Bulletin Daily Paper 09-02-13

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Serving Central Oregon sjnce1903 7513I

MONDAY September 2,2013

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LOCAL• A5

TEE TOGREEN• 85

bendbulletln.com

TODAY'S READERBOARD

c in asers i in

Turtle treatment —Ata South Carolina aquarium, care for the injured andendangered

e r oa ,

creatures is going high-tech.A3

e in

Prompt delivery —Might 3-D printers change when and

eat

how you geta productyou ordered online?A3

Best of luck —Don't get between tennis players and their superstitions.B1

Footdall upsets —what it means when teams from the NCAA's second tier come out

on top.B1

OutSi e

• The city will even be taking apage from Google tohelp it run smoothlyand guide spending

isters By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin

Odituary —David Frost, the TV journalist who coaxed an apology from Richard Nixon. A2

ln world news —Secretary of State John Kerry says lab tests indicate the use of sarin

in Syria, plus other developments.A2

And a Wed exclusiveIt's a hostile universe. Why,

we're lucky to beexisting at all. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras

EDITOR'5 CHOICE

Laxity found in foreign factory inspections By Stephanie Clifford and Steven Greenhouse New York Times News Service

Inspectors came and went from a Wal-Martcertified factory in

Guangdong province in China, approving its production of more than $2 million in specialty items that would land on WalMart's shelves in time for Christmas. But unknown to the inspectors, none of the playful items, including reindeer suits and Mrs. Claus dresses for dogs, that were supplied to Wal-Mart had been manufactured at the factory. Instead, Chinese workers sewed the goods — which had been ordered by the Quaker Pet Group, a company based in New Jersey — at a rogue factory that had not gone through the certification process set by Wal-Mart for labor, worker safety or quality, according to documents and interviews with officials involved. To receive approval for shipment to Wal-Mart, a Quaker subcontractor just moved the items over to the approved factory, where they were presented to inspectors as though they had been stitched together there and never left the premises. Soon after the merchandisereached Wal-Mart stores, it began falling apart. See Factories/A4

By Hillary Borrud Spencer Sanvitale spent part of the summer walking among graves in the cityowned Pilot Butte Cemetery, mapping the burial plots with a GPS unit. As a result of his work, the city for the first time has a map of the cemetery with GPS points that it can use to track maintenance work, plot sales and other data. Sanvitale is

The man arrested Saturday in connection with the death of a 78-year-old woman at her home outsideSisters was released from prison last year after serving a 70-month sentence for second-degree assault. Joshua Leo Jokinen, 30, is being held in the Deschutes County jail in connection with the death after

the program manager for

police say he

data servicesand assetmanagement in the Bend Public Works Department, so he is involved in many of the city data-gathering projects. "I think the overall goal of what we'd like to do with the cemetery is have points on a map to show if a plot is available, and maybe prices attached to it so it's easier for people to make choices," Sanvitale said. Sanvitale's cemetery project is part of a citywide effort to collect better data on assets and operations, from property the public owns to the hours employees work on individual projects. The city plans to use that information to guide both daily operations and major policy and spending decisions. The city already collects data on, for example, debris street cleaners pick up and the cost to fill individual potholes. SeeData/A6

called law enJokin e n forcement Saturday evening to report he'd killed a woman outside Sisters. Madras Police contacted Jokinen and arrested him for an outstanding Umatilla County warrant. Less than an hour later, law enforcement were called to a report of a woman dead at her home on Kent Road in the Cloverdale area of Deschutes County, 7 miles southeast of Sisters in a rural area filled with horse farms. After an investigation, police arrested Jokinen in relation to Carolyn Grace Burdick's death. Deschutes County Sheriff Larry Blanton would not say whether the suspect knew Burdick. SeeDeath/A4

The Bulletin

Mi\

re i r u

L.

Reti Kerr/The Bulletin

Bend utility employee Jake Obrist checks data transmission after changing out a water meter register and meter transmission unit last week. The city has an automated metering system that eliminates the need for driving out to collect water usage from individual meters at most homes. It also allows the city to identify changes in water usage, which could be due to a leak.

Acity ofdata

EXAMPLES OFDATA COLLECTED FOR 2013,AS OFAUG. 27

The city of Bend spent the last several years collecting data on its assets, from cemetery plots to sidewalk curb ramps and street paving equipment. The city uses the data

Miles swept by street sweepers

to make decisions about how to use public resources, although IT Manager Randy James says the city is only in its "infancy stage" in using this data. Much public property is not yet logged in the system.

is year: ,

5-y e ar average: 34,400 miles

mr es

Debris collected

5-year average:14,200 sp. yards By Adam Liptak

ghis year:13,126.0 sJPyard

New York Times News Service

5 75.5 176.5

38

cubic yards of

cubic yards of

"man hours"

concrete for

concrete used

curb ramps

for sidewalks

to construct each ramp

Source: City ef Bend

Andy Zeigert i The Bulletin

In secret budget, stamping out threats within By Carol D. Leonnig, Julie Tate and Barton Gellman The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The U.S. government suspects that individuals with connections to alQaida and other hostile groups

have repeatedly sought to obtain jobs in the intelligence community, and it reinvestigates thousands of employees a year to reduce the threat that one of its own may be trying to compromise closely held se-

crets, according to a classified budget document. The CIA found that among a subset of job seekers whose backgrounds raised questions, roughly one out of every five had "significant terrorist and/

Chance of storms High 79, Low 51

Page BS

or hostile intelligence connections," according to the document, which was provided to The Washington Post by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden. SeeThreats /A6

The Bulletin

INDEX

TODAY'S WEATHER Calendar A5 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Puzzles C3-4 Horoscope

C4 Local/State A7 Movies A7 Nation/World

Gay rights' surprising friend incourt

A5 SportsMonday B1-8 A7 Tee to Green B5-7 A2 Television A7

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 110,No.245, 22 pages, 3 sections

The San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus sang "Give 'Em Hope" for a revered and in some ways surprising guest who shared a California stage with them last month: Justice Anthony Kennedy. Kennedy was in San Franciscofor an American Bar Association meeting, but he was also there to be celebrated bythe men on the risers behind him. In remarks from the stage, San Francisco's mayor, Edwin Lee, thanked the justice "for upholding the Constitution and justice for all" in his majority opinion in June in United States v.

Windsor, a major gay rights victory. See Kennedy/A4

+ .4 We userecycled newsprint

: IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

88 267 02329


A2

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NATION 4% ORLD

Ker: arinuse in ria

YOSemite Wildfire —The wildfire burning in and around Yosemite National Park hasbecomethe fourth-largest conflagration in modern California history, fire officials said Sunday as clouds and higher humidity helped crews further contain the biggest blaze in the

United States this year. The2-week-old Rim Fire moved up aspot on By Craig Whitlock and Ed O'Keefe The Washington Post

WASHINGTON The Obama administration asserted Sunday for the first time that the Syrian government used the nerve gas sarin to kill more than 1,400 people in the world's gravest chemical weapons attack in 25 years, as the White House intensifiedpressure on a skeptical Congress to authorize punitive military strikes against Damascus. Secretaryof State John Kerry said new laboratory tests showed traces of sarin, an extremely toxic nerve agent, in blood and hair samples collected from emergency workers who responded Aug. 21 to the scene of an alleged chemical weapons attack in the Damascussuburbs. In an interview blitz on five Sunday television news shows, Kerry said the fresh forensic evidence strengthened an already compelling case for taking military action against the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad, predicting that Congress would vote to give PresidentBarack Obama that authority. "I can't contemplate that the Congress would turn its back on all of that responsibility and the fact that we would have, in fact, granted impunity to a ruthless dictator to continue to gas his people," Kerry said on "Fox News Sunday." "Those are the stakes." But many lawmakers, in-

the state's list of large wildfires dating back to1932 when it grew to 351 square miles — an area larger than the cities of San Francisco,

Arad league WeighS in —The Arab Leagueon Sunday urged international action against the Syrian government to deter

Oakland andSanJose combined, California Department of Forestry

what it called the "ugly crime" of using chemical weapons. It was a major step toward supporting Western military strikes but short

and Fire Protection spokesman Daniel Berlant said. Although the fire still is growing, it was 45 percent contained as of Sunday.

of the explicit endorsement that the United States andsomePerDEA phone data —For at least sixyears, law enforcement officials working on acounternarcotics program have hadroutine access, using subpoenas, to anenormous AT&Tdatabase that contains the records of decades ofAmericans' phonecalls — covering afar longer time than

sian Gulf allies had hoped for.

The Leaguemoved beyondthe more cautious stance it took just a few daysago,when it askedthe U.N.Security Council to overcome its internal differences on the Syrian conflict — an out-

come that wasextremely unlikely given Russia's strong support for Syria's president, Bashar Assad.

the National Security Agency's hotly disputed collection of phone call

logs. Thegovernment paysATBTto place its employees in drug-fighting units around the country. Those employees sit alongside Drug Enforcement Administration agents and local detectives and supply them

Syrian reSpanSe —Syria on Sundayderided President Barack Obama'sdecision to hold off on punitive military strikes, but also took precautions by reportedly moving sometroops and

with the phonedata from asfar backas1987.

military equipment to civilian areas.

EgyPt Pl'utSStS —Egypt's top prosecutor on Sundayreferred ousted Islamist President MohammedMorsi to trial on charges of

The administration predicted Sunday it will obtain congressional backing for limited strikes. After days of edging closer to

inciting the killing of opponents protesting outside his palace while he was in office, the state news agency said. The military ousted

military action against Syria, Obamasuddenly announced Saturday he would first seek approval from Congress, which gets back

Morsi on July 3 after millions took to the streets demanding that he

from summer break Sept. 9. Assad, in turn, tried to project confidence in his escalating

step down. He's been held incommunicado since. Despite other ac-

showdown with the U.S., saying in comments carried by state

cusations by prosecutors, the decision Sunday is Morsi's first referral to trial. No datewas announced for the trial. Morsi will be tried in a

media Sunday that Syria is "capable of confronting any external

criminal court for allegedly inciting his supporters to kill at least10

aggression."

people, use violenceandunlawfully detain and torture protesters. Fourteen other members of the Muslim Brotherhood will be tried with

Fmm tha VatiCan —PopeFrancis condemnedthe useof chemi-

Morsi, including top aides and leading members of his political party.

cal weapons and called for a negotiated settlement to the civil war in

Syria. Francis spokewith anguish about Syria: "My heart is deeply

MuslC fastiVal daaths —A multiday electronic music festival

wounded by what is happening in Syria and anguished by the dramatic developments" on the horizon, an apparent reference to the U.S.

that drew tens of thousands of concertgoers to New York City over

Labor Dayweekendwascanceled Sunday, after city officials said two concertgoers had diedand at least four others fell critically ill during

and Franceconsidering a military strike against the Syrianregime. — Fromvuire reports

the first two days of the event. Both deaths were consistent with use of the drug MDMA, also known as Ecstasy or molly, prompting the

city to recommendthat the concerts be canceled just hours before cluding some who had previously pushed for a harder line against Assad, said the White House would have a tough time drumming up support for i ntervention i n S y r i a's seemingly i n t ractable c ivil war. "My constituents are warweary. They don't want to see

us get involved in this," Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., said on CBS's "Face the Nation." "The president has an obligation to make his case to the Congress, but he also has an obligation to make this case to the American people.... It's going to be a very, very tough debate."

the third day of the festival was to start. Drug-related deaths and ar-

rests have doggedseveral popular raves in recent years. VeriZOn deal —Verizon Communications neared a long-anticipated deal Sunday to buy the 45 percent stake in its wireless business

held by Vodafone of Britain for about $130 billion, heralding a continued sweeping realignment within the global telecommunications landscape. Though a deal may have little effect on Verizon Wireless's

nearly100 million subscribers at first, it would ripple through the telecommunications industry and Wall Street, with both having closely watched the back-and-forth of the negotiations for months.

The companies wereexpected to announce the dealtoday, barring last-minute hiccups, according to people briefed on the matter.

MANDELA HOME; HEALTH STILL PRECARIOUS

German political dedate —Chancellor AngelaMerkeland her Social Democratic rival, Peer Steinbruck, fought each other to a virtual draw in their sole television debate of the German election

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campaign Sundaynight. The face-off was a mostly decorous 90-minute affair that commentators had cast as Steinbruck's last chance to show his mettle and overcome earlier stumbles. The two quite swiftly

laid out contrasting views of the euro crisis andGermany's role in helping countries like Greece, but it was more than an hour into the debate before they discussed other international problems, including

Syria. The election is Sept. 22. Afghan pulitiCS —President Hamid Karzai on Sundaychose his ambassador to Pakistan, UmarDaudzai, asthe newAfghan interior minister. The move, on the eve of the declaration period for potential presidential candidates, was public confirmation that Daudzai would

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not be Karzai's favored successor. Aformer chief of staff to Karzai, Daudzai had said Aug. 17 that he would be a "probable candidate." He was the only major figure in the Karzai camp to formally declare an

interest in running sofar, though others have hinted that they might.

cN50rr Gp,

Instead, Daudzai is getting the Interior Ministry as a consolation prize. Presidential candidates are barred from serving in government.

Thai protester death —One protester was shot and killed and another seriously wounded in southern Thailand on Sunday at the

site of a blockade by rubber farmers who areprotesting a sharp fall

Dems Farrell/The Assoaated Press

An ambulance transporting former South African the same level of intensive care at his Houghton home president Nelson Mandela arrives at his home Sunday that he received in Pretoria. His home has been recon-

in rubber prices. It was not clear who was responsible for the shoot-

in Johannesburg.

figured to allow him to receive intensive carethere."

ing, which took place in the predawnhours near arailway crossing that farmers haveblocked with a container truck. The police said the

Mandela was discharged from a hospital after spending 12 weeks there, the South African govern-

Mandela, who turned 95 in July, was admitted to a hospital in Pretoria in June to be treated for the recur-

shooting was linked to an internal conflict among the protesters. The episode Sunday adds further volatility to the protests, which began

ment said, adding that the ailing anti-apartheid leader rence of a lung infection. His condition has ranged

early last month and havethe support of the Democrat Party, which

remained in precarious health. "Madiba's condition remains critical and is at times

from serious to critical, Zuma said, and occasionally doctors have had to use "medical interventions" to

leads the opposition in Parliament.

unstable," President JacobZumasaid in astatement,

stabilize him, the government hassaid in previous

Chinese graft investigation —TheChineseCommunist Party

referring to Mandela by his clan name. "Nevertheless, his team of doctors are convinced that he will receive

statements.

announced Sundaythat a senior official responsible for overseeing — New York TimesNews Service

state-owned corporations was under investigation, and people with

knowledge of that caseand others said that the inquiries were part of a larger corruption investigation encroaching on the retired chief of the domestic security apparatus. The senior official under scrutiny,

TV figure David Frost, who coaxed

Jiang Jiemin, the director of the State-OwnedAssets Supervision and Administration Commission, "is suspected of grave violations of discipline and is currently under investigation," said a brief statement

issuedbyXinhua,themainstatenewsagency. — From wire reports

apology fromNixon, diesat age74 V Pa.re,&OA 6 &o. The Washington Post. Sir David Frost, the veteran broadcaster wh o f a m ously drew a grudging post-Watergate apology out of f o rmer President Richard Nixon, died Saturday aboard a cruise ship sailing from England to the Mediterranean. He was 74. His death, from an apparent heart attack, was confirmed in a statement his family released to the BBC. Known for his laid-back but probing style of interviewing, Frost gained access to an astonishing array ofworld figures during a f ive-decade career. His subjects included seven U.S. presidents and eight British prime ministers, and his A-list included Prince Charles, Nelson Mandela, Billy Graham, Muhammad Ali, Orson Welles, Truman Capote, the Beatles, Henry Kissinger and Vladimir Putin. Ferociously prepared b ut charming to the point of servility, he had a knack for getting his interviewees to relax and open up. "He could be — and c ertainly was with me — a good friend and a fearsome in-

OBITUARY

Nixon" (not Nixon/Frost) — established that Frost had bet erviewer," t w eeted D a v i d come as much ofa celebrity as Cameron, the British prime the VIPs he interviewed. minister. The coup of Frost's career AIs1"E2vDYQ ot ~ came in 1977, when he persuadIWDs 8 1Q , ed Nixon to sit with him (for a 'D I l « 2I t « t I r ly(s fee and a share of the broadcast Retire with us Today! profits) in a series of interviews over several weeks. Nearly 29 541-312-9690 hours of taped conversation — Nixon's first interview after resigning in disgrace in 1974 — was distilled into four 90minute programs. At one point, Nixon said of his Watergate machinations "that when the president does it, that means that it is not

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illegaL" Once Frost had established a rapport with Nixon, he cannily appealed to Nixon's sense of history and remorse, telling the leader that unless he acknowledged his abuses, "you're going to be haunted for the rest of your life." Finally, Nixon conceded: "I let the American people down." The Nixon interviews formed the basis of an acclaimed play and movie whose title — "Frost/

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2013•THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Monday, Sept. 2, the 245th day of 2013. There are 120 days left in the year.

SCIENCE

CUTTING EDGE

HAPPENINGS

3-0 printing couldhelpspeed

LabOr Day — TheU.S. marks the holiday in honor of

purchases to your doorstep

American workers.

HISTORY Shaving time off deliveries is viewed as retail gold by a variety of

Highlight:In1945, Japan formally surrendered inceremo-

companies, from Amazon to eBay. Some smaller companies have pinned

nies aboard the USS Missouri in

Tokyo Bay,ending World WarII.

their hopes on on-demand printing, saying it could upend the market.

In 1666, the Great Fire of London broke out. In 1789, the United States

Treasury Department wasestablished. In 1864, during the Civil War, Union Gen. William T. Sher-

man's forces occupiedAtlanta. In 1901,Vice President Theodore Roosevelt offered the

advice, "Speaksoftlyand carry a big stick" in aspeechat the Minnesota State Fair. In1924, the Rudolf Friml oper-

etta "RoseMarie" openedon Broadway.

In 1935, a Labor Day hurricane

slammed into theFlorida Keys, claiming more than 400 lives. In1945, Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam an independent republic. (Ho died on this date in

1969.) In1963,AlabamaGov.George Wallace prevented the integration of Tuskegee High School by encircling the building with state troopers. "The CBSEvening News" with Walter Cronkite

was lengthenedfrom15 to 30 minutes, becoming network television's first half-hour

nightly newscast. In 1972, Dave Wottle of the United States won the men's 800-meter race at the Munich

Summer Olympics. In1986,ajudgeinLosAngeles sentencedCathyEvelyn Smith to three years in prison for invol-

untary manslaughter for her role in the1982 drugoverdosedeath of comedian John Belushi.

(Smith served18 months.) In1993, the United States and

Russia formally endeddecades of competition in space by agreeing to a joint venture to build a space station. In 1998, a Swissair MD-11

jetliner crashedoff NovaScotia, killing all 229 people aboard.

Ten yearsago:A court in Jakarta,lndonesia,sentenced Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir

to four years in prison for sedition (his conviction was later overturned after he'd spent more than two years behind

bars.) A federal appealscourt in San Francisco threw out more than100 death sentences in Arizona, Montana and Idaho

because theinmateshadbeen sent to death row byjudges instead of juries.

Five yearsago:Republicans assail edBarackObamaas the most liberal, least experienced White House nominee in historyat their convention in St.

Paul, Minn., andenthusiastically extolled their own man,

John McCain, asreadyto lead the nation. PresidentGeorge W. Bush briefly addressed the convention by satellite from

the White House. A gunman in Skagit County, Wash., killed six

people andinjured four others; a suspect, IsaacZamora, later pleaded notguilty by reason of insanity to two murders and

guilty to the remaining four, and is being held in a mental hospital.

Oneyearago:Campaigning his way toward theDemocratic National Convention, Presi-

dentBarackObamaslappeda "Romney doesn't care" label on his rival's health care views and said Republicans wanted to

repeal newprotections for millions without offering a plan of their own.

BIRTHDAYS Pro and College Football Hall

of Famer Terry Bradshaw is 65. Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., is 62. International Tennis

Hall of Famer JimmyConnors is 61. Actor Keanu Reeves is 49. International Boxing Hall

of Famer LennoxLewis is 48. Actress Salma Hayek is 47. Actress Allison Miller is 28.

Rock musician Spencer Smith (Panic! at the Disco) is 26. — From wire reports

By Brian Fung Mike Di Paola/ Bloomberg News

Shane Boylan, a veterinarian at the South Carolina Aquarium, administers laser therapy to a diamondback terrapin that had been hit by a car.

0 -0-t e-ine

treatment aims to saveseaturtes By Mike Di Paola

examining an d m e asuring the creature.They prepped it I n th e b asement of t h e for X-rays to see how deep the South Carolina Aquarium in hook has gone. Charleston, I watched a diaW hile fishermen are r e mondback terrapin that had sponsible for numerous turtle been badly dinged by a car injuries, m an y p a r t i cipate receive c u tting-edge l a ser in the a quarium's sustaintherapy. able-seafood program, which " This i s v e r y g o o d f o r encourages restaurants and sprains, breaks, bad ankles," retailers to buy from them if said staff veterinarian Shane they are conscientious about Boylan as he waved a hand how and what they catch. laser over the injured back This is good for the turtles, and neck of the turtle. "Theo- according t o Tho r v alson: retically i t i n c reases blood "The fishermen that are abidflow and relieves pain, and ing by the rules are catching allows inflammation to defewer sea turtles." crease faster than it otherwise N evertheless, t h er e a r e would." more turtles coming in every Here in t h e s t ate's only year, and the hospital, whose s ea-turtle h o spital, w h i c h $ 360,000-a-year b u dget i s opened in 2000, Boylan and funded by donations and a others were treating 19 aniportion of the aquarium gate, mals the day I visited, includ- has plans to expand. It needs Bloomberg News

ing loggerheads, Kemp's rid-

more space and bigger tanks

leys and green turtles — all threatened o r e n d angered species. A 99-pound loggerhead had multiple stingray wounds. A green sea turtle had an intestinal impaction. Others suffered from something called "debilitated turtle syndrome." A number o f t u r t les were shipped from New England late last year, having been "cold stunned" — trapped in frigid water and too wracked b y h y pothermia t o s w i m south. If all goes well, the animals will recoverand be released in the wild, like 112 specimens before them. "There's something about seeing a turtle being returned to the ocean that is emotional," said Kelly T h orvalson, marine biologist and manager of the aquarium's sea-turtle rescue program. "You can't describe it." Three full-time staff and more than 300volunteers are saving turtles along the South C arolina coast, w it h h e l p from fishermen, recreational boaters and anyone else who spots trouble. " If you can c atch a s e a turtle in the water, something is wrong with that animal," Thorvalson said. As if on cue, two volunteers called in a r escue: a small K emp's r i dley o n My r t l e Beach had swallowed a fish hook. They w ere o n t h eir

for recovering turtles, which require room to swim as they gain strength before being set free. There is also a plan to create a recovery area within the aquarium proper, where visitors can see the turtles before they are released. (At the moment the aquarium gives guided tours of the hospital for $10, on top of the general

admission.) Raising public awareness is a key part of protecting the species,Thorvalson said."We are saving many more turtles through outreach and education than we are with the individual animals we are rehabilitating here." The aquarium is a staple on the grade-school field-trip circuit, and T horvalson regularly speaks at schools and at conferences on conservation. "But at the same time, animal care will a lways come first. That's why we're here. We're passionateabout these

species."

The Washington Post

In recent years, Amazon .com founder Jeffrey Bezos has been in relentless pursuit of a lag-less future in which you barely have time to utter the word "shipping" before a package hitsthe doorstep. In this utopia, deliveries take place within hours, not days. To make it a reality, Bezos is bringing to bear the full power of Amazon's supply-chain resources. The company has plowed $13.9 billion since 2010 into new warehouses near its customers. It's a massive undertaking, even for a multinational. But a handful of smaller companies are convinced there's a way to get products to consumers just as quickly, with greater satisfaction and at a fraction of the cost. The future, they say, is in on-demand 3-D printing. These two methods of delivery couldn't be more different. One relies on scaling and infrastructure to cut t ransportation time. T h e other eliminates infrastructure and instead sinks money into materials and on-site manufacturing. It won't be long before these technologies start overlapping and interacting — and that's a good thing. The resulting combinations will iron out a lot of the inefficiencies of using either method alone. But however it happens, it probably won't be hailed as a "3-D printing revolution" or as a "shipping revolution." This could be the just-in-time revolution. Amazon is merely one of many businesses jockeying to see who can shave the most delay off their shipping o ptions. EBay and W a lMart are testing same-day delivery. The competition to trim even a few hours is intense. To get deliveries to customers in under an hour, eBay dispatches college students by foot, bike and taxi to pick up products at bigbox stores and drop them at people's doorsteps. Faster shipping is costly. As a share of Amazon's total sales, shipping was nearly 5 percent in 2011, up from 3.2 percent in 2009. It's increasingly eating into Amazon's profit, and same-day delivery promisesto exacerbate that trend. Amazon ismoving ahead

Prime — whose members pay $79 peryear to receive freeshipping and by some estimates spend up to twice as much as nonmembers — the company is likely to make up for any shipping-related shortfalls. Although it's hard to see a momand-pop store pulling off such a feat, Amazon has the means

tent inventory gives a business much more freedom to test new products. Suppose you sold coffeecups that were manufactured only as people ordered them, said Hod Lipson, director of Cornell University's Creative Machines Lab. You could post a handful of options on your website at little to no cost to use same-day shipping as a to you, then just delete the lowloss leader. (Bezos, Amazon's performing cups. "That would be very costly to founder, has agreed to purchase The Washington Post in a deal do if you actually had to fill up expected to close this year.) a whole supply chain, a whole So the less time goods spend production line, for each of in transit during production those items," Lipson said. "But and distribution, the more ef- when you're printing them or ficient companies can be at sat- fabricating them on demand, isfying consumer demand. But you can much more easily what if companies could dis- adapt your production." pense with shipping altogether The idea of most American by"manufacturing" goods near entrepreneurs doing business their final destination? this wayis enticing. Alas, limitsto That's where 3-D printing just-in-timemanufacturingmake comes in. By producing goods universal adoption unlikely. in the ordered configuration One major hurdle isthatprintprecisely when they're needed, ing with more than one mate3-D printing is ideal for filling rial at once is difficult. A typical gaps in the supply chain (which roommight contain objects with reduces uncertainty), keeping 50 materials in various combiinventorylow(which saves com- nations. To print an object, not panies money on shelving) and only would you need all the reducing waste (which occurs materials on hand in a printable form — you'd also need a printer when the goods aren't sold). Advocates for 3-D printing withmultiple or interchangeable argue that the manufacturing nozzles. And each new material technique could upend the re- might need to be printed under tail sector. A small or nonexis- different conditions.

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way. "We always beg people, 'Don't cut the l i ne!'" Thorvalson said. S h e a d v i ses instead that w ould-be rescuers tether the fishing line to something that can't be s wallowed, as t u r t les w i l l do just that until the hook is buried in its gut. The week before, the staff executed its first esophageal inversion, w h ic h i n v o lved peeling back t h e a n i m al's e sophagus bit b y b i t u n t i l the hook could be safely removed, obviating the need to cutinto flesh. " It was as clean and as b eautiful a s u rgery a s w e could do," Thorvalson said. When the Kemp's ridley arrived, the staff rushed out to meet it, and Thorvalson began

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Allan Staley Bulletin Subscriber

T o subscribe, c al l 5 4 1 - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 0 The Bulletin bendbulletin.com

F RIDRY O C T O B E R 4 h lJ hGES • OtNKM L A D M

S S ION 4 RESEIWED SM T I N O

Tirhets atBENDCON C E R T S.rom, TICKETFLY.com, 877-435-9849, and at the Ticket Mill in Bend'I Old Mi ll DiatriCt.


A4

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2013

Kennedy

civil rights law, and they have cemented his legacy as a hero to Continued from A1 the gay rights movement. "Freedom is always a work That push has taken on moin progress," Kennedy said mentum thanks to the Windin his ow n r e marks, mak- sor decision, which gay rights ing clear that there was more groups are citing in challenges work to be done. to state bans on s ame-sex Kennedy has emerged as the marriage. On Thursday, the most important judicial cham- Internal Revenue Service said pion of gay rights in the nation's it would implement the Windhistory, having mi tten three sor ruling by recognizing the landmark opinions on the sub- unions of all lawfully married ject, including this summer's same-sex couples, including Windsor decision, which over- those living in states that do not turned a ban on federal benefits allow same-sex marriage. for marriedsame-sex couples. The praise now being showThose rulings collectively repre- ered on Kennedy by gay rights sent anewchapterinthenation's advocates — and the deep dis-

appointment of conservatives — would have been hard to imagine when President Ronald Reagan nominated him to the Supreme Courtin 1987.G ay rights groups were more than a little wary then. On the federal appeals court in California, where Kennedy had served for 13 years, he heard five cases concerning gay rights. He voted against the gay rights claim every time. "I have to say that Kennedy seems ratherobtuse on important gay issues and must be counted as a likely vote against us on most matters likely to come before the Supreme

Death Continued from A1 "It's a real tragedy and a senselesscrime," he said. "We are handling it as a homicide. We're not willing to say the cause of death, but it was not by natural causes." Blanton said that shortly after Jokinen was lodged in the Jefferson County jail on Saturday, a family friend of Burdick's checked on the woman and found her dead. "We put two and two together," Blanton said. On Sunday, a gate across Burdick's driveway was locked and horses grazed on the land dotted with outbuildings. A sign out front advertised Masterpiece Arabians. Burdick was a horsebreeder,a member of the Arabian Horse Club of Central Oregon and the Pacific Coast Breeders Club. Vernie Merritt was Burdick's neighbor, and on Sunday she stood outside Burdick's home, watching the horses. "She wouldn't hurt anybody," the 77-year-old said of Burdick. "It's u nbelievable. You s e e somebody one day.... I saw her yesterday at noon." Merritt described Burdick as a wonderful person who would bring her homemade strawberry jam and didn't have "a rotten word about anybody." Burdick had two dogs, including a rottweiler, Merritt said, as well as two parrots and a host of chickens and roosters. Burdick was an active mem-

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Carolyn Grace Burdick lived in this home in the Cloverdale area outside Sisters. The Deschutes County Sheriff's Office is treating her death as a homicide.

Court," Arthur Leonard, an authority on gay rights at New York Law School, wrote in The New York Native, a newspaper that focused on gay issues. The justice's trajectory since then has been a product of overlapping factors, associates and observers say. His Supreme Court jurisprudence is characterized by an expansive commitment to individual liberty. He believes that American courts should consider international norms, and foreign courts have expanded gay rights. His politics tend toward fiscal conservatism and moderate social views.

much of his life. Before his arrest Saturday, she said he was working and going to school in Pendleton. Jokinen has had run-ins with the lawbefore.In 2005,he was convicted first of unlawful possession of a firearm in Lane County and then of second-degree theft in Deschutes County. He spent short periods of time in jail in both those convictions. That same year he was convicted in Jefferson County of unlawful possession of methamphetamine and sentenced to probation and a short period in

jail.

Webb said her ex-boyfriend struggled with drugs. "If he's not o n d r ugs or ber of the New Hope Christian When she got t o B u rdick's drunk, he has a clear mind and Center in Sisters, she said, and house, she said their pastor had he's OK to be around," she said. would bring homegrown po- already arrived and apparently "But as soon as he gets on drugs tatoes and vegetables to the discovered Burdick's body. and stuff he completely loses church. Whether Burdick and Joki- it. That's part of the reason we "You wouldn't want a nicer nen knew one another remains separated." person for a neighbor," Merritt unclear. According to Webb and pubsaid. Sheryl Webb dated Jokinen lished reports in the Madras PiLouise Lamb had k nown for five years, and has a 10- oneer, Jokinen was 23 when in Burdick for 25 years through year-old son with him. They 2006he was sentenced to nearly their shared love of horses. separated nine years ago, but sixyears for beating a man with Burdick had previously lived in Webb said Jokinen has visited a trailer hitch ball at a home on Albany and long worked as a their son since his release from Cleveland Street in Madras. The school teacher. prison and most recently spoke man suffereda skull fracture " Carolyn wa s t h e k i n d - with him about three weeks ago and lacerations in the unproest, sweetest person that you when they argued over what voked attack, the published rewould ever meet," Lamb said. time he could come visit their port states. Jokinen fled but was "She would never harm a soul, son, who is currently fighting apprehended 10 days later and and this is just about the (most cancer. charged with attempted murder "He was upset," she said. "I and second-degree assault. He awful) thing; there just is no reason." haven't spoken to him since pleaded guilty to second-degree Merritt said Burdick's horse- then." assaultand was sentenced to 70 breeding partner called SaturWebb said Jokinen is origi- months in prison. — Reporter: 541-617-7831, day evening to ask Merritt to nally from Sweet Home and check on their mutual friend. lived in Jefferson County for smiller@bendbulletin.com

Factories

quently take months to correct, often with little enforcement or Continued from A1 follow-through to g u arantee Fifteen hundred m i les compliance. to the west, the Rosita KnitDara O'Rourke, a global supwear factory innorthwestern ply chain expert at the UniverBangladesh — which made sity of California, Berkeley, said sweaters for companies little had improved in 20 years across Europe — p assed of factory monitoring, espean inspection audit w i th cially with increased use of the h igh grades. A t eam o f cheaper "check the box" inspecfour monitors gave the fac- tions at thousands of factories. tory hundreds of approving "The auditors are put under check marks. In all 12 major greater pressure on speed, and categories, including work- they're not able to keep up with mg hours, compensation, what's really going on in the apmanagement practices and parelindustry,"hesaid."We see health and safety, the fac- factories and brands passing tory received the top grade of audits but failing the factories' "good.""Working Conditions workers." — No complaints from the The Rana Plaza factory colworkers," the auditors wrote. lapse in B angladesh, which Ten months after that in- killed I, 129 workers in April, inspection, Rosita's workers tensified international scrutiny rampaged through the fac- on factory monitoring and prestory in February 2012, van- sured the world's biggest retaildalizing its machinery and ers to sign onto agreements to accusing management of re- tighten inspection standards neging on promised raises, and upgrade safety measures. bonuses and overtime pay. While many groups consider Some claimed that they had the accords a significant adbeen sexually harassed or vance, some longtime auditors beaten by guards. Not a hint and labor groups voice skeptiof those grievances was re- cism that inspection systems ported in the audit. alone can ensure a safe workAs Western companies place. After all, they say, the overwhelmingly turn to low- number of audits at Bangladesh wage countries far away factories has steadily increased from corporate headquar- as the country has become one ters to produce cheap ap- of the world's largest garment parel, electronics and other exporters, and still 1,800 workgoods, factory inspections erstherehave died in w orkplace have become a vital link in disasters in the last 10 years. "We've been auditing factothe supplychain ofoverseas production. riesin Bangladesh for20 years, An extensive examina- and I wonder, 'Why aren't these tion by The New York Times things changing? Why aren't found that inspections are things getting better?"' said often so superficial that they Rachelle Jackson, the director omit the most fundamental of sustainability and innovation workplace safeguards like at Arche Advisors, a monitoring fire escapes. group based in California. Andevenwheninspectors are tough, factory managers find ways to trick them and hide serious violations, like child labor or locked exit STUDIO doors. Dangerous conditions cited in the audits fre-

mplements Hd.O 5 ' 3 t l fL r id. a"4 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2013•THE BULLETIN

AS

LOCAL 4 T A TE Labor Dayclosures

BIKE INFRASTRUCTUREPROJECT

In honor of Labor Day today: • All city, county, state and federal offices will be closed. • Banks will be closed.

ra e ar inerse ion ocose

• Post offices will be closed, and mail will not be delivered

or picked up. • Libraries in Crook, Des-

By Branden Andersen

An Oregon Department of Transportation grant funded The intersection on the the project. The grant requires southwest corner of Drake the project to be completed by Park will be closed Oct. 31. starting Tuesday for The goal is to make • Closure pedestrian and bicycle the popular intersection mor e pedestrian- and i nfrastructure upgrades. map,A6 "So far, it's going rebike-friendly, Lansdally well," project manager owne said; contractors will exHeidi Lansdowne said. "We're tend curbs, increase crosswalk ahead of schedule." visibility, improve lighting and The Bulletin

chutes and Jefferson counties will be closed.

• Schools, including school district offices and Central Or-

egon Community College, will be closed. • Juniper Swim & Fitness Center in Bend will be open

from noon to 5 p.m. • Most liquor stores will be

BRIEFING

add abufferarea between the shared bike lane and parked cars. "We get a lot of people down by Drake Park — tubers or

people enjoying the park," Lansdowne said. "It's a hightraffic area that needs to be safer for everyone." Lansdowne believes the improvements will make the intersection safer by removing the

Pilot walks away from crash uninjured A pilot from Tigard made

four-way intersection. Instead of putting a roundabout in the middle, the project proposed making a three-way intersection — one direction arcing around the southeast corner of Drake Park from Riverside Boulevard to Galveston Avenue, the other exiting to southbound Riverside Boulevard and eastbound Tumalo Avenue. SeeRiverside /A6

an emergency crash landing near the Sisters Eagle Airport

on Sunday evening. A resident who lives near the airport called 911 to report the crash soon after 6

p.m. Sunday, said Lt. Bryan Husband from the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. The

resident reported the single engine ultralight plane was on its side in a field, roughly

200 yards southeast of the

open.

airport.

The Sisters-Camp Sherman Fire District arrived first at the scene, and sheriff's

deputies and Oregon State Police troopers also responded, Husband said.

FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central

They found 53-year-old

and Eastern Oregon. For

Daniel Bernath of Tigard

the latest information, visit www.nwccweb

.us/information/ firemap.aspx.

f,' fftpe-.'

' Bend

who hadbeen flying home from Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.

• CascadeSwimCenter in Redmondlets dogsin the pool beforefall closing

I

Bernath experienced strong headwinds,which caused him

to use more fuel than expected, Husband said. The pilot decided to stop at the Sisters Eagle Airport, but he ran out

By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

r

REDMONDog owners brought dozens of pooches to swim at the Cascade Swim Center on Sunday, and it was clear that some dogs lovedwater and others feared it. It was more difficult to tell how 6year-old golden retriever Flynn felt about swimming. Flynn wore a yellow life jacket and floated calmly, occasionally kicking a leg or two. "He had cancer, so now he has three legs," said one of his owners, 15-year-old Shelby Muller, of Terrebonne. Muller and her friends stayed by Flynn's side, holding his life jacket to make sure his head remained above water. T he Sunday afternoon dip w a s Flynn's first swim since surgery to remove his right front leg in December. The dog swim is an annual event a t the C ascade Swim C enter i n Redmond, before the Redmond Area Park and Recreation District closes the pool for fall. This year, the event raised money for the Cascade Swim Center water polo team, according to the Redmond Area Park and Recreation District Facebook page. Dog owners paid $10 for a dog bath and entrance to the pool. Muller said Flynn's recovery has

John:Day g

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6

1. Government Flat • Acres: 11,434 • Containment: 90%

• Cause: Lightning 2. Vinegar • Acres: 1,323 • Containment: 45%

• Cause: Lightning 3. Middle Fork • Acres: 534 • Containment: 50%

• Cause: Lightning

Well shot! reader PhotOS

of fuel before reaching that destination. "But he was able to do a

somewhat controlled crash in the empty field to the southeast of the airport," Husband sald.

Medical personnel from the Sisters-Camp Sherman Fire District examined Bernath and determined he was uninjured.

La Pine resident injured in housefire

Joe Kl>neiThe Bulletin

Shelby Muller, 15, of Terrebonne, helps Flynn swim with the aid of a life vest Sunday at Cascade Swim Center in Redmond. The golden retriever had to have one of his legs removed due to cancer, but "he looks really happy," Muller said. plore the water. "Come on baby, come on," Workman said, trying to encourage the little website:bendbulletin.com/dogswim dog to swim. Dingo preferred to perch on Workman's shoulder and remained gone well so far. The retriever hops there most of the time. around fairly well on three legs, and Hayden Crow, 12, of Redmond, was "he looks really happy." also trying to convince his small dog Before Muller an d h e r f r i ends to swim. Yoda, a 12-year-old Chihuabrought Flynn to the pool, they purhua and miniature pinscher mix was chased a life jacket for duck-hunting not enthused. "He doesn't like water," Crow said. dogs from a sporting goods store. In the outdoor kiddie pool, Rhonda "He's mostly here for me." Workman was trying to get her Chi— Reporter: 541-617-7829, huahua and terrier mix, Dingo, to exhborrud~bendbulletin.com

An early morning fire in La Pine critically injured a man and destroyed his house Sunday, according to the La Pine Rural Fire Protection

O

Watch a video from the dog swimming eventon The Bulletin's

District. Several neighbors of the

home on Evans Lanecalled 911 just before 3 a.m. Sunday to report that they heard a

loud boom and several explosions, then saw the home in

flames, according to a fire district news release. Deschutes County sheriff's deputies arrived within min-

utes and found Gary Baldwin

• We want to seeyour photos of clouds for another special version

on the ground outside his front door. Neighbors were

of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at dendbulletiLcom/ cloudsand we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos ofthe great outdoors

toreaderphotos@ denddulletin.com andtell usabitaboutwhereand when you tookthem. All entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in print. Submission requirements: Include ae much detail ae possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well ae your name, hometown and phone number.Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

EVENT CALENDAR TODAY NO EVENTSLISTED TUESDAY

REDMONDFARMERS MARKET:Free admission; 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket1© hotmail.com. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT:A screening of the documentary "Living Downstream" about Sandra Steingraber's efforts to break the silence about cancer and its environmental links; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.

attempting to pull Baldwin away from the intense heat of the fire. Deputies found

Redmondwelcomesbevyofnew teachers By Tyler Leeds The Bultetin

Students often fumble through their first days back in school. There are new routes between classes to perfect and enough syllabi to justify not reading one or two. But for some newcomers,there'squite a bit more to learn. Nearly 50 new teachers will welcome students this year in the Redmond School District, and they will have to grapple not only with the names on their rosters, but with evaluation policies, various computer systems,health insurance benefits and many other things foreign to the student mind. The average age of the new cohort is around 34, though some arein theirearly 20s and others are nearing 50. About halfthe teachers are veterans, while the other half are getting their start here. Most are from Oregon,but some have come from as far as Alabama.

and Southwest Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-5191 or http:// visitredmondoregon.com. IAN MCFERON BAND:The Seattle Americana band performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. THURSDAY

WEDNESDAY BENDFARMERSMARKET:Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenueand Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket©gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com.

MUSIC ONTHE GREEN: A summer concert series featuring the Hokulea Dancers; food, crafts, retail and more; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Southwest 15th Street

a plastic wading pool in the

NO EVENTSLISTED FRIDAY

SISTERSFOLKFESTIVAL: Featuring seven stages of music, and workshops; $115, $50youth 5-18, plus fees for three-day festival pass, free children ages 5and younger; downtown Sisters; www. sistersfolkfestival.org. BASE CAMPSTUDIO PAINTING MARATHON: Watch three teams of nine local artists paint on large canvases for 26.2 hours; kids 5K

began to administer medical

"sprint" event where124 kids take three minute turns to paint for 3.1 hours; proceeds benefit BaseCamp Studio; free; noon, kids event 4 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 503-953-2175 or basecampstudio.org. SISTERSFARMERSMARKET:3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue andAsh Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Portland poet Margaret Chula reads from her latest poetry collections; free; 5-8 p.m.; The Nature of Words, 224 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-647-2233 or www.thenatureofwords.org. FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine andfood in downtown Bendandthe Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. MUNCH 8MOVIES:Anoutdoor screening of "Ozthe Greatand

to the news release. Sunriver firefighters also assisted,

(, )~~7,,

/dack2school

Natalie Conway, 30, is a new special education teacher at Sage ElementarySchool.She

care to Baldwin, according

4%

bendbulletin.com

Getting the job

home. The La Pine Rural Fire Protection District arrived and

BACK TO SCHOOL

To prepare the teachers for their new home, the district hosted a four-day"Induction Academy" in late August. The academy was broken into presentation topics, addressing everything from gradingpractices to technology to ethics. There were also buildingtours and a principal panel where new instructors could ask their new bosses questions. At one point, lawyers came to "scare the heck out of everyone," as human resources director Lynn Evans joked. In a sense, the academy was awayto teachthe teachers.

yard, placed Baldwin on it and pulled him away from the

-

//t' [ '

and Baldwin was transported

by air ambulance to Legacy Emanuel Medical Center in

'n

!tI'y ~

Portland in critical condition. Firefighters could not

completely extinguish the

' / -,'

fire until Midstate Electric

Cooperative employees arrived because power lines had fallen on the house and Rob Kerr /The Bulletin

Natalie Conway is a new special education teacher at Sage Elementary School in Redmond. She is one of nearly 50 new teachers in the Redmond School District.

nearby fences,and thelines remained energized. The fire district is still investigating the cause of the

fire. Inside the home, Baldwin had bottled oxygen, ammuni-

studied education as an undergraduate at Providence College in Rhode Island and earned her master's degree from Bridgewater State University in Massachusetts. She began teaching in the Bay State in 2005 as a special education and third-

Powerful" (2013); with food vendors and live music; free; 6 p.m., movie begins at dusk; CompassPark, 2500 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend;541-3821662 or www.northwestcrossing.com. "SPAMALOT"SNEAKPEEK:The cast and crew share songs, scenesand dance numbers from the upcoming show; free; 6 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. SCREEN ONTHEGREEN:A screening of the 2010animated film, "Tangled" with pre-showentertainment; bring snacks, chairs and blankets; free, boxed or canned food donations accepted; 7:30p.m.,8 p.m.movie;Sahalee Park, Seventh and Bstreets, Madras; 541475-3351 or www.jcld.org. SATURDAY

SISTERS FOLKFESTIVAL: Featuring seven stages of music, and workshops; $115, $50 youth 5-18, plus fees for three-day

grade inclusion teacher. After visiting Bend in February, however, Conway and her husband decided to move to Central Oregon for reasons familiar to most: outdoor activities, dogfriendliness and weather. SeeRedmond/A6

festival pass, free children 5 and younger;; downtown Sisters; www. sistersfolkfestival.org. HIGHDESERT SWAP MEET 5 CAR SHOW:Acar showand sale of automotive collectibles, antiques and more; proceeds benefit local and regional charities; free admission to the public; 7 a.m., vendors at 6:30 a.m.; DeschutesCounty Fair& Expo Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-4467 or www. coocc.or g/swapmeet.htm. VFW BREAKFAST: A community breakfast; $8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFW Hall,1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. ALL CHURCHYARD SALE:M ultiple ministry teams join to put on ayard sale; all funds go back into eachteam for ministry work; free admission; 8:30a.m.-3 p.m.;Zion Lutheran Church,1113 S.W.Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; 541-923-7466. PRINEVILLEFARMERS MARKET:

tion and propane. Baldwin was still in the hospital's burn center Sunday night, but his condition was

unavailable. — Bulletin staff

Free; 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E.Third St.; 541-4476217 or prinevillefarmersmarket© gmail.com. NORTHWEST CROSSINGSATURDAY FARMERSMARKET:Free;10 a.m.2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; www.nwxevents.com. THE FALLWOOL GATHERING: Featuring around 50 booths, llama fleece show, demonstrations, food and entertainment; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Jefferson County Fair Complex, 430S.W .FairgroundsRoad, Madras; www.fallwoolgathering.com. YOGIS UNITE!: An outdoor yoga event followed by a potluck picnic; proceeds benefit local charities; on the grass behind the yoga studio at Old Mill; $12 $10foraspecialkid'sclass 10 a.m.-noon; Bikram Yoga, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Bend; 541-389-8599, information©yogisunitebend.com or www.yogisunitebend.com.


A6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2013

Redmond Continued from A5 Conway didn't want to move here without a job, so she "blanketed" the region with resumes and cover letters. "Redmond wasthe onlyplace that called," she said. "We did a Skype interview, and it didn't really work out; they couldn't see me. I think we ended up do-

Threats

between you and your principal, who is your instructional leader. We've invested a lot into training our principals to

Continued from A1 The groups cited most often were Hamas, Hezbollah, and al-Qaida and its affiliates, but the nature of the connections was not described in the document. So sharp is the fear of threats from within that last year the NSA planned to launch at least 4,000 probes of p otentially suspicious or abnormal staff activity after scrutinizing trillions ofemployee keystrokes at work. The anomalous behavior that sent up red flags could include staffers downloading multiple documents or accessing classified databases they do not normally use for their work, said two people familiar with the software used

give good feedback."

In Redmond, as in most districts, new teachers are evaluated with the greatest frequency. To give new staff members a sense of what to expect, Evans and Kelly Hicks, Redmond's education innovation ing it by phone." and practice leader, went into Conway also had to submit the district's evaluation rubric, a sample Individual Education which focuseson teacher planPlan, an outline of goals for a ning, instruction, professional child with special needs. In the responsibilities and the classend, Conway was offered the room environment. The whole day wasn't spent job. "I felt very welcomed," she on instruction, as t eachers said. "The special ed direc- were also given time to rumtor, Martha Hinman, was on mage through colorful bins the East Coast for a trip and full of supplies and gifts from stopped at m y s chool with the community. They received flowers." hand sanitizer, office supplies Conway has been preparing and cleaning wipes, but were for the transition as the school also given donated Domino's year approaches. Redmond is P izza gift c a rds an d f r e e aboutthe same size as her old passes to the Cascade Swim district, but Conway says the Center. There were also raffles student-to-teacher ratio is high- for bigger prizes throughout er here. She has been working the week, including free Sun on setting up her classroom Country Tour rentals, which and office, which she has all Evans herself donated. to herself, something Conway If there was some irony to said is a "wicked big deal" to a room full of teachers being her. She's also focused on ex- taught, there was an added ploring regional differences amount when the administrabetween special education in tors asked for written feedOregon and Massachusetts. back on the first day — a rare "I took what I could from chance for the teachers to be in Massachusetts, just not know- charge of the evaluations. The ing what we use here," she said. anonymous notes, strewn with "And, what we use here is dif- smiley faces, spoke to the efferent, but in the end, I think it's fectiveness of that first day. " Today I lea r ne d t h a t all the same, too." Redmond respectsitsteachers, Teaching the teachers staff and community. I also At the first Induction Acad- learned that it is okay to make emy meeting on Aug.19,Ev- mistakes," one read. ans stood at the door shaking This sense of respect is key all the teachers' hands as they to the Induction Academy. The picked out their name tags. point is not to introduce teach"This is my favorite day of ers to the requirements and the year," Evans said. "There's regulations of their new posiso much energy in the room tions, but to position the new and people happy to have these teachers within a community. "The fact that we can bring jobs." The teachers ate breakfast our new team members toand discussed their p l ace- gether in a common setting ments, talking in excited voic- where everyone is new seems es when they found someone to reduce the usual anxieties placed in the same building. that come with starting a new The group noticed there was job," Evans said. "Essentially, a large number of special edu- on Monday all the educators cation teachers — the result of were on nearly equal footing a wave of retirements, Evans on that first day. It's our job said. to make them feel welcome, S uperintendent Mike M c relaxed and excited about the Intosh welcomed the group, opportunity to make success noting the district prefers the possible for every learner in term family over staff, and at- Redmond." tempted to lay out a concise Conway felt Evans achieved philosophy for the district. her mission and r ecounted "We want to give every kid how previous teacher inducthe best possible instruction tions she experienced were not and curriculum, and give them quite so successful. "It definitely boosted mothe best chance to succeed," Mclntosh said. "We should rale, and I'd even say it was treat every k i d a s t h o ugh inspiring, to see people who they're the most important." usually wouldn't have the time Ron Munkres, a f o r m er to be with you spend hours Redmond teacher and current with us," she said. "My other school board member, also inductions were much more added some of his thoughts on abbreviated. It was the basic the challenges faced by teach- introduction to p eople and ers today. your benefits package. This "When I was a student, the was surprisingly good, and teacher taught and I sat in a they even fed us well, too." chair," he said. "Today, stuC onway's o p i nion m a y dents want education just in have been swayed, however, time because they can g et as good fortune designated information on their phone. her the winner of a raffle for That's a big challenge, so we a jump drive. " It'll b e v er y u s eful f o r on the school board want to help however we can." a special education teachOn the first day, the district er starting out," she said. dove into the topic of teacher "There's always first-day-ofevaluations, explaining their school jitters. Will I rememstandards and the reasoning ber everyone's name'? Am I behind them. going to do the paperwork "Evaluations used to be a right? But after t his week, fearful, icky, unhelpful pro- I know that should I need it, cess. We've worked on making there's going to be someone it a meaningful one that helps ready to help." teachers get better," Evans — Reporter: 541-633-2160, said. "They are a partnership tleedsC<bendbulletin.com

Riverside Continued from A5 The three-way intersection reduces the chance of bikes and pedestrianscrossing the streets unseen, according to the

— Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulletin.com

ing highly classified documents from different parts of the NSA's networks. H e subsequently fled t o Hong Kong and then Moscow, where heremains afterbeing granted temporary asylum. Contractors like Snowden, an NSA spokeswoman said, were not included in the plans to reinvestigate 4,000 security clearances. CIA officials said the number of applicants ultimately tied

Data

is vacant land and available capacity for them to connect to the Continued from A1 sewer. Water meters in m any Meanwhile, the city is testing homes send usage data to whether employees can gather the city in real time, and data more accurately and efutility workers can detect ficiently when they take comdramatic changes in water puters with them in the field, usage at a particular home. "rather than coming back at the When water use increases end of the day and trying to get significantly, the city con- caught up on their (handwrittacts the residents to find out ten) notes," Sanvitale said. A city if there is a leak. The Police pilot project put tablet computDepartment hired a crime ers in the hands of some public analyst and recently began works employees. James hopes providing monthly reports to also provide tablet computers on important budget and tothe Community Development crime statistics. Department sometime soon, The next major city data so that building inspectors and project will be to collect im- planners can use them in the ages of sidewalks, streets field. The department already and all city signs this fall uses laptops, but employees with a camera mounted on cannot carry the laptops and a vehicle, similar to Google enter information while touring Street View. a construction site. City employees said this Firefighter paramedics will information helps them op- also soon have tablet computerate more efficiently, and ers in their ambulances, so they helps city councilors and can begin to use patient-care other leaders make more reporting software to track serinformed policy decisions. vices they provide to patients. Still, the city is in the early This will be more accurate than stages of collecting and us- the current paper forms, on ingdata. which mistakes and handwrit"Right now, we're at a rel- ing that is difficult to decipher atively early stage in really make it difficult for the city to using data to drive city deci- bill insurers, James said. The sions and drive efficiency," electronic patient-management said city IT Manager Randy system will cost an estimated James. "So we're really in $75,000, according to city budthe stage right now where get documents. we're primarily focusing on The budget for the street imdata collection and ensuring agery project this fall is $40,000, the data we collect is accu- James wrote in an email. The rate.... In terms of being on city will use these images to crethe cutting edge to use data ate a database of all city signs, to really drive the business with their GPS locations. Some of the city and where we're signs are already in a city dagoing, we're sort of in an in- tabase, but Sanvitale said there are "thousands and thousands" fancy stage." Sanvitale said the city of street name and other signs purchased asset manage- that have not been recorded. "It would allow us to do, for ment software in 2008 at the direction of Public Works the first time ever, a total invenDirector Paul Rheault, who tory of signs," said Street Diviused similar programs at sion Manager Hardy Hanson. previous jobs. This software The city will also check for allows the city to track how missing street striping, and use often individual pieces of the images to add to its invenequipment are used, how tory of sidewalks. Hanson said much time employees spend the images will lead to more acworking on particular jobs, curate data. "You have one or two people and much other information. Since then, employees have that look at this screen and they worked to gather the data necessary for the city to get the most out of this system. HIGH DESERT BANK "It's just been in the last three years with Infor (the assetmanagement software) that we've been able to colI II • • l. e lect true costs for staff and materials," Sanvitale said. After the real estate crash, Sanvitale had more time to collect data. Now that the economy is improving, more developers are contacting him to find out where there •

'

to terrorist networks or hostile foreign governments was "small" but declined to provide an exact number or the reasons the broader group of applicants initially raised concerns. "Over the last several years, a small subset of CIA's total job applicants were flagged due to various problems or issues," one official said in response to questions. "During this period, one in five of that small subset were found to have significant connections to hostile intelligence servicesand or terrorist groups." The official, like others interviewed for this article, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss classified material. The intelligence community's dramatic emphasis on insider threats came in the wake

can focus their time and get it done, as opposed to all the travel time and ancillary things they do," Hanson said. Plus, employees can log data from the images even when snow covers sidewalks and other infrastructure this winter. S ometime soon, th e c i t y will also map and create a database of the landscaped features it owns around the city. This could allow the city to, for example, identify through the database a location where the irrigation system is consistently m alfunctioning, said A d a m Malinowski, a program technician in the Street Division. It's more difficult for the city to map and track its buried assets — such as sewer and water lines — but crews are slowly recording those, too, with a small remote-controlled robotic camera that crawls through the

of disclosures by WikiLeaks in 2010. The anti-secrecy group received hundreds of thousands of military and diplomatic documents from Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, now known as Chelsea Manning. Congress made security a top priority and in 2011 ordered Director of N a tional Intelligence James Clapper to set up "an effective automated insider threat detection program" to guard against similar security failures. The program

was supposed to flag possible abuses, identify double agents and prevent leaks. The project was delayed several times because the int elligence community w a s preoccupied with handling the fallout from Manning's leaks, the budget documents show.

pavement system. "It's a program that rates your road based on seven criteria," Malinowski said. This includes rutting and cracking. A newly paved street might technically receive a score of 100, but it begins to degrade as soon as vehicles drive on it. An optimal road has a score of 82, Malinowski said. The average scoreforBend streetsis68 "and

falling" by roughly one point

per year, Malinowski said. The softwareuses a decision tree to recommend sections of streets for various treatments. The cityfocuses its resources on keeping streets that are in decent condition from further deteriorating, so it does not spend much money on maintaining streets that are already in the worst shape. Another factorthe software considers in its project recommendations pipes. is the budget division each year The Street Division provides between spending on maintean example of how the city nance and construction. Then, can use more data to manage the city supplies its annual budits assets and operations. The get and the software returns a way many cities handle street list of recommended work. maintenance changed more But it's not all automated. than a decade ago, thanks to Workers go out in the field to software that allows them to check conditions of street sectrack pavement condition and tions recommended for work. use that data to prioritize road City workers also must determaintenance and reconstruc- mine whichprojectsthey should tion projects. Hanson said the perform in-house, and when it city of Tacoma, Wash., where makes more senseto contract he previously worked, began with private companies. And to use pavement management people have to update data to software in the 1990s. reflect policy decisions, such as "There was a time when ev- the City Council decision to put ery time there was a new City a southeast Bend sewer trunk Council, t h ose ( c ouncilors' line project on hold. That decineighborhoods) were the areas sion meant the Street Division that got paved," Hanson said. put several imminent projects Those days are long past in on hold, in order to avoid installBend, he said. ing brand new pavement that The city has been using soft- would be damaged if the city ware to track pavement condi- restarts the sewer project. "This is a tool; it's not the tion since at least 2000. Malinowski, who works with the end-all," Hanson said of the pavement and asset manage- software. ment programs, said he enters — Reporter: 541-617-7829, several types of data into the hborrud@bendbulletin.com

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Riverside Boulevard closure As part of the bike infrastructure improvement project, Riverside Boulevard will be partially closed to traffic starting Tuesday and running through Oct. 31. A detour route will be marked. The intersection of

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Riverside Boulevard andTumalo Avenue will be closed throughout construction.

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project proposaL Brian Potwin, a Bend bicycle advancement advocate who works with organizations such as Safe Rides to School and Commute Options, feels the project is moving along nicely. "Creating whole c ommunities with complete streets and enhanced facilities for all roadways users will add convenience,safety and vibrance to Bend," Potwin wrote in an emaiL Last week, the city of Bend painted new street lines on Northwest Franklin A venue from Broadway Street to Lava Road. After the intersection is finished, work will continue on Northwest Riverside Boulevard between Broadway Street and Tumalo Avenue, according to the project website.

to monitor employee activity. This shrouded, multimillion-dollar hunt fo r i n sider threats has suffered from critical delays in recent years and uneven implementation across agencies, the budget records show. And the spy agencies' detection systems never noticed that Snowden was copy-

Newport Ave.

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2013• THE BULLETIN

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ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

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TV SPOTLIGHT

'Futurama' after all the work that had gone into it. I agreed, so it's really happening." By John Crook © Zapzit "Isn't that a h o ot?" West says. "I don't know if we'll even Futuristic delivery guy Philip J. Fry (voice of Billy West) be in the same room as those finally gets his happy ending guys, because we may just rewith the lovely Leela (voice of cord out parts separately, but Katey Sagal), albeit with dire it would be nice if we could at consequences forthe rest of least have a table read togeththe universe, as "Futurama" er. It was bound to happen, ends its long run Wednesday although the fan fiction people on Comedy CentraL probably have already written "We wanted to push the Fry crossover episodes." "Futurama" has won several and Leela relationship to its conclusion," explains execuEmmys and other awards durtive producer David Cohen, Courtesy Newscom ing its run, but Cohen says he who co-created "Futurama" Fry (voiced by Billy West), left, and Leela (voiced by Katey Sagal) is especially proud of the way with Matt Groening of "The have had an on-again, off-again relationship throughout the "Futura- he and his creative team manma" series. The series finale airs Wednesday on Comedy Central. Simpsons." "If this really is aged to figure out the rules our last episode, we wanted about how to make a show to have a payoff for this story like this work in the first place, that has been bubbling on and and this is literally the fourth the seeming end of 'Futura- starting with his and Groenma' those times before, and ing's decision to set the series off for the last 13 years. We episode that we h ave writdecided to give fans Fry and ten with the expectation that this time I was, and that must in a future that was neither exLeela's wedding, although, of it was going to be our series mean that I'm p repared. If plicitly utopian ("The Jetsons") course, in a twisted sci-fi way." finale. We probably have the that's it, that's it, and it was the or dystopian ("Blade Runner"). " That has allowed us t o If Cohen sounds a little un- most experience at writing se- greatest run." certain whether his show is ries finales as any show." It helps, of course, that a comment a little more on what really ending, you have to cut This time feels different, long-rumored crossover epi- is happening today," Cohen the guy some slack. He's been though, he says, and series sode between "Futurama" and says. "We had a presidential here before, but this animated star West— who voicessever- "The Simpsons" finally is go- election of 3012 episode, which series— which premiered on al other characters in addition ing to happen during the com- focused on one of the candiFox back in 1999, then found to leading man Fry — says ing season of the latter show, dates"Earth certificate,' where new life v i a d i r ect-to-DVD it hit him that the end was in penned by former "Futurama" there was discussion that one movies before eventually land- sight during the cast's recent writer-producer J . S t e wart of them had not actually been ing at its most recent home on appearance at Comic-Con in Burns. born on Earth and thus could "Al Jean, who is the show not be president of Earth." Comedy Central in2009San Diego. "It hit me on that Saturday has come back from the brink runner (on 'The Simpsons'), Cohen points to a Season before. that this was it," recalls West, approached Mattand me and 3 episode called "The Luck of "It's never that good a sign a veteran voice actor who calls asked our o pinion," Cohen the Fryrish," a fan favorite, as if you've gotten really good at "Futurama" his favorite gig explains. "Matt was all for it, an example of how the team writing series finales," Cohen in his long career. "I was very because the animation styles stretched the rules for the comsays, laughing. "That means emotional.... The thing is, I are basically the same, and it edy/sci-fi genre. "It was an episode where something has gone wrong, was never emotional about also would be a nice tribute to

o-wor ernee stoceanu act

F ry learns more about hi s brother, whom he had left behind in the year 2000," Cohen says. "It was a very complicated episode with what we hoped would be a very touching ending, which was something we had not tried up to that point. The episode had a very high order of difficulty, with a lot of flashbacks, and I think it ended up coming out great. Many viewers said we gave them a tear in the eye, which is very difficult to achieve with a crazy cartoon with monsters and robots in it. I felt really proud that we had gotten people invested enough in the show that they could be moved." T hey'll l i kely b e m o v ed as well by the quiet ending to Wednesday's finale. Still, who doesn't remember those cheesy old sci-fi movies of the 1950s that often ended with the phrase "The End ... or is it'?" "I feel like it is genuinely the end this time," Cohen says. "The caveat is I also said that on each of the last three times I thought we were done. The more I think it's done, the more it taps me on the shoulder a year later when I least expect it. People have started to just not believe me when I say it's over. "Everything is possible in the future. There's futuristic technology today that wasn't around the last time we were canceled. But at this moment, it's done."

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I

Dear Abby: I have had a friend since grade school, "Dennis," and have maintained a friendship with him throughout our lifetime. Dennis never married and lived with his parents until both died about 10 years ago. He now lives alone. Dennis does not DEAR seem to want to take ABBY care of himself hygienically, and since we work together it is becoming a serious problem. Some of the other guys don't want to be around him. He doesn't bathe often enough or appear to brush his teeth

daily. I have tried repeatedly over the years to talk to him about his apparent lack of cleanliness, and now that he is almost 60, it is becoming unbearable. People are starting to avoid him. Dennis is a good person and will do anything for anyone, but this lackadaisical attitude is something we can't overlook. How can I get it across to him? He just doesn't listen or take me seriously. — In Need of Fresh Air Dear In Need: Because Dennis' poor hygiene is affecting his relationship with his co-workers, the

person to address the issue is his supervisor or boss. While Dennis may ignore or dismiss your attempts to help him, when he hears from his employers that he has to clean up his act, he may pay more attention. Dear Abby:For the past year I have been an old friend's lover. I'm a widow; he is married. I don't want him to leave his wife because she has been through a lot with him, including alcohol addiction. For the past few months he has given me excuses for not seeing me. We had gotten together on a weekly basis until recently. I have all the emails and texts we have sent each other, along with pictures and a journal I have kept throughout the relationship. Should I send them to his wife'? They have had a long marriage, and he has cheated on her repeatedly for the last 25 years. I'm not ashamed or embarrassed about our affair. I just need to know if I should let his wife know what he has been doing. Yes, there is jealousy and revenge involved, and no, I haven't talked to him about what I suspect because I'm not sure

I

I

how to broach the subject. — The Other Woman in the Southwest Dear Other Woman:I know you are hurting right now, but I see no reason to punish the wife for it. I'm sure after all these years there is nothing you could show-andtell the woman that she isn't already aware of— except that you, a friend, betrayed her. Leave her alone. If you want confirmation of your suspicions, take it up with your lover. Dear Abby: I'm entering high schooL The one I'mtransferring to is K-12, and my younger sister already goes there. She warned me that all the girls wear skirts and wearing pants is, basically, social suicide. The problem is, I don't like skirts. I never have. Should I go with the flow and wear something I'm not comfortable in, or should I wear pants and give up all hope of mak-

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— Hung Up in Houston Dear Hung Up: Start by wearing skirts for the first week or so and let the girls get to know you. See if what your sister said is true. After that, make up your own mind. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

t

t

SEPT. 2, 2013:This yearyou havemore

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

drive and energy than usual. Youhavewhat it takes to hit a home run! Sometimes you are a bit reticent to share your thoughts and feeli ngsbecause ofthe responsesyouhave received in the past. Stars showthe kind Take some risks. of day you'll have If you are single, ** * * * D ynamic make a point to get ** * * P ositive to know someone ** * A verage wel l before even ** S o-so thinking about * Difficult committing. If you are attached, bothofyou needtodevotemoreone-onone time to the relationship. LEOcan be demanding.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * You'll seem nearly unstoppable, butyou might have adifficult moment when an associatechallengesyou. Don't take it personally — just respond appropriately. You could be tired of this person, but getting irritated won't help. Take a deepbreath. Tonight: Go with the unexpected.

TAURUS (April20-May20) ** * Know when to pull back andsay when enough isenough.You mightbe dealing with a difficult person, and you'll need to get the situation under control. Once you stop trying, you could gain an insight asto what is going on. Tonight: At a last-minute Labor Dayhappening.

GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * * Y ou have many opinions and ideas. Someone might letyou know that he or she has hadmore than his or her fill of information; not everyone is interested in thesame topicsyou are.Unexpected news

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

from afriend could putyou on anewpath. Tonight: Hang out with pals.

CANCER (June 21-July22) ** * * T he need to express yourself is crucial to your well-being. A child or new friend might come off as being rather testy. Look the other way, andunderstand that this has more to do with the other party than with you. Tonight: Buy acoveted item that you havebeenwanting.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * You might not be aware of howstern youseem to others.You haveatendencyto take responsibilities very seriously, and you don't smile a lot when handling important matters. If you could schmooze alittle more, the results would be better. Tonight: Watch some fireworks.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) ** * You might want to rethink a personal situation. How you handle someone ata distance could define your relationship much more clearly. A child or loved one might surprise you with his or her actions. Be spontaneous, and do notjudge.Tonight: Laugh the night away.

CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19)

** * * L isten to news more openly, and don't get bogged down in afamily member's tale of woe. This person has beenadowner lately.The unexpected draws positive results because of your optimism. You have aunique quality that is contagious. Tonight: The world is your oyster.

** * * O ne-on-one interactions will be highlighted. Everyone needs to feel important. Through this type of contact, you'll ensure that other people feel valued. You might discover that a roommate or family member surprises you with his or her actions. Tonight: At home.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * * Someone might be too assertive for your taste. Listen to what is being suggested, and tryto ignore this person's attitude. If it seems like agood idea, go along with it. If not, say "no." Getting caught up in the details won't serve youwell. Tonight: Go along with a friend's request.

** * A ssume a low profile, and you could have the good fortune of avoiding a difficult situation. You might havebeenfeeling a little down as of late, but know that it is only a passing mood. Youwill want to withdraw and handle apersonal matter. Tonight: Togetherness works.

LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22) ** * * Ameeting will allowyou to see the pros and cons of asituation. You are responsible for your own choices, but the right one will land you ahome run. Follow your instincts, and you'll know where to head in a particular circumstance. Tonight: Where the crowds are.

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18)

PISCES (Fed.19-March20) ** * You might be recuperating from a Labor Day party. Asurprising development could shake you up,especially if it involves your finances. Even if you feel lucky, you still should avoid going beyond whatyour budget canhandle.Tonight:Takesome much-needed "you"time. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

7 p.m. on TCM,"The Story of Film: An Odyssey" —This 15-part series from across the pond traces the history of motion pictures from their beginnings in the late 19th century to the more recent past. Movies featured in the series will also air in their entirety during its run in celebration of the classic film channel's 20th anniversary. 8 p.m. on E3, "How I Met Your Mother" —It's time for Barney's lNeil Patnck Harns) bachelor party, and it's gonna be legen — wait for it — dary! The gang goes all out to throw a bash that Barney won't forget in "The Bro Mitzvah." Frances Conroy returns as Barney's mom, and Ralph Macchio plays himself. Josh Radnor, Jason Segel, Alyson Hannigan and Cobie Sm ulders also star. 8 p.m. on BRAVO,"Tamra's O.C.Wedding" — In caseyou haven't gotten your fill of Tamra Barney on "The Real Housewives of Orange County," this new series follows her and fiance Eddie Judge as they prepare for their nuptials — from the planning and dress shopping to a wild bachelor party — culminating in the big event itself. 9 p.m. on H A, "Mistresses" — After the judge hands down a shocking ruling in her case, Karen lYunjin Kim) faces more trouble. When Lucy (Corinne Massiah) goes missing from school, Paul lDondre' T. Whiffieldl joins April (Rochelle Aytes) in searching for her. Joss lJes Macallan) tries to salvage her relationship with Alex lShannyn Sossamon). Savi (Alyssa Milano) gets some disturbing news about Harry's lBrett Tucker) restaurant in the new episode "When OneDoor Closes ..."

9 p.m. on(CW), "Breaking Pointe" —They say that if the dress rehearsal goes badly, the show will go well. Try telling that to the dancers of Ballet West, however. A disastrous dress rehearsal has everyone on edge about howthe performance is going to come out. Allison wonders if Jonathan will even show up, Rex continues to have trouble with his foot, and lan faces every dancer's worst nightmare in the new episode "This Ballet Is Cursed." ©Zap2it

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IN THE BACI4: WEATHER > Scoreboard, B2 MLB, B3

Community Sports, B4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2013

A rundown of games and events to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:

Tuesday

Wednesday-Sunday

Thursday

Saturday

Saturday

Prep doyssoccer, Sherwoodat Summit, 4 p.m.:Thevisiting Storm

tj.S. Cycling Masters RoadNational Championships:Thetop masters cyclists in

NFL, BaltimoreRavensat DenverBroncos, 5:30p.m. PDT(NBC):The NFLseason begins

College footdall, Oregon at Virginia, 12:30 p.m. PDT(ABCor ESPN2);Hawaii at OregonState,

edgedthe Bowmen 3-2to begin the 2012 season, which ended in

the country convene in Central Oregon for their 2013 national championships. Time trial

as thedefending Super Bowlchampion Ravens

5 p.m. (Pac-12 Network):After a lopsided win over Nicholls, Oregon will play its first real game of the season when it travels to Charlottesville to take on the Cavaliers, who are coming off a win over BYU. The Beavers, meanwhile, will try to

Prep cross-county, Jere Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede, 8

Summit's second straight trip to the Class 5A state semifinals. Now, the Storm kick off their 2013 campaign

against visiting Sherwood, which hasn't defeated Summit since the

2010 season.

I

take on one of this season's favorites to win races will be held in Prineville on Wednesday, it all, Peyton Manning's Broncos. Banners of road race championships will be staged near Baltimore quarterback Joe Flacco throughout Mount Bachelor on Thursday and Friday, Denver have raised the ire of Broncos fans and criterium races will be in downtown heading into the contest. A full slate of games Redmond Saturday andSunday. For more is scheduled for Sunday, including Seattle at information, go to www.usacycling.org. Carolina (10 a.m. PDT).

EE IO GREEt v

lNQl 0F QNf35 f37

Pac Amisbackthis month ThepopularCentraloregonamateur tournamentisflat in termsof

bouncebackfrom aseason-openinglosswhen

up the field for the Stampede in Prineville,

which marks the beginning of the 2013

USC in their opener.

cross-country season.

< Pettersentakestitle at Por t landLPGAevent, BS • Scoreboard,BB

~ tr u~ > :

I

RUNNING

Oregonianspace men in Sunriver SUNRIVER — Oregon runners took the top

I

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Oregon programs make

they take on the Rainbow Warriors, who fell to

,4

.

a.m.: Eight Central

spots in the men's races at the Sunriver Marathon for a Cause onSunday. Eugene's KevinCave won the men's race in

COMMUNITY SPORTS

two hours, 42 minutes

and14 seconds, just ahead of Portland's Jay

Upsets show FCS

v

Cech 2:42:56. Sisters' Josh Nordell, who raced

ti(/>,,

in Saturday's half marathon at the two-day Sunriver event and finished third, was the top local finisher (fifth, 3:06:08).

r

teams

Claire Saxton, of Santa Clara, Calif., won the women's marathon in 3:25:50. Bend's Kirstin

demand respect

Jones was thetop local finisher (sixth, 3:43:37). In the men's half

. vl

marathon on Sunday, Tigard's David Mitchell was the winner in 1:27:09. In the women's half, Misha Marie of Las

By Ralph D. Russo The Associated Press

Labels can be deceiving. The labels on North Dakota State and Eastern Washington say FCS for Football Championship Subdivision, Division I's second-tier. The reality is there are 123 programs and the range of quality is as great as the difference between the best teams in the Football Bowl Subdivision (aka tier 1) and the worst. "With all due respect there are plenty of FBS teams that you can't lump with the Alabamas and the Oregons of the world," Eastern Washington coach Beau Baldwin said Sunday. "The same way you can't lump all the FCS schools together." The FCS has won eight games against FBS opponents during the opening weekend of college football, twice as many as it did during last season's opening weekend. The most notable victories were by two-time defending FCS champion North Dakota State, which beat Kansas State on Friday night, and perennial FCS playoff team Eastern Washington, which knocked off No. 25 Oregon State on Saturday. SeeFCS/B8

Andy Cripe /Corvallis Gazette-Times

Eastern Washington quarterback Vernon Adams runs against the Oregon State defense on Saturday during a 49-46 victory over the Beavers.

Cruces, N.M., won in

s

1:34:08. Bend's Kristen :.S

Yax was second in 1:39:53rrand was the top

local finisher, manor woman, in the race. More than100 par-

ticipants completed the marathon, while more than 200 took part in the Courtesy of David Adams

Tim Jones, front, and Ryan Ness, both of Bend, pedal their tandem bike during a training ride in August. They will compete for national titles at the USA Cycling Masters Road National Championships this week.

half marathon. Results from Sunday's races are listed in Commu-

nity Sports Scoreboard, page,B4. — Sulletin staff report

NFL

Gronk back at practice for Pats FOXBOROUGH,

Mass.— Rob

• Bend's Iim Jones hasa new partner but will try to add to his runof success at the USACycling Masters RoadNational Championships inCentral Oregon By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

Tim Jones bought a tandem bicycle seven years ago, thinking it might be a nice way to ride while spending time with his wife. The longtime competitive cyclist should have known the bike was destined for bigger things than leisure rides in and around Bend. "If I've got a bike in the garage, I'll probably end up racing it," says Jones, a 40-year-old Bend web developer who in each of the past two USA Cycling Masters Road National Championships has placed first in his division in both the tandem bike road race and tandem trial. "I did a (criterium) with my wife one year, did a couple with one of my teammates at Therapeu-

USACyclingMasters RoadNational Championships When:Wednesday-Sunday Where:Prineville, Wednesday; Mount Bachelor, Thursday and Friday; Redmond, Saturday and

Sunday Wed:www.usacycling.org tic Associates ... and then saw when Bend got nationals there was a tandem category. I figured I'd find someone on my (bike) team who'd be interested in doing that for grins." After winning four national titles

with Bend cyclist T.J. Paskewich in the past two years, Jones hopes to add a fifth and sixth championship jersey this week at the 2013 masters road nationals, which begin Wednesday and run through Sunday. He will partner with longtime cyclist but tandem newbie Ryan Ness, a Bend rider who has been on exactly three training rides with Jones heading into this week's races. "I've been biking for a while, but this is a whole different type thing," says Ness, 39. "When you're sitting in the back, you're not steering, you just go with it." With two sets of legs pumping pedals, tandems can move faster than solo cyclists — eventually. SeeTandem/B4

Gronkowski looked "al-

most Gronk-esque" on Sunday as hepracticed in full pads for the first time since having back

surgery. The star tight end for the New England Patriots participated in drills with his teammates during the 15 minutes

reporters were allowed to observe the start of practice. Gronkowski isn't expected to play in the first few games but wasn't placed on the physically unable to perform list, a move that would have required him to miss at least the first

sixgames oftheseason. "He looked good," tight end Michael

Hoomanawanui said. "He looked almost

Gronk-esque." In his three NFL sea-

sons, Gronkowski has caught187 passes for

TENNIS: U.S. OPEN

38 touchdowns. — The Associated Press

If it works, playersstick with superstitions By Stuart Miller New York Times News Service

When Andre Agassi peered into his bag before his first match of the 1999 French Open, he was missing one crucialitem: underwear. He turned down his coach Brad Gilbert's offer to lend him a pair, then won the match. Agassi had lost in the first round there the previous year, so he credited the change in fortune to the change in attire. He did not wear underwear in the next round, or the next — all the way through to

his fourth Grand Slam title. Athletes are often superstitious. B aseball H al l o f F a m e r W a d e Boggs ate chicken before every game, and the Nets' Jason Terry sleeps in the uniform shorts of the next opponent. But tennis players — even those who wear underwear — seem more susceptible than most. "I always stay in the same room at the same hotel when in N ew York for the U.S. Open," Juan Martin del Potro said. Wimbledon semifinalist Jerzy

Janowicz is clean shaven now only because he lost in the first round in New York — he does not touch a razor when he is winning. Even Alexandra Dulgheru of Romania, who said she was not very superstitious, acknowledged, "I always step on the court first with my right foot." "Tennis breeds this," ESPN analyst Pam Shriver said, noting that athletes in other sports often have teammates and a coaching staff to help them relax. SeeSuperstitions/B8

CORRECTION L

A prep sports story

e

headlined "Summit

girls soccer opens with road victory" that

appeared in Sunday's Bulletin on Page D3 ' .

„r".

Darron Cummings /The Associated Press

Serena Williams returns a shot to Sloane Stephens during the fourth round of the U.S. Open on Sunday in New York. Williams won the all-American matchup.

inSide • Saturday's U.S. Open action, D2

contained incorrect information about the

Storm's leading scorer. Sophomore Christina Edwards recorded three

goals against Sandy on Saturday. The Bulletin regrets the error.


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 20'(3

SPORTS ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY TENNIS U.S. Open, round of16

U.S. Open, round of16

Time

T V /Radio

8 a.m. 4 p.m.

CBS ESPN 2

ON DECK

GOLF

PGA Tour, DeutscheBankChampionship PGA Tour, Deutsche Bank Championship MOTOR SPORTS

8:30 a.m. 10 a.m.

Golf NBC

NHRA, U.S.Nationals, final eliminations

9 a.m.

ESPN2

BASEBALL MLB, St. Louis at Cincinnati MLB, Seattle at Kansas City

10 a.m. 11 a.m.

MLB Root MLB MLB

MLB,TexasatOakland MLB,Tampa BayatLosAngelesAngels

1 p.m. 6 p.m.

FOOTBALL

High school, Godby (Fla.) vs. DeMatha (Md.) noon College, Florida State at Pittsburgh FIELD HOCKEY College, Michigan State at Stanford BOXING

5 p.m.

ESPN ESPN

3 p.m.

Pac-12

LouisCollazovs.AlanSanchez

6 p.m. Fox Sports 1

TUESDAY TENNIS

Time

TV/ R adio

U.S. Open, men's round of16; women's quarterfinals U.S. Open, singles round of16; doubles U.S. Open, men's round of16;

8 a.m. 8 a.m.

ESPN2 Tennis

4 p.m.

ESPN

women's quarterfinals SOCCER

UEFAChampionsLeague,Milanvs.Eindhoven 1 1:30 a.m. Women, U.S. vs. Mexico BASEBALL MLB, Detroit at Boston MLB, Seattle at Kansas City FOOTBALL CFL, Montreal at Toronto VOLLEYBALL Women's college, Portland State at Oregon

Roo t 5 p.m. Fox Sports 1

4 p.m. 5 p.m.

MLB Root

4:30 p.m. N BCSN 7 p.m.

Pac- 1 2

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

Tuesday Boys soccer: CottageGroveat Ridgeview,4 p.m.; Sherwood atSummit,4 p.m.;CrookCounty atSisters, 4:00p.m.;Thurstonat Redmond,4 p.m Girls soccer: Ridgeview atCotageGrove,630 pm.; Sisters atCrookCounty, 4 p.m.; Summit at Sherwood, 6p.m. Volleyball: CulveratCentral Linn,6p.m., Redmond atThe Daff esWahtonka,6:30p.m.

TENNIS Professional U.S. Open Sunday At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center New York Purse: $34.3million (GrandSlam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Third Round TomasBerdych(5), CzechRepublic, def. Julien Benneteau (31), France,6-0, 6-3,6-2. StanislasWawrinka (9), Switzerland,def. Marcos Baghdatis,Cyprus,6-3,6-2, 6-7(1), 7-6(7). AndyMurray(3), Britain, def.FlorianMayer, Germany,7-6(2), 6-2, 6-2. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan,def. AndreasSeppi (20), Italy,6-3, 6-4,2-6, 3-6,6-1. Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, def. EvgenyDonskoy, Russia,6-3, 7-6(5), 3-6,6-1. Mikhail Youzhny(21), Russia,def.Tomm y Haas (12), Germ any, 6-3, 6-2, 2-6,6-3. NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia, def.JoaoSousa, Portugal, 6-0,6-2,6-2. MarcelGranoffers,Spain,def.TimSmyczek, United States,6-4,4-6, 0-6,6-3, 7-5.

Women Fourth Round Carla Suarez Navarro (18), Spain,def. Angelique Kerber(8), Germany,4-6, 6-3, 7-6(3). SerenaWiliams(1), United States,def. Sloane Stephens (15), UnitedStates, 6-4, 6-1. Li Na (5),China,def. JelenaJankovic (9), Serbia, 6-3, 6-0.

EkaterinaMakarova(24), Russia,def. Agnieszka Radwanska(3),Poland,6-4,6-4. U.S. OpenShowCourt Schedules Today Aff Times PDT

Play begins at 8a.m. Arthur AsheStadium Alison Riske,UnitedStates, vs. DanielaHantuchova, Slovakia Not before9:30a.mcAnaIvanovic (13), Serbia, vs. VictoriaAzarenka(2), Belarus RogerFederer(7), Switzerland,vs. Tomm y Robredo (19), Spain Night Session (4p.m.) PhilippKohlschreiber(22), Germany, vs. Rafael Nadal (2), Spain BobandMikeBryan(1), UnitedStates, vs.Colin Fleming and JonathanMarray(12), Britain

MOTOR SPORTS

FOOTBALL

touchdown run in the first quar-

NASCAR

ter. No. 8 Clemsonbeat Georgia

No. 9 Louisville rolls-

38-35.

Teddy Bridgewater threw five

touchdownpassesand Michael Dyer had a 46-yard touchdown run as No. 9 Louisville defeated

CYCLING

Ohio 49-7onSundayinLouis-

Harner drOPS to fifth

ville, Ky. Bridgewater kicked off

— Daniel Moreno took the lead of the Spanish Vuelta on Sunday

hisHeisman Trophycampaign by going 23 of 28for 355 yards. Damian Copeland and Kai De La Cruz each caught two touch-

after winning his secondstage in six days with an impressive uphill push to separate from the

dovvns.

pack, as Bend'sChris Horner fell

ColoradO wins — Greg

to fifth in the overall classification. Moreno broke away on the

Henderson scored on a53-yard

steep ramp to the finish line to

fumble return in the fourth quarsnatch the leader's red jersey ter and Connor Wood threw three fromNicolasRochebyonesec-

touchdown passes —two to

ond in the overall standings. He

speedster Paul Richardson — to

finished Sunday's ninth stage, a104-mile mountainous ride

help Colorado beatColorado State 41-27 onSunday in Denver in Mike Maclntyre's coaching debut for the Buffaloes. Wood often

from Antequera toValdepenas de Jaen, with a time of 4 hours, 18 minutes, 57 seconds. Horner,

connected with Richardson, vvho vvho led after the first stage and vvas back on the field after misshad been insecond placebefore ing last season because of atorn Sunday, is now in fifth, 28 secleft ACL. Richardson finished onds behind. with 10 catches for 208 yards. He had an 82-yard TD catch on

Colorado's first pass playand sealed it with a 75-yard grab late in the fourth.

SOCCER Real Madrid paysrecord tranSfer —After the year's

GeOrgia lOSeSWRto

injury — Georgia receiver

most drawn-out transfer saga, it's finally official: Gareth Bale

Malcolm Mitchell will miss the remainder of the season after tearing the anterior cruciate

announced Sunday that Bale has

ligament in his right knee inSaturday' slossatClemson.Coach

is a RealMadrid player. Madrid signed a six-year contract, and a person familiar with the deal said the fee vvas a world-record

100 million euros ($132 million). will have season-ending surgery. The move for Bale,vvhohad Mitchell, the leading returning around threeyears remaining Mark Richt said Sunday Mitchell receiver for the No. 5 Bulldogs,

on his Tottenham contract, caps

hurt his kneewhenjumping up

a rapid rise for one ofEuropean

to celebrate with a teammate following Todd Gurley's 75-yard

football's most exciting players. — From wire reports

Sprint Cup AdvoCare500

Sunday At Atlanta MotorSpeedway Hampton, Ga. Lap length: 1.54 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (9) KyleBusch,Toyota, 325laps, 118.2 rating,47 points,$338,058. 2. (11)JoeyLogano, Ford,325, 130.8,44,$250,073. 3. (7) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 325, 100, 41,

$201,865. 4. (32) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 325, 92.5, 40, $165,235. 5. (17) RyanNewm an, Chevrolet, 325, 102, 40, $167,848. 6. (5) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 325, 117.1, 39 $171,176. 7.(3)JuanPabloMontoya,Chevrolet,325, 100.4,38 $156,504. 8. (8) DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet, 325,93.2, 36, $129,265. 9. (30) Kevin Harwck,Chevrolet, 325, 103.7, 35, $156,526. 10. (22) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 325, 83.1, 0, $120,015. 11. (15)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 325,94.6,33, $136,675. 12. (6)MattKenseth, Toyota,325, 98,32,$144,946. 13. (20) MarcosAmbrose, Ford, 325, 84.4, 31, $135,419. 14. (13) A J Affmedinnger, Toyota,325, 83.3, 30, $133,363. 15.(24) GregBiffle, Ford,325,72.7,29,$122,355 16. (1) Ricky StenhouseJr., Ford, 325, 77.2, 28, $163,466. 17. (31) David Giffiland, Ford, 325, 73.5, 27, $120,738. 18. (2)CarlEdw ards, Ford,324,102.7,27,$139,255. 19. (26) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 324, 67.3, 0, $117,013. 20. (29)AricAlmirola,Ford,323,65.4, 24,$140,091. 21. (21) DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet 323, 61.1, 23, $101,155. 22. (19)CaseyMears, Ford, 323,44.4,23, $119,888. 23. (14)DavidRagan,Ford, 323,61.1, 22,$117,002 24. (16) Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 322, 54.7, 20, $128,721. 25. (27) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 322, 53.9, 19, $142,405. 26. (36) DaveBlaney,Chevrolet, 322, 53.7, 18, $96,930. 27. (37) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 322, 49.5, 17, $101,830. 28. (10) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 321,558, 16, $142,141. 29. (25) David Stremme,Toyota, 321, 52.9, 15, $93,030 30. (42)J.J.Yeley, Chevrolet,321,40.8,15,$94,380. 31. (41)TimmyHil, Ford,321, 32.4,13,$92,730. 32. (34) DavidReutimann,Toyota, 320, 43.4, 12, $92,555. 33. (38) Mike Bliss, Chevrolet, 319, 36.3, 0, $100,380. 34. (28) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 319, 64.5, 10, $100,230. 35. (23)BradKeselowski, Ford,engine, 307,88.6, 10, $145,496.

Bengals ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS— Acquired RHPMatt Dolphins fromClevelandto complete anearlier trade. PANTHE RS Langweff ATLANTA BRAVES— Purchased the contract of Vikings RHPFreddyGarciafromGwinnett (IL). 95 Raiders CINCINNATI REDS— Recaled INFHenry Rodri4.5 Cards 4.5 Packers guez, RHPCurtis PartchandOF Derrick Robinson 3 Giants from Louisville(IL). COLOR ADO ROCKIES — Activated RHPTyler (M) — Miami openedasfavorite Chatwoodfrom the 15-dayDL.Recalled INFJosh College Rutledge from ColoradoSprings (PCL). Favorite Opening Current Underdog FLORIDAMARLINS—Activated OFChris CoghToday 1 2.5 1 1 PITTSBU RGH lan fromthe15-day DL.Recalled RHPChris Hatcher and LHPZach Philips fromNewOrleans (PCL). MILWAUKEE BREWERS— AcquiredRHPMichael BlazekfromSt. Louisto completeanearlier trade.ReSOCCER calledRHPDonovanHandfrom Nashvile (PCL). PITTSBU RGH PIRATES — Activated OF Travrs Top12 in Points MLS Snider fromthe15-day DL. Recaled LHPKris John1. J.Johnson,837;2. C.Bowyer, 809;3. K.Harvick, MAJORLEAGUESOCCER son andRH PKyleFarnsworth fromIndianapolis (IL). 795; 4. C.Edwards, 795; 5. Ky.Busch, 786; 6 All Times PDT SAN DIEGOPADRES — Recalled LHP Tommy M.Kenseth,768;7. D.Earnhardt Jr., 750;8. J.Logano, L ayne and C Chris Robinson fromTucson(PCL). 729; 9. GBiffle,727;10. KuBusch,719;11. J Gordon, Eastern Conference ST. LOUISCARDINALS Activated C Tony Cruz 713; 12.K.Kahne,709. W L T P f sGF GA from the15-dayDL. Montreal 12 7 6 42 41 35 WASHING TONNATIONALS— Recalled RHPErik New York 1 2 9 6 4 2 40 35 Davis andLHPlan Krol fromSyracuse(IL) andC IndyCar S porting KansasCity 12 9 6 4 2 38 27 SandyLeonfromHarrisburg (EL). Grand Prix of Baltimore Philadelphia 10 8 9 39 37 37 FOOTBALL Sunday NewEngland 1 0 9 7 37 35 25 National Football League Af Baltimore Street Circuit Houston 1 0 8 7 3 7 30 29 ATLANTA FALCONS—Srgned WRJamesRodgBaltimore, Md. Chicago 1 0 10 5 3 5 31 35 ers, WR DariusJohnson, FBPatrick DiMarco,QBSeth Lap length: 2.04miles Columbus 8 13 5 2 9 29 35 Doege,CBJordan Mabin, GPhiffipkeith Manley, DT (Starting position in parentheses) TorontoFC 4 12 10 22 23 35 AdamReplogle andTEtight endMickeyShulerto the 1.(3)SimonPagenaud,Daff ara-Honda,75,Running. D.c. 3 18 5 1 4 16 43 practicesquad. 2.(5)JosefNewgarden,Daff ara-Honda,75,Running. Western Conference ARIZONACARDINALS Claimed OT Bradley 3. (22) SebastienBourdais, Daffara-chevrolet, 75, W L T P f sGF GA Sowel off waiversfromIndianapolis andNTAlamRunning. RealSaltLake 1 4 8 6 48 52 35 eda Ta'amu off waiversfromPittsburgh. ReleasedLB 4. (4) JustinWilson, Daffara-Honda,75, Running Los Angele s I 3 9 4 43 43 32 KennyDemensandCBBryan Mccann. 5. (17) Simonade Silvestro, Daffara-chevrolet, 75, Seattle 1 2 8 4 4 0 32 26 BALTIMORERAVENS — Released WR LaQuan Running. Portland 9 5 1 2 3 9 39 30 Williams.SignedTEMatt Furstenburg, SOmar Brown, 6. (9) CharlieKimbaff,Daffara-Honda,75,Running. Colorado 1 0 8 9 3 9 34 29 LB BrandonCopeland,DLCodyLarsen, OLReggie 7. (11)JamesHinchcliffe, Dagara-chevrolet, 75,RunVancouver 1 0 9 7 3 7 38 35 Steph ens,OLJ.J.UngaandOLJordanDeveytothe ning. FC Dallas 9 7 1 0 3 7 36 38 practicesquad. 8. (19) SebastianSaavedra, Dagara-chevrolet, 75, SanJose 9 11 7 3 4 28 40 BUFFALOBILLS — Signed G Mark Asper, DE Running. ChivasIJSA 5 14 7 2 2 26 47 JamieBlatnick, DEIzaanCross, QBThad Lewis and 9.(7) HelioCastroneves,Daffara-Chevrolet, 75,RunNOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. W R TommyStreeter tothepractice squad.ClaimedCB ning. BrandonBurtonoff waiversfromMinnesota. 10. (16)MarcoAndretti, Daffara-Che vrolet, 75,RunSunday'sGames CHICAGO BEARS— Signed LB Jerry Franklin, ning. Chicago1,Houston1,tie CB Demontre Hurst, QBJerrodJohnson, WRRicardo 11. (6)TristanVautier, DaffaraHonda,74,Running. Vancouver 2, ChivasUSA2, tie Locke tte,TEFendiOnobun,FB HarveyUngaand DE 12. (15)OriolServia,Dalara-chevrolet, 74,Runnrng. Wednesday'sGames Aston Whi t esi deto thepractice squad.ClaimedDE 13. (20)E.J.Viso, Dagara-chevrolet, 74,Running. HoustonatColumbus,4:30 p.m. David Bassoff waivers(Oakland).WaivedDECheta 14. (18) EdCarpenter, Daffara-chevrolet, 74, Run- ChivasUSAat Seattle FC,7p.m. Ozougwu. ning. CINCINNATIBENGALS—SrgnedWRCobi Ham15. (14)TonyKanaan, Dagara-chevrolet, 73,Contact. ilton, OTReidFragel, RBDaniel Herron, CBChris 16. (21)StefanWilson, Daffara-Honda,72, Running. BASKETBALL Lewis-Harris, CB Onterio Mccalebb,LBJ.K. Schafer 17. (12)GrahamRahal, Dalara-Honda,68, Contact. andCTJ.Johnsontothepracticesquad. 18. (2)Wil Power,Dallara-chevrolet, 67,Running. C LEVELAND B ROWNS — ClaimedTEMarQueis WNBA 19. (1)ScottDixon,Daffara-Honda,52, Contact. Gray(SanFrancisco), RBDennisJohnson(Houston), 20. (8) RyanHunter-Re ay, Dallara-chevrolet, 42, WOMEN'SNATIONAL OL PatrickLewis (GreenBay), LB BrandonMagee Mechanical. BASKETBALLASSOCIATION (Daffas),TEKeavonMilton (NewOrleans)andBobby 21. (24)DarioFranchitti, Daffara-Honda,22,MechaniAll Times PDT Rainey(Baltimore)off waivers. cal. INDIANAP OLISCOLTS— ClaimedTEJackDoyle 22. (13)LucaFilippi, Daffara-Honda,12,Mechanical. Eastern Conference off waiversfromTennessee.WaivedRBKerwynn Wil23.(23)JamesJakes,Dagara-Honda5,Mechanical. W L P c t G B liams.Re-signedLBDaniel AdongoandLBJosh Mc24. (10)TakumaSato, Dagara-Honda4, Mechanical. z-Chicago 21 8 72 4 Nary tothepracticesquad. SrgnedCThomasAustin, Atlanta 1 4 13 .519 6 QB ChandleHami r sh,TEDominique JonesandCB Points Leaders Washington 1 4 15 .483 7 SheldonPriceto thepractice squad. Castroneves501, Drxon452, Pagenaud431,AnIndiana 13 15 . 464 7r/r JACKSONVILL E JAGUARS — Claimed WR Stedretti 430,Hunter-Reay427,J.Wilson 393, Franchitti NewYork 11 19 . 367 t O'Ir phenBurton(Minnesota), DBWinston Guy (Seattle), 388, Hinchcliffe376, Power371,Kimball 363. 7 2 2 . 241 1 4 TE ClayHarbor(Philadelphia), GJacquesMcclendon Connecticut WesternConference (Atlanta), LBChris McCoy(Phrladelphia), LB J.T. W L P c t G B Thomas(Chicago)andTED.J. Wiliams(GreenBay) FOOTBALL x-Minnesota 22 7 . 7 59 off waivers.ReleasedSAntwonBlake, TEBrett Brackx-LosAngeles 21 8 . 7 2 4 1 ett, G-0DanGerberry, DTKyle Love, FBLonnie Pryor, Phoenix 15 13 .536 6'Ir WR Jor danShipleyandLBAndyStudebaker, College x-Seattle 15 15 . 500 7'/~ MINNES OTA VIKINGS Claimed OL J'Marcus Pac-12 Standings 11 19 . 367 1 1'Ir Webboff waiversfromChrcago. SignedRBJoeBanSanAntonio All Times PDT Tu sa 10 20 . 333 12'/r yard, GTravisBond, DTEverett Dawkins,TEChase x-clinchedplayoffspot; z-clinchedconference Ford, OTKevin Murphy,WRRodney Smith andWR North Sonday's Game AdamThielento thepractice squad.Terminated the Conf. Overall Tulsa93,NewYork88 contract ofOLTroyKropog. 0-0 1-0 Oregon Today'sGame NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS Claimed off waiv0-0 1-0 Los Angeleat Washington s Atlanta, 3p.m. ers LB ChrisWhitefrom Detroit, OL Braxston Cave 0-0 0-0 Stanford from Cleveland,GChris Barker andDTA.J. Francis 0-0 0-1 California from MiamiRel . easedDBMarquice ColeandRBLeon 0-0 0-1 OregonState DEALS Washington.Re-signedLBJa'GaredDavis, SKanorris 0-0 0-1 Washington State Davis, DB Justin Green,DLMarcus Forston andLB South Transactions Jeff Tarpinianto thepractice squad. Conf. Overall N EW YORK GIANTS — Si gned DE Adewale BASEBALL 0-0 1-0 Arizona Olomo, DE Matt Broha,OLStephenGoodin, OLEric AmericanLeague 0-0 1-0 USC HermanWRMarcusHarris, WRJulian TaffeyandDB BALTIMOR EORIOLES— Recalled CSteve Clev0-0 1-0 uiah 0-0 1-0 engerand CChris Snyderfrom Rochester (IL) and CharlesJamesto thepractice squad. UCLA NEWYORKJETS — ClaimedRB Alex Green 0-0 1-0 LHP Wei-YinChenfrom TheGCLOrioles.to start Colorado 0-0 0-0 Sundayagainst NewYork at YankeeStadium. Des- (GreenBay), OTBenIjalana (Indianapolis) andLB ArizonaState ignated CTaylor Teagardenand OFEric Thomasfor Scott Solomon(Tennessee) off waivers. Released Saturday's Games RB Kahl ilBelland LB Danny Lansanah.Placed LB assignment Oregon66,Nichogs3 on injured reserve.SignedWRMichael BOSTONRED SOX— ActivatedINFJohnMcDon- Josh Mauga EasternWashington 49,OregonState46 Campbell, LBTroy Davis, DTTevita Finau, 0 Dalton ald. Selectedthecontract of OF Quintin Berryfrom Auburn31,Washington State24 Pawtucket.DesignatedRHPDaniel Bardfor assign- Freeman,S Rontez Miles, TEChris PantaleandOT UCLA58,Nevada20 ment. RecalledRHPRubbyDeLaRosaandCRyan J.B. Shugartstothepractice squad. Washington 38, BoiseState 6 OAKLANDRAIDERS — Caimed G Antoine McLavarnway from Pawtucket. Transferred CChristian Northwestem 44 Califomia30 Vazquez from Portland (EL)to Pawtucket.Activated Clain offwaiversfromBaltimore andDT BrianSanford Sonday's Game off waiversfrom Cleveland.ReleasedPChris Kluwe. INF Brandon Snyder fromthe15-day DL. Colorado41,ColoradoSt.27 WaivedQBTyler Wilson. CHICAGO WHITESOX — Recaled LHPCharlie Thursday's Game SAN DI EGO CHARGERS— Traded a 2015 condiLeesman and CBryanAndersonfromCharlotte (IL). SacramentoSt.atArizonaSt., 7p.m. draft pickto theDalas Cowboys CLEVEL AND INDIANS—Recalled CKelly Shop- tional seventh-round Saturday, Sept. 7 pach,RHPPrestonGuilmet, LHPNickHagadoneand for DT SeanLrssemore. ClaimedDL DrakeNevrs WeberSt.atUtah,11 a.m. RHPBlakeWoodfrom Columbus (IL) Purchasedthe off waiversfromthe Indianapolis Colts andLBTerOregonatVirginia, 12:30p.m. reff Manningfrom the GreenBayPackers. Released contractof INFJoseRamrrezfrom Erre(EL). PortlandSt. atCalifornia, 2p.m. DETROITIGERS— Purchasedthecontract of OF LB D.J. SmithandDEBrandon Moore. Placed DE Cent.ArkansasatColorado, 5p.m. Nick Casteffanos fromToledo (IL). Recalled RH PEvan Damik Scafe oninjuredreserve.Agreedto terms Hawaii atOregonSt., 5p.m. ReedandINFDannyWorth from Toledo. Transferred with LBReggieWalker. SignedTackle Nick Becton, Arizonaat UNLV,7:30p.m. LB Thomas Keiser andCBMarcus Cromartie to the RHPLuisMartetothe60-day DL. WashingtonSt.atSouthern Cal, 7:30p.m. practicesquad. MINNESOT ATWINS Added OF Alex Presleyto San JoseSt.atStanford, 8 p.m. TAMPA BAYBUCCANEERS— Claimed DT Chris the roster. NEW YORK YANKEES Recalled INFDavid Adams, JonesandWRRussell Shepard off waivers. Released Scores andSchedule WR TiquanUnderwoodandLBNajee Goode. Signed RHPDeffinBetances,RHPBrett Marshall andLHPCeAll Times PDT Carr, OLJace Daniels, LBKa'lial Glaud, sar CabralfromScranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Selected CB Deveron DT MatthewMasifilo, TE DannyNoble, WRChris the contractof CJ.R.MurphyfromScranton/WilkesSunday's Games Barre.TransferredINFJayson Nix to the 60-day DL OwusuandTMikeRemmersto the practicesquad. SOUTH TENNESSEETI TANS— SignedDTStefanCharles, ReeasedOFMelkyMesa. Bethune-cookman12,TennesseeSt. 9 FB Coff inMooney,WR RashadRoss,LBJonathan OAKLANDATHLETICS — Recalled LHP Pedro Florida A8 M27, MVSU10 Figueroa,INFAndy Parrino andINFJemile Weeks WiffardandCBKhalid Wootento thepractice squad. Louisville 49,Ohio7 from Sacram ento (PCL). Selectedthecontract of OF FAR WEST MichaelChoicefromSacramento. Designated CLuke Colorado41,ColoradoSt.27 FISH COUNT Montzforassignment. Today'sGame TAMPABAYRAYS—Selectedthecontract of OFUpstream daily movem ent of adult chinook,lack EAST DH Delmon Youngfrom Montgomery (SL). Recalled chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected CoFloridaSt.at Pittsburgh,5 p.m. RHPJoshLuekeandCChris Gimenez from Durham lumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. (IL). ReinstatedOF-DH LukeScott fromthe15-day Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Betting line DL. B onneville 25,199 2,579 2,051 6 6 2 NFL TEXAS RANGERS Reinstated DHLanceBerkT he Dages 17,511 2,747 1,890 6 3 2 (Home teams inCAPS) manandRHPNickTepeschfrom15-day DLand RHP John Day 4,939 1,177 8 0 9 28 0 Favorite Opening Current Underdog Neftali FelizandLHPMichael Kirkmanfrom the60McNary 1 , 859 4 4 8 581 210 Thursday day DL Purchasedthe contract OF/18Jim Adduci Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, BRONC OS 7.5 9 Ravens from RoundRock (PCL). Recaled RHPCory Burns jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected Sunday and CRobinson Chirinos fromRound Rock. Released ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Patriots 7 105 BILLS RHPJustin Miler. DesignatedOFJoeBensonfor asChnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd STEELE RS 7 7 Trtans signment. Bonnevi le 383 731 85 919 183,402 83,844 SAINTS 1 .5 3 Falcons TORONTO BLLIEJAYS— Activated RHPSteve The Daffes 237,684 68201 76,314 39,882 Bucs 15 3 JETS DelabarandRH PDustin McGowanoffthe15-day DL. John Day 167 087 56,655 42,666 21,157 Chiefs 3 4 JAGUAR S National League McNary 148728 41,255 37,516 18,402 36. (18) Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet, 292, 45.7, 8, $1 09,930. 37. (39)LandonCassiff, Chevrolet, engine,249, 33, 0, $91,760. 38. (4) DennyHamlin, Toyota,engine,231, 50.7, 6, $105,960. 39. (12)Clint Bowyer,Toyota, engine,192,106.3, 6 $124,793 40. (40)JoeNemechek, Toyota, vibration, 114,27.1, 0, $78,160. 41. (33) Josh Wise,Ford, vibration, 94, 31.9, 0, $74,160. 42. (43) MichaelMcDoweff, Ford,vibration, 92, 31, 3, $70,160. 43. (35) Scott Speed,Ford,vibration, 22, 25.3, 1, $66,660.

BEARS 3 B ROWNS 1.5(M) Seahawks 3 . 5 LIONS 3 COLTS 7 RAMS 5.5 49ERS 4.5 COWBOYS 2. 5

3 PK 3.5 4.5

W i iamSWinSa -AmeIiCanmatC u Wit Ste By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

NEW YORK — For eight intense, entertaining games, Sloane Stephens stayed right with Serena Williams. F or a 40-minute stretch in t h e fourth round of the U.S. Open, the top two American women put on quite a show. Both hit serves topping 115 mph. Both whipped groundstrokes to the corners. Both covered a lot of ground, extending points with legchurning defense. Both showed the occasional sign of nerves, reflecting what a big deal this was, in part because the 15th-seeded Stephens already was one of only three players to beat No. 1 Williams this season. Until, that is, the score was 4-all in the first set Sunday. That's when Williams took over. The 20-year-old Stephens' time at the top of tennis may come. For now, the 31-year-old Williams is still as good as it gets. Taking eight of the last nine games, defending champion Williams returned to the quarterfinals at Flushing Meadows by beating

TENNIS: U.S. OPEN Stephens 6-4, 6-1. "When you give her that opportunity to take that step forward, she definitely makes her move," Stephens said. "Unfortunately, today she made her move. I just couldn't get back in." Still, all in all, it was remarkably compelling and, within i ndividual points, rather evenly played for what turned out to be such a runaway. "I definitely think it was a highquality match," said Williams, 64-4 with eight titles this year. "We both came out today to play." She advanced to play No. 18 Carla Suarez Navarro of Spain, who defeated No. 8 Angelique Kerber of Germany 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (3). Asked whether there's any chance of a letdown after getting past Stephens, Williams replied: "Absolutely not. I mean, I've been at this for a long time, so for me in my career, there are no letdowns." In Sunday's other fourth-round women's matches, No. 3 A gniesz-

ka Radwanska lost 6-4, 6-4 to No. 24 Ekaterina Makarova, and 2011 French Open champion Li Na eliminated 2008 U.S. Open runner-up Jelena Jankovic 6-3, 6-0. In men's third-round action, the last of 15 Americans in the field lost, making this the first U.S. Open in history without at least one representative from the host country in the fourth r ound. W i l d-card r e cipient T i m Smyczek, who is ranked 109th, was beaten 6-4, 4-6, 0-6, 6-3, 7-5 by Marcel Grafmllers of Spain. It also means no U.S. man reached the fourth round at any of the four Grand Slam tournaments in 2013. Granollers, who is ranked 43rd, now takes on No. 1 Novak Djokovic, a 6-0, 6-2, 6-2 winner over 95th-ranked Joao Sousa of Portugal. The man Djokovic lost to in last year's U.S. Open final, and this year's Wimbledon f inal, A n d y M u r r ay, struggled with his breathing on a muggy afternoon but otherwise faced little trouble in a 7-6 (2), 6-2, 6-2 victory over 47th-ranked Florian Mayer of

Germany. Murray has won 29 of his past 31 Grand Slam matches, a run of success that includes his first two major titles — at the U.S. Open last September and Wimbledon this July — along with two runner-up finishes. "The expectations are higher, but there'snot as much pressure to win," the third-seeded Murraysaid. "I feel much more comfortable coming into these events than this time last year." In the fourth round, he'll play 65thranked Denis Istomin of Uzbekistan, who eliminated No. 20 Andreas Seppi 6-3,6-4, 2-6, 3-6, 6-1. Other matchups set Sunday are 2001 U.S. Open champion Lleyton Hewitt against No. 21 MikhailYouzhny, and No. 5 Tomas Berdych against No. 9 Stanislas Wawrinka. "It was a bit hot, a bit humid, but otherwise, tennis was good," Berdych said after his 6-0, 6-3, 6-2 victory over No. 31 Julien Benneteau. "I managed to stay focused from the first point 'til the last. Didn't do any ups and downs." The same almost could have been

enS

said by W i l l iams, w hose match against Stephens was eagerly anticipated from the moment the draw came out tr/z weeks ago. At the outset, anyway, it lived up to the hype. Williams was the oldest player to reach the fourth round; Stephens the youngest. Williams owns 16 Grand Slam titles, including four at the U.S. Open, and 54 trophies totaL Despite being the only current member of the top 20 in the WTA rankings without an appearance in a tournament final, Stephens has earned the label of "Next Big Thing," in large part by being one of three women to get to the round of 16 at all four Grand Slam tournaments in 2013 (Williams, of course, is another). Afterward, Stephens spoke about embracing others' expectations and her personal goal of moving into the top 10 in the rankings by year's end. She also spoke about Williams, of course, and kept returning to a concept that was rather clear on this day, saying more than once: "She's No. 1 in the world for a reason."


MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2013• THE BULLETIN

B3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Wchen 4 G ausman W,2-3 2 I Fr.Rodriguez 1 Tom.Hunter 1 O'Day 1 New York

Hosmer(28), SPerez(21), A Escobar (17) 38 H annhn3b 4 0 2 0 Torrealc 4 0 0 0 R.Davis(2). SB—Boniiacio 2(23), J.Dyson2 (29). 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WP —McGowan. Betances C incinnati 002 0 0 0 0 11 — 4 J uTrnrph 1 0 1 0 Hairstnlf 4 1 2 1 Central Division stretch with two hits and three Pettitte pitchedto2 baters inthe7th. T—2:51. A—22,961(49,282). Colorado 110 040 10x — 7 R icep 0 0 0 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 W L Pct GB DP — Cincinnati 1, Colorado3. LOB —Cincinnati Kegeypitchedto 2baters inthe7th. Germnp 0 0 0 0 Ohlndrfp 1 0 0 0 RBls, leading Boston to a threeDetroit 80 57 584 Loganpitchedto 2baters in the7th. 11, Colorado7. 28—Choo (31), Co.Dickerson(10), Quntngss 4 0 1 0 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 Cleveland 72 64 .529 7r/z game sweep ofChiacgo. National League T—3.30.A—40,361(50,291). LeMahieu(17), Cuddyer2 (28), Helton(14). HRNiesep 2 1 1 0 Lmrdzzph 0 0 0 0 Kansas City 70 66 .515 9'/z Choo (18),Cuddyer(18), Arenado(10). SB Choo ABrwnrf 2 0 0 0 Krolp 00 0 0 Minnesota 59 76 .437 20 Chicago Boston M atthsp 0 0 0 0 (17), Co.Dickerson (2), LeMahieu(17), Cuddyer (10). Indians 4, Tigers 0 Chicago 56 79 .415 23 Cardinals 7, Pirates 2 ab r bbi ab r hbi SF Arenado. EDavisp 0 0 0 0 West Division DeAzacf 4 0 0 0 Egsuryci 4 2 1 2 Cincinnati IP H R E R BB SO Span ph-cf I 1 1 0 W L Pct GB L eGarc2b 5 0 1 0 Berrycf 0 0 0 0 DETROIT — Mike Aviles hit a LeakeL,11-6 41 - 38 6 6 2 4 Totals 3 7 5 135 Totals 3 66 166 PITTSBURGH — Matt Holliday Texas 79 57 .581 A IRmrzss 5 2 3 0 Victornrf 3 1 0 0 Simon 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 N ew York 210 0 1 0 1 00 — 6 grand slam in the ninth inning and David Freesedrove in two 78 58 574 1 Oakland Konerkdh 4 1 2 1 JGoms f 1 0 0 0 M.Parra 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Washington 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 3x - 6 63 72 467 15r/z AGarcirf 3 I I 0 Pedroia2b 4 I 2 0 that lifted Cleveland to a win over Los Angeles runs apiece, andSt. Louis beat E Ohlendorf(3). DP NewYork1, Washington Partch 1133 1 1 0 0 Seattle 62 74 456 17 Kppngr1b 3 0 0 1 D.Ortizdh 3 0 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 2. LOB —NewYork7, Washington 11.28—E.Young Detroit. Pittsburgh to move back into a tie Ondrusek Houston 45 91 .331 34 V iciedolf 4 1 1 1 Navalf-rf 3 0 0 0 Colorado (21), Dan.Murphy(31),Satin(12),Lagares(19), Niese G igaspi3b 4 0 1 2 Carp1b 3 1 1 0 for the NL Central lead. Chatwood 2 4 2 2 3 0 (2), Werth 2(15). HR —den Dekker (1). SB—E.Young Cleveland Detroit Sunday's Games Flowrsc 4 1 2 1 Sltlmchc 2 1 0 0 DttavinoW,1-2 3 3 0 0 1 0 (34). S —E.Young, Harper, Ohlendorf, Lombardozzc ab r hbi ab r hbi Baltimore7, N.Y.Yankees3 D rewss 4 1 I 1 2-3 3 0 0 0 0 St. Louis Pittsburgh W.Lopez New York IP H R E R BB SO Bourncf 4 0 0 0 Dirkslf-cf 5 0 2 0 Kansas City 5,Toronto 0 Bogarts3b 4 0 I 0 52-3 10 2 2 2 4 ab r hbi ab r hbi OutmanH,12 1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 2 Niese Cleveland 4, Detroit 0 T otals 3 6 6 11 6 Totals 3 1 7 8 6 Swisherlb 3 0 I 0 Iglesiasss 4 0 I 0 Mcrpnt 2b 5 2 2 0 NWaikr 2b 4 0 1 0 Belise 1 3 1 1 0 2 AtchisonH,6 11 - 3 2 1 1 0 2 Boston 7,ChicagoWhite Sox6 Chicago 0 00 410 010 — 6 K ipnis2b 3 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 0 0 SRonsnrf 3 I 2 0 GJonesrf 4 0 0 0 Brothers 1 2 1 1 0 1 Rice H,17 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 CSantnc 3 0 0 0 Fielder1b 3 0 1 0 L.A. Angels5, Milwaukee3 Boston 041 200 Ogx - 7 Hollidylf 5 0 1 2 Mcctchcf 3 1 1 0 Chatwood pitched to4 baters inthe3rd. GermenL,1-2 BS,2-3 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 Houston2,Seatle 0 E—Gigaspie (11). DP—Chicago 1. LOB —Chi- JRmrzpr 0 1 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 0 1 0 Rosnth p 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 4 0 0 0 T — 3: 2 8. A — 30,594 (50, 3 98). Washington Minnesota 4, Texas2 cago 7, Boston8. 28—Viciedo (19), D.Ortiz (29). YGomsc 0 0 0 0 DKegycf 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Byrdlf 3 12 1 Ohlendorf 5 9 4 4 0 0 HR — Flowers (10), Drew(11). SB—Le.Garcia (3), Brantlylf 3 I I 0 Ncstlnsph-If 2 0 0 0 Mujicap Oakland5, TampaBay1 Craig1b 4 2 2 1 Mornea1b 3 0 1 0 Stammen 1 1 0 0 0 1 Today's Games AI.Ramirez2 (29), Egsbury (51), Saltalamacchia (1). Ascarrss 2 0 0 0 Infante2b 4 0 2 0 Y Molinc 5 1 2 1 Buckc 4 0 1 1 Marlins 7, Braves 0 Krol 2-3 2 1 1 1 0 K ubeldh 3 0 1 0 Avilac 3 0 3 0 Freese3b 4 0 1 2 Mercerss 4 0 0 0 ChicagoWhite Sox(Quintana7-4) at N.Y.Yankees CS A Garcia(3). SF Keppinger. Mattheus 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Mcarsnpr-dhg 1 0 0 RSantg3b 4 0 1 0 Chicago IP H R E R BB SO (P Hughes 4-13), 10:05a.m. E.DavisW,I-O 1 1 0 0 0 2 J aycf 3 0 1 1 KrJhnsp 0 0 0 0 ATLANTA — Nathan Eovaldi Aviles 3b 4 1 1 4 Detroit (Fister11-7) atBoston(Lackey8-11), 10:35 RienzoL,1-1 3 5 5 5 4 3 R.SorianoS,36-42 1 0 0 0 0 2 Kozmass 4 0 0 0 JGomzp 1 0 0 0 combined with Steve Ci s hek on 41-3 3 2 1 4 0 Stubbs rf 4 0 1 0 a.m. Leesman WP—Atchi s on 2. J.Kegyp 3 1 1 0 Sniderph 1 0 0 0 Minnesota(A.Albers2-2) at Houston(Clemens4-4), N.Jones 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 2 9 4 5 4 Totals 3 50 110 Manessp 0 0 0 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 an eight-hit shutout, Jeff Mathis T—3:09. A—28,995(41,418). C leveland 000 0 0 0 0 04 — 4 Boston 11:10a.m. homered anddrove in three runs, Detroit 0 00 000 000 — 0 C hamrsph-If 1 0 0 0 Morrisp 0 0 0 0 32-3 7 4 4 1 4 Seattle(F.Hernandez12-8) at KansasCity (Duffy 2-0), Doubront P ieph 10 0 0 DP — C le v el a nd 1. LOB —Cleveland6, Detroit 10. WorkmanW,4-2 I 1-3 2 1 I 1 1 Cubs 7, Phillies1 11:10 a.m. and Miami beat Atlanta to stop a Watsonp 0 0 0 0 28 — Di r ks (15), Infante (19). HR — A vil e s (9) SB1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Baltimore (B.Norris 9-10) at Cleveland(Masterson FMoralesH,2 I Frnswrp 0 0 0 0 six-game losing streak. 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Bourn (21), Swi s her (1), Brantl e y (15). CS — Igle si a s Tazawa H, 2 1 14-9), 1:05p.m. T otals 3 7 7 127 Totals 3 22 6 2 CHICAGO — Jake Arrieta allowed 2. 1 1 1 1 0 0 (2). S As.cabrera Texas (D.Hogand9-6) at Oa kland (Strarly 7-7), I:05 BreslowH,12 3 02 002 000 — 7 IP H R E R BB SO St. Louis Miami Atlanta three hits while pitching into the UeharaS,16-19 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cleveland p.m. 000 0 0 1 0 01 — 2 Salazar 6 6 0 0 0 5 P ittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi Flowers. Toronto(Rogers 3-7) atArizona(Mccarthy 3-8),1:10 PB — seventh inning andWelington DP — St. Louis1, Pittsburgh1. LOB—St. Louis H chvrrss 5 1 2 0 JSchairrf 5 0 I 0 Hagadone 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 T — 3:39. A — 37,053 (37,071). p.m. 8, Pittsburgh6. 28—M.carpenter (44), Freese(23), Allen 2-3 0 0 0 0 I Yelichlf 3 2 2 0 Smmnsss 3 0 1 0 Castillo drove in two runs to lead Tampa Bay(Archer8-5) atLA. Angels (Richards4-6), J.SmithW,6-2 1 1 0 0 1 0 Byrd (29).SF Jay. Stantonrf 4 0 0 0 EJhnsnss I 0 1 0 6:05 p.m. Chicago over Philadelphia. IP H R E R BB SO Coghlnrf 1 0 0 0 FFrmn1b 2 0 0 0 Athletics 5, Rays1 C.Perez 1 3 0 0 0 0 St. Louis J.KeliyW,7-3 6 4 1 1 2 5 Detroit Polanc3b 4 1 3 1 Trdslvc1b 1 0 0 0 NATIONALLEAGUE 1 0 0 0 0 2 Philadelphia Chicago Verlander 7 4 0 0 2 6 Maness D Solan2b 5 1 2 1 J.Uptonlf 4 0 1 0 OAKLAND, Calif.— Coco Crisp East Division Rosenthal 1 0 0 0 0 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi B.Rondon I 0 0 0 I I L ucas1b 5 1 1 2 G.Lairdc 4 0 1 0 W L Pct GB and Stephen Vogt homered, A.J. 1 2 1 1 0 0 Berndn cf 4 0 1 0 Stcastrss 3 1 1 1 1-3 1 4 4 3 0 Mujica Mrsnckci 3 0 I 0 BUptonci 3 0 0 0 Benoit L,4-1 Atlanta 83 53 .610 Roginsss 2 0 0 0 Bamey2b 4111 Griffin struck out seven in seven Mathisc 4 1 2 3 Uggla2b 3 0 0 0 Alburquerque 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 2 Pittsburgh Washington 69 67 .507 14 U tley2b 4 0 1 0 Rizzo1b 3 0 1 1 KrJohnsonL,0-2 2 7 5 5 2 1 Eovaldip 3 0 0 0 Janish3b 4 0 1 0 PB — Y.Gomes. NewYork 62 73 .459 20r/x innings, and Oaklandcompleted R ufrf 3 1 1 1 Schrhltrf 4 0 0 0 J.Gomez 3 0 0 0 0 2 T—3:11.A—41,557(41,255). Cishekp 0 0 0 0 A.Woodp 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia 62 75 .453 21'/2 Asche3b 4 0 0 0 Sweenycf 3 1 1 1 Ju.Wilson 1 3 2 2 I 0 F Garcip 2 0 0 0 Miami 50 85 .370 32'/z a three-gamesweep of fellow Fmdsn1b 4 0 0 0 DMrph3b 4 1 1 0 Morris 1 1 0 0 0 1 Constnz ph 1 0 1 0 Central Division playoff contender TampaBay. Twins 4, Rangers 2 Watson 1 1 0 0 0 0 O rrlf 3 0 0 0 Bogsvcli 4 2 2 0 Varvar p 0 0 0 0 W L Pct GB Farnsworth 1 0 0 0 0 2 Kratzc 4 0 1 0 Castigoc 3 1 1 2 CJhnsn ph 1 0 1 0 581 Pittsburgh 79 57 TampaBay Oakland Kr Johnsonpitchedto3 batters inthe 3rd. K ndrckp 2 0 0 0 Arrietap 3 0 1 0 ARLINGTON,Texas — Kevin T otals 3 7 7 137 Totals 3 4 0 8 0 St. Louis 79 57 .581 ab r hbi ab r hbi HBP —by J.Kegy (Mccutchen), byJ.Gomez (Craig). Miami D Brwnph 1 0 0 0 Russellp 0 0 0 0 1 16 000 000 — 7 Cincinnati 76 61 555 3 1/2 D eJesslf 2 0 1 0 Crispcf 4 1 1 1 Correia pitched sevenstrong WP—KrJohnson 2. Atlanta 0 00 000 000 — 0 D iekmnp 0 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 59 77 .434 20 DYongph 1 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 3 0 0 0 T — 3:09. A — 37,912 (38, 3 62). JCRmrp 0 0 0 0 Valuenph 0 0 0 1 innings and Minnesota clinched DP — Atlanta 2. LOB —Miami 8, Atlanta 10. 28Chicago 58 78 .426 21 F uldlf 0 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 I 2 0 B Parkrp 0 0 0 0 Mathis(7),E.Johnson(2), Janish(2). 3B—Simmons T otals 3 1 1 4 1 Totals West Division its first series victory at Texas in Zobrist2b-ss 4 0 0 0 Mossri 2 1 I I 3 17 9 7 Dodgers 2, Padres1 ( 4). HR — M ath i s (5). SB — Y eli c h (4). S — E ov aldi W L Pct GB Longori3b 4 0 0 0 Cespdslf 4 1 2 0 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 1 0 0 000 — 1 four years, beating the AL WestMiami IP H R E R BB SO Los Angeles 81 55 596 Joyce dh 4 0 0 0 Cagasp dh 4 0 0 0 Chicago 101 300 02x 7 EovaldiW,3-5 8 7 0 0 2 6 leading Rangers. Arizona 69 66 511 1'I'/x Loney 1b 4 1 2 1 Barton 1b 4 0 2 1 LOS ANGELES — ZackGreinke LOB—Philadelphia 7, Chicago7.28—Rizzo(34), Cishek I 1 0 0 1 2 Colorado 65 73 .471 17 WMyrsrf 4 0 1 0 Sogard2b 2 0 0 1 Bogusevic(6),Castilo(20) HR— Ruf(12).SB—Rolallowed one runover seven Atlanta SanFrancisco 61 75 .449 20 DJnngscf 3 0 I 0 Vogtc 4 I I I Minnesota Texas lins(18).SF—S t.castro, Barney. A.WoodL,3-3 21 - 3 8 7 7 2 2 SanDiego 60 76 441 21 J Molinc 2 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi innings, Yasiel Puig homered in Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO F.Garcia 42-3 3 0 0 1 2 KJhnsn ph-2b1 0 1 0 Presleycf 4 1 3 1 LMartncf 4 0 1 0 K.KendrickL,10-12 6 8 5 5 I 4 the sixth and Los Angeles beat Varvaro 2 2 0 0 1 2 Sunday's Games YEscorss 2 0 1 0 Mstrnnrf 3 0 I 0 Profarss 4 0 0 0 Diekman 1 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:44.A—38441(49,586). St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh2 SanDiegotocompleteasweep. Scottph 1 0 0 0 Dozier2b 4 0 1 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 0 0 J.C.Ramirez 1 1 2 2 3 1 L.A. Ange s5, Milwaukee3 Loatonc 0 0 0 0 Wlngh dh 4 0 2 0 ABeltre dh 4 0 1 0 Chicago Chicago Cubs7, Philadelphia 1 T otals 3 2 I 7 I Totals 31 5 9 5 P louife3b 4 0 I 0 Riosrf 4010 San Diego Los Angeles Giants 8, Di amon db ack s 2 ArrietaW,2-1 62- 3 3 1 1 3 4 Colorado 7, Cincinnati4 T ampa Bay 0 1 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 C olae01b 4 0 1 0 Adducilf 2 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Russell 1 1 0 0 0 1 L.A. Dodgers 2,SanDiego1 Oakland 101 000 12x — 6 Thomslf 3 1 0 0 Gentryph 1 0 0 0 V enalerf 3 0 0 0 Crwfrdli 3 I 2 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Strop PHOENIX — Yusmeiro Petit SanFrancisco8,Arizona2 E—Longoria (9), De.Jennings (3) DP—Tampa Pintoc 4 1 2 1 JeBakr3b 3 0 0 0 Amarst3b 3 0 1 1 M.ERis2b 4 0 2 1 B.Parker 1 0 0 0 1 1 Miami 7,Atlanta0 Bay 2, Oakland1. LDB—Tampa Bay 5, Oakland 7. Bemierss 4 1 1 1 Morlnd1b 3 1 1 1 struck out a career-high10, Hector HBP Denorfiph I 0 0 0 AdGnzlIb 4 0 0 0 —byK.Kendrick (St.Castro). 28 —DeJesus (3), W.Myers (11), Ke.Johnson(11), Washington 6, N.Y.Mets5 G .Sotoc 2 0 I 0 S tauffrp 0 0 0 0 Puigrf 4 1 2 1 Sanchez drove in three runsand T—2:59. A—31,859(41,019). Today's Games Lowrie(41). HR—Loney (11), Crisp(16),Vogt (3). Przynsph-c 1 1 1 1 G yorko2b 4 0 0 0 Ethiercf 4 0 0 0 N.Y.Mets(Matsuzaka0-2) at Atianta(Maholm9-10), S Sogard. San Francisco beat Arizona. T otals 3 4 4 123 Totals 3 2 2 7 2 B lankslb 4 0 0 0 Uribe3b 3 0 0 0 10:10a.m. Tampa Bay IP H R ER B BSO M innesota 000 0 3 0 0 1 0 — 4 K otsaylf 4 0 1 0 A.ERisc 3 0 0 0 St. I.ouis(Wainwright15-8)at0incinnati (Latos13-5), J.Wrrght I 2-3 3 1 1 2 I Interleague Texas 0 01 000 010 — 2 Hundlyc 3 0 0 0 Puntoss 2 0 0 0 San Francisco Ari zona 10:10a.m. AI.TorresL,4-1 3 1 -3 3 1 0 I 0 E—Profar (8). DP—Mrnnesota2, Texas2. LOBR cedenss 3 0 0 0 Greinkp 2 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Pittsburgh(Morton6-3) at Milwaukee(Thornburg1- BGomes 2 3 0 0 0 0 1 Minnesota 5,Texas4.28—Dozier (30), Pinto(1), Ber- Fuentscf 2 1 1 0 HrstnJrph 1 0 0 0 Ariasss 5 1 1 0 Blmristss 4 0 2 0 0), 11:10a.m. W.Wright 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 nier (3), G.Soto(7). HR Moreland(21), Pierzynski T.Rossp I 0 0 0 Belisarip 0 0 0 0 Angels 5, Brewers 3 A breu2b 5 0 1 0 Eatonlf 3 1 2 1 Miami (H.Alvarez2-3) at ChicagoCubs(TWood8- McGee 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 (16). SB —Mastroianni (2), L.Martin(30), Rios(33). Thayerp 0 0 0 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Posey1b 5 2 3 2 Gldsch1b 4 0 0 0 10), 11:20a.m. Lueke 2-3 1 2 2 1 1 CS — Presley(1). S—Mastroianni. Hynes p 0 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 Pence rf 4 3 3 2 Prado 3b 4 0 2 1 M ILWAUKEE — J.B. Shuck hita SanFrancisco(Zito4-10)at SanDiego(Kennedy5-9), C.Ramos 2-3 I 0 0 0 0 Minnesota IP H R E R BB SO Guzmnph 1 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 02 0 A.Hill2b 4 0 0 0 12.40 p.m. Oakland CorreiaW9-10 7 5 1 1 1 2 Forsyth 3b 0 0 0 0 P iglf 3 0 0 0 MMntrc 4 0 0 0 three-run double in the seventh L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw13-8) atCoorado(Betis 0-3), Griffin W,12-9 7 5 1 1 1 7 BurtonH,24 1 2 1 1 0 0 Totals 2 9 1 3 1 Totals 3 02 7 2 Kschnclf 2 0 0 0 Pogockcf 4 1 1 0 inning to rally Los Angeles past 1:10 p.m. Otero 0 1 0 0 0 0 PerkinsS,32-35 I 0 0 0 0 2 S an Diego 001 0 0 0 000 — 1 H Snchzc 4 1 2 3 GParrarf 4 0 1 0 Milwaukee for a sweep. Toronto (Rogers 3-7) atArizona(Mccarthy 3-8),1:10 Doo ittle H,22 1 0 0 0 0 1 Texas Los Angeles 0 0 1 0 0 1 Ogx— 2 G Blanccf 4 0 1 0 Corbinp 1 0 0 0 Cook I 1 0 0 0 2 p.m. Biackleyl.,2-2 41 - 3 8 3 3 0 4 LOB—San Diego 4, LosAngeles 6.28—C.crawford Petitp 3 0 1 1 Pnngtnph 1 0 1 0 Washington(Strasburg6-9) at Philadelphia(Hamels Oteropitchedto1batter in the8th. Milwaukee Feliz 12-3 I 0 0 0 2 (25). HR Los Angeles —Puig (14). SB—Fuentes(1), Greinke(2). M ijaresp 0 0 0 0 Roep 0000 6-13),4:05p.m. T—2:58. A—18,639(35,067). 1 1 1 1 0 1 CS — ab r hbi ab r hbi J.Ortiz Puig (8). S—TRoss Scasigp 0 0 0 0 Campnph 1 0 0 0 Soria 1 1 0 0 0 2 San Diego IP H R E R BB SO S cutaroph 1 1 1 0 Sippp 0 0 0 0 ShuckIf 5 1 1 3 Aokirf 3 0 1 0 Bourjoscf 0 0 0 0 Segurass 3 0 0 0 R.Ross 1 1 0 0 1 0 T.Ross 5 5 1 1 1 10 Kickhmp 0 0 0 0 Bellp 0 0 0 0 Orioles 7, Yankees3 American League J.Ortiz pitched to1 batterin the8th. ThayerL,2-5 12- 3 1 1 1 I 2 T htchrp 0 0 0 0 Aybarss 5 0 0 0 Lucroy c 3 1 0 0 WP — Blackley2. Trout cf-If 3 1 3 0 KDavis lf 4 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Hynes Nievesph I 0 0 0 NEW YORK — J.J. Hardy and T—2.59.A—36,549(48,114). Calhonrf 4 0 2 2 CGomzcf 4 1 2 2 Stauffer 1 1 0 0 0 2 T otals 4 0 8 158 Totals 3 5 2 9 2 Astros 2, Mariners 0 Trumo1b 4 0 1 0 YBtncr1b 3 0 0 0 Adam Jones hit three-run homers Los Angeles S an Francisco 010 310 003 — 8 C ongerc 4 1 1 0 Gindlph 1 0 0 0 GreinkeW,14-3 7 2 1 1 2 7 Arizona 1 00 000 100 — 2 in the seventh inning as Baltimore Royals 5, Blue Jays 0 HOUSTON — Rookie Brett BelisarioH,18 1 - 3 1 0 0 0 0 DP San Francisco 1, Arizona 1. LOB San LJimnz3b 4 1 2 0 Bianchi3b 4 1 1 0 AnRmn2b 3 0 I 0Gennett2b 2 0 0 0 suddenly broke loose, jolting New PRodriguezH,19 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Francisco7, Arizona7. 28—Posey(32), Pence(32), Oberholtzer pitched a four-hitter TORONTO — James Shields JansenS,24-27 1 0 0 0 0 2 H.Sanchez (2), Prado(31), G.Parra (33). HR —Pence F rierip 0 0 0 0 Lohsep 1 0 0 1 York to avert a sweep in a matchup and Jason Castro hit an RBI CWilsnp I 0 0 0 McGnzlp 0 0 0 0 WP — Belisario. (17). SB —Scutaro (2), Eaton(3). CS—Abreu(1). pitched seven innings of threeT—2:58. A—52,168(56,000). double in the eighth inning, lifting of wild-card contenders. San Francisco I P H R ER BB SO Hamltnph 0 1 0 0 Wootenp 0 0 0 0 hit ball to win his fourth straight CrRsmp 0 0 0 0 D.Handp 0 0 0 0 Petit W,2-0 6 7 2 2 I 10 Houston to a win overSeattle. DDLRsp 0 0 0 0 ArRmrph 1 0 0 0 Baltimore New York 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 decision as Kansas City beat Mijares ab r bbi ab r bbi Rockies 7, Reds4 S.casigaH,16 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 G Green2b 1 0 0 0 Figarop 0 0 0 0 Toronto to avoid a sweep. Seattle Houston 2 93 4 3 M arkksrf 4 1 0 0 Gardnrcf 4 1 2 I Kickham 1 0 0 0 0 1 T otals 3 4 5 115 Totals ab r hbi ab r hbi L os Angeles 0 0 1 0 0 0 400 — 6 M achd3b 5 0 I 0 Jeterdh 4 0 0 I Arizona DENVER — Todd Helton doubled BMrllerss 4 0 1 0 Grssmnlf 4 0 0 0 KansasCity Toronto M ilwaukee 001 2 0 0 000 — 3 A .Jonescf 5 1 2 3 Cano2b 5 0 0 0 Corbin L,13-5 5 9 5 5 I 6 E—Calhoun (6). DP—LosAngeles1, Milwaukee Frnkln 2b 4 0 1 0 Altuve 2b 4 1 3 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi for his 2,500th career hit, Michael Roe C .Davis1b 4 0 0 0 ASorinlf 4 0 1 1 2 2 0 0 0 1 Seager 3b 4 0 1 0 Jcastro c 4 1 1 1 AGordnlf 5 1 1 1 Reyes ss 4 0 0 0 Morself 4 1 2 0 ARdrgz3b 3 0 0 0 Sipp 1 0 0 0 1 0 3. I.OB—Los Angeles 6, Milwaukee4 28 —Shuck Cuddyer homeredamong his K Morlsdh 4 0 I 0 MDmn3b 4 0 I 0 Boniiac 2b 4 2 2 I Goins2b 4 0 0 0 McLothlf 0 0 0 0 VWellsrf 2 0 0 0 1-3 4 3 3 0 1 (17), Trout(35), Calhoun(3), Bianchi(6). 38—Trout four hits and Colorado overcame Bell FGtrrzrf 4 0 0 0 Wagac1b 3 0 1 0 Hosmer1b 5 0 2 3 Encrncdh 4 0 1 0 Valencidh 4 1 2 0 Grndrsph-rf 1 0 0 0 (9) HR C.Gomez(19) S An.Romine, Lohse Thatcher 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 MSndrslf 3 0 0 0 BBarnsph-cf 1 0 1 1 Wietersc 4 I 1 1 MrRynl1b 2 1 0 0 BButler dh 4 0 0 0 Lind1b 3 0 1 0 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO Petit pitched to1batter in the 7th. the loss of starting pitcher Tyler Smoak1b 2 0 0 0 Carterdh-1b 3 0 0 0 C.WilsonW,14-6 6 3 3 2 2 3 Hardyss 4 1 2 3 Overayph-1b 1 0 1 0 S.Perezc 3 0 1 0 Lawrie3b 3 0 0 0 T 3:22 A 33 422(48,633). Chatwood to beat Cincinnati. A ckleycf 3 0 0 0 Crowecf 4 0 2 0 Mostks 3b 4 0 0 0 Arenciic 3 0 0 0 Cor.Rasmus H,1 I 0 0 0 0 I BRorts2b 4 1 2 0 Nunezss 4 1 2 0 H Blancc 3 0 0 0 Orhltzrp 0 0 0 0 Maxwllrf 3 0 0 0 RDavisrf-If 3 0 1 0 D.De LaRosa H,14 1-3 1 0 0 2 0 C Stwrtc 2 0 0 0 JDyson cf 4 1 2 0 Gosecf 3 0 0 0 Cincinnati Colorado Nationals 6, Mets 5 Frieri S,30-34 12 - 3 0 0 0 0 4 H oesrf 3 0 0 0 ISuzukiph 1 0 I 0 2000 Milwaukee V illar ss 3 0 0 0 AuRmnc 0 0 0 0 AEscor ss 4 1 1 0 Pigarlf ab r hbi ab r hbi T otals 3 1 0 4 0 Totals 3 32 9 2 T otals 3 8 7 127 Totals 3 33 7 3 Kawskph 1 0 0 0 Choocf 5 1 3 2 CDckrsIf 4230 6 7 1 1 1 1 WASHINGTON — Jayson Werth's Lohse Seattle 0 00 000 000 — 0 B altimore 000 00 0 7 0 0 — 7 S ierra rf 0 0 0 0 BPhgps2b 3 1 1 0 CulersnIf 0000 Mic Gonzale z 0 1 1 I 0 0 two-out RBI double in the eighth Houston 000 000 02x — 2 N ew York 001 2 0 0 0 0 0 — 3 T otals 3 6 5 9 5Totals 30 0 3 0 Votto1b 4 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 5 1 2 2 WootenL,3 1BS,1-1 2-3 3 3 3 2 1 LOB —Seattle 5, Houston 8. 28 —Altuve (23), I 1-3 0 0 0 0 I DP — New York1 LOB—Baltimore 5, NewYork KansasCity 1 04 000 000 — 5 Brucerf 4 0 0 0 Tlwtzkss 3100 D.Hand inning capped a late rally and J.castro(35),Crowe(2). 10. 28—Gardner2 (29), Nunez(11). HR —A.Jones Toronto 0 00 000 000 — 0 Mesorcc 5 1 2 1 Cuddyrrf 4 1 4 3 Figaro 1 0 0 0 0 0 Washington avoided aseries E—Reyes (5), Arencibia (I0). DP—Toronto1. Heiseylf 4 0 4 0 Helton Ib 3 0 1 0 Seattle IP H R E R BB SO (28), Hardy (24). SF—Jeter. Mic.Gonzalepiztched to I batterin the7th. Iwakuma 7 6 0 0 1 7 Baltimore IP H R E R BB SO LOB —KansasCity 7, Toronto4 28—Bonifacio (21), DRonsnIf 1 0 0 0 Arenad3b 3 1 1 2 sweep with a win over New York. T—3:06. A—29,733(41,900).

Standings AU TimesPDT

FurbushL,2-5 2-3 3 2 2 0 Wilhelmsen 1-3 0 0 0 0 Houston OberhoitzerW4-1 9 4 0 0 1 T—2:41. A—17,203(42,060).

0 0

4 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0

3 0 0 0 0

5 I 0 0 0

5 3 2 1 1

I(yle Buschwins Sprint Cupracein Atlanta, locks up Chasespot The Associated Press HAMPTON, Ga. — Kyle Busch's pit crew got his car running like he wanted, then got him on the track ahead of everyone else. The volatile driver took it f r om there, locking up a spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship that

slipped away last year. Busch held off hard-charging Joey Logano at A t lanta Motor Speedway on Sunday night for his fourth Cup victory of the year, giving him plenty of momentum heading to the

playoffs. A yearago,he didn'teven make the 12-car field — a bitter disappointment for a driver of his talent. "It's a whole different situation than 365 days ago," Busch said. "We needed to prove to ourselves that we're a championship contender." Busch spit out some salty complaints over his radio in the early going, the No. 18 Toyota not performing like he wanted. The crew kept making adjustments until the driver liked the way it handled. Then, aftera rapid-fire series of caution flags near the end, Busch emerged from the pits with the lead. He comfortably beat Logano to the

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP line by 0.740 seconds. "My boys on pit road," Busch said. "They'reamazing. I would do anything for them." The 28-year-old is undoubtedly one of the most gifted drivers in NASCAR, earning his 16th win of the year in the top three series. He also has nine victories in Nationwide and three in trucks. Overall, this was his 121st career victory in those series, 28 of them in

Cup. But Busch is still seeking the prize he really wants — a Cup title. "The championship is number one on anybody's list," he said. "You want to be the best in your realm of racing. I'm a NASCAR driver. I want to win a championship. I've yet to collect the big prize. One of these days it will happen. Maybe it'll be 2013. Hopefully, it is." Martin Truex Jr., racing with a broken right wrist, was third on the 1.54mile trioval, followed by Kurt Busch and Ryan Newman. The rest of the top 10: Jeff Gordon, Juan PabloMontoya, Dale Earnhardt

Jr., Kevin Harvick and Brian Vickers. Kyle Busch was among four more drivers locking up their spot in the Chase heading to Richmond next weekend, where the 12-car field will be set for the playoff. He was joined by Harvick, Carl Edwards and Kasey Kahne. Points leader Jimmie Johnson, Clint Bowyer and Matt Kenseth had already claimed playoff berths before Atlanta. That means the final five will be determined at Richmond. Logano is one of the top contenders for those remaining spots, going into Richmond eighth in the points and also holding a victory as a wildcard backstop.He had the fastest car on the track at the end of the race, but ran out of time to run down Busch. "It's just frustrating," Logano said. "But in the grand scheme of things, it's a big points day for us to get into the Chase going to Richmond. This helps us a lot. A win would've helped a lot more." Bovvyer was dominant through the middle of the race, leading 48 laps, but he radioed his crew that that something didn't seem right in his No. 15 car. OnLap 193,those fears became

reality when smoke started pouring from the back of his Toyota going into Turn 1. He managed to creep back around to pit road, but he headed straight for the garage, any hope of winning the race snuffed out. "I don't think they wanted to believe me," Bowyer said about his crew. "But I was pretty sure what I was hearing." At least Bowyer won't have to worry about the poor finish — he wound up 39th — costing him a spot in the Chase. That wasn't the case for defending Cup champion Brad Keselowski. Winless for the year and on the Chase bubble, he took over the lead and looked as if he had a shot at a much-needed victory. But his engine dropped a couple of cylinders and

began dropping back, finally sputtering to a stop 18 laps from the finish. He finished 35th and will go to Richmond knowing he likely needs a victory to even have a shot at taking a second straight title. He slipped to 15th in the standings, 28 points behind 10th-place Kurt Busch. "There's just some things you can't control," Keselowski said. "I guess we'll look at the positive. We were

leading the race when it broke. We were doing all the right things. We just didn't put all the pieces together." Also on Sunday:

Pagenaud wins IndyCar race: BALTIMORE — Simon Pagenaud emerged as the winner of a collisionmarred Grand Prix o f B a ltimore, charging to the lead after a series of mishaps involving several other contenders — including one between rivals Scott Dixon and Will Power. It was the second career win for Pagenaud, both this year. Josef Newgarden was second, the best finish of his career, and Sebastien Bourdais took third. Brown top s N H R A q u alifying: CLERMONT, Ind. — Defending Top Fuel season champion Antron Brown took the No. 1 spot in NHRA qualifying in the U.S. Nationals at Lucas Oil Raceway at Indianapolis. Brown, 16th before the final session, powered his 8,000-horsepower dragster to a3.81l-second run at 320.58 mph for his second No. 1 qualifier of the season and 34th overall. Matt Hagan topped the Funny Car field, Mike Edwards was fastest in Pro Stock, and Hector Arana Ied the Pro Stock Motorcycle class.



MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2013• THE BULLETIN

T EE TO

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R EEN LPGA TOUR

P

Pettersen rallies orsecon win in Portlan in three years

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By Nick Daschel The Associated Press

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PORTLAND — Suzann Pettersen won the Safeway Classic for the second time in three years Sun-

day, taking advantage of playing

A~' 5 %",

( rrr Steve Dykes/The Associated Press

Suzann Pettersen hits a shot out of a bunker on the fifth hole during the final round of the LPGA Safeway Classic in Portland. Pettersen shot a 5-under-par 67 in the final round to win the tournament.

partner Yani Tseng's final-round collapse at Columbia Edgewater. Three strokes behind l eader Tseng entering the round, the thirdranked Pettersen closed with a 5under 67 for a two-stroke victory over second-ranked Stacy Lewis. Pettersen finished at 20-under

268 for her 12th LPGA Tour victory. The 32-year-old Norwegian also won the LPGA Lotte in Hawaii in April and won a Ladies European Tour event in March in China. She won the 2011 tournament at Pumpkin Ridge. "I felt like this was a good bounce back from last week when I kind of screwed it up on the last day," said Pettersen, who finished eight strokes behind winner Lydia Ko in the Canadian Women's Open after beginning the final round a shot

LOCAL GOLF

back. "I tried to give myself chances. Once I got going I felt like I made a lot of clutch putts. I guess that's what made me win today. The putter was a good friend of mine." Tseng followed her third-round 63 with a 78 to tie for ninth at 12 under. The Taiwanese star, a 15-time winner on the tour who had a 109week run at No. I in the world ranking, is winless in 37 events since the Kia Classic in March 2012. See LPGA/B6

GOLF ROUNDUP

• The popular Central Oregon amateur tourney is holding steadywith last year By Zack Hall The Bulletin

This summer has been kind to the Central Oregon golf industry. By most accounts, the area's golf courseshave generally been teeming with golfers. But brisk business has yet to translate into more golfers for the 17th annual Lithia Pacific Amateur Golf Classic, an amateur tournament that brings hundreds of players and others to the region for four days of golf and related festivities. "We had hoped with the recovery that we're seeing in tourism, and as how robust as the summer had been, we were anticipating that our numbers were going to improve this year," says Alana Hughson, president and CEO of the Central Oregon Visitors Association, which o r ganizes the event. "And we're generally flat. We're almost exactly on pace with where we were last year at this time." After years of declining participation — from about 800 golfers in 2007 and 2008 to 500 in 2012 — shooting par against the previous year is not the worst news for the Pac Am. COVA moved this year's tournam ent, which tees off on Sept.23,from the week leading up to Labor Day (its place on the calendar since 2010) to late September. A primary reason for the move, Hughson says, was because the later date worked better for host golf facilities, which are typically filled with golfers until after Labor Day, and for the tournament's title sponsor, Lithia Motors. But organizers also hoped that moving the tournament would helpdraw more golfers. "When we are calling past participants who haven't yet registered, the answers we're getting are across the board," Hughson says. "We're still hearing a lot of folks say that they are hesitant to take time off work. Things

2013 Lithia Pacific

AmateurGolfClassic When:Sept. 21-26

Where:Black Butte Ranch's Big Meadow course, Lost Tracks Golf Club in Bend, Quail Run Golf

Course in La Pine,andSunriver Resort' sMeadows andWoodlands courses andCrosswater Club What:54-hole net stroke-play

tournament. Low four golfers from each flight advance to final round at

Crosswater Cost:$505 for locals; $530 otherwise

Information or toregister: www.pacamgolf.com are still a little tight even if the economy is a little better. "For some of them moving the dates (to late September) impacted it," Hughson adds. "But last year, for some of them, holding it in August impacted them." In addition, many other golf-rich areas have adopted the idea of staging a net amateur tournament welcome to all. Since the Pac Am's inception in 1997, Western cities such as Palm Springs, Calif., and Mesquite, Nev., have sparked up tournament formats similar to the Pac Am. That has made the environment far more competitive, says Scott Ellender, lodge general manager for Sunriver Resort, the primary host of the Pac Am. "There is more competition for these kind of events out there than when things started up with the Pac Am," Ellender observes. "Even though I think golf as a whole this year has been up, it doesn't surprise me that the Pac Am ismore or lessflatbecause of that (competition).

"If you can stay flat you might actually be doing better than you think because of the added competition." The new September date for the Pac Am has its advantages, too, Ellender

says. One is that 500 extra golfers means more to the host courses in late September than in l ate August, when most tee sheets are relatively fulL "Purely from a golf perspective, it's a good move," Ellender says. "We're excited about that." With the 2013 tournament three weeks away, Pac Am organizers are making a final push. The advertising budget in l ocal media, including The Bulletin, is unchanged compared with last year. But COVA has backloaded the ads in the run-up to the event. That has sparked some interest among locals. "Certainly the event was created to drive visitor traffic in what's generally becoming a slower time of year," Hughson says. "But the visitors who come and play inthe Pac Am love the locals who play in the Pac Am. So we certainly want to encourage local

play."

The Pac Am does not expect hordes of local golfers, who make up roughly 15 percent of the field in an average

year. But locals do help keep the Pac Am healthy. After all, even with fewer golfers than at its peak, a healthy Pac Am is still among COVA's most important tourism-driven events, Hughson says. "It is a cornerstone event," Hughson says. "Even after 17 years it remains a wonderful opportunity to introduce people to Central Oregon's golf product in one comprehensive event.We'r e still passionately committed to the Pacific Amateur." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.

Below, golfers at the 2012 Lithia Pacific Amateur Golf Classic demo equipment at Sunriver Resort last August. The Pacific Amateur is on pace to draw the same number of golfers as in 2012 even after moving the tournament from late August, when it has been played for the past three years, to late September.

Michael Dwyer/The Associated Press

Sergio Garcia tips his cap after finishing in the lead at19 under par during the third round of the Deutsche Bank Championship in Norton, Mass., on Sunday.

Garcia leadsagain as players golow during third round inBoston The Associated Press NORTON, Mass. — Sergio Garcia was doing everything right. He had the lead going into the third round. He kept bogeys off his card and made two birdies on the front nine. And he was losing ground Sunday in the Deutsche Bank Championship. "You could make a lot of birdies if e v erything w ent exactly the right way, kind of like it went on the back nine for me," Garcia said. "But you have to be patient and just wait for the right time." Garcia regained control on the back nine of the rain-softened TPC Boston, making five birdiesfor a 6-under 65 that gave him a two-shot lead over Henrik Stenson. Garcia hit 4-iron from 218 yards onto the 18th green for a two-putt birdie as d a r kness settled o ver New England on t h i s longest of days. But nothing is close to being settled at this FedEx Cup playoff event. Not with such a soft course, w ith p r eferred l i es , w i t h

mint conditions on the putting surfaces and the world's best players — most of them, anyway — in top form. There were 332 birdies and 10 eagles in the third round, translating to sub-parholes 32 percent of the time. "There's h eaps o f l ow scores out t h ere," Stenson said after his 66. "You have to keep making birdies if you want to have anything to do with this tournament. Today was no different. It's going to be the same tomorrow. I'm sure everyone iscoming at us from all different angles." Tee timeshave been moved up for the final round this morning because of the threat of more rain. Garcia was a t 1 9 -under 194, though th e S p aniard isn't great at protecting the 54-hole lead. His record is 3-7 when he has at least a share of the lead going into the last day. And this Labor Day figures to live up to its name. It will take hard work to stay there. SeeGarcia/B7

Courtesy of Central Oregon Visitors Association wt

LOCAL GOLF IN BRIEF COURSES TetherOW hireS neW head PrOfeSSianal —Louis eertrtett, a 28-year-old from Bend,was namedTetherow Golf Club's new headgolf

t I

p

t I

professional, the club announced last week. Bennett, a Bend High School

graduate, has spent the past two years asthe headpro at Broken Top Club and was anassistant pro at Sunriver Resort before that. At Tetherow, Bennett will be responsible for daily golf operations, the course's

, 4 —.ApiLb '

forecaddie program, budget management, memberandguest relations, and tournament/event operations for the club. Bennett is replacing Caleb Anderson, who hasbeenTetherow's head professional since the course opened in 2008. Anderson is leaving the profession to pursue acareer in real estate, he says. Bennett will begin his newduties on Oct. 1.

TOURNAMENTS Bend prO miSSeS Cut at LPGA Q-SChOOI —Tiffany Schoning, a 24-year-old professional from Bend,was eliminated last weekfrom the first stage of the LPGA Tour's National Qualifying School. Schoning, a Summit High School graduate, shot a 23-over-par 78-81-77-75 — 311

at Mission Hills Country Club in RanchoMirage, Calif., to land in atie for 201st place out of 241 golfers. The top 105 golfers advanced at11 over par or better. This was Schonirtg's first attempt at Q-School. Karinn Dick-

inson, a Norwegian golfer who is also apart-time caddie at Pronghorn =arjgs

Club near Bend, safely advanced into second stage after firing an 8-over 76-71-72-77 — 296. — Bulletin staff reports






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Every item 745 drug test & b ackiron front axle l awn- Exc. orchard grass hay, have profess. training call 916-216-0162. the reader how the item will $3500. 541-389-3890 is categorized andevery ground check. Homes for Sale mower, 2008, used 2 t/e all up to date on vac., help them in someway. cartegory is indexed on the 0 Ibs bales , Please apply in perYamaha Badqer 1992 Check out the yrs, 50" dbl blade, 3 bag 7 etc. must sell section's front page. This 8 mi. east of Trims, 4-wheeler, YFM80, $450. son at Carrera Mocollector f o r gra s s, $215/ton, classifieds online 4.63 Acre Gentlemens S ee c raigslist a d . Bend. 5 41-306-1118 advertising tip 541-312-8879 or ors, 1045 SE 3 r d $1500. 541-806-1482 541-388-2706. Whether you are looking for R anch. H o use & www.bendbufletin.com tSt., or 206-954-8479. brought to youby 541-350-4622 in Bend. a home or need a service, guest house, paved Updated daily your future is in thepagesof rd., exc. cond. Newer The Bulletin semingceneal cmgo 5 nce ste The Bulletin Classified. m etal r o ofs, B L M Accounting across rd. In the big LOT MODEL pines. $159,000. Call The Bulletin servmg ce ss oregonsince 1903 LIQUIDATION Payroll Specialist Pat 541-420-9095. . LIS gHWII8 Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year Yamaha Banshee 2001, Call 54I 3855809topromoteyour service Advertisefor 28daysstarting at'Iff/trtsstsrai packageisssavailableonourwebstej Sales conditional warranty. Responsible for processing payroll, garnish350 custom sports quad, Finished on your site. ments and child support orders, answering $4500 obo. ONLY 2 LEFT! Independent Contractor Sales 541-647-8931 questions and r e solving p ayroll i ssues, We are seeking dynamic individuals. Redmond, Oregon W-2s, setting up and changing Building/Contracting Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care generating 541-548-5511 direct deposits, and other duties as assigned. DOES THIS SOUND LIKE YOUP JandMHomes.com Boats & AccessoriesI NOTICE: Oregon state I DO THAT! NOTICE: Oregon Land- Requires a high school diploma or equivalent • OUTGOING 8 COMPETITIVE law r equires anyone Home/Rental repairs scape Contractors Law Rent /Own • PERSONABLE 8 ENTHUSIASTIC and prior payroll experience. Must be able to 13'4" Gregor, 15 hp who contracts for Small jobs to remodels (ORS 671) requires all work independently; possess strong written 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes • CONSISTENT & MOTIVATED Johnson, 3 hp construction work to Honest, guaranteed businesses that ad$2500 down, $750 mo. Evinrude great cond., be licensed with the vertise t o pe r f orm and verbal c ommunication skills; g ood work. CCB¹151573 OAC. J and M Homes Our winning team of sales 8 promotion Construction Contrac- Dennis 541-317-9768 Landscape Construc- decision making, mathematical, analytical and $1750. 541-420-5855 541-548-5511 tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: problems solving skills. Les Schwab has a professionals are making an average of reputation of excellent customer service and active license ERIC REEVE HANDY p lanting, decks , $400 - $800 per week doing special means the contractor fences, arbors, over 400 stores in the Northwest. SERVICES. Home 8 events, trade shows, retail 8 grocery is bonded & insured. water-features, and inCommercial Repairs, store promotions while representing Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir- We offer a c o mpetitive salary, excellent Carpentry-Painting, THE BULLET?N newspaper CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be benefits, retirement, and cash bonus. Visit us Pressure-washing, as an independent contractor www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the at: www.LesSchwab.com. Resumes will be Honey Do's. On-time contractor.com Landscape Contrac- accepted through September 5, 2013. Check promise. Senior yyE OFFER: or call 503-378-4621. Discount. Work guar- tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin Classified The Bulletin recom- anteed. 541-389-3361 number is to be inPlease send resume and salary requirements •Solid Income Opportunity * mends checking with cluded in all adverto: ZYLSHuman. Resources O lesschwab.com. Complete Training Program" or 541-771-4463 the CCB prior to contisements which indiEmails must state "Payroll Specialist" in the Bonded & Insured *No Selling Door to Door * tracting with anyone. cate the business has subject line. No phone calls please. CCB¹181595 *No Telemarketing Involved* Some other t r ades a bond,insurance and EOE "Great Advancement Opportunity* also req u ire addiworkers c ompensa* Full and Part Time Hours * t ional licenses a nd Landscaping/Yard Care tion for their employcertifications. ees. For your protecWind Turbine Technicians Nelson tion call 503-378-5909 AES is a successful global energy corporation. Our FOR THE CHANCE OF A or use our website: mission is to improve lives by providing safe, reliLandscaping & LIFETIME, Concrete Construction www.lcb.state.or.us to able and sustainable energy solutions in every Maintenance Call Adam Johnson check license status market we serve. AES is engaged in both the Serving Central 541-410-5521, TODAY! JJ & B Construction, before contracting with generation side of energy as well as the transmisOregon Since 2003 quality concrete work. Residental/Commercial the business. Persons sion and distribution of energy to end-users. We Over 30 Years Exp. doing land s cape are part of a strong and stable Virginia-based Career 0 o r t unities Sidewalks; RV pads; company that, as of 2012, was ranked 151 on the maintenance do not Sprinkler Repair Driveways; Color & r equire an L C B Fortune 500. AES has built a world-class team of Night Pressman Back Flow Testing The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, OrStamp wor k a v a il. cense. energy experts and have over 40 years of experiAlso Hardwood floorence in the wind energy business. We're looking egon. is seeking a night-time Pressman. Maintenance Schedule Fall Clean-up ing a t aff o rdable Thatch & Aerate for motivated, energetic and customer-focused We are part of Western Communications, Inc. and Aeration now! which is a small, family owned group consistprices. 541-279-3183 • Summer Clean up professionals to join our team. Weekly/one-time service ing of 7 newspapers - 5 in Oregon and 2 in CCB¹190612 •Weekly Mowing avail. Bonded, insured. Currently seeking Wind Turbine Techniciansat our Condon, Oregon project. This is a moderCalifornia. Ideal candidate must be able to & Edging Free Estimates! ately skilled position in the maintenance, trouble- learn our equipment/processes quickly. A • Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly COLLINS Lawn Maint. Debris Removal shooting and repair of wind turbine mechanical hands-on style is a requirement for our 3tle Maintenance Ca// 541-480-9714 systems. Qualified candidates must have a high tower KBA press. In addition to our 7-day a •Bark, Rock, Etc. JUNK BE GONE school diploma or equivalent, and possess a ba- week newspaper, we have numerous comALLEN REINSCH •Lot clearing/brush cut sic understanding, knowledge and skills in the use mercial print clients as well. Competitive wage I Haul Away FREE Yard maintenance 8 of computers, mechanical, hydraulic and electri- and benefit program, and potential for adFor Salvage. Also clean-up, thatching, ~Landsca in cal systems. Ability to read/ interpret blueprints vancement in a stable work environment. If Cleanups & Cleanouts •Landscape plugging & much more! and hydraulic/electrical schematics is desirable. you provide dependability, combined with a Mel, 541-389-8107 Construction Call 541-536-1294 All candidates will be required to pass a drug positive attitude and are a team player, we •Water Feature Remodeling/Carpentry screen prior to being hired. Installation/Maint. www.bendbulietin.com Take the next step in your career and experience would like to hear from you. I Domestic Services •Pavers our flexible and wide-ranging opportunities. SILVER LINING •Renovations more information or to submit a resume, Challenge yourself to continuously improve and For A ssisting Seniors a t •Irrigations Installation CONSTRUCTION contact: Al Nelson, Pressroom Maninnovate, broaden your expertise and build rela- please Home. Light houseResidential const., ager, anelson I bendbulletin.com. Applicationships with a diverse network of professionals. keeping 8 other serSenior Discounts remodels, maint. tions are also available at the front desk at The Interested parties please submit resume to: v ices. Licensed & Bonded & Insured & repair. CCB ¹199645 Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave., Bend, OR. 'ana. riffith@aes.com and Bonded. BBB Certi541-815-4458 Cody Aschenbrenner Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE cinda.enli sh@aes.com

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C4 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2013•THE BULLETIN

DA I L Y

B R ID G E C LU B

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Will Shgrtz

Mo nday,septem ber2,2013

ACROSS 1 Peak 5 Bolivian capital 10AnImal house? 14Italy's shape 15Addis Ethiopia 16Temporary calm 17More than

43 Magazine whose 1"Honest" cover has a red president border 2 Nightstick 44Likea hilarious carrier story 3"Me?,"to Miss 46 Hubbub I'iggy 47 Deluxe sheet 4 A Sk e tch fabric 5 Neighbor of 48 Japanese fish Maui dish awesome 6Cancel, as a 18Purchase for an 52 Valentine's Day launch flower all-nighter 7Asian noodle 19 f ixe 55Adriatic or dish with Aegean 20Like a sweet peanuts story 56Likea hilarious BTake story 23White House (acknowledge grp. that meets 60Listingon eBay applause) in the Situation 61MountainRoom 9Drag queen in climbing tool "La Cage aux 26"Revengeof 62"lliad"warrior the ("Star 66 Marcel Folles" Wars" subtitle) 10Go up Marceau, for 27 Jet-black one 11Sound 28 Fortuneteller's transmission 67 Military group card 12John who 68"TheTwilight 30"Yeah, right!" was the first 33Like an American to 69 Ballunbelievable orbit the earth hammer story 13Poem for the 36Circlemeasure: 70 Shoelace dearly departed problems Abbr. 71 Jeweled Faberge 21 Legally prohibit 40Suave or Prell objects 22 Boxing official 41Two-character David Mamet 23 Bikini blast, DOWN briefly play 24Give a quick ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE greeting 25Additive to MA T T D A M O N P A S S E coffee S P EE D D A T E I N A L L 29"Coffee,Tea ?" R E L A T E S T O E N I A C P R E K N C O S C E N T I 31 Snooty sort R O OM S E X T E D 32 Eskimo home: Var. G ES S 0 T A BO O I TH A C A N U F F S A I D 34 The Olympic rings, e.g. S T A R K L Y B T W E L V E 35 Earsplitting HUG I T O U T CO R DO N 36 Facts and H E M E N R E A R S figures GNOM E S D U C K 37The "F" and "B" S AW I V I T C H D U P E of Samuel F. B. Morse, e.g.: P I N T O M A L E N U RS E Abbr. O V E T T P L E A S E S I R 38 Comics orphan T E R S E S K I P C L AS S 39 cum l aude

Cy'S job SeCurity By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

Cy the Cynic's former job, if ever he had one, isthe object of much speculation at my club. "I know you won't talk about it," I said to Cy, "but didn't your job offer any job security?" "Doing a job right the first time gets it done," he shrugged. "Doing it w rong 14 t i mes g ives you j o b security." Cy was today's East and — I've seen it happen many times — he made a lazyplay.Declarer won the f irst heart and led a c l u b f r o m dummy, and Cy played low.

double, and your partner bids three hearts. What do you say? ANSWER: P ar t ner's j um p response is invitational to game but not forcing. He promises about 10 points and may have only four cards in hearts. If his hand were stronger, he could have bid four hearts or cuebid two spades. Pass. If your clubs were A-Q-6, you could barely justify a raise. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH 4K J 7 QAJ 0 J1 05 4 109 8 4 2

GOOD CLUBS W est won, cashed a heart and led a trump, won in dummy. The Cynic won the next club and led a diamond, but South took the ace, led a trump to dummy, ruffeda club and got back with a trump to discard two diamonds on the good clubs. Making four. Cy has little hope of four defensive tricks if South has the ace of clubs. But even if West has it, East may need to get in to lead a diamond through, setting up a diamond trick. Cy must put up the king of clubs at Trick Two to lead a diamond, and South goes down.

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(C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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

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PUZZLE BY ANDREA CARLA MICHAELS

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65 Ballot marks

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 ~Boats & Accessories

Motor h omes

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2013

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers •

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

882

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

C5

916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear kitchen, very good condition.

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

14'8" boat, 40hp Mercury outboard (4-stroke, Fleetwood D i s covery electric trim, EFI, less 40' 2003, diesel mothan 10 hrs) + electric torhome w/all trolling motor, fish finder, options-3 slide outs, $5000 obo. 541-548-2173 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. Wintered in h e ated shop. $89,900 O.B.O. 541-447-8664

882

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Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer.

Monaco Lakota 2004 KeystoneLaredo 31' 5th Wheel RV 20 06 w ith 1 2' 541-382-2577 34 ft.; 3 s lides; imslide-out. Sleeps 6, maculate c o ndition; queen walk-around bed w/storage under- CAMEO LXI 2003, 35 ft. l arge screen TV w / neath. Tub & shower. O nan g en . 3 6 0 0 , entertainment center; reclining chairs; cen2 swivel rockers. TV. wired & plumbed for Air cond. Gas stove 8 W/D, 3 slides, Fan- ter kitchen; air; queen refrigerator/freezer. tastic fan, ice maker, bed; complete hitch Microwave. Awning. r ange top & o v e n and new fabric cover. Outside sho w e r. (never been used) $22,900 OBO. Slide through stor(541) 548-5886 very nice; $29,500. a ge, E a s y Lif t . 541-548-0625. $29,000 new; Montana 2006 3400 Asking$18,600 The Bulletin RL, 37', 4 slides, Ar541-447-4805 To Subscribe call I tic options, K/bed, I w/d combo. M ust 541-385-5800 or go to ~ sell $22,990.OBO. ~ www.bendbulletin.com Mallard22' 1995, Call f o r det a i ls ready for hunting 805-844-3094 CHECK YOUR AD season!Sleeps 7, La Pine Address two twin beds, fully equipped, very good cond,$4800 obo.

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Aircraft, Parts & Service

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Superhawk Ownership Share Available!

Mitsubishi Fuso 1995 14' box truck with lift gate, 184,000 miles, needs turbo seal. $3500 or best offer. 541-420-2323

Economical flying Need to get an ad in your own IFR equipped Redmond: in ASAP? 541-548-5254 Cessna 172/180 HP for only $13,500! New Garmin Touchscreen Fax it to 541-322-7253 avionics center stack! Tick, Tock 14' LAZER 1993 sail1/3 interest in Columbia Exceptionally clean! The Bulletin Classifieds boat with trailer, exc. Hangared at BDN. 400, $150,000 (located Tick, Tock... c ond., $2000 o b o . @ Bend.) Also: SunriCall 541-728-0773 ...don't let time get Call 503-312-4168 ver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, Want to impress the away. Hire a G ulfstream S u n @ $400/mo. 17.5' Glastron 2002, sport 30' Class A professional out relatives? Remodel 541-948-2963 Chevy eng., Volvo 1988 new f r idge, your home with the of The Bulletin's outdrive, open bow, TV, solar panel, new stereo, sink/live well, help of a professional Peterbilt 359 p o table refrigerator, wheel"Call A Service water t ruck, 1 9 90, w/glastron tr a i ler, c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W from The Bulletin's 3200 gal. tank, 5hp Professional" incl. b oa t c o v er, g enerator, Goo d "Call A Service pump, 4-3" h oses, Like new, $ 8 500. Directory today! condition! $18,000 Professional" Directory camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-447-4876 obo 541-447-5504 541-678-5575 541-820-3724 1/3 interest i n w e l lT-Hangar for rent 931 equipped IFR Beech Boon the first day it runs nanza A36, new 10-550/ at Bend airport. JAMEE 1982 20', to make sure it is corAutomotive Parts, low miles on it, rect. "Spellcheck" and MONTANA 3585 2008, prop, located KBDN. Call 541-382-8998. Service & Accessories , r xa n ~ I S - H self-contained. Runs human errors do ocexc. cond., 3 slides, $65,000. 541-419-9510 916 Great, everything cur. If this happens to TIFFIN PHAETON QSH king bed, Irg LR, (4) Yokohama snow works. $3,000. your ad, please con2007 with 4 slides, CAT Arctic insulation, all • tires on rims, 17' Cris Craft Scorpion, 541-382-6494 tact us ASAP so that 350hp diesel engine, options $35,000 obo. Monte Carlo 2012 LimHeavy Equipment • 225/60R16, $ 4 00. fast & ready to fish! I/O 8 corrections and any $129,900. 30,900 miles, 541-420-3250 541-536-1080 ited Edition, 2 slides, 2 trolling motor. Lots of exadjustments can be great condition! tras! $5000. 541-318-7473 A/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps Tires 235/55R18 M&S made to your ad. NuWa 297LK HifchExtended warranty, 6-8 comfortably, has Hiker 2007, All seastudded used o nce dishwasher, washer/ 541-385-5809 w/d, dishwasher, many 1/5th interest in 1973 l ike n e w . $37 5 . dryer, central vac, roof extras, fully l o aded. The Bulletin Classified sons, 3 slides, 32' 541-389-1135 satellite, aluminum perfect for snow birds, Cessna 150 LLC $29,600 obo. Located wheels, 2 full slide-thru left kitchen, rear 150hp conversion, low lounge, extras, must time on air frame and basement trays 8 3 TV's. in Bend. 682-777-8039 KOUNTRY AIRE Falcon-2 towbar and see. Prineville engine, hangared in 1979 580C Case Antique & •x 541-447-5502 days & 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, 1994 37.5' motorEven-Brake included. Bend. Excellent perBackhoe Classic Autos 541-447-1641 eves. Enclosed heated cab, inboard motor, g r eat home, with awning, Call 541-977-4150 formance & afford80" front bucket, cond, well maintained, and one slide-out, able flying! $6,500. 18" hoe bucket, exc. $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 Only 47k miles Fleetwood Prowler 32' 541-410-6007 Garage Sales 2001, many upgrade rubber, plumbed for and good condition. $14,500 obo. hammer, hardly used $25,000. Garage Sales Orbit 21' 2007, used options, 1921 Model T 541-480-1687, Dick. during 12 yrs I've 541-548-0318 Delivery Truck owned it. Extra hoses, only 8 times, A/C, lphoto above is of a Garage Sales parts & 8' screen inoven, tub s hower, Restored 8 Runs similar model & not the Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th cluded. $10,500 obo. actual vehicle) micro, load leveler $9000. Find them wheel, 1 s lide, AC, 541-389-4092 hitch, awning, dual 541-389-8963 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, TV,full awning, excelin batteries, sleeps 4-5, new upholstery, new elec- M innie W innie 1 9 9 7 lent shape, $23,900. 1974 Bellanca EXCELLENT CONThe Bulletin tronics, winch, much more. Class C 3 0 ' motor541-350-8629 1730A DITION. All acces$9500. 541-306-0280 home. Excellent conClassifieds sories are included. Keystone Ch allenger dition. $14,750 or best 2004 CH34TLB04 34' Say "goodbuy" 2180 TT, 440 SMO $15,000 OBO. offer. View it on Varco 541-385-5809 fully S/C, w/d hookups, 541-382-9441 180 mph, excellent PRICERNUCN! to that unused Road in Bend or call new 18' Dometic awcondition, always 20.5' Seaswirl Spy541-390-8493 if interning, 4 new tires, new item by placing it in hangared, 1 owner 1987 Freightliner COE 3- 1929 Ford Phaeton in der 1989 H.O. 302, ested. Kubota 7000w marine truck, Cummins en- beautiful condition. Cover RV 285 hrs., exc. cond., diesel generator, 3 The Bulletin Classifieds for 35 years. $60K. axle gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 for top when down. Some CONSIGNMENTS slides, exc. cond. instored indoors for obo. 541-419-2713 extras. $25,000. In Madras, WANTED l ife $ 9 90 0 O B O . .-I s ide & o ut. 27" T V 5 41 -385-580 9 541-420-5303. Serious call 541-475-6302 541-379-3530 Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' We Do The Work ... dvd/cd/am/fm entertain inquiries only. center. Call for more 2004, on1y 34K, loaded, You Keep The Cash! What are you On-site credit too much to list, ext'd details. Only used 4 1952 Ford Customline Executive Hangar looking for? warr. thru 2014, $54,900 approval team, times total in last 5y2 Coupe, project car, flatat Bend Airport (KBDN) Monaco Windsor, 2001, Dennis, 541-589-3243 web site presence. years.. No pets, no head V-8, 3 spd extra 60' wide x 50' deep, You'll find it in loaded! (was $234,000 smoking. High r etail We Take Trade-Ins! parts, 8 materials, $2000 w/55' wide x 17' high binew) Solid-surface Need help fixing stuff? Free Advertising. $27,700. Will sell for The Bulletin Classifieds fold dr. Natural gas heat, counters, convection/ Call A Service Professional BIG COUNTRY RV $24,000 including slid20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L offc, bathroom. Adjacent micro, 4-dr, fridge, find the help you need. Bend: 541-330-2495 i ng hitch that fits i n Recreation by Design to Frontage Rd; great V6 w/OMC outdrive, open washer/dryer, ceramic Redmond: your truck. Call 8 a.m. 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. visibility for aviation busi541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com bow, Shorelander trlr, nds tile & carpet, TV, DVD, 541-548-5254 to 10 p.m. for appt to Top living room 5th some interior trim work. satellite dish, leveling, ness. Financing availsee. 541-330-5527. wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 $4500. 541-639-3209 able. 541-948-2126 or 8-airbags, power cord A/Cs, entertainment email 1jetjock@q.com reel, 2 full pass-thru • T r avel Trailers • center, fireplace, W/D, trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 Have an item to 21' Crownline Cuddy Chevy C-20 Pickup garden tub/shower, in Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; Cabin, 1995, only il~ e ~ .i . great condition. $42,500 sell quick? based in Madras, alDiesel gen set. $85,000 auto 4-spd, 396, model 325 hrs on the boat, or best offer. Call Peter, ways hangared since If it's under obo. 503-799-2950 CST /all options, orig. 5.7 Merc engine with 307-221-2422, new. New annual, auto owner, $19,950, Backhoe outdrive. Bimini top ( in La Pine ) '500 you can place it in pilot, IFR, one piece WEEKEND WARRIOR 541-923-6049 8 moorage cover, WILL DELIVER 2007 John Deere windshield. Fastest ArThe Bulletin •R Toy hauler/travel trailer. 310SG, cab 4x4, $7500 obo. Chevy 1955 PROJECT cher around. 1750 to24' with 21' interior. 4-in-1 bucket 541-382-2577 Classifieds for: RV tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. car. 2 door wgn, 350 Cougar 33 ft. 2006, Sleeps 6. Self-conExtendahoe, CONSIGNMENTS small block w/Weiand 14 ft. slide, awning, 541-475-6947, ask for tained. Systems/ hydraulic thumb, '10 - 3 lines, 7 days dual quad tunnel ram Ads published in the WANTED Rob Berg. easy lift, stability bar, appearancein good loaded, like new, with 450 Holleys. T-10 "Boats" classification NATIONAL DOLPHIN bumper extends for We Do the Work, '16 - 3 lines, 14 days condition. Smoke-free. 500 hours. 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, FIND IT! include: Speed, fish- 37' 1997, loaded! 1 extra cargo, all ac- Tow with '/2-ton. Strong You Keep the Cash! (Private Party ads only) New $105,000. Weld Prostar wheels, ing, drift, canoe, On-site credit slide, Corian surfaces, cess. incl., like new BUY IT! suspension; can haul Sell $75,000. extra rolling chassis + house and sail boats. wood floors (kitchen), condition, stored in approval team, SELL IT! ATVs snowmobiles, 541-350-3393 extras. $6500 for all. For all other types of 2-dr fridge, convection RV barn, used less even a small car! Great web site presence. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-389-7669. watercraft, please go microwave, Vizio TV & than 10 t imes loWe Take Trade-Ins! price $8900. to Class 875. roof satellite, walk-in c ally, no p ets o r Free Advertising. Call 541-593-6266 541-385-5809 shower, new queen bed. smoking. $20,000 BIG COUNTRY RV White leather hide-a- obo. 541-536-2709. Bend: 541-330-2495 bed & chair, all records, Redmond: Looking for your Setvtng Central Oregon smce 1903 no pets o r s moking. 541-548-5254 next employee? $28,450. Keystone Montana Place a Bulletin help Call 541-771-4800 2955 RL 2008, wanted ad today and 885 2 slides, arctic reach over 60,000 Canopies & Campers insulation, loaded, readers each week. excellent never used Your classified ad Eagle Cap '04 camper 8/2', condition. $29,900 will also appear on $1200 of recent wk done. 541-923-4707 Beautiful h o u seboat, bendbulletin.com Legal Notices Jayco Eagle • L e g al Notices Legal Notices • $5300. 541-530-7930 $85,000. 541-390-4693 which currently rewww.centraloregon Pontiac G6 2007, low 26.6 ft long, 2000 ceives over 1.5 milarea) or toll-free elsemiles, excellent tow car, LEGAL NOTICE houseboat.com. Take care of lion page views evHOW TO COMMENT: has Brake Buddy, shield, Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, IN T H E CI R C UIT where in Oregon at ery month at no GENERATE SOME ex- T owmaster to w b ar, awning, Eaz-Lift 452-7 6 36 Send written c o myour investments COURT O F THE (800) extra cost. Bulletin ments by fax, mail or citement in your neig- $10,000. 541-548-1422 stabilizer bars, heat Irr STATE OF OREGON Dated and first pubwith the help from Classifieds Get Relished on August 12, email to: borhood. Plan a ga& air, queen FOR THE COUNTY sults! Call 385-5809 Lance 8~/~' camper, 1991 OF walk-around bed, The Bulletin's rage sale and don't DES C H UTES 2013. R o bbie BianTURN THE PAGE or place your ad Great cond; toilet & fullJesse Anderson, forget to advertise in very good condition, Case No. SC 130533 chi, Plaintiff, 550 NW "Call A Service For More Ads on-line at size bed. Lightly used. classified! 385-5809. $10,000 obo. S UMMONS: RO B - H ill St., B e nd, O R State Plan Manager bendbulletin.com Recently serviced, Professional" Directory Tel e phone: Division of Medical The Bulletin 541-595-2003 BIE DEE B IANCHI, 97701 $4500. 503-307-8571 Assistance Programs Plaintiff, v. STEVEN (541) 350-9251. Serving Central Oregon smce 1903 500 Summer Street NE CARY SAHMS, DePUBLIC NOTICE Salem, Oregon 97301 f endant. You are REQUEST FOR Fax: 503-947-1119 h ereby required t o COMMENTS Watercraft Email: appear and d efend PROPOSAL TO UP- Iesse.andersonOstate.or.Us the Complaint filed DATE DES C R IPAds published in "Waa gainst you i n t h e TIONS OF THE NEXT STEPS: OHA tercraft" include: Kayabove men t i oned POPULATIONS ELI- will consider all comaks, rafts and motorcause w ithin t h irty GIBLE FOR MEDIC- ments received. A ~zed personal (30) days from the AID A N D E S T AB- State Plan A mendwatercrafts. For date o f p u blication LISH OHP BENEFITS ment will be submit" boats" please s e e stated in t his S umFOR T HE NEW ted to the Centers for Class 870. mons, and in the case A DULT POPU L A- Medicare and Medic541-385-5809 of your failure to do, T ION UNDER T H E ald. for w a n t the r eof, AFFORDABLE CARE PUBLIC NOTICE plaintiff will apply to ACT The Bend Park 8 Recthe Court for the relief demanded i n the C OMMENTS D U E : reation District Board of Directors will meet Complaint. The September 20, 2013 I Mo t o rhomes in a work session and Complaint filed regular bus i ness against you states a ICL ' PROPOSAL: Due to ittle Red Corvette" meeting on Tuesday, claim for violations of changes in the fedSeptember 3, 2013, at the Oregon Landlord eral definition of eli!~ Tenant Act and acts gible Medicaid popu- the District Office, 799 SW Columbia, Bend, of Civil N egligence lations made by the and the demand for Affordable Care Act, O regon. The w o r k r relief is $ 1 0,000.00 the Oregon H ealth session will begin at Brougham 1978 motor NOTICE T O THE Authority (OHA) pro- 5:30 p .m . A g enda home, Dodge chassis, i tems include a r e 17' coach, sleeps 4, DEFENDANT: READ poses the following: T HESE PAPE R S 1) rear dining. $4500. Conso l idate view and discussion 2004 Convertible solid regarding the Discov541-602-8652. CAREFULLY! You Oregon's 14 MedicF atures inc!ude Coupe,350, auto must "appear" in this aid eligibility catego- ery Park developer rs, 4-dr Surface counter,rnlcm, with132 rnii«gets case or the other side ries to four categories: a greement, an u p will win automatically. adults, children, preg- date on the Simpson 1 d e, conuectioner, m' ce26-24 rnpgAddlots To "appear" you must nant women and par- M aster Plan and a ui - washer/dn/, built-in more description and p resentation of d i sfile with the court a le- ents/caretaker r e lainteresting facts for trict website informaramic tile floor, TU,DVD, gal paper called a tives; and t ion a b o u t bon d "motion" or "answer." 2) Define the O HP satellite dish, air leueling, $99! Look how much Alfa See Ya 2005 40' storage The "motion" or "an- benefit package that p rojects an d o t h er ass-through fun a girl could have in excellent cond, 1 owner, swer" (or "reply") must the new adult popula- current park developYOur autO, RV, mOtOrryrle, 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas d aking tray, an ' size bed a sweet car like thisi be given to the court tion will receive. This ment projects. The stove/oven, convection - AH foronly board will conduct a bOat, Or airPlane clerk or administrator benefit package will $12,500 oven, washer/dryer $149,000 regular busi n ess within 30 days of the be the current OHP combo, flatscreen TV, all 54!-000-000 ad runs until it sells first publication speci- b enefit, w h ic h in - meeting at 7:00 p.m. 541-000-000 electronics, new tires, fied herein along with cludes coverage for to receive an update many extras. 7.5 diesel from Bend 2030 and or up to 12 months the required filing fee. EPSDT services ingen, lots of storage, It must be in proper cluding family plan- staff will present the basement freezer, 350 (whichever comes first!) Annual Action Plan. form and have proof ning. Cat Freightliner chassis. T he a g enda a n d o f service o n t h e Asking $86,500. See at meeting report for the Includes tjp to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, plaintiff's attorney or, BACKGROUND: For Crook County RV Park, S eptember 3, 2 0 1 , if the plaintiff does not background and de¹43. 520-609-6372 full color photo, bold headline and price. have a n at t o rney, tailed inf o rmation, meeting will be posted F riday, August 3 0 , proof of service upon please see the final Need to get an t he plaintiff. If y o u rule o n • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. A l t ernative 2013, on the district's ad in ASAP? website: www.bendhave any questions, Benefit Plans for the parksandrec.org. For You can place it y ou should see a n • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED new adult Medicaid attorney immediately. population in the Fed- more information call online at: to over 30,000 households. If you need help in eral Register/ Vol 78, 541-706-6100. www.bendbulletin.com finding an a ttorney, No 135, published on • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over you may contact the J uly 15 2 0 13. It i s Need to get an ad 541-385-5809 Oregon State Bar's available 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon at Lawyer Referral Ser- http://www.gpo.gov/fd in ASAP? v ice onl i n e at sys/pkg/FR-2013-07-1 • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com BOUNDER 1993 www.oregonstatebar. 5/pdf/2013-16271.pdf. 34.6', 43k miles, org or by calling (503) Fax it to 541-322-7253 loaded, $13,900. * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad 684-3763 ( in t h e EFFECTIVE D A T E: Info - Call Portland metropolitan 1/1/14 The Bulletin Classifieds days in the above publications. Private party ads only. 541-536-8816.

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

C6 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2013 •THE BULLETIN 932

Antique & Classic Autos

Antique & Classic Autos

a

Pickups

Pickups

Sp o rt Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles •

-~~~ ~ ~ I SI

Chevy 2500 HD 2003 Dodge Dakota Quad B uick Enclave C X L Chevy Stepside 1963 /e Mercedes-Benz SL380 4 WD w o r k tru c k , Cab SLT 2006, V8, 6 2009, V6, atuo, AWD, 140,000 miles, $7000 speed, 4WD, a l loy N av., l eather, t o w ton One owner, good 1 983 Roadster. V - 8 . obo. 541-408-4994. wheels, tow pkg., bed pkg., alloy w heels, inside & out. $9,999 Lots of power in this beautiful car with hard 541-382-7515. liner. VIN ¹627033 VIN ¹186577 a nd soft t o ps, A l so $15,988 $26,588 comes with hard t op stand. 54 0 0 0 m i les. S UBA R U . S UBA RU. BUBAltUOPBENDCOM PUBARUOPBEND COM $14,000. 429 NW 24th 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Pl, Redmond. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 541-420-5303. Serious Chevy Colorado ExDlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 inquiries ONLY! tended Cab LS 2005, Chevy Wagon 1957,

541-389-6998

©

Corvette Coupe 1964 530 miles since frame off restoration. Runs and drives as new. Satin Silver color with black leather interior, mint dash. PS, P B, AC, 4 speed. Knock offs. New tires. Fresh 327 N.O.M. All Corvette restoration parts in & out. Reduced to $59,500. 541-410-2870 Ford Ranchero 1965 Rhino bedliner custom wheels, 302V-8

auto. Runs $9,995.

g o od

541-771-4778

with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo.

Grand 1 9 99,

1 59,970 mile s . 4WD, au t o matic transmission, cloth interior, power everything, A/C, trailer hitch. Well maintained & runs great. $3850. 541-385-5286

Porsche Carrera 911

2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with

18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500.

Mustang convertible, 1994, economic V6, 2nd owner, $2200 obo.

541-322-6928

541-633-6662

©

©

BUBMtUOFBEND COM

The Bulletin

BUBARUOPBRND COll

©

541-420-4677

Automo b iles

BUBARUOPBEND COM

Ford Ranchero 1979

Automobiles •

Good classified ads tell Just bought a new boat? Subaru Outback 2008 Sell your old one in the the essential facts in an Immaculate! classifieds! Ask about our interesting Manner. Write Original owner. 82K Super Seller rates! from the readers view - not miles, 2 new sets of 541-385-5809 the seller's. Convert the tires, service records, into benefits. Show new brakes & struts, Cadillac El Dor a do facts reader how the item will leather seats, loaded! 1994, T otal C r e a m thehelp them in someway. $16,900. Puff! Body, paint, trunk 5 Cyl, 5 speed, 4WD, 541-693-3975 This as showroom, blue b ed li n e r , all o y advertising tip leather, $1700 wheels wheels. VIN ¹170983 brought to youby I nternational Fla t w/snow tires although $12,988 Looking for your Bed Pickup 1963, 1 car has not been wet in next employee? The Bulletin S UBA R U . ton dually, 4 s pd. 8 years. On t rip t o Place a Bulletin help great MPG, Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., MGA 1959 - $19,999 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. trans., Tahoe Jeep Wrangler X Sport $5400, 541-593-4016. Ford Taurus 2003 SSE wanted ad today and could be exc. wood Chevrolet Convertible. O r igi877-266-3821 2002, V8, auto, 4WD, 2004, 6 Cyl., 5 speed, reach over 60,000 hauler, runs great, s edan, e xc . co n d nal body/motor. No Dlr ¹0354 leather, third row seat, 4WD, hard top, alloy new brakes, $1950. 63,000 miles. $5,000 readers each week. rust. 541-549-3838 t ow pk g . , all o y Your classified ad 541-389-9569 541-41 9-5480. wheels. VIN ¹749542 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS wheels. VIN ¹148836 will also appear on $15,988 Mercedes-Benz E320 $9,988 bendbulletin.com Search the area's most ~ OO CDI 2005 68K miles. which currently relisting of Nissan XE Pickup S UBA R U . MorePixat Bendboletin.com comprehensive 4@ SUBARU. Loaded with optional ceives over 1.5 milclassified advertising... 1995. $3,000 Red BUBARUOFBEND COM Chrysler Newport equipment. $24,700. lion page views real estate to automotive, with five spd. and 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. (2) 1962 4 door sedans, 541-647-1 1 1 0 every month at merchandise to sporting 877-266-3821 a/c. N e w c l utch. $2500 and $5500. 877-266-3821 no extra cost. Bullegoods. Bulletin Classifieds Reasonable miles Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 La Pine, 541-602-8652. Mustang GT 1995 red tin Classifieds appear every day in the and runs well. Call 133k miles, Boss 302 Get Results! Call print or on line. 541-549-6896 motor, custom pipes, 385-5809 or place USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! RMNU-" Get your Call 541-385-5809 5 s p eed m a nual, your ad on-line at www.bendbulletin.com business power windows, cusMustang 1966 2 dr. Door-to-door selling with bendbulletin.com tom stereo, very fast. coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 fast results! It's the easiest $5800. 541-280-7910 cyl. Over $12,000 inway in the world to sell. Nissan Pathfinder SE a ROW I N G vested, asking $9000 1998, 150K mi, 5 spd Garage Sales All receipts, runs loaded, very good Porsche 911 The Bulletin Classified 4x4, with an ad in good. 541-420-5011 tires, very good cond, Carrera 993 cou e Garage Sales 541-385-5809 Toyota Tundra Crew$4800. 503-334-7345 The Bulletin's Max 2012, V8, auto, "Call A Service Garage Sales 4WD, moonroof, alloy Professional" wheels, VIN ¹261814 Find them Chevy Silverado 1500 $38,888 Directory in Crew Cab 2012, V8, auto, 4WD, p o w er S UB A R U . Must Sell! Health forces 1996, 73k miles, The Bulletin sale. Buick Riviera 1991, seats, bed liner, alloy 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Tiptronic auto. "My little red Toyota RAV4 2010, V6, Classifieds classic low-mileage car, wheels. VIN ¹218620 M transmission. Silver, 877-266-3821 Infiniti FX35 2 012, a uto, 4 W D , al l o y $32,888 Coryette Coupe garaged, pampered, blue leather interior, Dlr ¹0354 wheels, heated seats, 541-385-5809 Platinum silver, non-smoker, exclnt cond, moon/sunroof, new S UBA R U . 24,000 miles, with VIN ¹096913 $4300 obo 541-389-0049 PUBARUOFBEUD COM quality tires and factory wa r ranty, $23,888 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. battery, car and seat f ully l o aded, A l l The Bulletin recoml 877-266-3821 . SU B A R U . covers, many extras. Wheel Drive, GPS, mends extra caution f Dlr ¹0354 Recently fully sersunroof, etc. when p u r chasing ~ 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. viced, garaged, $37,500. Advertise your car! 877-266-3821 1996, 350 auto, f products or services looks and runs like Add A Ptcture! 541-550-7189 from out of the area. (Photo forillustration only) Dlr ¹0354 132,000 miles. new. Excellent conReach thousands of readers! Toyota Tundra Double J S ending c ash , Non-ethanol fuel & dition $29,700 975 Plymouth B a r racuda Call 541-385-5809 checks, or credit inCab 2009, V8, auto, synthetic oil only 541-322-9647 The Bulletin Classifieds 1966, original car! 300 4WD, tow pkg., cus- Isuzu Axiom 2 004 Automobiles formation may be I garaged, premium hp, 360 V8, centert om b umper, V I N 4wd, auto trans, new Bose stereo, J subject to FRAUD. ~ lines, 541-593-2597 II • ¹015272 For more informajl t,er, tires & brakes. New $11,000. Porsche 911 Turbo f tion about an adver$21,988 luggage rack. Silver 54 I -923-178 I The Bulletin's tiser, you may call with silver w/leather S UBA R U I the Oregon State I "Call A Service interior. 77K miles & 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. in excellent condi~ Attorney General's f Professional" Directory Volkswagen Karmann 877-266-3821 Office C o n sumer Dodge Dakota Cl ub tion $7000. is all about meeting Ghia 1970 convertible, Dlr ¹0354 f Protection hotline at Cab 1998, V8 ,5 541-419-6433 very rare, new top & inteyourneeds. 1-877-877-9392. speed, 4WD, tow pkg, 2003 6 speed, X50 rior upholstery, $7500. a lloy w h eels. V I N added power pkg., Call on one of the Call a Pro 541-389-2636 ¹511766 530 HP! Under 10k SUPUrng Central Oregan slOCB1903 professionals today! Whether you need a CORVETTECOUPE AUDI 1990 V8 Quat$8,988 miles, Arctic silver, Glasstop 2010 fence fixed, hedges tro. Perfect Ski Car. gray leather interior, PROJECT CARS: Chevy . S UBUBARUOPBEND B A R UCOM. Grand Sport - 4 LT LOW MILES. $3,995 new quality t ires, trimmed or a house Need to get an 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & loaded, clear bra obo. 541-480-9200. and battery, Bose 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. built, you'll find ad in ASAP? Chevy Coupe 1950 hood & fenders. premium sound ste877-266-3821 BMW X5 2007, 1 owner, rolling chassis's $1750 New Michelin Super professional help in You can place it Jeep Grand Cheroreo, moon/sunroof, Dlr ¹0354 exc. 30K mi., sunroof, ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Sports, G.S. floor car and seat covers. kee 1996 4x4, autoThe Bulletin's "Call a $27,500. 541-389-1128 online at: complete car, $ 1949; mats, 17,000 miles, matic, 135,000 miles. Many extras. GaCadillac Series 61 1950, Service Professional" www.bendbuUetin.com Find It in Crystal red. Buick Century Limited raged, perfect conGreat shape - exc. 2 dr. hard top, complete The Bulletin Classifieds! $42,000. Directory 2000, r un s g r e at, dition $5 9 ,700. cond., $3,600. w/spare f r on t cl i p ., 503-358-1164. beautiful car. $3400. 541-322-9647 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 541-815-9939 541-385-5809 $3950, 541-382-7391 541-312-3085

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4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades. Please call

Jeep C herokee

Aut o m obiles Buick Lucerne CXS 2006 - 93K, silver, black leather, Northstar engine, $36,000 new; no doubt Buick's best! Seeing's worth a thousand words. Under $10,000. Buick Bobis car, 541-318-9999

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Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179 Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

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GMC Vzton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171 •

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