discovered it was a license my Leaf and now I can't charge plate light. I replaced the it at home unless I replace the bulb in the module, it lit but entire charging device, which is out on the right rear and

a

false alarms.

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/opinion

SUNDAY READER NICHOLAS

KRISTOF

a." ..:; '

sa

The miracle elixir that is breast milk

i t

L

U CKNOW, India — W hat i f there werea remedy that could save more children's lives in the

• ==

developing world than are claimed by malaria and AIDS combined?

A miracle substance that reduces ear infections while seeming to raise

I.'::- ~ n

'

.nk

.T""

scores on IQ tests by several points'? Available even in the most remote

villages, requiring no electricity or refrigeration? Oh, and as long as we' re dreaming, let's make it free. This miracle substance already exists. It's breast milk.

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Current estimates backed by the W orld H ealth O r ganization a n d UNICEF are that optimal breast-feed-

ing would save 800,000 children' s lives a year in developing countries. That would amount to a 12 percent

drop in child mortality, a huge gain. I'm on my annual win-a-trip journey, in which I take a student with

me to the developing world to look at neglected issues. The student, Austin Meyer of Stanford University, and I

have been reporting in India, where 1.2 million children under the age of 5

Jadareous Davis graduated from Ruleville Central High School in Ruleville, Mississippi, on May 23 and then began his quest to find a job. After having a run

die annually — and where nutrition-

of bad luck in Mississippi, he moved toNashville, Tennessee, and started classes as part of a training program at Lincoln College of Technology to becomea

ists say that improved breast-feeding practices could save many. Exclusive breast-feeding for six months, as strongly recommended

certified diesel mechanic.

by the World Health Organization, is

practiced by just 46 percent of women in India, 17 percent in Nigeria, and 10 percent in Yemen, according to the

Michael S. Williamson /The Washington Post

n e e e o u , ea u i na

latest Global Nutrition Report. gn the U.S., the figure is about 22 percent, according to the Centers for Disease

Control and Prevention.) Let me get this out of the way: It' s awkward for men to hail breast-feed-

ing, and it risks sounding patronizing becausewe'renotthe ones doing the work. And this: Sometimes promo-

tion of breast-feeding carries an unfortunate edge of reproach for wom-

• The DeepSouth's 'paralyzing intergenerational poverty' has its roots in the region's history, andfamilies arestruggling to break free

en who can't breast-feed or choose

not to, and that's counterproductive. In any case, where this is a life-ordeath issue is in developing countries, where water is often contaminated and child mortality is high. Infants who ar e no t

By Chico Harlan •The Washington Post

b r east-fed

are 14 times more likely to die than those who are exclusively breast-fed,

according to a major metastudy just published by Acta Paediatrica, a pediatrics journaL Here in northern India, Austin and I met a mother, Maher Bano, whose daughter had been born at home just

hours earlier. The baby was underweight and in danger of dying. The best medicine in this context is breast

milk: Studies from India, Nepal and Ghana show that prompt breast-feeding reduces neonatal mortality by 44 percent. But Maher Bano said that for the first 24 hours, the baby would be given only tea with honey. "I' ll breast-feed the baby tomorrow, or the next day," she said, explaining that she was following the guidance of the traditional birth attendant who

had helped her deliver the baby and

DREW, Miss.— The day of his high school graduation, like so many of the days before, began with chaos. Ruleville Central had pledged to lock its front doors an hour before the ceremony

birth, as recommended by the World

Health Organization. One reason for delays is suspicion of colostrum, the f i rst, yellowish

milk, which doesn't look quite like milk but is packed with nutrients and antibodies; it's sometimes called the "first immunization."

Another big challenge: In hot countries, villagers also often give infants water on hot days, or start them on food before six months. Water both

displaces milk and also is often contaminated. (Breast milk, in contrast, is safe even when the mom drinks

contaminated water.) While the clearest benefits of breast-feeding have to do with saving lives, there is also some evidence of other health and cognitive gains. In

Davis scanned through his mental checklist. Shoes? His older brother hadn't yet swung by to drop off a pair. Bow tie? Maybe he could borrow one from a neighbor. Pants? Davis wasn't even sure whether the dress code mandated black or brown, and he called a friend for help.

MALE LIFE EXPECTANCY • 63.9 years to 72.4 years

"Hey, what color pants we supposed to be wearing?" he said over the phone. His grandmother's voice blared from

amples of something better. His street

in Drew consisted of a rusting cotton gin and a row of boarded-up storefr the other room. fronts. His neighborhood had a thriv"Quarter after nine!" she said. ing drug trade that took place near an r sa "C'mon, fellas! I don't want to be locked abandoned building with "For Colored" out." painted atop a doorway. His county had Davis, 19, was about to graduate from a poverty rate nearly three times the na"%%hi. 595 one of the poorest-performing schools tional average, at 36 percent. His state in a region of America that offers the had the lowest median income in the bleakest landscape for the young, and nation and the second-highest incarcerthe moment came with equal parts ation rates. He could drive for two hours excitement and dread: As he entered in any direction without finding a local adulthood, there was no telling when or jobless rate resembling anything near how all the combustible parts of his life the national average. HOUSEHOLDSWITHOUT BANK ACCOUNTS might now blow up. The Deep South's paralyzing inter• 12 to 37 percent of households Davis's senior year had doubled as generational poverty is the devastating sum of problems both historical and

emergent — ones that, in the life of a young man,can buildin childhood and

ly assigned to exclusive breast-feeding promotion scored six points higher on IQ tests than controls.

support; he'd fought with his mother

only to find themselves, as graduates, searching for low-paying jobs in states

This annual win-a-trip journey is a chance to highlight elegant solutions

so furiously several years back, his

that have been reluctant to fund pro-

solution now was to simply not see her.

to global problems. Sometimes the

He also was graduating with a debt$1,200, the fine for driving his aunt's car without insurance and then skipping a

grams that help the poor. That cycle carries implications not only for the

— Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.

• 40 or more percent of children

away.

a reminder about all the hazards. He

solutions are dazzlingly high-tech, but almost nothing could save as many children's lives each year as nature's own mirade: breast milk.

CHILDRENLIVING WITH ONE PARENT

at his grandmother's home 6 miles up the road, time slipping

barely had a stable place to live and had moved months earlier to the far edge of town, taking over a dim unit paid for by his aunt after he grew sick of sleeping on a love seat at his grandmother's cramped place. Davis had little family

Belarus, children of women random-

Five states in the South are muchworse off than the majority of the country. Here's how theworst 20 percent of counties fare.

to prevent a crowd overflow, and Jadareous Davis was still

cut the cord. This is common: World-

wide, only 43 percent of babies are put to the breast within an hour of

What wentwrongwith theDeepSouth?

court date.

Toughest of all, graduation meant stepping into a place providing few ex-

then erupt in early adulthood. Students

nation.

See Poverty /F5

r

s

S

s s

home and dysfunction at school-

current generation, but also for the ones

s

g ~~.,ya-„„ P

such as Davis deal with traumas at

to come, and holds back a region that has fallen further behind the rest of the

s

~•I hler

s s(

;

,

" .

Sources: Institute for Health 1 Metrics and Evaluation, ~eg University of Washington U.S. Census Bureau, Corporation for Enterprise Development •

Washington Post


F2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

EDjTO

The Bulletin

s

r u in i e

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fore the group loses again. Forthosewhohavenotbeenkeep- appealtoOregon'shighestcourtraising track, Truth in Site's logic failed es awhopper of an objection. It wants with city staff. OSU-Cascades tobe requimitopresent full-fledged plans for those sites it It failed with ahip+QQ@officer does not own and may never own. If that logic becomes the standard Council. in Oregon land use law, government It failed with the Land Use Board officiaiswouidhave to make hndus of Appeals. decisions based on guesses ofdevelIt failed with the Oregon Court of oper intent. P ahnistry, soothsaying, a n d That's fail, fail, fail, fail and faiL thmwingbones could be the hot new OSU-Cascades is building a new campusonaI0-acresiteoff( handier there would be a state oracle to diAvenue in Bend. It has seriously con- vine the signs and Portents. Truth in sideredfuhm expansion in anearby Site, aka full employment for fortune 46-acre pumice pit and a nearby 76 t ellers. acredumP. The university does not Truth in Site professes its objec own those sites and may never own tives are to be an advocate for truth them. They both present weighty about the campus and parlidpate challenges. in the process. But its defining charTrulh in Site has raised some le- acteristics have come to be a lucragitimate concerns about the campus, tive indulgence for attorneys and a induding traffic and parking. But its scteechy, irrelevant wail.

National rules needed for livestock antibiotics

T

here's more than enough ev-

idence that the overuse of antibiotics in this country has contributed to the creation of superbugs. M e t hicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus is just one. The bacterium sickened at least 86 children under the age of 10 in Alabama this spring. It's also true that the bulk of antibiotics sold in this country are sold for use in the livestock industry, making cattle, pigs and chickens

But a state-by-state ban on antibiotic use ts not the way

to go. Oregon farmers and ranchers ship their animals for sale out of state, just as meat grown outside Oregon is commonly sold within this state.

living breeding grounds of drug-re- may not be perfect and those hoping sistant bacteria. Yet that doesn't mean Oregon should follow California's lead and ban the use of the drugs in livestock grown in this state. A measure doing just that failed to gain traction in the Legislature earlier this year. The push is on to bring it up again in 2017, and it should suffer the same fate. As state Sen. Ti m K n opp, R-Bend,notes,a farbetterapproach is to keep pressure on the Food and Drug Administration, which has proposed guidelines limiting antibiotic use for weight gain in feed animals. They are due to go into effect at the end of 2016. The agency already has ruled out the use of over-the-counter (for animals only) use of antibiotics for anything other than weight gain, requiring instead that they be prescribed by a veterinarian. The new guidelines and rules

to tighten them further should work to that end. They' re likely to find an ally in Congresswoman Louise Slaughter, a New York Democrat and microbiologist. But a state-by-state ban on antibiotic use is not the way to go. Oregon farmers and ranchers ship their animals for sale out of state, just as meat grown outside Oregon is commonly sold within this state. Would a ban mean pork from Utah could not be sold at the Bend Haggen stores'? Would differences in Oregon and California bans end the sales of Oregon beef south of the border? Again, the use of antibiotics in livestock is far too common. But some use, even preventative use in some circumstances, makes sense, just as nationwide rules governing that use also makes sense. Working to help the FDA get its rules right will have far greater impact than a mere Oregon ban ever could.

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a zis

By Noah Feldman

Van Gogh case followed its deci- state, the court can't revisit its validity.

Bloomberg View

sion in a 2012 case involving anoth-

And what about Nazi art? Here

er painting originally owned by the things get messy. In 1947, in a decision Cafe" will stay at the Yale Uni- same distinguished Russian collector, by the great Judge Learned Hand, versity Art Gallery, the U.S. Ivan Morozov — the portrait of Ma- was sometimes known as the "10th Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit dame Cezanne in her conservatory Justice," the 2nd Circuit applied the ruled, even though the Bolsheviks held by the Metropolitan Museum of act of state doctrine and held that it stole it from a private collector in 1918. Art. couldn't consider the claims of Arnold The court said it has no authority to Both paintings were seized by Bernstein to the shipping line that he consider the validity of a foreign gov- the Bolsheviks in a decree of Dec. owned andthathad been confiscated ernment's act confiscating private 19, 1918, that targeted Morozov and by the Nazis. Hand reasoned that, alproperty. two other private collectors. In 1933, though the U.S. had declared the Nazi So how come confiscated Nazi the paintin@ were sold by the Sovi- regime illegitimate, any reparations art can end up returned to its right- ets under Stalin to Stephen Carlton claims would have to be worked out ful heirs, while Soviet-confiscated Clark, an American collector who in negotiations that were then ongoart can'tP The legal answer turns out was also the founder of the Baseball ingbetween theexecutivebranch and to be surprisingly convoluted. In es- Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New the German government. He didn' t sence, it's this: The Nazis are diff'erent. York. Clark donated them in his will, want the courts to interfere in those A whole bag of legal tricks has one to Yalewherehe'dgonetocollege reparations talks. been used to dodge the doctrine that and the other to the Met where he had In 1949, in an extraordinary and would otherwise bar courts from con- served on the board. unusual act, the State Department sidering the ownership of stolen Nazi Morozov's great-grandson, Pierre released a letter it sent to Bernstein's

V

incent van Gogh's "The Night

art. And the executive branch, from the 1950s until the present, has used

Konowaloff, sued both institutions

daiming ownership. The courts

attorneys, which said that it was "the policy of the Executive ... to relieve

its influence on behalf of the heirs to confiscated Nazi property, while making no comparable effort on behalf of those whose works were expropriated by the Communists. The resulting landscape makes almost no sense. It's not as though the

barred his suit under the doctrine known as the "act of state." This

American courts from any restraint upon the exercise of their jurisdiction

judge-made doctrine, formulated most dearly by the U.S. Supreme Court in a 1964 case called Banco Nacional de Cuba v. Sabbatino, holds

to pass upon the validity of the acts

that courts 'will not examine the va-

Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin was so much more humane than

lidity of a taking of property within its own territory by a foreign sovereign

suit to go forward. The upshot is that in this, as in so

Germany under Hitler. The Commu- government,extant and recognized nists were responsible for roughly as by this country at the time of suit," unmany deaths as the Nazis — maybe less a treaty says otherwise. more, depending on how you count. Because the Supreme Court has Either the courts should return gov-

the last word on what courts can

of Nazi officials." Responding to that statement, the 2nd Circuit reversed itself and in 1954 allowed Bernstein's many other things, the Nazis are treat-

ed as different, without a fully satisfying answer why. In this case, at least, the difference isn't justified by law but

by complicated judicial politics. Don' t expect any movies about Communist

ernment-stolen property, or they shouldn' t: The rules shouldn't vary

and can't do, the act of state doctrine confiscated art anytime soon. is law. And you can see why the 2nd — Noah Feldman is a columnist for based on details that are hard to fol- Circuit applied it to the paintings takBloomberg and a professor low even for lawyers. en by the Bolsheviks. So long as the of constitutional and international law The 2nd Circuit's decision in the confiscation was an act of the Soviet at Harvard.

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Without a unifying leader, dysfunction prevails s every schoolchild knows, the gravitational pull of the sun

Cold War world has received blow

elps hold the planets in their

orbits. Gravity from the center lends coherence to the whole solar system.

DAVID

BROOKS

I mention this because that's how

our political and social systems used to work but, no longer do. In each sphere global and domestic. of life there used to be a few big suns

In the 1990s, the central political

radiating conviction and meaning. institutions radiated confidence, deThe other bodies in orbit were defined rived from an assumed vision of the by their resistance or attraction to that post-Cold War world. History would pull. be a slow march toward democratic But now many of the big suns in our capitalism. Nations would be bound world today lack conviction, while the in peaceful associations like the Eurodistant factions at the margins of so- pean Union. The United States would ciety are full of passionate intensity. oversee a basic international order. Now the gravitational pull is coming This vision was materialistic and from the edges, in sphere after sphere. individualistic. Nations should pursue Each central establishment, weakened

economic growth and a decent distri-

by its own hollowness of meaning, is being ripped apart by the gravitational pull from the fringes. The same phenomenon can be seen in many areas, but it's easiest to

bution of wealth. If you give individuals access to education and opportunity, they will pursue affluence and personal happiness. They will grow more temperateand "reasonable."

illustrate in the sphere of politics, both

Since 2000, this vision of the post-

tic belligerence. Iran is still committed

United States is no longer willing to

to its radical eschatology. Russia is led occupy the commanding heights and self-inflicted. Democracy, especially in by a cold-eyed thug with a semi-theo- oversee global order. In region after rethe United States, has grown dysfunc- logical vision of his nation's destiny. gion, those who are weak in strength tional. Mass stupidity and greed led to The establishments of the West but stmng in conviction are able to a financial collapse and deprived capi- havenotresponded to these challeng- have their way. Vladimir Putin in talism of its moral swagger. es by doubling down on their vision, by Crimea, Ukraine and the Middle East. But the deeper problem was spiri- countering fanaticism with gusto. On Bashar Assad crosses red lines in Syrtual. Many people around the world the contrary, they' ve lost faith in their ia. The Islamic State spreads in Syria rejected democratic capitalism's vision own capacities of understanding and and Iraq. Iranian proxy armies roam of a secular life built around materi- action. Sensing a loss of confidence in the region. alism and individual happiness. They the center, strong-willed people on the I only have space to add here that sought more intense forms of mean- edges step forward to take control. the primary problem is mental and ing. Some of them sought meaning in This happens in loud ways in the do- spiritual. Some leader has to be able to the fanaticisms of sect, tribe, nation, mestic sphere. The uncertain Repub- digest the lessons of the last 15 years or some stronger and more brutal ide- lican establishment cannot govern its and offer a revised charismatic and ology.In case aftercase,"reasonable- own marginal members, while those persuasive sense of America's historic ness"has been trampled by behavior on the edge burn with conviction. Jeb mission. This mission, both nationalist and creedthat is stronger,darker and Bush looks wan but Donald Trump ra- and universal, would be less individless temperate. diates confidence. ualistic than the gospel of the 1990s, A group of well-educated men blew The Democratic establishment no and more realistic about depravity up the World Trade Center. Fanatics longer determines party positions; it and the way barbarism can spread.It flock to the Middle East to behead is pulled along by formerly marginal would offer a goal more profound than strangers and apostate material comfort. s. China's players like Bernie Sanders. growing affluence hasn't led to sweetBut the big loss of central confi— David Brooks is a columnist ening, but in many areas to nationalis- dence is in global governance. The for The New York Times. after blow. Some of these blows were


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

an a i ornia's sou e save ? rime is back up in California. Los Angeles reported a 20.6 percent increase in violent

C

crimes over the first half of 2015 and

nearly an 11 percent increase in property crimes.

the polls. But what turned a once bipartisan

VICTOR

and purple state bright blue' ? A perfect storm of events. Higher taxes and increased regulations have driven out lots of small-business owners. In the last

DAVIS MAN SON

Last year,cash-strapped Califor-

nia taxpayers voted for Proposition 47, which so far has let thousands of convicted criminals go free from prison and back onto the streets. Now the state may have to relearn what lawbreakers often do when let out of jail

early. The state may be entering the fifth year of a catastrophic drought, but

California has not started building any of the new reservoirs that were plannedbut long ago canceled under the unfinished California Water Project. Water may remain scarce,

but legislators — many of whom have their daily water needs met by the ancient reservoirs and canals that

their grandparents built — don't seem overly bothered. They prefer to designate transgender restrooms, ban

plastic bags at grocery stores, and prohibit pet dogs from chasing bears and bobcats.

Never has a region been so naturally rich but so poorly run by its latest generation of custodians.

California endures some of the highest gasoline taxes, sales taxes and income taxes in the nation. Yet its

roads and public schools rate near the very bottom of U.S. rankings. Traffic accidents in California in-

creased by 13 percent over a threeyear period — the result of terrible

roadsand worse drivers.Almost half few years, hundreds of thousands of of all accidents in Los Angeles are hit- disgruntled middle-of-the-road voters and-runs where the drivers leave the voted with their feet and left for noscene. tax Nevada, Texas or Florida. California has lots of petroleum The state devolved into a pyramid and natural gas. It used to be a pace- of the coastal wealthy and interior setter in building nudear and hydro- poor — the dual constituencies of the electric plants. Yet because of inept new progressive movement. governance, the state's electricity and A third of America's welfare recipgasoline prices are among the highest ients reside in California. Nearly a in the nation. quarter of Californians live below the Why is California choosing the poverty line. path of Detroit — growing governYet nowhere in America are there ment that it cannot pay for, shorting more billionaires. California's long, the middle classes, hiking taxes but thin coastal corridor has become a providing shoddy services and in- tony La-La land unto itself. Some frastruct ure in return,and obsessing of the highest housing prices in the over minor bumper-sticker issues nation and richest communities are while ignoring existential crises? dustered along the Pacific coastline, The cause is political. California is from the wine country and Silicon a one-party state, without any serious Valley to Malibu and Hollywood, dotaudit of authorities in power. ted by marquee coastal universities The California State Assembly and zillionaire tech corporations. currently includes 52 Democrats and Meanwhile, poorer people in the 28 Republicans. The California State interior, in places such as Madera and Senate has 26 Democrats and 14 Delano — far from Stanford, Google, Republicans. Pacific Heights and Santa Monica All of the state's executive offi- — require ever more public services. cers are Democrats. Both of its U.S. The very rich don't mind paying the senators are Bay-area progressives. necessary higher taxes, while the California's House delegation is over- strapped, shrinking middle dass sufwhelmingly liberal and Democratic. fers or flees. The party in power can do as it pleasDemography also explains the new es without being held accountable at true-blue California. It is one of the

youngest states, with a median age of 35. Voters tend to be more liberal beforethey reach 40 — and must take

on increasing responsibilities, often for people other than just themselves. California hosts more undocumented immigrants than any other

state. Its percentages of minority and foreign-born residents are among the highest in the country. (One of four California residents was not born in the United States.) As with the young, immigrant groups are likewise traditional liberal constituencies, at least in the early generations. Good money in California along the affluent coast, for the most part,

THOMAS

FRIEDMAN

Are you sure you even want the job?

H

watched all the debates aving

in mining, timber, ranching, farming and construction. Instead, California specializes in high-tech, social

and seen all these people running for president, I can't suppress the thought: Why would anyone want this job now? It now comes

media, the Internet, government em-

with Afghanistan, ISIS and the Re-

ployment, academia, lawyering and acting. Could California change? Only when voters of all persua-

publican Freedom Caucus — not to mention a lot of people, places and things all coming unstuck at once. Consider the scariest news this year. The Washington Post report-

is not made the old-fashioned way-

sions decide to return to the old give-

and-take politics that keeps politicians honest. Or when water taps in the suburbs

go dry.

ed that "the Justice Department has

charged a hacker in Malaysia with stealing the personal data of U.S. service members and passing it to

s gmwing Orperhapswhenthestate' poor populations connect their exorbi-

the Islamic State terrorist group, which urged supporters online to

tant gas, power and housing costs with

attack them." In June, Ardit Ferizi,

an elite agenda of rich coastal liberals, who do not seem to care about the peo-

the leader of a group of ethnic Alba-

ple working hatd to glimpse what the elites take for granted. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.

nian hackers from Kosovo who call themselves Kosova Hackers Secu-

rity, "hacked into a server used by a U.S. online retail company" and "ob-

tained data on about 100,000 people."

Ferizi, it said, "is accused of passing the data to Islamic State member Junaid Hussain, a British citizen who

in August posted links on Twitter to

T e ecineo t

e w o r ing woman

the names, email addresses, pass-

words, locations and phone numbers of 1,351 U.S. military and other government personnel. He included a warning that Islamic State 'soldiers

... will strike at your necks in your

J

weeks of maternity leave, about half

apan now has a higher propor-

tion of working women than

we do. I'm trying to get my head GAIL around this fact. COLLINS "Everyone else is continuing to rise and we' ve declined, and now we' re basically tied with Japan. And Japan's on the upswing and we' re It's incredible that we' ve built a still going down," said Jason Fur- society that relies on women in the man, chairman of President Barack Obama's Council of Economic Ad-

labor force yet makes no discern-

ible effort to deal with this problem. visers. He was pointing to a chart The Economic Policy Institute, a that shows women in the labor force liberal think tank, recently divided in 24 countries. These are the usual the country into 618 "family budget suspects when we' re comparing our- areas" and determined that in more selves to other societies — Australia, than 500 of them, the cost of child Belgium, Canada, etc. care for a family with a 4-year-old "When it came to women in the and an 8-year-old would exceed workplace, the United States used housing costs. to be seventh. And now we' re 20th," And infant care is impossible. In said Furman in a phone interview. most states infant care is more exYou' ll be happy to know that while pensive than college tuition. Ireland also seems to be closing in on We generally — and rightly — talk working women will stimulate the us, it' ll be a hell of a long time before about early childhood education as economy. Now Japan, where 64 perwe fall below Turkey. something that's critical because it centofworking-age women areemStick with me for a minute on this. increases kids' chances of success in ployed, compared with 63 percent in We spend half of our national debate school. But as Carmel Martin of the the United States, is in the process of time talking about how economical- Center for American Progress points creating 400,000 new prekindergarly fragile Americans feel. Why do out, "there's also evidence of a posi- ten spaces. you think that is? Well, there's the tive effect on the economy overall." We will now stop for a moment whopping disproportion of national I am going to take a huge leap of and recall that in 1971, Congress wealth flowing into the pockets of faith and say that Japan is not trying passed a bipartisan bill that would the already-wealthy. And the plum- to bring its mothers into the work- have made quality preschool educameting power of labor unions. force because of its historic commit- tion available to every family in the But women falling out of the work- ment to feminism. (Last year, when United States that wanted it, with tuforce is also a huge deal. It reduces a member of the Tokyo Metropolitan ition based on the family's ability to family standards of living and puts a Assembly made a speech calling for pay. Also after-school programs for crimp in the economy. more services for women, she was older children. Richard Nixon vetoed And why do you think this is hap- taunted with cries of "Get married!" it, muttering something about "compening? One of the reasons is clearly, and "Can't you even bear a child' ?") munal approaches to child rearing." positively, absolutely the cost of child But the prime minister, Shinzo There's also paid family leave. Jacare. Abe, is convinced that encouraging pan guarantees that mothers get 58

of it paid. In this week's Democratic debate, Bernie Sanders said he was

own lands!'" FBI agents tracked Ferizi "to a computer with an Internet

address in Malaysia," where he was

embarrassed that the United States

arrested. Meanwhile, Hussain was

was the only "country on earth" that did not guarantee workers paid

killed by a U.S. drone in Syria.

maternity leave. This was inaccu-

laysia collaborating with an ISIS

rate,since Sanders completely overlooked the situation in Papua New

jihadi on Twitter to intimidate U.S

Guinea.

Our current government policy requires that employers give new mothers 12 weeks of unpaid leave.

This was based on a bill passed early in the Clinton administration. I re-

member well the combination of joy (parental leave!) and despair (three months with no pay?).

Wow: An Albanian hacker in Ma-

soldiers online — before we killed the jihadi with a drone! Welcome to the future of warfare: superpowers versus superempowered angry men — and a tag-team of cybercriminals and cyberterrorists. They' re all a byproduct of a profound technology-driven inflection point that will greet the next president and will make the current debates look

laced into Carly Fiorina's argument

laughably obsolete. I was born into the Cold War

that government shouldn't "dictate

era, a dangerous time with two nu-

to the private sector" about family leave."They don't mind having big

clear-armed superpowers and the doctrine of "mutually assured de-

government to interfere with a wom-

struction" kept both in check. But we now know that the dictators that

During the debate Hillary Clinton

an's right to choose and to try to take down Planned Parenthood. They' re fine with big government when it comes to that. I'm sick of it," Clinton

said. It was really one of her better moments.

You may be stunned to hear that while the Republicans talk endlessly aboutginning up the U.S.economy, the idea of helping working mothers stay in the labor force does not

both America and Russia propped up in the Middle East and Africa suppressed volcanic sectarian conflicts. The first decades of the post-Cold War era were relatively stable. Dictators in Eastern Europe and Latin

America gave way to democratically elected governments and free mar-

kets. Many household incomes continued to rise.

come up all that often. Although Ben

"Up untilthe year 2000, over 95

Carson has described preschool as "indoctrination."

percent of the next generation were better off than the previous genera-

From Richard Nixon to Ben Car-

son, and wow, nothing's changed. — Gail Collins is a columnist for The New York Times.

tion," said Richard Dobbs, a director

of the McKinsey Global Institute. Therefore, even though the rich were getting even richer than those down the income ladder "it did not lead to

political unrest because the middle was moving ahead, too" and were

sure to be richer than their parents. But, in the last decade, we entered

In today's world, who would be a journalist?

the post-post-Cold War era. The com-

By Hector Tobar

low, according to a recent Gallup poll.

the lid off nation-states in the Mid-

New York Times News Service

Across the political spectrum, some

EUGENE

— Jonathan Bach's

dream job is in a profession that' s widely reviled, poorly compensated and often dangerous. A lot of people tell him it's doomed to become obsolete. None of that seems to matter to him. He still wants tobe a journalist. This summer Bach got his first taste of daily newspaper reporting, at the East Oregonian, a publication based in Pendleton. He covered rodeos, Native American tribes and

the opening of a new bar called the Strip'n Chute. He wrote a lot, wrote

fast — and earned minimum wage. "It's the best job in the world," he said, with all the earnestness you' d expect from a 21-year-old college senior. To enter journalism these days you have to be a true believer. If you can

find an entry-level job — and newspaper staffs declined by 10 percent last year — you will more than likely take a vow of poverty worthy of a monk. Even in television, a news reporter

can make as little as $18,000 a year. In our polarized society, public trust of the media is at an all-time

nity college in Roseburg, some 70 dreamed of being a foreign corremiles south of Eugene, several news spondent. He'd fall asleep listening to accuse us of spreading insidious lib- outlets contacted our university's BBC radio reports from distant lands. eral ideas, while others call us lackeys journalism department and asked: India. Pakistan. Russia. of a corporate, right-wing conspira- Do you know a young freelance reHis goal now is to report from Eastcy. Worse yet, people think of us as porter or photographer we can hire? ern Europe. In addition to studying heartless jerks who'd make a little Right away? journalism, he's in his third year of "I don't think that one photograph Russian language dasses. And he' s boy cry or kick an immigrant in pursuit of a story. is going to change the world, but it's a already been to Ukraine and AzerThe truth is that the best journalists record of where we are," the Mexican baijan to try his hand at freelance connect with readers, viewers and journalist Ruben Espinosa said in one reporting. listeners by being open-minded and of his last interviews before he was Bach was also among the Univercompassionate. That's one reason so killed in Mexico City in July. He cov- sity of Oregon students asked to covmany people remain in the profes- ered the drama unfolding in the Mex- er the tragedy in Roseburg. For The sion, despite the poor pay and long ican state of Veracruz: official corrup- Daily Beast, he interviewed friends hours. As Bach learned on assign- tion, violent organized crime, disap- of an English teacher who died in the ments like interviewing a rodeo camp pearances, protestand resistance. shooting and a nursing student who volunteer, empathy is a key part of the Espinosa's work ha d e arned suddenly found her class transformed him death threats and the enmi- into an emergency room. job. "You get to share stories and you ty of powerful people in Veracruz. I'm confident that Bach conducted get to see things through someone Many American journalists working himself professionally on this assignelse's eyes every day," he said. abroad have faced similar dangers ment. And that he remembered what I tell the young reporters I teach at from those who would silence them we professors taught him and his felthe University of Oregon to ignore — induding James Foley, a graduate low students when we sent them to the gloom that surrounds the profes- of Northwestern University's Medill cover stories on campus, at City Hall sion and its future. People will always School of Journalism. and at county fairs: "He gave his life trying to expose have an appetite for true stories well Be respectful to the people you intold. the world to the suffering of the Syr- terview. Double-check the spelling of And they will never stop want- ian people," Foley's mother said, after every name. And always make your ing essential information, delivered he was killed by his Islamic State cap- deadlines. quickly and accurately. When a gun- tors in Syria last year. — Hector Tobaris a contributor man opened fire Oct. 1 at a commuAs a kid growing up in Bend, Bach to The New York Times.

bination of technological, economic and climate pressures is blowing dle East and Africa, unleashing sectarian conflicts that no dictator can

suppress. "Suddenly," argues Dobbs, "the number of people who don't believe they will be better off than their

parents goes from zero to 25 percent or more." When you stop advancing, added Dobbs, you can "lose faith in the system — whether that be globalization, free trade, offshoring, immigration, traditional Republicans or traditional

Democrats. Because in one way or anotherthey can be perceived as not

working for you." And that is why Donald Trump is resonating in A m erica, Marine Le Pen in France, the ISIS caliph in the Arab world, and Vladimir Putin

in Russia. They all promise to bring back the certainties and prosperity of the Cold War or post-Cold War eras — by sacking the traditional elites who got us here and by building walls against change and against the superempowered angry men. They are all false prophets, but the storm they promise to hold back is very real. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


© www.bendbulletin.corn/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Oct. 18. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "See Me" byNicholas Sparks (GrandCentral, $27) 2. "The Survivor" by Vince Flynn and KyleMills. (Atria/ Bestler, $28) 3. "The Murder House" by James Patterson andDavid Ellis (Little, Brown, $28) 4. "A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms" by GeorgeR.R. Martin (Bantam, $30) 5. "The Girl in the Spider' s Web" by David Lagercrantz (Knopf, $27.95) 6. "City on Fire" by Garth Risk Hallberg (Knopf, $30) 7. "Go Set aWatchman" by Harper Lee (Harper, $27.99) 8. "Come Rain orCome Shine" by JanKaron (Putnam, $27.95) 9. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead, $26.95) 10. "Dashing Through the Snow" by DebbieMacomber (Ballantine, $18) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "Killing Reagan" by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard (Holt, $30) 2. "Humans of NewYork: Stories" by Brandon Stanton (St. Martin' s, $29.99) 3. "A More Perfect Union" by Ben Carson (Penguin/Sentinel, $26.95) 4. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed,$16.99) 5. "The Power of 'I Am.'" Joel Osteen (Hachette/FaithWords, $26) 6. "M Train" by Patti Smith

(Knopf,$25) 7. "FarmhouseRules" by Nancy Fuller (GrandCentral Life & Style, $30) 8. "A Common Struggle"by Patrick Kennedyand Stephen Fried (Penguin/Blue Rider, $28.95) 9. "Agents of Babylon" by David Jeremiah (Tyndale, $24.99) 10. "Big Magic" by Elizabeth Gilbert (Riverhead, $24.95)

oo s ores in on on is a e ow e r o ei i n By Michael Forsythe and Crystal Tse

that market forces — rising rents and the advent of e-books

— play a part. But so does Xi's government, which is increasingly intolerant of dissent and has warned Chinesetourists that they risk being punished if they return from Hong Kong or Taiwan with banned political books. During Xi's tenure, Sino United has curtailed its purchases of political books, said

New York Times News Service

HONG KONG — The tiny book stall next to the popular Star Ferry terminal in Hong

Kong does a brisk business catering to the thousands of visi-

tors from mainland China who pass by every day.

aoF "

About half of its books are

political, induding titles about the private lives, backroom politics and fabulous fortunes of the Communist Party elite

B ao Pu, publisher at

in China. The other half are pornographic. Both types are banned in the mainland. "Political books and pornography books both have market value,"said the owner, Mak Kuen-tat, as he leafed through

whose titles indude the mem-

a tabloid about local celebrity

That hurts in Hong Kong, with Sino United's position controlling as much as 70 per-

oir of Zhao Ziyang, a former Chinese premier. Sales of New Century's books to Sino United

have fallen by 90 percent since Xi took office, Bao said in an interview.

gossip. But a few blocks away, a different calculus is at play. The

Commercial Press bookstore does not carry th e b anned

political books. Instead, the collectedspeeches of China's president,Xi Jinping, are prominently displayed, as are at least four biographies of Lee Kuan Yew, the late Singaporean leader who was widely admired by Chinese officials. It is the same pattern in 13

other Hong Kong stores owned by theparentcompany ofCommercial Press, Sino U nited

Publishing, the biggest bookseller and publisher in the city. Despite the interest from mainland tourists, books that paint

Chinese politicians in a bad light are either not available or

tucked out of sight on shelves far from heavily trafficked areas. As in the United States,

pornography is not found in most bookstores.

New

Century Press in Hong Kong,

cent of the market, Bao said.

Lam YikFeiiThe New YorkTimes

A customer peruses the books inside the 1908 bookstore, which specializes in bannedChineselanguage books, in Hong Kong. Sino United Publishing, which controls as much as 70 percent of

Last year was the first he failed

the city's book market, is owned bythe Chinese government, according to corporate records and a

a decade in the publishing

company executive, and books that paint Chinese politicians in a bad light are either not available or are tucked out of sight at its stores.

llldustry. "It's an existential threat," he

to make a profit in more than

said, adding that he was looking to branch out into graphic According to Hong Kong corporate records and one of

the central government in Beijing wields influence here not the company's top executives, through force, but through its Sino United is owned, through financial clout. a series of holding companies, That influence has become by the Chinese government. e ven more apparent in t h e The company'sdominant nearly three years since Xi beposition in the city's publish- came the top leader in China. ing and bookselling industry The traditionally rambuncis a major breach in the wall tious news media here faces between the communist main- growing pressure to soft-pedland and Hong Kong, a former al coverage of Beijing and the British colony whose civil liber- Beijing-aligned Hong Kong ties — including freedom of the government. Most of Hong press — were guaranteed by Kong's newspapers and televitreaty for half a century after it sion stations are independently returned to Chinese sovereign- owned, but often by pro-Beijing ty in 1997. It also illustrates how

tycoons. In some cases, top

editors who oversaw coverage novels. "At best we can break critical of China have been even." shunted aside. Elvin Lee, an assistant presThe two m ost v ocally ident at Sino United and the pro-Beijing newspapers, Ta chairman of the Hong Kong Kung Pao and Wen Wei Po, Publishing Professionals Soare owned by the same gov- ciety, denies that political conernment-owned holding com- siderations play a role in the pany, Guangdong New Culture company's decisions on which Development, that owns Sino books to publish or sell. "Business comes before any United. The market for books on other concerns," he said in an Chinese politics, which have interview at Sino United's Hong long been a fixture in Hong Kong headquarters, where Kong bookstores that cater to the elevator lobby is festooned mainland visitors, has fallen with pro-Beijing political poston hard times. Interviews with ers. "Every brand gets to make booksellers and publishers say their management decisions."

Writers rin a sur i tot emun ane "Welcome to NightVale: A Novel" by Joseph FinkandJeffrey Cronor (Harper, 416 pages,

direction for spinoff pop lit, one whose fiercely loyal core audiencesprang up practically overnight from social media, fueled by a sense of pride

,/ s

$19.99) By Kristin Tillotson (Minneapolis) Star Tribune

~

sQ .

m dhscovery. "The Weirdtown, USA thing IililII

In the fictional Southwest-

ern desert town of Night Vale, weird is normal, and dark con-

Q

jjjiili5L

spiraciesare a wa y oflife.Everyone is willfully ambiguous.

ents mundanity in an absurd

way or absurdity in a mundane way."

Diane, mother to a misfit Filmmaker David Lynch,

shape-shifting teenager, is so used to him morphing into

speaking at the David Lynch

fantastic creatures that she

Foundation Music Celebration at the Theatre at Ace

barely gives him a second glance when he turns into a cloud of bats. ("'Please stop shrieking and swarming into the cupboards,' she would

Chris Pizzello i Invision via AP

Hotel, in Los Angeles in April, is collaborating with his friend the journalist and critic Kristine McKenna on the memoir-biography "Life & Work."

DavidLynch memoir-bio on tap in'17

With central character Ce-

istencegoes topsy-turvy when a stranger with a deerskin suitcase whom everyone has

NEW YORK — D avid L ynch wants to t ell t h e straight story of his life, but

with a little help. The 69-year-old filmmaker i s c o llaborating with his friend the journal-

cil (actor Cecil Palmer), who relays the news of Night Vale via a biweekly radio broadcast, and guest stars in tow, Cranor and Fink have put on more than 150 live shows in

seen but no one can remember 11 countries, soon to add Ausboundaries.") anything about hands her a tralia and New Zealand. They Jackie, proprietor of the lo- note consisting of two words: recently passed a download cal pawnshop, where every KING CITY. milestone of 100 million. item costs $11, has been 19 Writers Joseph Fink and years old as long as she can Jeffrey Cranor have created Suburbia to surrealism remember. Clocks and cal- an addictive fictional world Strolling into th e F rench endars don't work in Night that's not only truly original Roast cafe i n M a n hattan's Vale. Her routine, surreal ex- but signals an interesting new West Village, Cranor and Fink say. It was important to set

L

The Associated Press

has been going on for a long time, so it's hard to be totally original," Cranor said. "'Night Vale' has a sense of humor similar to the Onion. It pres-

the "Welcome to Night Vale" pilot, released in June 2012.

look like they could be slightly hip accountants or Apple store

managers or what they arewriters. Over coffee and toast, nothing too fancy, they reflected on their casually begun, fateful partnership and "Night

He set it in the desert Southwest "because if you' re talking about conspiracies in the United States, that's where they live. I kind of grew up not that

Vale's" trajectory.

far away. Southern California Cranor grew up in subur- is a desert with stolen water ban Dallas, Fink outside of lightly sprinkled on it." Los Angeles. An interest in the Then came a happy lesson stage drew both several years in the capriciousness of online ago to New York City, where culture. The podcast began they met working with an picking up fans with lots of aptly named downtown the- social media followers, includater company, the New York ing actor Wil W heaton and Neo-Futurists. musician John Darnielle of the After co-writing and per- Mountain Goats. After chatter forming the play "What the about it reached a Tumblr tipTime Traveler Will Tell Us" in ping point, downloads spiked the East Village, they decided and a star was born. In July to try a podcast.

2013, "Night Vale" even beat

As fans of such early podcast successes as "This American Life" and "Comedy Bang! Bang!" they wanted to avoid anything that had been done,

out Ira Glass — Supreme Rul-

it card company, Fink wrote

Fink said.

er of the Pods for "This Amer-

ican Life" — as the No. 1 podcast download from iTunes. "We were still working so they turned to serial fiction. our day jobs and people were After getting fired from a talking about our home hobby customer-service job ata cred- like it was this big TV show,"

Give in the Best Way Possible

ist and critic Kristine Mc-

Kenna on thememoir-biography "Life & Work," Grand Central Publishing announced Monday. The book will combine Lynch's reflections w it h

m a t eri-

al from McKenna based on dozens of interviews Lynch's friends, family and colleagues. Grand Central, a division of Hachette Book

Group, plans a 2017 release. Lynch's credits include the films "Blue Velvet," " Eraserhead" an d " T h e

Straight Story" and the TV drama "Twin Peaks."

Office of Gift Planning 503-228-1 730

The OHSU and Doernbecher Foundations'Gift Planning team can help you support the missions of Oregon Health 8r Science University or Doernbecher Children's Hospital with many kinds of giftswills, trusts, real estate, personal property, stocks or other assets. Our gift planners are ready to help you explore the possibilities and make the most of your philanthropy.Call or visit us online to learn more.

giftplanning.ohsufoundation.org giftplanning.dchfoundation.org

OHSU & DOERNBECHER FOUNDATIONS


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Poverty

She was 21 when she had a state school with a big quad. him. She was in cosmetolo- Lincoln Tech had a campus, gy school at the time, with but it was mostly a series of no income. She met his dad garages. The place was situat a nightclub, and they were ated along a commercial, fastbriefly together until she found food pike. The students wore out that other women were in mechanics' uniforms. Dorms the picture. Relatives said she were available, but basic. The wasn't ready, and so her moth- training was practicaL You' d er took Jadareous home from get a certificate, not a degree. "Does that sound like somethe hospital. 7yarra Davis felt scorned and embarrassed, and thing you'd be interested in'?" for years, living farther south Black recalled asking Davis. "Yessir," Davis said. "I don' t in Biloxi, she slipped in and out of his life. need English. I don't need

Continued from F1 Davis had spent his high school years at Ruleville Central, a one-story, red-brick building built in 1958, where the clocks don't work and where 55 percent graduate on time, according to state data, well below the state rate of 76

percent. Administrators there had said a day earlier that ev-

erything would lock down at 9 a.m. sharp — part of enforcing the fire-safety code in a too-

When Davis hit ninth grade,

small gym. But Davis figured the school would play loose

Tyarra tried to move back in

math. Just training."

After so many dead ends,

with the family. Davis made no attempt to hide his fury.

Davis strained to believe his

dryer and looked at his cloth-

a Wonderlic intelligence test,

luck: Here was a place that One morning, the family was would take him. He quickly late for church and Davis was told himself that he'd be happy drying his clothing. His moth- working on trucks rather than er urged him to hustle. Davis driving them. He researched tried to ignore her; who was the average pay for diesel meshe to play mother, he recalled chanics — $42,000 per year. thinking. So he stood by the "Real money," he said. He took

with the rules.

So even though he was running late, he pulled a white shirt and a billowy pair of black slacks from the closet and started ironing as the minutes passed.

"Boy, you knew yesterday you had to have black slacks and black shoes," his grand-

F5

ing. Then 7yarra came at him one of Lincoln's prerequisites. mother Nettie Davis said at A burned-out store stands near where Jadareous Davis often stayed with his grandmother Nettie Da- with a cord, he said. To cover the costs, he took out "So I grabbed her," he said. 9:20 a.m. vis. Many unemployed young men just hang out on the street. Note that the building wes once called two loans, one with the federal "I didn't know!" he said. the Ding Ho (market) For Colored, a reminder of the days of segregation. About a third of the residents The two yelled. They locked government under his aunt's "Why are you ironing, Bae in this area live below the poverty line. arms. They traded punches. name and a smaller one directBae?" she asked, using a nick7yarra felt Davis — already ly from the school. The total name. "Ain't nobody going to above 6 feet tall at the timecost: $30,000. see that shirt." data shows, and the obstacles pi districts to receive a D or that refurbished plastic bags. couldn't be calmed. He chased Shana warned Davis that Some 15 minutes later, Da- that hold back new high school F grade from the state, Afri- T he factory, its w a lls a n d her into several bedrooms, he needed to finish school to vis was ready to go. His grand- graduates shine a light on a c an-Americans make up a t floors often covered in white throughthe kitchen and even- make the investment worthmother and aunt, tired of wait- vast economic struggle that least 95 percent of the student powder, had a rough reputa- tually into the front yard. The while; otherwise she would ing, had already headed for the differs in i t s e x pansiveness body. tion. But it was also known as fight lasted several minutes. At default and her own daughter gymnasium in a separate car. from the concentrated probIn Sunflower County, where a place that hires most who some point, a call was made to might oneday be denied acDavis darted into a cousin' s lems seen in urban hubs. Ruleville is one of two nearly the police; Davis said his moth- cess to loans. Davis agreed. "Everybody who w o rks er made the call, but 7yarra "I was scared of staying in vehicle, hit the gas and thought In r e cent y e ars, s h r iv- all-black public schools, the about how much easier this eling job prospects for the differences in opportunity are there, their whole body be said a neighbor did. Mississippi," Davis said. "All I remember, we were on would be if he'd simply slept at h igh-school-educated a n d particularly pronounced. Da- white," Davis said. He had virtually no money his grandmother's house — his s cant state support for t h e vis's graduating class had one With no appointment, Da- top of each other and the police to cover his expenses, so he home before his aunt and her poor have combined with the white student — even though vis arrived at the factory with pulled up," 7yarra said in an pledged himself in Nashville to newborn moved in and it be- Deep South's more timeworn the county is 30 percent white. his friend, De'Sean Willis, and interview from Biloxi, where work 16-hour days: eight hours came too crowded. problems - single-parent- White students, instead, tend a worker emerged from the she again lives. "It was basical- as a student and eight hours When he swung into the hood and under-educationto enroll at North Sunflow- white cloud to greet them. ly on him. They took him." in a job — perhaps a late-af"You here to see someRuleville student parking lot to diminish the chances of a er Academy, a small private The police kept Davis for ternoon shift at McDonald's. at 9:48 a.m., 12 minutes before middle-class life for somebody school where two Confederate body?" the man asked. several hours. Just to get to Nashville, Davis the ceremony was to start, sev- born into poverty. In Missis- flags — painted on a tool shed He ushered them into an Davis never tried to explain needed new, stiff, dark jeans, eral nongraduates who'd been sippi, if high school graduates and the football field press office room right off the man- himself. steel-toed boots, bedsheets and "I just stayed quiet and rode a comforter. So Nettie asked milling around spotted him in don't advance to college, they box — greet visitors at the ufacturing floor, and there, too, the lot and rushed toward him. have a 77 percent chance, entrance. everything was caked in white down to the station," he said. for severalhundred dollars in "The police locked the compared with67 percent naA t R uleville, D avis h a d Ti02, titanium dioxide, as they "They wouldn't understand." donations from relatives and doors!" one said, nearly out of tionally, that their children will talked often about dropping were told, a powder used in In the years that followed, pulled as much as she could breath. grow up poor, according to the out. He hadn't bothered to plastics. The room had an old Tyarra all but cut off contact from h e r S o c ial S e curity D avis sprinted toward a National Center for Children take standardized tests. He' d telephone, a paper shredder, with her son, even as she found check. In September, as Davis back entrance to the gymna- in Poverty. Such odds, which sometimes walk out of school a filing drawer for "Vacation a decent job working security headed to school, she cut back sium, dress shoes crunching have been rising since 2008, midday, or retreat to the gym Request"forms, and a poster with the Mississippi Depart- on groceries and didn't pay her gravel, as the others followed. represent the steepest in the and shoot hoops. He was occa- reading, "Teamwork." Davis, ment of Labor. "He's not at a phone bill. An officer spotted the commo- nation, and Alabama, South sionally suspended, and some wearing canvas shorts and a stage in his life where I can The morning of the first tion and cracked the door for Carolina and Georgia (along teachers said he'd dodged ex- LeBron James Nike shirt, sank talk to him," she said. class, which began at 6:40 a.m., him to slip inside. with Arkansas and New Mexi- pulsion only because of his into a dusty armchair, creating He feels a similar distance. Davis pulled himself out of bed "Thank you," Davis gulped. co) are just behind. "On her Facebook profile, she in a cinder block dorm room status as the best player on a a poof of white, and filled out don't even say she has kids," where Capri Suns were under But now he was in a packed Poverty rates in the South bad basketball team. He was a an application. "What are you saying here?" Davis said. gym wondering whether his spiked higher in the aftermath "ticking time bomb," his coach the bed and a Black 8z Decker family had made it. He tried of the recession and have been sard. D avis asked W i l l is, w h en iron sat on the desk. He put on to tune out the band music, far slower to recover, rising to In the last months of his he came to the part about Finally, a chance one of his five school-issued and his eyes skipped across levels last seen three decades senior year, he'd twice been education. Davis stayed jobless for work uniforms and walked "Just say what you did," Wil- weeks. Some days he talked quietly into a w i ndowless the bleachers, scanning for ago. And the young have en- pulled over for speedinghis grandmother and aunt. dured the brunt of the pain. both times in his aunt's car. lis shrugged. aboutthe Army. Some days he classroom, a place where he' d One side: Not there. The oth- In 2000, the states of the Deep The tickets were initially And so he did. inquired about jobs. One day learn the basics for several er: Not there. Folding chairs: South — Louisiana, Mississip- manageable, but then Davis Did you graduate? Yes. he grew frantic enough that he weeks before moving into the Nowhere. pi, Alabama, Georgia, South skipped his payment date and School? Ruleville Central. took a risk: He called a friend garage. On the wall, a postD avis pushed his w a y Carolina — all had child pov- a court date and the fines balGPA? 1.8. and asked to borrow his car. er was titled "Picture Perfect through the gym, into the erty rates worse than the na- looned. He received a notice Davis grimaced. Even though he didn't have a Wheel Alignment," and the hallway and toward the front tional average, but they were soon after graduation that his A manager, Edward Leak, license. whiteboard read, "Mr. Bullock, entrance to the school — and spread loosely among the bot- license had been suspended. walked into the office and pepDavis drove around the re- 102." only then did he lock eyes with tom half on a list of all states. Still, he had made it. Just pered them with a few ques- gion, stopping anywhere that There were 29 people in the his grandmother. She was out- Now, those five states have daysafterhegraduated,ashis tions. He stood while talking. looked promising. A health classroom, all but one of them "Best hours'?" side, pressed against the small sunk to the bottom. friends talked about college, center. A burger joint. He filled men. They were ordered to window of the front double Experts say that these trou- Davis updated the education Davis said anything would out applications. And when he take off their hats and to put door, the first in a group of 120 bles stem from the region's status on his Facebook profile. do. dropped off the car at the truck away their cellphones. "One of the things we' re who had arrived too late and difficulty adapting to an in- "East Mississippi CommuLeak braced for a second stop where his friend worked, were now begging to be let in. creasingly technology-based nity College," he wrote, even and glanced at the young he met his friend's boss, who going to do is a little self-in"Fire code," one officer ex- economy that has displaced though nothing was finalized. men before him. Neither had told him about a program in troduction," Mr. Bullock said. "Anyone want t o v o lunteer plained, quietly, as he turned t raditional b l ue-collar j o b s There, he hoped, he would stood when he entered; neither Nashville. his back to the crowd. "We and put a premium on high- take a commercial-truck-driv- seemed talkative; neither had Lincoln Tech, it was called, first?" can't make any exceptions." skill positions. The states of ing course and earn a license questions for him. He pressed and it taught diesel mechanics. Students stood and talked "That's my grandma!" Davis the Deep South have also de- to operate an 18-wheeler and Davis further. Davis applied online that about themselves. "And what about your fu- night. barked. dined to put in place policies "see America," as his grandfaO ne w a s fr om Wes t "Bae!" Davis's grandmother that might help the young and ther had done. ture?" Leak said. "College?" Days later, responding to Tennessee. said from the outside. She their struggling parents — optDavis paused before pro- that application, a recruiter Another f r o m Fr a n k lin, smacked the window. "Bae!" ing against expanding Medic- Finding employment viding an answer he no longer drove across the region for West Virginia. Davis paced off and came aid, the health program for the Before he could go to col- believed. "East Mississippi," he a visit, and they all met at One had served in the Air back. The officer wouldn' t poor, while carrying out some lege and drive a truck, Davis said. "In December." Nettie's house. They spread Force. negotiate. Davis's family was of the nation's sharpest cuts in needed to get his license back. around the kitchen counter, S everal said t hey h a d trapped outside and would re- education spending. So, thanks to a local nonprof- Family problems right under a wall taped with worked in body shops. "Overall, these are not plac- it group, he got a $10-an-hour main there. D avis pictured hi s t o w n President Obama magazine It was Davis's turn. He had a "Bulls--," Davis said, and es that have invested in the summer job pulling weeds and and his region as a trap of covers, and R o bert B l a ck seat in the first row of the classhe was wearing his cap and basic economic security that checking water meters for the part-time and short-lived jobs plugged in his laptop, talking room, at a metal workbench. gown, tassel hanging, as he families need for their chil- town of Drew, just north of because his family members about a one-year program, He stood and turned around. "I'm Jadareous Davis," he took one final look at his dren to thrive," said Patrick Ruleville. But on the first day, were among those who'd got- the hands-on training, the job grandmother through the win- McCarthy, the president and Davis showed up 45 minutes ten stuck. One of his aunts had placement, and he also tried to said. "From Drew, Mississippi. dow. "Bulls--," he said again, chief executive of the Annie E. late. He was 30 minutes late a criminal justice degree that disavow Davis of the image of I'm here for diesel." and he turned back into the Casey Foundation, a charity on Day 2. Several weeks later, turned into a $9.75-an-hour job gym to graduate. that deals with disadvantaged Davis retreated into the Drew at a nearby prison. Another youth. police station to wait out an aunt had spent a few years in The struggle to getout The high school just south early afternoon rainstorm. He prison on aggravated assault T he 86 members of R u - of Ruleville uses a building sat in a chair and fell asleep. charges, earned a cosmetology leville Central's senior class that lacks air conditioning or When his boss, town Police certificate while behind bars had attended a school given heat and where urine backs Chief Terry Tyler, walked into and came out with a two-dayan F grade by the state. Nearly up in the piping and wafts into the office, Tyler fired him. a-week job cutting hair at a "I explained that to him: nursing home. Even his grandeverybody qualified for gov- the hallways. The biggest disernment-provided l u nches. trict in the region gets by with 'You' re a good kid. Got great father's comforts were fleetThe school was so strapped 15-year-old buses, 28-student potential,' " Tyler said. "But I ing; he, too, had been in prison for teachers that in 2014 it dassrooms and six nurses for want to work with kids who as a young man for drug trafbrought in seven from India- 6,000 students. actually want a future, not be ficking, and he battled with jD Power & Associates Ranked CENTURY 21Real Estate " Education i s t h e g a t e - insubordinate." during the middle of the year various cancers over 20 years "Highest in overall customer satisfaction 2 years in a row" — to instruct math and science keeper," said Mike Sayer, Davis reeled. He retreated as he tried to stay behind the co-founder of Jackson, Missisclasses. for a weekend to his two-bed- wheel. Call Us Today! And then, with graduation, sippi-based Southern Echo, a room unit, where laundry was F or Davis, living o n t h e those students walked out the community group focusing on piled in the spare bedroom and fringes ofpoverty required Our team looks forward dooI'. i African-American opportuni- his diploma sat by the TV, and a near-daily calculus about to talkingwith pj Some new graduates went ty. "The effort to provide pro- didn't come out for three days. how to get by. "I try to hide my off to local colleges. Others grams for the students most in He ignoredcalls from friends thoughts," Davis said. When the opportu)ity,)pegrn' lacked money or test scores. need are being suffocated." and relatives. He pulled on his family decided it couldn' t One turned down a n o ff er earphones and played video afford a graduation party, Dayour business.- ~ from his dream school — the The race factor games. How could he drive a vis didn't complain. When he CallRobbi Today at541-382-3333 University of Mississippi — be- Class and race still correlate truck if he couldn't even drive didn't have money for a prom cause of the cost. Another who closely in the South, where Af- a car? How could he reinstate ticket, he quietly asked an oldhad bragged about an await- rican-American populations his license if he didn't have a er friend in the community for The Hadley Group ing football scholarship ended are the highest in the nation. job to pay the fine? $40. When his family took a "I realized I was just stuck," quick summer trip to the Misup working at a truck stop. The In Mississippi, for i nstance, school's guidance counsel- black children are three times Davis said. sissippi coast — a rare getaway or said she can count on her likelier than whites to grow up After ignoring people for — he decided to stay back in hand the ones who will finish poor, three times likelier to live days, Davis called a friend and Drew. In this case, his family college. with single parents, more than suggested they go job-hunting was going to visit his mother. ' WHEAE uu IS A TIMEIIOIIORED IO Here in th e Deep South, twice as likely to lack basic together. They aimed at the He wanted no part. LIFEsTYLEs REALTY poverty perpetuates from gen- reading skills by fourth grade, first place they could think If anything could set Davis eration to generation like in and twice as likely to drop out. of: one of the only factories in off, it was the thought of his 550 NW Frankli nAve.Suite 188BendOR 9770 no other region of the country, In 24 of the 40 Mississip- Ruleville, a small company mother. Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post

showup.

an/

SMAR TER.


F6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015

Ta ingt e ongroa Making sense of Putin no easy task to inmonogamy "The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin" by Steven Lee Myers

(Knopf,459 pages, $32.50)

"The Truth: An Uncomfortable Book About Relationships"

By Dan Simpson Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

by Neil Strauss (Dey Street

Books, 448 pages, $29.99) By Heidi Stevens Chicago Tribune

Not since Gillian Flynn's

"Gone Girl" have I read a book as unflinching and jaundiced about relationships and monogamy as "The Truth," Neil Strauss' sprawling new book about finding and accepting love. Released r ecently, "The Truth: An Uncomfortable Book

TRUTH AN UNC O M F O R T A B LE BOOK ABOUT RELATIONSHIPS

Neil Strauss Kl ' laN( 'rill(( s ( ( 1 '' K(LI Xl (

A ( T I I O ROl

re I( c (xn(

and Reign of Vladimir Putin" by Steven Lee Myers should be read first b y

P r esident

Barack Obama, who has the formidable task of trying to

"The Game," which chronicled the barriers to intimacy that the Rolling Stone journalist's so many of us are carrying transformation from a shy los- around. If you' ve struggled er to a master Lothario whose with monogamy, or loved moves were revered and re- someone who has, this book is peated by the pickup artists he revelatory. coached through his writing Strauss' stint in rehab (which andappearances. he checked out of early, against Both books are fascinating. medical advice) forced him to examine his parents' mar-

riage, his mother's slightly toxwhere Strauss has checked ic brand of parenting and the in for sex addiction therapy childhood wounds that shaped after his latest bout of infidel- the way he approached sex as a ity — this time at the expense craving to be constantly, freely of his longtime girlfriend, In- indulged and intimacy as the grid, whom he truly loves. He' s enemy, rather than the cataashamed and confused and lyst, to that indulgence. doubtful that monogamy is a After rehab, he goes on a realistic goal for him — for any bit of a sex bender — sneakof us, really. ing into a free-love cult, pass"I am not the hero in this sto- ing out at a Hollywood orgy, ry," Strauss writes. "I am the forming a love commune, all villain." in an attempt to find the most Strauss, a Chicago native, authentic, happiest version of is quite publicly and happily himself. He undergoes brain married to Ingrid now and liv- scans. He interviews social sciing in Malibu, California, with entists, historians and psycholtheir infant son, so I don't think ogists. He tests the patience of it ruins the ending to reveal Ingrid, who is in and out of his that he eventually comes to see life post-rehab. monogamy as an ideal, rather It sounds like a train wreck, and I' ll admit to approaching than a prison. And that's heartening, but

President V l adimir V l a d imirovich Putin, from a writer who was The New York Times correspondent in Mos"The New Tsar: The Rise

low-up to Strauss' best-selling

hardly the book's biggest strength. In the course of exorcising his pickup artist demons, Strauss learns and exposes

ough biography of Russian

cow for seven years of the Russian chief's reign?

About Relationships" is a fol-

"The Truth" is fantastic. It begins in a rehab center,

What could be more timely and relevant than a new, thor-

the book with more than a hint

of skepticism. But "The Truth" uses our deepest fears and ug-

understand and interact with Putin for the next 14 months

or so. Next on the list of readers should be any of the nu-

merous geniuses who think they have a chance of suc-

ceeding Obama as U.S. presAlexander Zemlianichenko /The Associated Press ident, part of whose inherit- Steven Lee Myers, who was a New York Times correspondent in Moscow for seven years while ed task will be, at least until P utin's own c u r rent t e r m

Vladimir Putin, above, was in power, has written a biography on the Russian president.

expires in 2018, the same as Obama's is now, trying to He rose from being a KGB make sense of Putin and Rus- officer in an unimportant ofsian policy. It won't be easy, fice of that organization, then but Myers' book helps a lot. numbering300,000,to being Putin takes risks. A cur- handed the presidency by rent example is his decision Yeltsin in 1999. to have Russia dive deeper into Syria and the whole Mid-

dle Eastern mess. He believes in God, said an early KGB colleague. That is dangerous, coupled with a willingness to take risks. Perhaps the most

T hat R ussia

W. Bush did not reciprocate his reaching out. Condoleezza Rice, an alleged Russian expert, played no noticeable role in improving U.S.-Rus-

snow, "Take care, take care of Russia." Putin has kept afloat, even

Steven Lee Myers

sian relations. Obama's at-

h a s l i v e d tempted "reset" of relations

through numerous prime

f lopped miserably. N ow

s t ock m a rket America appears to be ob-

ministers, a

crash, a debt default, moments of paralysis, wrenching warfare in Chechnya, brutal murders and good and crooked elections, all recounted succinctly by Myers. Putin's and Russia's rela-

sessed with Russia's relations with Ukraine, where Putin

spent his honeymoon. Putin warned then-presi-

valuable piece of information in the book is not new, but still very relevant. In handing the presidency over to Putin tions with the United States in late 1999, an ailing Bo- are dealt w i t h c a n d idly. ris Yeltsin said to him in the

The New Tsar

dent Bill Clinton about Osama bin Laden in 1999. Putin's

concerns about Islamic extremism date from Russia's

own wars with Chechnya, on his watch. He likes stability. America occurred, Putin's He doesn't like being patronquestion to his colleagues ized, particularly by Ameriwas, "What can we do to help cans who see themselves as W hen the 9/11 attack o n

ahead of the game, since 1975 them?" He was the first world "exceptional." in a Russia characterized by leader to phone the White The book has two faults, as what Myers calls "dishones- House after the disaster. I see it. First, it's long at 459 ty, criminality, and injustice." Then-U.S. president George pages. Of course, so is Pu-

tin's career. Second, Myers doesn't pursue the interesting "Putin as the new tsar" idea

of the title, linking his reign t o Russia's past: Ivan t h e Terrible, Boris Godunov and Peter the Great. That could

be another book which, I, for one, would read with alacrity.

liest impulses to reveal a true, if

not rosy, portrait of human love and its many complications.

Lafayette painted assymbol, champion ofAmericanliberty "Lafayette in the Somewhat United States"

by SarahVowell (Riverhead Books, 274 pages, $27.95)

L

By Chris Foran Milwaukee Journat Sentinel

I can't think of anyone who' s

better at making you think about American history — and sometimes laugh while you' re doing it — than Sarah Vowell. Her books explore underappreciatedparts of our past

A hfagazine Highlighting the Vari ety of Organizations

to show that, in many ways, they' re still present.

That Connect Your Community.

Her latest, "Lafayette in the Somewhat U n i ted S t ates,"

Central Oregon communities continue to grow due to a nationally-recognized appreciation for the region's quality of life. From providing

recounts one of the more improbable figures in American with tales of her forays to sites history: the Marquise de Lafay- connected to Lafayette's role in ette, an idealistic, restless and the Revolutionary War. reckless French teenager who A threatened government helped the fledgling republic shutdown — which would shutfind its footing. ter historic sites — reminds her The Lafayette of "Lafayette in the Somewhat United States"

population of New York City turned out to see and cheer him.

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

that what seems like a new normal is really "the quintessential

is equalparts cheerleader for experience of living in the Unitthe cause of liberty and a sym- ed States: constantly worrying bol of its possibilities — an odd whether or not the country is mix for a man born into privi- about to fall apart." lege who left his family behind Visiting the site of the Battle to pursue adventure half a of Brandywine Creek — a deworld away. feat for the rebels, but a victoThat status as a symbol, ry the British failed to exploit, Vowell asserts, is crucial to un- while helping make the woundderstanding America, particu- ed Lafayettea heroic figure larly since Lafayette was a rare — Vowell talks with a group bird: something we all could of Quakers, still angry their agree on. When Lafayette community was home to such was invited back to the United States in 1824, two-thirds of the

the mOStbaSiC needS Of fOOd, Shelter and SeCurity, tO Creating and maintaining

a bloodbath. The conversation

helps Vowell focus her perspective on Lafayette's, and Ameri-

make uP thiS nOnPrOfit netWOrk.

Through the publication of Connections, The Bulletin will both define and profile the OrganiZatiOnS that make uP thiS netWOrk. COnneCtiOnS Will PrOVide readerS With a

thorough look at nonprofit organizations in Deschutes, Jefferson, and Crook Counties. SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 5th CALL 541.382.1811 TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY.

ca's, story: "I don't think I see American

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"Other than a bipartisan con- history as war. I see it as a his-

sensus on barbecue and Meryl Streep," she writes, "plus that

tory of argument, a daily docket of estrangement and tiffs time in 1942 when everyone — big and grand like the Linfrom Bing Crosby to Oregonian coln-Douglas debates, big and schoolchildren heeded FDR's stupid like the impeachment of call to scrounge up rubber for President Clinton, or small and the war effort, disunity is the civil like what is happening at through-line in the national this moment with these strangplot — not necessarily as a fail- ers in these pews." ing, but as a free people's priviVowell notes that Lafayette's lege.... Getting on each other' s embrace of liberty made him nerves is our right." a symbol long after his role in Vowell's sort of the Quen- the revolution was forgotten. tin Tarantino of popular his- Lafayette Square, across the tory: She weaves pop culture street from the White House, and real life into her narrative, has become "the nation's capbreaking down the barriers ital of protest, the place where that keep history buried in the we the people gather together past. to yell at our presidents." She In a device she's made her own, Vowell brackets his story

thinks the Frenchman would

approve.

I

ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS The Bulletin is in theprocess ofverifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon.Pleasefill oijt this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail backto: The Bulletin, Attn: Karl Mauser, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. E-mail information to coitltectioits©bendbtilletin.corn or call 541-383-0379 Name OfNOnPrOfit GrOuP

Contact Person

E-maII

Organization Phone Number

WebsIte

Nonprofit MISSIonStatement/Purpose


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Free to g ood home G ENERATE SOM E Stand for violin/fiddle/ The Bulletin Offers 2 000 watt B r iggs & Hovv to avoidscam only, 5 yr. old yellow EXCITEMENT in your G iant Talon 1 2 9 e r mandolin, like new, and fraud attempts Free Private Party Ads S tratton gen., l i ke lab/golden r etriever neighborhood! Plan a hardtail, small, excel- KAHR pistols; P9 lines - 3 days new, in box, w/war$39. 541-330-9070 YBe aware of interna- •• 3 Private Party Only mix, neutered male. garage sale and don' t lent condition, $475. 9mm, $495 o b o . ranty, only used 6 hrs. tional fraud. Deal loVOGUE BANJO with 541-536-1105 forget to advertise in • Total of items adver- $750. 541-771-7101. P45 .45ACP, $475 541-408-1676 cally whenever posstand, exc e llent classified! tised must equal $200 obo, with case, exsible. German Shepherds ondition, $32 5 . Jamis Dakar mtn bike cellent or Less co n dition. c sr Watch for buyers www.sherman-ranch.us 541-385-5809. 541-385-4790 Find exactly what 202 7 005 a l um . 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Holiday Bazaar RPM, used very little. trap shotgun, very $15. 541-389-4079 34 Britannica books, /Never give out perP~PPy, $250 obo. S tanley d i ning s e t . Exercise machine, $260. 503-936-1778 & Craft Shows nice, $650. 360-932-4054 micro, macro, index, sonal financial infor541-548-3408 H utch, pecan t o p stretch bands, exc. + $85. 541-548-6224 mation. Werner ext. ladder 24' Krucher high pressure A BIG Deal, benefiting Lab Pupa AKC,black & table — 6 chairs. Bam- $700. 541-389-3469. sfTrust your instincts fiberglas, Type 1 was h er, 1400 psi, new 4-H, Desc h utes yellow, Master Hunter boo design. $1200 248 and be wary of Bernina 820 in ex$60. shred, performance pedi- OBO. 541-382-0782 $ 185. 541-548-6224 hos e . 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Medicare PaT ACK & EQU I P-Maremma guard dog I uautto t e pu 4-drawer beige $40 tients Call Health HotMENT for a 15% con- pup, purebred, $350 chasing products or, line No w ! 1- Board games (Piction- obo. 541-388-0865 signment. For info call 541-546-6171 services from out of I FIND IT! 800-285-4609 the area. Sending II 541.548.6088 ary, Trivial) like new. Sell your s t ructured SII Y I7' (PNDC) cash, checks, or $29/ea. 541-330-9070 settlement or annuity 205 SELL IT! 280 292 I credit i n f ormation payments for CASH Items for Free P eople g iving p e t s may be subjected to The Bulletin Classifieds New Lumin ess cos- Bread maker, exc cond, NOW. You don't have Estate Sales Sales Other Areas metic airbrush 8 kit, large, strong; books incl. to wait for your future away are advised to I FRAUD. For more $59 obo. 541-330-9070 FREE T O G O O D be selective about the information about an I Treadmill, Weslo Epic $80. 541-388-1533 payments any longer! 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(PNDC) For newspaper CHECK YOURAD 8 up. 541-280-1537 Bend Pawn approx. class rings, sterling silCollectibles delivery questions, www.rightwayranch.wor Sept.13-17, 2014 has ver, coin collect, vinplease call the dpress.corn central diamond and 2 tage watches, dental Antiques Wanted: Circulation Dept. little side stones, one gold. Bill Wood furniture, old Fl e ming, at 541-385-5800 Shih Tzu Poo teacup is missing. Sz. 7.5. 541-382-9419. puppies, first shots, signs, pocket knives, 541-213-1221 Please fishing gear, marbles, To place an ad, call dewormed, gorgeous. on the first day it runs keep trying! Will pay tools, weathervanes, 541-385-5809 $450. 541-771-2606 to make sure it is cor- any reasonable price. toys. 541-389-1578 or email rect. uSpellcheckn and Yorkie AKC pups, 1F, classified@bend253 3M, tiny, cute, UDT Leaded crystal bowl 8" human errors do ocbulletin.corn shots, health guar., pics, exc. cond., $49 obo cur. 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New Smaller Cover 246 mends extra caution Hesston 4655 inline 2-string baler• 1988 Case — IH 8550 inline 2-string baler 2015 NFL S u nday For Owner - $3000 The Bulletin when purc has- BOOKCASE, 4 - shelf Seruinrt Central Cpregonsince Sttltp Guns, Hunting Ticket Included (Se•2 a ech 20'hay elevators •IH5000 swather•Moreequipmentmaybeadded $1800 ing products or ser- 3wx6tx1'd, $10 obo. lect Packages) New & Fishing 541-550-0699 541-480-7823 vices from out of the C ustomers Onl y . TlLULGEEQlllPNENT area. Sending cash, CALL 1-800-410-2572 Richard BROWNING CITORI JD 21 0 12' tandem disk, 16u disks• Calahan 12' offset heavy disk, 22" disks checks, or credit in(PNDC) 12 Ga.Skeet 26" EXC • Case 16' tandem disk, 18 n disks• 8' and 10' flex pasture harrows f ormation may b e $1100.00 D ish Network - G e t subjected to fraud. • IH 51 0 12' grain drill w/ grass seed attachment and double disks• Brillion 541 536 6'I76 M ORE fo r LE S S ! 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For Witch• Seven 55 gallon drums of Field Fresh hay preservatives• Pallet paver Adorable C h ihuahua 209-623-7174 "dealer" in their ads. a free rate brochure bricks• Metal used barn tin• Hydraulic cylinders• Hot washer and hot presfemale puppies, pureNon-commercial Private party advertis- call 916-288-6019 or bred, 8 weeks old, 1st 215 advertisers may sure washer• Air tire machine• 5hp 80 gal. air compressor • Oils and fluids • Estate Saleers are defined as shots, wanting good place an ad Cash only! Coins 8 Stamps Antiques and collectibles• Household furniture and misc.• 3 shop bays full of those who sell one email h omes, $200 e a . Bedroom set: double with our elizabeth © cnpa.corn computer. misc.• Consigned from 2 ranches: 6 ranch saddles with lots of horse tack 702-541-0447 "QUICK CASH bed w/headboard 8 (PNDC) Private collector buying • Toomuchlo list • Scrap Iron SPECIAL" Chihuahua pups, AKC. mattress, 3 drawer postagestamp albums & 257 dresser w / m irror, collections, world-wide 1 week3!ines 13 10% BUYER'SFEE ON ALL MISCELLANEOUS $350. Parents on site. Musical Instruments or nightstand, SOLD. and U.S. 573-286-4343 541-420-9474 ' ' ' I I I I I I (local, cell phone). ~aweake ao! Breakfast table: 4' Deposit c a ns/bottles round oak, seats 4+ BASS GUITAR Ad must needed for local all SOUNDGEAR by include price of 240 leaf seats 6, 4 up' volunteer, non-profit holstered Ibanez 4-string, black a~ in te item ot $50p I s I I c h a irs, Crafts & Hobbies cat rescue. Donate: SOLD. exc. cond., with pre- Golden West pool or less, or multiple ' ' s ' I ' ' I I Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 Dining mium padded case, items whosetotal room: table ex c . c o n d, strap and amplifier. Bend; Petco, Red- 76 ux18u dark wood does not exceed FoodAvailable www.dennisturmon.corn Checkwebsitefor photos dark cherry finish, mond; Smith Sign, buffet, $285. Fender electnc black felt, has racks, $500. $'I50.72 nx42n Q Like us on Facebook Terms:Cash,Check,Visa, MC Pollshers • Saws 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; beautiful glass dinguitar, Squire Strat 8 and balls and cues. CRAFT in T u malo. ing room table, 8 Call Classified at case, SOLD. Vintage $1000 professional Can pick u p Ig . upholstered chairs, Repair & Supplies 541-385-5809 banjo, 5-string, new move or $700 you DennisTurmon Romey 541.923.6261 amounts. 389-8420. $400. 541-504%228 i bendbulletin.corn keys & strings, SOLD. move. 541-588-0508 541 AS0.0795 406.640.1262 Powell Butte, Oregon97753 F a x: 54I.SZI.6316 www.craftcats.org 541-385-4790.

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G2 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015•THE BULLETIN

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BY DAN SCHOENHOLZ / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ 18

ACROSS

I Supreme Court justice who once compared the majority's reasoning to 'the mystical aphorisms of the fortune cookie" 7 Low part 12 Classify 18 A dozen for Hercules 19 Silk case 20 Words of defiance 22Admission of a lack of familiarity with Mr. Hockey? 24 Business feature? 25 Ancient Persian 26 Like sailors' talk 27 Celebritycook Paula 29 Curse (out) 30 Fusses 32 Kyoto concurrence 33 Less serious works by the author of "Brighton Rock" ? 36 Take responsibility for 38 Makes fast 40 Roman law 41 Onemaking a roaring start?

45 Only one person can do it 46 Fits comfortably 50 Toque 52 Reason for Brosnan fans to watch 1980s TV? 55 "Home, Online 6ubscriptions: Today's puzzle and more thon 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.corn/crosswords

($39.95 a year).

56 Beach fronts? 58 A title might be presented in it: Abbr. 59 Being dragged along 60John Lennon's middle name 61 Brand name whose middle two letters are linked in its logo 62 Cameo stone 63 Some briefs 64 Round house? 65 Trying to sell one' s "Au Revoir les Enf ants" video'? 68 Wheresafety goggles may be worn 71 Don Juan's mother 73 Plowmen's cries 74 "Rhyme Pays" rapper 75"Catch-22"pilot

102 Home of Future World 106 Soil: Prefix 107Upbeat 108 Rocky debris 110 Brazilian berry 111 Applaud 113Assign blame to the singer of "Blurred Lines" ? 117"Lake Wobegon Days" writer

16 Actress O' Connor of "Xena: Warrior Princess" 17Saturn's largest moon 19 Rum mixers 21 "What we want most, but what, alas! we use worst," per William Penn 23 "Uh-uh" 28 Questioning interj ections 31 Like Vatican guards 118 Writing award won 33Ripsnorter multiple times by 34 Pressing work Alice Munro 35 Fidgety 119 Where Quiznos and Mapquest are 37 Japanese drama 3$Some Thanksgiving headquartered decorations 120Erotic 41 Dead-end position 121 "All I Do" 42Modern-day home of (Sheryl Crow hit) the ancient Ashanti 122Tavern vessels empire 43 Some sites on the 76 Deplete DOWN National Mall 78 Flakystuff I Slenderizes 44Homeof Jar Jar 79 Foam 2 Midshipman' s Binks in "Star 80 Challenge for a Wars" films counterpart virologist 46 TV's Net w ork 3 Residence 82 Explosive side of (sports presenter) 4 Single copy of "The a formertennis 47Relaxes and has Bonfire of the great? some fun Vanities" ? 85 Fruitcakes 4 8 Chess's r at i n gs 5 N.Y.C.line 87 Libation with a floral 6 Questions 49 Singers do this bouquet 51 Nutrition-related 7 Farf sile shapes 88 Noted second-place 53 Confound 8 Sore finisher 54 Resident of southern 9 Great Lakes' 90 Make sense of Mexico Canals 91 "Smack!" 57 Llama's kin 10 Disperse 92 Maybe noteven that 61 Radio freq. 11 Fidgety 95 Rockies game 12Net-worth component 62 Come$6 Comic's copy of "The 63Nonkosher lunch Importance of Being 13 Topsiders? order 14 Spain's Costa del Earnest" ? 65 Onetime title for 15 Go too far 100 "Oh, no!" Obama and Clinton

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66 "They got mel" 67 Preceded, with "to" 69 Former kingdom of Provence 70 Military mucketymucks 72 Midwesterners, stereotypic ally 76 Modern TV feature 77 Hundred Acre Wood resident 78 Farrow or Hamm

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92 Sue Grafton's for Innocent" 93 Come in under the radar, say 94 Artist Neiman 96 Raise, with "up" 97 Eyes 98 Poisonous snake 99 Producer of wrinkles, it's said 101Comprehension

103First year in Constantine's reign 104 Like some port vessels 105 Levels 1 08 Fei n 10$ LAX figs. 112Jupiter's locale: Abbr. 114 "Got it>" 115 Hankering 116 Riled (up)

PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

541-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

o E' go to w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . cor n

Place 8 photoin your private party sd for only $15.00per week.

OVER '500 in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 3 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 5 .00 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0 .00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 5 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 4 9 .00 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 7 9 .00

A Payment Drop Box i s available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 5.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFIEDTELEPHONE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since tgtB

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 263

267

Tools

Fuel & Wood

270

All Year Dependable Firewood: dry Lodgepoie, split, del, 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 .

Multi-cord discounts! cash, check, Visa, MC MARK V SHOP541-420-3484, Bend SMITH Model 510 bandsaw, scrollsaw, Ponderosa pine strip sander, thickfirewood split, ness planer, dust col$160 or trade. lector, support table, 541-419-1871 lathe chisel set, ringmaster, wall mount269 ing brackets for stor- Gardening Supplies a ge, s et-up a n d & Equipment operation m a nuals. $2000. 541-383-7124

BarkTurfsoil.corn

Shop vac 5. 0 P e ak 12gal New never used PROMPT DELIVERY $110. 541-385-1894. 541-389-9663

265

Building Materials Bend Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale

Garden Shelf, 3 t ier, reen pwdr coat, new, 49. 541-830-9070

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at

541-312-6709

224 NE Thurston Ave. Open to the public.

541-385-5SOO

To place an ad, call 541-385-5809

266

or email

Heating & Stoves

classified 0 bendbulletin.corn

NOTICE TO

The Bulletin

ADVERTISER

Serving Cancel Oregon sincesana

Los t & Found

325

476

476

476

476

Hay, Grain & Feed

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and Pet Skunk Vioreach over let Lost ai 14ih and 60,000 readers each week. Albany. Black with white stripes with Your classified ad more pr o minent will also w hite than a w i l d appear on skunk. She cannot bendbulletin.corn spray. Hides in dark which currently areas, attracted io receives over easily a c cessible 1.5 million page food. Please do not views every attempt to catch her, month at no please call extra cost. 563-357-7503 or 319-493-1361 with Bulletin any information. Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-580$ or place your ad on-line at REMEMBER: If you bendbulletin.corn have lost an animal, don't forget io check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537

Redmond 541-923-0SS2 Madras 541-475-6889 Prineville 541-447-717S

421

Schools & Training IITR Truck School REDMOND CAigiPUS Our Grads GetJobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.HTR.BDU

TURN THE PAGE

For More Ads The Bulletin 470

Domestic & In-Home Positions

Correctional Officer The Oregon D epartment of C orrections' D e e r Ridge Correctional Institution in Madras, Oregon is seeking qualified applicants for Correctional Officer positions. Salary: $40,116.00 $57,432.00 annually, with excellent benefits. To view the full job announcement and how ro apply, visit our website at www.odocjobs.corn. For quest ions, call Eric at 877-888-5234, X41059.

General

les~YE asAsaAtaEMEese

NOW HIRING MULTIPLE OPENINGS! in Arlington, OR! Requirements: Some Positions will Require a HAZMAT

Pre-Employmenr Physical

Competitive Pay, Great Benefits! Call or apply online for immediate consideration!

r.=.-"-,.— ..a

Looking for your next employee? caution when purPlace a Bulletin help chasing products or I wanted ad today and services from out of reach over 60,000 readers each week. I the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r Your classified ad will also appear on I credit i n f ormation • may be subjected to ben dbulletin.corn I FRAUD. which currently For more informa- I receives over 1.5 tion about an adver-• million page views I tiser, you may call every month at the Oregon State no extra cost. I Attorney General's Bulletin Classifieds Office C o n sumer 8 Get Results! Protection hotline ai I Call 385-5809 or place I 1-877-877-9392. your ad on-line ar The Bulleting ben dbulletin.corn

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1-877-220-5627

wmcareers.corn Media Code: 6EN EOE M/F/DN

Aiison's Resort House Call The Bulletin At Keeping Service 541-385-5809 Offering resort, residen- Place Your Ad Or E-Mail People Lookfor Information tial, and commercial Ai: www.bendbulleiin.corn About Products and cleaning. Services Every Daythrough 541-213-5288 The Bulletin Classfff9rfs

Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbullerin.corn

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Just too many Say "goodbuyn collectibles? to that unused item by placing it in Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classifieds

54 t -385-5809

54 1 -385-5809

or Craft Cars

541-389-8420

Since September 29, 1991, advertising for

used woodstoves has Take care of been limited io modyour investments + Peat Mixes els which have been + Juniper Ties with the help from certified by the Or+ Paver Discounts egon Department of The Bulletin's + Sand+ Gravel Environmental Qual"Call A Service + Bark ity (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Instantlandscaping.ctsmI Professional" Directory 541-389-9663 Protection A g e ncy (EPA) as having met Q smoke emission standards. A cer t ified USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! w oodstove may b e identified by its ceriifi- Door-io-door selling with cation label, which is fast results! It's the easiest permanently attached way in the world io sell. to the stove. The Bulletin will not know- The Bulletin Classified ingly accept advertis541-385-5809 ing for the sale of 325 uncertified 270 • Hay, Grain & Feed wood stoves. Lost & Found First Quality green grass 267 hay, no rain, barn stored, Fuel & Wood $250iton.

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Call 541-549-3831

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 12S cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood

purchased.

• Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregonsince Sana

Og peat'.

Patterson Ranch, Sisters Quality o rchard/grass LOST DOG mix $225-$245 ton, small bales, between 10-17-2015, L a b/Pit mix, male. S years old Bend Redmond, del. black/white, 111 lbs. avai. 541-280-7781 "Cody," L oganlEm- Wheat Straw for Sale. pire/Boyd Acres/Town Also, weaner pigs. NE area of B END. 541-546-6'I 71 Very friendly, quiet. Needs his MEDICINE, Tick, Tock on a special diet. Surgery recently, disoriTick, Tock... ented. Please c all/text/email: R i c k ...don't ler time get 541-678-8563 rickgaway. Hire a soto © outlook.corn. hotShellykovacs © professional out mail.corn of The Bulletin's 626-375-2045, or see "Call A Service ad po s te d on Craigslist or F a c eProfessional" "Dogs lost in bookDirectory today! Bend" with photo.

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HUNTING TENT & GEAR iOXiO White Stag

,•

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CanVaSI PIUS queen SiZe

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

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

541-385-5809

Item Priced af: Your Tofrrl Ad Coston • $499 or less....................................................................... $39 • $500 to $999...................................................................$49 • $1000 IQ $2499.............................................................. $59 • $2500 and over............................................................... $69 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. (maximum up to 3 itemsper ad.j

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• • •

Your ad will a/so appear in:

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

'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Somerestrictions app/y


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

Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bendbulletin.corn, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you' ll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities Assistant Professor Oregon State University E x t ension Service and the 4-H Youth Development Program is recruiting for a f ull-time, tenure-track, Assist ant Professor i n Deschutes, Oregon. Salary is commensurate with education and experience. To review posting and a p ply, v i s it http: //oregonstate.ed u /jobs. Apply t o posting ¹ 16 0 86. Closing: 11/1 0/2015. OSU is an AA/EOENets/Disabled.

Deputy SheriffCrook County-

Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds 541 e385-5809

SPOKESM~ The Bulletin

Community/Sports Reporter

-

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 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.

Employment Opportunities

The Bulletin

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 is a drug-free workplace. EOE Pre-employment drugscreen required.

To apply,please email resume and any relevant writing samples to: spokes maneditor@bendbulletin.corn

/ /

In this position you will play a vital role on our Sports Staff!

The successful candidate will work weeknight and Saturday shifts.

s

• 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

/

iot auat i g

IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl / including life insurance, short-term & long-term/ disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time.

I~ Please submit a completed application . I

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No phone calls please.

* No resumes will be accepted *

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Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

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The Bulletin

No agencies or telephoneca//s p/ease

Airfield S Facilities Maintenance Worker Roberts Field - Airport Non-Exempt, Represented Salary: $3,668 - $4,509

Performs a variety of unskilled, semi-skilled and skilled tasks related to airfield, facilities, and ground maintenance. This includes corrective and preventative maintenance, construction, carpentry, demolition, and remodeling projects for Airport airfield and facilities, maintains HVAC systems located in Airport structures, and maintains the baggage handling system within the terminal building.

Mandator Re uirements:

High school diploma, or GED equivalent, plus a minimum of four (4) years of verifiable work experience in facilities maintenance to include skills in construction, carpentry, HVAC maintenance, plumbing and electrical, and heavy equipment operation or any equivalent combination of experience and training, which demonstrates the ability to perform the described duties.

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ADVERTISING SALES EXECUTIVE

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• Enterprise Architect • Enterprise Platforms Supervisor • Security and Privacy Professional

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Please visit www.lesschwab.corn/careers for more information and to apply for the following positions currently open at Les Schwab Headquarters:

.

For more than 60 years, Les Schwab Tire Centers has taken Pride in Performance, providing superior customer value and building customers for life. People choose Les Schwab because they trust our service and our values. We don't just sell tires; we do the right thing.

n

To apply, respond with a resume and letter of interest to the attention of Jay Brandt, Advertising Director at jbrandtobendbulletin.corn, or mail to: Advertising Director, The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708-6020.

W e' ve grown from on e s t ore an d o n e employee — our founder, Les Schwab — to more than 450 stores and over 7,000 employees today. Our secret? Success is a two-way street. Our employees deliver World Class Customer Service. In return we provide them with generous compensation and benefit programs. Everyone wins.

All hiring contingent upon passing a drug test. EOE

Les Schwabis proud to be an equal opportunity employer.

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616

Information Systems Specialist Want To Rent Provide daily technical and data entry support in the Banner student information system. Au- Lady sr. citizen w/small dit data, create reports, and find resolution for dog looking for room issues. Req Associates + 2-yrs technical / troubleshooting e x p . $2 , 866-$3,414/mo. to rent. 541-848-7165 Closes Oct. 28. 630 Rooms for Rent Information Systems Specialist Provide daily technical and data entry support Furnished room, no in the Banner student information system. Au- smoking/drugs. $550/mo dit data, create reports, and find resolution for + dep. 541-408-0846 issues. Req. Associates + 2-yrs. technical / rental/Bend. Nice troubleshooting e x p . $2 , 866-$3,414/mo. Room master bdrm, private Closes Oct. 28. full bath, $500 mo. + sec. dep/references. Coats Campus Center Specialist 541-350-1281 Serve as point of contact and provide information to students, staff, and community members. Coordinate event exhibits and maintain web pages. 2-yrs. customer service exp. Have an item to $2,206-$2,626/mo. Closes Nov. 8. sell quick? Adult Basic Skills instructor, Basic Reading and Writing Provide noncredit basic skills instruction to adults. Master's req. $45,217-$46,875 for 9 month contract. Closes Nov. 3.

If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

Part-Time instructor Positions Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.

'13 - 3 lines, 7 days %0 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

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T I T A N

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tising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H ousing A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any such pre f erence, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cus t odians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. O ur r e aders a r e hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of d iscrimination cal l HUD t o l l-free a t 1-800-877-0246. The

toll free t e lephone number for the hearing i m paired is 1-800-927-9275.

Sell an Item

FAST! If it's under $500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for: $10 • 3 lines, 7 days $16 • 3 lines, 14 days

(Private Party ads only)

I SAT/SUN 1 — 3 PM

THURS-SUN 12 — 4 PM

3 bed, 3 bath, 2200 sq, fL,

H omes c o m m u n i t y featuring multimillion

dollar amenities; pools, c lubhouse, f i t n e ss 61104 Ambassador Drive, Bend center, sports complex,

Directiorgsr East on Reed Market, 15 acres of open space irst exii tu roundabout onio /5th. and 2 miles of trails. fSouth on 15th to Golden GatePlace, Tour a variety of single- turn left. Follow Golden Gate Place level and 2-story plans. to Ambassador, turn right.

HOmeS Starting Low ljI300s

Principal Broker

EDIE DELAY

27'x13.5', 14' overhead door, thermostat heated, rec. 8 rest room. GarajMahal on Crusher Ave. in Bend. Annual rent neg. Tenant pays utilities. 541-389-4111

Director of Student and Campus Life Roommate Wanted Provide leadership for the Student Life team for campus events, activities, and other stu- 780 sq. ft. downstairs dent engagement events on all four campuses. unit for rent in home in Serve as Title IX Coordinator and oversee Awbrey Butte. Club Sports, student newspaper, and Resi$675/mo. Wifi. dence Life. Bachelors + 3-yrs. exp. required. 408-694-7045 $54,434 -$64,802/yr. Open Until Filled.

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Flagship P a h I I s c h

Hosted 6 Listed by: T EAM DEI AY

has openings l i sted b e low. G o to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97703; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCO is an AA/EO employer.

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THURS-SUN 12 — 4 PM

O V E R E X T E N D

Call 541-460-5323 or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392. Apt JMultiplex NE Bendi LOCALMONEY:We buy secured trust deeds & Copper Leaf Village note, some hard money New C o n struction, loans. Call Pat Kellev t ownhouse style 2 541-382-3099 ext.13. m aster suites or 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, ga673 Business Opportunities rage, some fireplaces and some wash ers/ spacious WARNING The Bulletin dryers, recommends that you kitchen, extra storage, i nvestigate eve r y gas heat, patio, no phase of investment pets. Call Plus PropMan a gement opportunities, espe- erty c ially t h ose f r o m 541-389-2486. out-of-state or offered Only a few left! by a p erson doing Two 8 Three Bdrms business out of a lowith Washer/Dryer cal motel or hotel. In- and Patio or Deck. vestment o f f erings(One Bdrms also avail.) must be r e gistered Nfountain Glen Apts with the Oregon De541.383.931 3 partment of Finance. Professionally We suggest you conmanaged by sult your attorney or Norris & Stevens, Inc. call CON S UMER HOTLINE, 1-503-378-4320, Houses for 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. Rent General

606

Technology professionals at Les Schwab Tire Centersare engaged in a Company-wide, multi-year effort to upgrade business solutions essential to meeting our overall strategic objectives of world class customer service, continued growth, and consistent profitability. Whether you are working in Core IT Operations, or Information and Digital Services, you' ll be engaged in work that supports our ongoing business and ensures successfulachievement of Company priorities both now, and in the future.

a

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.

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

II tt8 88IWII8 •

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.

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.

Technology

S S O A S S O O N S H O OW E 8 I L D E E N L I G H T G R U R E S L E L O N E S U N S O F S T I T A L I O N Y X B V N G MA L L E S I GE T H E A D E H E N U T C A R E P R O T A L L E L E E E K E S C R E E Y I T O N T H E N R Y D E N N A S T

Storage Rentals

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B A O C WH T Y I E C S O B A S L P I AW CA A S H F A LD Y L A O H WA

General

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The Bulletin

C O L A S

PUBLISHER' S NOTICE All real estate adver-

Serving Central Oregonsince tgtg

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with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

HOW TO APPLY

Please send your cover letter, resume, and a work sample attention: sportsassistant@bendbuiletin.corn

S S

e ROW I N G

Request application packet from DeAnne Wakefield, City of Redmond Human ResourcesDepartment, ~nemaaonideanne.wakefield©ci.redmond. or.us lete epplcetio packets ost C~o be submitted by 5pm, Friday, November 9, 2015.

front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred O bendbulletin.corn).

.

attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin

If you are a sports-minded journalist and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT TO TALK TO YOUI

Get your business

* ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * I

I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I I day night shift and other shifts as needed. We• • currently have openings all nights of the week.• / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo• sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and / other tasks.

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PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT

541-385-5809

General

/ * Great Supplemental Income!! * /

I A RS T K N SA S H WN I ON S HA S B K0 S H O E1 N M AN I TEA 0W R SW R0 F O R L OR AMY

Sales Help Wanted: E n ergetic kiosk sales person ne e ded immediately for the Central O r e gon on the first day it runs 528 area. Secured loto make sure it is corcations, high comLoans & Mortgages rect. nSpellcheckn and missions paid human errors do ocWARNING weekly! For more cur. If this happens to The Bulletin recominformation, please your ad, please conmends you use cauc all H oward a t tact us ASAP so that tion when you pro541-279-0982. You corrections and any vide personal adjustments can be can a ls o e m a il information to compamade to your ad. tcolesoyourneighnies offering loans or 541-385-5809 borhoodpublicacredit, especially The Bulletin Classified tions.corn for more those asking for adinformation. Senior Apartmentvance loan fees or Independent Living companies from out of ALL-INCLUSIVE state. If you have with 3 meals daily concerns or questions, we suggest you 1 & 2 Bedrooms Avail. consult your attorney NOW at StoneLodge.

Serrtng Central Oregon since tgge

General

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S C A L L A B O I DO N ME DE S T E W 0 M GM L C H E F J AM E O NO B A R I N D R A I V OL C ROS E P J O K E AG R O C L A P K E I L S T E

The Bulletin

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The Bnlletin

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

CAUTION: I Ads published in "Employment O p M portunities" include employee and indeE pendent positions. Ads for p ositions that require a fee or L E S upfront investment T E L E must be stated. With any independent job R T O W opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r O S oughly. Use extra P L A B caution when applying for jobs onH O R R line and never proI B O L A vide personal information to any source C A S E S you may not have C E S S researched and deemed to be repuI K table. Use extreme c aution when r e I P C O T s ponding to A N Y S A C A I online employment ad from out-of-state. I C K E We suggest you call N V E R the State of Oregon Consumer H otline E I N S at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal OpportuPUZZLE IS ON PAGE GZ nity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of 486 Labor 8 I n dustry, • jij)(89 A pt multiplex Generali Civil Rights Division, Independent Positions 971-673- 0764. CHECKYOUR AD

are necessary. Computer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive

Employment Opportunities

Home Delivery Advisor

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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.

Employment Opportunities

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

476

KNO W LIBRARY SPECIALIST Newspaper-generwanted at the Jeffera ted content is s o son County Library. valuable it's taken and Adult Ser v ices/40 repeated, condensed, hours per week with broadcast, t weeted, PERS and HSA. Addiscussed, p o sted, ditional i nformation: copied, edited, and www.jcld.org emailed c o u ntless 541-475-3351. times throughout the Medical day by others? DisRN's up to $45/hr cover the Power of LPN's up to $37.50/hr Newspaper Advertis- CNA's up to $22.50/hr ing in FIVE STATES Free gas/weekly pay with just one phone $2000 Bonus call. For free Pacific AACO Nursing Agency Northwest Newspa- 1-800-656-4414 Ext. 14 per Association Net(PNDC) work brochures call h a l f-time 916-288-6019 or Permanent Crooked River Wateremail shed Council position. elizabeth©cnpa.corn C ontact C h ris f o r (PNDC) more information at 541-447-8567 or chrisocrwc.info. Job opportunity c l osing October 30th, 2015.

Garage Sales

476

DID Y O U

Part-time/On-call: To apply go to: http://crook-county. hiringthing.corn/

Redmond Spokesman

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541-420-2950 pahjischHomes g • • • • o • e

Pahlisch Homes Model in NE Bend. Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel appliances 20802 NE Sierra Drive and all the quality Pahlisch Directions: North on Boyd Acres, Homes is known for. Now right on Sierra, OR north on /8th selling Phase Two —stop by from Empire, lePonSierra. Lookfor for more information. signs.

Hosted 6 Listed by: RHIAjeIA KUNKLER ABR, SRS

541-506-0959

Homes &om the

$240,000s

master suite and bdrms on main level, wonderful floor

plan, recently painted, hardwood floors. Granite countertops, center island 5298 NW Bungalow

in kitchen, SS appliances. Great views from balcony deck, 3-car garage. Newly landscaped, on nice lot w/ alley access. Great value! Hosted byi

RICK KARVASALES Broker

541-647-8206

$44y,ooo

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G4 SUNDAY OCTOBER 25 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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Homes for Sale

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Winnebago Journey

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

ONLINE Real Estate Price lowered: Cabin/ 638 acres in forest on Auction 519 S. Dapple Grey trout stream, P R I-I ~ , = VATE hunt/fish/invest, St. Hines, OR 80 mi. from Bend, Nominal Opening Bid: $749K. Fo r D r o ne $10,000 Video Link, 18' 3 bdrm., 2 bath 2003 S un 541-460-7215 J ack, I Cruiser 1,480 sq. ft. +/- pontoon I NVESTwest Re a l 218 Hemlock, boat, fully equipped. Estate. Wheeler, OR I Has only been used I Nominal Opening Bid: a handful of times & $50,000 has been in covered Manufacturedl • 2 bdrm., 1 bath I storage. Ask ing Mobile Homes • 1,233 sq. ft.+/Open to the Public List Your Home Bid live from JandMHomes.corn anywhere at We Have Buyers auctionnetwork.corn! Biddingstarts Get Top Dollar Financing Available. October 30 541-548-5511 williamsauction.corn or call 800.982.0425 Philip R. Heiliger 19' Classic 1 9 90 Re Lic 201211071 :I . Buyer's premium Mastercraft ski boat. may apply. Pro-star 190 conventional in-board, custom trailer, exc. cond. 750

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Homes for Sale FSBO Motivated & Ready 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sf 195K Not Firm 541-279-8783

NOTICE

All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e F ederal Fair Housing A c t, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r eal e state which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified •

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

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Redmond Homes

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

850

4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $7500. 541-379-3530 860

Motorcycles & Accessories

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

881

2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser 620 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and

many extras. Stored inside $19,900

541-350-5425

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, • house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. • 541-385-5809 •

882

541-520-3407

Fifth Wheels

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RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

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

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

925

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Util i ty Trailers

2013 7

f t .X18 ft.

Carry-On open car hauler trailer. Used only three times to haul my 1967 Camaro, and looks like new. I had the front barrier made and installed and added the tool box. It also has a mounted new spare tire. $3995 obo .541-876-5375 or cell: 503-701-2256.

Tilt-bed light duty, for ATVs/snow machines. $200. 541-788-6276. 929

Automotive Wanted 30' Alpenlite 1990 5th

wheel i n e x c ellent cond., $4,800 obo. auto-level, 2 slides, 541-410-6945 Bendhomes.corn queen bed & hide-a-bed sofa, 4k for Complete Listings of The Bulletin gen, convection mi- Area Real Estate for Sale To Subscribe call crowave, 2 TVs, tow 541-365-5800 or go to package. www.bendbulletin.corn

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

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

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Travel Trailers

19' Ampex. 2011. Slide $8,995. 541-389-6562 out and other extras. Monaco Monarch 31 ' Tows well $12,500. FUN 8 FISH! 2006, F ord V 10, 541.316.1367 miles, 28,900 Look at:

Snowmobiles

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2001 36' 2nd owner, 300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 80k miles. D river s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat screen TVs, refer, generator, inverter, King Dome, tow bar. N on-smoker, n o pets, no c h ildren. C lean, an d w e l l maintained, $43,000 541-390-1472.

885

Cano pies & Campers

Cameo 32' LXI, '01, 3 slides, rear lounge, island kitchen, new tires, wheel pack, new batteries, Onan generator, rear cargo carry hitch, $16,500 541-923-2595. Cameo LX1 2001, 32 ft. 5th wheel, 2 slides, A/C, micro, DVD, CD p l ayer, conv. and i n vert. New batteries, tires and shocks. Quad carrier. Quad avail. $11,900 OBO. 541-390-7'I 79

908 Aircraft, Parts & Service

DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day V acation, Tax D e -

ductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care O f . CAL L 1-600-401-4106 (PNDC) 1/3 interest in Got an older car, boat Columbia 400, or RV? Do the huFinancing available. mane thing. Donate it to the Humane Soci$125,000 ety. Call 1(located © Bend) 800-205-0599 541-288-3333 (PNDC) Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.corn Updated daily 1/5 share in very nice W ANTED! I b u y o l d 150 HP Cessna 150; Porsches 911, 356. 1973 Cessna 150 with 1948-1973 only. Any Lycoming 0-320 150 c ondition. To p $ $ hp engine conversion, paid. Finders Fee. 4000 hours. TT air- Call 707-965-9546 or frame. Approx. 400 email porschedclashours o n 0- t imed sics©yahoo.corn 0-320. Hangared in (PNDC) nice (electric door) 931 city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One Automotive Parts, of very few C-150's Service 8 Accessories that has never been a t rainer. $4500 w i l l 4.2L 6 cyl. engine from consider trades for 2001 Chevy T r ailwhatever. C all J im blazer, complete with Frazee, 541-410-6007 computer, starter & alternator. A p p rox. "%IIII 15K mi., stored inside for many years, $800 s/ obo. 541-617-0211 4 P195/70/r14 Hank1947 Stinson 108-2, ook studded t ires, engine has been gone great cond., used 4 $300 obo. through, the m a gs months, h ave b ee n g o n e 541-923-6303 through, new c a rb, Goodyear t o p-of-thebrakes rebuilt, new in- line all weather tires s trument panel & T 255/60R19 10 8 H gauges, new ELT, & E agle RS-A $ 4 0 0 much more. F resh 541-382-0421 annual.Signed offby Bend Ace mechanics, Jeep Wrangler JK 4 Bend airport. $24,000. d oor M o par s i d e step/running board, 541-365-5662 $150. 541-480-0008 SNOW T I R ES (4) 205/60R15-910, rims and 5-lug hubcaps/ $200 541-317-0291

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 BARON 2003 cusRedmond: 541-548-5254 tom built on '03 Vulcan chassis, 1600 Meet singles right now! No paid o perators, Price lowered: Cabin/ V-twin, 4600 miles, Servin Central Ore on since 1903 just real people like 636 acres in forest on custom paint, fend~ eall stream, P R I- ers, wheels, etc., Desert Fox 21SW 875 you. Browse greet- trout with helmet, 2014 toy hauler in ings, exchange mes- VATE hunt/fish/invest, comes Watercraft windshield and mi. from Bend, excellent condition, sages and connect 80 CHECK YOUR AD Fo r D r o ne more! Discounted for has al l f e atures live. Try it free. Call $749K. ds published in "WaVideo off-season. $8,495. Link, Southwind 33 ft. 1989 shown o n N o r thnow: 8 7 7-955-5505. tercraft" include: Kay- on Chevy chassis, wood website, 4 541-460-7215 Jack, 541-280-9404 (PNDC) aks, rafts and motor- 64k mi., 454 motor, season trailer, fuel I NVESTwest Re a l Ized personal new front brake pads, s tation fo r A T V , Estate. K awaskai Vul c an watercrafts. For 6.5k Onan generator. non-smoker owned, I Drifter 2005, 800cc, "boats" please see $9000. 541-389-7669 on the first day it runs n ever ha d A T V 1,150 mi., 1 owner, 771 Class 870. inside, u p g raded to make sure it is cori n new cond., n o Stowmaster 5000 ve- memory foam matLots 541-385-5809 EVERY BUSINESS has rect. "Spellcheck" and chips or scratches, hicle/motorhome tow tress, wheel bearhuman errors do oca story to tell! Get always stored inhitch, cables, wiring ings your message o ut Yi Acre in Bend city s ide, re- p acked. cur. If this happens to $3,4 0 0 . Serving Central Oregon since 1903 and some brackets. your ad, please conwith California's PR- limits Flag lot in NE 541-350-3886 $31,000 $250. 541-410-5959 Media Release - the area of newer homes. 406-396-1043 tact us ASAP so that 880 corrections and any only Press Release All underground utiliMotorhomes Service operated by ties at street, view from adjustments can be Good classified ads tell building site. Downmade to your ad. the press to get press! Itasca 2003 31' Class C the essential facts in an For more info contact town, outdoor recre541-385-5809 MH. Great cond., 31K interesting Manner. Write The Bulletin Classified Elizabeth © ation, all necessities in miles, slider, $32,000. from the readers view not $1 35,000 916-268-6019 or minutes. 541-508-9700 the seller' s. Convert the http: //prmediarelease. Owner terms avail- Moto Guzzi Breva Sunseeker 2500 T S facts into benefits. Show Get your able 541-385-4790 corn/california (PNDC) 2015 by Forest River the reader how the item will 1 100 2007, o n l y business miles. triple slide Class C. 11,600 help them insomeway. Purchased June $5,500. This 206-679-4745 2015, used twice (wife e ROWIN G advertising tip became ill) F ULLY brought toyou by Loaded with Platinum Sport 1 5 0 Ta o T aoAerbus 2001 35', very Full Body paint auto with an ad in S cooter, 2014 Al - good cond., 32,870 The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon si ce 1RB level system, Arctic The Bulletin's m ost N ew , $ 9 9 5. mi, Ford V-10, new rear c amera, "Call A Service 541-548-0345 Call 54 I -385-5809 tires, 2 slides, couch Pkg, luetooth. Also i n RV & recliner, L-Shape- B to r o m ot e o u r service Professional" SUZUKI 2006 SV650S cludes NEW Adco allCONSIGNIIIIENTS queen walk weather tinted win d shield, kitchen, coach cover. Directory WANTED around bed $35,000. 932 fra m e 541-480-3632 Superhawk N7745G $74,900. Call Jim cell We Do The Work ... Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care H ELI-Bars, guards, almost new 209.401.7449 Owners' Group LLC (can You Keep The Cash! Antique & Laredo 31'2006, Cessna 172/1 80 hp, email addt'I photos) On-site credit NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land- tires, red color, 10k Need to get an Classic Autos 5th wheel, fully S/C full IFR, new avionics, law requires anyone scape Contractors Law miles, extras, exc. approval team, Tow Dolly Roadmaster, ad in ASAP? GTN 750, touchone slide-out. who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all cond., only $3,100. web site presence. m odel 3 4 77 , li k e screen center stack, Awning. Like new, You can place it construction work to businesses that ad- 541-548-3443 new-never exceptionally clean used, We Take Trade-Ins! hardly used. be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form online at: electric breaks, mag- BIG COUNTRY RV Healthy engine Construction Contrac- Landscape ConstrucMust sell $20,000 reserve fund. www.bendbulletin.corn netic lights w/wiring Bend: 541-330-2495 tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: or refinance. Call Hangared at KBDN. harness, professionactive license p lanting, deck s , Redmond: 541-410-5649 Oneshare ally wired. $1450. means the contractor fences, arbors, 541-548-5254 541-385-5809 Jeep CJ5 4x41967, 541-419-5151 available. is bonded & insured. water-features, and infirst year of the orig. Call 541-815-2144 Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irDauntless V-6, last RV COB l i c ense at rigation systems to be V-Max 2009 year of the "All metal" CONSIGNMENTS 916 www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e Yam aha body! Engine overpjg . WANTED contractor.corn Landscape ContracTrucks & Lots of factory hauled: new brakes, We Do the Work, cvv — ~ L= or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit extras: windshield, fuel pump, steering Heavy Equipment You Keep the Cash! The Bulletin recom- number is to be insaddlebags, back gear box, battery, alOn-site credit mends checking with cluded in all adverAllegro 32' 2007, like ternator, emergency rest, rear cargo 1997 Utility 53'x102" dry Winnebago 22' approval team, new, only 12,600 miles. Unique R-Pod 2013 the CCB prior to con- tisements which indirack, bike cover, freight van. S l iding brake pads, gauges, 2002 - $26,900 Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 web site presence. tracting with anyone. cate the business has trailer-tent combo, motorcycle hoist, warn hubs, dual exaxles, leaf springs, Chevy 360, We Take Trade-Ins! Some other t rades a bond, insurance and dual exfully loaded, exsystem, also transmission, haust, 5 wide traction good tires, body & heavy duty chassis, haust. Loaded! Auto-levalso req u ire addi- workers c ompensa- alarm tended service conset of new tires. tires, 5 new spoke, swing doors in exc. eling system, 5kw gen, cab & roof A/C, BIG COUNTRY RV tional licenses and tion for their employtract and bike rack. $11,000 chrome wheels. NO cond., has no dings, power mirrors w/defrost, tow hitch w/brake, cert ifications. ees. For your protecBend: 541-330-2495 $14,500. 541-508-1554 rust, garage stored. road ready! $7500 2 slide-outs with aw22k mi., more! Redmond: tion call 503-378-5909 541-595-3972 or $7,495 OBO! o bo. Sisters, O R . nings, rear c a mera, 541-280-3251 541-548-5254 or use our website: 503-780-4487 Handyman 541-719-1217 (775) 513-0822 trailer hitch, driver door www.lcb.state. or.us to w/power window, cruise, check license status exhaust brake, central contracting with I DO THAT! before vac, satellite sys. Rethe business. Persons duced price: $84,950. doing lan d scape 503-781-8812 maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i - Yamaha V Star 1100 cense. Classic, year 2004, -Many extras. 17K miles. $4800 . Painting/Wall Covering Handyman/Remodeling 541-548-2109 Residential/Commercial I 870 Beaver Contessa 40'Small Jobs to Boats & Accessories 2008, four slide dieEntire Roww Remodels sel pusher. Loaded, Garage Organisation 14' 2006 Tracker fish- great condition. WarHome lmsPection RePairs ing boat, 15hp motor, ranty. Pictures/info at Quality, HonestWork nice trailer. Like new. www.fourstarbend.corn European $4999. 541-719-0050 541-647-1236 eennis 541-317-9768 CCSt151573 Bondedl/nsured Professional 14' aluminum boat w/ B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , trailer. Trailer has 2 one slide, low milePainter brand new tires & age, very clean, lots Landscaping/Yard Care wheels. Trailer in exc. of storage, $26,500. Repaint ]Ps cond., guaranteed no 541-639-9411 Specialist! leaks. 2 upholstered by Thor 30' swivel seats, no mo- Columbus Oregon License brakes (jess than 100 otorhome, 1 9 94, tor. $2,900. m s186147 LLC Zdde 4Qua/reI Michelin tires, Chevy 454, B anks 541-410-4066 p ower w / new e r Za~<0u e r,. 541-815-2888 AWD, (cather interior, transmission, w a lkManaging around queen bed, heated front seats, preCentral Oregon 41K miles, full gas mium factor/ sound, 6 Have an Item to t ank! $ 9,500 o b o . Landscapes CD ln dash player and sell quick? 541-598-6978 Since 2006 sub-woofer, heated If it's under I 16' Seaswirl Tahoe Fall Clean Up outside mirrors, dua Don't track it in all Winter '500you can place it in with trailer, 50 HP • Leaves moonroof, tow pkg., Evinrude, bimini top, The Bulletin •Cones excellent condition. roof rack, always gaClassifieds for: • Needles $3,500 • Debris Hauling raged, no smoke or 541-647-1916 Fleetwood D i scovery '13 -3 lines, 7 days 40' 2003, diesel, w/all dogs. Exc. cond. Winter Prep '20 -3 lines, 14 days options - 3 slide outs, •Pruning satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, (Private Party ads only) ~Aerating etc., 34,000 m iles. 12-Week Package 1" ad* •Fertilizing Wintered in h eated OR shop. $78,995 obo. Personal Services Vehicle Priced at: AdCo st: 12-MOnthpkg. 2n Ad With phOtO Compost 541-447-8664 Until SOLD, 16' Smoker C raft • Under $4999 $50 Applications 2" Ad With PhOtO,BOrder fishing boat, 50 HP Use Less Water • $5000 to $9999 $70 Yamaha ou t board whichever comes 8 BOld Headline, $$$ Save $$$ Errands motor w/electric tilt & • $10,000 to $14,999 $8 5 regardless of item price. Improve Plant Health electric trolling motor first! & • $15,000 to $19,999 $9 5 w/remote control $149 flat rate 'Photo o tional 2014 Maintenance mounted on bow, walk through w i ndshield, Fleetwood SouthPackages Available exc. cond. $8,500. wind, F o rd, 3 2 ' , Your ad will appear in: s AtYour 1994, 82,000 miles, 541-233-6223 Weekly, Monthly & 4 queen bed & sleeper 8 Se rvice • The Bulletin • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads One Time Service sofa, TV, coo ktop, Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • Central Oregon Marketplace • bendbvlletin.corn oven, m i c rowave, EXPERIENCED I stand in line refrigerator & Commercial so you don't freezer, trailer hitch & Residential equipped, new tires, have tol serviced. just Senior Discounts 17' Sun Craft, e rr a nd s a n d no l s r y e g m a l l. c or n $9,800. 'Private party merchandise only. 541-390-1466 2 motors. $1,000. 503-459-1580. 541-81 5-4731 Same Day Response 541-593-7257 763

503.305.5191

Recreational Homes & Property

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

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY OCTOBER 25 2015

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Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Mercedes Benz 560-SL 1988, white, 74K mi., $10,100 541-350-6057 Where can you find a ..:.-~:*':-'-", I helping hand? T OYOTA T A C O M A Chevy Impala 2007, Honda Accord 2005, SubaruImpreza 2013, From contractors to (exp. 10/31/1 5) VIN ¹334268 4x4 1999 4 cyl., non V6, f ully l o aded, Mercedes 450 SL Vin ¹027174 yard care, it's all here smoker, snow tires, $6,988. Nav, Moon roof, CD, 1979 Roadster, soft Stock ¹83205 in The Bulletin's canopy, extra cab, (exp. 10/31/1 5) perfect leather inte& hard tops, always or $249/mn., L ots of e x t ras, 2 DLR ¹366 rior, one owner, full $19,965 "Call A Service garaged, 122k mi., $1300 down, 84 mo., safes, 332,000 miles. maintained, always new tires, shocks 4 .49% APR o n a p - Professional" Directory $8000. 541-389-9115. never garaged, and brakes, $7900. proved credit. License wrecked, 143K road 541-548-5648 and title i ncluded in '70 I mpala E 4 0 0 , 935 miles, $7,999. Great payment, plus dealer $2,500. '76 Nova, Sport Utility Vehicles car ready to drive. installed options. $1,800. '03 Honda Mike 541-499-5970 541-548-1448 700cc MC, $ 2 000. 541-410-5349 smolichusedcar center.corn 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 The Bulletin's Dlr ¹0354 "Call A Service Sunbeam Tiger 1966 Just bought a new boat? Professional" Directory Very clean car. AlToyota FJ40 Sell your old one in the is all about meeting Hyundai Santa Fe GLS ways garaged since Landcruiser 1977 classifieds! Ask about our BMW Z3 R o adster 2012, repaint 3 0 y e a rs with winch, Super Seller rates! your needs. 1 997, $4500. C a ll (exp. 10/31/2015) 541-385-5809 ago. Original 260 $18,000 541-548-0345 to see. Call on one of the Vin ¹151185 V-8 engine totally 541-389-7113, Stock ¹45197A rebuilt 9,400 miles Michelle professionals today! ago. Factory hard $15,979 or $199/mo., Tick, Tock $1900 down, 84 mo., top, good condition 4 .49% APR o n ap soft top, many LAT Tick, Tock... proved credit. License dealer sold options and title i ncluded in ...don't let time get so car is considered payment, plus dealer inSubaruLegacy "stock" at car shows. away. Hire a stalled options. LL Bean 2006, I have owned the car (exp. 10/31/1 5) professional out Toyota Corolla 2013, S UBA R U . f or 18 year s . Ford EscapeAyyD Vin ¹203053 of The Bulletin's (exp. 10/31/1 5) $ 70,000. Tel 5 4 1 2012, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Stock ¹82770 Vin ¹053527 548 3458 "Call A Service (exp. 10/31/2015) 877-266-382'I $16,977 or $199/mo., Stock ¹83072 Vin ¹B18831 Dlr ¹0354 $2600 down, 84 mo. at Professional" $15,979 or $199 mo., Stock ¹45590A 4 .49% APR o n a p Advertise your car! down, 64 mo., Directory today! proved credit. License Add AP<cture! $15,999 or $199/mo., $2000 4 .49% APR o n ap and title included in Reach thousands of readers! $2500 down, 72 mo., proved credit. License Call 541-385-5809 4 .49% APR o n a p - and title included in payment, plus dealer The Bulletin Classifieds proved credit. License payment, plus dealer ininstalled options.

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© suan' 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Chevrolet 2500 HD, 2003, 4x4, 8.1L, Allison trans., 99,650 mi, LS, AC, all p ower, Audi A4 Quaftro 2010, cruise ctrl., $16,500, VIN ¹017492 call 541-280-0707 $19,497 F ord Explorer X LT (exp. 10/31/1 5) 1991 r eliable w e l l DLR ¹366 GA L LW cared for, clean, nonsmoking, incl. 4 studSMQLICH TODAY% ded winter tires, new Chevy Pickup 1978, V Q LV O H D b attery, 1 9 0 k long bed, 4x4, frame 541-749-2156 miles, 20k towed beup restoration. 500 moto r home smolichvolvo.corn Cadillac eng i ne, hind $1500 obo Message fresh R4 transmis541-241-4896. sion w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 2008 77k mi n ew wheels a n d vin126386 $13,995 tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. AAA Ore. Auto Source BMM/Z4 3.1 corner of West Em$12,000 OBO. Convertible 2003, pire 8 Hwy 97, Bend. 541-536-3889 or VIN ¹U06112 541-598-3750 541-420-6215. $9,977 www.aaaoregonauto(exp. 10/31/1 5) source.corn. Dlr 0225 DLR ¹366

+R~

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

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I Toyo AT tires (less I

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[

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Toyota Avalon Lmtd 2007 V-6 4dr. only 54k mi, New Everything: brakes, battery, Michelin tires/rims, show room condition, local car, all services, too! Nothing to do to car. Just drive! GPS/AC and heated seats, etc. Too much to list! Was $1 7,459, reduced again! $14,975. In Bend (928) 210-8323

Kia Soul 2013, V IN ¹767481 $1 1,988 (exp. 10/31/1 5) DLR ¹366

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Toyota Camry Hybrid 2007, 1 51 k m i l es, one owner, garaged, Toyota Highlander Ltd cruise, non-smoker, 2003, V-6, all wheel, fully l o a ded, all garaged, A/C, leather, records, Now $7900. DVD, hitch, sunroof, 54'I -350-9806 extra se t w h e eled B lizzak tires, n e w timing belt, 187,700 m i., 2 2 -2 3 mp g , $7,500. 541-549-6896

consider part trade. Call or text Ron at

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all V OL V O hwy, original owner, 541-749-2156 never been off road smolichvolvo.corn or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, Ford F-150 1995, 4x4, very clean. $26,000. new t r a nsmission, Call or text Jeff at new rear end, runs 541-729-4552 great, custom wheels & new tires. $2,000.

SMOLICH

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Ford F250 Crew Cab Super Duty 2012, (exp. 10/31/1 5) Vin ¹C52424 Stock ¹83414

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Volvo XC60 2014, VIN ¹556164 $33,997 fexp. 10/31/1 5) DLR ¹366

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GMC Pickup 1983 w/ topper, 4 wheel drive, r uns good, goo d winter truck. $1,500 obo. 907-310-1877

Small Block 327 Modified engine. Large duration roller Cam. Edlebrock Alum Heads and more. $8,000 Runs Great! 541-977-2830

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and place an ad today! Ask about our 'Wheel Deal" ! for private party advertisers

~ The Bulletin ~ servingcentrel organ since 19ta

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BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... (exp. 10/31/1 5) real estate to automotive, Vin ¹688743 merchandise to sporting Stock ¹82316 Bulletin Classifieds $10,979 or $155/mo., goods. $1500 down, 72 mo., appear every day in the print or on line. 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License Call 541-385-5809 and title i ncluded in www.bendbulletin.corn payment, plus dealer inMercedesBenz E Class 2005,

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Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Ford FusionSEL2012, readers each week. (exp. 10/31/1 5) Your classified ad Vin ¹117015 The Bulletin Classifieds will also appear on Stock ¹44382A DID YOU KNOW 7 IN bendbulletin.corn 10 Americans or 158 $14,979 or $199/mo., which currently re541-385-5809 $2400 down, 72 mo., million U.S. A d ults 4 .49% APR o n a p - ceives over 1.5 milread content f r om lion page views C3 2014 proved credit. License n ewspaper m e d i aPRIUS title included in every month at each week? Discover w/1 2,000 miles, as- and lease with 20 payment, plus dealer in- no extra cost. Bullethe Power of the Pa- sume stalled options. tin Classifieds cific Northwest News- months remaining at mo., 50+ mpg. Get Results! Call paper Advertising. For $240 SuaWau $3000. Call L a r ry 898lRUOM H HO.COM 385-5809 or place a free brochure call your ad on-line at 916-288-6019 or 541.728.1775 e mail 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Imbatstar@aol.corn 877-266-3821 bendbulletin.corn email Dlr ¹0354 elizabeth@enpa.corn (PNDC) The Bulletin recoml mends extra caution ~ when p u r chasing I

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 GMC 2500 1990, 4x4,

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Buick Lucerne 2008 Dlr ¹0354 Very clean 6 cylinder, auto., leather interior, 87k mi. $6950 Will

Cadillac CTS 2010, V 6 I n j ection, 6 Speed A utomatic. Luxury series. Exterior: Black Raven, Interior: Light Titanium/Ebony. 22,555 miles. 4 door. Excellent condition all a round. Has A r i zona plates. This is car is a great mix of luxury, com f ort, style, and workmanship. $24,000 Call 541-408-3051

Mercedes-Benz SLK230 2003, exc. cond., auto, convertible retractable hard top. 54,250 miles, carfax available. $1 3,000.

Kia Soul 2013, Need to get an ad (exp. 10/31/2015) Vin ¹768357 in ASAP? Stock ¹45202A1 $12,979 or $215/mo., Fax it te 541-322-7253 $1000 down, 66 mo., 4.49% APR on app roved credit. L i - The Bulletin Classifieds cense and title i ncluded in p ayment, REDUCED! plus dealer installed options.

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SUBAR Ll

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f products or servicesf from out of the area.

Scion TCcoupe 2007, (exp. 10/31/1 5) Vin ¹198120 Stock ¹44193B

Ford Windstar 2001,

wheel chair ramp plus Dodge Challenger Jazzy chair, 6 cyl., 201 I, 28K mi. 23K mi., g a raged. VIN ¹503833 $11K. 541-548-3172 $19,998 (exp. 10/31/1 5) 975 DLR ¹366 Automobiles

$10,379 or $149/mo.,

$2600 down, 60 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title included in payment, plus dealer installed options.

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Toyota Corolla 2008, VIN ¹013663 $8988 Toyota Tacoma 2006, (exp10/31 8/t 5) reg. cab, 4x4, 5 spd DLR ¹366 standard 4 cyl engine, 2 2+ mpg, one s e nior owner, n on-smoker, wel l maintained, n e a rly ~ a new tires, o r iginal spare near new, runs 541-548-1448 excellent. $ 1 4 ,750. smolichusedcar 541-633-9895 center.corn ~

smolichusedcar center.corn

Ford LTD 1985 Country Squire Wagon Exc. shape. 106,300 miles. Small V-8 Engine. $2700 541-548-1821

Nissan 350Z Convertible 2005, VIN ¹752136 $14,988 (exp. 10/31/1 5) DLR ¹366

ash ,f

q checks, or credit in-

I formation may be I [ subject toFRAUD

For more informa-

l tion about an adver-f tiser, you may call

I the Oregon State I

S UBA R U .

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

f S ending c

541-548-1448

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Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house

Garage Sales

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General's ~ I Attorney I Office C o nsumer f Protection hotline atf 1-877-877-9392. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since1RB

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

'13 - 3 lines, 7 days '20 -3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

G5

1000

1000

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs and e x Principal subjects anpenses of sale, inticipated to be considcluding a reasonable ered include general charge by the trustee b usiness. A dra f t Notice is further given agenda for the meetthat for reinstatement ing will be posted unor payoff quotes reder Legal Notices on the Housing Works The Board of Direc- quested pursuant to web site www.hous- tors of Tumalo Irriga- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d ingworks.org. tion District will hold a 86.789 must be timely general board meet- c ommunicated in a If you have any ques- ing at the district of- written request that tions or need special fice on Monday, No- c omplies with t h a t accommodations, vember 16th, 2015 at statute addressed to please contact Julie 10:00 a.m. to declare the trustee's "Urgent B enson a t (541) the results of the No- Request Desk" either 323-2975. For special vember 10th, 2015 by personal delivery to the trustee's physiassistance due to mo- election. cal offices (call for adtion, vision, speech dress) or b y f i r st and hearing disabili- P lease contact t he ties, the toll free num- District O ff ic e at class, certified mail, r eturn r e ceipt r e ber of CenturyLink's 541-382-3053 if you quested, addressed to services for custom- have any questions. the trustee's post ofers with disabilities is fice box address set 1-800-223-3131. forth in t his n otice. Due to potential conTom Kemper, flicts with federal law, Executive Director persons having no Housing Works LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE record legal or equi(abn Central Oregon table interest in the Regional OF SALE File No. 7236.23549 R e f er- subject property will Housing Authority) ence is made to that only receive informaLEGAL NOTICE c ertain t rust d e e d tion concerning the NOTICE OF PUBLIC made by Rebeckah K lender's estimated or HEARING Maxson, as grantor, to actual bid. Lender bid Amerititle, as trustee, i nformation is a l s o The Desc h utes in favor of Mortgage available a t the County Plan n ing Electronic R egistra- trustee's web s ite, Commission will hold tion Systems, Inc. as www.northwesta public hearing on nominee for Accred- trustee.corn. Notice is Thursday, November ited Home Lenders, further given that any 5, 2015, at 5:30 p.m. Inc., A California Cor- person named in ORS in t h e De s chutes poration, its succes- 86.778 has the right, County Ser v ices sors and assigns, as at any time prior to Center, 1300 NW Wall b eneficiary, da t e d five days before the Street, Bend, to take 10/23/06, r e c orded date last set for the testimony on the fol- 10/31/06, in the mort- s ale, to h a v e t h is l owing item: F I L E gage records of DE- foreclosure proceedNUMBER: SCHUTES C o unty, ing dismissed and the 247-15-000542-TA. Oregon, as trust deed reinstated SUBJECT:Amend2006-72652 and sub- by payment to t he ment to D e schutes sequently assigned to beneficiary of the enCounty Code Titles Deutsche Bank Na- tire amount then due 18, 19, 20, and 21 to tional Trust, C o m- (other than such pordefine, permit, and as Trustee for tion of the principal as establish s tandards pany, the holders of HSI As- would not then be due for marijuana related set Sec u r itization had no default ocuses in u n incorpo- C orporation Tr u s t curred) and by curing rated Des c hutes 2007-HE1, Mortgage any o t her d e fault C ounty. T h e p r o - Pass-Through Certifi- complained of herein posal identifies where cates, Series that is capable of bethe various uses are 2007-HE1 by Assign- ing cured by tenderpermitted, outright or ment recorded as ing the performance conditional use, and 2015-00714, covenng required under the prohibited. A lso in- t he f o llowing d e - o bligation o r tr u s t cluded are proposed scribed real property deed, and in addition time, place, and man- situated in said county to paying said sums ner regulations. AP- and state, to wit: Lot or tendering the perPLICANT:Deschutes (4), Block Five formance necessary County. STAFF Four (5), Taylor's Addition to cure the default, by CONTACT: Matthew to the City of Red- paying all costs and Martin, Ass o ciate mond, Des c hutes expenses actually inPlanner, (541) County, Ore g on. curred in enforcing the 330-4620; Matt. Mar- PROPERTY AD- obligation and trust tin © deschutes.org. DRESS: 835 South- deed, together with Copies of the staff re- west 1 4 t h Str e et trustee's and port, application, all Redmond, OR 97756 s fees not documents and evi- Both the beneficiary attorney' exceeding the dence submitted by or and the trustee have amounts provided by on behalf of the appli- elected to sell the real said OR S 8 6 .778. cant and applicable property to satisfy the Requests from percriteria are available obligations secured by sons named in ORS for inspection at the the trust deed and a 86.778 for reinstatePlanning Division at notice of default has ment quotes received no cost and can be been recorded pursu- less than six d ays purchased fo r 25 ant to Oregon Re- prior to the date set c ents a page. T h e Statutes for the trustee's sale staff report should be vised 86.752(3); the default will be honored only at made avail able seven for which the foreclo- the discretion of the days prior to the date s ure i s m a d e i s beneficiary or if r eset for the hearing. grantor's failure to pay quired by the terms of Deschutes C o u nty when due the follow- the loan documents. encourages persons ing sums: monthly In construing this now ith d i sabilities t o payments of $732.72 tice, the singular inparticipate in all pro- beginning 07/01/12; cludes the plural, the grams and activities. and monthly p a y- word "grantor" inThis event/location is ments of $793.24 be- cludes any successor accessible to people ginning 11/01/12; and i n interest t o t h e with disabilities. If you monthly payments of grantor as well as any need a c commoda-$ 709.19; plu s a d - other person owing an tions to make partici- vances of $7,829.61; obligation, the perforpation poss i ble, together with title ex- mance of which is seplease call the ADA pense, costs, trustee's cured by said trust Coordinator at (541) fees and attorney's deed, and the words 617-4747. fees incurred herein "trustee" and "benefiby reason of said de- ciary" include their reLEGAL NOTICE successors O REGON H UM A N fault; any further sums spective advanced by the ben- i n interest, if a n y. DEVELOPMENT eficiary for the protec- Without limiting the C ORPORATION i s a ccepting bids t o tion of the above de- trustee's disclaimer of or warperform weatheriza- scribed real property representation i st inte r est ranties, Oregon law tion work in Klamath and requires the trustee to and Lake Counties. therein; and prepay- state in this notice that Bids will be accepted ment penalties/premiresidential until 5pm November ums, if applicable. By some 23, 2015. Contractors reason of said default p roperty sold at a sale may interested in bidding the beneficiary has trustee's must be ; l i censed, d eclared al l s u m s have been used in owing on the obligamanufacturing methbonded and insured. To obtain a bid pack- tion secured by the a mphetamines, t h e components a ge p l ease c a l l trust deed i mmedi- chemical 5 41-883-7186 ext . ately due and pay- of which are known to toxic. Prospective 1029 or Emai l able, said sums being be the following, to wit: purchasers of r esijim.minix@ohdc.org prop e r ty OREGON H U M AN $173,003.61 with in- dential terest thereon at the should be aware of DEVELOPMENT this potential danger CORPORATION Pro- rate of 2 percent per b efore deciding to beg i nning g rama d e Me j o - annum a bid for this ramiento de h ogar 0 6/01/12; plus a d - place esta aceptando pre- vances of $7,829.61; property a t the sale. T he supuestos para me- together with title ex- trustee's jorar residencias fa- pense, costs, trustee's trustee's rules of aucbe accessed milia res e n los fees and a ttorneys tion may w w w .northwestC ondados de K l a - fees incurred herein at trustee.corn are math y Lake. Presu- by reason of said de- incorporatedand by this puestos se aceptaran fault; any further sums hasta las 5pm Novi- advanced by the ben- reference. You may e mbre 2 3 , 201 5 . eficiary for the protec- also access sale staat ww w .northContratistas interesa- tion of the above de- tus dos deben poseer; li- scribed real property westtrustee.corn and USA-Foreclocencia y estar aseg- and i t s int e rest www. urado. Para obtener therein; and prepay- sure.corn. For further ment penalties/premiinformation, p l ease un paquete de infora p plicable. contact: Nanci Lamm acion h a blar a ums, if Northwest 5 41-883-71 86 e x t . W HEREFORE, n o - bert 1 028 or Emai l : tice hereby is given Trustee Services, Inc. that the undersigned P.O. Box 997 Bellejim.minix@ohdc.org trustee will on Janu- vue, WA 98009-0997 ary 11, 2016 at the 586-1900 M a x son, Sell an Item hour of 10:00 o' clock, R ebeckah K ( T S ¹ A.M. in accord with 7236.23549) the standard of time 1002.279371-File No. established by ORS 187.110, at the fol- BULLETINCLASSIFIE08 lowing place: inside Search the area's most If it's under$500 the main lobby of the comprehensive listing of Deschutes C o u nty classified advertising... you can place it in Courthouse, 1164 NW real estate to automotive, The Bulletin Bond, in the City of merchandise to sporting Bend, County of DE- goods. Bulletin Classifieds Classifieds for: SCHUTES, State of appear every day in the Oregon, sell at public print or on line. $10 • 3 lines, 7 days auction to the highest Call 541-385-5809 bidder for cash the $16 • 3 lines, 14 days i nterest in t h e d e - www.bendbulletin.corn scribed real property The Bulletin (Private Party ads only) which the grantor had Serving CentralOregon sincef%8 LEGAL NOTICE Housing Works will hold a Regular Board Meeting on Wednesday, October 28th, 2015 at 1:00 p.m. at Housing Works, located at 405 SW 6th Street, Redmond, OR 97756 and with electronic communication with Board members.

FAST!

LEGAL NOTICE The Board of Directors of Tumalo Irrigation District held a general board meeting at the district office on Tuesday, October 13th, 2015 and declared an election for a Director of Division ¹3 of the District. The election will be held on Tuesday, November 10th, 2015 at the D i strict o ff ice, 64697 Cook Avenue, Bend, OR 97703. It will be a mail in ballot election.


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

G6 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015•THE BULLETIN

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?

4

11 II I ')I

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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.corn

The Bulletin

To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) 'Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.


/

OCTOBER 24-25, 2015

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BLONDIE/ by Dean Young and John Marshall WE STlLL HAVE TO BBTTER GBT COMB UP WlTH SOME SOME C'EST CLEVER STUFF FOR THEN! OUR STRlPS

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