Bulletin Daily Paper 09-01-15

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TUESDAY September1, 2015

Serving Central Oregon since 1903$'i

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a(e e es o summer’s oun

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IN SPORTS: COUGARSGo FROM ROLLERHoclt'.EY To THESOCCERPITCH, C1

bendbulletin.corn TODAY’ S READERBOARD

County

Beer dOuquetS ABend

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company's answer to flowers.

blamefor jail death

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Loco for lavender A couple with a lavenderfarm in Redmond puts thefragrant herb in everything theycanthink of, from salmon tosoap. B1

By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin e

Wildfire update Fire-

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Federal courtrecords

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show Deschutes County is

fighters keep closewatch on Cove Fire. Plus, anupdate on other area fires.B1

denying responsibility for the December overdose death of an inmate in the

county jail. Edwin Burl Mays, who

Good news! sharing in

died the night of Dec. 14in ) a holding cell in the jail, was culpable for his own Mays death because he ingested methamphetamine,

child care leads tobetter sex.Aa

Riley’s new gig Mike Riley has wonover fans in Nebraska, but can hewin games?C1

And a Wed exclusive›

failed to notify deputies

Thefinance world is embracing a technology created to circumvent it: Bitcoin. beetlbelletie.cern/extras

. :’Declining number ,:ofnewteachers

By Abby Spegmane The Bulletin

In Wisconsin, officials were scrambling to fill teaching

EDITOR'SCHOICE

Long-shot candidate's

big plans for politics By Cathleen Decker Los Angeles Times

In the dead of night, his eyes fixed on the ceiling, does Larry Lessig really think: "It could be me

standing

ANALYSIS on the steps of

he'd done so, and neglected to inform them of any resulting medical condition, county attorneys wrote in an Aug. 10 court filing. The filing is a response to a $10.7 million lawsuit filed in late May on behalf of Mays' family against the county, as well as

positions before the start of school. In Nevada, lawmakers approved millions for hiring bonuses to help bring in more applicants, while California was issuing emergency teaching permits to get more bodies in the classroom. "We' re not in that kind of spot at all," said Jay Mathisen,

Oregonhasseenasteadydecline in the number of teachers graduating from universities in the state since a peak in the2008-09 school year. NEW TEACHERSWITH

then-Sheriff Larry Blan-

ton, two sergeants and seven deputies, which

COMPLETEDOREGON TEACHER CERTIFICATIONS

proceeds as the sheriff's

2,500 "--.--.--.--.--.--.--.--.--.--.--.--"

office awaits the findings of an Oregon Department

2,000

of Justice investigation into

Bend-La Pine Schools' deputy superintendent. The district hired about 115 new teachers this year; for most positions therewere dozens of experienced applicants,he said. Human resource directors i n

du r i n g t h e G reat Recession led

Central Oregon say overall they f ewer people to enter teaching; had plenty of applicants and I - d the impro v ing e c o nomy managed to fill open teacher means higher-paying jobs positions, despite the drop < A en elsewhere; and debates over " in graduates from teacher Common Core and federal preparation programs in Oregon.

man d a tes took the luster out of the

Shortages elsewhere may be p r ofession. a result of many factors: layoffs

SeeTeachers/A6

Mays' death.

SeeJail death /A4

l,500

1,000

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1,425 teachers

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Innovation

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vs. balance

Note: The2014-15 school year was completed Aug. 31.

at work

Source: Oregon Teacher Standards and Practices Commission

the Capitol on Jan. 20, 2017,

Pete Smith l The Bulletin

being sworn in as president

By Matt McFarland

of the United States"'? Does this Harvard law professor really believe that

The Washington Post

In the summer of 1994, Jaap Haartsen started worked on what would

he can persuade Americans that the only thing that matters isobliter›

ating money

Related

become a ubiquitous and essential technology

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— Bluetooth.

The 31-year-old Dutch engineer was living in Sweden and working for Eries son. He never worked week-

fl oui the Po

Outsiders

htrcal sys™,

poli weil

and once that

giant hurdle is leaped, Americans will turn

to him to do it? Well, maybe. "Obviously, from this per-

ends, or more than 40

spective, I think it's a long

hours a week. He had a cellphone and laptop but

shot," he said, "but I actually

doesn't recall having Inter-

think that if we can make a

net at home. Every weekend he immersed in nature

number of steps happen it' s plausible." See Lessig /A4

with his wife and three

young children. SeeInnovation/A4

TODAY'S WEATHER ~~' '~ ~

N i ce;someclouds High 77, Low47 Peg e B6

INDEX At Home D1-6 Business C5-6 Calendar B2 Classified E1-6 Comics E3-4 Crosswords E4

Dear Abby D6 Horoscope D6 Local/State B1-6 Obituaries B5 Sports C1-4 TV/Movies D6

Homicide rates are rising sharply in manyU.S.cities a startling rise in murders

215, up from 138 at the same

afteryears ofdeclines,and few places have witnessed a

point in 2014. In Washington,

Vol. 113, No. 244,

D.C., the toll is 105, compared shift as precipitous as this city. with 73 people a year ago.

30 pages, 5 sections

With the summer not yet over,

And in St. Louis, 136 people

dispute that theory.

An Independent Newspaper

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play in different cities, though no one is claiming to know for sure why murder rates are climbing. Some officials say intense national scrutiny of the use of force by the police has made officers less aggressiveand emboldened criminals, though many experts

The Bulletin

ivll tNAuk

By Monica Davey and Mitch Smith New York Times News Service

MILWAUKEE — Cities acrossthe nation are seeing

New Orleans, 120 people had been killed by late August, compared with 98 during the same perioda yearearlier.In Baltimore, homicides have hit

104 people have been killed have been killed this year, a 60 Rivalries among street this year — after 86 homicides percent rise from the 85 murgangs, often over drug turf, in all of 2014. ders the city had by the same and the availability of guns, More than 30 other cities time last year. are cited as major factors in have also reported increases Law enforcement experts some cities, including Chicago. in violence from a year ago. In say disparatefactors are at See Murder /A4

AlyssaschukarlThe New YorkTimes

Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn at the department’s admin› istration building in Milwaukee last month. Cities across the nation

are seeing a startling rise in murders after years of decreases, and few places havewitnessed a shift as precipitous as the one in Milwaukee.


A2

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

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uro e'smi ran crisis co s or ercrossin s By Alison Smale and Melissa Eddy New YorJz Times News Service

VIENNA — Europe struggled Monday with traffic backups on Hungary's border with Austria, stalled trains packed with refugees bound for Germ any and deepeningpoli cy confusion over the migrant crisis — punctuated by a warning from Germany's leader that the European open-border policy was at risk. The Austrian police, struggling to slow the influx of migrants from war-ravaged areas of the Middle East, Afghanistan and Africa, began checking vehicles crossing from Hungary overnight, finding 200 migrants and arresting at least five people suspected

of being smugglers. Traffic stretched for miles on the Hungarian side of the

border because of the traffic controls, but the Austrian au-

e Oh AN.

oauuw R+

thorities argued that they had no choice after the deaths of 71 migrants, including three children and a baby girl, whose de-

composing bodies were found in a truck on a highway southeast of Vienna on Thursday. The clampdown also extended to at least four Austria-

bound trains carrying hundreds of m igrants, which were stopped at the Hungary-Austria border over what

tion not seen since the end of

World War II, with thousands arriving daily. Most of the new arrivals are crossing from Turkey toGreece, Macedonia and Serbia before entering Hungary and then heading to Europe'swealthier northern countries, mostly to Germany.

The crisis has become a priovercrowding, European news ority for Chancellor Angela agencies reported. After sever- Merkel of Germany, who told al hours, two of the trains were reporters Monday that Euroallowed to proceed toward peans must uphold principles Vienna. of justice and human rights in W hile t h o usands h a v e their response. She exhorted drowned at sea trying to cross the European Union's 27 other the authorities described as

the Mediterranean and enter members toshare the burden Europe, the mass deaths on more equitably.

the road in Austria shocked the Continent and reverberated around the world.

Clinten emallS The State Department redacted information from roughly150 of Hillary Clinton's emails from her time assecretary of state that were releasedMondaynight because they contain sensitive information, according to department officials. The information was blacked out because"confidential" materials — the lowest classification of government intelligence —had beendiscovered in the batch of roughly 7,000 pages ofClinton's correspondencesthat the State Department said would beposted on its website, the officials said. None of thedocuments were marked classified at the time, said Mark Toner, aspokesman for the State Department.

Otherwise, Merkel warned, the principle o f

u n f ettered

movement among Europe"We want to save lives and an Union member states, a fight the criminal smugglers," freedom enshrined in w h at said Johanna M i k l -Leitner, is known as t h e S chenAustria's interior m inister. gen Agreement, would be Asked how long the controls endangered. "If we don't succeed in fairwould be in place, she said the time period was "unlimited." ly distributing refugees then The disaster i n A u s t r ia of course the Schengen queshighlighted Europe's muddled tion will be on the agenda for response to a mass migra- many," Merkel said.

BangkOk demding inVeStigatiOn Thai police Mondayexpanded their investigation into a deadlyBangkokshrine bombing, seizing explosives from asuburban apartment building and warning that the group theyare pursuing had beenpreparing "quite a lot of bombs." Yet two weeksafter the attack, which killed 20 people, authorities have remained vague onthe possible motives of the perpetrators and have refused to classify the blast as terrorism, despite what security experts say was aclear intent to cause maximumcivilian casualties. The Aug. 17 blast at Erawan — apopular Hindu shrine —wasthe worst bombing in Thailand in decades.

TranSgender inmate Ashley Diamond,thetransgender inmate who sued Georgia inFebruary for access to hormonetherapy andprotection against prison rape,was unexpectedly paroled Monday after serving less than athird of a12-year sentence for burglary. Diamond, 37, whose federal lawsuit was backed bythe Justice Department, had become athorn in the side of the Georgia Department of Corrections. Talking by phoneMonday, Diamondsaid shethought her early release was largely "a wayfor the department to throw their hands up at my situation and escaperesponsibility for being a provider of care for me, and as regards to mysafety."

ISraeli raid in WeSt Bank Israeli soldiers clashedwith Palestinian gunmen inoneof theWest Bank's toughest refugeecamps overnight, as araid that appeared to beaimedat arresting people suspected asPalestinian militants turned into anarmed confrontation. The hourslong clash in thecrowded cinder-block Jenin refugee camp, one of the chief battlegrounds of the second Intifada, wasthe mostserious confrontation in the area in atleast 18 months, and cameafter a summer of deadly violence throughout theWest Bank. Israeli military officials would sayonly that there was acontinuing arrest raid and that there had been shooting.

CalifOrnia death penalty California onMondayasked a

ADMINISTRATION

DEPARTMENT HEADS

federal appeals panel to overturn a 2014court ruling that — unless it is reversed — could bring a reprieve to themorethan 740inmates on death row in the state. Theruling, by afederal district judge, held that judicial reviews of death sentenceswere so prolonged —and executions so rare andseemingly random —that prisoners were subjected to cruel and unusual punishment. If that ruling is allowed to stand, it could have repercussions for capital punishment across thecountry.

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PROTESTS IN UKRAINE

refused to allow acounty clerk in Kentucky who objects to same-sex marriage on religious grounds to continue to denymarriage licenses to all couples, gay orstraight. In June, in Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court established anationwide constitutional right to same-sex marriage. Thenewcasefrom Kentucky, Davis v. Miller, wasthe court's first opportunity to consider whether government officials may refuse to comply with the Obergefell decision on religious grounds.

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— From wire reports

Iowa pollsrevealhunger for political outsiders

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

MEGABUCKS

Efrem Lukatsky I The Associated Press

Ukrainian protesters, one using police riot equipment, clash with police outside the Parliament in Kiev, Ukraine, on Monday. The results of a fiercely contested parliamentary vote over autonomy for eastern Ukraine werecounted Monday, partly in blood: 265 in favor, three major partie sopposedandonedeadpoliceman. About120 other officers were also wounded in an attack during a protest that intensified after Parliament approved ameasure onconstitutional changes that could grant autonomy to parts of the Luhansk and Donetsk regions. The authorities said amanlater identified as a member of a nationalist party had thrown agrenade at the police lines. The violence underscored the tensions over avote that many hereseeas a concession to Russia in exchange for peace.

Monday's vote in Parliament was just a first step. Changing the status of the rebel eastern regions, as demanded by President Vladimir Putin of Russia in peace talks in Minsk, Belarus, last winter, involves both an amendment to theConstitution, which must receive final approval from a supermajority of 300 of Parliament's 450 members, and aseparate law passed by that chamber. The measure is fiercely opposed byUkrainian nationalists and manyothers, who loathe anyconcession to Putin. President Petro Poroshenko hadconceded the constitutional change, which is included in thetext of the Minsk agreement, with a metaphorical gun to his head: thousands of Ukrainian soldiers surrounded by Russian-backed rebels near the Ukrainian railroad town of Debaltseve. — New YorkTimesNews Service

Destruction of temple byISconfirmed By Anne Barnard and Hwaida Saad New York Times News Service

BEIRUT — After conflict-

ing reports about the extent of damage that Islamic State militants had inflicted on the

Temple of Baal in the ancient city of Palmyra, Syria, a United Nations agency confirmed Monday that the structure had been largely destroyed. Satellite images released by the U.N. training and research agency UNITAR in Geneva showed that the main temple building and a row of columns had been fl attened. The explo-

sion Sunday was the militants' second attack on the world-re-

The numbers drawnMonday night are:

nowned ruins in a week.

Q4QtaQeQ aeQ aaQ cr

uities experts scrambled Monday to determine what had hap-

The estimated jackpot is now $1.6 million.

pened, all agreed that the blast had damaged the best-preserved structure of the temple, a stone building that induded

As local activists and antiq-

the altar.

Some experts had dung to optimism by saying the extent of the damage was still undear, while residents and activists

Maamoun

A b d ulkarim,touchstone for Syrians. It has been a backdrop for concerts ties department, had said he in the annual Palmyra Music thought the main building had Festival, as the ancient amphiremained standing, nonethe- theater has been more recently less calling any damage a loss. for Islamic State executions. The damage tothe nearly The ancient city of Palmy2,000-year-old Temple of Baal ra, which stands in the descame just a week after the mil- ert about 150 miles northeast itants, who have held the Pal- of Damascus, is a UNESCO myra ruins and the modern World Heritage site. city with the same name for The Islamic State has widely three months, destroyed anoth- publidzed images of its fighters er important ancient building blowing up tombs and destroythere, the nearby Temple of ing statues that it considers Baalshamin. blasphemous under its extremKhaled al-Homsi, an anti- ist interpretation of Islam. Argovernment activist and Pal- chaeologists and a n tiquities myra native who recently fled experts consider the losses to to 'Ihrkey but remains in dose be irreparable. contact with residents of the city, accused Abdulkarim of trying to play down the damage. Homsi said that much of the director of Syria's antiqui-

the structure had been knocked

down, including a portico of eight columns just outside its

REFRIGERATOR

attend their first-ever Iowa caucuses next February.

If Iowa voters are any indication, 2016 may be shaping up as the year that angry voters coalesce on their gripes more than any single candidate.

The figures help explain the strong showing in the polls for T rump, retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, and socialist Vermont Sen.

Responses from Repub- Bernie Sanders, three candidates who have all pitched described themselves as like- themselves to voters as either ly to attend next year's first- political outsiders or alternalicans and Democrats who

in-the-nation caucuses in the latest Bloomberg Politics/Des

tives to the mainstream.

In the Democratic primaMoines Register Iowa Poll re- ry, the poll released Saturveal a strong level of biparti- day showed Sanders having san discontentment over the gained significant ground state of American politics. on Clinton, with 30 percent When asked to assess their of support from likely caufeeling about "politicians in cus-goer s for Sanders as general," just 7 percent of compared to Clinton's 37 perRepublicans and 16 percent cent. Back in May, Sanders of Democrats said they were was at just 16 percent and either "happy" or "satisfied." Clinton was at 57 percent. By contrast, 91 percent of Appearing Sunday on CNN's Republicans and 82 percent State of the Union, Sanders of Democrats surveyed said claimed the poll reflects mothey were either "unsatis- mentum in the early nomified" or "mad as hell" about nating states and beyond. "Not only in Iowa, not only politicians. And there's remarkable in New Hampshire, but all partisan symmetry to other over this country we' re gendiscontents among the most erating enormous enthusimotivated of voters — those asm," Sanders said.

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 THE BULLETIN

T TODAY

A3

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

It's Tuesday, Sept. 1, the244th day of 2015. Thereare 121 days left in the year.

STUDY

ANNIVERSARY APPROACHING

Good news,parents. Sharing ofchild care may lead tobetter sex

HAPPENINGS Odama in AlaSka The president will tour Kenai Fjords National Park andhike to Exit Glacier during day two of his three-day tour that aims to highlight climate change.

HISTORY Highlight:In1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr was found not guilty of treason. (Burr was then tried on a misdemeanor charge, but was again acquitted.) In1905,Alberta and Saskatchewan entered Confederation as the eighth and ninth provinces of Canada. In1914,the last passenger pigeon in captivity, "Martha," died at the Cincinnati Zoo. In1923,the Japanesecities of Tokyo andYokohamawere devastated by anearthquake that claimed some140,000 lives. In1939,World War II began as NaziGermany invaded Poland. In1945,Americans received word of Japan's formal surrender that endedWorld War II. (Because of the time difference, it was Sept. 2 inTokyo Bay, where theceremony took place.) In1951,the United States, Australia and NewZealand signed a mutual defensepact, the ANZUStreaty. In1969,a coup in Libya brought MoammarGadhafi to power. In1976, U.S. Rep.Wayne Hays, D-Ohio, resigned in the wake of a scandal in which he admitted having anaffair with "secretary" Elizabeth Ray. In1983,269 people were killed when aKorean Air Lines Boeing 747was shot down by a Soviet jet fighter after the airliner entered Soviet airspace. In1985, a U.S.-Frenchexpedition located the wreckageof the Titanic on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean roughly 400 miles off Newfoundland. In1995,a ribbon-cutting ceremony washeld for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fameand Museum in Cleveland. (The hall opened to the public the next day.) Ten years age:NewOrleans Mayor RayNagin issued a "desperate SOS" ashis city descendedintoanarchyamid the flooding left by Hurricane Katrina. Al-Qaida's number two made the terror group's first direct claim of responsibility for theJuly7 bombingsinLondon in a videotape. Five years age:President Barack Obamaconvened a new round of ambitious Mideast peace talks at the White House as he hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the first faceto-face negotiations in nearly two years. A manupset with the Discovery Channel's programming took two employees and a security officer hostage at the network's headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland; police shot and killed the gunman, James JaeLee,andall three hostages escapedsafely. One year age:President Barack Obama,addressing a union crowd in Milwaukee, renewed his push for Congress to raise the minimumwagein a buoyant accounting of the economy's "revving" performance.

BIRTHDAYS Former DefenseSecretary Melvin Laird is 93. Comedian-actress Lily Tomlin is 76. Actor Don Stroud is 72. Singer Archie Bell is 71. Singer Barry Gibb is 69. Talkshow host Dr. Phil McGraw is 65. Singer Gloria Estefan is 58. Former White House PressSecretary Dee DeeMyers is 54. Jazz musician BoneyJames is 54. Singer-musician Grant Lee Phillips (Grant LeeBuffalo) is 52. Retired NBAAll-Star Tim Hardaway is 49. Rap DJSpigg Nice (Lost Boyz) is 45. Rock singer JD Fortune is 42.Actor Scott Speedman is 40.Actor Boyd Holbrook is 34. Actress Zoe Lister-Jones is 33. — From Mf ereports

By Deborah Netburn Los Angeles Times

Sharing the pain and joy of child care with your spouse could pay off in the bedroom, a new study finds.

Moms and dads who split child-rearing duties down the middle have a lower lev-

el of couple conflict, higher overall couple satisfaction,

and higher quality sexual relationships for both partners compared with t heir

less egalitarian peers, according to the report.

-e

"When it comes to relat ionship s atisfaction a n d

)S

couple conflict, the only ar-

Mike G roll I The AssociatedPress

World War II veteran Felix Farina shows off his portrait taken in a Mechanicville tavern during the war, at the Mechanicville Public Library in Mechanicville, New York. Seventy years after the war officially ended, Siciliano’s Restaurant in Mechanicville is long gone, but the town still celebrates the photos.

rangement that seems to be problematic is when the fe-

male is doing most or all of the work with the kids," said

ooco ec ion ivesoninsma own Nearly 70 years after the end of World War II, Mechanicville, New York, fondly clingsto history.

Dan Carlson, a sociologist at Georgia State University who led the study.

Women report the highest satisfaction with t heir

"Our culture has consistently moved toward the attitude

that having an equal partnership is good and important, and that has increased over time." Dan Garison, sociologist at Georgia State University who led the study

who do yardwork and are good breadwinners, and men are turned on by feminine caretakers. "It was part of this can-

non of work using older data that suggested egalitarian couples divorce more and have lower quality sex lives," Carlson said. B ecause th e d a t a t h e

marriage and sex life when study relied on were 20 years old, Carlson decided majority of child care, the it was worth re-examining researchers found. Howev- the question with a more er,that arrangement does contemporary data set. "We thought this was not always work out best for the dad. worthy because of what we Men who do most of the know about couples in the work with the kids report U.S. and what they want," having sex less frequently he said. "Our culture has than men who split child consistently moved toward their partners take on the

care with their spouse more

the attitude that having an

library's local history room. least three women in uniform Some photos are tom or discol- are in the collection. The men in the photographs ored, but most remain remarka popular tavern near the Hud- ably intact and clear, as if they represent all branches of the son River in upstate New York. were taken yesterday. U.S. military and nearly evSeventy years after the war The entire Siciliano collec- ery rank and specialty: enlistofficially ended with Japan's tion has been digitized on the ed men and officers, gunners and bomber pilots, medics and surrender Sept. 2, 1945, Si- library's website.

equally. equal partnership is good The research was based and important, and that has on data collected in 2006 increased over time." from 487 straight couples The team found that the from low-income and mid- majority of the couples in dle-class homes. the 2006 survey shared It was p resented last child care tasks. Women month at the American So- reported sharing child care ciological Association's an- with their partner 73.4 pernual meeting. cent of the time, while men C arlson and h i s c o l - reported sharing these duleagues were inspired to ties 80 percent of the time.

ciliano's Restaurant is l o ng

doctors. It's unknown how many of

look at ho w

the veterans in the photos are

affects relationships after

By Chris Carola

War, but most of the portraits are from WWII. More than 600

has just over 5,000.Servicemen

N. Y . of them are on display in the

had their pictures taken. At

The Associated Press

M ECHANICVILLE,

from nearby communities also

— During World War II, hundreds of servicemen in uniform had their photographs taken at

gone, but the black-and-white How it happened After the U.S. entered the portraits endure. Only a few ofthepeoplephotographed by war, word spread around town Mechanicville restaurant own- that Siciliano was taking phoer Charlie Siciliano are still tos of anyone who showed up living. at his restaurant in uniform. It Public displays of photo- quickly became a ritual for lographsoflocalservicemen and calservicemen home on leave

still living. Seven were recent-

ly contacted for an informal gathering at the library and four showed up, including Sgambati and Army veterans Anthony Luciano, 90, and Felix Farina, 91, and Marine

women were common in many

or recently returned from over-

U.S. communities during the

seas to head to the hangout, Corps veteran Francis "Dick" known for its Saturday night Varone, 89.

war, but few have survived.

The quality, size and longevity of the Siciliano collection make it "completely unique" among known WWII collections, according to Kimberly Guise, a curator at the National World War II Museum in New

Orleans. Here are some of the de-

reading a 2013 study pub- their relationships and relished in t h e A m erican ported little conflict. Sociological Review. That It should be noted, howstudy, based on data col- ever, that the f i ndings in lected from 1992 to 1994, the study are general and suggested that t r aditional do not rule out that couples couples — where the female who have more traditional partner does the majority of roles in their marriages and the work around the house child-rearing practices are — have more sex than egali- also sexually satisfied. "For a vast majority of tarian couples. The authors of the 2013 people, an d e s p ecially study make the argument young adults, an egalitarit hat sexual t u r n-ons a r e an relationship is what they

Varone, an Iwo Jima veter-

cents a dozen. "If Charlie saw you there in

an, was fresh out of boot camp when he had his picture taken

uniform, he'd say, 'Go sit in the

at Siciliano's in 1943. When he

corner.' Then he'd snap your picture," said Mechanicville

finally returned home in 1946, he went to Siciliano's — and

native Christopher Sgambati,

met Mary Lou, the woman he

ditional male and female

want, but that's not to say that peoplewho have more

90, a Navy veteran who served would be married to until her

roles. In other words, women

traditional divisions of labor will have a negative out-

are attracted to burly men

come," Carlson said.

traits of local servicemen, and with flowers, and occasional- brose, is home to more than a few servicewomen. ly a bottle of wine, appears in 100,000 artifacts, i ncluding The 3-by-3-inch photos, nearly every photo. photo collections, but it h as framed in groups of 25, covSiciliano, a p h otography nothing that compares with ered the walls of his bar for buff, gave each person he pho- the Siciliano collection, she 30 years. Siciliano died in tographed a copy for free. Each said. The photographs are one 1980,a few years afterselling framedphotohad aname typethe restaurant. The new own-

written under it. A star placed

er had the photos arranged alphabetically in eight large

on a photo indicated that per- the local men and women who son was killed during the war. fought in history's biggest war.

frames, which eventually were donated to the Mechanicville

The servicemen

vicemen during the Korean

They also report that the

majority of c ouples surveyed were very satisfied in

dance bands and clams at 25

in the Pacific. deathin 1994. tails a b ou t t h e Si c i l iano Each sailor, soldier, airman or Marine sat in t h e same Why it’s important photographs: well-lit corner at the end of the Guise, the National WWII The collection curved wooden bar. Many are Museum curator, called the Siholding a drink in their hands. ciliano collection "a local histoStarting in 1942 and continuing through the war's du- The interior white tile walls ry treasure trove." The museum, founded by ration, Siciliano snapped more and a shaded window served than 700 black-and-white por- as a backdrop. The same vase the late historian Stephen Am-

Public Library. Several years ago, Siciliano's son also donated the negatives. Siciliano photographed ser-

t h e d i v ision

of labor around child care

Most of the men photographed at Siciliano's were

fundamentally tied to t r a-

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small town's lasting tribute to "We

c onsidered

t hem

all part of our family," said Charles Siciliano Jr., who was 9 when his father started tak-

ing the photos. "That collection during the war had a popula- will last long after all the guys tion of about 7,500 and now aregone,includingme." from M e chanicville, w h ich

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A4

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

An increasingtoll throughthe summer A sampling of cities where the number of murders so far this year is outpacing the same period last year.

Innovation Continued fromA1

PE RCENT CHANGE

Milwaukee

59

104

76%

well havebeen Walden Pond.

S t. Louis

85

136

60

Haartsen credits his work-life balance and serene existence with sparking the creativi-

W ashington

73

t 05

44

ty that led to his invention of Bluetooth. "It's a very important part

New Orleans 9 8

1 2 0 22

C hicago

294

244

20

Dallas New York

71

83

17

190

208

9

171

4

P hiladelphia 1 6 5

The New York Times

Continued fromA1 But more commonly, many top police officials say they are seeing a growing willingness among disenchanted young men in poor neighborhoods to use violence to settle ordinary

tor of the Major Cities Chiefs

disputes.

ficials said were the lowest in decades. In New York, killings have increasedabout 9 percent,to 208 through mid-August from

munity is literally a matter of life and death," Milwaukee's police chief, Edward Flynn, said. "And that's coupled with a very harsh reality, which is the mental calculation of those who live in that strata that it is

Association and a former police chief in Charlotte, North Carolina.

In New York and Chicago, homicides have risen from the 2014 numbers, which of-

190 a year earlier. Homicides

in Chicago are up about 20 percentover the same period a year ago.

W hy the uptick?

more dangerous to get caught

The police superintendent in Chicago, Garry McCarthy, caught with their gun." said he thought an abundance The resultshave often been of guns was a major factor in devastating. Tamiko Holmes, his city's homicide spike. Even a mother of five, has lost two as officials in both parties of her nearly grown children are calling for reducing the in apparently unrelated shoot- prison population, he insisted ings in the past eight months. that gun offenders should face In January, a daughter, 20, stiffer penalties. "Across the country, we' ve was shot to death during a robbery at a birthday party at all found it's not the individual a Days Inn. Six months later, who never committed a crime the authorities called again: before suddenly killing someHer only son, 19, had been body," McCarthy said Monshot in the head in a car — a day. "It's the repeat offenders. killing for which the police It's the same people over and are still searching for a motive over again." and a suspect. Among some experts and Holmes said she recent- rank-and-file officers, the noly persuaded her remaining tion that less aggressive policteenage daughters to move ing has emboldened criminals away from Milwaukee with — known as the "Ferguson her, but not before one of them, effect" in some circles — is a 17, was wounded in a shooting popular theory for the uptick while riding in a car. in violence. "The violence was nothing "The e quilibrium h a s like this before," said Holmes, changed between police and 38, who grew up in Milwau- offenders," said Alfred Blumkee. "What's changed is the stein,a professor and a crimistreets and the laws and the nologist at Heinz College, Carparents.It's become a mess negie Mellon University. and a struggle." Others doubt the theory or without their gun than to get

An alarming trend

say data has not emerged to prove it. Richard Rosenfeld,

Urban bloodshed — as well as the overall violent crime

a criminologist from the Uni-

rate — remains far below the

said homicides in St. Louis, for instance, had begun an

peaks of the late 1980s and early '90s, and criminologists say it is too early to draw broad conclusions from the recent numbers. In some cities, including Cincinnati, Los Angeles and Newark, New Jersey, homicides remain at a relatively steady rate this year. Yet with at least 35 of the

nation's cities reporting increases in murders, violent

crimes or both, according to a recent survey, the spikes are raising alarm among urban police chiefs. The uptick prompted an urgent summit meeting in August of more than 70 officials from some of

ployee's license plate numbers so he knew when they were Today he never checks From left, Mark Zuckerberg, Dustin Moskovitz and Sean Parker at connng and going. While this intense passion email after 6 p.m., or on week- Facebook headquarters in Palo Alto, California, in 2005. Mosko› ends or holidays. He's turned vitz, one of Facebook’s first employees, recently said that if he that founders possess may be off all push notifications on was able to have a better work-life balance in the company’s early essential to building a great his smartphone. There's a fire- years, he could havebeen a better leader. company, it can also wear on wall between the cacophony many employees. of digital life and Haartsen. Dustin Moskovitz began Haartsen's story is a curi- marks aren't pretty for many of reviews of Tesla specifical- working with Mark Zuckerous one amid a debate over tech companies often cited ly write that long hours and a berg on Facebook when they the modern, w hite-collar as current meccas for inno- lack of work-life balance are were both Harvard students. workplace following a New vation. Employees at Airbnb, a con of working at the com- When Zuckerberg dropped York Times story detailing Amazon, Apple, Facebook, pany. But not everyone sees it out and headed to Silicon a brutal culture at Amazon. Netflix, SpaceX, Tesla and that way. Valley to focus on Facebook, "Sure you work 10 (hours) Moskovitz followed. (Amazon chief executive Jeff Uber reserve their lowest "2006 was one of the best Bezos owns The Washington scores for their company's a day, but honestly, time flies. work-life balances. Post.) I am pushed to be better than years for Facebook, and one A big question is, does the The Glassdoor rankings what I thought was my best," of the worst years for me as a price of innovation require for tech companies with a wrote one reviewer. human," he recently wrote on "For innovators, they may Medium. a workload that is destined shortage of recent innovation, to leave employees unhappy stagnant stock prices and not really notice all this presMoskovitz believes that if with their work-life balance? murky futures tells the oppo- sure around long hours and he'd made more time for ex"I don't think there was any site story. Employees at AOL, harsh circumstances, because periences outside Facebookwork-life balance while the Cisco, Dell, HP, IBM, Nokia they just frickin' dig what they such as sleeping, eating well Sistine Chapel ceiling was be- and Sony all give their highest do," said Luis Solis, the North and exercising — he would ing painted," said Larry Kee- marks for work-life balance. America president for Imag- have been a better leader at "When you' re doing some- inatik, which consults on in- Facebook. ley, co-founder of Doblin, an "I would have had fewinnovation consulting agency. thing that's intense, that' s novation. "A lot of people in "None of the great innovators hard, that's new to the world, innovation are sustainers or er panic attacks, and acute or inventors in history — not that's really innovative, expect are basically, essentially good, health problems — like throwEinstein, not L eonardo da to be working 20-hour days normal people who aren' t ing out my back regularly Vinci — ever had work-life and don't expect that you' re going to work to create some- in my early 20s," Moskovitz b alance. The idea we c a n going to get enough sleep," thing new every day. For them said. "I would have picked achieve work-life balance and Doblin said. "You won't eat it's really stressful and it' s fewer petty fights with my do extraordinarywork strikes regularly. You' re going to eat, highpressure and it's m aybe peers in the organization, me as somewhat ridiculous." breath and deliver amazing, not a whole lot of fun." because I would have been Data from Glassdoor, a amazing work." The aforementioned inno- generallymore centered and website that is similar to Yelp Elon Musk, the chief execu- vative tech companies, with self-reflective." or TripAdvisor, but for work- tive of Tesla and SpaceX, com- the exception of Apple, are That sel f - reflectiveness places, seems to support Kee- pares workingfor his com- still led by a founder. Success- is something Haartsen, the ley's view. panies to being in the special ful founders are the truest in- Bluetooth inventor, could find Glassdoor asks employees forces. novators, obsessed with their on his hikes in Sweden. This "We' ve grown (expletive) missions and likely to de-em- spring he was inducted to to rate their companies on five characteristics: culture soft," Musk told his biographer phasize other aspects of their the National Inventors Hall and values, work/life balance, after seeing that only hun- life, because they are so fo- of Fame. He isn't leading a senior management, compen- dreds of people were working cused on their work mission. company worth billions and "If you count all the time he hasn't found mainstream sationand benefits and career at Tesla's headquarters on a I'm focused on our mission, fame. But there's no doubt he' s opportunities. Saturday. The w ork-life b alance On Glassdoor, 52 percent that's basically my whole an innovator. stress."

worry about it," said Darrel Stephens, executive direc-

you will, within that peer com-

Gates even memorized em-

counterbalance to release the

Murder

"Maintaining one's status and credibility and honor, if

Microsoft grew into a be-

hemoth when it was led by founder Bill Gates. In the company's earliest days, Gates would sometimes sleep with his head on his desk between long binge sessions of coding. He'd awaken and immediately start typing again. A young

stressful," Haartsen told me. "While on the other hand this

Year-to-date time periods range from Aug. 11 to Aug. 31. Source: City police departments

in the office and wears a gray T-shirt every day, so his energy is rarely wasted on things other than Facebook.

L

that you balance between your work, which can be very

20

Kansas City, Mo. 45 5 4

He spends 50-60 hours a week

Compared with the frenet-

ic pace of the modern worker, Haartsen's existence might as

2014 2015

life," Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg once said.

versity of Missouri-St. Louis, arc upward in 2014 before a

white police officer killed an unarmed teenager, Michael Brown, in nearby Ferguson. That data, he said, suggests that other factors may be in play. Less debated is the sense among police officials that more young people are settling their disputes, including one started on Facebook, with guns. Capt. Mike Sack, a homic ide commander in th e St . Louis M e t ropolitan P o l ice

Department, cited k i llings there that had grown out of

the nation's largest cities. A Justice Department initiative

arguments over girlfriends, food and even characters on

is scheduled to address the rising homicide rates as part of a conference in September. "If you have that many cit-

a TV show. "Most remarkable

ies that are having that kind

sort to such a level of violence,"

of experiences, we ought to

he said.

Lessig

others seem a little — no, a lot,

is that individuals get so upset over things that I or others might consider petty but re-

no, completely — less so. Continued fromA1 Lessig is not, after all, DonPlausible in the way that ald Trump, able to promote his all nutty concepts sound a nonpolitician candidacy with lot more achievable if broken the help of billions stashed down into small digestible i n his mattress. And he i s pieces. c ertainly no t H i l l ar y C l i n What he means is: raising a ton or Jeb Bush, this year' s million dollars by Labor Day earned-money championsof to kick off h i s D e mocratic the two major political parties. presidential campaign, then He is, instead, a man few using that momentum to boost people know, outside of acahis poll numbers, which in demic and Internet circlesturn would give him a place on at 54, he is the former director the debate stage with the more of the Edmond J. Safra Center conventional candidates. Us-

for Ethics at Harvard and has

ing the debates to romp over the professional politicians. And managing, somehow, to not get plowed under by the very moneyed political campaign system he is trying to dismantle.

worked to free restrictions on Internet interests. He's also

sought to diminish the power of money in politics, most recently with the 2014 Mayday PAC, which raised money to elect like-minded members of The first o f t h ose goals Congress. (In eight races the may indeed be plausible; Les- group targeted, two of its cansig had about half a million didates won.) in hand as of Aug. 21. But the Still, Lessig has his hook

Jail death

Jim Wilson/The New York Times file photo

ic court records show that

the county was required to Continued fromA1 respond to the complaint by Surveillance video of the Aug. 10. night Mays died shows depJ ennifer C o ughlin, a uties mocking him, despite Bend attorney who filed the apparently acknowledging lawsuit on behalf of Mays' he was high. father, said Monday that In essence, the lawsuit she was "impressed" by allege s Mays' death was the extent of th e c ounty's wrongful, that deputies act- admissions. ed negligently and that Mays However, she took issue suffered cruel and unusual with the county's assertion punishment. County attorthat Mays should have alertneys acknowledged in the ed deputies that he had swalresponse that sheriff's depu- lowed me t h a mphetamine ties noted Mays was agitated and that he hadn't told them and had split his head open, he needed medical attention. and that according to the The lawsuit alleges that Bend Police officer who ar- nearly two h ours before rested him, Mays exhibited Mays died, one deputy said agitation and an inability to to another: "He says he stay still. needs to go to the hospital." Attorneys for the county The other deputy responded: wrote that damages aren' t "He probably does." "If (inmates are) in a posimerited because Mays' fault is greater and that the al- tion where they need medleged harm at the heart of ical assistance, you let the the lawsuit was the result doctors figure out what they of Mays' illegal actionstook," Coughlin said. "These possessing and i ngesting defendants clearly were not methamphetamine. doctors and they were makDeschutes County Coun- ing medical choices on Mr. sel Dave Doyle could not be Mays' behalf." reached for comment MonThe response concedes d ay. In a n i n t erview w i t h The Bulletin in June, Doyle

that deputies yelled at Mays

to "chill out" when he was said the county's defense banging on the window of preparations were on hold his cell and pushing his body until the completion of the against the window with his DO J investigation. Electron- arms over his head.

Both parties agree that sheriff's deputies b egan

cede these and several other

claims. According to Nelson, the sheriff's office handed at8:58p.m.,nearlytwohours down disciplinary actions after Bend Fire Department against four employees for paramedics left the jail after violations of sheriff's ofevaluating another inmate in fice policy and procedure in the booking area. ApriL Nelson could not name The county also acknowl- the employees due to restricedged in the response that tions on the release of inforformer D eschutes County mation protecting employee Sheriff Larry B lanton was privacy under Oregon law. directly responsible for adNelson w r o t e i n an ministration of the sheriff's emailed statement Monday office and jail and acted as that two sergeants were dea "policy maker." Blanton moted to deputy, one for failannounced his retirement in ing a probation period and late December and was suc- the other for failing to corceeded July I by Shane Nel- rect "unbecoming and unson, who at the time of Mays' professional conduct by depdeath was jail commander. uties under his supervision." Sgts. Brian Bishop and Two deputies were issued Tedd Morris, defendants in letters of reprimand, one the lawsuit, were supervi- for "making a gesture that sors at the jail, the response appears to demonstrate the acknowledged. The plain- actions of an inmate" and tiffs assert that Bishop and "behavior that is not consisMorris failed to m anage tent with the core values of deputies and that jail staff the sheriff's office." A second weren't properly trained to deputy was issued a letter of dealwith overdoses ordeter- reprimand for "violation of mining when medical atten- professional conduct" and tion was necessary. The suit "establishing a pattern of also describes an "informal nonproductivity." culture and custom" of negCoughlin, the plaintiff's ligent treatment of detainees attorney, said she looks forin the county jail. ward to depositions in the But attorneys for the coun- case, which are scheduled ty wrote in the response that for October. they didn't have enough in— Reporter: 541-383-0376, chest compressions on Mays

formation to refute or con-

cM7ithycombe@bendbulletin.corn

team" out of San Francisco. He's also opened an online system, it would be easy to fix the system." poll to help choose his vice Larry Lessig, Harvard professor whowants to run for president presidential running mateto remove moneyed interests from politics in other words, offloading a lot of the campaign to volunteers. If the money he's raised "I think the only way to have by Labor Day doesn't add up — that bright and shiny thing meant to convince voters of a strong enough mandate is to to a million, he says, he' ll rethe seriousness with which he make clear I will be there for turn it. is approaching this campaign. one reason," he said in an inPolitics has its share of egoHe's promising that, were he terview. Were he a traditional centrics and narcissists, so it to defy universal expectations candidate, he said, he'd have to can seem puppy-kicking cruel to win the presidency and grind out positions and "talk to dump on a do-gooder like push through the campaign about 10 to 12 issues." Lessig. f inance-inflected Citi z e n With attention on them, "the His sole effort, the equality Equality Act of 2017, he would hardest thing we have to do measure, would push through resign and leave the rest of is what we wouldn't accom- advances to the Voting Rights the nation's worries to his vice plish," he said. Ergo, he would Act, which has been chipped "sacrifice the full presidential at by courts and Congress. president. C ampaign promises t o term." Among other things, it would serve only one term always Presidential c a m paigns seek to spur public financing seem a little daffy. And prom- these days are giant startups, of campaigns, another effort ises to serve less than a term, requiring a national staff and long tried, mostly without after all the trouble of getting hundreds of millions of dol- success. there? Daffy doesn't cover it. lars. Lessig is running what He insists that all the roadBut that is precisely what his campaign calls a "decen- blocks would tumble under Lessig is vowing. tralized virtual c ampaign the force of his giant mandate.

He cites a Wall Street Journal poll from this summer that he

"My bet is when we givea clear way to fix the

said proved changes like he is espousing were "the No. I issue" among Americans. "This is historically completely anomalous," he said. "It has not been that important to

people before. What you typically find is that people are so skeptical — they don't believe the politicians when they talk about it. My bet is when we

give a clear way to fix the system, it would be easy to fix the system." But it's not clear that atti-

tudes have changed all that much. Indeed, the poll he cited showed that a third of Amer-

icans said their top concern was the power of moneyed interests in politics. But the

question measured only a few options, and not matters like

the economy, which has been the top-ranking issue for much of the last decade.


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 T HE BULLETIN A 5

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A6 T H E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

IN FOCUS: TAXI OF TOMORROW

ra e in eow,avan emmesa By Emma G. Fitzsimmons

tors and customers.

New York Times News Service

A court ruling in June ended the legal dispute over the

NEW YORK — The boxy

yellow vehicle is a survivor.

vehicle and allowed the Taxi

It won a competition to redesign New York City's taxi. It

and Limousine Commission to set the Sept. 1 start date.

endured a

p o thole-marred The administration of Michael Bloomberg had wanted a unireplicate the city's rugged form taxi tailored to the city' s streets. And it prevailed in a strenuous demands, but oppolegal battle and overcame the nents argued the administraelection of a new mayor who tion had exceeded its authority had been a vocal opponent. by trying to force drivers to The vehicle, known as the buy a certain vehicle. Taxi of Tomorrow, finally beWhile some owners can comes the city's yellow cab still choose from a short list standard today. of hybrid and wheelchair-acThe Nissan NV200, more cessible vehicles, taxi officials minivan than muscle car, is a said 80 percent of the city's yelmajor makeover for the city low cabs could eventually be taxi, which has evolved with NV200s. memorable (the Checker) and Hundreds of t h e N i ssan not-so-memorable (the Crown models arealready roaming Victoria) incarnations. After Manhattan's streets, but they a decade of planning and de- make up a small sharebate over the taxi's fate, most about750 cabs — ofthe more owners will now be required than 13,000 yellow taxis. More to switch to the Nissan model are on the way; each year be-

n "i -

course in Arizona meant to

when they retire their cabs.

City officials hope the new look, from the sunroof to the

cellphone-charging o utlets, will give yellow cabs a boost at a time when their dominance

is threatened by Uber, the car service app. But whether the Taxi of Tomorrow will help yellow cabs retain a place in a fast-fracturing market is a question facing drivers, inves-

h

Joshua Bright/The New York Times

A Nissan NV200 taxi, which won a redesign competition to become the city's new standard yellow cab, in New York. Most cab owners will now be required to switch to the Nissan model, which looks like a minivan, when they retire their current vehicles.

city officials have grappled industry because there has re- with how to regulate new encently been a stronger focus on trants in the car-for-hire indusof the rollout is great for the customer service.

try. In July the city introduced

Initial Common Core goals unfulfilled as results trickle in Testing andthe CommonCore

The Associated Press

L OS ANGELES —

Re-

Two tests, the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness and Careers and the Smarter BalancedAssessment System, were

sults for some of the states that participated in Common

developed to test students on the Common Core State Standards but are being dropped by numerous states.

Core-aligned testing for the first time this spring are out, with overall scores higher than expected, though still below what many parents may be accustomed to seeing. Full or preliminary scores have been released for Con-

~ ~

Sm a rter Balanced ~ PA R CC

Oth er test or leaving one of these tests No CommonCore

» ~ fk

necticut, Idaho, Missouri, Or-

egon, Vermont, Washington and West Virginia. They all

Oaag

participated in the Smarter

Balanced Assessment Consortium, one of two groups of

Connecticut and New Hampshire 11th-graders take the SAT instead

states awarded $330 million

by the U.S. Department of Education in 2010 to develop exams to test students on the

Common Core state stanAP dards in math and English Source: AP reporting language arts. Scores in four other states nationwide has largely unrav- the results. t hat developed their o w n eled, chiefly because states At Los Angeles Unified exams tied to the standards are dropping out of the two School District, Cynthia Lim, have been released. The sec- testing groups and creating executive director of the Ofond testing group, the Part- their own exams. fice of Data and A ccount"The whole idea of Com- ability, said the preliminary nership for Assessment of Readiness for College and mon Core was to bring stu- results are "lower than what Careers, is still setting bench- dents and schools under a people are used to seeing." marks for each performance common definition of what District officials are consultlevel and has not released any success is," said Tom Love- ing with school leaders about results.

Even when all the results are available, it will not be possible to compare student

performanceacross a majority of states, one of Common Core's fundamental goals. What began as an effort to increase transparency and allow parents and school lead-

Teachers Continued from A1

OSU-Cascades reports a

growing number of applicants for itsteacher program. Of

~

said Carolyn Platt, a senior

Special Science education 10.6% 12.7% Language lich Fhgilsh A rts a r t s languages 6.2% 15.8% 25%

instructor and program lead. She said her students get plenty of classroom experience before they graduate, and she worries about districts across

the country putting people in the classroom beforethey are ready. Candidate pools do vary, and rural districts generally see fewer applicants. Jayel Hayden, who manages hiring for Crook County School District, said of the 20 teachers that the district hired, more than half were new to teach-

ing, and many of the openings were due to Crook County teachers being hired away to

should not be compared with old ones. "I think we are get-

gion's reputation as a desirable place to live tends to pull

have that."

ting richer information about student learning," she said.

score as proficiently in math and reading on the tests. So this summer, states, parents

ers to assess performance and schools have braced for

sta t ewide

scores thus far are not as stark as f i rst p r edicted, though they do show that vast

numbers of students are not proficient in math or reading.

21.9%

Social studies 13%

June, nearly all are employed, mostly in Central Oregon,

Common Core is not going to

the

that districts are hiring Bilingual ESl teachers nowHiring managers also point are in demand to areas consistently difficult

the 38 teachers it graduated in

Bend or Redmond. The re-

Overall,

in candidates, and once hired

8.8%

*Only 31 of the 309 teachers who received ESL certifications were certified as bilingual. Source: Oregon Teacher Standards and Practices Commission Pete Smith / The Bulletin

Pine. That district does have

some open positions but only because they were recently posted.

But Oregon is not entirely in the clear. After an initial uptick at the start of the reces-

sion, the number of graduates from Oregon's teacher preparation programs fell 37 percent in five years. That's likely because people saw teaching as a safe career move in a bad economy, only to watch dis-

they may move on to the larger districts. trict issue pink slips thanks to "I don't think it would be

inaccurate to say Bend being Bend is our best defense against teacher shortages," said Mathisen at Bend-La

«~’g

ot

Department o f

budget cuts, said Keith Menk,

cial education. It is also short those who can teach English

language learners, or ELL, as well as school nurses and speech pathologists. For those last two, Knobbe

said schools are competing for workers who could also

go into the medical field with different salaries and working conditions.

BilinguaVELL te a chers have been on the shortage list for nearly a decade, a sign that teachers may not be keeping up with the state's growing Hispanic population, which grew by a third in that time. Of the 309 new teachers certified to teach English as a sec-

ond language in 2013, just 31 were certified bilingual. But the teaching market,

like any other market, tends to correct itself, Menk said. If would-be teachers hear over

and over that these are the credentials d i stricts

n e ed,

deputy director at the state' s eventually — hopefully Teacher Standards and Prac- they will catch on. tices Commission. The num— Reporter: 541-617-7837, ber of graduates could go up aspegman@bendbullet n. icorn

f

y

~

~

' 'I

WITH

g

f

f I

OF CAD IL LAC

Ed u c ation,

Oregon faces shortages for the coming school year in science, math, Spanish and speon bilingual teachers and

, 1 ’› 0 y 1~ 1 ~ O~ y ’ O ~ y W •

Taxi Workers Alliance, said

An analysis of teacher certificato fill as a source of worry. If boomers hitting retirement, tions issued to newteachers for you can hire all the elementathe most recent year that data freeing up more positions. ry school teachers you need "We keep hearing about were available shows that being but can't find a qualified high when the baby boomer gen- able to teach English as asecond school science or math teachlanguage was apriority for eration retires, we' re going to er, that's a problem, says Carol have a shortage," said Lynn students. Seventy-five percent of Knobbe, board president for Evans, human r e sources new graduates also left school the Oregon School Personnel director fo r t h e R e dmond with multiple certifications. Association. "We may be able to fill most School District. Retirements 2012-13 OREGONTEACHER there were actually down this CERTIFICATIONS BY of our positions satisfactorily, year. "At least in Redmond SPECIALTY(ENDORSEMENT) but that doesn't mean it's not a we haven't experienced that English as a crisis," she said. Other — yet." 8.6s/', se c ond language" According to the federal

how to explain that the results

last year indicated that a majority of students would not

Pointing to a more tradition-

al taxi, Cheung, 22, of Queens, drivers mostly like the design added: "That's the stereotypi- of the NV200. "The real test of time will cal image that comes to mind, and they' re ruining that. Who not be just the customer satisdid this'?" faction," she said, "but it will be Sitting on a nearby bench, more about how these cars will Giona Jefferson said she did stand the test of durability."

And then there's the baby

less, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. "And

Field tests administered

madinejad, the former Iranian not mind the vehicle's "Europresident, inside the vehicle. pean vibe" and had enjoyed After becoming mayor, he ne- riding in the Taxi of Tomorrow gotiated a revised agreement a few times. She liked the exwith Nissan last year, prompt- tra legroom and the open feel ed by the potential cost of end- ofthe sunroof,shesaid. "The overall ambiance of ing a 10-year contract with the company. your commute is happier," Given that history, it is not said Jefferson, 27, of Brooklyn. surprising that the city is ap- "You' re not cramped in a little proaching the rollout with little small raggedy Town Car-style fanfare. City Hall is not plan- of cab." ning any public events to mark As for taxi drivers, they are the day, in contrast to the news still getting used to the vehiconference Bl held cle, which has a list price of in 2011 to announce the new $29,900. Waldir Sousa said he vehicle. switched to an NV200 from Wiley Norvell, a spokesman a Crown Victoria last year. for de Blasio, said New York- Some passengers have comers have already been riding plained — tall people hit their in the vehicle for years. "The heads on the roof, while older cat is out of the bag," Norvell people strain to step up into the sard. vehicle — but overall he likes Despite the publicity, many his new taxi. The ergonomic people have never heard of the seat for drivers has improved vehicle or taken a ride in one. his shifts, he said. "It is much better than the As Charles Cheung watched an NV200 taxi pass Union Crown Victoria because I have Square on a recent afternoon, a lower back problem," said he was not impressed. Sousa, 64, of Queens. "Oh my god, that's so ugly," Bhairavi Desai, the execuhe said. tive director of the New York

oomb erg

"We get letters and feedback — and then abandoned — a tween 2,500 and 3,000 owners saying, 'Wow, I took a trip, I proposal to place a temporary typically replace their taxis, looked up, and I saw the sky,'" cap on the number of Uber city officials said. Joshi said in an interview at vehicles. The vehicle has a "low-an- her office in Lower ManhatMayor Bill de Blasio has a noyance" horn and sliding tan. "That's the kind of char- complicated relationship with doors — in a nod to traffic acteristic that the taxi industry the Taxi of Tomorrow. As the city's public advocate, he opsafety groups, along with more needs to compete." comfortableseats for drivers S ince Uber e n tered t h e posed the plan and criticized who spend long hours on the New York market in 2011, the Nissan for doing business in road. value of taxi medallions has Iran. In a Twitter message, he Meera Joshi, the city's taxi dropped. Some taxi drivers posted a photo of the planned commissioner, said the timing have decamped to Uber. And taxi with M ah moud Ah-

By Christine Armario

or imn

Your Truck and SUV Superstore.

I I


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbuiietin.corn/iocai

THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

j~P' =- -,L+

inc consi ers em ra o nrec iona usi n By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

City Council members

The city of La Pine will be-

rwthF. Ir

FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon.For more information, visit the Northwest Interagency Coordination Center's webpage:bit.ly/bbfires

vember 2016 general election.

gin drafting ordinances that wouldtemporarily ban recreational marijuana sales and future business ventures. A potential permanent ban

would have to be brought to La Pine voters during the No-

discussed recent legislation allowing the ban and future local regulations of marijuana businesses at a special meeting Monday. Two medical marijuana dispensaries exist within city limits. Although the two

businesses would be grandfathered in and not affected by

the ban, the owners told city councilors their businesses would be harmed as they seek

n

Cove Fire

could be contained

I want," said Matt Toepfer, owner of High Desert Botan-

icals in La Pine, about selling recreational pot. "I deal with the community

today By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

to attract more customers through the recreational legal-

all the time, and I know the

ization of marijuana.

said. "This would be a big

a close watch today on land

letdown."

charred Saturday near Culver due to its proximity

"That's really ultimately

community is for it," Toepfer

See Marijuana /B2

what we want, or at least what

Firefighters plan to keep

to a campground at Cove

Palisades State Park and structures. The Cove Fire was

rjnv i

1. County Line 2 Acres: 67,247 Containment: 88% Cause: Unknown

90 percent contained as of Monday night, and firefighters today plan to patrol the burned area and mop up, or check for and

u

extinguish hot spots, said

Christie Shaw, spokeswoman for the Oregon

2. Canyon Creek Complex Acres: 105,048 Containment: 49% Cause: Lightning

Department of Forestry.

3. National Creek Complex Acres: 15,091 Containment: 60% Cause: Lightning

Department of Forestry

A 20-person crew from Deer Ridge Correctional Institution, a pair of Bu-

reau of Land Management engines and five Oregon engines are set to be on the fire today. "They' ll be looking for places where there is a little bit of smoke," Shaw

said. The firefighters then splash water on the hot spot and stir it up using fire tools. The fire, which is

BRIEFING

surrounded by fire line, is expected to be completely

contained today. Firefighters have held

2 arrested in Bend bike thefts Bend Police made several arrests last week in connection with multiple bicycle thefts, according to BendPolice Lt. Glint Burleigh. Benjamin Lamphere, 27, of Bend, wasarrested twice on suspicion of two separate bicycle thefts, Burleigh wrote in a news release Monday. One bike was reportedly stolen the afternoon of Aug. 18 in front of the Downtown Bend Public Library. The next day, Bend Police responded to a report of a person scraping a serial number off a bicycle near Miller's Landing. Lamphere wasarrested on suspicion of first-degree theft and criminal mischief. Two days after that, police reviewed video evidence of another bike theft from in front of the Westside Tavern onNW Galveston Avenue,identifying Lamphere asthe suspect in the video. Bend Police went back to Miller's Landing and found Lamphere there in possession of another reportedly stolen bicycle. Hewas arrested on suspicion of additional bike thefts. The bicycle stolen from in front of the Westside Tavern had not been recovered as of Monday afternoon. Lamphere was lodged at the Deschutes County jail on suspicion of second-degree theft and theft by receiving. Melissa Johnson, 43, of Bend, was arrested Thursday on suspicion of stealing a bicycle from the downtown area May 21.Thevictim reported the stolen bike using the department's online reporting system. See Local briefing /B5

the fire, which started Sat-

i

urday and destroyed a pair of vacant homes, at 280

ew

acres, she said.

"It actually did not grow at all since Saturday," Shaw said. The fire is no Submitted photo

This view shows the Crooked River and one of Prineville’s smaller test wetland areas. The Crooked River Wetlands Complex project looks

to convert city-owned property into publicly accessible wetlands that double as a wastewater site.

near the fire, which started

in Cove Palisades State Park. While the evacuations are over, the Crooked

By Beau Eastes

of which is being funded by The Bulletin The Crooked River Wetlands various grants — will feature PRINEVILLE — In one fell Complex looks to begin Maif 5.4 miles of walkingpaths swoop, the city of Prineville ex- construction later this fall, maan-made wetland O" B2 around pects to expand its wastewater said Eric Klann, Prinearea northwest of Prineville. capacity, stabilize sewage rates, ville Public Works director. It's designed to expand the create a new public hiking trail When finished, the $8.8 million c i t y's wastewater capabilities system and improve the overall project — more than $4million b y filtering it th wethealth of the Crooked River.

rough the

lands. The project, which has survived nearly eight years of various financial and environ-

disposed of in new wetlands

Wastewater would be sprayed onto irrigated fields

known as E Loop, remains closed, said Chris

Havel, Oregon Parks and

$62 million mechanical treatment plant in Prineville.

spokesman. The agency issued a ban

See Wetlands /B2

Recreation Department Sunday on the use of char-

coal briquettes at Cove Palisades State Park, he said. The ban covers briquettes

Wetlands naturally filter pollutants out of surface water while creating ecosystems that benefit birds and other wildlife. Prineville hopes to expand this sort of habitat on a section of land adjacent to the Crooked River northwest of Prineville.

Wastewater would also be

River Campground, also

mental studies, replaces a 2005 plan that called for building a

Prineville wants tocreate morewetland haditat to filter wastewater Water seepsoutof ground intO exiStingwetlandS

Crooked River

in portable barbecues fire rings and permanent barbecue stands. eYou can't ignite char-

coal briquettes in the park for any reason," Havel said. A statewide ban on campfires at state parks due to wildfire danger is also still in effect. The fire Saturday startedfrom barbecue

briquettes that had been collected by a volunteer and dumpedinto a campground ash pile.

A monitoring well ensures no pollutants enter waterways undetected

Source: City of Prineville

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

See Fire /B5

Flight carrieslocal veterans With supervision ofstudents in mind, to memorial for last time WHATEVER

HAPPENED TO...

Following up onCentral Oregon stories that have beenout of the headlines. Email ideas to news©bendbulletin.corn.

schools areditching restroomdoors

By Scott Hammers

an interest in seeing the me-

The Bulletin

morial has been offered an opportunity, she said.

World War II veterans from

Drury said it was inevi-

By Abby Spegman

Central and Eastern Oregon

table that the Honor Flights

The Bulletin

to the National World War II Memorial in Washington,

would come to an end.

was in elementary school, the boy and his friends would

D.C., is scheduled to depart Sept. 16.

wad up wet paper towels and throw them at the restroom

It could have been just a youthful indiscretion, except that Tiller is the director of

facilities and maintenance at Bend-La Pine Schools, and clean schoolrestrooms are

no joke. When it comes to supervising students, no building detail is too small — or obvious.

SeeRestrooms/B2

The final flight carrying

"When you' re dealing with a bunch of 90-year-olds, you' re going to run out of Starting in 2010, the Bend people eventually," she said. Heroes Foundation has sponThe final flight will insored 10 trips to the nation's clude about 15 Eastern and capital, providing free trips Central Oregon veterans, to 240 veterans to see the me- along with about 35 from the morial erected in their honor. Portland area. Yvonne Drury, vice presDrury said the trip — two ident of the Bend Heroes days of travel, and two days Foundation, said her group in Washington, D.C.— will believes it has contacted likely follow the same temnearly every eligible veteran plate used on prior trips.

When Mike Tiller's son

stick.

In a story headlined "State puts hemp industry on pause," which appeared Wednesday, Aug. 26, on pageB1, Lindsay Eng's namewas spelled incorrectly. The Bulletin regrets the error.

About 100 people were

evacuated from a subdivision and campgrounds

The CrookedRiverWetlands Complexwill add public trails while treating wastewater

ceiling, trying to get them to

Correction

longer actively burning, although there are hot spots.

Joe Kline /The Bulletin

Loren Hall, an employee of CSConstruction, puts a layer of caulk along the back of a sink in a bathroom at Jeweii Elementary School in Bend on Thursday. The exterior doors were removed in a recent remodel so the sinks are visible from the hallway.

in Central and Eastern Or-

Veterans and their guests

egon. After accounting for those who have made the

typically visit the World War

trip before or are unable to travel, almost everyone with

II Memorial on their first day in town.

SeeVeterans/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.

Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn,541-383-0351.

LIVING SMALL:"BUILDINGAT BETTERNEST":Author Evelyn Hess will discuss sustainable living, living REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: off the grid and her own adventures Featuring food, drinks and more; in "Building a Better Nest"; 6 p.m.; 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 SW Seventh Street and Evergreen NW Wall St., Bend; 541-312-1034. Avenue, Redmond;541-550-0066. SPIRITUAL REZ:The reggaeGREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT:A funk band performs; 7 p.m.; free; showing of "Slavery by Another McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Name" gives voice to the largely forgotten victims and perpetrators of 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. orn or541-382-5174. forced labor and includes interviews mcmenamins.c AT THE HOLLYWOOD of their descendants; 6:30 p.m.; First "ALT-J Presbyterian Church, 230 NENinth AMERICANLEGION":Featuring alt-J's private performance, with St., Bend; 541-815-6504. exclusive footage; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; BREAKERBREAKERONENINER: Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and The San Diego band performs, with IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Lysolgang; 9 p.m.;$5;Volcanic Bend; www.fathomevents.corn or Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn 844-462-7342. or 541-323-1881.

TODAY

WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket. corn or 541-408-4998. MUSIC ONTHE GREEN: Featuring the Hokulea Dancers, the traditional Hawaiian Dancers; 6 p.m.; free; Sam Johnson Park, SW15th Street and

SW EvergreenAvenue,Redmond;

541-923-5191. HEART Ik SOUL CONCERT SERIES: KC FLYNN:Acoustic rock and country; all ages welcome; 6 p.m.; W orthy Brewing Company,495 NE Bellevue Drive, Bend; 541-639-4776.

GoodLife Brewing and Silver Moon Brewing; 4:30 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite 1, Bend; 541-728-0703. FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; 5 p.m.; throughout Bend. THE PUNCH BROTHERS: The progressive bluegrass band performs; 5:30 p.m.; $34 plus fees, $79 for dinner tickets; Athletic Submitted photo Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Marvel’s "Guardians of the Galaxy," starring Chris Pratt, will screen Drive, Bend; www.c3events.corn or 541-382-3940. at Munchand Movies atCompass Parkon Friday. MUNCH AND MOVIES: "GUARDIANS OFTHE GALAXY": Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. ANNUAL USEDBOOKSALE: A used Watch the 2014 live action superhero corn or 541-382-5174. book sale to benefit the Friends film; bring blankets and low chairs; of the Sunriver Area Library; 10 6 p.m.; Compass Park, 2500 GEOFF TATEAND EMMA ARNOLD: a.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, NW Crossing Drive, Bend; www. Featuring the Cincinnati-based THURSDAY 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; comedian; 8p.m.;$8plusfees northwestcrossing. cor n/activities/ www.deschuteslibrary.org or munch-movies or 541-382-1662. LIVING SMALL:"BUILDINGA in advance, $10 at the door; The 541-312-1080. BETTERNEST":Author Evelyn Hess Summit Saloon 8 Stage,125 FIRST FRIDAY:Featuring live will discuss sustainable living, living NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www. DIXIELANDPARTY BANDAND m usic by SweatBand and artby off the grid and her own adventures bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111. FRIENDSCONCERT:Featuring Marlene Moore Alexander; 6 p.m.; in "Building a Better Nest"; noon; La more than 25 musicians performing free; Deschutes Brewery 8 Public Pine Public Library, 16425 First St., jazz; 1 p.m.; free, donations House, 1044 NWBond St., Bend; FRIDAY La Pine; 541-312-1034. accepted; La Pine Moose Lodge 541-382-9242. 2093, 52510 Drafter Drive, La Pine; BLUES JAM: A jam hosted by Scott "FROM THEVAULT" EXHIBIT ALL AGESCOMEDY IMPROV:Tw o 541-536-3388. Foxx and Jeff Leslie; all musicians OPENING:Featuring rarely displayed improv groups make upcharacters welcome; bring your instruments SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: volumes of "The North American and stories based on your ideas, (drums provided); 6:30p.m.; all ages; 7 p.m.; $5; Cascades Indian" from the inaugural exhibition, Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, ymadegoodsandmore;2 Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., through Oct. 31; 9a.m.; $15, $12 for locall 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; p.m.; Barclay Park, Hood Street, Bend; www.bendimprov.corn or seniors, $9 for ages 5-12, free for 4 541-306-0797. between Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-771-3189. andyounger;High DesertM useum, 541-719-8030. JIVE COULIS:The rock-funk band 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; WILDERNESS: Thelocalband performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins www.highdesertmuseum.cornor FIRST FIRKIN FRIDAY:A fundraiser performs, with Thick Business; 9 Old St. Francis School, 700 NW 541-382-4754. for Chimps Inc., sponsored by p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub,

70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

SATURDAY SUNRIVERMARATHON FOR A CAUSE:Featuring a marathon, a half-marathon, a 5Kand kids race benefiting St. Charles Cancer Services; 8 a.m.; $15-$115; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Drive, Bend; www.sunrivermarathon.corn or 855-420-8206. MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: Featuring food, drinks, live music and more; 9 a.m.; Sahalee Park, 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring crafts, music, food and more; 10 a.m.; Across from the Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; 541-420-9015. NWX SATURDAYFARMER’S MARKET:Featuring local organic artisans in produce, meats, baked goods, skincare and more; 10 a.m.; NorthWest Crossing, NW Crossing Drive Bend www nwxfarmersmarket.corn/ or 541-350-4217. ANNUALUSEDBOOKSALE:A used book sale to benefit the Friends of the Sunriver Area Library; 10 a.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1080.

1VEWSOF RECORD DUII CaseyLynn Rollins, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:23 The Bulletin will update items in the p.m. Aug. 27, in the area of NENeff Police Log whensuch arequest Road and NE Tucson Way. is received. Any newinformation, Theft A theft was reported at 6:59 such as the dismissal of charges or p.m.Aug. 28,inthe200 blockofNW acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Columbia Street. information, call 541-633-2117. Theft A theft was reported at 8:20 a.m.Aug. 29,inthe300blockofSE BEND POLICE Springer Court. Criminal mischief Anact of DEPARTMENT criminal mischief was reported and an Unauthorizeduse Avehicle was arrest made at 8:05 a.m. Aug. 28, in reported stolen at 5:05 p.m. Aug. 26, the 500 block of NEFranklin Avenue. in the 2400 block of NEMoonlight DUII Kris Lindorf Smith, 56, was Drive. arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:51 Theft A theft was reported and an arrest made at 5:56 p.m. Aug. 26, in p.m.Aug. 29,inthe3400 blockofN. U.S. Highway 97. the2600 blockofNE U.S.Highway 20. Theft A theft was reported and an arrest made at 2:22 p.m. Aug. 29, in Burglary A burglary and theft were the area of NWWall Street and NW reported and anarrest made at1:19 Louisiana Avenue. p.m.Aug.27,inthe 700blockofSE Third Street. Theft A theft was reported at 4:40

p.m. Aug. 29, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft A theft was reported at12:27 a.m. Aug. 30, in the 1300 block of NW Quincy Avenue. DUII Lizabeth Dawn McAllister, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:18 a.m. Aug. 30, in the area ofNW Bond Street and NW Wall Street. DUII Frederic Werner Voss, 41, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:08 a.m. Aug. 30, in the area of NW Hill Street and NWLafayette Avenue. Burglary A burglary was reported at7:46p.m.Aug.28,inthe2700 block of NE MesaCourt.

a.m.Aug.27,inthe7200 blockofSW Robin Court. Theft A theft was reported at1:49 p.m. Aug. 27, in the 51600 block of Huntington Road. Theft A theft was reported at 5:08 p.m. Aug. 27, in the 900 block of Central Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at 5:22 p.m. Aug. 27, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost130. Theft A theft was reported at 5:50 p.m. Aug. 27, in the 65100 block of N. U.S. Highway 97. Theft A theft was reported at 7:14 p.m.Aug.27,inthe52500 blockof Railroad Street.

6:40 p.m. Aug. 28, in the area of NE Third Street. Unauthorized use Avehicle was reported stolen at12:11 p.m. Aug. 29, in the area of NESnowberry Street. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at 3:23 p.m. Aug. 29, in the area of NWFifth Street. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:41 a.m. Aug. 30, in the area of NEMain Street.

DESCHUTES

PRINEVILLE POLICE

Burglary A burglary and theft were reported at 3 p.m. Aug. 27, in the 500 block of NWGlass Drive.

Theft A theft was reported at10:38

Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered and items stolen at

Wetlands

reduceflooding. "When you straighten out

nior planner, referencing the outside-the-box thinking on

rivers, it speeds up their velocity, which creates all kinds of

how to deal with wastewater.

exploring a more naturalproblems,"Klann said. and cheaper — way to expand Not only will the new wet-

as a wastewater site and has gone on to win several envi-

POLICE LOG

Continued from B1 " This really i s a cutting-edge project," Klann said Monday. He hopes to have the wetlands finished by 2017. The Crooked River Wet-

lands Complex, which will utilize more than 500 acres of land already ownedby the city, was firstlooked at after wastewater system development charges skyrocketed in 2005. In anticipation of the $62 million mechanical treatment

cil was to find a way to cut

those rates. Looking for an alternative to a $62 million treatment plant, Klann began the city's wastewater capacity. "Those costs were unten-

able," Klann said about the mechanical plant. "There's no

way we could have paid for that." After several studies and two small wetland test plots,

the Prineville City Coun-

COUNTY SHERIFF'S BzpggyMKMy OFFICE

ronmental andgolf awards. "Projects like this certained River, Klann said — as much as 2 million gallons a ly helps put us on the map.... day once the entire complex is You don'tnecessarily expect completed — butalso cool wa- progressive solutions like this ter, which is expected to help out of asmall, rural place like

Continued from B1 It's this sort of prank that led to the district's policy in recent

years ofredesigning student restrooms with sinks in clear

view of the hallway and stalls obscured behind a corner or

the current setup and the pref-

erence of each school's staff, Tiller said. Updates paid forby the bond will continue through 2017. Some of the district's newer

half-wall, similar to ai r p ort schools were built without re-

restroom s.

stroomdoors. That includes PaAmong the renovations paid cific Crest Middle School and for by the $96 million bond Silver Rail Elementary School, passed in 2013 were restroom alsopaid for by the 2013 bond, renovations that involved re- which will hold ribbon-cutting moving doors, including at ceremonies this week. Buckingham Ele mentary Pine Ridge E lementary Schoollast summer and at Jew- opened in 2003 with no reell Elementary this summer. stroom doors. Principal Kevin "We try to do that as often Gehrig said being able to see as we can," Tiller said. "Usu- and hear into the restrooms ally the hand-washing station from the hall means staff can is wheremost of the horseplay make sure students aren't lintakes place." gering there when theyshould The do ors do n't a l w a ys be inclass,and assure no adults come off — sometimes there wander into the student-only are walls or fixtures in the way restrooms. "It's really to monitor safethat would make removing them and reworking the en- ty, behavior, all those things," trance too difficult. Restrooms Gehrig said. "Being able to hear at Pilot Butte Middle School, is alwaysgood." La Pine Middle School and — Reporter: 541-617-7837, Amity Creek Magnet School aspegman@bendbulletitt.corn

t

I)

Marijuana

imately 10,000residents, the wetlands complex will be ca-

Prineville is proposing to create a new series of wetlands to dispose of treated wastewater and establish 5.4 miles of new trails. Cro

tfifi " %4lRimrock AcresRd

PRINEVILLE Eti

0@ I

pable of handling an area with as many as50,000people. "This sets us up for the fu-

ture," Klann said. "The person that has my job 15 years from now, the people sitting on City Council then, they'll have a goodwastewater plan." — Reporter:541-617-7829, beastes@bettdbulletin.corn

Pete Smith i The Bulletin

torium in the interim between now and November 2016. Voters will then determine whethc i t - er to agree with the moratori-

would center on policy and not

ies and five counties have um and make it permanent. passed ordinances instiThe opportunity to ban pot tuting a p e rmanent ban retail shops and other busibecause at least 55 percent nesses was affordedlocal govof their populations voted ernments by House Bill 3400. against Measure 91. Medical marijuana dispenCrook County has adopt- saries can begin temporarily ed a marijuana ban, which selling recreational pot Oct. 1 would only apply to unin- through Senate Bill 460. The corporated areas and not bill requires thosesales to end the city of Prineville. The Dec. 31, 2016. city of Madras has schedUp to $7.4 million in tax revuled a meeting at 6 p.m. enue is expected to be generattoday to discuss a possible ed between January 2016 and ban. The cities of Redmond, July 2017 and placed in a state Bend, Sisters, P r ineville shared account. and Jefferson County have Cities and counties will each not decided whether they' ll receive a 10 percent portion of consider the local "opt-out" the tax revenue for the initial option. period based on population

len said. "It's not particularly a

Continued from B1 F ourteen O r egon

Deschutes County com-

missioners are scheduled

size. La Pine was last estimated to

have a population of 1,670 resisession dents and would receive min-

to discuss the issue at a

1:30 p.m. work Wednesday.

imal revenue from the state.

threshold in the legalization

Cities that pass a ban are cut off from all of the shared revenue. City officials said Monday

vote must choose a mora-

that the discussion of the ban

Cities and counties that didn't meet the 55 percent

Medical aid calls.

New wetlands area

s teel- Prineville, u he said. headsalmon in theriver.M ore While Prineville's wastewathan 5 miles of trails — half ter department serves approx-

of which will be paved — will costly mechanical process- meander along the wetlands, ter SDCs rose from not quite ing plant idea and adopt the including a perimeter loop $4,000 per single household to wetlands-complex plan in its that measures out perfectly more than $9,000.At the time, place. In addition to costing at 5 kilometers. Interpretive that was more than triple a fraction of what the earlier kiosks and wooden footbridgwhat Bend was charging for project called for, the w e t- es will also figure into the wastewater SDCs and about lands plan is expected to im- design. " It's similar t o w hen w e $6,000 more than Redmond. prove wildlife habitat around Klann said when he was the Crooked River, which has built Meadow Lakes (Golf hired in 2007, one of his first becomeless and less crooked Course) in 1992," said Joshua mandates from the City Coun- over the years in an effort to Smith, a city of Prineville se-

the coming years. Whether the doorscome off will depend on

26

the reintroduction of

cil voted in 2011 to drop the

are all slated for renovations in

Wednesday

JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

lands add water to the Crook-

plant, Prineville's wastewa-

Restrooms

Meadow Lakes was created

BEND FIRE RUNS

7:17p.m. Smoke odor reported, 2500 NWAwbrey Glen Drive. 17 Medical aid calls. Thursday 1:42 p.m. Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 2146 NEFourth St. 1:52 p.m. Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 65055 OldBend Redmond Highway. 5:58p.m. Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 1900 NE Third St. 6:14 p.m. Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 604 SEGleneden Place. 8:01p.m. Unauthorized burning, 21050 BearCreek Road. 8:11p.m. Authorized controlled burning, 800 SECentennial St. 11:46 p.m. Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 63164 Lancaster St.

cardholders.

potential tax revenue.

— Reporter 541-617-7820 tshorack@bendbulletitt.corn

"It's really not about income for us," City Manager Rick Alfinancial issue."

SUN FoREsT

"I don't think we need to have

peopleselling recreational out of the medical dispensaries," Councilor Stu Martinez said. The City Council will likely vote next month on an ordi-

CoNSTRUCTION

DEsIGN 0 BUILD 0 REMQDEL PAINT

nance banning recreati onal sales at the two dispensaries

eoa sw Industrial way, Bend, OR

in the city ahead of Oct. 1, when they could legally sell to the general public in addition to medical marijuana

vaarse mo ALASKA, WASHINGTON,OREGON, IDAHO, MONTANA, UTAH REACH 3 million Pacilic Northwesterners withjust One Call! PNDC CULSSIFIED - Daily Newspapers 29 newspapers — 1,187,980 circulation Number of worda 25 • Extraword cost: s10 Cost: S540 (Runs 3consecutive daysinotudingwkds.)

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

re on uar smanw o e e sto traIn attar returns ome Alek Skarlatos has beenhailed a hero, but he just wants to relaxand dolaundry The Associated Press

and a little bit of normalcy."

PORTLAND — Ten days

"I'm sure it will happen

ago, Oregon Army National

eventually," he said at Portland I nternational A i r port.

Guard specialist Alek Skar-

latos helped stop a terrorist attack on a high-speed train traveling through Belgium. On Sunday night, he returned to Oregon, looking weary and dressed in plaid and khakis. He described the intern ational attention h e's r e ceived in th e m eantime as

"pretty unreal," reported The Oregonian. Skarlatos, a

22 - year-old

Roseburg native, said he' s looking forward to "relaxing

"Just not sure how or when."

AROUND THE STATE Eugene teen death An18-year-old is facing manslaughter

or, made television appearanc- airport gate and accompanied es and learned that the city of him to baggage claim. While Sacramento plans to hold a pa- Skarlatos waited for his lugrade to honor him, Stone and gage to appeared, a man in Sadler. The U.S. Army also military uniform walked up to plans to award him a medal shake his hand. for his actions. Skarlatos h a s be e n a It's all been a l ittle over- guardsman for three years whelming, said Skarlatos. and returned from a nine"If you were thrown in a ridiculous situation like that,

m onth deployment t o

Af -

ghanistan in July. He said he childhood friends Spencer and you just want to survive, eventually wants to go back to Stone, a U.S. Air Force Air- you'd be surprised if everyone school and pursue a career in man, and Anthony Sadler, a wanted to give you attention law enforcement, a goal he' s Sacramento State University about it, too," he said. had since he was 18. senior, on a Paris-bound train Anyone in a similar situaHe grew up in the Sacrawhen the three helped subdue tion, he said, should "do some- mento area with Sadler and A youb El-Khazzani, a m an thing, because you' re probably Stone and said he plans to with ties to radical Islam who going to die anyway, so you keep a low profile until he is was carrying a handgun and might as well give it a shot." reunited with his friends. an assault weapon. On Sunday, a spokesman Skarlatos did, however, reSince then, he has been from the Oregon Military De- veal one thing on his to-do list: awarded France's highest hon- partment met Skarlatos at his laundry. S karlatos wa s

with h i s

charges and another person could be charged in connection with the shooting death of a Eugeneteen at an apartment complex near Autzen Stadium. Eighteen-year-old Zachary Aristotle Beauchamp was arrested on suspicion of first-degree manslaughter Sunday night. Police say a review by the LaneCounty District Attorney's Office will determine if another suspected shooter will be charged in the case. Thevictim has been identified as17-year-old Justin Lee Gardner.

Idanha mayOr arreSted TheMarion County Sheriff's Office said the 68-year-old mayor of the small town of Idanha hasbeen arrested for possession of methamphetamine. Lt. Chris Baldridge said Monday that Cletus Moore and his passenger, 39-year-old Christopher Kosack, were stopped for a traffic violation in Jefferson Sunday night. He declined to name the specific traffic violation. Deputies allege they found "what appeared to be methamphetamine" on both men. Idanha is a town of about140 people about 60 miles southeast of Salem. — From wire reports

UO president turns

to facula to fill up empty bookshelf

COQ VILLE

Marine Corps uty was a ' ig er ca ing' By John McDonald The Coos Bay World

COOS BAY — For some

people, life is all about the experiences. Bill Marino was in high school when he realized that

n,

he wanted to join the Marines.

"I wasn't looking for glory or anything like that," explains Marino. "It was kind of a step I wanted to take, to have the

experienceofbeing aM arine." Marino had a cousin who

was a career Marine, a "Mustang" who had climbed the enlisted ranks and was serving as a warrant officer. For the young man whose childhood was spent moving from place to place in Southern California, hearing about his cousin

tion of American Universities, according to a 2012

comes out about higher educationand read every other one I

analysis. Professors queued up to

buy. Given how hot the area is right now, it's challenging," he

deliver their tomes during

said in a July interview.

Schill was available to re-

ceivethem — between Aug. 19 and last Thursday. "I want to know that at

Schill could populate a shelf or two with titles he wrote, co-wrote or edited. They in-

clude "The Future of Health Care Reform in th e U nited

any time, while talking to States," "Property; Eighth another faculty member, Edition," "Reducing the Cost

"Being a Marine can be very hard, but being able to handle

a staff member, an elected

the training and the life of a

Amanda Loman/The World via The AssociatedPress

Marine is something we are very proud of." It was during boot camp that Marino discovered his fu-

U.S. Marine Corps veteran Bill Marino, who served in Vietnam, is a member of the Marine Corps League Coquille River Detachment 1042.

ture career. Marino had scored

up, told them I was a Marine,

few feet, then shot the explo- es, and it's been tremendous

high enough on an aptitude and theyput me up during my test that he was given a choice stay."

sion out of the hole. One of the rounds landed close to an

for my work ethic. Times when

between infantry radio repairman and fire control radar

antenna and knocked out the power supply. I managed to crawl to it and got the antenna going again. "That was probably the most exciting thing that happened to me there."

and a hard place, I knew that if

After arriving in Vietnam

late in 1965, Marino discovered technician. he would be serving as a radar "I chose the fire control ra- technician for a fire control dar technician — I even had to base. Fire control bases used extend for a year to get that. I radar to help guide planes to just seemed like a fun career their targets. Their equipment — a higher calling." included a short-range radar, a After completing training, leftover from the Korean War. "Marines never throw anyMarino received orders for Vietnam. Marines received a thing away." month's leave before deployOn a clear day the radar ment. While most M a rines could see perhaps 20 miles. planned to spend their time To be effective, a fire control with family and friends, Mari- team had to be within 15 miles no had a different destination of the target, sometimes closer — often within range of enemy in mind. "I knew I was going through artillery. "There was a time when at least a few months of staging at Camp Pendleton, and we were up at Dong Ha, right would see my folks during that up on the demilitarized zone. time. So I put in a leave request One morning the North Vietfor Europe. namese started sending in a "I spent half my time in Par- lot of artillery our way. I had is and half my time in Spain. just gotten up and was taking It's probably the best vacation a stretch outside my tent when I' ve ever had. I was living with the rounds started coming in. the embassy Marines while The second round hit my hut,

I' ve been stuck between a rock I went in and gave it everything I could that I could do anything. That's a wonderful thing that I learned in the Corps." About 10 years ago, Marino realized he needed to ex-

After leaving the Marines, perience Vietnam again. He Marino spent some time work- took his wife, Kay, and their ing as a research and develop- two children, Amy and Jesment technician for a company se. It was exactly what he had in San Diego. But for someone hoped it would be. "It was very cathartic for always looking for new experiences, it could not last long. me. I wanted to reassure myOne holiday season Marino self that the Vietnamese were purchaseda side of leatherto making it. I'm not interested in make Christmas presents for all the politics of Vietnam, but his friends and family. They they have a pretty good counwere so well received that he try going there. I' ve never felt realized he could turn his hob- more welcome anywhere and by into a business. He moved never felt more safe than I did to Oregon in the early 1970s during that trip. The Vietnamand has been working with ese people are very high on my leather ever since. Marino estimation of humanity." credits his success in business

Marino is the owner of Ma-

rino's Boots and Saddles in to his success as a Marine. "The one thing I discovered Coquille. He is a member of by being in the Marines was the Marine Corps League Co-

right near the foot of the bed. It

that I could do more than I ever

was an armor piercing round. It penetrated the ground a

supposed I could. The Marines He and his wife, Kay, have sure put you through your pac- been married 38 years.

Mom sente nced intoddlerabuse case By Steven Dubois

child's identity. The woman pleaded guilty PORTLAND — A W a s h- in May to transportation of ingtonwoman who took her a minor for criminal sexual

a glimpse of what happened." The judge replied: "It may be true that I'm only getting a

toddler daughter across state

activity. But she submitted a

lines for sexual abuse was sentenced Monday to 25 years in prison. Prosecutors said the woman repeatedly visited the Portland

five-page, handwritten letter to

from the portion I have seen and I have read, it does appear

U.S. District Court Judge Mi-

to me that you have failed the

chael Simon before sentencing that caused the judge to ask if

fundamental responsibility of

The Associated Press

she wanted to withdraw her

plea. friend, James Lee Hickerson. Though thewoman did not The toddler was often present take that step, she also didn' t when the couple had sex and accept full responsibility. She was later included. said her boyfriend was the inAgents found two videos on stigator and her behavior was Hickerson's phone that show not as bad as portrayed by the woman performing a sex prosecutors. "I never hurt my daughter, act on her daughter. The Associated Press is not the way the court is lookwithholding the 29-year-old ing at it," she said. "Like I said mother's name to protect the your honor, you' re only getting area to have sex with boy-

my great loves," Schill said in his post. "I really enjoy discovEUGENE — New Uni- ering new books and am exversity of Oregon President tremely excited to get to know Mike Schill has opened a our faculty members personnew front in his charm of- ally. I want to understand their fensive, asking UO faculty expertise, hear about what to bring books they' ve writ- they' ve written and learn about ten to fill a broad, empty their research." bookshelf in his office. Schill, a self-described bibWriting books is one area liophile, said he was eager to in which UO faculty ex- visit Powell's City of Books in cel. UO professors publish Portland when he moved to Orbooks at the rate of 76 per egon in July. He said he loves 100 faculty members, com- shopping for books, loves colpared with 69 per 100 at the lecting books and, apparently, average public university loves shelving books. "I try to buy every book that belonging to the AssociaEugene Register Guard

appointed hours, when

left an impression.

I was in Paris. That's a great thing about the Marines — we take care of our own. I walked

By Diane Dieiz

portion of what happened, but

a parent, which is to protect

one's child."

Assistant U . S . A t t o rney Jane Shoemaker said even

if the abuse was Hickerson's idea, the woman — who lived in Camas with her parents-

could have said no. "She could have left her child at home, but she didn' t," Shoemaker said. "She went with Mr. Hickerson time and time again, took her child time

and time again."

quille River Detachment 1042.

leader, a donor, I can pick up a book and reference the great work we are doing on this campus," Schill said in a blog post. Schill has chatted with

of New Housing Construction in New York City," "The State

of New York City's Housing and Neighborhoods," "Housing and Community Development In New York City: Facing The Future" and "Revitaliz-

the professors who've de- ing America's Cities: Neighlivered their books, asking borhood Reinvestment and and answering questions, Displacement." according to observers. "Who

w ould

ha v e

guessed that professors like to talk about their lat-

est book?" Professor Bill Harbaugh wrote on his independent blog, uomatters. corn. So far, Schill has collect-

ed 101 books. Additional drop-off times are scheduledfor 4 p.m. to

5 p.m.today and from 3:30 p.m.to4:30p.m .on Sept.8. "This combines two of

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

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n 2006, the secretary of state's office issued an audit. It warned about the security risks at Oregon's state data center, where much private information of Oregonians is stored. In 2008, the office issued another audit, a confidential audit and a consultant report. More warnings. In 2009, it issued another audit and a confidential audit. Warnings

Of course, no data storage is completely secure. I n dividuals, businessesand governments get hacked. It can disrupt or ruin finances and lives. again. Officials at the state data center In 2010,there were three more know that.And they have had the advantage ofknowing they have audits with more warnings. In 2012,two more and more serious security problems, but they have not fixed them. warnings. They have a response to the And now in 2015, there's another. most recent audit: They say they are The state data center has failed working on it. They have said that to fix the problems. before. Why does that matter? Why do they treat the private The state data include sensitive records of Oregonians with so little taxpayer information, induding care? medical records, Social Security Is this good enough for you? numbers and information about Tell your legislator what you payments and collections. The data could be stolen, altered or destroyed think. Maybe they can get the state because of lax security. to finally do something about it.

State gambling rules could usemore dari

O

regonhas a gambling addic-

tion. State government cannot live as well as it does without the billions in revenue the state lottery pumps into its coffers with videopoker and other gaming machines. In the current biennium, the lottery is expected to add more than $1 billion to state revenues. A recent audit by the secretary of state's office finds problems with the lottery, however. Chiefly, the Oregon Lottery does not do enough to curb "casino" gaming in restaurants, particularly in what are known as limited menu restaurants. That's important, because the constitution also bans casinos in Oregon. For restaurants and the like to avoidbeing considered casinos,the lottery's own rules require they get at least 50 percent of their revenuethe dominant use — from something other than gambling. They also are not allowed to somehow look or feel like casinos. Fixing the problem is likely to prove difficult. For one thing, the constitution itself does not define "casino." Moreover, the major court case on the subject, decided in 1994 by the state Supreme Court, didn't define it either. Nor have the courts or Legislahue bothered to define what "dominant use" is. Over the years, the lottery itself has decided what percentage of revenue makes gam-

T e i

Fixing the problem is likely to prove difficult. ing "dominant." It started at 66.67 percent and has been whittled down to today's 50 percent. Secretary of state auditors do not accuse the lottery of breaking the law. The agency is allowed to set its own rules, after all. But, auditors say, a recent change in those rules has meant that retailers' revenue statements are seldom checked and that retailers themselves sometimes label gifts of food and the like as revenue producing. Lottery officials, meanwhile, disagree with several key elements of the audit report. While Jack Roberts, the Oregon Lottery director, agrees with the need for dearer language about such things as casinos, he notes that deeper financial analysis has rarely led to action against retailers for noncompliance with the regulation. Meanwhile, the Legislature has been reluctant to step in. While lawmakers considered a measure defining casinos this year, the bill died. No wonder. Doing so could have cost Oregon as much as $83 million, by some estimates. We don't see lawmakers embracing a plan that costs so much anytime soon. But the law and the rules could use clarity.

M nickel's Worth How Oregon’s gunbill

Bend deserves better

impacts me

We elect city councilors to represent the best interests of our citizens

No bungee jumping in the gorge

This is how Senate Bill 941, Or-

egon's legislation to end gun viothemselves like children. It under- lence, impacts me. I'm retired milmines our trust in your leadership itary. I shoot trap with my friend and our city, not to bicker amongst

I agree with Gary Clowers' "In My View" words of Aug. 11. The wildlife of the Crooked Riv-

er Gorge does not need to be harassed and upset by people think80 years old. Roger is older at 81. ing they can only achieve excitenewspaper (Aug. 23), leading us to I want to sell Roger a shotgun, ment andwhatever elseby bungee believe there is an unprofessional but under the provisions of SB 941, jumping off the bridge on U.S. attitude in the council chambers. I must first run a background check Highway 97. There are many issues our elect- on Roger — that is if we can find a What reall y upsetsme, however, and is an embarrassment to our city to have that behavior detailed in the

Roger, who is a retired attorney. I'm

ed representatives consider in the

dealer who will take the time to do

course of their elected term. The a background check. Most dealers facts are presented, staff provide consider this a waste of time and recommendations and occasionally money, especially since they are a citizen committee also provides not making the sale. If they were input — all to help the City Council making the sale, they would almake an informed decision. Rarely ready be required by law to conduct is there a unanimous vote, but a vote a background check on the buyer. is a vote. Those on the "losing" side The Oregon Legislature thinks must ask themselves if their opin- gun violence will be reduced by ion could have been presented more having people like me see to it that clearly or simply, or maybe their a background check is accomopinion was just wrong. plished on someone like Roger. The Business is not and should not be background check will cost money, personal. Keep your focus on what but Roger and I will do it because we elected you to do and what you we are law-abiding citizens. took an oath to do — to do your best I could, instead of selling the for us and for Bend. shotgun to Roger, legally give it KatIe Phelps to my grandson without a backBend ground check — go figure. I guess the Legislature feels since my grandson is a blood relative, he' s The Bulletin should less of a r isk than 81-year-old publish a variety Roger. Thank you, Bulletin, for your enRoger and I t h ink t hat cr imilightening and educating columns nals and those bent on committing every Sunday! I especially look for- g un violence won't bother w i t h ward every week to reading Victor background checks. But as usuDavis Hanson's column. He is histor- al, law-abiding citizens like Roger ically accurate and writes an inter- and I will comply. I don't think this esting, educated read. I am one who new law will reduce gun violence in loves all perspectives. Keep it up! Oregon. Peggy SpIttler Peter J. Pedone Sr. Bend

is that Oregon Parks and Recre-

ation has asked for comments and feedback and seems to not really care whatresidents of Oregon have

to say about this. On Aug. 5, I sent my comments to them (oprd.publicomment@oregon.gov) along with a link to a news article about the horrendous murders of two innocent children

in May of 1961. I simply asked if they had forgotten this event.

The reply I received from them was incredibly flip and makes me wonder if they really care about what we have to say. "We are indeed aware of it. As much as we dream to live in a

world where bad things never happen, public outdoor places such as parks are sometimes the set-

ting for tragic events. We don't let those tragedies determine the future for a park. We will look at all

the public comments and effects on the park at the end of the trail before making the next decision.

Thanks." My tax dollars help support Oregon Parks and Recreation — I

don't want it supporting bungee jumping. Barbara "BJ" Thomas

Sunriver

Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

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

P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

i c u t 0 tra n s ormative i e ecisions

DAVID

BROOKS et's say you had the chance to become a vampire. With one magical bite, you would gain immortality, superhuman strength and a life of glamorous intensity. Your friends

L

who have undergone the transforma-

tion say the experience is incredible. They say everything about their new existence provides them with f un,

companionship and meaning. Would you do it? Would you consent to receive the life-altering bite, even

knowingthatonce changed you could never go back'? The difficulty of the choice is that

you'd have to use your human self and preferences to try to guess whether you'd enjoy having a vampire self and preferences. Becoming a vampire is transformational. How can you possi-

bly know what it would feel like to be

purest version of this choice. On av-

you really trust yourself to raise and

tures. When faced with a transforma-

this different version of you or whether you would like it'?

erage, people who have a child suffer nurture a child simply on the basis of a loss of reported well-being. They' re self-revelation? Curiosity is too thin,

tional choice, the weakest question may be,what doIdesire?Ourdesireschange

more exhausted and report lower life

all the time. The strongest questions

In her book "Transformative Expe-

relativistic and ephemeral.

rience," L.A. Paul, a philosophy profes- satisfaction. And yet few parents can sor at the University of North Carolina imagine going back and being their old at Chapel Hill, says life is filled with pre-parental selves. Parents are like decisions that are a bit like this. Life is self-fulfilled vampires. Their rich new filled with forks in the road in which lives would have seemed incompreyou end up changing who you are and hensible to their old childless selves. what you want. So how do you make transformaPeople who have achild suddenlybe- tional decisions? You have to ask the come different. Joining the military is right questions, Paul argues. Don' t another transformational experience. ask, "Will I like parenting?" You can' t So are marrying, changing careers, know. Instead, acknowledge that you, immigrating and switching religions. like all people, are born with an inIn each of these cases, the current tense desire to know. Ask, "Do I have you is trying to make an important a profound desire to discover what it

I'd say to really make these decisions well, you need to step outside the modern conceptionofourselves as cognitive creatures who are most sophisticated when we rely on rationality. The most reliable decision-making guides are more "primitive." We' re historical creatures. We have inher-

decision, without having the chance to know what it will feel like to be the

would be like to be this new me, to ex-

may be: Which path will make me a better person? Will becoming a parent make me more capable of selfless love? Our moral intuitions are more du-

rablethan ourdesires,based on auniversal standard of right and wrong. The person who shoots for virtue will more reliably be happy with her new

ited certain life scripts from evolu-

self and will at least have a nice quality

tion and culture, and there's often a lot of wisdom in following those life

to help her cope with whatever comes. Which brings us to the core social

scripts. We' re social creatures. Often

point. These days we think of a lot of de-

we undertake big transformational challenges not because it fulfills our

cisions as if they were shopping choices. When we' re shopping for something,

desires, but because it is good for our

we act as autonomous creatures look-

ing for the product that will produce the most pleasure or utility. But choosing to Paul's point is that we' re fundamen- to this situation is to choose based on when people make a transformational have a child or selecting a spouse, faith tally ignorant about many of the big- whether we want to discover who we' ll choice they feel it less as a choice and or life course is not like that. It's probgest choices of our lives and that it' s become." more as a calling. They feel there was ably safer to ask, "What do I admire'?" not possible to make purely rational Personally, I think Paul's descrip- something that destined them to be than "What do I want?" declslons. tion of the problem is ingenious, but with this spouse or in that vocation. — David Brooks is a columnist The decision to have a child is the her solution is incomplete. Would Most important, we' re moral creafor The New York Times. future you.

perience this new mode of living?" kind. We' re mystical creatures. Often As she puts it, "The best response


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 THE BULLETIN

Fire

Continued from B1

BITUARIES

"Whoever left these briquettes did not e x tinguish

CanyonCreek Fire

P irieCit

extent as otMonttay 105,048 acres burned John Day

them," he said. A metal container for ash is set to be installed at Cove Palisades State Park, Havel said,

FEATUREDOBITUARY

B5

Canyon City

replacing the ash pit. "We won't go back to allowing briquettes until we

Area burned since Friday

have a metal disposal unit in

place in the park," he said.

ssr ',

C NYON CREEK

At the County Line 2 Fire

ATURAL AREA

on the Warm Spring Indian Reservation, firefighters over the weekend pushed

STRAWBERRY MOUNTAIN WILDERNESS

back their expected date of

I

e

containment, said Doug Epperson, spokesman for the interagency team managing the fire. While t h e c o n tainment date was expected to be Mon-

Uncontrolled

fire edge

JohnOar

H

Bend

16 MAL HE UR

0RE 8 0

N

day, he said it is now Thursday due to unexpected activity late last week.

On Friday, the fire made a run up Shitike Butte, Epperson said. The lookout atop the 5,080-foot butte, which firefighters had wrapped in protective foil, was not damaged by the flames. Since Matt Sayles / The Associated Press file photo

Writer-director Wes Craven, whose "Nightmare on Elm Street" and "Scream" movies made him one of

the most recognizable names in the horror film genre, died Sunday. Hewas 76.

Movie director WesCraven› a master of the horror genre

starting Aug. 12, the County Line 2 Fire has burned 67,247 acres, or more than 105 square miles, and as of fighters remain on the fire.

great friend, fine director and

sense of outrage that comes

Veterans

good man." Craven was born in Cleve-

from discovering that that' s not the truth of the matter, that

Continued from B1 This is followed by a trip to

gives American horror films, Baptist family. He earned a in some ways, kind of an addimaster's degree in philosophy tional rage." and writing from Johns HopDirector Edgar Wright, who

the Capitol to meet with mem-

virtuoso Wes Craven man-

aged to do it twice. The prolific writer-director, who died Sunday at age 76, ushered in two distinct eras of suburban slashers, first in the 1980s with his iconic "Nightmare on Elm Street" and its

land on Aug. 2, 1939, to a strict

kins University and b r iefly

counts Craven as one of his in-

taught asa college professor in Pennsylvania and New

fluences, reflected on the legacy of his films in a tribute on

York, but his start in movies

his website. " The f i r s t was in pornography, where he

'Nightmare' quicklybecame a landmark

worked under pseudonyms. indelible, razor-fingered vilCraven's feature debut un- horror movie and what dislain Freddy Krueger. He did der his own name was 1972's tinguished it then is what still it again in the 1990s with the "The Last House on the Left," marks it out as a classic now. self-referential "Scream." a horror film inspired by Ing- It's the sheer twisted imagB oth re i n troduced t h e mar Bergman's "The Virgin ination of the premise; the fringe genre to mainstream Spring," about teenage girls idea of lucid waking nightaudiences and spawned suc- abducted and taken into the mares bleeding into the real cessful franchises. woods. Made for just $87,000, world makes Freddy Krueger Perhaps it was his perfect- the film, t hough graphic a much more formidable and ly askew interpretation of the enough to be censored in interesting foe than any of his medium that resonated with many countries, was a hit. slasher rivals," Wright wrote. "Nightmare on Elm Street," his nail-biting audiences. The formula would work "Horror films don't create however, catapulted Cra- a gain fo r C r aven w i t h fear," Craven said. "They re- ven to f a r g r eater renown "Scream," albeit with an added lease it." in 1984. The Ohio-set film layer of self-aware spoof. By Robert Englund, the actor is about teenagers, includ- 1996, the Craven-style slasher who brought Freddy Krueger ing a then-unknown Johnny was a well-known type, even to life, wrote on Twitter that Depp, who are stalked in their if it wasn't always made by Craven was a "rare species ... dreams. Craven wrote and him. He had no involvement brilliant, kind, gentle and very

funny man. It's a sad day on Elm Street and everywhere." "Wes will forever be remem-

beredforkeeping generations of moviegoers on the edges of their seats, defining and redefining the horror genre with each passing decade," said DirectorsGuild ofAmerica President Paris Barclay. Craven didn't solely deal in terror. He also directed the 1999 drama "Music of the Heart," which earned Meryl

directed, starting a franchise that has carried on, most recently with a 2010 remake. The concept, Craven said,

with many of the "Elm Street"

came from his own youth in Cleveland — specifically an

ror branded with his name,

Elm Street cemetery and a

homeless man that inspired Krueger's ragged look. Along with John Carpenter's "Halloween," "Nightmare on Elm Street" defined a hor-

sequels. Craven increasingly oversaw a cottage industry of horincluding remakes of his 1977 film "The Hills Have Eyes" (2006) and "The Last House on the Left" (2009). H e was active until h i s death. Craven had n u mer-

ror tradition where helpless

ous television projects in development, including a new

teenagers are preyed upon by knife-wielding, deformed

"Scream" series for MTV. In a s t atement, Craven's

Streep an Oscar nomination. killers in cruel morality tales. But his name and his legacy Usually promiscuous girls will always be synonymous were the first to go.

family said he died in his Los Angeles home, surrounded by family, after battling brain "There is something about with horror. cancer. "He was a consummate t he A m erican d r eam, t h e He is survived by his wife, filmmaker and his body of sort of Disneyesque dream, producer Iya Labunka, a son, work will live on forever," said if you will, of the beautiful- daughter and stepdaughter. Weinstein Co. c o-chairman ly trimmed front lawn, the In 2010, he told The Los Bob Weinstein, whose Dimen- white picket fence, Mom and Angeles Times: "My goal is to sionFilms produced "Scream." Dad and their happy children, die in my 90s on the set, say, "He was truly an old-school God-fearing and doing good 'That's a wrap,' after the last director," Craven's genre con- whenever they can," Craven shot, fall over dead and have temporary John Carpenter once said. "And the flip side the grips go out and raise a said on Twitter. "Wes was a of it, the kind of anger and the beer to me."

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deathsof note from around the world:

Mary's County, Maryland. Nelson Shanks, 77: A paint-

MarvinMendel,95: Form er er renowned for his portraits governor whose record of of prominent figures, ranging modernizing Maryland's state from presidents to a pope to government was o v ershad- royalty. Died Friday in Andaowed by a messy divorce and lusia, Pennsylvania. a fraud conviction for helping Oliver Sacks, 82:A neurolassociatesprofit from a race-

ogist and acclaimed author

track deal. Died Sunday in St. who explored some of the

brain's strangest pathways in best-selling case histories like "The Man Who Mistook

His Wife for a Hat," using his patients' disorders as starting points for eloquent medita-

tions on consciousness and the human condition. Died Sunday in Manhattan. — From wire reports

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but spe-

cific u gidelines must be followed. Localobituaries arepaid

advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825

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

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted Until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,and by9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.

0

5

Pete Smith /The Bulletin

fighters had the 105,048-acre

firefi ghtersareon thefire. fire 49 percent contained, People living in and around Greg Heule, a spokesman Prairie City, about 900 people with the i nteragency team

in all, remain under a Level II

managing the fire said Monday night. The fire, which was sparked by lightning on Aug. 12, has burned more than 164 square miles.

evacuation advisory, meaning they should be ready to evacuate at a m oment' s notice, said Traci Weaver, a spokeswoman with the inter-

over the weekend to bring the

from the Grant County town. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.corn

At the Canyon Creek Com- total number of homes lost to plex Fire near John Day, fire- 43, he said. More than 1,000

The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — It's hard

Source: Northwest Interagency Coordination Center

The fire a lso d estroyed agency team managing the Monday night was 88 percent three more homes — two res- Canyon Creek Complex Fire. contained. Nearly 500 fire- idences and a guest homeThe fire is about a I t/z miles

By Daisy Nguyenand JakeCoyle enough to redefine a genre once in a career, but horror

MILES

Com p letedNATIONAL FOREST fire line

"Watching the reaction of these people, the honor that's bestowed on them by everybody they meet, it's absolutely amazing."

bers of Oregon's congressional delegation. On day two,

Yvonne Drury, vice president of Bend Heroes Foundation

they visit the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Korean War Veterans Memorial, memorial

sites for the individual service have forgotten about the war branches, Arlington National they fought 70 years ago, she Cemetery, and on occasion, said, and are surprised by the members of the group have crowds that line up to meet

Heroes Foundation regards

laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

them at airports or take pictures and shake their hands at

on a May 2016 trip with Port-

Drury, who's made two more Honor Flights after join-

the memorials.

ing her World War II veteran

these people, the honor that' s ing with all these people, and bestowed on them by every- I'm really going to miss it," she body they meet, it's absolutely said. amazing," she said. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, Even though the Bend sitammers@bendbulletin.corn

father on her first trip in 2011, said every visit to the memorial hasbeen special.Th e veter-

ans often assume most people

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from B1

An officer contacted Johnson near the intersection of NE27th Street and U.S.Highway20, finding she had avalid warrant for her arrest and believing that the bicycle she hadwasstolen. She was arrested on thewarrant and on suspicion of third-degree theft. No connection has been found between Lamphereand Johnson's alleged bicycle thefts, Burleigh wrote. Police have learned that suspects stealing bicycles have begun to place their own locks on a bicycle before stealing it. If you leave your bicycle Unattendedand come back andfind a lock that is not yours on it, call the nonernegency number at 541-693-6911.

the upcoming trip as its last,

Drury said the organization should be able to find a spot land veterans should any eligible candidates be identified.

"Watching the reaction of

"It is an absolute joy work-

You can register your bike at the police department free of charge. Police also recommend taking pictures of the bikeandits serial number.

Pacific Crest Trail near Crater Lake reopens A section of the Pacific Crest Trail through Crater LakeNational Park that was closed due to fires has reopened, theNational Park Service announced Monday in a news release. The National CreekComplex fires closed asection of trail between the park's north boundary and the junction where thePacific Crest Trail meets the Lightning Springs Trail. Cooler, wetter weather and burnout operations in the areahavereduced fire

COCCMadras campus closed for maintenance The Central OregonCommunity College campus in Madras will be closed through Sept. 7 for maintenance, the college announced in anews release Monday. All Madras COCC staff will be reachable byemail, and the main phone line for the Madrascampus will be temporarily redirected totheRedmond campus. All COCC campuses will be closed Friday through Monday for Labor Dayand Sept.17 for the annual all-college meeting.

activity.

The Boundary Springs, Bald Crater Loop andBert Creektrails remain closed. All roads andfacilities within the park areopen. — Bulletin staff reports

Food, Home tt Garden In

PUBLIC OFFICIALS U.S. SENATE Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http: /lmerkley.senate.go t/ Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne At/e., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 Sen. Ron Wyden,D-Ore. 223 DirksenSenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http: /lwyden.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne At/e., Suite I07 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Rep. GregWafden, R-HoodRiver 2182 RayburnHouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http:1/walden.house.got/ Bendoffice: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-889-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452 STATE OF OREGON Gov.KateBrown,D 160 StateCapitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor. oregon.got/ Secretary of State Jeanne Atkins, D 136 StateCapitol

AT HOME

Salem, OR97310 Phone: 503-986-1523 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us Treasurer Tsd Wheeler, D 159 OregonState Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon. treasurer©state. or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us B t

B

B B’

Th e Bulletin

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

I SINCs

I58'TREss

View our presentation at Tompklnswealthpresents.corn

G allery-Be n d

charles Tompkins,cFPi 541-2044OO7 Securltlas SAdvisoryServicesofferedthrounh KMS Rnanclsl Sarvlces,Ins MemberFlnft/yalPC

s :

I

s

541-330-5084

For Mond ay, Sept. 7, 2015andTuesday, Sept. 8, 2015 PAIDOBITUARIES ~

+

DEADL INE

Tuesday, 9/8 .......................................... Friday, 9/4, 1PM

DEATH NOTICES

DEADL INE

Sunday, 9/6 ........................................... Friday, 9/4, 1PM Tuesday,9/8......................................... Friday,9/4,1 PM

Sty'auytfrts~

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,


B6

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

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

I

'

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH

47’

Nice with times of clouds and sun

ALMANAC

"’"

34’

)

Partly sunny andcool

SATURDAY

63’ 32’

64’

33’

Variable clouds with a shower; cooler

Partly cloudy

FRIDAY

THU R SDAY

64’

W LGW

77’ I f’ I

W EDN E SDAY

~P Tq~

Sunny intervals with a thunderstorm; cool

32’

Plenty of sun

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. EAST:It will remain ria /5 comfortable with Umatiga Seasid TEMPERATURE Rood 82/59 several hoursof 64/55 Yesterday Normal Record RiVer Rufus ermiston sunshine today.Cool Cannon /59 High 77 76 95' in 1 9 16 lington 63/56 portland 76/ss Mesc am Losti ne patchyclouds 62/55 37' 43' 29' in 1975 with Low 72/ 8 /eo sf/46 tonight. dleton 7« he Daa 7 7 60/47 Tigamo PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Sunny andy 79/60 65/54 Mc innvie Heppner ., Grande 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" to partly cloudy and Condon 0/53 8 51 Record 0.31" in 201 0 comfortable again Union Lincoln 66/ .Patchy clouds 64/55 Month to date (normal) 0.0 3" (0.46") tonight Sale pray Granite e Year to date(normal) 6.56 " (6.76") and cool tonight. 75/ /57 ’Baker C Newpo 79/44 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 6" 4/53 63/52 84/44 Camp Sh man R WEST:Increasing 81 /53 ed n R SUN ANDMOON eU Yach rs/49 John cloudiness today 76/53 64/54 Prineville Day 3/45 Today Wed. tario with rain pushing 80/48 Pa line 83 / 5 4 Sunrise 6:26 a.m. 6 : 2 9 a.m. 55 i n to northern areas Floren e Eugene ’ Re d Brothers Sunset 7:42 p.m. 7: 4 0 p.m. this afternoon and Valee 66/56 47 Su iVere 77/47 Moonrise 9:3 4 p.m. 10 :13 p.m. 90/56 evening. Nyssa 76/ Ham ton Moonset 10: 03 a.m. 1 1 :16 a.m. La pine J untura 90/ 5 6 Grove Oakridge Co Burns OREGON EXTREMES Last Nw e Fir s t Full 69/46 76/56 /54

r

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

Yesterday Today Wednesday

Yesterday Today Wednesday

City Hi/Le/Prec. HiRe/W Hi/Lu/W City Hi/Le/Prec. Hi/Le/W HiRe/W Abilene 94/69/0.00 93/70/s 93/71/s Juneau 51/45/0.83 57/42/c 60/42/s Akron 88/65/Tr 88/67/s 88/68/pc Kansas City 90/69/0.00 90fto/s 89no/s Albany 87/64/0.00 87/64/s 90/68/s Lansing 81/61/0.00 87/69/s 88/68/pc Albuquerque 91/65/0.00 87/64/1 88/63/pc Las Vegas 103/80/0.00 100n5/pceon 4/s Anchorage 59/41 /0.00 63/43/s 64/48/s Lexington 88/64/Tr 88/67/pc 89/68/pc Atlanta 84/67/0.03 89/72/pc 91/73/pc Lincoln 88/62/0.00 92ft1/pc 91n2/pc Atlantic City 85n3/0.05 86/71/s sr/Tots Litue Rock esnuo'.oo 94n3/pc 94n2/pc Austin 96/67/0.11 91/70/pc 90/69/pc Lus Angeles 85/69/0.00 81/66/pc 80/65/pc Baltimore 88/73/Tr 92/69/s 91/70/pc Louisville 88/67/0.00 91/72/pc 92/74/pc Billings 84/51/0.00 88/62/s 89/57/pc Madison, Wl 83/56/0.00 87/69/s 88/67/pc Birmingham 84/69/0.00 88/71/pc 90/rllpc Memphis einafr'r 93n4/pc 95n5/pc Bismarck 84/65/0.00 91/58/s 98/62/s Miami 91/78/0.00 91n9/pc 90n8/pc Boise 83/52/0.00 89/59/s 82/53/pc Milwaukee 80/60/0.00 87/70/s 89/68/pc Boston 90n1 /0.00 80/67/s 89/71/s Minneapolis 86/63/0.00 88ft2/pc 88/71/pc Bridgeport, CT 87n4/0.00 86/69/s sr/Tots Nashville 88/65/0.00 90no/pc 92no/pc Buffalo 79/65/0.00 84/66/s 84/68/s New Orleans 93/75/0.00 93n6/pc 92n7/t Burlington, YT 85/61 /0.00 85/64/s 90/68/t New YorkCity 91/74/0.13 92/75/s 92/76/s Caribou, ME 78/60/0.00 73/58/s 82/57/t Newark, NJ 94nsfr'r 93ft1/s 93n4/s Charleston, SC 87n4/6.64 88/73/c 89/73/t Norfolk, YA sons/o.fr 85n2/pc 89n2/pc Charlotte 89/67/0.09 92/71/pc 93/70/pc OklahomaCity 93/66/0.00 92no/s 91no/s Chattanooga 86/68/0.00 eono/pc 91/72/pc Omaha 86/65/0.00 90/72/pc 89/72/pc 70 7 Fort Rock Riley 85/42 YESTERDAY Greece t Cheyenne 84/63/0.06 84/55/1 85/56/pc Orlando 91/75/3.60 91 f/5/t 92n5/t 83/43 75/44 Chicago 85/60/0.00 89/70/s 90/69/pc Palm Springs tornwo.oo104n5/pc102n3/pc High: 66’ Bandon Ro seburg C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 87/64/0.00 88/67/pc 88/68/pc Peoria 91/67/0.00 92n2/s 93n1/pc Jordan V gey Sep 5 Sep12 S ep 21 S ep 27 at Medford 68/57 Beaver Silver 80/46 Frenchglen 80/58 Cleveland 85/67/0.00 86/67/s 87/67/pc Philadelphia eonsnr 93/73/s e4ns/s Low: 35’ 86/47 Marsh Lake 88/46 ColoradoSprings 85/60/0.05 84/57/1 88/60/pc Phoenix 106/85/Tr 104/83/s 103/80/pc Tonight’6 uity:Neptune is at opposition, 76/42 at Burns 80/43 Gra Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 90no/0.00 91/69/s 90/68/s Pittsburgh 88/66/0.00 88/68/s 87/67/pc Paisley 66/ with the distance of 2.6 billion miles away Columbia, SC 89no/1.72 93/72/pc esn4/p Portland, ME 86/61/0.00 79/60/s 86/66/s 91/52 Chiloquin 63/43 Columbus,GA 88/71 /0.00 eon2/c 91/74/t Providence srnonr 87/66/s 89/68/s from earth, at faint magnitude 9, located in Goid ach 55 MedfO d ’ ra/43 Rome 0' Columbus,OH 86/66/0.09 87/70/t 87/69/pc Raleigh 77/67/1.75 90ft1/pc 92no/pc ,66/ss 92/54 Aquarius duesouth. Klamath Concord, NH 87/58/0.00 86/55/s 92/63/s Rapid City 75/64/Tr 92/59/s 96/62/s Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields Ashl nd Falls Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 93n5/0.46 91/75/t 91/75/pc Rene 90/52/0.00 90/54/s 85/53/s Rro ings 86/5 81/42 69/5 83/42 69/46 Dallas esn4/o'.oo 94n4/s 94ns/s Richmond 87/73/Tr 91/71/pc 91/71/pc Dayton 85/65/0.08 87/67/1 87/68/pc Rochester, NY 84/63/0.00 86/65/s 87/67/s 88/64/0.12 88/59/1 90/60/pc Sacramento 93/57/0.00 88/59/s 84/57/s 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Denver Des Moines eon2/s ssnf/pc St. Louis 91/75/0.04 93n5/s 94n4/pc 88/68/0.00 3 I~ 6 ~ 6 3 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 85/66/0.00 88/69/s 89/70/pc Salt Lake City 87/63/Tr 91/69/pc 91/69/s The highertheAccuWealher.rxrmtiy Index number, Asturia 67/61/0.08 67/52/r 66/48/r La Grande 76/46/0.00 82/51/pc68/42/pc Portland 74/6 1/0.0075/57/sh 69/52/r Duluth 81 /64/0.00 84/62/pc 82/62/pc San Antonio esn5/o.oo 92ft5/pc 92n5/s the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protscgun.0-2 Low, Baker City 78/37/0.00 84/44/pc 65/34/pc La Pine 74/38/0.00 75/45/pc 63/34/pc Prinevige 75/ 43/0.0080/48/pc63/36/ c El Paso 97/69/0.00 97/71/t esno/pc San Diego Tsno/o.oo 78n1/pc 78/69/pc 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extreme. Brookings 73/53/0.00 69/55/c 67/52/pc M edford 86/5 1/0.00 86/56/pc 78/50/pc Redmond 79/ 35/0.0080/46/pc 67/34/ c Fairbanks 50/33/0.00 51/32/pc 58/39/s San Francisco 76/60/0.00 72/62/pc 72/60/pc Gums 78/35/0.00 85/42/s 72/35/pc N e wport 6 6/57 /0.00 63/52/c 63/47/r Roseburg 82 / 54/0.00 80/58/c 73/50/c Fargo 82/66/0.00 88/66/s 92/69/pc San Jose 85/59/0.00 78/60/pc 75/58/pc Eugene 80/49/0.00 77/55/sh 72/45/r No r th Bend 72 / 55/0.00 70/56/c 66/48/c Salem 76/57/0.00 75/56/sh 72/48/r Flagstaff 75/50/0.17 74/46/s 74/45/pc Santa re 89/56/0.00 84/56/t 84/55/pc Klamath Fags 80/38/0.00 81/42/s 71/37/pc O ntario 83/50/0.00 89/55/s 81/52/pc Sisters 75/38/0.00 77/48/pc66/37/ c Grand Rapids 81/62/0.00 87/69/s 87/68/pc Savannah 86/73/0.97 87n3/c 88n3/t G rasses T r ee s Wee ds Lakeview 81/39/0.00 83/42/s 73/38/pc Pendleton 78/50/0.00 79/57/pc71/46/pc The Dages 7 9 / 54/0.00 79/60/c 73/52/c Green Bay 79/61/0.00 88/67/s 88/65/pc Seattle 65/61/Tr 66/53/r 66/51/r s-sunny, pc-partly cl o udy, c-cl o udy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl u rries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace, Yest e rday data as Greensboro 83/67/0.28 88/71/pc 91/70/pc Sioux Fags 83/64/0.00 85/69/pc 86/69/pc Weather(W): of 5 p.m. yesterday Moderate g Lo~w A bse nt Harrisburg 89n2/Tr 90/68/s 90/69/pc Spokane 70/50/0.00 73/53/c 68/44/c Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577 Harffurd, CT 90/64/0.00 88/63/s 91/65/s Springfield, MO sent/0'.00 88/68/s 89/68/s Helena 81/50/0.00 86/52/s 80/51/pc Tampa sen5/o.oe 89n7/t eon r/t Honolulu cone/o'.os 91/78/sh eonsn Tucson cans/o.oo ern4/t 95/73/c ~ gs ~ t ee ~ 20 6 ~ 3 0 s ~ 4 0 s ~ 5 0 s ~ 5 0 6 ~ 7 0 6 ~ ao s ggs ~100s ~ 110s ~ 106 ~ o s Houston 89n1 /0.00 srnl A 88/72/pc Tulsa 93/68/0.00 92fto/s 92n1/s As uf 7 a.m.yesterday Huntsville 87/67/Tr 87/69/pc 89/69/pc Washington,Dc ssn5/o.oo 93n5/s 93n5/pc "; ; c ares v Indianapolis 87/67/0.00 87/70/t eono/pc Wichita 94/69/0.00 91n2/pc 90n1/s Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL I hlp$9 Ttrandersayj jy Jackson, MS 96/72/0.00 erne'pc esnr/c Yakima 81/49/0.00 80/51/c 74/43/c C rane Prairie 265 4 9 46% EXTREMES 75/42 sdr Jacksonville 89n3/0.15 84/73/t 89/72/t Yuma 108/83/0.00 1O5ne/s 104n9/pc (for the Wickiup 33916 17% YESTERDAY sr p, r I wss I 46 contiguous states) Crescent Lake 5 6 0 16 64% 91/SS re o te Ochoco Reservoir 13075 30vo National high: 112 Amsterdam 77/64/0.77 65/53/eh 63/52/eh Mecca 109/83/0.00 113/73/pc 109/74/s 8 uu o 2 Athens 95n7/0.00 eon2/s 90/73/s Mexico City 75/55/0.15 74/56/1 72/57/t Prineville 59295 40vo at Death Valley,CA 8 89/59 uke Auckland 59/55/0.95 62/53/r 63/52/eh Montreal 77/66/0.00 83/65/s 86/66/pc River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low: 26 sn Baghdad 109/87/0.00 107/80/s 110/79/s Moscow 66/50/0.02 64/49/c 61/51/pc Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 171 at Boca Reservoir, CA Che n 91ns Bangkok 91 /77/0.08 91/79/sh 92/79/t Nairobi 73/61/0.02 78/58/pc 77/58/c eon2 ' 6 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1360 Precipitation: GAS" ss/s gadelphls Beijing 74/67/1.20 76/66/ah 86/66/pc Nassau cons/0'.05 91/81/s 90/80/pc C ice Cot mb sett Beirut 88n8/0.00 89/80/s acne/s New Delhi 95/82/0.00 98n8/pc 98/78/pc Deschutes R.below Bend 139 at Charleston, SC eeclsco 87 Omah . os is 8 /70 72/62 91/eek + X De n Berlin 95/66/0.08 82/54/t 70/52/pc Osaka 78/73/0.56 84/74/1 86/69/c ington Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1610 'sss 2 93 Lo i s ville . ~v k L„v „ 93 Bogota 64/52/0.11 65/48/pc 67/48/c Oslo 68/48/0.00 57/51/r 56/50/r Little Deschutes near LaPine 126 91 2 /deli; Kansas City Budapest 93/64/0.00 94/64/s 85/61/s Ottawa 77/63/0.00 85/61/s 86/62/t C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 2 1 90/70 Chert Buenos Ai r es 73/48/0.00 57/48/pc 59/50/pc Paris 82/66/0.00 70/49/pc 69/49/pc 6 evhvit Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Los An les Cabu San Loess 95/79/0.14 93/78/pc 92/75/pc Riu de Janeiro 90/66/0.00 88/66/pc 72/64/ah eon 1/64 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 220 L’ ' j~ , v v y Cairo e5n4/o' . Go esn4/s 96/73/s Rome 90/64/0.00 87/64/s 82/65/pc pheen Anchorage Ala uque Idshoma Ci 9 Calgary 70/52/0.00 70/49/pc 65/40/s Santiago 79/48/0.00 82/51/s 81/53/s Crooked R. near Terrebonne 143 9 43/4 n 87/44 Cancun 84nr/0.24 91/78/pc 92/76/pc Sau Paul o 88/63/0.00 77/57/pc 66/55/ah uir in hs Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 8 7 n1 ul Pa Dublin 61/46/0.07 60/45/pc 59/45/pc Sap pure 77/67/0.03 78/64/c 76/65/r ss 1 94n n Edinburgh 63/41/0.24 60/45/sh 58/44/pc Seoul 87/66/0.01 85/69/pc 82/68/t 67/ N es Geneva 88/61/0.00 68/56/t 69/52/sh Shanghai 85no/o'.oo 89/75/s 89/74/t sade Harare 80/58/0.00 84/56/s 88/59/s Singapore cons/o.os 88/80/1 88/79/pc ~9 /71 5 Bend/Sunriver Mod~erato ~ Hung Kung 88/79/0.77 87/80/t 87/81/1 Stockholm 66/48/0.00 59/52/r 63/50/r ~ x k' 0 Xv Istanbul 84/72/0.00 89/74/s 88/73/s Sydney 61/50/0.00 66/48/s 68/54/s Redmond/Madras ~M od ~erato ~ . Mi a m i y Jerusalem 84/66/0.00 86/67/s 88/68/s Taipei 81/75/0.53 90/77/t 89/77/t Monte ti: ’e’e’e: ;Vhhv.k 91/79, trs/de W'e'e' Johannesburg 81/58/0.00 78/49/s 74/45/s Tel Aviv 91/76/0.00 89n9/s 9One/s Sisters ~M o d~erato ~ Lima 68/63/0.00 72/65/pc 72/59/s Tokyo 78/70/0.23 82/77/sh 84/73/pc Prinevige ~M o d~erato ~ Lisbon Teno/o' . o4 80/64/s 76/63/pc Toronto 84/64/0.00 88/66/s 88/65/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 61/58/1.45 65/50/ah 64/49/sh Vancouver 74/57/0.00 64/52/r 63/51/r La Pine/Gilchrist ~M od ~erato ~ T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 84/64/0.02 85/60/pc 87/61/pc Vienna 93/66/0.00 92/66/s 74/58/1 Manila 88/75/0.00 88/77/t son r/t Warsaw 95/63/0.00 95/67/s 73/54/ah Source: USDA Forest Service

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 ML B, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NFL, C4 Tennis, C2 College football, C4 THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

BASEBALL

Mariners trade Jackson toCubs HOUSTON—The Seattle Mariners traded outfielder Austin Jackson to the ChicagoCubs on Monday. Chicago sent aplayer to be namedandan international draft slot to the Mariners. Because the deal wasmadebefore Sept.1, Jacksonwill be eligible for the postsea-

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Riley haswon overfans; now can hewin games? By Eric Olson The Associated Press

The scrutiny that wore on his predecessor is about to

Diego Chargers. But he has

ramp up again with Saturday' s season opener against BYU. Bring it on, Riley says. Riley, with that nice-guy persona that plays well in

son if the Cubs get that

never worked at a place like

the Heartland, has done and

far. Chicagobeganthe

Nebraska, where football is the biggest point of pride and a 365-day-ayear passion inthis

said all the right things since

day with a 5t/~-game

lead overSanFrancisco for the secondNational League wild card. The 28-year-old Jackson was traded from Detroit to the Mariners in July 2014. Hewas hitting .272 with eight homers and 38RBls in 107 games this season. Mariners interim general managerJeff Kingston announced the trade Monday night. "Obviously we would prefer to be buyers than sellers at this point, but I think for us andthe Seattle Mariners at this point in time, it's more about the future, looking ahead and trying to balance the short term with the long term," he said.

LINCOLN, Neb. — Mike

Riley has been coaching for 41 years, including three at the helm of the NFL's San

state of 1.8 million residents.

"It might not be comparable to anywhere," Riley said Monday.

he was hired at Nebraska in

December. Now Big Red fans want to see if Riley can elevate a program that seemed to hit a

ceiling under Bo Pelini. SeeRiley/C4

FirStuiI Weber St. at Oregon St. When:5 p.m. FridayTV:Pac-12 Radio:KICE940-AM E. Washington at Oregon When:5 p.m. Saturday TV:Pac-12 Radio:KBND 1110-AM

Weber St. coachno stranger to Andersen By Anne M. Peterson

as an aspiring cornerback

The Associated Press

way back when the Beavers'

CORVALLIS — Oregon

first-year coach was an as-

State coach Gary Andersen says facing Weber State coach Jay Hill in the Beavers' football opener makes him feel all of his 51 years.

sistant at Utah. Their paths have crossed many times

Andersen recruited Hill

Inside

since. They will reunite again on opposite sidelines Friday night when Oregon State opens the season at home against the Wildcats. It will

California preview,C4

be Andersen's first game as coach of the new-look

ComingThursday W

Beavers.

The Bulletin football section

See Beavers/C4

PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK

NFL

Lots of love, but few rules, for gloves

After the trade was

By Sam Farmer

announced, Ketel Marte was inserted into the Seattle lineup at shortstop, and Brad Miller moved from shortstop to center field. Kingston said oneof the benefits of the trade

Los Angeles Times

Odell Beckham Jr.

was a rookie when he leaped, a superstar when he landed. The New York Giants

wide receiver made one of the signature plays

is that Miller will get

of the 2014 NFL season

more time in center field. "I think we'd like to see quite a bit of it," Kingston said. "I just spoke to (manager) Lloyd (McClendon)

with his 43-yard touchdown catch against

Dallas, jumping and bending his body Matrix-style, then somehow

securing the football with just three fingers.

about it and I think that

at this point in time that's probably his best fit for this organization going forward. Wethink he has the components and skill set to play out there. If he canplay out there it's a hugeasset to this organization."

In the aftermath of

what some called the most athletic catch in league history, Beckham acknowledged he had a small assist on the

play — the red-and-white XXL Nike Vapor Jet 3.0

gloves he was wearing.

— The Associated Press

But he was not the only

Inside Mariners fall at Houston,C3

TENNIS

Serena advances in Slam quest NEW YORK— Even before SerenaWilliams set foot in Arthur Ashe Stadiumon Monday night, her path through theU.S.Opentocomplete the GrandSlambecame a lot easier thanks to losses by six seeded women. And when it wasthe No. 1-seededAmerican's turn to play her first-round match, she was not tested onebit by a woman whoappeared overwhelmed bythe opponent, the occasion and, to makematters worse, an injured left foot. So Williams moved a step closer to tennis' first calendar-year Grand Slam since 1988without much of a workout, reaching the second round when86th-ranked Vitalia Diatchenkoof Russia stopped playing while behind 6-0, 2-0.

Williams wasout there for only 27 minutes and took 32 of the 37 points

that were played. Next up for her is 110th-ranked Kiki Ber-

tens of the Netherlands, who advanced to the second round with her second career U.S.Open match victory. — The Associated Press

Inside More U.S. Open, C2

Andy Tullis I rhe Bulletin

Mountain View’s Mie Morey, left, nnd Eve Knox are roller hockey gonlies that were recruited to play goalkeeper for the girls soccer team.

Needing a goalkeeper,Mountain Viewfinds a pair of them atthe roller hockeyrink ow do you replace Sarah Bailey?

still am a little nervous. Those

are big shoes to fill." Earlier this summer, work-

Donnie Emerson has faced that problem for nearly a year. Bailey starred in goal for

LUCAS

Mountain View, breaking a handful of the program's

ing at Cascade Indoor Sports,

where he isthesoccerdirector, Emerson stumbled upon a potential solution to his problem.

Conference player of the year as a senior last season and a Class 5A first-team

Two solutions, actually. Emerson stopped to watch a roller hockey game being played at the complex, a match-

all-state selection.

up, he recollects, between the 15U Bend Bullets and the 14U

girls soccer goalkeeping records in the process. She was the Intermountain

For more Central Oregon preps From the end of the Cougars' news and previews for the up- season last November to the comingseason:hendbniietin.corn/ beginning of this summer, Emersonracked hisbrain,the sports/highschooi

O

Mountain View coach trying to

Bend Bullets. He knew practically nothing of roller hockey's

somehow fill the position.

rules or tactics, only that, as he

"I was extremely worried," Emerson concedes now, "and I

one to give some love to the gloves. "You have tobe careful about the way you analyze that play because you don't want people calling you a hater or whatever," said Tim Brown, a Hall of Fame

receiver. "But you can' t make that play without

those kind of gloves. It's just impossible. The guy's a freak of nature, no doubt about it, I' ll give you that. He has the big hands and all that. But

those gloves are so 'tackified' these days that that's part of the reason

you see guys making those kinds of catches." SeeGloves/C4

says now, "it's fun to watch." SeeCougars/C3

PREP VOLLEYBALL

Cowgirls topStorm in5-game seasonopener Bulletin staff report

Summit coach Jill Waskom said. "Crook County is always Summit in five games in a tense tough, anytime you step on the season-opening matchup of court with them." two of Central Oregon's stronCrook County, which won gest prep volleyball programs eight consecutive state titles beMonday night at Summit High fore finishing third in the Class

Cowgirls to force a decisive was 23-for-24 with three aces, fifth game. Crook County took and Kelley was 14-for-15 with an 8-4 lead in the fifth game be- two aces.

School.

4A tournament last year, also

The visiting Cowgirls got 20 kills from Jennifer Roth en

got 19 kills from Jennifer McCallister in Monday's win.

Crook County outlasted

route to a 25-23, 25-21, 21-25, 24-

26, 16-14 victory. "It was just a great match between two good young teams,"

fore Summit rallied back to go on top 13-12. The score was 14-

Crook County was strong at

14 before the Cowgirls notched

the service line as well, led by Abby Emerson Smith, who was

the final two points to secure

27-for-27 with an ace; she also

the nonconference win. Haley Smith and McElle Kelley each had 11 kills for the

had 42 assists. Aspen Chris-

Storm. Summit served at a

tianson was 22-for-22 serving with three aces and led the

in the Class 5A state tourna-

96 percent clip,ledbyJordan

Cowgirls with 33 digs. Laura Fraser chipped in at

ment last season, rallied from

Waskom's perfect 16-for-16

the net for the winners, record-

two games down against the

performance. Jade Waskom

ing four blocks and six kills.

Summit, which placed fourth

Wilfredo Lee /The AssociatedPress

Gloves are becoming more popular with NFL players, but there are few rules governing them.

Inside Brady, NFL fail to reach settlement,C4 Seahawks trade WR Norwood to Panthers. Sports in brief,C2 Teams begin to make cuts. Today is the deadline to reduce rosters to 75 players. Scoreboard,C2


C2

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKB DARD

TODAY Time TV/Radio 10 a.m. E S PN 4 p.m. E S PN

TENNIS

U.S. Open, first round U.S. Open, first round BASEBALL

MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat Boston MLB, Seattle at Houston

4 p.m. 5 p.m.

MLB Roo t

WEDNESDAY TENNIS

U.S. Open,second round U.S. Open,second round

10 a.m. E S PN 3 p.m. E SPN2

BASEBALL

MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat Boston MLB, Washington at St. Louis

1 p.m. 5 p.m. 5 p.m.

MLB, Seattle at Houston

MLB E S PN Roo t

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF CYCLING Sharagli WiRS10th Vuelta Stage Kristian Sbaragliof Italy outsprinted his rivals to win the 10th stage of theVuelta a Espana on Monday, while TomDumouljn of The Netherlands retained the overall leader's red jersey. Sbaragli crossed the line inchesahead of second-pl aceJohn DegenkolbofGermanyandJoseJoaquin Rojasof Spain. All three finished with the sametime. Dumoulin has a 57-second overall lead over 36-year-old Spanish rider Joaquin Rodriguez, with Esteban Chaves ofColombia another two seconds back. Bend's lan Boswell finished in the back of apackthat was 10:50 behind the leaders, and js1:24:29 behind overall jn129th place of180 riders.

FOOTBALL SeahawkS trade WRNOrwOOdfOr PantherS’ PiCk

JaguarS TEThOmaSCauld miSSStart Of SeaSOn Jacksonville Jaguars tight endJulius Thomascould miss multiple gamesto start the regular season.General managerDaveCaldwell said Monday that Thomas, a former Portland Statestar, will get asecond opinion on his injured right hand,and if heneeds surgery, hewould besidelined another four weeks.Thomas, whosigned afive-year, $46 million contract that included$24million guaranteed in free agency, broke abone in the back of his hand inthe preseason openeragainst Pittsburgh.

UCLAcor-

nerback IshmaelAdamsvvasarrested Sunday on suspicion of taking a phone from anUber driver, UCLA's media relations office confirmed Monday. Adamsvvasarrested early Sunday morning when he allegedly used force to takethe phone, according to a university spokesman. Adamsstarted all 26 gamesfor the Bruins over the previous two seasons. — From wire reports

TENNIS: U.S. OPEN

Fish puts retirementon hold after 1st-roundwin By Naila-Jean Meyers

self through," he said. "And I

New York Times News Service

got through it. I knew that I

N EW YORK — M a r d y Fish opened the final tournament of his career with a

was playing fine. It was just a matter of getting going."

6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-1, 6-3 victory

The Pride of Moldova

over Marco Cecchinato on

The order of play at the

Monday at the U.S. Open. The match took 2 hours,

U.S. Open lists each player's name followed by a three-let-

52 minutes, a relative mar-

ter abbreviation for the coun-

athon for Fish, who has played only four singles

try the player is represent-

matches this year.

Fish, a 33-year-old American once ranked seventh in

ing: USA. RUS. FRA. GER. ITA. CZE. MDA. MDA'? That stands for Moldova

and was alongside the name of the past three years be- Radu Albot, who fell, 4-6, cause of anxiety problems. 7-5, 6-1, 6-0, to seventh-seed-

the world, has missed most

"I haven't played for three

e d David F errer o n

the

hours very long or very often," he said, adding, "I hav-

Grandstand. Albot, 25, is the first play-

en't hit tennis balls for three hours in practice at alLa At his p ostmatch news conference, he wa s o p en

er from Moldova to break

into the top 100 and is now ranked 86th. He was playing in his second Grand Slam

about the worries that have t ournament; he lost in t he become part of his life. first round of the U.S. Open "You look at th e clock,

and you' re a bit worried that 'Can I last this long' ?'" he said. "You know, that just

last year.

Midmatch interview

sort of spirals and snow-

ESPN did its first in-match interview, with Pam Shriver

balls into the other issues that I have to deal with." The hotand humid weather — "conditions that I used

speaking to CoCo Vandeweghe after Vandeweghe won the first set on the way to defeating Sloane Stephens.

to absolutely love," he said — was also a concern. "I would have just drawn

Afterward, though, Van-

deweghe said, "I'm a sports fan, so for anyone to have

up a day like this, just with an insight into an athlete's more sun, three, four years mind, I think, is a positive." ago," Fish said. "I was superanxious about that, about Hingis’ Protegee the weather, and about how Belinda Bencic cruised that was going to be and past Sesil Karatantcheva, how I was going to deal with 6-1, 6-2. Bencic, the No. 12 it." seed, is the highest remainHe br ok e C e cchinato's ing seed after No. 1 Serena serve in the first game of the Williams in the top half of match but was broken when the draw. serving for the set at 5-4. Bencichas much in comFish went on to lose the first set in a tiebreaker.

"I figured, you know, if I lost this set, I was going to be in for a really long day that maybe I can't push my-

Today Boyssoccer:RidgeviewatMcNary,4;30p.mcSummit at Marist,4:30p.m. Girls soccer: Marist at Summ it, 4:30 p.m.;Eagle PomtatRedmond, 3p.m. Volleyball: Ridgeview atTheDalles,6:30p.m.; Bend at Lebanon,6:30 p.m.; Summitvs. Churchill at CorvallisHigh,4p,ms MountainViewat Corvalis, 4 p.mcMountainViewvs. Churchill at Corvallis High, 6p.m.;Summit at Corvagis, 6 p.mcCulver at TrinityLutheran,5;15p.m.

mon with her mentor Mar-

tina Hingis: Both are from Switzerland, Bencic's coach is Hingis' mother, and the

two players use Yonex rackets.

GOLF

IN THE BLEACHERS

Professional g/1 In the Bleachers O 201 5 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck www.gocomics.corn/inthebleachers

Wednesday Boyssoccer:MadrasatLaPine,4:30p.mzMadras JVat Culver,4:30p.m. Girls soccer:RidgeviewatCrookCounty, 4p.m.; La Pine atMadras,4:30 p.m. Volleyball: Redm ondat Hood River Valley, 5p.m.

Friday Football: Central at Bend, 7p.m.; Wilsonvigeat Mountain View,7:30 p.m.; Redmondat Franklin, 7 p.m.; Baker at Ridgeview, 7p.m.; Summit at Pendleton, 3:30p.mcSweet Home at CrookCounty, 7 p.m.; JunctionCity at Madras, 7 p.mcSisters at Burns, 7p.m.;LaPineat Culver, 7 p.ms Gilchrist at Mohawk, 7 p.m. Boys soccer:SouthMedford at Bend,4 p.ms North MedfordatMountainView,4 p.m. Girls soccer: MountainViewat North Medford, 6 p.m.;BendatSouth Medford,4p.m. Volleyball: Bend,Redmond, Mountain View, Ridgeview atMountain ViewTournament, 8a.m.

Saturday Boys soccer:NorthMedfordatBend, 11a.mzSouth Medfordat Mountain View,11a.m.;Culverat Irrigon,1:30p.m. Girls soccer: MountainViewat South Medford, 11 a.m.;Bendat North Medford,11 a.m. Volleyball: La Pine,Gilchrist, TrinityLutheranat La PineTournament,9 a.m.

TENNIS Professional U.S. Open

Monday atNewYork Men First Round Mikhai lKukushkin,Kazakhstan,def.Yen-hsunLu, Taiwan,6-3, 6-3,3-0, retired. David Goffin (14),Belgium,def. SimoneBolegi, Italy, 6-4,6-1,6-2.

GrigorDimitrov(17), Bulgaria,def. MatthewEbden,

Australia,6-4,6-2, 6-4. Marsel llhan,Turkey,def. RadekStepanek, Czech Republic,6-0,2-6, 6-4,3-2, retired. MardyFish, UnitedStates,def. MarcoCecchinato, Italy, 6-7(5), 6-3, 6-1,6-3. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (19), France,def.JarkkoNieminen, Finland,6-3,6-1, 6-1. FelicianoLopez(18), Spain, def. NikolozBasilashvili, Georgia7-6 , (5), 6-1, 6-3. Andreas Seppi (25), Italy, def.TommyPaul, United States,6-4,6-0, 7-5.

BenoiPai t re,France,def. KeiNishikori(4), Japan, 6-4, 3-6,4-6,7-6(6), 6-4. MarcelGranogers, Spain, def. LukasLacko,Slovakia, 6-2,6-3, 6-1. RicardasBerankis, Lithuania,def.JoaoSousa, Portugal, 6-2,6-2,4-6, 2-6,7-6(4). Ferna ndoVerdasco,Spain,def.TommyHaas,Germany, 3-6,6-1, 6-7(3}, 6-3,6-1. Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia, def.PabloAndujar, Spain,7-6(6), 0-6, 4-6,6-4, retired. Milos Raonic(10), Cana da, def. TimSmyczek, UnitedStates,6-4, 7-6(8), 6-1. Marin Cilic(9), Croatia,def.GuidoPega, Argentina, 6-3,7-6(3), 7-6 (3). Jeremy Chardy (27),France,def. RyanShane,United States, 6-2, 6-1,6-7(6), 6-2. Sergiy Stakhovsky,Ukraine, def.John Milman, Austraha,6-1,3-6, 7-6(3), 6-4. Martin Klizan,Slovakia, def.FlorianMayer, Germany, 6-7(5), 6-3,6-3,3-0, retired. TommyRobredo (26), Spain, def.MichaelBerrer, Germany, 6-2,6-2, 6-4. EvgenyDonskoy, Russia, def.Lucas Pouille, France, 6-2, 6-7(3), 6-2,6-4.

NovakDjokovic (1),Serbia, def. JoaoSouza, Brazil,

6-1, 6-1, 6-1.

DavidFe rrer(7), Spain,def.RaduAlbot, Moldova,

4-6, 7-5, 6-1,6-0.

Filip Krajinovic,Serbia,def.AlejandroGonzalez, Colombia6-4, , 6-0, 6-4.

RobertoBautista Agut (23),Spain,def.Pierre-HuguesHerbert,France,6-3,6-2, 7-6(7). DiegoSchwartzman, Argentina, def. Elias Ymer, Sweden, 6-3,6-2,6-2. PabloCarrenoBusts, Spain,def.JerzyJanowicz, Poland,6-3,4-6, 6-2,6-4. PabloCuevas,Uruguay, def. DudiSeta,israel, 6-2, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1.

l lya Marchenko,Ukraine,def. GaelMonfils (16), France, 2-6, 6-4,5-0, retired. AndreasHaider-Maurer,Austria, def.VasekPospisil, Canada, 6-4, 3-6, 6-7(7), 6-0,6-1. SamGroth,Australia, def. AlexandrDolgopolov, Ukraine, 4-6, 6-1,7-5, retired.

FabioFognini (32),Italy,def.SteveJohnson, Unit-

ed States,2-6, 6-3,6-4, 7-6(2). RafaelNadal(8), Spain,def. BornaCoric, Croatia, 6-3, 6-2,4-6,6-4. Women First Round Mariana Duque-Marino, Colombia, def. Sofia Kenin,UnitedStates,6-3,6-1. Anett Kontaveit, Estonia,def. CaseyDellacqua, Australia,7-5,6-2. AgnieszkaRadwanska (15), Poland,def. Katerina Sini akova,CzechRepublic,6-2,6-3. EkaterinaM akarova (13),Russia,def.TelianaPereira, Brazil,6-3,6-3. Bojana Jovanovski, Serbia,def.LaraArruabarrena, Spain,6-2,6-2. JessicaPegula, UnitedStates, def.Alison VanUytvanck,Belgium,7-5,6-3. LaurenDavis, UnitedStates, def. Heather Watson, Britain,7-6(3), 7-6(0). DominikaCibulkova,Slovakia,def. AnaIvanovic (7), Serbia6-3, , 3-6,6-3. Kaia Kanepi,Estonia,def. Anna-LenaFriedsam, Germany, 6-1,6-1. Kristlna Mladenovic, France, def. Svetlana

Kuzne tsova (30),Russia,6-3, 7-5.

MadisonBrengle,UnitedStates, def.ZhengSaisai, China,6-2, 5-7,7-5. AnnaTatishvili, UnitedStates,def. Karolina Plisko-

va (8),CzechRepublic, 6-2,6-1. Oceane Dodin, France,def. JelenaJankovic (21), Serbia,2-6, 7-5,6-3. Elina Svitolina (1 7), Ukraine,def. ElizavetaKulichkova,Russia,6-1,6-4. Irina FalconiUni , tedStates, def. Samantha Crawford, UnitedStates,6-4,6-2. DenisaAllertova,CzechRepublic, def. CarlaSuarez Navarro (10), Spain,6-1, 7-6(5). VenusWiliams(23), UnitedStates,def. Monica Puig,PuertoRico, 6-4,6-7(7), 6-3. MagdaLinette, Poland,def. UrszulaRadwanska, Poland,7-6(3), 6-1. AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova(31), Russia,def. MagdalenaRybarikova, Slovakia, 6-4,7-5. PolonaHercog,Slovenia, def. ZarinaDiyas, Kazakhstan,6-2, 7-5. Bethanie Matek-Sands, UnitedStates, def.Kateryna Kozlova, Ukraine, 6-4,6-3. CocoVandeweghe, United States, def. SloaneStephens (29), UnitedStates,6-4, 6-3. EugenicBouchard(25), Canada, def. Alison Riske, UnitedStates,6-4r 6-3. Belinda Bencic (12), Switzerland, def. Sesil Karatantcheva, Bulgaria, 6-1,6-2. Ana Konjuh,Croatia, def.Tatjana Maria, Germany, 6-4, 6-4.

Misaki DoiJapan, , def. DanielaHantuchova, Slovakia,6-3,6-3. RobertaVinci, Italy, def.VaniaKing, UnitedStates, 6-4, 6-4. Kiki Bertens,Netherlands, def. MirjanaLucic-Baroni, Croatia,3-6,6-4, 6-2. MadisonKeys(19), UnitedStates,def. KlaraKoukalova,CzechRepublic, 6-2, 6-4. DariaKasatkina, Russia, def. DariaGavrilova, Australia, 6-2,4-6/ 7-5.

TerezaSmitkova, CzechRepublic, def. Andreea Mitu, Rom ania,7-6 (4), 6-2. Serena Wiliams(1), UnitedStates,def. Vitalia Diatchenko,Russia, 6-0, 2-0, retired.

WORLDGOL FRANKING 1, RoryMcllroy,NorthernIreland, 12.36.2,Jordan Spieth,UnitedStates, 12.22. 3, JasonDay, Australia, 10.99. 4,BubbaWatson, UnitedStates,8.84. 5,Justin Rose,England,7.22.6, JimFuryk,United States,7.06. 7, DustinJohnson, UnitedStates,6.85. 8, Henrik Stenson, Sweden,6.73. 9, RickieFowler,UnitedStates, 6.57. 10,SergioGarcia, Spain, 5.48

DEALS Transactions BASEBA LL

AmericanLeague CLEVELAND INDIANS— Announcedtheresignation of presidentMarkShapiro to becomepresidentand CEOof Torontofollowing the2015season. KANSASCITY ROYALS — Acquired OFJonny Gomes andcashconsiderations fromAtlanta for INF Luis Valenzu ela.

Thursday Boyssoccer:Ridgeview atMadras,4:30p.m4SheldonatSummit,4p.m.;TheDagesatRedmond,4 p.m.; SistersatPhilomath,4:15p.m. Girls soccer:MadrasatRidgeview,4;30p.m.; Summit at Sheldon,7p.m.; Redmond atTheDalles, 4 p.m.;SistersatGladstone, 4:15p.m. Volleyball: Ridgeview at Culver,6:15 p.m.;Marist atBend,5p.mcDavidDouglasatRedmond,3: 30 p.m.; Madras, LaGrande at Sisters, 4 p.mcCrook Countyat ValleyCatholic, 6:30p.m.; Chiloquinat La Pine,6:30p.m.

The

Seattle Seahawksacquired an undisclosed 2017draft pick from the Carolina Panthers in a tradefor wide receiver Kevin Norwood on Monday. The6-foot-2, 200-pound Norwood was afourth-round draft choice by theSeahawks in 2014. Heplayed nine gameswith two starts as a rookie, catching nine passesfor102 yards.

NO. 13 UCUL Starting CB AdamSarreSted

ON DECK

National League CHICAGODUBS— AcquiredOFAustinJackson fromSeatle Mariners foraplayer tobenamed. CINCINN ATIREDS— PlacedOFBrennanBoesch of the 15-dayDLRecaled OF-INFAdamDuvall and RHPMichaelLorenzenfromLouisville (IL). Optioned LHPDavidHolmbergto Louisvile. BASKETB ALL

"Oh, sorry. You’ re actually ’out.’ I’m just pretending I’m an airplane!"

FOOTBALL

RODEO

mer ica’s Line

Professional

Hometeam inCAPS

LEADERS All-Around — 1,TrevorBrazile, Decatur, Texas, $182,838. 2,TufCooper, Decatur, Texas, $117,395. 3,CalebSmidt,Begvige,Texas,$94,084.4,JoJo LeMond,Andrews,Texas, $92,435.5, Rhen Richard, Roosevelt, Utah,$82,897. 6, ClaytonHass,Terrell, Texas,$80,144. 7, RyanJarrett, Comanhe, c Okla., UTAH 5 6 4 6t/z Michigan 378,390. 8, Josh Peek,Pueblo, Colo., $75,872.9, Tcu 14 15 57t/t MINNES OTA Clint Robinson,SpanishFork, Utah,$74,584. 10, Duke 10 7t/t 47t/z TULANE Russell Cardoza,Terrebonne,Ore., $70,344.11, Ohio U 9I/2 8'I~ 5tt"7t IDAHO DoyleHoskins,Chualar, Calif., $61,345.12,Jordan ARIZON A 32 31'/t 54'/t Utsa Ketscher,SquawValley, Calif., $60,574. 13,Dakota Colorado 71/2 8 57 HAWAII Eldridge,Elko,Nev., $58,537.14, Garrett Smith,Rex-21/2 WKentucky 2 6 4t/z VANDER BILT burg, Idaho, $57,126. 15,StevenDent, Mugen, Neb., Friday $55,982. Baylor 34 36 74t/z SMU Bareback Riding— 1,EvanJayne,Marseige, GEORGIA ST 3I/2 7'I~ 73t7t Charlotte France ,$89,464.2,KayceeFeild,SpanishFork,Utah, MichiganSt 18'/t 18t/t 58t/t WMICHIG AN $88,2 89.3,BobbyMote,Stephenville,Texas,$81,934. ILLINOIS 16 14 52lat KentSt 4, JakeBrown,Higsboro, Texas,$78,262. 5, Glint BOISEST 1Ot/z 11t/z 56t/z Washington Cannon, Wager,Texas,$74,230.6,CalebBennett, Saturday Tremonton,Utah,$73,432.7, Glint Laye,Cadogan,AlOld Dominion 51/2 6 6 4t/zEMICHIG AN berta,$71,283.8, Wil Lowe,Canyon, Texas,$70,621. FLORIDA 36 37 57kt NewMexicoSt 9, Tim O' Connell, Zwingle,iowa,$69,925. 10,Seth PennSt 7 7 3 8 '/t TEMPLE Hardwick,Laramie, Wyo., $69,344.11,Tanner Aus, TULSA 71/2 7 6 4 Fla Atlantic GraniteFalls, Minn.,$69,326. 12,Austin Fuss,TerreUCLA 17 19 53t/z Virginia bonne,Ore.,$68,539.13, WinnRatliff, Leesvile,La., Stanford 12 12 45t/t N'WEST ERN 368,31 0. 14, GrinLarsen,Inglis, Manitoba,$67,055. Auburn 1Ot/z 10t/z 58t/z Louisville 15, JessyDavis, Power, Mont., $62,117.17,Steven TexasA&M 3 3 6 t t"7t Arizona St Peebl es,Redmond,Ore.,$57,635.18,R.C.LandingNEBRA SKA 51/2 7 6 4 '/t Byu ham,Pendleton,Ore.,$57,206. NC STA TE 24'At 26 58 Troy Steer Wrestling — 1, Ty Erickson,Helena, NO ILLINOIS 21 22t/z 62t/z Univ Mont., $73,237. 2, HunterCure,Holliday,Texas, OKLAHO MA 30t/t 31 55t/t Akron $70,941. 3, TrevorKnow les, MountVernon, Ore., Tennesse e 21 21 60t/z BowlingGreen $69,473. 4, Luke Branquinho, LosAlamos,Calif., GEORG IA 35t7t 35t7t 52kt UL-Monroe $67,570. 5, ClaytonHass,Terreg, Texas, $66,292. KENTUC KY 14'/t 1 7 6 1 UL-Lafayette 6, Nick Guy,Sparta, Wis.,$65,722. 7, SethBrockARKAN SAS 33 33 491/2 Utep man, Wheatland,Wyo.,$63,747.8,BlakeKnowles, WVIRGINIA 1 9t/z 19t/z 58t/z Ga Southern Heppner ,Ore.,$60,059.9,TylerWaguespack,GonNOTRE DAME 10 10 54t/t Texas zales,La.,$59,492.10, KyleIrwin, Robertsdale, Ala., FLORIDA ST 30 30 58t/z TexasSt 359,382.11,Olin Hannum,Malad, Idaho,$59,141. Alabama 1 IF' 10 51t7t Wisconsin 12, TannerMilan, Cochrane,Alberta, $58,894.13, Miss St 23 21'/t 56'/t SO MISS K.C. Jones,Decatur, Texas,357,784. 14, Tyler PearUSC 28'At 28 67'At Arkansas St son, Louisville, Miss., $54,215.15,CaseyMartin, Sunday Sulphur,La.,$54,170. MARSHALL 7 t/t 7t/t 64t/t Purdue TeamRoping(beader) — 1, ClayTryan, BilMonday ings, Mont.,$90,910.2, ChadMasters, CedarHil, Ohio St 14 12 54t7t V A TECHTenn., II3,807. 3,DerrickBegay, SebaDalkai, Ariz., $79,564.4,TrevorBrazile, Decatur, Texas, $78,173. 5, Erich Rogers,RoundRock, Ariz., $71,845.6, Aaron NFL preseason Tsinigine,TubaCity, Ariz., $70,883.7, JakeBarnes, NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE ScottsdaleAri , z.,$68,987.8,JakeCooper, Monument, All TimesPDT N.M., $65,692.9,LukeBrown,Stephenville,Texas, 363,910.10,ColemanProctor, Pryor,Okla.,$62,109. Thursday'sGames 11, ColbyLovell, Madisonvige,Texas, $61,466. 12, NewOrleansat GreenBay,4 p.m. JoJo LeMond,Andrews,Texas, $59,272.13, Clay BaltimoreatAtlanta, 4plm, Smith, Broken Bow,Okla., $58,806. 14,MattSherCincinnatiat Indianapolis,4p.m. wood, Pima,Ariz., 357,124.15,RileyMinor,EgensPhiladelphiaatN.Y.Jets, 4p.m. burg,Wash.,$56,847. TampaBayat Miami,4 p.m. Team Roping (beefer) — 1, JadeCorkil, Jacksonvilleat Washington, 4:30p.m. Fagon,Nev.,$90,910. 2, ClayO'Brien Cooper, GardCarolinaat Pittsburgh,4:30p.m. nervige,Nev., $80,684.3, Patrick Smith, Lipan,Texas, Buffalo atDetroit, 4;30p.m. 378,173. 4,TravisGraves,Jay, Okla., $76,414. 5, N.Y. GiantsatNewEngland,4: 30p.m. Travis Woodard,Stockton, Calif., $73,330. 6, Cory Minnesota at Tennessee,5 p.m. Petska,Marana,Ariz., $73,203.7, Junior Nogueira, Clevelandat Chicago,5 p.m. Scottsdale,Ariz., 368,410. 8, Paul Eaves, LonedHoustonatDalas, 5p.m. ell, Mo., $65,080. 9, Kollin VonAhn,Blanchard, KansasCityat St.Louis, 5p.m. Okla., $63,910.10, RyanMotes,Weatherford, TexArizona at Denver, 6p.m. as, $63,053.11, KoryKoontz,Stephenvige, Texas, Oaklandat Seattle, 7p.m. 361,103.12,JakeLong, CoffeyvigelKan., $60,324. SanDiegoatSanFrancisco,7p.m. 13, DuganKelly, PasoRubies, Calif., $57,273. 14, QuinnKesler,Holden,Utah,$56,959. 15, RichSkelton, Llano, Texas, $56,197. 18,Russell Cardoza,Terrebonne, Ore.,$54,874. SOCCER SaddleBroncRiding— 1,CodyDeMoss,Heflin, La., $113,172.2, RustyWright, Milford, Utah, MLS $98,581. 3,IsaacDiaz, Desdemona, Texas, $91,657. 4, Taos Muncy,Corona, N.M.,$90,707.5, Jacobs MAJORLEAGUESOCCE Crawley,Boerne,Texas, $84,625. 6, Dort Scheer, All TimesPDT Elsmere,Neb.,$81,257. 7, Wade Sundell, Coleman, Okla. ,$79,730.8,Chuck Schmidt,Keldron,S.D., EasternConference W L T Pts GF GA $72,396. 9, JakeWright, Milford, Utah,867,877.10, Spencer Wright, Milford, Utah, $66,496. 11, Zeke D .C.United 13 10 5 44 35 34 Thurston,BigValley,Alberta, 362,374.12, Bradley NewYork 12 7 6 42 43 28 Harter,Loranger,La., $61,272.13,HeithDeMoss, HeColumbus 11 8 8 41 45 flin, La.,358,327.14,Tyrel Larsen,Inglis, Manitoba, Toronto FC 11 10 4 37 44 42 NewEngland 1 0 9 7 37 35 36 $49,937.15,AllenBoore,Axtel, Utah,$49,168. Tie-down Roping — 1,Tuf Cooper,Decatur, Orlando City 7 12 8 29 33 47 Texas,$106,488. 2, HunterHerrin, Apache,Okla., Montreal 8 11 4 28 30 34 N ewYorkcityFC 7 1 3 7 28 38 46 $87,21 5.3, Marty Yates, Stephenvile, Texas,$86,096. Chicago 7 13 6 27 31 38 4,Ti mberMoore,Aubrey,Texas,$84,829.5,Caleb Philadelphia 7 14 6 27 33 44 Smidt, Bellville, Texas,$79,353. 6, GorySolomon, WesternConference Prairie View,Texas, $77,473. 7, MontyLewis, HerW L T Pts GF GA eford, Texas,$75,916.8, RyanJarrett, Coma nche, Los Angele s 1 3 8 7 46 49 33 Okla. ,$74,706.9,MattShiozawa,Chubbuck,Idaho, Vancouver 14 10 3 45 38 28 $70,208.10,Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas, $70,059. FC Dallas 12 8 5 41 35 30 11, CadeSwor,Winnie,Texas,$66,650. 12, Glint SportingKansasCity 11 7 7 40 40 35 Robinson,SpanishFork, Utah,$65,722. 13, Michael Portland 11 9 7 40 29 32 Utero,Lowndesboro, Ala., $63,548.14,AdamGray, Seattle 12 13 2 38 32 30 Seymour,Texas,$60,256. 15, MarcusCosta, ChilSanJose 11 10 5 38 32 29 dress,Texas,$58,524. Houston 9 10 8 35 35 34 Steer Roping — 1, MikeChase,McAlester, Colorado 8 9 9 33 25 27 Okla., $59,562. 2, TrevorBrazile, Decatur,Texas, RealSaltLake 8 11 8 32 29 40 $58,722. 3,Vin FisherJr., Andrews,Texas, $57,171. 4, Scott Snede cor, Fredericksburg, Texas, $51,231. Saturday'sGames 5, Jess Tierney,Hermosa, S.D., $50,895.6, Rocky OrlandoCityat NewEngland,4:30p.m. Patterson,Pratt, Kan.,$49,31t. 7, NealWood, NeedChicagoatMontreal, 5 p.m. ville, Texas,$46,662.8, CodyLee,Gatesvile, Texas, TorontoFCat Seattle, 7p.m. $46,0 57.9,ShayGood,Midland,Texas,$39,273. PhiladelphiaatSanJose, 7:30p.m. 10, ChetHerren,Pawhuska, Okla., $37,945. 11, Troy Sunday'sGame Tillard, Douglas,Wyo.,$37,155.12,JoJo LeMond, FC DallasatColumbus,4p.m. Andrews,Texas, $36,547. 13,ChanceKelton, Mayer, Ariz., $32,441.14, BrodiePoppino, Big Cabin, Okla., $30,724.15,J.P.Wickett, Sallisaw,Okla., $29,579. Bull Riding — 1, SageKimzey, Strong City, BASKETBALL Okla., $118,258.2, BrennonEldred, Sulphur, Okla., st 07,726. 3, Wesley Silcox, Santaquin, Utah, WNBA 397,903.4, Parker Breding, Edgar, Mont., $86,292.5, WOMEN'8 NATIONALBASKETBALLABSOCIATIN O ChandlerBownds, Lubbock, Texas, $74,651.6,Shane All TimesPOT Proctor,GrandCoulee, Wash., $72,139. 7,Brett Stall, Detroit Lakes,Minn.,$70,086. 8, CodyTeel, Kountze, EasternConference Texas,$65,958.9,JoeFrost, Randlett, Utah,$59,971. W L Pct GB 10, AaronPass, Dallas,Texas,$57,782. 11, Caleb x-New York 20 8 714 Sanderson,Hallettsville, Texas,$55,962. 12, Reid x-Chicago 18 12 600 3 Barker,Comfort,Texas,$55,567. 13,KodyDeShon, Indiana 17 12 586 3t/t Helena,Mont.,$55,109.14,Scottie Knapp,AlbuquerWashington 16 12 571 4 que, N.M.,$54,678.15, Dustin Bowen, Wailer,Texas, Connecticut 13 17 433 8 $52,186. Atlanta 12 17 414 Bt/t Barrel Racing — 1, LisaLockhart, Oelrichs, WesternConference S.D., $150,969. 2, Gallic Duperier,Boerne,Texas, W L Pct GB $144, 452.3,SarahRoseMcDonald,Brunswick,Ga., x-Minnesota 20 10 667 $117,650.4, MaryWalker, Ennis, Texas, $100,136. 5, x-Phoenix 17 13 567 3 SherryCervi, Marana,Ariz., 394,488.6, Nancy Huntx-Tulsa 15 14 517 4t/t er, NeolaUt , ah,$89,590. 7,FalonTaylor, Collinsvige, Los Angeles 12 18 400 8 Texas,$86,828.8, CarleyRichardson,Pampa,Texas, Seattle 9 20 310 10'/a $74,845. 9,TaylorJacob, Carmine,Texas, $71,579. SanAntonio 7 23 233 13 10, CassidyKruse, Gilette, Wyo.,$61,942.11,Jill x-clinchedplayoff spot Welsh,Parker,Ariz., $59,444.12,MicheleMcLeod, Whitesboro,Texas,$57,809. 13,Vickie Carter,RichToday'sGames fiel d,Utah,357,588.14,MeghanJohnson,Deming, AtlantaatNewYork,4 p.m. N.M., $53,780.15, JackieGanter,Abilene, Texas, ConnecticutatIndiana,4p.m. $53,235.

Favorite OpenCurrent 0/U Underdog Thursday SCarolina 2I/2 2'I~ 64'/t NCarolina CFLOR IDA 17 14'/t 46t/t FloridaInt'I OklahomaSt 22lat 24 56 CMICHIG AN

National Basketball Association LOSANGELES CLIPPERS— SignedF-C Chuck Hayes. SACRAMENTOKINGS— NamedVladeDivacvice presidentofbasketball operationsandgeneral manager, MikeBratzassistant general manager,RolandBeech vice president of basketball strategyandPejaStojakovic director of playerpersonnelanddevelopment. Women'sNational Basketball Association INDIANA FEVER—Signed GBriannJanuaryto a contractextension. FOOTBA LL National Football League ARIZONACARDINALS— Released LB Lorenzo Alexander,LBGlenn Carson, GNate Isles, LBEdwin Jackson, LBAndraeKirk, CB Shaquige Richardson, TE Gannon Sinclair, WRRyan Spadola, CBDarren Woodardand PDaveZastudil. Waived-injuredWR TravisHarvey. ATLANTAFALCONS — Wai ved DB Jonathon Mincy. BALTIMOR ERAVENS — Waived GLeon Brown, WRDeAndreCarter, CBTramain Jacobs,G-TMarcel Jones, P Justin Manton, WRAldrick Robinson, LSPatrick Scalean sdWRTrent Steelman. BUFFALO BILLS— Released RBFred Jackson, DE MichaelBuchanan, CBRoss Cockrell, DTJustin Hamilton,LBAndrewHudson,TTerrenJones,CBEllis Lankster,SKennyLadler, SWesMiler, GDJMorreg, DE CedricReed and RB RickyScale. Waived-injured WRAustinWilis. PlacedCBCamThomasonthePUP list. CAROLINAPANTHERS — Acquired WR Kevin Norwoodfrom Seatle for anundisclosed2017draft choice. CINCINN ATI BENGALS—Terminatedthecontract of WRDenarius Moore. WaivedDTKwameGeathers, LB Nic o Johnson,DE Sam Montgomery,G Chris Jasperse, WRDesmondLawrenceandTEJohnPeters. CLEVELANDBROWNS — Waived TEAnthony Ezeak unneandWRShaneWynn.Terminatedthecontracts of LBEverette Brown,LBMoiseFokou, RBJalen ParmeleandDBAaronRoss. DALLASCOWBOYS — WaivedWRPhilBates,P TomHornsey,LSCaseyKreiter,CBRobertSteeplesand DT CarlifTaylor. DENVER BRONCOS— Traded OTChris Clarkto Houstonfora2016seventh-rounddraft pick. PlacedTE Jeff Heue rmanoninjured reserve.Released LBReggie Walker.WaivedCBTevrin Brandon,GAndre Davis, TE-FBJoe DonDuncan, QBZac Dysert, P Spencer Lanni ng,SRossMadison,TEJakeMurphy,RBJeremy StewartandLBChaseVaughn DETROILIO T N S—ActivatedDTHaloti Ngatafrom the reserve/non-footbag injury listandRBJoiqueBell from thePUPlist. ReleasedTEDeonButler,WRRyan Broyles,QBGarret Gilbert, WRVernonJohnson, RB DesmondMartin, DTRoyPhilon, CBJocquel Skinner, CB R.J.StanfordandDEErik Wiliams. PlacedCB ChrisOwensoninjured reserve. GREENBA Y PACKERS — Released LB Tavarus Dantzler, OT Fabbians Ebbele, LBJosh Francis, DT LavonHooksandOTVinceKowalski. INDIANAPOLI S COLTS — Released G Donald Thomas. WaivedG HarlandGunn,LBNicklasHaag, LBZac kHedges,OTTylerHoover,WRRyanLankford, DT JerisPen

FISH COUNT


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

HELLO? STATEFARM?

All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE

Toronto NewYork TampaBay Baltimore Boston Kansas City Minnesota

Cle veland Chicago Detroit

Houston Texas Los Angeles Seattle Oakland

East Division W L

74 57 72 58 65 66 63 68 61 70

Central Division W L 80 50 67 63 64 66 61 68 60 70 West Division W L 73 59 68 62 65 66 61 71 58 74

Pct GB .565 .554 I'/r .496 9 .481 11 .466 13

Pct GB .615 .515 13 .492 16

.462 20

Pct GB .553 .523 4 .496 7t/r

»

.462 12 .439 15

Monday'sGames Tampa Bay6, Baltimore 3 Cleveland 4,Toronto2 Boston 4, N.Y.Yankees3 Houston 8, Seatle 3 Oakland11, LA.Angels5 SanDiego7,Texas0 Today'sGames TampaBay(Smyly 1-2) at Baltimore(Tiffman9-9), 4;05 p.m. Cleveland(Co.Anderson2-3) atToronto(Estrada118), 4:07p.m. N.Y.Yankees(Pineda9-8) at Boston (Porceffo6-11), 4:10 p.m. ChicagoWhite Sox (Sale 12-7) at Minnesota (Duffey 2-1), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (Verlander 2-6) at KansasCity (Cueto2-3), 5:10 p.m. Seattle(Elias4-7) atHouston (Feldman5-5), 5:10p.m. L.A. Angels(Shoemaker 6-9) at Oakland(Co.Martin 0-0), 7:05 p.m. Texas(Gallardo 11-9) at SanDiego (Cashner5-13), 7;10 p.m. Wednesday'sGames LA. AngelsatOakland,12:35 p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat Boston,1:05 p.m. TampaBayat Baltimore, 4:05p.m. Cle velandatToronto, 4:07p.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxat Minnesota, 5:10p.m. Detroit atKansasCity 510pm. Seattle at Houston, 5:10 p.m. Texasat SanDiego,7:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L

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Ben M argot / The Associated Press A piece of the left field wall falls as Los Angeles Angels outfielder Shane Victorino watches during the fifth inning Monday night in Oakland, California. Victorino hit the wall trying to field an RBI double hit by the Athletics' Danny Valencia. There was a 10-minute delay to fix the wall.

American League

Astros 8, Mariners 3 HOUSTON — Houston' sDallas Keuchel allowed one runand struck out eight in seven innings tobecome theAmerican League's first16-game winner. Mark Trumbo homered twice for Seattle, which was 2-for-9 with runners in scoring position.

Red Sax 4,Yankees3

indians 4, Blue Jays2

BOSTON — David Ortiz hit his

TORONTO — Jerry Sands singled homethego-aheadrunintheseventh inning andClevelandwon its season-best sixth straight. Danny Salazar struck out 10 to reach double digits in strikeouts for the fifth time this season.

495th career homerun andJackie Bradley Jr. had three hits and threw out a runner at the plate to lift Boston. Mookie Betts hit a

two-run homer for the RedSox, who won for the ninth time in 13 games.

Reds13, Cubs6

Marlins 4, Braves 0

CHICAGO —Eugeni o Suarezand Adam Duvall hit two-run homers in a four-run sixth inning, andCincinnati took advantage of three errors by Chicago secondbaseman Starlin Castro.

ATLANTA — Martin Prado and

Cincinnati Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi Bourgscf-If 6 1 3 2 Fowlercf 5 1 2 1 Bruce rf 5 1 0 0 Schwrrc 4 1 1 1 V otto1b 2 2 1 0 Coghlnlf 4 0 1 0 Phillips2b 5 0 1 2 Rizzo1b 3 0 0 0 F razier3b 4 0 0 0 Bryantrf 3 0 2 1 DJssJrlf 3 1 1 1 LaSte03b 4 0 0 0 LaMarrpr-cf 0 1 0 0 Stcastr2b 4 1 1 0 Suarezss 5 2 1 2 Hndrckp 1 0 0 0 Brnhrt c 5 2 3 2 Denorfi ph 0 1 0 0 Lornznp 1 1 0 0 Grimm p 0 0 0 0 M atthsp 0 0 0 0 Richrdp 0 0 0 0 Duvallph 1 1 1 2 JHerrrph 1 0 0 0 Balestrp 0 0 0 0 Rodneyp 0 0 0 0 Badnhpp 0 0 0 0 TmHntp 0 0 0 0 Schmkrph 1 0 0 0 TWoodp 0 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 Achpmp 1 1 0 0 Szczurph 1 0 0 0 ARussllss 4 2 2 3 Totals 39 131111 Totals 34 6 9 6 Cincinnati 000 1 2 4 006 — 13 Chicago 001 040 001 — 0 E—St.castro 3 (23). DP—Chicago1. LOB—Cincinnati 7,Chicago4.28—Bourgeois (2), Fowler (25),

Coghlan(20), St.castro(16), A.Russell (24). HRSuarez(10), Duvall (1), Fowler(15), A.Russell (10). CS — Bryant(4). IP H

Justin Bour eachhad anRBIdouble in the eighth inning andMiami extended Shelby Miller's winless streak to 19 starts. Miller (5-12), an All-Star with a 2.56 ERA,began the night with the worst run support in the majors. Atlanta has scored two or fewer runs in 20of Miller's 27 starts. Miami

Atlanta ab r hbi ab r hbi DGordn2b 5 0 0 0 Markksrf 4 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 3 1 0 0 Ciriacoss 3 0 1 0 Prado3b 4 1 2 1 FFrmn1b 3 0 0 0 Bour1b 4 0 3 1 JGomslf 2 0 0 0 Dietrchlf 4 0 0 0 Swisherlf 0 0 0 0 Dunnp 0 0 0 0 AdGarc3b 4 0 0 0 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 JPetrsn2b 3 0 1 0 Gillespicf 4 1 1 1 Bthncrtc 3 0 0 0 Realmtc 4 0 2 0 Bourncf 2 0 1 0 Hchvrrss 4 1 1 0 SMillerp 2 0 0 0 Narvsnp 2 0 0 0 Mrksryp 0 0 0 0 Brrclgh p 0 0 0 0 Maybin ph 1 0 0 0 BMorrs p 0 0 0 0 Moylanp 0 0 0 0 Yelichph-If 2 0 1 1 R.Keffyp 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 4 104 Totals 27 0 3 0 Miami 010 000 021 4 Atlanta 000 000 000 — 0 E—Bethancourt (4). DP—Miami 2, Atlanta 1. LOB —Miami6,Atlanta 5.28—Prado(18),Bour(15). HR — Gillespie (2). SB—Realmuto (6), Ciriaco(4).

Ciriaco(2). R E R BBSO CS —

Cincinnati Lorenzen 42-3 6 5 5 1 5 MattheusW,2-4 1- 3 1 0 0 0 0 BalesterH,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 Badenhop H,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 HooverH,15 13- 1 0 0 1 1 A.chapman S,26-28 12-3 1 1 1 0 3 Chicago Hendricks 5 5 3 3 3 4 GrimmL,2-4 BS,2-5 1-3 3 4 4 1 0 Richard 23 0 0 0 0 0 Rodney 1 0 0 0 0 1 Tom.Hunter 1 1 0 0 0 1 2-3 0 3 0 3 1 TWood J.Russell 1-3 2 3 0 0 0 HBP —byLorenzen(Rizzo), byHendricks (Lorenzen). PB — Schwarber. T—3:22.A—34,017 (40,929).

Cardinals 8, Nationals 5

IP H R Miami Narveson W2-1 51-3 2 0 B arraclough H,2 2-3 0 0 B.MorrisH,12 1 1 0 DunnH,21 1 0 0 A.Ramos 1 0 0 Atlanta S.Miller L,5-12 7 6 1 Marksberry 1 2 2 2 -3 2 1 Moylan 1-3 0 0 R,Keffy WP—Barraclough. Balk—Moylan. T—2:54. A—12,916(49,586).

ER BBSO 0 0 0 0 0

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0 1 0 0

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Interieague

Padres 7, Rangers 0

SAN DIEGO— Tyson Rossheld Cleveland Toronto ab r hbi ab r hbi ST. LOUIS —Jason Heyward hit a Texas to three hits in seven innings New York Boston Kipnis2b 4 1 1 0 Reverelf 5 1 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi two-run, tie-breaking double in the and hit an RBIsingle, andSan 4 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 4 0 1 2 402 20r/t E llsurycf 4 1 0 0 Bettscf 4 1 2 2 Lindorss Seattle Houston Brantlylf 4 0 0 0 Bautistrf 4 0 1 0 seventh inning to key afive-run Diego handedthe Rangers just .394 21'/t CYounglf 3 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 0 1 CSantn1b 3 1 1 0 Encrncdh 4 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Central Division rally and lift St. Louis, which won their third loss in10 games.The Drew2b 1 1 1 0 Bogartsss 3 0 1 0 Raburndh 3 1 1 1 Tlwlzkss 3 0 1 0 KMartess 4 0 00 Altuve2b 5 2 3 0 W L Pct GB Seager3b 4 0 1 0 MGnzlzlf-1b 3 2 1 0 A Rdrgzdh 4 0 1 0 Ortizdh 3 1 2 1 for the eighth time in nine games Rangers dropped four gamesbeJRmrzph-dh 1 0 0 0 Colaeg1b 3 0 0 0 St. Louis 85 46 .649 JMrphypr 0 0 0 0 TShaw1b 3 0 0 0 N.cruzrf 3 0 1 0 Correass 4 1 2 2 YGomsc 4 1 1 0 Smoak1b 1 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 79 50 .612 5 and movedfivegamesahead of Beltranrf 3 0 1 1 Rcastllrf 4 0 0 0 hind first-place Houston in the AL Rsmssnp 0 0 0 0 Gattisdh 3 1 1 2 Sands rf 3 0 1 1 RuMrtnc 4 0 0 0 Chicago 74 56 ,569 I Qr/t BMccnc 2 1 0 0 B.Holt2b 4 0 0 0 Pittsburgh in the NLCentral. Cano2b 4 0 1 0 CGomzcf 4 0 1 1 West and remained in thesecond C hsnhffph-rf 1 0 1 0 Pillarcf 4 0 1 0 Milwaukee 55 75 423 29r/r Headl y 3b 3 0 1 1 Hanignc 4 0 1 0 Almontcf 4 0 2 0 Goins2b 4 1 2 0 Cincinnati 54 76 .415 30r/t Gutirrzlf 4 1 1 0 Lowrie3b 4 1 2 2 AL wild-card spot. Bird1b 5 0 1 0 BrdlyJrlf 3 2 3 0 Trumo1b-rf 4 2 2 3 Carter1b 2 0 0 0 Washington St. Louis Aviles3b 3 0 0 0 West Division Gregrsss 5 0 4 1 JMontrdh-1b4 0 0 0 CIRsmsff 1 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Totals 3 4 4 8 2 Totals 3 62 102 W L Pct GB B.Ryan 2b 3 0 0 0 BMiller cf 4 0 2 0 Conger c 4 1 1 1 C leveland 100 0 0 0 201 4 Werthlf 4 0 2 0 Mcrpnt3b 4 1 1 0 Texas ab r hbi San Diegoab r hbi Los Angeles 72 57 .558 Gardnrph-If 1 0 1 0 Toronto 0 00 020 000 2 Rendon2b-3b4 0 1 0 Pisctlyrf-If 5 1 1 1 SanFrancisco 69 61 .531 3r/r Sucrec 3 0 0 0 Mrsnckrf 3 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 103 Totals 3 2 4 9 4 DShldscf 4 0 0 0 Solarte3b 4 0 1 1 Totals 3 4 3 8 3 Totals 3 38 118 E—Donaldson (18). DP—Cleveland 1, Toronto Harperrf 2 2 0 0 JhPerltss 3 2 2 1 SanDiego 64 67 .489 9 N ew York 100 1 0 0 001 — 3 2. LOB 4 0 0 0 Wallacph-3b 1 0 1 1 Seattle 0 10 000 002 — 3 —Cleveland 4, Toronto 9. 2B—Kipnis (37), Zmrmnfb 5 2 3 4 Heywrdcf-rf 4 2 2 2 Choorf Arizona 63 68 .481 10 — 4 Boston 002 100 10x Fielder1b 3 0 1 0 Alonso1b 5 2 2 1 100 220 30x — 8 YEscor3b 4 0 1 0 Molinac 3 1 1 1 Raburn(16), Encarnacion (28), Tulowitzki (6). 38Colorado 53 76 .411 19 Houston E — H anigan (3), San d oval (15). DP — B os ton 3. B eltre3b 3 0 0 0 Kemprf 4 1 1 1 E—N.cruz (4), Seager (13), Correa(8). DP —Se- LOB Riverop 0 0 0 0 Wong2b 4 0 2 2 (1). —New York 14, Boston 7. 28—Beltran (31), Donaldson O dor2b 4 0 0 0 uptonlf 4 0 1 0 attle 2,Houston2. LOB—Seattle 5, Houston 5.2BTreinenp 0 0 0 0 MrRynl1b 4 1 2 1 IP H R E R BBSO Monday'sGames (26),BradleyJr. (9). HR —Betts (13), Ortiz(29). Cleveland 3 0 2 0 Gyorkoss-2b 3 0 1 1 Gattis (17),Lowrie(10). HR —Trumbo 2 (10), Correa Ortiz C Ronsnph 1 0 0 0 Mosslf 3 0 2 0 Andrusss SF — Beltran. Miami 4, Atlanta0 Napoliph 1 0 0 0 Spngnr2b 4 1 2 1 (16), Lowrie(6),Conger(9). SB—B.Miller (12), Al6 2 2 1 10 Dsmndss 4 0 1 0 Phampr 0 0 0 0 NrY.Mets3, Philadelphia1 IP H R E R BBSO SalazarW,12-7 7 Venal e lf 2 0 0 0 BNorrsp 0 0 0 0 tuve (35).SF—Gattis. B.Shaw H,18 2 3- 1 0 0 0 0 Loatonc 3 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati13,ChicagoCubs6 New York BWilsnc 3 0 0 0 Hedgesc 3 1 0 0 MTayl r cf 4 0 0 0 Lackeyp 2 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBBO Allen S,28-31 1 1 3 3 0 0 1 2 St. Louis8,Washington 5 NovaL,5-7 6 7 3 3 1 3 Lewis p 2 0 0 0 T.Ross p 3 0 1 1 Seattle Toronto GGnzlzp 2 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 1-3 2 1 1 0 Colorado 5, Arizona4 Warren Falknrp 0 0 0 0 Barmesss 1 0 0 0 NunoL,0-2 6 7 5 5 2 2 7 6 3 3 1 9 Espinosph 0 1 0 0 GGarciph 1 0 0 0 12-3 0 0 0 2 1 PriceL,13-5 SanDiego7,Texas0 Shreve Morlndph 1 0 0 0 Jnkwskcf 4 2 2 0 Rasmusse n 2 4 3 3 0 2 Cecil 1 0 0 0 0 1 Janssn p 0 0 0 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 SanFranciscoat L.A.Dodgers, late Boston SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 Houston Hawki n s 1 2 1 0 0 1 TTurnr2b 1 0 0 0 Bouriosph-cf 1 0 0 0 Today'sGames E.Rodriguez W,8-5 5 7 2 1 3 4 T—2:56. A—46,643(49,282). 0000 euchelW,16-6 7 6 1 1 1 8 RossJr. H,12 1 Totals 3 4 5 8 4 Totals 3 48 138 Bassp Arizona (Corbin 3-3) at Colorado(Flande3-1), 12:10 K 0 0 0 1 1 3 0 0 3 0 Totals 3 67 127 W.Harris 1 0 0 0 0 0 A.Ogando W ashington 1 0 0 0 0 1 300 — 5 Totals p.m., 1stgame H,11 1 0 0 0 1 0 Texas 0 00 000 000 — 0 1 2 2 2 0 1 Tazawa St. Louis 000 3 0 0 5 0x 8 Miami(Nicolino2-2)atAtlanta(Banuelos1-2), 410pm. O.Perez H ,16 1 2 0 0 0 0 — 7 San Di e go 0 0 2 0 0 4 01x National League E—Wong (14). DP—Washington 3, St. Louis1. —byNuno(Marisnick). WP—Nuno, Keuchel 2. Philadelphia(Harang5-14) at N.Y.Mets(Niese8-9), HBP MachiS,4-4 1 1 1 1 3 2 E—Beltre (13), Solarte(10). LOB —Texas 6, San LOB —Washington 9, St. Louis 6. 28—Werth (11), T—2:48. A—19,923(41,574). 4:10 p.m. E.Rodriguez pitched to 1batter in the6th. Diego 8.2B—Fielder (25), Walace(4), Alonso(17), Zimmerma n(22), Heyward(27). HR—Zimmerman(13). WP — Tazawa, Machi. Cincinnati(DeSclafani7-10)atChicagoCubs(Haren Rockies 5, Diamondbacks4 IP H R E R BBSO Kemp(25), Upton(18), Spangenberg(12). 3B—JanT—3;44.A—36,148 (37,673). 8-9), 5:05 p.m. kowski(1).SB—Kemp(11),Jankowski (1). CS—AnAthletics 11, Angels 5 Washington Pittsburgh(G.cole15-7) at Milwaukee(Nelson 10—Gyorko. DENVER — Ben Paul s en hit a twoG Gonzal e z 6 5 3 3 2 4 drus (7).SF 10), 5:10p.m. IP H R E R BBSO Rays 6, Orioles 3 JanssenL,1-3BS,2-2 2-3 4 4 4 1 0 Washington (J.Ross5-5) atSt. Louis(Gonzales0-0), OAKLAND, Calif.— Mark Canha out, two-run single andColorado Texas 1-3 2 1 1 1 0 Rivero 5:15 p.m. hit a three-run homer, Jake Lewis L,14-7 52 - 3 7 6 5 2 2 rallied for four runs in the bottom Treinen 1 2 0 0 0 1 Arizona(R.DeLaRosa11-6) at Colorado(K.Kendrick Smolinski's three-run double BALTIMORE — Chris Archer Faulkner 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 St. Louis of the ninth to snap a three-game 4-12), 5:40p.m.,2ndgame n 1 2 0 0 0 0 pitched six shutout innings, and Lackey 6 4 2 1 4 8 S.Freema SanFrancisco(Bumgarner16-6) atL.A.Dodgers(Gre- highlighted a five-run third inning Bass 1 2 1 1 0 0 losing streak. Charlie Blackmon SiegristW,6-1BS,4-101 1 3 3 2 2 Tampa Bayhit three home runsto inke14-3),7:10p.m. San Diego and Oakland earned its first threeCishek H,5 1 1 0 0 0 1 finished a home run short of the Texas(Gallardo 11-9) at SanDiego (Cashner5-13), .RossW,10-9 7 3 0 0 2 7 beat fading Baltimore, which has RosenthalS,42-44 1 2 0 0 1 1 T game winning streak sinceAug. 7;10 p.m. cycle for the Rockies. B.Norris 2 0 0 0 0 0 T—3:07.A—42,081 (45,399). l o st 11 of its previous 12 games Wednesday'sGames HBP — by T .R os s (F i e l d er). 7-9againstHouston.LosAngeles Miami atAtlanta,9:10a.m. T—2;39. A—19,013(41,164). Arizona Colorado lost for the ninth time in11 games. and have beenheld to three or Cincinnatiat ChicagoCubs,11:20 a.m. Nets 3, Phillies1 ab r hbi ab r hbi fewer losses in each of those Philadelphiaat N.Y.Mets, 4:10 p.m. 5 1 1 1 Blckmncf 4 1 3 0 Leaders Los Angeles Oakland games. Archer finished the month Inciartrf PittsburghatMilwaukee,5:10 p.m. Pollock cf 4 1 2 2 Reyesss 4 1 1 1 NEW YORK — Bartolo Colon ab r hbi ab r hbi WashingtonatSt. Louis, 5;15p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE with 50 strikeouts, tying the club Gldsch1b 4 1 1 0 Arenad3b 5 1 1 2 Calhonrf 5 0 0 0 Burnscf 5 1 1 0 Arizona at Colorado, 5:40p.m. BATTINGMicabrera, Detroit, .358; Brantley, DPerltlf 4 0 2 1 CGnzlzrf 4 0 0 0 extended his scoreless streak record for August held by Scott Troutcf 4 1 0 0 Canha1b 3 2 1 4 SanFranciscoat L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m. Cleveland, .322; Kipnis, Cleveland, .319; Fielder, Wcastff c 4 0 2 0 LeMahi2b 5 1 3 0 to16innings,and NewYorkgot Texasat SanDiego,7:10p.m. Puiols1b 4 1 2 1 Lawrie2b 4 2 0 0 Kazmir (2007). Texas,.316;Altuve,Houston, .316; Bogaerts, Boston, JaLam3b 4 0 0 0 Hundlyc 4 0 1 0 homers from Curtis Granderson Crondh 5 1 1 0 Valenci3b 4 1 2 3 Gosseln2b 4 0 0 0 McBrid1b 4 0 1 0 .315;Ncruz,Seatle, .314. Aybarss 3 1 3 2 Pheglyc 3 1 0 0 and Michael Conforto to improve RBI Donaldson, Toronto, 108; CDavis, BaltiTampa Bay Baltimore Ahmedss 0 0 0 0 Paulsnph 1 0 1 2 History Victornlf 4 0 2 0 Smlnsklf 4 0 1 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi Owingsss-2b4 1 3 0 BBarnslf 2 0 0 0 more,92;Encarnacion, Toronto, 91; KMorales, Kansas to 13-1 against Philadelphia this lannettc 3 0 0 0 BButlerdh 3 1 1 0 THIS DATE IN BASEBALL Guyerrf-cf 5 0 1 0 MMchdss 5 1 2 0 R ayp 2 0 0 0 Bettisp 2 0 0 0 City, 90;Bautista,Toronto,88;JMartinez, Detroit, 87; Cowart3b 3 1 2 1 Reddckrf 2 2 1 0 season. JButlerlf 4 0 0 0 GParraff 5 1 1 0 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 KParkrph 1 0 0 0 Ncruz, Seattle,82;BMccann,NewYork,82. Green 2b 3 0 0 0 Semienss 4 1 2 1 Sept. 1 DOUBLES —Brantley, Cleveland, 40; Kipnis, Longori3b 4 1 1 1 A.Jonescf 4 1 1 1 DHrndzp 0 0 0 0 Germnp 0 0 0 0 1968 VinegarBend Mizell oftheSt.Louis Car- Totals 3 4 5 104 Totals 3 2 11911 Forsyth2b 4 2 3 0 C.Davisrf 4 0 0 0 Cleveland,37; Donaldson, Toronto, 35; KMorales, Sltlmch ph 1 0 0 0 Fridrch p 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia New york L os Angeles 1 0 2 0 0 0 110 — 5 dinals set aNational League record bywalking nine Acarerss 4 1 1 2 Wieters1b 4 0 0 0 Zieglerp 0 0 0 0 Sicastrp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi KansasCity, 35;Dozier, Minnesota,33;Kinsler, De000 013 02x — 11 TBckhdh 3 1 2 2 Clevngrdh 4 0 1 2 battersandtossing ashutout. Mizell beatCincinnati Oakland MtRynlp 0 0 0 0 Descalsph 1 1 1 0 OHerrrcf 4 0 0 0 Grndrsrf 3 1 1 2 troit, 32;Beltran, Ne wYork, 31;Cano,Seattle, 31. E—Cowart (2). DP—Los Angeles 1, Oakland 1. Loney1b 3 0 1 0 Schoop2b 4 0 2 0 1-0 in thefirst gameof adoubleheader. Totals 3 6 4 114 Totals 3 7 5 125 CHrndz2b 4 1 2 0 Cespdscf-If 4 0 0 0 HOMERUNS Ncruz, Seattle, 39; Donaldson, —Los Angeles 8, Oakland4. 28—Valencia 2 Kiermrcf 1 0 0 0 Flahrty3b 3 0 0 0 1975 TomSeaver struck out MannySanguil- LOB Arizona 003 010 000 — 4 Altherrlf 4 0 1 0 DnMrp1b 3 0 0 0 Toronto,36;CDavis, Baltimore,35;JMartinez, Detroit, len in theseventh inningto become the first pitcher (19), Smolinski (4), B.Butler(23), Reddick(23). HR Nava rf 3 0 0 0 Joseph c 3 0 1 0 C olorado 001 0 0 0 004 — 5 Howard1b 2 0 0 0 DWrght3b 3 0 0 0 34; Puiols,LosAngeles, 34;Trout, LosAngeles, 33; —Green Rivera c 4 1 1 0 to strikeoutat least200battersin eight consecutive Canha(11). SB—Cron(2), Victorino (6). CS Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. Sweenypr 0 0 0 0 KJhnsn2b 3 0 0 0 Bautista,Toronto,31;Teixeira, NewYork, 31. seasons.Seaver recorded10strikeouts in theMete' (1). SF —Aybar,Canha. E—Ziegler (1). DP—Colorado 1. LOB—Arizona Francrrf 4 0 0 0 dArnadc 3 0 0 0 Totals 35 6 10 5 Totals 3 6 3 8 3 STOLENBASES Altuve, Houston, 35; LCain, 3-0 triumph overPittsburgh. IP H R E R BBBO T ampa Bay 0 1 0 2 2 1 000 — 6 6, Colorado12.28—Goldschmidt(30), Owings (23), ABlanc3b 4 0 1 0 Confortlf 2 1 2 1 Kansas City,26;Burns,Oakl and,25;JDyson,Kansas 1998 — Mark McG wire broke HackWilson's Los Angeles B altimore 000 0 0 0 300 — 3 Blackmon (27),Reyes(6), LeMahieu(20). 38—Black- Ruppc 3 0 0 0 Fami lip 0 0 0 0 City,23;DeShields, Texas,22; Gose, Detroit,19; RD a68-year-oldNationalLeaguerecordfor home runsin SantiagoL,7-9 2 2 - 3 4 5 5 3 4 E—Longoria (8), J.Butler(1). DP—Tampa Bay mon (7). HR —Pollock (14). SB—Blackmon (36), Galvis ss 3 0 1 0 WFlors ss 3 0 0 0 vis, Detroit,18;Gardner,NewYork,18. 12-3 1 1 0 0 2 aseason,hitting his56thand57th in theSt. Louis Salas 1, Baltimore 1.LOB —Tampa Bay 4, Baltimore11. LeMahie(20), u B.Barnes(3). S—Ray. Eickhff p 2 0 1 0 B.colon p 2 1 1 0 PITCHING —Keuchel, Houston,16-6; FHernanCardinalsvi'ctoryovertheFlorida Marlins. Gott 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 2B — Forsythe (24), Rivera(14), Schoop(11). 38IP H R E R BBSO DBrwnph 1 0 0 0 Lagarsph-cf 1 0 0 0 dez, Seattle15-8; , Eovaldi,NewYork, 14-2; Buehrle, 1999 Twenty-twoof baseball 68 perman ent J.Alvarez 1 2 2 2 1 1 Forsythe(2). HR —Longoria (15), A.cabrera(10), Arizona JGomzp 0 0 0 0 Toron to,14-6;Lewis,Texas,14-7;McHugh,Houston, umpiresfoundthemselves jobless, thefallout from Bedrosian 1 0 1 1 1 2 TBeckham 5 2-3 5 1 1 3 8 14-7; Hutchi son,Toronto,13-2; Price,Toronto,13-5. (7). SF—TBeckham. Ray Totals 3 1 1 6 0 Totals 2 73 4 3 1 1 1 1 1 2 ERA — SGray,Oakland,2.13;Keuchel,Houston, their union'sfailedattemptto forceanearly start to C.Ramos IP H R E R BBBO DelgadoH,B 1 1 - 3 1 0 0 1 0 Philadelphia 00 0 000 001 — 1 negotiationsfor a newlaborcontract. Underthe deal Oakland TampaBay D.Hernandez H,5 1 1 0 0 0 0 New York 000 0 3 0 Ogx— 3 2.24; KazmirHouston, , 2r45;Kazmir, Houston,2.45; 7 4 4 4 5 ArcherW,12-10 6 mediatedbyU.S.District JudgeJ. Curtis Joyner,the DoubrontW,2-1 6 4 0 0 3 6 ZieglerL,0-3H,4 2-3 4 4 4 1 1 DP — NewYork2. LOB—Philadelphia5,NewYork2. Price, Toronto, 2.47; Price,Toronto, 2.47; Archer, 1 1 0 0 0 0 unionagreedthe22'Wil providenofurther services." Muiica Andriese 1 4 3 3 1 1 Mat.ReynoldsBS,1-1 0 1 0 0 0 0 HR —Granderson(23), Conforto(4). CS—Conforto (1). Tampa Bay,2.78. 2014 ColeHamelsandthreePhiladelphia Phil- Abad 1 2 1 1 1 1 ColomeH,4 1 0 0 0 0 2 Colorado IP H R E R BBSO STRIKEOUT S Sale, Chicago, 229;Archer,Tam1-3 0 0 0 0 1 BoxbergerS,33-37 1 lies relieverscombinedto pitch ano-hitter, beatingthe Scribner 0 0 0 Bettis 6 1 1 4 4 0 4 Philadelphia pa Bay,223;Kluber, Cleveland,219;Price,Toronto, 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Baltimore 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 AtlantaBraves7-0. Hamels pulled aftersix innings.He Pomeranz Germen EickhoffL,1-2 7 4 3 3 2 4 188; Keuchel,Houston,173; Carrasco, Cleveland, 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 J.Gomez struckoutseven,walked five, hitabater andthrew108 Doubrontpitchedto 2 batters inthe7th. W.chenL,8-7 42 - 3 9 5 5 0 4 Friedrich 1 0 0 0 0 0 173; Salazar,Cleveland,172. 11-3 1 1 1 1 1 Si.castroW,2-0 2 pitchesona hot afternoonat Turner Field. Relievers Gott pitched to 1baterin the6th. Brach 0 0 0 0 1 New York SAVESBoxberger, Tam pa Bay, 33; Street, Los JakeDiekm an, KenGiles andcloser Jonathan Papel- Bedrosianpitchedto 1batterin the8th. JasGarcia 2 0 0 0 0 2 Mat.Reynoldspitchedto 1batterin the9th. B.colonW,12-11 8 4 0 0 1 9 Angeles,31; Perkins, Minnesota, 31; Britton, BalAbad2. O'Day —byRay(B.Barnes). WP—Bettis. boneachpitchedahitless inningtofinish offthefourth WP — 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP FamiliaS,36-41 1 2 1 1 1 1 timore,30;GHogand, Kansas City, 29;AMiffer,New T—3:03.A—19,841(45,971). T—3:30. A—21,386(50,398). no-hitter inthemajors that season. T—3:34 (Delay; 0:10).A—12,054(35,067). T—2;23.A—34,233 (41,922). York,28;Allen,Cleveland,28;ShTolleson, Texas, 28. NewYork Washington Atlanta Miami Philadelphia

73 58 66 64 54 77 53 79 52 80

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Cougars

ing. "They' re not afraid of anything." "That's key for soccer, be-

Continued from C1 As he observed the competition, he took notice of each

ing a soccer goalie," Emerson says now. "You' ve got to have

team's goalie. Defending each a little bit of craziness. These goal, amid a sea of boys, were girls were taking hard shots girls — Mia Morey on one end from these boys, so I figured and Eve Knox on the other. Emerson approached the fa-

they had that little element of craziness in them."

cility's roller hockey director,

After speaking with Morey and having his JV coach,

John Kromm. "Man, I can' t

believe how these girls are taking these pucks and stopping them," Emerson recalls telling his colleague. Kromm's response piqued Emerson's interest, leading him to con-

Sara Merrick, talk to Knox,

girls soccer team in the fall.

guts to come out at somebody

Emerson went from having no goalkeeper for the this season to having two. "I feel a lot better about it now," Emerson says of his team's goalie situation, "aftact Morey and Knox, who would be a freshman and a ter working with these girls sophomore, respectively, at for three weeks and seeing Mountain View, about possi- what they can do. They' re bly trying out for the Cougars both fearless. It takes so much "These girls are just tremendous athletes," Emerson recounts K r omm

when they' re dribbling at you, to come out and face that ball.

s ay- It's just that little element of no

fear, a little craziness maybe. I soccer field," Emerson says. Morey was allowing goal afsee both of these young ladies "They' re both just tremendous ter goal in practice, for examare fearless like that. I expect athletes." ple, Bailey — who had played good things from both of them Both Morey and Knox have football on boys teams until over the course of the next played roller hockey for sever- she began her soccer career couple years." al years. Their natural reac- as a sophomore at Mountain The sharp reflexes, quick- tions on the rink sometimes View — shared with the freshness and t oughness show- do not bode well on the field. man her own early struggles. cased by Morey and Knox Then again, those same in- When Knox felt anxious in have stood out to Emerson so stincts translate well, such as goal during the early practice far. And while Emerson and quick responses to shots and sessions, Bailey urged the sochis two keepers disagree with the angles keepers use to de- cer newcomer to maintain the the difficulty of t r ansition fend those attempts. fearless attitude that had alfrom roller hockey goalie to But those natural goalie lowed her to become an effecsoccer goalkeeper — Emerson knacks go only so far, Knox tive roller hockey goalie. eMy confidence level inadvocating for its ease, Morey says. "Being a goalie (in soccer) is creased a little bit, knowing and Knox saying otherwise — all areon the same page so much different than hock- that she went from playing regarding how much progress ey," she observes. "In hockey, other sports to going in and Morey and Knox have made. you can stay in a really small playing goalkeeper," Morey That is worth noting, consid- space.In soccer,there'salotof says. "It was like, 'Cool,' and ering neither Morey nor Knox diving and moving." then, 'Wait, if she could do it, has played competitive soccer Making the transition has maybe I can do it too.'" since elementary schooL not been without its chalEmerson was hoping for "I could not believe the lenges. And Bailey, who now keepers who were a little bit a thleticism o f th e s e g i r l s plays for Linfield College, crazy and very much fearless. once we got them out on the has been there to help. When Morey and Knox assure they

possess both of those traits, and theyare becoming more comfortable, more adept and

more confident in goal for the Cougars. In return, Emerson says he has eall the faith in the world" in his two new convert-

ed keepers.

"It's definitely a nice feel-

ing," Emerson says of having two capable goalies at his disposaL "It's a feeling that in years past, when Sarah would go down ... your heart would kind of stop for a little

bit because you didn't have a backup. Having both of these ladies is definitely a good feeling." How do you replace Sarah Bailey? Emerson may have found his answer. Says the Cougars coach: "I see a young Sarah in both of these girls." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glzzcas®bendbulletin.corn.


C4

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Gloves

Golden Bears have skill players all over, but their defense must improve

Continued from C1 Said former NFL receiver

ing that it would give them a better grip on the ball. That substance was outlawed in 1981.

The league's uniform code Cris Collinsworth, now color analyst on NBC's "Sunday says that "adhesive or slipN ight Football": "I think i f pery substances on the body, they took the gloves com- equipment, or uniform of pletely away from the guys, any player" are prohibited. including the quarterbacks at Tackified gloves are allowed, this point, it would have a ma- though, provided "such tacky jor impact on what the game substance does not adhere

By Josh Dubow

looked like on the field. And

to the football or otherwise

The Associated Press

not for the better." While the topic of slight-

cause handling problems for players."

BERKELEY, Calif. — A p otential f i r st-round d r a f t

l y deflated f ootballs h a s

pick at quarterback, a deep receiving group and a potent running game will carry California only so far this football season.

sparkedcountlessdebatesin recent months, the growing popularity of gloves that almost adhere to the ball has largely gone unnoticedand unregulated. Rich McKay, president

If the Golden Bears are go-

ing to get back to their winning ways and into a bowl game in coach Sonny Dykes' third season at the helm, the defense will have to show some signifi-

of the Atlanta Falcons and

chairman of the league's competition committee, said the group has talked exten-

sively in recent years about whether the NFL should come up with new regulations for gloves. Although no decisions are imminent, he

cant improvement.

Cal has allowed the most yards, most first downs and second-most points in the na-

tion since Dykes arrived in 2013, leading to a 6-18 record

said, it is a subject expected to

come up again. Various companies make

despitethe presence of star

quarterback Jared Goff. "We' ll be as good as our de-

the gloves, and the products

fense allows us to be. That will

be the key for us," Dykes said. "We' ve been able to address

The Associated Press file photo

California's deep well of skill position players, including third-year starting quarterback Jared Goff,

some of our deficiencies in will only carry California so fer this season. The defense must pitch in. terms of depth. We need some guys to come through. We still PAC-12 PREVIEWS have questions we have to get tion. It doesn't get much betAug. 24: Colorado answered, but we think we' re ter than that. I'm just trying Sept. 5 rambling St 2 p.m. goingtobemuch improved." to enjoy it." Aug. 25:Utah Sept.12 SanoiegoSt. 2p.m. It will be hard not to imAug. 26:Arizona Center of attention prove following a s eason Se t.19 t Texas 4:30 .m. Aug. 27:UCLA during which five of Cal's Cal dismissed starting cenSept. 26 at Washington TBA Aug. 28: Arizona St. sevenlosses came in games ter Matt Cochran from t he Oct. 3~Washington St. gTBA Aug. 29: Southern Gal in which the Bears scored at team after spring ball, leaving Oct. 10 at Utah TBA least 30 points. While the rest Aug. 30: Washington St. a big hole on the offensive line. O ct. 22 t UCLA 6 p . m . Aug. 31:Washington of the nation won more than Guard Jordan Rigsbee will O ct. 31 Southern Gal T B A 80 percent of the time when likely move over a spot and Today:California the offense scored 30 or more Nov.7 t 0 re on BA take over that role. Wednesday: Stanford points, Cal went just 5-5. N ov. 14 Oregon St. TB A Thursday: Football preFamiliaf1ty That overshadowed another Nov. 21gat S tanford ~B A view section featuring stellar season from Goff, who The Bears hope a second N ov. 28 Arizona St. T B A Oregon andOregonState passed for 3,973 yards with 35 season with Art Kaufman as touchdowns and only seven defensive coordinator will help interceptions in a sophomore shore up the defense. With 17 season that put him near the Goff's audibles m ent that we w ant hi m t o defensive players who starttop of the list of pro prospects In his third year in the sys- make." ed games last year returning, at quarterback in college. tem, Goff is being given much that hope is reasonable. Goff's focus is not on the more latitude to change plays Receiving depth "Having the defensive coNFL draft, individual awards at the line of scrimmage. Despite Chris Harper leav- ordinator around for a second or even a bowl game. He is That control of the offense ing early for the NFL, Cal season is a huge thing," safety concerned with the process led to more efficient play in brings back seven players Griffin Piatt said. "We' re faof getting better each day as a the spring in a development who caught at least 20 pass- miliar with the coverages and team and believes the results the Bearshope willcarry over es last season. That group is everything." will come from there. into the season. led by Kenny Lawler, Stephen "We' re excited for the year," "Jared took a big step be- Anderson, Bryce Treggs and Schedule he said. "We try not to put too tween year one and year two," Trevor Davis, giving Goff The Bears had better start much pressure on ourselves. Dykes said. plenty of options in the pass- fast because the finish of their "I thought Jared took an ing game. There are a lot of people out Pac-12 schedule is brutal. Cal "I think they' re the best plays road games at UCLA, there saying this will be a big even bigger step between year year for us. We know it. But two in spring football. At the group of wide receivers in the Oregon and Stanford and we also know we' re mature end of the spring, I thought country," Goff said. home contests against South"A lot of teams have one or ern California and A r izona enough to take it day by day he was a completely different and not think about the future player than he was last fall. two featured receivers. We State over the final six weeks too much." That is the kind of improve- have two deep at every posi- of the regular season.

California schedule

Beavers Continued from C1 "I'm proud of him," Andersen said about his friend. "It just makes me feel old." Weber State went 2-10 over-

all and 2-6 in the Big Sky Conference last season, Hill's first as head coach.

Nearly 20 years ago, Hill was a promising junior college cornerback when Andersen,

then an assistant under coach Ron McBride, helped recruit him to play for at Utah. Hill went on to be the team's defensive MVP as a senior in 1999. Later, Hill coached corner-

backs at Utah for two years when Andersen was defensive coordinator under Kyle Whit-

dersen said he has nothing vers in December after two but respect for Hill, saying he seasons at Wisconsin. He is would hire him in a heartbeat charged with remaking Orbecause he cares about his egon State following the deplayers and is an exceptional parture of longtime coach recruiter. Mike Riley for the top job at "When Jay was making Nebraska. the decision to become ahead Andersen is installing a new football coach, he called me. spread offense with the help That was a tough decision for of offensive coordinator Dave him to leave Utah and jump Baldwin, in addition to switchout and go be a head coach," ing up the defensive scheme. Andersen said. "There's no Oregon State, which went 5-7 question in my mind that he lastseason,useda largelypromade the right decision." style offense under Riley. Hill and Andersen are not Known as more of a defenthe only coaches who will sive coach, Andersen has left have a connection Friday: We- the offensive details to Baldber Statereceivers coach Fesi win, including who will take Sitake is the brother of Oregon the first snap on Friday night.

first snap of the game from a

State defensive coordinator Kalani Sitake.

starters, including j u nior quarterback Jadrian Clark,

"I'd rather have a reunion maybe like on July Fourth or coach. something," Andersen joked. During the first of what will Andersen, who got his first be weekly press conferences head coaching job in 2009 at

tingham. Weber State is Hill's first crack at being a head

throughout the season, An-

Utah State, came to the Bea-

Last week, Baldwin said it

defensive standpoint to our offensive standpoint," Andersen said. "So it won't be that this

guy is taking the first snap because he's got the upper hand, it' ll be just whatever play in the opener is set for that young man."

There were a few other "ors" regarding starters on the depth chart: Lavonte Barnett and Jalen Grimble at left defensive end, Rommel

Mageo and Manase Hungalu at middle linebacker and Storm Barrs-Woods and Chris

Brown are also at the top spot at running back. W eber State r eturns

15

was important, at least at the start of the season, to make who took over for the Wildsure both players get game cats' last five games last seaexperience. son to pass for 902 yards and "It' ll be what call we think fits best against what we be-

lieve they' re going to do on the

— The Corval!!s Gazette-Times contributed reporting.

and Eastern Washington in 2011 and 2013. In between they

rogatory to women in describNo one, including Riley, ing athletic director Shawn knows what to expect.

Continued from C1

upset 13th-ranked Wisconsin.

" What we want t o d o i s W ester- win this week and grow from kamp said Riley and his assis- there," he said. "That is the tants have earned the players' recipe for a good season. We trust. understand we want to win "At first, obviously, when it the championship and all first happened with the coach- that, but there's a long road to

at least nine games a year.

Last season they trailed FCS Portland State at halftime be-

fore winning 29-14. en seasons, but Riley did that Yes, Riley has imagined in only four of his 14 seasons what it will be like when he at Oregon State. Riley also comes out of the tunnel for his will be expected — maybe firstgame atNebraska. "I' ve really thought about not this year, but soon — to put the Huskers in position to it when we' ve gone out for win their first conference ti- scrimmages the last few days," tle since they won the Big 12 he said. "My stomach goes in championship in 1999. knots when I think about it. It' s The 62-year-old Riley said not necessarily nerves. It's fun he was looking for one last ad- and exciting." venture when he and his wife Riley and the players said decided to move to Lincoln. they have built a strong rapThe fun starts with a game port. He took over an emoagainst Nebraska's toughest tionally fragile team. Players opening opponent since 2003, acknowledgeda negativevibe when the Huskers beat Okla- last season, an us-against-thehoma State. world mentality that was fosRiley was up and down in teredunder the previous staff. hisrecentopeners at Oregon In Pelini's last meeting with State. The Beavers lost to FCS the players, he was secretly opponents Sacramento State recorded using language dePelini did that each of his sev-

Eichorst. Receiver Jordan

ing staff change, it was tough go down and a lot of things to for us," Westerkamp said. do before we can make that "We weren't expecting it and

relevant."

we were blindsided by it. As

One thing Riley knows

time went on, the transition

is that a whole state will be

got smoother and guys started to buy into what these new

watching. "It's fun and exciting to be

coaches were preaching."

around so much interest, so

much caring and great pride ing Riley's pro-style offense in the place, great pride in the with some pieces of the spread/ university, great pride in the zone-read option system of football program and all the the previous staff, and the de- sports," he said. "Even how fense will be less complicated it's cared for physically, how but still new. And they will be people take care of it and how going against a Taysom Hill- clean and neat it always is. It' s The Huskers will be blend-

led BYU team that won eight games and went to a bowl last

year.

ager for the San Francisco

49ers for 18 years, remembers receiver Jerry Rice using gloves when they first began gaining popularity. He liked to wear his so tight that the palms would frequently tear during games when the football smacked them. "Jerry was bare hand, bare hand, then he started trying gloves," recalled Walsh, now visiting clubhouse manager for baseball's Seattle Mariners. "But if he would drop a ball in a game, off would come the gloves." Denver's Manning wears gloves on occasion, usually for cold-weather games. But

have similar qualities, namely special surfaces (some- he alsoappreciates the beautimes l eather, s ometimes ty of going without. "I like Dallas Clark," he rubber) on the palms, fingers and thumbs that allow a lock- said of his former star tight end in Indianapolis. "He used down grip on the ball. "I think it's time to go back to go natural; commando, if and look at the gloves and see you will. There's something if, with what's going on here to that. Look, I think a guy with sports science in the can catch or he can' t, gloves past 10 years, if there isn't too or no gloves. So true hands much of an advantage being catchers can catch no matter what." gained," McKay said. Gloves essentially h ave become part of the uniform,

The difference now, said

and Kurt Warner and Peyton

even start to catch the ball

former NFL c oach and even forming the team logo broadcaster John Madden, is when positioning the palms that receivers can confidently together. It is not just wide go up for a ball with one hand receivers who are wearing and inconspicuously bend the gloves these days. Virtually rules with the other hand. "I' ve been watching preeveryone wears them, includseason games and I see this," ing quarterbacks. "You know something's up he said. "When you can catch when guys like Tom Brady the ball with one hand, or Manning are wearing gloves with one hand, that frees up to throw a football," former your other hand to push off. NFL quarterback Rich Gan- You can get real subtle about non said. "You' re starting to

that."

tight end Zach Ertz said. "So

or dive to make that catch.

to say that anybody can go out there and catch a football with a million guys running

hands like that, but I had nev-

go,'Wait asecond here.'Guys Collinsworth said the use for years dreaded bad weath- of gloves has forever changed er, cold weather, and they the game. "Before these gloves, I'd didn't want to have anything that would take their hands never seen anybody make off the football. Now guys are an overhand catch — when like, 'These gloves are better their fingers point toward the ground — below the than the human skin.'" But not everyone whose waist, but now I see guys catchesbelow the job depends on hanging on m ake those to the football thinks the cut- knees," he said. "They' re brilliant catches, ting-edge gloves provide an and brilliant players, I don' t unfair advantage. "You don't catch the ball want to take anything away with your hands, you catch it from them. But if you played with your eyes," Philadelphia before gloves, you had to slide

around, it's different."

Coby Fleener, tight end for the Indianapolis Colts, said

Maybe somebody could make the ball stick in their er seen it." Collinsworth, who was in the broadcast booth for Beck-

ham's catch, rubbed his eyes in disbelief at that incredible to wear at Stanford, where he play. "Odell Beckham is probwas a teammate of Ertz. "There are some aspects ably in another class; he' s where they really help you, got Spider-Man hands," he but some aspects where they said. "But some of the catchhinder you," he said."To be es you see now would be difthere are pros and cons to the gloves, which he began

able to feel the ball when it

ferent catches. Not that they

hits your hands, it makes it more difficult when the

wouldn't make them, but they would be different kinds of

gloves are on. I wear them

catches."

er their hands with Stickum,

tainment business. Why not

Then again ... as much for blocking as I "Every Sunday we say, 'Oh, do for receiving, because it gives you that extra layer of my goodness! Look at that!'" Collinsworth said. "That' s protection." NFL players used to slath- a good thing. It's an entera gooey adhesive that also make it as entertaining as came in a spray form, reason- possible?"

seventouchdowns.

Riley To do that, Riley must win

Ted Walsh, who was the

assistant equipment man-

always the best foot forward

at Nebraska, and that's really a privilege to be a part of."

NFl, Bradyfail to reach settlement NEW YORK —A federal judgewill rule this week onwhether to lift or uphold NewEngland Patriots quarterbackTomBrady's four-gamesuspension bythe NFLafter Bradyandthe league failed to reach an agreement to their seven-month standoff. Brady andNFLcommissioner RogerGoodell appeared Monday beforeJudgeRichard M. Berman, of theU.S. District Court in Manhattan, whofor weekshasurged themto settle their differencesoverthe quarterback's role in analleged plot to deliberately deflate game balls. Despite Berman's pleasandthe appointment of amediator, the sides werereluctant to budge. Berman saidthat while thesides hadmadean effort to settle, they had beenunableto agree, andthat he would rule by Friday — and possibly bytoday. Berman saidJohnMara, theco-owner of the NewYork Giants, and JayFee!y, aformer NFLkicker andafriend of Brady's who is on the executive committee of theNFLPlayers Association, had in recent daystried to mediate asolution to the standoff. The NFLwants Brady toaccept someblamefor his role in the use of deflated footballs usedagainst Indianapolis in the AFC championship gamein January, but Bradyinsists that hehas done nothing wrongand isbeing penalizedcapriciously. If the judge lifts the suspension, Bradywill be able toplay in the Patriots' seasonopenerSept. 10 against Pittsburgh. Berman hasbeenasked to rule only on whether Goodell had the authority to act asarbitrator under the collective bargaining agreement with the players. Although hehasasked pointed questions in previous hearingsabout howthe leaguereached its decision to suspendBrady, it is not his role to adjust the length of the suspension. — New YorkTimesNews Service


C5 THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

r

DOW 16,528.03 -114.98

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Selected Mutualpunds

Oppenheimer Global has a consistently strong performance FAMILY American Funds record and its 3-year record ranks in the top 10 percent of Morningstar's World stock fund category.

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 23 . 93 -.13 -2.2 -0.1 +10.2+11.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 56.58 -.30 -3.4 -4.3 +6.7 +8.3 8 8 A CpWldGrlA m 44.45 -.35 -2.4 -4.7 +1 0.7 +10.0 C C C EurPacGrA m 47.09 -.26 -0.1 -4.7 +8.6 +7.0 C B C FnlnvA m 50. 2 6 - .37 -1.8 -0.4 +13.8 +14.2 C C C GrthAmA m 43.31 -.40 +1.5 +2.1 +16.1+15.4 C 8 0 Oppenheimer Global A (OPPAX) IncAmerA m 20.32 -.11 -4.4 -4.1 +8.2 +9.9 E C 8 InvCoAmA m 35.22 -.30 -3.6 -2.5 +13.7+14.0 D C D VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m36.86 -.30 +1.6 +0.9 +12.3+12.2 A 8 A c› WAMutlnvA m38.52 -.27 -5.1 -2.7 +12.4+14.4 8 C 8 $3 Dodge &Cox Income 13.53 -.01 -0.4 -0.2 +2.4 +3.8 D A 8 Cc cc IntlStk 39.48 -.10 -6.2 -14.1 +10.2 +7.6 E A A Stock 169.82 -.77 -4.6 -3.7 +16.2+16.2 C A A c› Fidelity Contra 99.21 - 1.18 +2.2 + 4 .2 +15.1+16.0 8 C C $3 ContraK 99.2 0 -1.17+2.3 + 4.4 +15.2+16.2 8 8 C C3 LowPriStk d 50.64 +.02 +0.8 + 1 .7 +15.3+16.0 A C 8 Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg69.75 -.59 -2.9 + 0 .4 +14.3+15.8 8 8 8 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 21 . . . -6.3 -11.2 +4.7 +6.9 E C 8 52 IncomeA m 2. 1 9 . .. -5.6 - 10.4 +5.3 +7.5 E 8 8 FrankTemp-TempletonGIBondAdv 11 .62 -.03 -4.4 -6.7 +2.0 +3.6 C A A 273 Oakmark Intl I 22.80 -.13 -2.3 -6.6 +11.9 +9.3 0 A A MorningstarOwnershipZone™ Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 01 -.18 -4.5 0.9 +11.3+13.2 C E D RisDivB m 16 . 78 -.16 -5.0 1.6 +10.4+12.2 D E E OoFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 16 . 66 -.16 -4.9 1.6 +10.5+12.3 D E E average of stock holdings SmMidValA m46.10 -.13 -5.2 2.7 +15.8+13.0 C 8 0 Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings SmMidValB m38.68 -.10 -5.6 3.5 +14.9+12.0 C C E T Rowe Price BIChpGr 70.5 9 -1.05+4.9 + 7 .4 +18.2+19.6 A A A CATEGORY:WORLD STOCK GrowStk 55.0 3 - . 75 +5.9 + 8 .5 +17.7+18.9 A A A HealthSci 78. 0 8 -1.41 +14.8 +26.8 +32.9+32.8 A A A IBORNINGSTAR Newlncome 9. 4 4 - . 01+0.4 + 0 .8 + 1.6 +3.0 C C D RATINB~ ***wc Vanguard 500Adml 182.61 1.53 -2.9 +0.5 +14.3+15.8 8 8 8 ASSETS $7,948 million 500lnv 182.58 1.53 -3.0 +0.3 +14.1+15.7 8 8 8 EXPRATIO 1.13% CapOp 51.97 -.45 -1.5 +3.4 +21.1+18.4 C A A Iglff.INIT.INVES T. $1,000 Eqlnc 29.36 -.20 -4.7 -2.4 +12.2+15.1 8 C A PERCEN TLOAD 5.75 IntlStkldxAdm 24.87 -.17 -3.0 11.8 +5.8 NA E D HISTORICALRETURNS StratgcEq 31.69 -.22 -1.5 +0.8 +18.6+19.2 8 A A TgtRe2020 27.99 -.14 -1.7 -1.5 +8.0 +9.4 8 A A Return/Rank TgtRe2025 16.22 -.09 -1.9 -1.9 +8.8+10.1 8 8 8 YEAR-TO-DATE +3.6 TotBdAdml 10.72 -.02 +0.2 +1.2 +1.4 +2.8 8 D D 1-YEAR +1.6/A Totlntl 14.87 -.10 -3.1 11.8 +5.7 +5.0 E D E 3-YEAR +14.0/A TotStlAdm 49.78 -.39 -2.7 +0.3 +14.6+16.0 8 8 A 5-YEAR +12.2/A TotStldx 49.76 -.39 -2.7 +0.2 +14.4+15.9 8 8 A 3and5-yearretcttts are mnualized. USGro 30.89 -.42 +3.3 +8.0 +17.6+18.3 A A A

LAST CHG %CHG -22.18 -A7 Paris 4,652.95 London 6,247.94 +55.91 + . 90 -39.07 -.38 Frankfurt 10,259.46 Hong Kong21,670.58 + 58.19 + . 27 Mexico 43,721.97 +431.10 +1.00 Milan 21,941.92 -51.82 -.24 Tokyo 18,890.48 -245.84 -1.28 Stockholm 1,501.07 -8.64 -.57 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -F88covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -52.62 -1.00 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in Sydney 5,222.08 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales cr Zurich 8,824.56 +39.46 + . 45 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption f88. Source: Mcmingstar.

MT

Close:$7.88 V-0.17 or -2.1% Labor contracts with the United Steelworkers union at the steel company and its peers are set to expire Tuesday. $12 10

60

J J 52-week range

$59.58~

A $12 9.38

J J A 52-week range $7.51 ~ $15.19

Vol.:16.9m (1.7x avg.) PE: 1 2 .5 Vol.:9.3m (1.1x avg.) P E: .. . Mkt. Cap:$152.3b Yie l d: 5.3% Mkt. Cap:$12.3 b Yie l d : 2.5%

Arch Coal

will be listening for an update on DividendFootnotes:8 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredcr paid in last t 2 months. f - Current how the discount retailer's annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafter stock split, rc regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared cr paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend strategy for making the most out announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared cr paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash of its recent acquisition of rival value cn ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. Family Dollar Stores. Dollar Tree completed the $8.5 billion purchase of Family Dollar in July. In May, Dollar Tree agreed to sell Shares of Nefflix slumped 2.2 percent Monday after library films and Epix original programming. 330 of its stores to a private equity Terms of the deal were not disclosed. the cable network Epix announced a multiyear deal to firm in order to get regulatory move its programming from I»lefflix to I»iefflix plans to improve its lineup approval for the deal. the Hulu streaming service. through original films and licensing Starting on Oct. 1, Hulu subscribers arrangements with movie studios, Chief will be able to view films from Content Officer Ted Sarandos wrote in a Lionsgate, MGM and Paramount, the blog post. companiesannounced late Sunday. Even with Monday's decline, Nefflix The deal includes such titles as shares have doubled in value this year. "Hunger Games: Catching Fire," 'V/olf With a climb of 135.7 percent, it tops the of Wall Street," as well as new titles, Standard 8 Poor's 500 index.

ArcelorMittal

80

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L F M A M J J NAME TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV 2015 A +25. 3 +6 4 .5 1 316 15 0 . 8 0 Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ 82.15 7 4. 8 6 -.95 -1.3 T T Source: Factaet T A -11.2 + 1 . 5 27 3 1 7 1. 3 2 Aviate Corp A VA 30.10 ~ 38.34 3 1. 3 9 -.31 -1.0 T -8.7 + 3 .4 64153 18 0 . 20 Bank of America BAC 14. 60 ty 18. 48 16 . 34 -.02 -0.1 T T T Eye On Block Barrett Business B BS I 18 . 25 ~ 60.86 35. 6 5 +. 1 9 + 0.5 L T T +30.1 - 39.2 9 5 dd 0. 8 8 Financial analysts anticipate that Boeing Co BA 115.14 ~ 158. 8 3 13 0.68 -2.56 -1.9 T T T +0.5 +7.5 40 4 9 1 8 3. 6 4 H8 R Block will report a loss for its Cascade Bancorp C A C B4 . 14 ~ 5.69 5.41 +. 1 3 + 2.5 4 4 4 +4.2 +3.9 64 23 fiscal first quarter versus a year ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.90 ~ 3 3.7 0 30.31 +.26+0.9 L T T +9. 8 +21.3 228 20 0.72a earlier. ColumbiaSportswear COLM 34.25 ~ 74. 7 2 61.37 +.73 +1.2 A T A + 37.8 +59.8 228 31 0.60 The tax preparer typically Costco Wholesale CO ST 117.03 ~ 1 56.8 5 140.05 + .10 +0.1 A T A -1.2 +2 1.1 2819 27 1 . 6 0 reports an operating loss in the cc Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 7.00 ~ 17.89 8.17 +.2 0 + 2.5 4 T T -38.8 -38.7 3 7 May-July quarter, which follows -11.4 -13.8 1008 18 0 . 44 FLIR Systems F LIR 26.34 ~ 34.46 28 . 6 3 +. 0 6 +0.2 4 T T the peak U.S. tax filing season. In Hewlett Packard H PQ 24 . 85 ~ 41.10 28.0 6 +. 0 3 +0.1 A T T -30.1 -24.5 13480 11 0 .70 a seasonally slow quarter, Intel Corp INTO 24.87 ~ 37.90 28. 5 4 +. 1 2 +0.4 A T T -21.4 -15.3 40355 12 0.96 investors will likely focus on the K EY 11.55 ~ 15.70 1 3. 7 4 -.04 -0.3 T T T -1.2 + 4 . 1 741 7 13 0 .30 Keycorp company's plans to grow its T +7.5 +38 . 5 7 41 3 19 0 .42f business. Kroger Co K R 2 5 .42 ~ 39.43 3 4.5 0 -.44 -1.3 T T Lattice Semi LSCC 3.25 ~ 7.79 4.18 -.07 -1.6 T T T -39.3 -42.6 1335 dd HRB $34.02 LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.64 16.4 4 +. 0 7 +0 .4 4 4 T -0.7 +15.3 271 2 dd $40 $33.56 T T -23.8 -40.0 1658 dd 0 . 73 MDU Resources MDU 1 6 .28 a — 31. 7 3 1 7 . 91 -.08 -0.4 T 35 Mentor Graphics MEN T 1 8.25 t -r 27.3 8 25 . 84 + . 1 7 + 0.7 A T T +17. 9 +1 9 .3 9 8 9 2 0 0. 2 2 Microsoft Corp MSFT 3 9.72 ~ 50.05 4 3. 5 2 -.41 -0.9 T T T -6.3 +0 . 6 31529 30 1 . 2 4 30 ’15 Nike Inc 8 NKE 78.35 ~ 117. 7 2 11 1.75 -.75 -0.7 T T X +16. 2 +4 3 .8 3 381 30 1.12 25 -8.2 + 7 . 4 1 251 2 0 1 . 48 NordstromInc J WN 66.08 ~ 83.16 7 2. 8 8 -.48 -0.7 T T T 1 Q '14 1 Q' 1 5 L A -11.9 + 1 . 8 11 6 2 4 1. 8 6 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 42.00 ~ 52.57 4 3. 9 8 -.24 -0.5 T Operating EPS Paccar Inc PCAR 53.45 ty 71. 1 5 58 . 9 7 -.48 -0.8 T T T -13.3 -2.1 1713 13 0 .96f Planar Syslms PLNR 3.02 ~ 9.17 5.50 -.13 -2.3 T > A - 34.3 +15.4 3 1 0 1 8 Plum Creek PC L 38,07 0 45,2 6 3 8. 4 9 -.63 -1,6 T T T -10.0 + 0,4 1232 3 6 1 , 76 Price-earnings ratio: 20 -4.4 - 5.4 1400 1 9 0 . 12 based on past 12-month results Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 249. 1 2 23 0.25 + . 27 +0.1 L X L SchnitzerSteel S CHN 1 5.06 ~ 28.23 17. 3 1 + . 5 2 +3.1 L + T -23.3 -36.7 278 d d 0 . 75 Dividend: $0.80 Div yield: 2.4% Sherwin Wms SHW 202.01 ~ 294. 3 5 25 5.81 -2.30 -0.9 T T T - 2.7 +19.5 5 8 1 2 6 2 . 68 Source: Factaet StancorpFncl A +62. 8 +7 5 .8 6 0 5 2 0 1 . 30f SFG 60.17 ~ 114. 7 7 11 3.71 -.19 -0.2 T T StarbucksCp SBUX 35.38 ~ 59.3 2 5 4. 7 1 -.92 -1.7 T T X +33.4 +44 .6 7 6 30 2 5 0.64 Strategy update? Umpqua Holdings UM P Q 14.70 ~ 1 8.92 16. 7 1 + . 2 5 +1.5 L T T -1.8 -1.8 1750 17 0 . 60 Dollar Tree reports financial US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.26 4 2. 3 5 -.24 -0.6 T T T -5.8 + 3 . 6 5 869 1 4 1 .02f results for its fiscal second quarter WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.2 5 22.69 +.23 +1.0 A T T +2. 4 +6 .6 51914 0.52 today. -2.7 + 7 . 5 13273 13 1 . 50 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 ~ 5 8.7 7 53.33 -.21 -0.4 T T T Beyond its earnings, investors T T -22.2 -14.3 3752 27 1.24f Weyerhaeuser WY 2 6.84 a — 37. 0 4 2 7 . 94 -.30 -1.1 T

Netf fix(NFLX)

CVX

Close:$80.99%0.56 or 0.7% Oil stocks tracked the price of crude, which shook off early losses and rallied on a report of a June drop in U.S. production. $120

North westStocks

0.1

EURO $1.12 3 5 +.0052

Dow jones industrials

"

DOW Util.

3.8

4%

"

~

Close: 16,528.03 Change: -114.98 (-0.7%)

Economists project that construc1,840 " 15,360" tion spending accelerated in July 2,160 18,400 after a slight increase a month earlier. The Commerce Department is 2,080. 17,600 " expected to report today that construction spending rose 0.7 2,000 " 16,800" percent in July. Spending inched up 0.1 percent in June, the 1,920 " 16,000" smallest amount in five months. Even so, construction spending hit 15 200 a seasonally adjusted annual rate 1 840 M A M J A M A M J of $1.06 trillion, the best pace in HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. %CHG. WK MO QTR YTD seven years. StocksRecap Construction spending DOW 16632.02 16444.05 16528.03 -114.98 -0. 69% -7.27% seasonally adjusted percent change -1 4.17% DOW Trans. 791 7.44 7845.12 7845.15 -63.51 -0. 80% NYSE NASD "

CRUDEOIL $49.20+3.9 8

AC I Close:$9.31 %1.10 or 13.4% The coal mining company is extending its private debt exchange offer, which had been set to expire Friday, to September 23. $10

J J 52-week range 81.89~

A

$31.70

Vol.:9.8m (4.9x avg.)

P E: .. .

Blyth BTH Close:$5.97 %3.05 or 104.5% The direct-to-consumer products and marketing company is being sold to asset manager The Carlyle Group for $98 million. $8

J J A 52-week range $2.72 ~ $10.37

Vol.:5.8m (51.1x avg.)

Yie l d : 0.1% Mkt. Cap:$96.33m

Mkt. Cap:$1.98 b

P E: . . . Yi e ld: 1.7%

MagnaChip Semi.

MX Medicines Co. MDCO Close:$8.55%0.81 or 10.5% Close:$41.00 %7.36 or 21.9% Hedge fund Pleasant Lake Partners The drugmaker and its partner Alis offering to buy the semiconductor nylam Pharmaceuticals reported upcompany for a 30 percent premium, beat results from an early-stage or about $345.7 million. cholesterol drug study. $10 $50 40

30 A

J J 52-week range $4.89~

$15.72

V ol.:1.4m (3.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$291.18 m

PE: . . Yield : ..

A

J J 52-week range

$19.92 Vol.:16.7m (11.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.72 b

$41.03 PE: . . . Yield: ...

Amicus Thera.

FOLD I$letflix NFLX Close: $14.38T-0.49 or -3.3% Close:$115.03 T-2.60 or -2.2% The biotechnology company is buy- The Internet television company lost ing Scioderm for $299 million and cable network Epix as that company will gain a potential treatment for a signed a multiyear deal with rival genetic skin disorder. Hulu. $20 $140 120

15

100

J J 52-week range $5.13~

Vol.:2.3m (1.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.39 b

A $18 .83

P E: .. Yield:..

J J 52-week range

A

$4588 ~

$ 129 29

Vol.:17.0m (0.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$48.81 b

PE : 259.0 Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

SU HS

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

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

. 0 2 .0 5 -0.03 A T . 2 6 .21 + 0 .05 A L

52-wk T-bill

.38

.36

+0 . 0 2 4

The yield on the 10-year Treasury edged up to 2.22 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

2-year T-note . 7 4 .72 + 0 .02 4 5-year T-note 1.55 1.52 +0.03 A 10-year T-note 2.22 2.18 +0.04 4 30-year T-bond 2.96 2.91 +0.05 A

Commodities

FUELS

Oil prices slumped early in the day but shot higher after the Energy Department cut its forecast for U.S. oil production. In metals trading gold and silver were little changed.

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

BONDS

L

L + X A

Foreign Exchange The ICE U.S. dollar index, which measures its value against a basket of other major currencies, rose slightly.

h58 88

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

.02 .05 .08

4

.49 1.63 4 2.35 A 3.08

NET 1YR TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.78 2.75 +0.03 A + Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.42 4.41 +0.01 4 4 Barclays USAggregate 2.40 2.38 +0.02 4 4 PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 7.28 7.33 -0.05 T A RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.12 4.14 -0.02 A L TEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.82 1.79 +0.03 A L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.48 3.46 +0.02 A L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

METALS

A A 4

CLOSE PVS. 49.20 45.22 1.46 1.44 1.67 1.58 2.69 2.72 1.64 1.52

T 2 92 . 4 4.41 4 2.22 A 5.22 L 3.94 T 1.88 L 2.86

%CH. %YTD -7.6 +8.80 -1 0.3 +6.17 -9.4 -0.96 -6.9 +7.79 +1 4.3

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -4.4 1131.60 1131.80 -0.13 14.58 14.54 +0.29 -6.4 1010.50 1021.70 -1.10 -16.4 2.34 2.35 -0.36 -17.6 601.55 589.55 +2.04 -24.7

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.46 1.47 -0.70 -12.2 Coffee (Ib) 1.21 1.20 +0.08 -27.6 -8.4 Corn (bu) 3.64 3.63 +0.14 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.64 - 0.02 + 5 . 8 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 234.20 237.10 -1.22 -29.3 -7.5 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.30 1.31 -1.41 Soybeans (bu) 8.98 8.93 +0.48 -1 2.0 Wheat(bu) 4.83 4.77 +1.15 -1 8.2 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5350 -.0040 -.26% 1.6563 Canadian Dollar 1.3 1 72 -.0048 -.36% 1.0872 USD per Euro 1.1235 +.0052 +.46% 1.3134 -.20 -.17% 104.10 JapaneseYen 121.15 Mexican Peso 16. 7089 -.0383 -.23% 13.0745 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9263 -.0036 -.09% 3.5759 Norwegian Krone 8 . 2772 -.0133 -.16% 6.2016 South African Rand 13.2574 -.0459 -.35% 10.6729 Swedish Krona 8.4 3 80 -.0211 -.25% 6.9914 Swiss Franc .9659 +.0031 +.32% . 9 184 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.4037 +.0079 +.56% 1.0713 Chinese Yuan 6.3773 -.0146 .23% 6.1435 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7500 -.0000 -.00% 7.7503 Indian Rupee 66.375 +.235 +.35% 60.515 Singapore Dollar 1.4096 +.0034 +.24% 1,2490 South KoreanWon 1181.95 +1.71 +.14% 1015,20 Taiwan Dollar 3 2.44 + . 0 9 +.28% 29,89


© www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY What's Brewing? Gaining Strength in Salem: Learn howto speak up onissuesthat will impact your business including: transportation, living-wage bills, employer mandatesand technical education. 5 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery 8 Public House,1044 NW Bond St., Bend, 541-382-3221. Hatch Oregon's Reckstar Entrepreneurs Launch Party: First stop on a statewide tour to discuss and feature companies taking part in community public offerings; free; 6 p.m.; Tetherow Resort's Fireside Room,61240 Skyline RanchRoad, Bend, 503-452-6898, tinyurl. corn/nkmjhtf. WEDNESDAY Business Startup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class anddecide if running a business is for you; $29; 6 p.m.; CDCC Chandler Lab, 1027NW Trenton Ave., Bend,541383-7290, cocc.edu/sbdc. TUESDAY CLA Estate Services Workshop: A workshop for seniors about estate and retirement planning; free, but seating is limited; to register, call 866-252-8721 between 7 a.m.and 3 p.m.; 2 p.m.; Comfort Suites Redmond Airport, 2243 SW YewAve., Redmond, 866-252-8721. SCORE Business Counseling: Business counselors conduct free one-on-one conferences forlocal entrepreneurs. 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend, 541-706-1639. Launch Your Business: Three one-to-one daytime business advisingsessions combined with three Wednesdayevening workshop presentations, plus peer support; $199; 6 p.m.; CDCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NWTrenton Ave, Bend, 541-383-7290, cocc.edu/sbdc. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.cern/ bizcal

DEEDS Deschutes County Terry H. and Charlene R. Trout to Steven G.and Glynis S. Morehouse, Hayden View, Phase 2,Lot 68, $165,000 Robert W. Schulz to Matthew J. andDeniseM. Engelbert, Crescent Creek, Lot 34, $194,000 •SGS Development LLC, which acquired title as Pacwest II LLC,to Tammy Collier, Sundance Meadows, Lot 48, $289,947 Luke K. andJenea D. Cardwell to Daniel R. Moses, SavannahEstates, Phase 3, Lot 21, $270,000 Kelly L. Wilson, trustee of the Lawrence C.Wilson Survivors Trust, to Daniel M. Sine andKathya L. Avila Choquez, Majestic,Phase 2, Lot 6, $200,000 Janet L. Sackin to Matthew K. andKristen W. Wiest, Rockwood Estates, Phase 3, Lot 9, $537,000 Michael M. and Darlene E. Daly, trustees of the Daly Family Revocable Living Trust, to Steven D.and Lylah L. Moyer,Township 15, Range13, Section 20, $175,000 Martin S. and Theresa I. Denham toTyler R. and Jodie A. Kelly, Partition Plat 2001-8, Parcel 2, $545,000 Tyler R. and Jodie A. Kelly to Sean Lakin, Township 17, Range13, Section 28, $365,000 Tumalo Properties LLC to Sloan RealEstate LLC, Partition Plat 2004-8, Parcel 1, $775,000 Daniela M. andDavid Marshall to James R.and Deborah G.Yount, Tollgate Second Addition, Lot 99, $270,000 Rickie W. Morton to Jamie M. Cantrell, Promise Lane, Lot 39, $275,000 Frank A. and Betty L. Winterberger and LonnyA. Winterberger to Bill E. and Louise F.Walker, Skyline Ridge, Phase 2,Lot 6, Block 3, $215,000 John D. andKathleen D. Charlton to MeganE. Larkin, ParkwayAddition, Lot 3, Block 1, $293,550 Roger W. andCarroll A. Dressier, trustees of

Bend Broadband to upgrade service

EXECUTIVE FILE What: Bouquet of Beer Co. What it does: Assembles and delivers an assortment of local and regional beer. Pictnrod:Co-founder Daniel Brewster Employees: Three Phone:541-390-2918 Wohsito: bouquetofbeer.corn

The Internet provider will upgrade its email system toresolve repeated outages By Joseph Ditzlor The Bulletin

BendBroadband anto its email service aimed at

going to go into the dollars and cents of

ending a series of outages

the update, what we

nounced an upgrade Monday this year linked to outdated

equipment. Customers who use the Joe Kline /The Bulletin

ower s'? eer ins ea

ire 0

By Stephen Hamwaye The Bulletin

In April, Daniel Brewster bought flowers for his wife, Amy, after she had a tough week. The following week, she responded by buying Brewster a six-pack of beer, which she called a "bouquet of beer." "When she came in, I was like,

metal bottle-opener — can be pur-

and eventual co-owner Andrew

chased for $39.99. "It's not something you' re going to bring to a Super Bowl party; it' s definitely kind of a special event,"

Gorman andmocking up a design of a cardboard container,

Brewster said. Brewster, who also operates the

Bouquet of Beer was born with a

delivery service Cascade Couriers, delivers all of the bouquets and offers same-day delivery for orders placed by noon. Recipients must sign for the package to prove they are 21 or older. They can choose to have their bouquets

Brewster said. "And within 15 minutes, I had the domain name."

After consulting with his friend

soft launch on Father's Day, just 12 weeks after Brewster came up with the idea.

In practice, Bouquet of Beer is relatively simple. Users can order a bouquet of six beers through the

company website, choosing from the categories of "Light," "IPA"

delivered either between 1-3 p.m.

or 3-5 p.m. While the company is still

and "Dark," which are delivered

to the provided address. As of Friday morning, the website listed 26 beers to choose from,

though Brewster said that fluctuates with season and supply and could reach as many as 40. Bend beer mainstays like Deschutes Brewery and GoodLife Brewing Co. make appearances, as do craft beers from elsewhere in Oregon and the West Coast, such as Ash-

land's Rogue Ales 8 Spirits and San Diego's Green Flash Brewing

What's your favorite local beer or brewery? DanielBrew› ster: I really like Crux (Fermentation Project), which is funny because

Q

holding them, a pint glass and a

'Oh, it's like you got me flowers,'"

small, delivering about one to

two orders per day, Brewster said it has increased the number of orders processed each week. He

said the company got some traction from its appearance at Bend Brewfest last month.

Going forward, Brewster said the company might allow for cus-

that's one that we

don't offer, because they don't have 12-ounce bottles. I like Crux andBoneyard (Beer) both. Where do you see the business two or three years out? In a perfect world, we prove the concept here, people like it, and we areoperating in Portland and potentially in other cities by then.

Q

"We' re not going to just limit ourselves to Bend beers because there are really good beers in the region, and even throughout the country," Brewster said.

Bend-based Internet service

provider's email service should receive information about the change via email.

The company has already posteda notice ofthechanges it's making on its website.

The upgrades, which include a new email application and

want to emphasize is the investment

we' re making in our customers in order to bring them a superior product." — Kriota Lodbottor TDS Telecommunications

spokeswoman

host, are scheduled to be

complete by early October, the company stated in a news release.

how many, if any, were lost because of them. Whether

Zimbra is the new email application, and it will be powered by Synacor, said John Farwell, BendBroadband manager of business operations. "It's a full-featured email

or not an Internet service

product," Farwell said Mon-

year to outdated equipment; Ledbetterin March said company engineers were close to a solution. She said at the time that the equipment fail-

day."We have atourofthe product online; if you have access to current (Bend-

Broadband)Web mail,you can take a video tour of the new app." Synacor is among the largest providers of email services in the U.S., he said.

BendBroadband's operating company, TDS

subscriber actually uses the email application is not something the company tracks, she said. TDS Telecommunications attributed the outages this

ures were not related to the

BendBroadband ownership change. Telephone and Data Systems, a Chicago-based Fortune 500 company and the parent company of TDS Telecommunications, purchased

outages in the past year that

BendBroadband for $261 million in May 2014. On Monday, Ledbetter and Farwell declined to say how

left thousands of subscribers without email and voice mail

much the email improvements would cost.

Telecommunications Corp.,

of Madison, Wisconsin, wrestled with a series of

services. Outages occurred

"While we' re not going to

in January, February and March; the most recent email

go into the dollars and cents of the update, what we want

interruption occurred Aug. occurred when amotorist

to emphasize is the investm ent we' rem aking in our customers in order to bring them asuperiorproduct,"

struck a switch cabinet at

Ledbetter said in an email.

NE Third Street and Wilson Avenue.

BendBroadband subscribers who do not use the email

19, according to the company website. A November outage

TDS Telecommunications

service will not be affected,

tomization of the pint glass, with

fixed the voice mail issue ear-

except those who use the

options for ordering a Silipint or a 24-ounce glass instead. He and

lier this year by separating it from email on a common

TV Everywhere television streaming service. Those cus-

Gorman see Bend as a test mar-

server, said TDS spokeswoman Krista Ledbetter. "Back when that was an issue, we were able to get that

tomers use BendBroadband email to sign into the service

ket and said the company could expand into Eugene, Portland or

Co.

"While we' re not

Seattle in the future.

"And, worst-case scenario, we have a whole cooler full of beers,"

resolved quickly," she said Monday.

Gorman said.

The ensemble — which includes

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

the six beers, the cardboard piece

Customers complained about the outages, Ledbetter

said, but she could not say

and, like the email-service

subscribers, must eventually sign on to accept the user agreement under the new

platform, Ledbetter said. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletirt.corn

Apple aimsto boost mobile-devicesaleswith CiscoSystems' help By Michael Liodtko The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Ap-

ple is leaning on Cisco Systems' Internet networking

expertise in its latest attempt to sell more iPhones and iPads

gear deliver content quickly and securely to iPhones and iPads. Cisco will also help Apple develop ways for iPhones to interact more smoothly with workers' office phones. Financial terms of the part-

tocorporatecustomers. The alliance announced

nership weren't disclosed. This is the second time

Monday calls for Cisco to ensure that corporate Internet

in two years that Apple has

connections relying on its

the Dressier Family Trust, to Patrick C. andLeslie J. Koegler, Awbrey Park, Phase 2, Lot 80, $879,000 Amber L. Lidell to LaDonna Sullivan, DeerPointe Village, Phase 2, Lot12, Block 2, $246,000 Manfred and Brigitte Walder, trustees of the Walder Revocable Living Trust, to Lawrence K. and Jeanine W.Jones, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 4, Lot 141, $460,000 Schumacher Construction Inc. to Sharon K.KumlerSeaton,trustee ofthe Sharon K. Kumier-Seaton Trust, Hidden Hills, Phase1, Lot 5, $350,000 Patricia A. Francek to Stephen York, RedHawk Unit 3, Lot 52, $194,000 George M. Callinan to Jeffrey S. andGina M. Patterson, AspenRimNo. 2, Lot 180, $399,999

teamed up with a major technology company that focuses

Brandon T. andShallon F. Gould to John W.and Leslie A. Lamer, Quail PineEstates XII, Lot 22, $315,000 Joshua and Tina Blessing, who acquired title as Tina Morris, to GlendaCollins, Tanager Village, Lot 24, $230,000 Phong X. andGail L Ngo, trustees of the NgoFamily Trust of 2003, to Michael and Sally Ketchmere, Hillside Park, Phase1, Lot 3, Block1, $815,000 Timothy J. and Dawn G. Donahue toJohn W. Giannini, BonneHome Addition to Bend, Lot 6, Block 28, $382,000 Russell D. Paulto Kimberly B. and Justin J. Shepard, Boones Borough, Lot19, Block 2, $326,500 Donald E. and Amy C. Troxell to Saul andAngela Pineda, Arrowhead, Phases 1-4, Lot 83, $255,000

joined forces with IBM Corp.

ing competition from less expensive alternatives and

13 months ago to build and

consumers' aversion to up-

sell business applications for the iPhone and iPad. The aggressive push into the corporate market is part of Apple's strategy to reverse a

grading to the latest iPads as frequently as they have with

of the iPhone, its biggest moneymaker. Apple isn't the only maker of popular consumer products that's trying to court more

new versions of the iPhone.

businesscustomers. Google,

Apple Inc. is hoping to spur more sales of the iPad by

the maker of the Android operating system for mobile

slump in the iPad. Sales of the

making the tablet more useful

devices and Chrome operat-

pioneering tablet have fallen from the previous year in six

for businesses. The Cupertino, California, company also

ing system for personal computers, also has been trying to

consecutive quarters, reflect-

wants to expand the appeal

muscle into the same market.

on business customers. Apple

Judy A. Blakleyto Sara A. BaughmanandBryan N. Crossley, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 4, Block X, $289,000 Kenneth E. and Kristin L. Thomas, trustees of the Thomas Living Trust, to Daniel M. andSamantha S. McCleery, Orion Estates, Lot 20, Block1, $445,000 William R. Brown IV to Nicole C. Kelly, Awbrey Butte Homesites ,Phase26,Lot 15, Block 24, $930,000 Nationstar Mortgage LLC to Federal National Mortgage Association, Township 22, Range10, Section14, Lot 102, $203,583.20 William A. and Linda Leveaux to Jared C.and Alexis A. Abell, Golden Mantle Third Addition, Lot1, Block 5, $329,000 •JesseB.WychulestoKyle E. Byington andKelissa D. Averre, Chestnut Park,

Phase 1, Lot 2, $229,000 David W. andDeborah J. Bartles, trustees of the Bartles Family Trust, to Rickie W. Morton, Replat of Orion Estates, Lot 8, Block 4, $365,000 Erinn M. and Joshua B. Lindsey to Kimberly Bowman, Yardley Estates, Phase 6, Lot131, $367,500 Griffin and Samantha Webb to Christopher P. Peterson, Park Place Estates, Lot 26, $220,000 James A. andMary V. Leagjeld, trustees of the Leagjeld Charitable Remainder Unitrust, to 934 NE Third Street LLC,Center Addition to Bend, South forty feet of Lots 1-2, Block 20, $650,000 Anthony E. andDianne M. Marchiano to Michael W. Harned, Staats Addition to Bend, Lot 5, Block 6, $389,900

RadiOShaCkCreditOrSSLje

after the chain'scollapse By Steven Church

lowest price possible. The

Bloomberg News

creditors say turmoil at the

RadioShack Corp., the icon- company last year, including ic consumer-electronics chain, an October loan transaction was driven into bankruptcy

that paved the way for the

because of a takeover scheme by hedge fund Standard Gen-

hedge fund to win control,

eral LP, according to a lawsuit

bankruptcy. After filing bankruptcy, the company closed about half its 4,000 stores and in March sold about 1,700 of the remainder

by a committee for creditors who say they are owed more than $500 million. By delaying actions that might have preserved some of the chain's value, Standard

General allegedly sought to take over RadioShack at the

led to RadioShack's February

to Standard General, which

had been the company's biggest shareholder, for about $145.5 million.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

O www.bendbuiietin.corn/athome

GARDEN

OOOO O OO, /

L

L

i

f

IKEA / Submitted photo

Area rugs, which come in many colors and patterns, can tie a

room together and serve as the focal point for a conversation.

A guide to picking the perfect arearug Photosby Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

Gene and Bonnie Schmidt own Still Waters Lavender in Redmond, where they have 4 acres of lavender plants.

By Linda Turner Griepentrog

way to the walls like wall-to-

For The Bulletin

wall carpeting does. Some of the underflooring surface

Area rugs provide a plethora of benefits in any home.

shows on all sides of an area

rug. rug can tie together a room Size matters setting. Area rugs provide warmth (visual and literal); Area rugs are available in keep pets, kids and seniors a hostof sizes,from 2-footby-3-foot up to 12-footfrom skidding across a hard-surface floor; HOM E by-14-foot. Selecting a and they cut down the size of course depends echoes in a room without on the look you want and otherfloorcoverings. where you' re putting it. Bold patterning and rug Shapes vary, too: rectancolors can also serve as a gles to squares, circles to A carefully selected area

focal point of a conversation

ovals and even octagons.

area or highlight a room's architectural features, such

Look for long runner, about 2 to 3 feet wide, designed specifically for hallways or wide kitchens and half-circle rugs designed to be

as afireplace,hearth or ac-

cent wall.

Gene and Bonnie Schmidt grow 26 cold-hardy lavendervarieties at their farm

So, what's an area rug'?

An area rug is a floor covering that does not go all the

placed in front of a hearth.

SeeArea rugs/D5

By Penny NakamuraeFor The Bulletin

ene and Bonnie Schmidt wipe their brows under the hot summer evening sun as they walk along the rows of the 4 acres of lavender plants growing on their Still Waters Lavender farm in Redmond. Gene apologizes for a few weeds sprouting out above the billowing waves of lavender blooms, which emit a sweet fragrance that is wafting into the air.

Stretch yourharvest: Make sauerkraut By Jasmine Rockow

time can transform a hum-

For The Bulletin

"The bulk of the laven-

"Youcan only hunt, fish and relax so much in retirement, and l needed something todo; the lavender plants give me a reason to wake up each morning."

der harvest came about five weeks earlier than

normal for Central Oregon," says Gene, looking over his fields. The farm

specializes in 26 cold-hardy lavender varieties. "It' s because we had such a

light winter. We' ve been so busy with the harvest. I haven't had as much time

to weed." Gene, a retired Wey-

— Gene Schmidt, on coming out of retirement to help his wife, Bonnie, start Still Waters Lavender

erhaeuser executive

tree grower and master gardener, knows about pine trees. But he had to

ble head of cabbage into a Cabbage started popping t a ngy and crunchy health up in Central Oregon home f o od. It's exciting to watch, gardens and farmers mara n d you' ll be continuing an kets last month. ancient food preservation While those first cab-

pr act i c e that has been used

bage dishes may have been b y humans for centuries. a delight, soon even Robbie Bianchi-Pray die-hard fans of the F OOD tea c hes people how to cruciferous vegetable create probiotic-rich will tire of endless coleslaw f o ods through her business, and finding ways to sneak Who l e Body Robbie. She' s cabbage into meals. also taught fermentation Why not make that cabc l a sses at the Deschutes bage harvest stretch into Publ i c Library through Cenwinter by turning it into tral O regon Locavore and at homemade sauerkraut? Cent r al Oregon Community Through a process called C o llege. lacto-fermentation, salt and SeeCabbage/D2

bone up on his knowledge of lavender to fulfill his

For starters, Bonnie

wife's dream of owning a lavender farm. "I love lavenders, always have. I never get tired of it," says an emphatic Bon-

pulls out a fresh-squeezed

nie. She had to convince her husband to come out

rims each glass with a mixture of lavender sugar before she pours. "I' ve mixed the sugar

ade from her refrigerator. It has been steeping with the lavender buds. She

of retirement in the summer of 2011 to start their new venture.

with Miss Katherine lavender," explains Bonnie.

Gene, 73, chuckles good-naturedly and ex-

"You have to be careful because lavender is strong

plains: "You can only hunt,

fish and relax so much in

and you don't want to overwhelm it or it will tastetoo perfumed or soapy. I used two tea-

retirement, and I needed

something to do; the lavender plants give me a reason to wake up each

Bonnie Schmidt runs her hands through a container of laven›

spoons of lavender for this

morning." We walk up to their

der placed near the front door of her home inRedmond. She

batch of lemonade." After touring the farm,

white clapboard farmhouse and next to the

willow chairs on the porch is a big metal tub of dried lavender buds. Bonnie, 72, calls this lavender collectionher stress-reliever.

She buries her hands deep in the tub of dried purple flowers and brings a handful to her nose, then breathes in deeply and sighs with satisfaction.

TODAY’5 RECIPES

pitcher of lavender lemon-

calls this a stress-reliever.

thelavenderlemonade 0 See more photos on The Buiietin's website: bendbulletin.corn

tastes cold and refreshing. With just a hint of laven-

der, it adds complexity to On the other side of the wraparound porch there

l a v ender envelops the

the lemonade in a most re-

sen s e s. Bonnie exclaims

freshing flavor explosion. Bonnie, who has been busy preparing her laven-

are several lines strung up the lavender smell is promfour deep with bouquets of inent inside the farmhouse lavender being dried upkit c hen because she has side down.

Walking inside their quaint house, the faint smell of the earthy floral

der-infused meal, starts

by plating lavender fruit fuse d foods, which not salsa. It's paired with her surpr i singly is her special- lavender-rubbed salmon. t y at t h e farm. See Lavender /D4 made some lavender-in-

Tomato time:Nowis the time to whip Up a

batch of tomato sauce: Quick FreshTomato Sauce, Pasta with Fresh TomatoSauce andRicotta,D2

Fattoush:Howto make this Middle Eastern bread salad in six steps,D3 Summer salatis: Craft a juicy salad out of poached chicken: Summer Chi ckenSalad,BlackBeanandCornSalad,03 Buckle up:Put summer fruit to good use with SummerBerry Buckle,D3


D2

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

FOOD

Prepping Of Omcl 0 SBLlCB tomatoes for a deep freeze

CITY KITCHEN

e imeisri By David Tanis New York Times News Service

Tomatoes are now at their

Reds oftencometo mind reflexively whenthinking of wines to pairwith tomatoes. That's becauseweoften think of tomatoes inthecontext oflong-cookedpasta sauces, oftenblendedwith meat or mushrooms.Yet the morehigh-tonedacidic zing of freshtomatoes, or a quickl ycookedtomatosauce like this one,often goes better with acrisp white.

ripest and reddest, just right for a batch of fresh tomato sauce. Go ahead: Get to work. It

doesn't have to be a cellar full of sauce, with shelves and shelvesoflabeled Mason jars. Just make a small batch or three and freeze the stuff in zip-top bags. In a few months, you' ll be happy to have this tasty souvenir of summer' s 4

sweetness. Or, for that matter,

The Washington Post Lynne Rossetto Kasper and Sally Swift of "The Splendid Table," and columnist Cathy Barrow a n s wered r e a der questions recently.

just make enough for a meal tonight. Real, ripe tomatoes are at sauce a go. At the market,

Makes 4 to 6servings

look forthe large, cracked, ugly, slightly bruised tomatoes sold at a discount. The

flesh of these tomatoes is dense, sweet and blood red.

Use plum tomatoes if you prefer; the main thing is they This is a quick-cooking sauce with

freezer whole'? Eventually, I would like to turn them into sauce and can them.

have a choice. Ei› A You ther pop them in a bag

2’/ C Quick Fresh Tomato

Sauce, warm (see recipe)

Makes about 2/2 cups

i n th e

Grated pecorino Basil leaves, for garnish

and core the tomatoes, then

preparation. There's no need 5 Ibs tomatoes to blanch and peel tomatoes s/4tsp salt

1 TBS tomato paste 1 garlic clove, halved

or even use a food mill. All

2 TBS olive oil

1 basil sprig

you need is a hand-held grat-

Cook the pasta in a large pot of Cut tomatoes in half horizontally. Squeezeout the seeds and discard, if you wish. Press the cut side of to- well-salted water, making sure to mato against the large holes of aboxgrater and grate tomato flesh into a bowl. Discard skins. Youshould have keep it quite al dente. about 4 cups. Put butter in a wide deepskillet Put tomato pulp in alow wide saucepanover high heat. Addsalt, olive oil, tomato paste, garlic, basil and bay over medium heat. Add drained leaf. Bring to a boil, then lower heat to a brisk simmer. pasta to the pan and season with Reduce the sauce byalmost half, stirring occasionally, to produce about 2i/2cups medium-thick sauce, 10 salt, pepper and crushed red pepto 15 minutes. Tasteandadjust salt. It will keep up to 5 days in the refrigerator or may befrozen. per, if using. Add tomato sauce gradually and stir to coat pasta, using only and bright-tasting sauce in a plain pasta with tomato sauce dition, the rules are simple: enough sauce for a light coating. manageable small batch. It is glorious when it's done Keep the pasta quite al den- (You may not needthe entire 21/2 doesn't cook for hours — 15 right. te; use just enough sauce, no cups.) to 20 minutes are really all it One of my favorites is this more; give it a good pinch of Transfer pasta to a warm servtakes. version I learned in Sicily, crushed red pepper; and add ing bowl and dot top with spoonThere are a number of ex- made with nothing more enough salt. Once the pasta fuls of ricotta. Sprinkle lightly with tremely simple pasta dishes than tomato sauce and good is dressed, top it with blobs of pecorino and garnish with a few that epitomize the term "com- ricotta, with a little pecorino. luscious fresh ricotta. Basta. tom basil leaves. fort food." Among them, a For a perfect, balanced ren- It's ready.

er. In a matter of minutes,

you' ll be simmering a small saucepan full of gorgeous tomato pulp. Cut the tomatoes in halves

or quarters. Squeeze out the seeds, or don' t. (I never mind a few seeds in the sauce.) Place the cut side against the large holes of the grater and gently rub until only the tomato skin remains in your hand. Add a pinch of salt, a little olive oil, a garlic clove and a sprig of basil. A spoonful of tomato paste helps thicken the sauce.

This makes a very fresh-

Cabbage

1 bay leaf

freeze the pulp to make sauce — Cathy Barrow make pesto in a small Q Ifood processor and it

is always a beautiful bright green until I add it to the hot pasta. It turns brown! What

am I doing wrong? Nothing. P esto turns brown because the basil is oxidizing. You can try blanching your basil first to prevent this. Some acid such as lemon juice may also help. Another reader suggested adding some spinach to the mix to help. — Becky Krystal

A

All modelsand all makes.

the fermentation process take place. "Part of the fun is watching

SAME GREAT SERVICE EVERY TIME!

the different stages," Bianchi-Pray said. "Different bacteria are active after the first

week than in the second. One comes in, then it fizzles out and

traditional diet using probiot-

ic-rich foods," she said. But anyone can benefit from making

OIL CHANGE

a new bacteria comes in. They

their own home ferments.

The key to safely fermentThinkstock ing cabbage, or any other Making sauerkraut is a good vegetable, is creating a salty, way to makeyour cabbage oxygen-free (anaerobic) envi- harvest stretch into winter. ronment. Healthy bacteria like lactobacillus are present on all

fruits and vegetables. They tolOne trick to making excellent erate salt well, while harmful sauerkraut is to taste it before bacteria and molds do not. Once jarring it. The goal is for your in an anaerobic environment, cabbage to have the saltiness they turn sugar into lactic acid, of a Lay's potato chip, Bianwhich preserves the food and chi-Pray said. If your salted cabprevents the growth of harmM bage has that perfect amount of bacteria. In fact, it's this bacteri- saltiness that makes you want al dance that makes fermented to reach for more, it is very likefoods full of beneficial probiotic ly to become a tasty sauerkraut.

party, consume and fizzle out." Bianchi-Pray likes a really

rect sunlight — a countertop or

COMPLETE

tangy sauerkraut with lots of

crunch, which usually takes temperature can makea big difference, so it's important to taste

I Offers valid with coupon only. Expires 12/31/15.

the krautevery so often. Once

the flavor is where you want it, move the jar to fridge. It will continue to ferment, but much

®gmaiLcom

I i

(DIESEL 8 SYNTHETIC ADDITIONAL)

about three weeks. But room

slower. The cabbage will change color over time, from bright green to amore subdued shade. That' s normal. Sauerkraut made with purple cabbage will turn fluobacteria. rescent pink. Also normal. But Ready to turn the cabbage in Making the kraut sometimes ferments don't go as your fridge into healthy, tangy, Start with clean hands and planned. crunchy sauerkraut'? Turns tools. Remove the outer cabWatch out for mold or anyout, it's not only easy to do, but bageleafandsetaside. thing that turns brown. If it most people will already have Slice the cabbage into equal smells like an armpit or dirty everything they need. A basic, size pieces. What size'? That de- feet (or otherwise putrid)lacto-fermented sa u e rkraut pends on personal preference; throw it away. When her stuhas three ingredients: cabbage, it's more important that all piec- dents aren't sure if something salt and time. Beyond those es areabout the same size,so has gone bad, she advises to three necessities lie endless they ferment at the same rate. smell first, taste second. "I teach my students to put possibilities. Sprinkle some salt over Play around with smoked the cabbageand massage it the product in their mouth and salts, different herbs and other in. Taste a piece. Does it taste spit out," she said. "See what the vegetables to create a ferment like a Lay's potato chip? If not, flavor is ... if it is bad when you that's delicious and u nique. add more salt. Massage, taste swish it in your mouth and spit Bianchi-Pray r e c ommendsand repeat until you' ve hit the out, don't go there. If it's delightstarting with a high quality, mark. ful and tastes good, then put it mineral-rich sea salt. Kosher Let the salted cabbage sit. in your mouth, chew it and spit salt and table salts usually have The salt will extract water from it out again and see how it sits anti-caking agents in them that the cabbage, and after a while with us. If you chew and spit out could mess up the fermentation it will be really wet and soupy. and it tastes okay then go ahead process. This liquid is called the brine. and eat it." To get started, you' ll need: a Once it's reached this stage, These days Bianci-Pray is dean glass jar (Mason or recy- pick up a handful and squeeze preparing for a move to Chided) big enough to fit your fist, out as much brine as you can. cago, but she will continue to a knife, cutting board, large You want it to be as dry as you teach fermentation classes onmixing bowl and, of course, sea can get it. Put it into the jar and line at WholeBodyRobbie.corn. salt and cabbage. Optional ad- pack in each handful with your Some of herfavorite resources ditions indude an air-lock and fist. Fill the jar three-quarters for fermenting foods indude the g Tr a ditions" cooka weight that will keep cabbage full, packing it down as you go. "No~ submerged below the brine. Once your jaristhree-fourths book by Sally Fallon, and for This isn't a typical recipe full, cut a cabbage leaf to match those who really want to geek with precise measurements or the circumference of your jar out, anything by Sandor Katz. "Fermentation is an advenexact ratios of salt per pound of and place it on top. Pour the cabbage. remaining brine into the jar. It ture and an experiment," she "I teach my students to use should cover the tightly packed said. "It should be fun. It's not altheir tastebuds," Bianchi-Pray cabbage and the leaf resting on ways going to be a success, and said."Differentcabbages have top. Place a weight on top of the there's failure in everything we different water content. Rath- leaf to keep it submerged below do, but that's part of the advener than make it a hard sci- the brine. ture and learning process." ence, I teach them to use their Find a place that's not in di— Reporter: j asminenicolel intuition."

later.

WE DO GENERAL AUTO REPAIRS.

cabinet works well, and watch

Continued from D1 Her main objective is to help people "improve their health and reverse disease and autoimmune disorders through a

f r eezer w h ole a n d

stem and seed and skin them when they come out (it's surprisingly easy), or peel, seed

6 oz ultrafresh ricotta, at room temperature

r e l atively f a st

that online chat.

ing them, or just put them in

Crushed red pepper (optional)

Quick hesh Tomato Sauce

QatA

I core and seed Q • Should tomatoes before freez-

Karsten Moran/The New York Times 1 Ib dried pasta, such as Freshly made tomato sauce it will keep in the refrigerator for up to five days, or can be frozen› farfalle or penne simmers on a stovetop. Tomatoes are now at their ripest and reddest, so go ahead and make a batch Salt and pepper of quick, fresh sauce. 2 TBS butter, softened

must be truly sun-ripened, whatever the variety.

Here are edited e xcerpts from

R ec i p e s whose namesare capitalized can be found on Recipe Finder at washingtonpost.corn/ recipes.

Pasta with Fiesh Tomato Sauce and Ricotta

their cheapest now, too — another reason to give tomato

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 THE BULLETIN

F OO D

D3

GOOD APPETITE

is er u c e ma es rea useo summer rui By Melissa ClarkeNew York Times News Service

It's easy to see how the crumble and the crisp got their names. Just look at their toppings. But for me at Linda Gassenheimer/TNS

least, the buckle was more of a mystery.

Summer Chicken Salad is paired with black beans andcorn.

That's because I was thinking belts when I should have been thinking about floors. Or knees. Something that would give way under pressure, which is what happens when buttery buckle batter collapses slightly into the fruit beneath it as it bakes. Its surface cracks unevenly and browns marvelously, while any sugar that you' ve sprinkled on top melts into a crunchy crust.

Poachedchicken makes ajuicy salad By Linda Gassenheimer

Summer Chicken Salad

Tribune News Service

A colorful salad featuring deliciously moist, flavorful

All buckles have this distinctive pitted, craterlike top,

Makes 2 servings

chicken is a cool treat for a

warm August evening. The secret to this dish is poaching the chicken

but not all are the same beneath the surface. Some are

QUICK

as syrupy and jammy as the filling of a pie. Others are

FOR THE CHICKEN: /4 Ib boneless, skinless

chicken breasts

an d letting it 1 C fat-free, low-sodium

like coffeecake. This buckle splits the differ-

cool slightly in the poaching liquid. The meat remains moist and firm.

chicken broth t/s Ib fresh green beans, trimmed and cut into 1-inch

ence, with copious amounts

This dinner is served on

4 TBS reduced-fat vinaigrette

of fruit and just enough bat-

a large platter with the lettuceleaves as a bed forthe

FIX

more solid and soft-crumbed,

ter to bind it together. The result is moister and more like c r u mble o r

and corn served around the edge. Sliced tomatoes are washed, ready-to-eat salad arranged on the side as a 1 med tomato, cut into garnish. wedges

Photos by Andrew Scrivani /The New York Times

Some buckles are more like pie, while others are more coffeecake. SummerBerry Buckle’s name

crisp. comes from the way the buttery buckle batter collapses slightly into the fruit beneath as it bakes, the You can use any kind of surface cracking and browning while the sugar you’ ve sprinkled on top melts to a crunchy crust. ripe, juicy summer fruit you like here. I chose berries partSummer Berry Buckle ly for their intense sweet-tart flavorand deep color.The other reason was the alliteration.

Berry buckle is more fun to say than peach buckle, though diced peaches, nectarines and plums bake up just as nicely. You can even take this reci-

Helpful hints Any type of lettuce can be used. Any type of beans such as red kidney or navy beans can be used.

Makes 8 servings /2 C (1 stick) butter, at room

temperature, plus morefor greasing pan /2 C sugar, more for sprinkling /4 C light brown sugar

pe into the fall. As long as the 3 Ig eggs, at roomtemperature fruit you use is soft and juicy, 1 TBS finely grated lemon zest

1 tsp vanilla extract 1/s C all-purpose flour t/s tsp fine sea salt /2 tsp grated nutmeg /4 tsp baking powder 4t/ C summer berries (a mix of blueberries, raspberries and

blackberries, or use anyone kind) Cinnamon, for dusting (optional)

Countdown:

Poach chicken. While chicken cooks, prepare remaining ingredients. Make black bean and

Powdered sugar, for dusting

it should work well. I plan to

try it with figs, persimmon Heat oven to 375degrees. Butter a 9-inch round cakepan. and pineapple (though not In the bowl of anelectric mixer, addbutter, sugar andbrown sugar and beat until light and fluffy. Add eggsone all at once). Beware of hard- at a time, then addlemonzest andvanilla and mix until combined. er fruit like apples and pears, In a separate bowl, combine flour, salt, nutmeg and baking powder, and whisk to combine. Add dry ingrediwhich would probably need ents to egg mixture and mix until just combined. to be cooked through before Gently fold berries into the batter, then spreadbatter in panand sprinkle lightly with more sugar. Bake40to 50 being folded into the batter. minutes, or until top is golden andcake is cookedthrough. A buckle doesn't bake long Allow cake to cool, then sprinkle with cinnamon, if using, and powdered sugar.

corn salad.

Assemble dish. Fred Tasker's wine suggestions: A n i c e s ummer

salad calls for a nice summer wine — rose. Drink the sweet ones if you must,

but I'd prefer a dry rose like

enough to soften them.

Then in winter, feel free to substitute frozen fruit if that' s what you have. Just don't thaw

it first, or its seeping liquid will thin out the batter too much. Stir it in quickly while still fro-

zen, then add a couple of minutes onto the baking time to

compensate for the chill. Because of all that fruit, buckles are best eaten on the

same day they are baked. They tend to get soggy as they sit.

You can serve wedges on their own, in all of their sim-

ple, buttery glory. Or try them topped with large scoops of ice cream, letting it melt all over that beautifully buckled

surface.

dressing ’/4 C chopped fresh cilantro FOR THE SALAD: 4 C lettuce leaves from

chicken and the black beans

pudding than cake, but more s liceable than

pieces (about 2 C)

Simi rose of Cabernet.

Shopping list

Youcan use any kind of ripe, juicy summer chose berries partly

Here are the ingredients you' ll need for t onight's quick fix. To buy:/4 pound boneless,

for their intense

skinless chicken b r easts;

fruit you like here. I

I can fat-free, low-sodium chicken broth; /s pound beans; and I package frofresh green beans; I bunch zen corn kernels. c ilantro; I bag washed, Staples:Reduced-fat vinready-to-eat salad; I me- aigrette dressing, salt and dium tomato; I ca n black black peppercorns.

sweet-tart flavor and deep color. The other reason was the alliteration. Berry

buckle is more fun to say than peach buckle, though diced peaches, nectarines and plums bake up just as nicely.

Black Bean and Corn Salad Makes 2 servings 1t/s C black beans, rinsed and drained 1 /2 C corn kernels, frozen,

Fresh berries are used towhip up Summer Berry Buckle.

2 TBS reduced-fat vinaigrette

dressing Salt and freshly ground black

canned drained

owtoma e attous in eas ste s By Amy Scattergood easy steps: l. A Saturday morning. Sunshine. More sunshine. A farm2. Fill a huge market bag with these things: tiny ripe heir-

1 / tsp Aleppo pepper,divided 2 cloves garlic, minced

loom tomatoes, Persian cucum-

bers, bunches of parsley and mint, pink breakfast radishes, salad greens — maiche, purslane, arugula, romaine, whatever looks best. 3. Then go home. Break up some stale pita bread — left out from last night's dinner, or

1 TBS sumac 1 TBS red wine vinegar

forgotten in the back of the refrigerator — and toast it with

t/ tsp kosher salt

2 C cherry tomatoes, halvedor quartered, depending onsize 2 C choppedPersian cucumbers stale, tom

Anne Cusack/Los Angeles Times/TNS

dle Eastern bread salad. ("Fat- Fattoush is a Middle Eastern bread salad. "Fatta" means tom to ta" means tom to pieces, which pieces. is a great thing to tell your kid when you ask her to help you do this.) Fill your cup of coffee Break up some stale pita bread — left out from

can. Whisk together the dress-

ing (lots of sumac, Aleppo pepperand garlic,and usethebest olive oil you have), then chop up and drop in the vegetables that were atthose farmers' stands

just an hour ago. (Remember the story a friend told you about her Iraqi family fighting in the kitchen over fattoush recipes. Too much lemon,not enough spices and garlic. Yelling, tears.)

I

t/ med red onion, finely sliced 3 whole wheat pitas, preferably

your own morning toast. Why?

sun. 4. Find the biggest bowl you

The RecipeFinder feature will return. If youarelooking for a hard-to-find recipe orcananswer a request, write Julie Rothman, RecipeFinder,TheBaltimore Sun,501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder©gmail. corn. Namesmust accompanyrecipes for them to bepublished.

’/ C plus 3 TBS extra-virgin olive oil, divided Zest of 1 lemon /4 C lemon juice

ers market.

while the tomatoes warm in the

RECIPE FINDER

Makes 4 to 6 servings

How to make fattoush in six

pepper

If using frozen corn, heat 2 minutes in amicrowave or place in boiling water for 1 minute. Drain. Toss beans and corn in dressing and adjust seasoning by adding salt and pepper to taste. Spoon around edge of serving platter.

Fattoueh

Los Angeles Times

You' re making fattoush, a Mid-

To cook chicken: Place chicken in a saucepan just large enough to hold it. Add the chicken broth. Add water to make sure chicken is covered by the liquid. Bring the liquid to a simmer. Gently simmer 5 minutes. Do not boil or chicken will be tough. Remove from heat and let chicken sit in liquid for 15 minutes. While the chicken simmers, blanch the beans by microwaving 2 minutes on high or adding to a pot of boiling water for 1 minute. Drain. Assemblethesalad:Remove chicken from liquid and cut into cubes about one inch square. Place in a bowl. Add the green beans and dressing and toss well. Place lettuce on a serving platter. Spoon chicken mixture in center, leaving room around the edge for black beans and corn. Placetomato wedges on one side of platter and sprinkle cilantro over top.

4 C fresh saladgreens: purslane, watercress, maiche, arugula, romaine or acombination

~

rl

g

/4 C chopped fresh mint

WeWillbeCIOSedOII LabOrDay, MOnday, SePt. 7, 2015

/ C chopped freshparsley

Heat the oven to 425 degrees. In a large bowl, whisk togethert/2cup olive oil, the lemon zest and juice, last night's dinner, or forgotten in the back of 1 teaspoon Aleppo pepper, the minced garlic, sumacand red wine the refrigerator — and toast it with your own vinegar. Add the tomatoes, cucummorning toast. Why? You' re making fattoush, a bers andonion, toss and set aside. Middle Eastern bread salad. Place the tom pita pieces on a rimmed baking sheet and toss with the remaining 3 tablespoons oil, the 5. Load the bowl with green- of kitchen tongs or your hands, remaining /2 teaspoonAleppopepper ery, toss in the crisp bits of and spill the whole salad onto a and salt. Bakeuntil crisp andgolden, bread. Add more garlic? Maybe sheet pan. about 15minutes. Setaside to cool. so. (Other things you can add: 6. Hand your kid a cup of Add the greens, mint andparsley garbanzo beans, feta cheese, mint tea and two forks, and go to the bowl, and toss in the cooled bell peppers, avocados.) Mix outside. Eat lunch from the pan, pitas. Serve immediately. everything together with a pair just the two of you.

RETAIL &CLASSIFIEDDISPMYADVERTISING DAY DEADL INE Monday, 917 .............................. Wednesday, 912, 4pm At Home,9/8.............................W ednesday,912,4pm Tuesday 9/8................................. Thursday, 913, Noon Wednesday, 919................................ Friday, 914, Noon

p

CLASSI FIED LINERDEADLINES: Tuesday, 913 ..............................................Friday, 8/30

Classifieds 541-385-5809


D4

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

HOME ck

AR D EN

er s ave a on IS 0 By Kathy Van Mullekom Daily press(Newport News, Va)

In the 17th- and 18th-cen-

tury garden, herbs were an important part of the vege-

table plot, growing side-byside with peas, carrots and lettuces, and then harvested

and used in cooking, dye and soap making and herb-

Lavender is hung out to dry on the porch of the Schmidts' home.

al medicine.

Today those crops are grown in d emonstration raised beds at Virginia's

QSAwith BonnieSchmidt A Q&A with Bonnie Schmidt, co-owner of Still Waters Lavender farm. What are the three ingredients you' l always find in your home kitchen cupboard and/or refrigerator? Besides lavender, we always have cream, butter and sugar.

Photos by Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

Bonnie Schmidt pulls salmoncooked with lavender from her oven.

do the same as part of the living history museum ex-

Q

perience for visitors.

It goes to show that history often repeats itself — to-

day's raised-bed vegetable patches are again popular

A

What is your favorite hand tool/cooking utensil? You always need a spatula. Also, did you know you could take the stripped sticks from a lavender plant, soak them in water and usethemas grilling sticks for the barbecue?We alsousethelavender stalks as fire starters. It gives whatever your barbecuing the slightest taste of lavender. It's delicious.

and practical fo r

For h om e

Bonnie Schmidt holds a bowl of lavender she will use for cooking

at her Redmondhome.

Bonnie Schmidt serves salmon cooked with lavender.

In fact, an advertisement

a .. ~

»

Favorite roomyoulike to eat your meals? When our family comes together, we always gather at the round

Q

kitchen table.

Bonnie and Gene Schmidt sit down for a meal crafted with the taste of lavender.

Guilty food pleasures? Sugar cookie dough and brownie batter. There's also a pepper chicken with lavender that' s delicious. We lovegoing to the Oregon LavenderAssociation's chef's potluck; everything is delicious there.

Lavender

Q

Favorite food quote or philosophy, you often repeat to yourself? At our age, it's "keep moving!"

Q

Continued from 01 "All my favorite recipes use lavender, which is part of the mint family. Any recipe that calls for mint you can substi-

"All my favorite recipes Use lavender, which is part of the mint family. Any recipe that calls for mint you can substitute it with a little bit of

lavender."

The philadelphia rnquirer

Bonnie Schmidt

tute it with a little bit of lavender," explains Bonnie. "For

the salmon rub, I roasted the lavender buds with some other Their daughter, who lives on spices and herbs." the farm next to them, raises Gene explains that certain goats and uses the milk to help lavenderspecies are betterfor her mother make 500bars of culinary use, while others are lavender goat milk soap. Acbetter suited for fragrances. cording to Bonnie, this is a "There are more than 400 varieties of lavenders that are

popular item at Still Waters

Lavender farm and always grown all over the world," says sells out. Gene. "Probably by next year The Schmidts' son, who's a there will be close to 500 va- school teacher in Washington, rieties. They' re pretty easy to helped write up and illustrate

22, 1772, according to inter-

17th and most of the 18th cen-

tury, tobacco was also used medicinally. The juice was used from Britain, and to be sold as a purgative. The juice was by the subscriber at Norfolk, also used on insect stings and a large and complete assort- bites. The smoke was used for ment of garden seeds, also constipation, tools; he likewise furnishes Sassafras:This was one of plants and herbs of all kinds the first native plants to be exin their respective seasons." ported. Sassafras tea was used At the Yorktown Victory as a stimulant and antispasCenter, this year's field crops m odic; sassafras is the flavorare growing on a limited ba- ing in root beer. sis while a huge expansion Mint:There are thought to be and transition is underway at least 30 species of mint, all of at the American Revolution whichhave been highly valued Museum at Yorktown. The for their medicinal properties entire project, including since earliest times. By the 18th a reconstructed and en- century, various species were hanced Revolution-period used asa cure forcolicand difarm, will be complete late gestive odors. 2016, she says. Willow bark:The bark of the

YOUR PLACE

rage or find and reset the GFCI.

rooms, basement, kitchen and I have contacted the builder the attached garage. I was sur- to question this, and the sub-

(National Electrical Code) and insisting they are in compliance with the codes with regards to the garage GFCI hookup. I did find a website addressing GFCI hookups. The attached garage is specifically addressed. Please provide any advice on whether I should continue to Although I

from which acetylsalicylic acid is derived, the main ingredient and medicinal plants in the in aspirin. Needless to say, wil18th-century, a c cording low bark was used for headaches or to lower fevers.

Vinegar: Made from apple cider. Many farms had a small apple orchard, and the primary use of the apples was for the making of cider. When the ci-

your temples or even a baby' s

ranean shrub that found its

der turned,it became vinegar,

feet, you can use it as an antiseptic. The Romans found it

way to America with early which was used as a preservasettlers. The plant has long tive as well as medicinally. The been valued as a stimulant benefits of a daily tablespoon of and tonic. It also "quickens cider vinegar mixed with water a weak memory and the are very much in today's health

"Besides the calming ef-

fects of lavender, which you can rub the oil onto pillows or

helped heal the wounds faster," says Bonnie. "The ancient

Egyptians used lavender oil as part of mummification. It helps with headaches, acne,

a children's activity book for

A

white willow contains salicin,

Useful herbs

include: Rosemary: An ancient medicinal and c u linary herb, rosemary is a Mediter-

products.

school groups that tour the rocks. And it's drought-hardy, farm as a field trip.

u n d e rstand G FCI

hookups reside in the bath-

Tobacco: Grown primarily as a cash crop throughout the

to Jamestown and Yorktown historical interpreters,

sunburn, bug bites, and it can clean and disinfect carpets, dog beds and helps to repel but you do need to water them, W hen Bonnie isn't in t h e fleas and ticks. Oh my, there' s especially the babies." field or the kitchen, you can so much you can use lavender The Schmidts jokingly refer find her crafting with the for, and I'm still experimenting to their lavender plants as their lavender. She makes wands, with all the different food reci"babies" as they tenderly care hand-embroidered sachets, pes, too." for each plant. wreaths and other beautiful Bonnie brought out a plate Their two grown children items. Still Waters Lavender of lavender shortbread butter have giventheir parents sug- also sells lavender jams, jellies cookies and cups of hot lavengestions on how to make their and oils, and the Schmidts say der tea as proof. farm even better. they stand by their lavender — halenl®aol.corn p grow becauseitthrives on neutral ground and doesn't mind

the light on the garage door (ground fault circuit inter- opener). rupter) wiring is done for safeThis perhaps would impede ty of the occupant/homeowner safety in the garage if someone and is construction code. were in the garage when the I recently purchased a brand GFCI engaged, and therefore new home and moved inthe the individual would not have early part of the year. GFCI any lighting to get out of the ga- pursue the builder on this issue. I

newspaper dated October

Commonly used herbs

Is t FCI wiring installed correctly in mygarage? By Alan J. Heavens

and muscles.

preters at Yorktown, states, "Imported in the last ships

A

What do you like to do outside of the kitchen whenworking duties are finished? I love to read, garden and craft with my lavender flowers.

oil that is both anesthetic and

antiseptic. It is used for toothcadito recommends parsley, aches and indigestion. sage, rosemary and thyme, Oak gall: Caused by a galland peppermint, spearmint wasp puncturing the bark of and lemon balm, which col- the oak and laying eggs inonists also favored. All of side, galls are astringent and these can be grown indoors antiseptic. in pots as well as outdoors, Cayenne pepper: Native to she adds. tropical America and Africa, it "The majority of vegeta- was used medicinally as well bles and herbs grown in the as a seasoning. The oil from 17th century are grown to- the peppers was used for salves day," she says. and to help clear congestion. "Kitchen herbs grown in Modern Capsaicin, which conEngland were cultivated in tains capsicum, is from the pepVirginia." pers. It is rubbed on sore joints from the Virginia Gazette

Q

A

g a r dens,

Jamestown Settlement historical interpreter Pat Lec-

What chefs do you admire most? My mom was the best cook in the world. She could take nothing and make adelicious meal.

If you could invite three guests to dinner, who would they be? (They can bedeador alive.) I'd invite my mom and dad and my two grandsons. I think they would truly enjoy oneanother. I know, that's four.

Herbs need sun and well-drained soil. Regular pruning and good air circulation around plants helps keepthem healthy. Herbs are easily dried by cutting and hanging them in bunches to dry in a cool, dark place; whenthe herbs easily crumble, store them in airtight containers. Foliage on herbs can be cut into small pieces and placed in baggies to freeze for later use in dishes; herbs can also be frozen in ice cube trays anddropped into soups, saucesand stews. Learn more about herbs with the American Herb Society at www.herbsociety.org.

are the same.

Q

Q

s m all-

space, easy-access gardening. Even many of the crops

Q

Do you have a favor› ite cooking memory or memorable meal? Our son-in-law prepared a prime rib and king crab for the family on Christmas Eve.(Hedied Aug. 9, 2012 in amotorcycle accident.)

Jamestown Settlement and Yorktown Victory Center, where historical interpreters

Herds101

on installation methods or code compliance. I leave electricity and plumbing in my house to the experts with licenses to operate, reduc-

ing the chance of fire and flood, or not having the house pass inspection when it goes on the

senses," according to "Cul-

news.

peper'sComplete Herbal," originally published in the 17th century.

Cloves:Cloves are the unopened buds of the tropical clove tree, used medicinal-

e c

ly and as a spice. The clove bud, when crushed, releases

GARDENING. Get good at it. Join OSU Master Gardeners for garden events this autumn The Great Wrap Up: End of Season Issues,Sat. Sept. 19, 10:30 a.m., at Hollinshead C F r e e. ommunityGarden,1237 NE-JonesRd.,~B Season Wrap Up: Closing Expectatlons & Questions,Sat. Sept. 26, 990 a.m., at Northwest Crossing Community Garden, Northwest Crossing Dr. at Clearwater Dr., Bend. Free. Closing Day,Sat. Oct. 10, 9 a.m., work party forgarden plot renters; Hollinshead Community Garden, Bend. Closing Day,Sat. Oct. 10, 9:30 a.m., workparty for garden plot renters; Northwest Crossing Cotytmunity Garden. For questionson any of these events,call541-54S-6OSS.

sale market. I sent your question to two

u n derstand electricians for comment and

the need for GFCI wiring, have not heard back yet. especially in high-moisture arI invite experts to weigh in, prised to learn that the GFCI contractor is citing the 2009 eas such as bathrooms, kitch- please. Thanks. in the attached garage also in- IRC (International Residential ens, basements and garages, — Contact Alan J. Heavens dudes the overhead lights (not Code) as well as the 2014 NEC I am not qualified to comment at aheavensphil lynews.corn.

Central Oregon

Master Garde er

Associ ion


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 THE BULLETIN

ASK MARTHA

D5

The place› ment of

area rugs draws a variety of opInIons from the

decorating industry, but one

recent trend is to

layer them in coordi› nating pat›

terns and 4,

colors. But personal

"Iijjj!(,

prefer› ence and

v

decorat›

, t(~ ' nw((jI’(ter

ing style

'r/' j (4

matters most when

configur› Ing youl’

area rugs. !KEA Submitted

photo

Pattern picks

Area rugs

Area rugs can have allover patterning, they can have well-defi ned borders or cen-

Continued from D1 Smaller rugs are often labeled as scatter, throw or

ter medallions, or they can

5,

accent rugs. Those are ideal for bathrooms and kitchens, An easy way to decide on a rug size is to spread out a

be a solid color. If the room already has a focal point, like a large fireplace, or has print furniture, an allover pattern may be the best option to

sheet or newspapers in the

avoid visual clutter.

area under consideration, or mask off the space with a

Match the mood of a rug to the mood of other furnishings in the room. Ask yourself if the mood is casual or formal and select a rug pattern accordingly.

like in front of the sink.

painter's tape border to de-

Photos by Bryan Gardner / Martha Stewart Living

For a new twist on an old standby, top crackers with ricotta and fresh berries.

fine the perimeter. If one rug doesn't cut it, add another one. The rugs don't have to be the same size — in fact, it's better if

Pad news

they' re not so it doesn't look

Pre arin musses, an a newtwiston c eesean crac ers

A hearth rug from Rugged Quilt kits, made by Quiltsmart, a

Whether you' re putting an area rug over hard-surface flooring, like wood or tile, or you' re layering it over carpeting, it's important that the rug have a pad of some

Bend company.

kind underneath it. The pad

like the room is simply cut in half — but the patterns should coordinate with each

other. A

Submitted photo

r e c en t dec o r ating

trend is to layer area rugs for more interest — smaller over larger — in coordinating patterns and colors.

Placement pointers The decorating industry has varying opinions about the placement of area rugs

serves several functions. It helps to keep the rug from skidding, though some area rugs have nonskid backings already applied. Pads also help to prevent damage to the under floor by protecting

Hearthhelp Bend quilt companyQuiltsmart has created aRugged Quilt kit so you can makeyour own hearth rug in colors of your choosing. It's made from wool yardage or pre-cut piecesavailable at a quilt shop andhasbacking provided. The kit makes several different sizes andshapes depending on your preferences.

it from moisture in the event of a spill. Another function of

and the amount of space "

,

.

-

- ,

surrounding furn i t ure. Let's take a look at some edges and the walls. common recommendations In a bedroom, the rug from the flooring experts at should be about 2 to 3 feet

. MARTHA STEWART

tent and rug construction, an

pads is to help prolong the life of the rug itself by cushioning

area rug can cost as much as the furniture it's accent-

it against the floor.

For an entryway, be sure sides. Putting nightstands that an area rug is placed on it is optional, of course. far enough from the door Another placement option is that the open door doesn' t to put a runner at the end of hit it (about 3 feet). This the bed, slightly wider than avoids damaging the rug the bed. edges. Remember that t h ese In a dining room, select recommendations are just a rug that's about 3 to 4 feet that — it's a matter of your larger than the table on all personal preference and sides so that the chairs sit decorating style, but do pay fully on the rug when some- attention to proportion so one is sitting and getting up. the area rug doesn't look Never place a rug so that miniscule or overbearing in only the front chair legs the room's setting. are on the rug, as it creates an uneven surface and the Material musings chair will rock. Area rugs ar e m a de In a living room, an area from many different types rug should be large enough of materials. They can be to have the furniture legs on constructed from natural

than wool or silk but may not

pad can helpprevent transfer

last as long. If you' re purchasing an area rug for your deck, synthetics, especially polypropylene, are the way to go, as

of any dye coloration to the surface below. Some rug dyes

tablespoons

it, at least the front ones. If

fibers like wool, silk, cotton

they' re left uncut. Some area

Sunflower seeds: about 5 teaspoons

the back ones are not, then

or jute, or they can be made rugs are also braided or simfrom synthetics like polyes- ply flat woven. ter, nylon or polypropylene. Area rug edges can be Wool is natu r a lly bound, fri nged, hemmed or stain-resistant and doesn' t simply left with cut edges.

Lowe's.

Q

I'm new to vegetarianism. How can I make

sure I get enough protein? The r e quired d a ily

A ies by age, gender and level of amount of protein var-

physical activity. In general, adult women who fit in at least 30 minutes

Tofu takes well to many cook›

ing methods baking, searing, grilling and more and to

of moderateexercise (such as jogging or biking) five times manv different flavor orofiles. weekly should consume 5 to 5.5 ounces of protein per day. Women who work out more should increase their protein intake accordingly. Each of the following options offers a meatless alternative for I ounce of protein: Tofu: /4 cup

Hummus: 2

Cooked chickpeas /4 cup Peanut butter or almond

butter: I tablespoon Raw Almonds: about 12 nuts

wider than the bed on both

casters can be added for

Sunflower seeds are a great source of protein for vegetar› ians.

For more information, check out choosemyplate.

gov. v

leveling. The size of the rug can vary greatly depending on the desired look, but there flatten like some other fishould always be at least 6 bers, but it's one of the more inches of floor showing on expensive options, as is silk. Depending on the fiber con-

I

Cookingmusselsathome

When an area rug is placed ing. Synthetic fibers cost less over light carpet or flooring, a

they repel water and sun fad-

ing and can simply be hosed offforcleaning. Like carpeting, area rugs are constructed in different ways. Some high-end rugs

are not colorfast and can ruin

lighter color floorings below. Pads are made of various fibers, from PVC and latex to

fibrous materials, and should always be I to 2 inches small-

er than the rug itself to prevent seeing it at the edges.

are hand-knotted, with indi-

Care cues

vidual fibers tied around the lengthwise threads during

Floor-care experts at Macy's suggest the following tips for area rug care: Spot clean any s pills immediately.

construction. Others are tuft-

ed, with loops simply pulled through a backing fabric, then cut. Hooked rugs have

Keep the rug out of direct

loops inserted through a backing fabric as well, but

sunlight to prevent fading. Shake a n d /or v a c u um both sides of the rug regularly. Rotate the rug to prevent

Find It All Online

uneven wear due to t r affic

patterns in the room. — Reporter: gw izd esigns@aotcorn

BarhTurfSoil.corn I

541-389-9663

A that look clean and shiny

The f r e shest mussels are those with s h ells

and are tightly closed. To get them ready for cooking, follow these simple steps. I. Inspect each shell for

cracks and openings, and discard any that have them. 2. Rinse the mussels in cold For a quick anddelicious vege› water, scrubbing them with tarian snack, pair two table› a scrub sponge or vegetable spoons of hummus with fresh brush to remove sand and veggies or pita chips. grit. 3. De-beard the mussels with your fingers: Simply Top crackers with a dolgrip the tough fibers that exlop of fresh ricotta and tend from the shell and pull ripe summer berries. They

A

them off.

A new twist

on a classicsnack Can you suggest asea› sonal take on cheese and crackers'?

*

re r/vvv r ooor/'iv

make a

p e r fect a f ternoon

snack or even dessert. — Questions of general interest can be emailed to mslletters@ marthastewart.corn. For more information on this column, visit wwttt marthasteM/art.corn.

In general, adult women who fit in at least 30

a

!KEA / Submitted photo

SODERHAMN modular seating is complemented by two IKEA PS2014 rugs. Batteries

Crystal

Bands

WATCH BATTERY

s1Q~~

r

INFINITY WATCH1KPAI

minuteS Of mOderate eXerCiSe (SuCh aS jOgging

or biking) five times weekly should consume 5 to 5.5ounces ofprotein perday.Women who work out more should increase their protein intake accordingly.

l i *

CENTRAL OREGON RNYOI.ITE

II

503-887-4241 61405 S. Hwy. 97, Bend OR 97702 Office: 541.728.0411 Cell: 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell, Owner Stem & Crowns Movements

I

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TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

sse ’ asen e or rie

’ merican TV PIPELINE

Q

By Jay Bobbin

What happened to "The Cycle," "Now With Alex

ter Paradise," but also "The

Wagner" and "The Ed Show"

and "Bachelor Pad." And as

on MSNBC?

for other jobs it has brought

Zapzit

M y husband an d I Q watched "American Od-

A

yssey." Is NBC going to bring it back, and if not, can we please

cisions for the cable network

j'4 -

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A censing of a given title. As vast as its library is, TCM It has to do with the li›

tz, Abby Huntsman and Toure

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have left.

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doesn't necessarily hold the vv

Photo via Newecom

I r ecently saw t h e Odyssey" for a second season. "Criminal Minds" epi-

sode that introduced the new

time. The best bet for that is earlynextyear,though, which was what happened with "CSI: Cyber" when "CSI: Crime

— Ed Carlyle, Kingman, Arizona Scene Investigation" spawned Yes, the parent show re› that — and that also paid off

peated that episode last in being able to cash in on star Patricia Arquette's then-recent

up on CBS again right before Oscar win for "Boyhood." "Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders" has its official premiere. Will "Togetherness" be The network is holding the back? new show for midseason, and — MeganWade, depending on how other seWheeling, West Virginia ries fare when the fall lineup It will, and it's a happy starts, it could turn up at any circumstance for th e

Q

A

t h ere's n o

"Bachelor" show with-

telecasting rights to a film forever, and those have to be

out Chris Harrison, as "Bach-

renegotiated with the related

Q

Y

I t seems

studio ... as with "Sabrina" (owned by Paramount) and "Rear Window" (originally come from? — Alice Morse, via email made byParamount,butnow seriocomic HBO series that If you meanprofession› owned by Universal). It's virtually certain you' ll took a while to make it onto ally (geographically, the schedule. Not only did the he was born in Dallas), his see all the films you named show's t ra d i tional-telecast career began in local televi- on TCM again at some point, ratings justify the renew- sion ... Oklahoma City, to be since after all, the channel al, so did its performance in exact, where he was a sports dealsin screen classics and other platforms (mobile, On reporter. He then worked for all three of those titles surely Demand, etc.) It won't return a horse-racing channel and qualify, However, the exact this year, but in the mean- began as host of HGTV's "De- "when" of when they' ll reaptime, co-star Mark Duplass signers' Challenge," and then pear there is hard to predict.

NBC declined to renew the Anna Friel-starring show "American

month — and it likely will turn

were shown on a regular

basis on 'Itrrner Classic Mov-

whileothers such as Ed Schul=

when its season ends.

A

How come movies that

to overhaul the weekday-after- ies — such as "Sabrina," "Rear noon lineup, putting the em- Window" and "High Noon"phasis on breaking news. Sev- are not shown at all now? eral hosts, induding Wagner, — Tom Barr, are remaining with MSNBC, Columbus, Ohio

a second season, and its ratings wouldn't seem to justify a special concluding story being produced. We feel your pain, but this is the gamble for all viewers of investing in a continuing story that may not have all the loose ends tied up

begin?

Q

role, alsotheoverseerofM SNBC — made one of his first de-

NBC declined to renew it for

Sinise. When will that show

— Dot Lesar, Harrison, he becomes Terry Reading, Pennsylvania Crews' successor as host of Andrew Lack, the rela› the syndicated "Who Wants

5 p.m.on OPBPL/8 p.m. on7, "Big Blue Live" Episode two of this new three-night miniseries event features an interview with a scientist who is trying to help solve the mysteries of shark migration and to study the anatomy of elephant seals and white sharks. The hour also dives into the hidden world of Monterey Bay's sea lions and sea otters.

of NBC News — and in that

A drama as you' re going to see.

spinoff that will star Gary

(of course)

tively new (or, more ac- to Be a Millionaire" starting curately, returned) chairman Sept. 14.

see a conclusion? — Karen Erwin, Powell, Ohio You' ve seen as much of the Anna Friel-starring

Q

Bachelorette"

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

— whose brother Jay is a ma-

elorin Paradise"proves again this summer. Where did he

in 2002, "The Bachelor" first

— Send questions of general

jor creative force behind "To- appeared and gave Harrison a getherness" — can be seen in career-making job. the final season of the FXX The franchise has spawned comedy "The League" start- not only "Paradise" and its ing Sept. 9. aptly titled after-show "Af-

interest via email to tvpipeline@ gracenote.corn. Wri tersmust include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent.

8 p.m.on 5,8,"America'sGot Talent" — The live semifinals of the competition begin as a dozen of the top 24 acts perform on the stage of New York's Radio City Music Hall for judges Howie Mandel, Mel B., Heidi Klum and Howard Stern as they try to clear another hurdle toward that $1 million grand prize. Nick Cannon hosts the new episode "Semi-Finals 1." 9 p.m.on 6, "Zoo" Pursued as fugitives, Jackson (James

Walk) andthe teamfly to Zambia in search of leopard DNA that they hope will prove useful in manufacturing a cure for the aberrant behavior that' s affecting animals around the world. Getting out of the country without detection may prove tricky, however, so they turn to animal rights activist Ray Endicott (guest star Warren Christie) for assistance. Chloe (Mora Arnezeder), meanwhile, makes the ultimate sacrifice to avoid further bloodshed in the new episode "Emotional Contagion." 10 p.m. on FX, "Tyrant" The

fate of Jamal(Ashraf Barhom) and his extended family is unclear as a newday dawns in the season finale, "Pax Abuddin." Recognizing that the situation is ripe for positive change, Barry

(Adam Rayner)urges Rami

oman ecomin anunnee s rien 's interest, not er concern Dear Abby:I was best friends with "Joanne" after we met in middle

For the 15 years I have known her, she has been an open-minded, culschool. She comes from a conserva- ture-loving social butterfly, and tive Christian family and has three she doesn't seem to have changed successful siblings. This has made much personality-wise. Naturally, her quirky, media-driven pursuits her family is thrilled with her deciand city life a disappointment to sion because it means she will never her family. When we date another woman were teens and she or be a part of "that learned that I was a lifestyle." OPER

fo

rights, she came out

ABBY

to me as a lesbian, but for years only I and a few dose friends knew.

Once she was an adult and her family found out, they practically disowned her and made their dis-

approval and "shame" very clear.

I know Joanne is

templation, or will she be working to help underprivileged communities'? Does she plan to remain in the Unit-

ed States, or join an order like Mother Teresa's in some other country? If you show an interest rather

than "concern," I'm sure she will be glad to answer any questions you may have withoutbecoming offended. Dear Abby:I have recently been

an adult and these invited to my sister's baby showchoices are hers to er. The problem is I am a man. My make, but I'm afraid

mother and sister think I am sex-

she is being guilted into a life she ist for not wanting to go. I always will ultimately regret. How do I ex- thought this kind of thing was a press my concerns to her without women's event. Are my mother and being offensive'? sister right? Am I being sexist? — Kathy in New York

Dear Kathy:Before you "express problems of my own, I moved away, your concerns," I think you should and we communicated only peri- have enough respect for your odically for the last couple of years friend's intelligence to ask her what until recently. I was shocked when has prompted this life-changing deshe informed me that she is going to cision, and what it will entail. become a nun. Will she be joining an order that Abby, I have no problem with wears a habit'? (Not all nuns do anyher faith (I attend an LGBT-friend- more.) Will she be taking a vow of ly church), but I'm afraid Joanne is silence and shutting herself off from doing it for all the wrong reasons. the world for a life of prayer and conUnfortunately, due to some family

—Nathan in Indiana

Dear Nathan:You' re not necessarily sexist, but you are behind the

times. Baby showers are no longer solely women's events. In fact, because menare so much more active-

ly involved in their little ones' care than they used to be, it is becoming common for the showers to be coed affai . — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.corn or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0 and IMAX movies. • Movie times aie subject to change after press time. f

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Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 AMERICANULTRA(R) 3:15, 6:50, 9:30 ANT-MAN(PG-l3) 12: l5, 3: I 0, 705, 10:10 THE DIARYOFATEENAGEGIRL (R) 11:45 a.m., 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:55 THE GIFT(R) 11:55 a.m., 2:35, 5:10, 7:50, 10:35 HITMAN:AGENT47 (R) 11:50 a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:20, 9:50 INSIDE OUT(PG)12:10, 2:40 JURASSICWORLD(PG-13) 4:25, 7:25, 10:25 • JURASSICWORLD IMAX 3-O(PG-13)noon,3,6:45, 9:45 • THEMAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)11:35 a.m.,2:05, 4:55, 7:40, 10:40 MINIONS(PG)11:40 a.m., 2 MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROGUENATION(PG-13) I2:15, 3:35, 6:55, 10 NO ESCAPE (R) 11:45 a.m., 2:20, 4:50, 7:45, 10:25 RICKI ANO THEFLASH (PG-13) 12:20, 2:55, 5:15, 8, 10:30 SHAUN THESHEEPMOVIE (PG)11:35 a.m. SINISTER 2(R) 11:50 a.m., 2:20, 5, 7:30, 10:05 STRAIGHTOUTTACOMPTON(R) 12:05, 3:30, 7,10:15 TRAINWRECK (R) 6:40, 9:45 • WAR ROOM(PG)11:30 a.m.,2:30,7,9:50 WE AREYOURFRIENDS(R) 12:25, 3:05, 5:25, 7:55, 10:20 Accessibility devices areavailable for somemovies. t

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 SPY(R) 6 VACATION(R) 9 Younger than 21 mayattend ail screeningsifaccompanied by a legal guardian.

(Keon Alexander) to stay and oversee the transition. Leila (Moran Atias), meanwhile, cooperates with the Arab League, hoping to secure a position for Ahmed (Cameron Gharaee) and herself in the new world order. 10 p.m. on TNT, "Public Mor› als"— In the new "Family Is Family," Kay O'Bannon (Michele Hicks) asks her nephew Muldoon (Edward Burns, who also wrote and directed this episode) to find out who killed her husband. Meanwhile, the victim' s son, Sean (Austin Stowell), starts a romance with Deirdre (Lyndon Smith), the sister of his best friend, Duffy (Keith Nobbs).

Bullman (MichaelRapaport),

takes Jimmy Shea (Brian Wiles), a Public Morals rookie, to a private, illegal casino. ct zap2it

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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, SEPT. 1, 2015:This yearyouseemto be walking around with a magic wand. What you wish for often becomes reality. Know that if you focus on acertain area of your life, you will achieve positive results. If you are single, your charisma speaks. You could get involved in a life-altering relationship, which could point to a major lifestyle change. If Btsfs showthe kleig you are attached, of day you’8 hove yo u will start acting ** * * * D ynamic like newlyweds. ** * * p ositive Yo u r romantic

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

no matter which direction you head in. Tonight: Add fun to the moment.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

** * * You could be in the position of making a radical change. Your ability to handle problems will emerge nearly immediately. You tune in well to various factors and people in difficult situations. Your innate sensitivity allows you to makechoices *** Average wa ys draw in your that work. Tonight: All smiles. ** So-so significant other * Difficult even closer. ARIES LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * * Your happiness around travel, has a hot temper, a foreigner or a newadventures radiates but he or she becomes cold andanalytical off you. Though you might not be ready with you. to discusswhathashappened,the people ARIES (March21-April 19) around you will sense achange. An unex** * * Your success will be defined by pected call or conversation lights up your your ability to connect on an individual day even more. Tonight: Visit with a friend. level. You might have strong feelings about VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) a situation, but be careful about how you ** * * Someone's overture invites a verbalize your thoughts. You will surprise yourself with the outcome of a discussion. strong response, though you might choose not to share it. This person will keep tapTonight: Be spontaneous. ping on your door until you respond. Doing TAURUS (April 20-May20) nothing is not appropriate here, even if it ** You will gain more information by feels like the right move. Make anextra saying little and observing more. A family effort. Tonight: Say "yes" to living. member orlovedonekeepsseekingyou out, as he or she might have asurprise for you. This person seems to bewearing his or her feelings on his or her sleeve today. Tonight: Go for the unknown.

GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * A meeting will have acaring tone. What you see happening will be what you wished for. Be imaginative in your choices when communicating with a special person. You' ll find a receptive audience,

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) ** * * Respond positively to someone' s efforts toward you. This person is much stronger than you might realize; he or she is capable of adapting, changing and supporting him- or herself all at once. Observe him or her more carefully. Tonight: Say "yes" to a special invitation.

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21) *** * Run errandsandclear outas

much as you can. Youhavethe ability to m ake many projectsseem easy.W hen others try to follow in your footsteps, they often are overwhelmed. A person who has been in that position openly admires your ability. Tonight: Join a pal for dinner.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) ** * * * You have astrong senseof self. When you decide to go off and do your own thing, as you will today, expect a

strong response.Youseeothers asbeing unpredictable, while they tend to seeyou in the same light. Enjoy the different perceptions. Tonight: Think "weekend."

CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * * You could be at the point where you would like others to either not comment or take over what you are doing and run it the way they want. This feeling indicates that you need afew days off. Look at your calendar and schedule agetaway. Tonight: Unexpected developments.

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * * You might be taken abackan by offer from someone who cares a lot about you. You could be overwhelmed and have difficulty responding. Think carefully about

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 CARTELLAND(R) 3:30 • THEDIARY OF A TEENAGE GIRL (R)6 DIGGINGFORFIRE(R) 8:15 I

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 AMERICANULTRA(R) 6:45, 9 HITMAN:AGENT47 (R) 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 • THEMAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)2,4:30,7,9:30 • SHAUN THE SHEEP MOVIE (PG)2:45,4:45 • STRAIGHTOUTTA COMPTON (R)3,6:15,9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THEMAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)6:30 MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROGUENATION(PG-13) 6:15 • MR.HOLMES (PG)6:30 RICKI AND THEFLASH (PG-l3) 6:45 t $

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your optionsbeforeyou speakup.A spontaneous event will lead to new friendships. Tonight: Hang out.

PISCES (Feb.19-March28) ** * You might be more concerned about a financial matter than many of your associates are. You could have somedifficulty explaining a feeling and making it logical. Be aware of your idea, but don't share them with those who are cynical. Tonight: Treat yourself to a favorite food. © King Features Syndicate

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt.,541-416-1014 • THEMAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)6:15 MR. HOLMES (Upstairs — PG) 6:30 The upstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility. e

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

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Pets & Supplies

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Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Art, Jewelry & Furs

Building Materials

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Sales Northeast Bend

Hay, Grain 8 Feed

Deposit c a n s/bottles G ENERATE SOM E needed for local all EXCITEMENT in your volunteer, non-profit neighborhood! Plan a cat rescue. Donate at garage sale and don' t Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 forget to advertise in E Bend; Petco i n classified! R edmond; Smi t h 541-385-5809. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; CRAFT in Tu- WHIRLPOOL CABRIO malo. Can pick up washer and d r yer, large amts. 389-8420. never used, still in boxes. $1000 for both. www.craftcats.org Antique wicker baby German Shepherds bassinet/buggy, $100. www.sherman-ranch.us Call 541-408-9813, or Quality. 541-281-6829 706-851-7881 Looking for a standard poodle to breed my The Bulletin female t o . Call recommends extra 541-576-2809. I oa ton pe n p r chasing products or s POODLE pups, services from out of I toy or mini, f the area. Sending f 541-475-3889 ' cash, checks, o r ' Queens/and Heelers I credit i n f o rmation may be subjected to Standard 8 Mini, $150 & up. 541-280-1537 I FRAUD. For more www.rightwayranch.wor information about an f dpress.corn advertiser, you may I / call t h e Or e gon / Siberian Husky pup- ' State Atto r ney ' pies, AKC, shots, I General's O f fi ce $1000+. 541-815-8147 Consumer Protec541-536-5844. tion h o t line a t I i 1-877-877-9392. 210 Furniture & Appliances f The Bulletin >

Bend Habitat Looking for your ** FREE ** RESTORE Desperately Seeking next employee? 3 salmon, steel› Supply Resale Garage Sale Kit Missing 1940s dia- Building 541-312-6709 Place a Bulletin head fishing poles, Place an ad in The m ond ring sold a t Abu Garcia, + Peat Mixes help wanted ad Bend Pawn approx. 224 NE Thurston Ave. B ulletin fo r yo u r Browning 8 Berkley, Open to the public. + Juniper Ties today and Sept.13-17, 2014 has sale and receive a $40 each.3 casting + Paver Discounts reach over central diamond and 2 G arage Sal e K i t 202 reels, Daiwa, Abu Sisters Habitat ReStore + Sand + Gravel little side stones, one FREE! 60,000 readers Want to Buy or Rent Garcia, $25-$35 is missing. Sz. 7.5. Building Supply Resale + Bark each week. each. Call for de541-213-1221 Please Quality items. Instanttandscaping.corn I KIT INCLUDES: Your classified ad 541 -389-9663 tails. 503-936-1778 keep trying! Will pay LOW PRICES! 4 Garage Sale Cash paidfor wood will also L any reasonable price. 150 N. Fir. dressers; dead washSigns appear on 541-549-1621 $2.00 Off Coupon ers and dryers 270 Fine art, gallery quality, bendbulletin.corn Open to the public. 541-420-5640 To Use Toward certified a ppraisals, Lost & Found which currently Your Next Ad Wanted: $Cash paid for private coll ector, receives over 10 Tips For 266 vintage costume jewdealers welcome! Call FOUND fishing tackle at 1.5 million page "Garage Sale to set up appointment. Heating & Stoves elry. Top dollar paid for Crane Prairie O outviews every Success!" 54'I -548-7860 Gold/Silver. I buy by the let/dam, the week of month at no 50 BM G A r malite NOTICE TO Estate, Honest Artist August 21st. Call to ID extra cost. rifle, single shot bolt 255 PICK UP YOUR Elizabeth,541-633-7006 ADVERTISER 541-419-1407 Bulletin GARAGE SALE KIT gun, exc. cond., low Computers Since September 29, Classifieds 205 md. count. Very accuFOUND o n Fr i day, at 1777 SW Chan1991, advertising for rate, great m uzzle T HE B ULLETIN r e Get Results! Items for Free used woodstoves has young female calico, dler Ave., Bend, OR break, light recoil, 20 quires computer ad- been limited to mod- short-haired. Call to 97702 Call 541-385-5809 gauge maybe, HD ID. 541-330-6923 541-385-5809 or place your ad vertisers with multiple Free pears off which have been bi-pod 8 H D c a rry ad schedules or those els on-line at of our tree! certified by the O r- LOST: 2 kayak paddies The Bulletin bag. 60 loaded rnds. selling multiple sys- egon Department of Serving Cenrrai Oregon sinceigpp bendbulletin.corn 541-388-4687 South Twin Lake on included. C o mplete tems/ software, to dis- Environmental Qual- at Saturday 8/22. Please loading set up avail. close the name of the ity (DEQ) and the fed- call 541-536-5578 Notice fo our People Lookfor Information w/ comp o nents. business or the term eral E n v ironmental valued readers! About Products and $2,950. 503-781-8812 "dealer" in their ads. Protection A g e ncyLost: Aug. 8 from EmServices Every Daythrough Private party advertis- (EPA) as having met pire near OB Riley For newspaper The ffvlletin Classiffeds AR-15 St a garms ers are defined as smoke emission stan- peach-faced Lovebird, delivery questions, 5.56, long range barthose who sell one dards. A cer t ified looks like small parrot, please call the green body, answers 341 rel with BDX scope computer. w oodstove may b e Circulation Dept. to "Wednesday". + ammo. $1,000. identified by its certifiHorses & Equipment 260 at 541-385-5800 11-87 Rem i ngton Serving Central Oregon since fggp cation label, which is 541-385-8367 Misc. Items Premiere 12 gauge permanently attached Lost prescription glasses To place an ad, call auto-load, 2 stocks, to the stove. The Bul- in black hard case in325 541-385-5809 212 Buying Diamonds (camo & wood), like letin will not know- side bright clip-on soft or email Hay, Grain & Feed Antiques & new, $650. Call Mike /Gold for Cash ingly accept advertiscase at a free garage classified @bendat 541-610-7656 Saxon's Fine Jewelers ing for the sale of Collectibles s ale, 8/21 O 6 7 7 7 First Quality green grass bulletin.corn 541-389-6655 uncertified 66th Pl., Redmond, hay, no rain, barn stored, H orse T r ailer 1 6 ’ Wanted: Old Bend local dealer pays woodstoves. 541-408-5136 The Bulletin 3-piece hardwood wall Antiques BUYING $250/ton. Gooseneck 1 9 8 9 tools, beer cans, fishCASH!!For firearms & Lionel/American Flyer Call 541-549-3831 unit, 91nLx79 nH, glass Just bought a new boat? dual axle donated to ing/sports gear, ammo. 541-526-0617 267 trains, accessories. Patterson Ranch, Sisters shelves, $400 obo. Pre-'40s B/W photogSell your old one in the Equine Ou t r each. Home Brewers! Free 541-408-2191. Fuel & Wood classifieds! Ask about our 541-526-1879 CASH!! Second c u t ting o r- 'I 2,000 GVW, 7X16, hops! You pick. raphy, marbles, Breyer Super Seller rates! For Guns, Ammo & BUYING & SE LLING 541-548-7137 chard grass mix, small 23' overall length, 6 animals. 541-389-1578 541-385-5809 Reloading Supplies. All gold jewelry, silver 1/2' tall, slider/swing 7 piece be droom bales, $220/ton, no WHEN BUYING 541-408-6900. and gold coins, bars, Lost: "Spencer", Male rain. 5 4 1 -420-9736 rear door, tack shelf, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! set, $350. 1 roll top Need to get an rounds, wedding sets, FIREWOOD... mid-swing door, paddesk & chair, $300. Golden Retriever off Madras, Oregon Central Oregon's ad in ASAP? rings, sterling silded walls with new PT Door-to-door selling with 1 hall tree, $200. 2 Brosterhous (on the Wheat Straw for Sale. To avoid fraud, Largest Gun & Knife class ver, coin collect, vinYou can place it S. side o f B e nd). Also, weaner pigs. deck. $$3,995 Call The Bulletin fast results! It's the easiest leather chair reclinShow! Sept. 5, Sat tage watches, dental recommends Wearing silver choke Gary 541-480-6130 e rs, $ 30 0 bo t h . 9-5 Sept. 6, Sun 9-3 pay› online at: way in the world to sell. 541-546-6171 gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-504-9945 chain. Reddish-golden ment for Firewood County Fair 541-382-9419. www.bendbulletin.corn Deschutes color. Call/Text An& Expo Center only upon delivery The Bulletin Classified Sell an Item drea 541.610.8871 The Bulletin is your and inspection. Admission $6.00! 541-385-5809 Miscellaneous 541 -385-5809 A cord is 128 cu. ft. 503-363-9564 Employment 4' x 4' x 8' wesknodelgunshows.corn camping e q uip› 208 ment & Competitor The Bulletin reserves Receipts should Marketplace School Muscle exerPets & Supplies the right to publish all Coast 12 gauge 28" REMEMBER: If you include name, i pump, $200. Good. cise bench comphave lost an animal, ads from The Bulletin phone, price and Call Win. ¹100 22" 308, If it's under$500 letee with weights. don't forget to check newspaper onto The kind of wood Beautiful designer The Bulletin recom$450. Good. Call f o r pr i ces The Humane Society Bulletin Internet webpurchased. sectional you can place it in mends extra caution Savage 99 300 w/ 3x9 5 413 8 5 5 8 0 9 and/or p i c tures. Firewood ads site. Bend when purc has- Excellent condition The Bulletin scope, $400. Fair. 702-249-2567 (Sun541-382-3537 MUST include $850 ing products or serOBO, call Jim river). to advertise. The Bulletin Redmond species & cost per Classifieds for: 503-781-5265 serving Centrat(tragon since igta vices from out of the 541-977-3091 541-923-0882 cord to better serve area. Sending cash, Oneida King C e dric Madras our customers. Wonderful bas e ball www.bendbulletin.corn $1 0 - 3 lines, 7 days checks, or credit insterling silverware, 30 541-475-6889 card coll e ction! f ormation may b e Prineville p ieces. $1400 . The Bulletin 1978-91. Topps, full $16 3 lines, 14 days subjected to fraud. Serving Central Cregon sinceIgta 541-475-4618 541-447-7178 sets, + many other For more informaor Craft Cats sets, individual cards (Private Party ads only) Serving Central Oregonsince fgla tion about an adver541-389-8420 of Mantel/Mays, Artiser, you may call All year Dependable 15 0 0 300 + o t her stars. Howa the O regon State Bedroom set 3-piece ron Firewood: dry Call Win. Mag. New, never Attorney General' s Flanders Maple, good $950. Lodgepole, split, del, 541-729-1677 or fired. W o o d stock, Office C o nsumer condition. Full s i ze email 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . barrel and Protection hotline at bed w/like new Sim- dbwassom@gmail.corn. stainless Multi-cord discounts! action. Great deer or 1-877-877-9392. Beautiful Classical cash, check, Visa, MC mons pillow top matelk gun , b a rgain Persian rug from 541-420-3484, Bend tress 8 box springs. 215 priced-wife says sell The Bulletin Original Karastan Night stand and 45" Serving central Oregon sincetgta :-) $6 5 0 . Call dresser. $400 for all C oins & Stamps collection, 9'x5.9", Ponderosa pine fire541-389-3694, leave exc. condition. including bedding. wood split, $160 or message. Private collector buying 541-548-8425 A $2000 value, trade. 541-419-1871 postagestamp albums & selling for $1000 Brand new p edestal collections, world-wide John Wayne com541-788-4229 269 sink, never removed and U.S. 573-286-4343 memorative holster (local, cell phone). from box! Paid $325, and gun belt set, Sunvision tanning bed, Gardening Supplies asking $200. Model JW81, unit ¹ & Equipment 245 must see to appreci"Bug" Puppies for 541-536-5578 711 of only 3,000. ate! 325 hrs. on 1500 G olf Equipment sale. Father is AKC New in box w/ all hr. l a mps. $500. registered Boston ter- Dining room set, ebony For newspaper orig. printed mate541-385-9318 delivery, call the rier and mother full table ha s b e v eled CHECK YOURAD rial incl. certificate glass cover, 36" high, Pug. Vet check and Circulation Dept. at signed by Michael a 263 541-385-5800 first shots, available x41 widex57" long. Wayne. Perfect conTools shelf under table for after Labor Day. $450 To place an ad, call dition. $ 795 . s torage o r kni c k541-385-5809 each. See JZ Pups 541-420-5184 Complete OxyaceTyfacebook site for more knacks 4 upholstered or email lene welding ouffit stools. Almost new, classifiedCibendbtil etin.corn pics. 541-589-0171 M onday, 9/7..............................W ednesday,9/2,4pm on the first day it runs WANTED: Collector w/tanks, $175. paid $900 sell f or to make sure it is cor- seeks high quality fish- 541-310-0343 Chihuahua pups tea- $450. 541-953-9256 The Bulletin At Home, 9/8.............................W ednesday,9/2,4pm serving Central Cregon since fgta n and rect. nSpellcheck cup 1st shots, dewing items 8 upscale fly human errors do oc- rods. 541-678-5753, or Craftsman Heavy duty Tuesday 9/8................................. Thursday, 9/3, Noon ormed, $ 2 00-$250. c onstruction tab l e cur. If this happens to 541-420-1068 503-351-2746 Wednesday, 9/9................................ Friday, 9/4, Noon saw, used very little. BULLETINCLASSIFIE0$ your ad, please conS ell for $300 . Search the area's most 's 247 tact us ASAP so that 541-280-5114. corrections and any comprehensive listing of CULSS IFIEDLINERDHLDLINES: Sporting Goods adjustments can be classified advertising... - Misc. Tuesday, 9/8 ................................................Friday, 9/4 Frigidaire- Gallery Se› Milling Machine made to your ad. real estate to automotive, ries gl a ss-top self 541-365-5809 Clausing3/4HP, 3 merchandise to sporting 1970 Pool table, Classified s541-385-5809 cleaning range, like The Bulletin Classified phase, speeds 180 goods. Bulletin Classifieds Dachshundsminilong- new $300. to 3250, 3" spindle appear every day in the haired AKC. $500 & up Whirlpool refrigerator, "LIKE NEW" 2 rounds like new. Balls and travel, 6"x24" bed, 4 cue sticks print or on line. 541-598-7417 cubed or crushed ice played Adam's Idea included. Slate top, has approx.a dimenCall 541-385-5809 Deere Chihuahua/Pom and water in the door, Combo irons. 3-4-5 sions 36 x40". www.bendbulletin.corn felt is in new mix, wellness exam + like new, $5 50 . In H.B. 6-TW GRPH SR $2500 f irst s h ots, $ 3 5 0. Madras, please call s hafts, $36 0 o b o . condition. $750. 503-866-8858 The BuHetin

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We wil lbeclosedonLaborDay,Monday,SePt.7,2015 RETAIL8t CLASSIFIEDDISPULVADVERTISING DAY DEADLINE

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951-454-2561

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ServingCentral Oregon sinceigtg


E2 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 THE BULLETIN

41.3$1.5$0I

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.b d b

ti Opportunities

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday Tuesday. Wednesday Thursday

5:00 pm Fri .Noon Mon. Noon Tues.

Noon Wed. Friday. Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday Sunday.

... . . . .

Hydrologic rech Ill

Starting at 3 lines

OVER '500 intotal merchandise

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 26 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

lcall for commercial line ad rates)

Houses for Rent General

LThe Bulletin g

Course in Redm ond, OR is looking for a line cook! Do you have experience cooking or just have fun cooking for others? If this sounds like an opportunity you could sink your teeth into, we'd like to hear from you! For more details, contact Lee Harlow at 541-548-3121 X301 or Iharlow @playjuniper.corn.

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave Bend, Oregon 97702

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limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children

TRUCK DRIVER WANTED Must have doubles endorsement. Local run. 541-475-4221, eves 541- 419-7247

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!

OREGON MEDICAL TRAINING Phlebotomy Classes Sept. 1 to Nov. 23,

www.oregonmedical training.corn 541-343-3100

Call 385-5809

or place

Check out the classifieds online www.bendbtdfetin.corn Updated daily PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the fir st day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction l is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right I p iu nt b e r I to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these l JOUrne newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.

your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn

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pre f erence,

850

Snowmobiles

Yamaha V Star 1100 Classic, year 2004, -Many extras. 17K miles. $4800. 541-548-2109

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

under the age of 18 866 living with parents or ATVs legal cus t odians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper 4-place enclosed Interwill not knowingly ac- state snowmobile trailer cept any advertising w/ RockyMountain pkg, for real estate which is $7500. 541-379-3530 Polaris S p o rtsman in violation of the law. 500, year 2000-Tires O ur r e aders a r e Call The Bulletin At tubed. 61 8 H o urs, hereby informed that 541-385-5809 all dwellings adver- Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 2900 miles. $3500. tised in this newspa- At: www.bendbulletin.corn 541-548-2109 per are available on 870 an equal opportunity 860 basis. To complain of Boats & Accessories d iscrimination ca l l Motorcycles & Accessories 12' Valco alum. on HUD t o l l-free at 1-800-877-0246. The trailer 9.9 J ohnson toll f re e t e lephone 0/B, plus amenities, exc. shape. $1250. number for the hear541-549-8126 ing i m p aired is 1-800-927-9275. 14' aluminum boat w/ Harley 2003, Dyna trailer. Trailer has 2 wide glide, 100th An- brand new tires 8 Baal 5@Re9s n iversary mod e l . wheels. Trailer in exc. 13,400 orig. mi., cus- cond., guaranteed no [/goy ®)[]g tom paint, new bat- leaks. 2 upholstered tery, lots of extras, swivel seats, no moshow cond. Health tor. $2,900. f orces sale. W a s 541-410-4066 $11,000 OBO, now $8,000 firm.

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541-633-7856 360-815-6677

705

Needed for New

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Real Estate Services

476

Employment Opportunities

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All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t 805 which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any Misc. Items preference, limitation or disc r imination5250 Falcon tow bar, based on race, color, $150; Guardian, $75; religion, sex, handi- box of misc. $60; 4 cap, familial status, tire covers 22.5, $25; marital status or na- Will take $250 for evtional origin, or an in- erything. tention to make any 541-852-5843

I the area. SendingI

I 1-877-877-9392.

llotorcycles & Accessories

PUBLISHER' S NOTICE

chasing products or I services from out of e

I

Place a photo inyourprivate party ad for only $15.00par week.

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00 *llllust state prices in ad

I

3 :00 pm Fri.Juniper Golf

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

Employment Opportunities

c ash, checks, o r This position is located I credit i n f ormation in Chiloquin. I may be subjected to FRAUD. For more information For more informacontact: tion about an adverThe Kiamath Tribes I tiser, you may call PO Box 436 the Oregon State Chifoquin, OR97624 jobs@klamathtribes.corn I Attorney General's www.klamathtribes.org e Office C o n s umer e 541-783-2219 x 113 l Protection hotline atl

5:00 pm Fri

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

648

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$30,454-$43,501 Full Benefits Prof. Mgt., Regular, Full time

TO PLACE AN ADCALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809 860

476

Start im m ediately! Good pay/ ben e fitS.

I

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

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For Sale by O wner: 14’ Lund aluminum 1200 sq. foot home, fishing boat, 8 HP attached garage on Loans & Mortgages Mercury e n g ine, large lot. 3 bedroom, long shaft. $2,500. 2 bath. Eastside off WARNING H arley Road K i ng Keyte Ln. AS IS sale Classic 2003, 100th 702-249-2567 (SunThe Bulletin recomriver) mends you use cau- $300,000. Anniversary Edition, 541-419-7428 tion when you pro16,360 mi., reduced vide personal $9,999. 541-647-7078 5 I information to compaI Say "goodbuy" nies offering loans or credit, especially to that unused SBM, 40, pro. seeks those asking for aditem by placing it in SF, friendship © C,S. vance loan fees or Wimberly ¹10571327, companies from out of The Bulletin Classifieds 3920 E. Ashwood Rd., state. If you have Madras OR 97741 concerns or quesMoto Guzzi Breva 541-3B5-5B09 tions, we suggest you St. Jude’s Novena 1 100 2007, o n l y May the Sacred Heart consult your attorney 11,600 miles. or call CONSUMER of Jesus be adorned, $5,500. HOTLINE, glorified, loved and 206-679-4745 H omes for Sale 1-877-877-9392. preserved throughout the world, now and BANK TURNED YOU NOTICE forever. Sacred Heart DOWN? Private party All real estate adverof Jesus, pray for us. will loan on real es- tised here in is subSt. Jude, worker of tate equity. Credit, no ject to th e F ederal miracles, pray for us. problem, good equity Fair Housing A c t, St. Jude help of the is all you need. Call which makes it illegal hopeless, pray for us. Oregon Land Mort- to advertise any pref- V ictory T C 2 0 0 2 , Say this prayer 9 gage 541-388-4200. erence, limitation or 40K mi., runs great, times a day by the 8th LOCAL MONEyrWe buy discrimination based s tage 1 kit, n e w day, your prayer will be answered, say it secured trust deeds & on race, color, reli- tires, rear brakes & for 9 days and it has note, some hard money gion, sex, handicap, more. Health forces loans. Call Pat Kellev familial status or na- s ale. $3,5 0 0 . never failed. Publica541-382-3099 ext.13. tional origin, or inten- 541-771-0665 tion must be promtion to make any such ised. MJ preferences, l imitations or discrimination. Bnl aRnlh We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed Call 54 i -385-580 9 that all dwellings adto r o m ot e o u r service vertised are available 627 on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulle- Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Vacation Rentals tin Classified & Exchanges NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law Beautiful furn. spacious who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all Redmond Homes 1bdrm, 2bath condo, construction work to businesses that adFP, balcony, pets ok. be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form 7th Mtn Resort, Bend. Looking for your next Construction Contrac- Landscape ConstrucAvail 10/1/1 5-4/30/1 6. tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: $1750 incl. all utils. Placeemp/oyee? active license p lanting, deck s , Bulletin help Int-cable, etc. Use of wanteda ad means the contractor fences, arbors, today and amenities, pool, spa, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inreach over 60,000 etc. 541-815-7707 Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irreaders each week. CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be Your classified ad www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e Take care of will also appear on contractor.corn Landscape Contracbendbulletin.corn your investments or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit which currently reThe Bulletin recom- number is to be inwith the help from ceives over mends checking with cluded in all adverThe Bulletin's 1.5 million page the CCB prior to con- tisements which indiviews every month "Call A Service tracting with anyone. cate the business has at no extra cost. Some other t rades a bond, insurance and Professional" Directory Bulletin Classifieds also req u ire addi- workers c ompensaGet Results! tional licenses and tion for their employCall 385-5809 or 632 cert ifications. ees. For your protecad on-line tion call 503-378-5909 AptiMultiplex General place your at Handyman or use our website: bendbulletin.corn www.lcbistate.or.us to CHECKYOUR AD check license status I DO THAT! before contracting with Home/Rental repairs 763 the business. Persons Small jobs to remodels Recreational Homes doing lan d scape Honest, guaranteed maintenance do not & Property work. CCB¹151573 r equire an LC B l i Dennis 541-317-9768 on the first day it runs Cabin in the woods on cense. to make sure it is cor- trout stream, private, LandscapingNard Care rect. "Spellcheck" and off the grid, 80 mi. Painting/Wall Covering human errors do ocBend. 638 ac. cur. If this happens to from $849K. Fo r d r o ne KC WHITE your ad, please con- v ideo li n k , call PAINTING LLC tact us ASAP so that 541-480-7215. Interior and Exterior corrections and any L'a~< C'~ r,. Family-owned adjustments can be Residential & Commercial Full Service made to your ad. 40 yrs exp. Sr. Discounts Manufactured/ 541-385-5809 Landscape 5-year warranties The Bulletin Classified Mobile Homes Management SUMMER SPECIAL! Call 541-420-7846 Senior ApartmentList your Home CCB ¹20491 8 Fire Protection Independent Living JandfyfHomes.corn and Fuels Reduction ALL-INCLUSIVE We Have Buyers Tall Grass with 3 meals daily FIND YOURFUTURE Get Top Dollar Low Limbs 2 Bedrooms Available Financing Available. HOME INTHE BULLETIN Brush and Debris NOW. Check it out! 541-548-5511 Call 541-460-5323 Your future isjust a page Protect your home with away.Whetheryou're looking 634 defensible space for a hat or aplaceto hangit, AptiMultiplex NE Bend The BulletinClassified is 528

CDL DRIVERS Fishing CDL Truck Driver WANTED Fishing Alaska - at sea I Needed. We have i mmediate BeringSea/Guffof AK I Company Van.I openings a t our (54K per Year) CDL Employment Inf o . Cail G a r y at Truck driver needed. P rineville, OR a n d Meeting Sept. 4, Noon I Sunlfnlt Our wood chip and Portland, OR l o caComfort Inn & Suites Plumbing 421 tions. Full or part time lumber drivers averRedmond, OR Airport I positions offering op- age 54K annually 2243 SW 'yew Ave - I 5 4 1 4 10 1655 Schools 8 Training portunities in multiple (.48 cent ave). Ott more info on Twitter, l divisions, competitive weekends, Paid va@FishFinest HTR Truck School R edmond M e m o cation, health insurhourly wages, flexible REDMOND CAMPUS For 35 years Food Service - Bruno' s work schedule, paid Our Grads Get Jobs! /U-bake is taking Country Side Living of 1-888<38-2235 vacation, bonus pro- we have serviced G rocer Eastern O r e gon, apps. f o r par t -time WWW.HTR.EDU gram, medical/dental Central wil l be Ore g on, Cashier & Pizza Maker. Redmond benefits & 401K opening in October Southern O r e gon A p ply in Person at: 1709 w/employer m a tch. 2015 yye are h~/rfn Find exactly what We are a family ori- and the Boise Val- NE 6th,Bend. No phone fora//positions you are looking for in the ented company and ley and you can live calls. CLASSIFIEDS work hard to get our in any of these locadrivers home most Just too many trysideliving.corn, and nights and weekends. download the applica476 collectibles? Kenworths all 550 Call or e-mail for more tion. Please send your cats with 13 speeds, Employment information, p hone: application and/or reour trailers are CurSell them in 541-977-6362, e-mail: Opportunities sume as an attachtin vans (no tarps to lindseyw I whhsmaf The Bulletin Classifieds ment to your emailed deal with) 4 0 -23 .corn response to doubles year around CAUTION: kathys@coun› work. We our look54 $ - 3 S 5 . 5SO9 Ads published in trysideliving.corn Where can youfind 8 ing for long term "Employment Opdrivers, our average portunities" include helping hand? employee h a s I General employee and indeorked for us f or pendent positions. From contractors to w over 8 years. So if ~ Ads for p o sitions yard care, it's all here you are looking for a that require a fee or upfront investment home, give us a call in The Bulletin's 541.523.9202 must be stated. With / * Great Supplemental Income!! " / any independent job "Call A Service opportunity, please Drivers Needed! Full I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I i nvestigate tho r - Professional" Directory time day shift, apply at $ day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI currently have openings all nights of the week. oughly. Use extra 1919 NE Second St. / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts caution when apstart between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and plying for jobs onHome Delivery Advisor between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoline and never proThe Bulletin Circuiation Department is seeking / end sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. vide personal infora Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI mation to any source position and consists of managing an adult g minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI you may not have carrier force to ensure our customers receive are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of researched and superior service. Must be able to create and / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackdeemed to be repuperform strategic plans to meet department ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and table. Use extreme objectives such as increasing market share / other tasks. c aution when r e and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a s ponding to A N Y self-starter who can work both in the office IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl online employment and in their assigned territory with minimal / including life insurance, short-term & long-term ad from out-of-state. supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. We suggest you call with company vehicle provided. Strong the State of Oregon customer service skills and management skills Consumer Hotline a completed application are necessary. Computer experience is ~ Please submit at 1-503-378-4320 attention Kevin Eldred. required. You must pass a drug screening Applications are available at The Bulletin For Equal Opportuand be able to be insured by company to drive nity Laws contact front desk (1 777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we an electronic application may be obtained Oregon Bureau of elieve in p r omoting from w i thin, s o Labor & I n dustry, b upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via advancement within company is available to email (keldred Ibendbulletin.corn). Civil Rights Division, the right person. If you enjoy dealing with 971-673- 0764. people from diverse backgrounds and you are No phone calls please. have great organizational skills and The Bulletin energetic, interpersonal communication skills, please * No resumes will be accepted * 541-385-5809 send your resume to: The Bulletin Drug test is required prior to employment. c/o Kurt Muller Add your web address EOE. PO Box 6020 to your ad and readBend, OR 97708-6020 ers on The Buiietin's or e-mail resume to: The Bulletin web site, www.bend5<rvrsacentral oregon since 19IB kmuller@bendbulletin.corn bulletin.corn, will be No phone calls, please. able to click through The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE automatically to your Pre-emp/oymenf drug screen required. website.

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This position is full-time 4 days per week, 10 hours per day, from 3:30 p.m. to approximately 2:00 am on a rotating schedule that will allow for every other weekend being 3 days off. ~7 0 U B I I

1-2 years web press experience Move and lift 50 Ibs or more on a continuing basis Reaching, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. Ability to learn and execute appropriate safety practices Successfully pass a drug screen If you are a self-motivated, teamoriented individual and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU! Send your resume to anelson@bendbulletin.corn

Applications are also available at The Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702 Western Communications, inc. and their affiliated companies, is proud to be an equal opportunity

employer,supporting a drug-free workplace No agencies or telephone

ca//s p/ease.

Enterprise Pfafforms Supervisor

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Les Schwab Tire Centers is seeking an Enterprise Plafforms Supervisor responsible for design and implementation of enterprise-wide, scalable technologies to support overall corporate IT operations and ensure the stability of

the company's mission critical technology

platforms. This is a new position requiring a highly motivated leader with robust infrastructure experience and demonstrated success at developing and leading a technical team, managing budgets, and delivering projects on time and on budget.

Ideal candidates will have a Bachelor's degree in Computer Science, Information Systems, Engineering, or a related field and at least seven years' IT experience, with 2+ years' experience managing people. Please visit www.lesschwab.corn/careers to view a full job description and apply. This position is located at Les Schwab's Headquarters in beautiful Bend, Oregon. 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. W e' ve grown from one s tore and 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. Les Schwab is proud io be an equal opportunity employer.

Faded Qua/re I

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Only a few left! Two 8 Three Bdrms with Washer/Dryer and Patio or Deck. (One Bdrms also avail.) fyfountain Glen Apts 541.383.931 3 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

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

Where buyers meet sellers

You know what they say about "one man's trash". There's a whole pile of "treasure" here!

Classyleds Thousands ofadsdaily in print andonline. a

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Landscape

your bestsource. Every daythousandsof buyersandsellers of goods and services do business in these pages.Theyknow can't beatTheBulletin Fertilizer included with you ClassifiedSectionfor monthly program selectionandconvenience -every itemisjust aphone Ciean-Ups call away. Its not to late to have a Beautiful Landscape The ClassifiedSectionis easy touse.Every item WeedFree Bark is categorizedandevery & FlowerBeds cartegory isindexedonthe section's frontpage. Lawn Restoration Whether youare lookingfor Experienced ahomeor needa service, Commercial your future is inthepagesof & Residential The BulletinClassified. Free Estimates Maintenance

Full or Partial Service Mowing ~Edging Pruning .Weeding Sprinkler Adjustments

Senior Discounts 541-390-1466

Same Day Response

The Bulletin serving centraloregon sinceres


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C L U B Tuesday, september 1,2015

Great gentleman

ACROSS

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By FRANK STEWART

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Tribune Content Agency

One of my regrets is that I never got to have a game with Norman Kay, one of the great gentlemen in the h i story o f bri d g e a n d a magnificent player. Kay was West in today's deal from a Team Trials. Against South's four spades he led the ten of diamonds, and East, Edgar Kaplan, took the ace and shifted to a t rump: nine, ten, king. Declarercashed the A-K of hearts, ruffed a heart, ruffed a diamond in dummy and led the jack of h earts. W h e n E a s t' s q u een covered, declarer chose to discard his last diamond. W hat d o y ou su p p ose K a y discarded?

your right, opens two spades (weak). Suppose you pass. Your pattern is ideal, but you l ack the high-card values to act. After two passes, your partner doubles. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner should have opening values to double, even in the "balancing" seat. Game is l i kely. Cue-bid three spades. If he bids 3NT or four hearts, pass. If he bids four of a minor suit, you must guess whether to raise. East dealer Neither side vidnerable NORTH 49 K4

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He threw the ace of clubs! Kaplan then led the king of clubs and another club, and no matter what South did, Kay would score his jack of trumps for the setting trick. South could have survived by discarding the nine of clubs on the fourth heart. He would have survived against many Wests

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By Mark Btckham '2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

09/01/15


THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809 870

880

870

Boats & Accessories Boats & Accessories

881

Moto r homes

Travel Trailers

0

00

16’2"

1984 Citation and trailer, I/O Alpha1

16'6" 2005 Tracker Targa V16 boat. 60

HP 4-stroke Mercury motor & 8 HP 4-stroke motor, Minnkota fowl mounted, foot c ontrolled motor, Lowranges fish finder, top & fold and close top. $17,500. Ask about extras. 541-632-2676.

16’

Lowe,

Get your business

¹t 6 05

The Bulletin

Servin Central Ore on since19D3

Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 Radio & Tower. 16' Smoker Craft — Great family boat f ishing boat, 50 H P Priced to sell. Yamaha ou t board $11,590. motor w/electric tilt & 541-548-0345. electric trolling motor w/remote control 875 mounted on bow, walk Watercraft through w i ndshield, exc. cond. $8,500. ds published in "Wa 541-233-6223 tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal waterc rafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Talon, 60HP Merc 4 stroke, 55 lb. thrust Minnkota trolling motor with remote. 4 pedestal seats with storage, E-Z loader trailer. This boat is in exc. cond. throughout, very little use. Garaged. Top and full cover. Turn-key, all you need is a fish› ing pole! Price Reduced! Now $14,750.

Serving Central Oregonsince 1903

880

Motorhomes

Winnebago Outlook 2007 Class"C" 31 ', clean, non- smoking exc. cond. Must See! Lots of extra's, a very good buy.$47,900 For more info call 541-447-9268

I 17' SunCraft, 2 motors. $1,400. 541-593-7257

r : - -' — v I+ I

=

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I I

S outhwind F o r d Fleetwood motor› home, 19 9 4, 3 2', gasoline, 82K miles, Good con d ition, obo. $7,000 503-807-5490

Stow Master 5000 by Tow Master. $350. Generator exhaust system, Gen Turi, with case. $ 7 5 . 503-936-1778

, me› Winnebago 22’ 2002 - $28,000 Chevy 360, heavy duty chassis, cab 8 roof A/C, tow hitch w/brake, 22k mi., more! 541-280-3251

541-977-2972

Automobiles

Automobiles

'I

’ ll $45,000 Beautiful Beach Cottage, million dollar view! See Craigslist/Bend, enter 5092619794. Call 541-390-9723

Winnebago Journey

2001 36' 2nd owner, 300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 80k miles. D r iver s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat screen TVs, refer, generator, inverter, King Dome, tow bar. Non-smoker, no pets, no c hildren. C lean, an d w e l l maintained, $43,000 541-390-1472. 881

Travel Trailers

18’ 2 003 S u n ( Cruiser - pontoon ~ boat, fully equipped. ~ 83 Has only been used AvrX a handful of times & •t ~ has been in covered ~ ( storage. As king Ampex. 2011. Slide ~ $13,000. Call Wen- ~ Allegro 32’ 2007, like 19' out and other extras.

new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, Skw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driver door 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, w/power window, cruise, great shape, call for exhaust brake, central info. $6M500. In Bend vac, satellite sys. Re› 661-644-0384. duced price: $64,950. 503-781-8812

a g

19' C lassic 1 9 90 Mastercraft ski boat. Beaver Contessa 40’› Pro-star 190 conven- 2008, four slide dietional in-board, cussel pusher. Loaded, tom trailer, exc. cond. great condition. War$8,995. 541-389-6562 ranty. Pictures/info at www.fourstarbend.corn 541-647-1236

Tows well $12,500. 541.3'I 6.1367

RVision C r ossover 2013, 19ft, exc. Well

equipped, $ 11,500.

19’ Willie Predator, 175 HP sport jet, 160 hours. Also 9.9 Yamaha tro l l ing motor with Garmin TR-1 aut o - pilot, Scotty electric down riggers & accessoD i scovery ries, dual batteries Fleetwood 40' 2003, diesel, w/all with selector switch. options - 3 slide outs, Full canvas & storsatellite, 2 TV's, W/D, age cover, always etc., 34,000 miles. stored inside. Wintered in h eated $19,500. shop. $78,995 obo. 541-480-9277 541-447-8664

Keystone Cougar 2013 21’ Slide-out, power awning, power hitch lift, exc. condition $21,500. 707-484-3518, in Bend

(located © Bend) 541-288-3333

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin Silver Streak Sabre 17' 1963 beautifully restored, vertical grain fir cabinets, shower, toilet, kitchen s ink, stove & refrigerator. Better built than an Airstream! $10,500. 541-350-4077

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

Must see! 541-598-7940

1/5 share in very nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 Cessna 150 with Lycoming 0-320 150 hp engine conversion, 4000 hours. TT airframe. Approx. 400 hours o n 0- t imed 0-320. Hangared in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One of very few C-150's that has never been a t rainer. $4500 w i l l consider trades for whatever. C all J im Frazee, 541-410-6007

1974 Bellanca

Excellent condition ~Always hangared One owner for 35 years.

$40,000.

In Madras,

call 541-475-6302

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville.

Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500 Tom, 541.788.5546

Jeep CJ5 4x41967, first year of the orig. Dauntless V-6, last year of the "All metal" body! Engine overhauled: new brakes, fuel pump, steering gear box, battery, alternator, emergency brake pads, gauges, Ford Explorer Sport warn hubs, dual ex2011, 6 cyl. auto., haust, 5 wide traction 4WD, 3rd seat, tires, 5 new spoke, $21,995. 541-598-5111 chrome wheels. NO rust, garage stored. $7,495 OBO! (775) 513-0822

Cougar 27.9 RKS 2015 5t h W h eel. Like new, loaded, automatic leveling jacks, Polar package, everything you need to take on a trip, hitch included. $33,900 or best reasonable offer. 541-815-3076.

Laredo 31’2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,

hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or refinance. Call 541-410-5649

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

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

Lance Squire 4 000, 1996, 9' 6" extended cab, bathroom w/ toilet, queen bed, outside shower. $5,700. Call 541-382-4572

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.

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Write from the readers view not the seller' s. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them in someway. This advertising tip brought to you by

The Bulletin Seniny CentnllOregonsince f9t8

Mercedes 450 SL 1979 Roadster, soft & hard tops, always garaged, 122k mi., extras, $9, 7 0 0. 541-548-5648

kee Overland 2012, 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards, front guard, nav., air and heated leather, custom wheels and new tires, only 47K miles, $30,995 541-408-7908

Lexus ES350 2010, Toyota Corolla 1999 Excellent Condition 32,000 miles, $20,000 4 cyl. 5 spd, 200K mi., 214-549-3627 (in new tires last spring. studs incl.!! A/C, casBend) sette, headliner needs help. Runs G reat!! $1800 541.480.9327 Need help fixing stuff?

Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.corn

Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft 8 hard top, exc. cond., always garaged. 155K miles, $9,500. 541-549-6407

Looking for your next employee?

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on ben dbulletin.corn which currently receives over 1 5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletm Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbuiietin.corn

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

I e B ulletin recoml Look at: mends extra caution l Bendhomes.corn when p u r chasing for Complete Listings of f products or services Area Real Estate for Sale from out of the area. f S ending c ash , e checks, or credit in› l formation may be I [ subject toFRAUD. For more informal› Jeep Wrangler Rubif tion about an adverPontiac 1966 Boncon 2 0 04, $17,500 you may call neville Convertible. Mileage: 065 , 1 54 Mercedes ML350 2004 I tiser, 3 89 Engine, 3 2 5 Automatic, Cr u i se 3.7L V-6, auto trans., the Oregon State( General's e Horsepower $6500 Control, Tow Bar, Air 4-wheel traction con- Attorney Call John Conditioning, Power trol, sunroof, white Office C o nsumer f Protection hotline at 541-389-6116 Door Locks, Alarm with Hava l e ather. and much more. Call One owner local car. 1-877-877-9392. 9 0,100 miles. E x c Gary: 541-280-0558. condition. $ 1 0 ,500. Serving Centra/ Oregon since l903 Suzuki Samurai 1988, 5 541-593-2053 spd 4WD, clean, new Weber carb. & radiator. RV ready towable. e a Chevy El Camino 1973, $4000. 541-419-3520

I

f f f

I

I f

The Bulletin

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time,

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. 541-390-7179

BMW X3 SI 20 07,

Jeep Grand Chero-

1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph

Bighorn 37' 2 014, M3260Elite, like new, always stored inside, center island, fireplace, solar panels, 6volt batteries, auto leveling, system loaded, asking $62,000. MUST SEE!! 541-480-7930

935

Sport Utility Vehicles

Low Miles - 68,500 mi., AWD, leather Interior, su n roof, b luetooth, voi c e command system, and too much more to list here. $15,900. Please call Dan at 541-815-6611

Fifth Wheels

Bighorn 2012 f ifth wheel, 35', lots of extras. $4 9,750. 541-388-4905

Toyota T a coma 2006, reg. c a b, 4x4, 5 spd standard 4 cyl engine, 2 2+ m pg , o n e s enior own e r , non-smoker, well maintained, nearly new tires, original spare near new, runs ex c e llent. $14,750. 541-633-9695

HUNTER S P E CIALPorsche Cayman S Jeep Cherokee, 1990, 2 008, L i k e new , 4x4, has 9 tires on 14,500 miles, wheels. $2000 obo. $35,000. 541-771-4732 360-510-3153 (Bend) I nfiniti M 37 X 2 0 1 1Toyota Avalon 2003, 47,000 miles, AWD, 150K m i . , si n g le loaded, always ga- owner, great cond., raged, gorgeous dark new tires and battery, b lue, S porty c a r maintenance records, driven by retired folks. leather seats, moon$24,500 obo. roof, full set of snow 541-382-6028 tires on rims, $7000. 541-548-6181 Kia Forte SX 2012 Toyota C am ry 2007 hatchback, $16,000, 78K m i . Loa d ed, 32,015 miles, still leather heated seats, under 60k warranty, moonroof, auto cliexc. condition, see mate control, studded craigslist for full detires, Bose s t ereo, tails. 541-948-7687 great shape. $11,500 541-270-1337

tion. If2,500.

882

541-923-2593

J a Fl i ht 264 B H 2011. like new, sleeps B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , 9, self contained, 1/2 one slide, low mile- ton towable $13,900 age, very clean, lots OBO (541) 410-9017 of storage, $28,500. 541-639-9411

Hard top 1965, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condi-

$125,000

541-604-5387

885

2013 30RE. $25,000.Two slides. Fully loaded. Full photos and info sent upon request. Family illness requires sale.

Ford Mustang

Financing available.

Canopies & Campers 34’ Winnebago One

54'I -388-9802

1/3interest in

,, p.'

17" 2005 Alumaweld

975

Pickups

CORVETTE 1979, glass top, 31k miles, all original, silver 8 maroon. $12,500.

Columbia 400,

deep water, four-man bass boat with dual Cannon down-riggers for trolling to 100 feet. Excellent c o ndition with f as t 40 HP Johnson o u t board with automatic oil inPRICE REDUCTION! jection. E a g le-Elite $59,000. fish finder and GPS to 2 3’10" S R 2 3 0 0, 541-8154319 locate the "big ones". ’95, own with pride, New trolling kick plate always compliments, + Minn Kota electric no salt, head never used, due for 5 year trolling motor. New main t . , 2-way radio. Water- c ooling proof cover, life-jack- $9500 firm. Extras. W eekend only . ets, bumpers, and ex541-678-3249 tras. All tuned and Pace A r row V i s ion ready to go. $4,500. 1997, Ford 460 enPhone (541) 593 7774 gine w/Banks, solar, - NW Bend. walk-around queen bed, 2 door fridge, micro-convection oven, WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, needs work, (photo 25’ 2006 Crestliner similar to actual ng) p ontoon boa t , $9,500. 541-280-0797 model 2485LSI An16’ Navarro canoe, Edition, 115 HP RV Loon 16. Fi b e r- gler Mercury outboard, CONSIGNMENTS glass with lots of dual cano p ies, WANTED wood. $ 800 . change room, bathWe Do The Work ... 702-249-2567 (Sunroom, all accessoYou Keep The Cash! river) ries. $2 0,000. On-site credit 702-249-2567 (Sunapproval team, river) web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Ads published in the "Boats" classification BIG COUNTRY RV include: Speed, fishBend: 541-330-2495 ing, drift, canoe, Redmond: 16’ Seaswirl Tahoe 541-548-5254 house and sail boats. with trailer, 50 HP For all other types of Evinrude, bimini top, watercraft, please go Ne excellent condition. to Class 875. $3,500 541-385-5809 ~ I 541-647-1918

975

Antique & Classic Autos

541-548-5254

g s~-› Monaco Monarch 31’ 2006, F ord V 10, 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides, queen b ed & hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, convection microwave, 2 TVs, tow package.

908 Aircraft, Parts & Service

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

541-520-3407

a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

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.$59,000.

2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and many extras. Stored inside $1 9,900 541-350-5425

541-280-5114

933

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

FUN & FISH!

Mercruiser outdrive, 140 hop GMC 4 cyl motor. good running boat asking $1995.

932

full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at

RARE! Manual trans.

4spd, Exc. Cond. $7500. 541-389-1086

541-447-5184.

Toyota FJ C ruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, VW Beetle c lassic never been off road 1972, Exc. shape, no or accidents, tow rust, very clean, fully pkg, brand new tires, restored, has had 2 very clean. $26,000. or text Jeff at o wners. $4,0 0 0. Call 541-729-4552 541-815-8147

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

tion specified herein a long with th e r e q uired filing fee. I t Superhawk N7745G must be i n p r oper Owners’ Group LLC form and have proof Cessna 172/1 0 hp, o f service o n t h e full IFR, new avionics, plaintiff's attorney or, GTN 750, touch933 if the plaintiff does not screen center stack, exceptionally clean. have a n a t t orney, Pickups proof of service on the Healthy engine reserve fund. plaintiff. If you have Hangared at KBDN. CAL LW any questions, you Oneshare should see an attorTODAY% available. ney immediately. If Chevy Pickup 1978, 1977 Call 541-815-2144 y ou need h elp i n long bed, 4x4, frame F J40 Toyota finding an attorney, up restoration. 500 Lande ruiser you may contact the 916 Cadillac eng i ne, with winch, Oregon State Bar's fresh R4 transmisTrucks & $21,000. Lawyer Referral Sersion w/overdrive, low 541-389-711 3, Heavy Equipment vice on l in e at mi., no rust, custom Michelle www.oregonstatebar. interior and carpet, 1997 Utility 53'x102" dry n ew wheels a n d org or by calling (503) freight van. S liding tires, You must see 684-3763 ( in t h e 975 axles, leaf springs, it! $25,000 invested. Portland metropolitan Automobiles egon, you are hereby good tires, body & area) or toll-free elseOBO. required to a p pear swing doors in exc. $12,000 in Oregon at 541-536-3889 or and answer the com- where cond., has no dings, 541-420-6215. 452-7636. This plaint filed against you (800) road ready! $7500 summons issued in the above-entitled pursuant tois o bo. Sisters, O R . ORCP 7. Court and cause on or 541-719-1217 LEGAL, P.C., Cf before the expiration RCO Randall Szabo OSB 927 of 30 days from the ¹115304, Acura TL 06, 3.2L V6, date of the first publi- rszabo@rcolegal.corn Automotive Trades auto, F WD , b l a ck cation of this sum- Attorneys for Plaintiff, color, A/C, 115,971 mons. The date of SW 10th Ave., Chevy S-10 1988 4.3L miles, clean title and first publication in this 511 400, P ortland, V-6, s unroof, many carfax. Call or t ext matter is September Ste. OR 97205, custom features, su- 541-834-8469 1, 2015. I f yo u fail 977-7840 F:P: (503) ( 5 03) timely to appear and 977-7963. per clean, always garaged. $3200 obo. answer, plaintiff will 541-388-0811. apply to the LEGAL NOTICE 2 013 7 t L X18 f t . above-entitled court NOTICE TO Carry-On open car for the relief prayed INTERESTED hauler trailer. Used for in its complaint. PERSONS only three times to This is a judicial foreEstate of haul my 1967 CaBuick LeSabre 2005 closure of a deed of Nancy I. Wood maro, and looks like Custom. Clean, 96k t rust in w h ich t h e new. I had the front miles. 32 mpg hwy, plaintiff requests that Notice is h e reby barrier made and in22-25 in town. $4250 t he plaintiff be a l - given that Sandra Dodge Big Horn stalled and added obo 541-419-5060 Ram 2500, 2005, 6 lowed to f o r eclose Dougherty has been the tool box. It also speed manual. Exyour interest in the a ppointed as t h e has a mounted new tra tires and rims, following d e scribed Personal R e p respare tire. $3995 canopy goes with. real property: LOTS sentative of the esobo. 541-876-5375 Excellent condition, ONE (1), TWO (2), t ate of N ancy I . or cell: well mai n tained, THREE (3), FOUR (4) Wood, deceased, by 503-701-2256. runs great. 160K A ND FI V E (5), the Desc h utes miles. $2 8 ,500 BLOCK County, O r e gon, Cadillac CTS 2010, 541-620-1212 931 EIGHTY-SEVEN (87), Circuit Court N o. V 6 I n j ection, 6 HILLMAN, DES- 15PB03664 on AuAutomotive Parts, A u tomatic. F-150 XL V8 2007, Speed CHUTES C O UNTY gust 10, 2015. All Service & Accessories Ford Luxury series. Exte32k orig. mi., o ne O REGON. C om - persons ha v i ng Black Raven, exc. shape, no rior monly known as: 1077 claims against said Factory shop r epair owner, Interior: Light Titaaccidents. $ 1 4,500. C Avenue, Terrebestate are hereby m anuals fo r 2 0 0 0 541-617-0846 nium/ E b o ny onne, Oregon 97760. required to present Chevy Tracker, 1976 2 2,555 m i les. 4 NOTICE TO DEFEN- t he s a me , w i t h Ford L ight T r u ck, door. Excellent conREAD proper v o uchers, 1979 Ford Light truck, dition all a r ound. DANTS: T HESE PAP E RS within four months 1973 Chevy light duty Has Arizona plates. CAREFULLY! A law- after the date of first truck, 1982 10-30 seThis is car is a great suit has been started publication of t h is ries truck. $40 each. mix of luxury, coma gainst you i n t h e notice, as s t ated 541-310-0343 f ort, s t y le , an d above-entitled court below, to the underworkmanship. Ford F-250 1990 by Federal National signed P e r sonal 932 e xtended cab, v e ry $24,000.00 Mortgage Association R epresentative a t Antique & clean, n o d a mage Call 541-408-3051 ("FNMA"), p l a intiff. the Law Offices of 97,992 miles, 460 V8, Classic Autos Plaintiff's claims are Anne C . S t einer, 2WD tool box, auto 3 stated in the written A ttorney fo r th e speed/OD. A s k i ng complaint, a copy of Personal R e p re$5000. Call Dennis which was filed with sentative, 2720 NE at 541-548-8662 or the abo v e-entitled 33rd Avenue, Port541-280-5994 Redmond Court. You must "ap- land, OR 97212, or pear" in this case or they may be barred. Rl the other side will win All persons whose Honda Accord 2005, To r ights may be a fV6, f ully l o aded, automatically. CHEV ELLE "appear" you must file fected by proceedNav, Moon roof, CD, MALIBU 1971 with the court a legal ings in this estate perfect leather inte57K original miles, d ocument called a may obtain addirior, one owner, full 350 c.i., auto, Ford F-350 XLT 2006, maintained, always "motion" or "answer." tional i n f ormation stock, all original, The "motion" or "an- from the Court, the Crewcab, 150K mi., garaged, never Hi-Fi stereo bed liner, good tires, wrecked, 143K road swer" (or "reply" ) must Personal R e p reexc. shape. $16,500. miles, $9,399. Great be given to the court sentative, or the at$15,000 Please clerk or administrator torney for the Percall, car ready to drive. 541-350-8856 or Mike 541-499-5970 within 30 days of the sonal 541-279-1072 541-410-3292 date of first publica- Representative. LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E C I R CUIT C OURT FOR T H E STATE OF OREGON, I N AND FO R T H E COUNTY OF DESCHUTES. FEDERAL N ATIONAL M O R T GAGE ASSO C IATION ("FNMA"), its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff,v. FRANK CENIGA; AND OCCUPANTS OF T HE PREMISES, Defend ants. C as e N o . 15CV0298FC. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. TO THE DEFENDANTS: FRANK CENIGA: In the name of the State of Or-


E6 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 THE BULLETIN

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