Bulletin Daily Paper 11-05-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1

THURSDAY November5,2015

a iona ores seers win ervoun eers LOCAL• B1

bendbulletin.corn

What the EastCoast iswilling to do to get oLlr beer • From social media to songs, cities vie for the coast's 1stDeschutesBrewery

The Deschutes 2 Roanoke Facebook page attracted

bringing a nationally known business organization to

1,000 followers in its first

Roanoke," Galliher, a Ro-

Listen to thesong Steve Primo, of Montvale, Virginia, wrote a song hehoped would inspire Deschutes to locate to Roanoke, Virginia. Tohear "Deschutes, a Brewery for Roanoke,"

48 hours, and Wednesday By Joseph Ditzler

Facebookcampaign aimed

The Bulletin

at sending much love to the

News that Deschutes

Brewery executives came courting in Roanoke, Virginia, this fall sparked a

anoke County court clerk, counted more than 4,000. said Wednesday, "but also a A Twitter hashtag, way to encourage our econNDeschutes2Rke, inspired omy and have an economic Michael Galliher to create the impact through not only job Facebook campaign. creation but tourism." "This is a way of not only See Brewery/A5

Bend-based brewer, the nation's seventh-largest craft brewer and the 12th largest

overall.

visit bit.ly/20vmbg J. Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Legalized marijuana

TODAY' S READERBOARD Search for healingBend parents usealternative remedies to help their son with cerebral palsy. B1

in motion in Mexico owned by Bend-La Pine • A hearing on potential development isSchools, which has sought sell the land to help fiat the location hasbeenset for December tonance the building of new

Goss resigns — Jefferson

By Tyler Leeds

ment, a prospect that has

County treasurer DeenaGoss resigns from her position, nearly a weekafter being found guilty of stealing county money. B1

The Bulletin

irked community members

An independent hearings officer on Dec. 3 will consider whether Troy Field is fit for commercial develop-

who hope to preserve the property as open space.

Small-town suicides-

More potential lodging in downtownBend

Rural teens commit suicide at twice the rate of adolescents in urban areas, according to a study published this year. A3

Prep soccer — Summit High School's girls soccer teamadvancestotheClass5A quarterfinals. C1

EDITOR'5CHOICE

The downtown parcel,

currently a fenced-in park,

schools. In June, the district accepted a $1.9 million offer from the Portland-based Brownstone Development

Inc. While no formal plans have been released, the dis-

trict has said the company is interested in building a bou-

By Elisabeth Malkin and Azam Ahmed

tique hotel on the 0.8-acre

New Vortt Times News Service

Troy Field. For that to happen, howchange the site's general plan designation from pub-

The Mexican Supreme Court opened the door to legalizing marijuana on Wednesday, delivering a pointed challenge to the

lic facilities to commercial.

nation's strict substance

ever, the city will have to

See Troy Field /A5

bate in Latin America over

McMenamins Old St. Francis School plans to build two new lodges downtown. And if a boutique hotel gets built on Troy Field, the southeast edge of downtown Bendwill be a hub of hospitality or hotels. it/ra/y

Rendering of new lodges

Siteof2newlodges '

City Hall I

p~

Troy Field This has the potential to be the site of a new boutique hotel.

the costs and consequences of the war against drugs. The vote by the court's

criminal chamber declared individuals should have the right to grow and distribute marijuana for their

personal use. While the

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ruling does not strike down

espg

current drug laws, it lays the groundwork for a wave

Mell/tearriins

of legal actions that could

S. Francis c ooi

Sources: City of Bend; Ankrom Moisan Architects

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

With Gl Bil, veterans

abuse laws and adding its weight to the growing de-

WINTER ON ITS WAY

ultimately rewrite them, proponents of legalization say. The decision reflects a changingdynamic in Mexico, where for decades the U.S.-backed war on drugs has produced much upheaval but few lasting victories. Today, the flow of drugs to the United States continues, along with the

still accrue

political corruption it fuels in Mexico. The country,

student debt

dispirited by the ceaseless fight with traffickers, remains engulfed in violence.

By Alan Zarembo

all of our efforts," said Juan

Los Angeles Times

Francisco Torres Landa, a

"It's the drama behind

Despite the generous

corporate lawyer who was one of the plaintiffs in the

benefits of the latest GI Bill, military veterans attend-

Supreme Court case. With little to show after

ing college are taking out substantial student loans, raising concerns among

years of tough-on-crime policies, countries in the

Western Hemisphere have enacted laws allowing

veterans' organizations

thattheyareunnecessarily diving into debt.

some marijuana use.

Uruguay, Chile and more

For most veterans, the GI

Bill covers four academic years of tuition at public colleges and universities and has programs to cover the vast majority of

than 20 states in the U.S.

expenses at many private institutions. Veterans also

use in Mexico is low, and most Mexicans oppose

receive a monthly living allowance — averaging about $1,300, depending on where they live — to help cover expenses while they attend school.

have passed laws allowing medical or recreational use. The rate of marijuana legalization. The U.S. is the Joe Kline /The Bulletin

Snow covers the top of Mount Bachelor wast of Bend on Wednesday. Winter is moving into Central Oregon as temperatures cool,

with periods of snow projected for Monday, according to Accuweather. For a complete forecast, sae B6.

main market for marijuana grown there. See Marijuana /A4

But data compiled for the

Los Angeles Times by the Department of Education show that in one academic year — 2012, the latest

Police violence is nothing new to black millennials

available — 26 percent of undergraduates receiving

By Jesse J. Holland

veterans education benefits

The Associated Press

also took out federal or pri-

WASHINGTON — Long before the deaths of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and

vate education loans. The

average loan was $7,400 — slightly more than for

Freddie Gray, more than half of

African-American millennials

The information, from the

indicated they, or someone they "Black Millennials in America" report issued by the Black knew, had been victimized by

violence or harassment from

Youth Project at the Study of

law enforcement,anew report says.

Race, Politics and Culture at the University of Chicago, re-

among black, Latino, Asian

veyed millennials several times during the past decade, point

and white millennials when it

out that the disparities existed

fleet starkly different attitudes

comes to policing, guns and the well before the "Black Lives legal system in the U.S. Matter" movement began. Researchers, who have surSee Report /A4

students who had never

served in the military. The figure suggests that beneficiaries could easily accrue more than $25,000 in debt to graduate with a four-year degree. See Veterans /A4

TODAY'S WEATHER Cloudy, chilly

High 49, Low 27

Page Be

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

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

B5 C1-4 D6

An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 113, No. 309,

30 pages, 5 sections

Q ri/f/e use recycinewspri ed nt

:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII o 8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

How to reachUs

PROTESTS CONTINUE IN ROMANIA

STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

EgyPt CraSh —British and U.S.officials said Wednesdaythey have information suggesting the Russian jetliner that crashed in theEgyptiandesertmayhavebeen broughtdownbyabomb,and Britain said it was suspending flights to and from the Sinai Peninsula indefinitely. Intercepted communications played arole in thetentative conclusion that the Islamic State group's Sinai affiliate planted anexplosive device onthe plane, said a U.S. official briefed on the matter. He spoke oncondition of anonymity because hewasn't authorized to discuss intelligence matters publicly. The official and others said there had been no formal judgment rendered by the CIAor other intelligence agencies, andthat forensic evidence from the blast site, including the airplane's black box, wasstill being analyzed.

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Canadian PM SWOIh Ih —Justin Trudeau wassworn in Wednesday asCanada's newLiberal prime minister, and his new cabinet ministers vowed to honor campaign pledges to settle 25,000 Syrian refugees bythe end of theyear. Trudeau, the son of the late iconic Liberal Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau,also promised aless controlling style of "government byCabinet" after almost10 years of Conservative rule under StephenHarper. "Government by Cabinet is back," Trudeausaid, vowing to have anopen and transparent government.

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Vadim Ghirda I The Associated Press

A protester screamswhile holding a paper that reads "Corruption has killed — Romaniawake up" with the communist era-built House of the People in thebackground,whichnow housestheRomanian parliament, during a rally of thousands calling for early elections in Bucharest, Romania, onWednesday.

Prime Minister Victor Ponta announced the resignation of his government Wednesdayfollowing huge protests the daybefore in the wake of aFriday nightclub fire that killed more than 30people. Thefire was the deadliest in Romania's history. — The Associated Press

Stabdihg arreSt — Sacramento police Wednesdayannounced the arrest of a man inthe stabbing last month of U.S.Airman Spencer Stone, one of threeAmericans who helpedthwart an attack on a Paris-bound train in August. Stone, 23, wasstabbed multiple times during a street fight in the pre-dawn hours of Oct. 8 after heand his friends had left a popular club. At the time, Sacramento police described the incident as a"very unfortunate altercation between two groups of folks who wereenjoying the nightlife." Sacramento police Chief SamSomerssaid officers secured awarrant Tuesday and on Wednesday morning arrested JamesTran, 28, during a traffic stop near his home inElk Grove, California.

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Dice i

a i a mia

s u en a er s a in By Ashley Southall

Slh Dlhgh gllhmlh —A gunman in a rooftop apartment surrendered to police Wednesdayafter a more than five-hour standoff that interrupted air traffic at the SanDiegoairport. Police said the gunman's bullets narrowly missed anofficer but that no injuries were reported. The suspect, armedwith a high-powered rifle, shot numerous rounds from his ex-girlfriend's apartment complex nearSanDiego International Airport, prompting the FederalAviation Administration to halt incoming flights for several hours as aprecaution. Titus Colbert, 33, walked out of the complex after tossing "multiple weapons" out an apartment window, SanDiego Police Lt. Scott Wahl said. Police Chief Shelley Zimmermansaid authorities recovered an"AK-47-type" assault weaponand ahandgun.

The Merced County sheriff,

after he turned toward them.

New York Times News Service

Vern Warnke, said policewere

A student wielding a hunting knife stabbed four people at the start of a class Wednesday on the campus of the Uni-

not able to release his name

Officials said they could not immediately provide any de-

students, a student adviser

Vasquez. A contractor heard

because they had not reached tails about the possible motive his next of kin, who live else- for the attack or about what where in the state. students or other witnesses versity of California, Merced, The stabbings took place have said. before he was fatally shot by around 8 a.m., Leland said. The knife was the only university police officers, law The attacker walked into weapon found, Warnke said. enforcement officials said. a class as it was starting and Classes were canceled, and Dorothy Leland, the uni- stabbed a student, said the the campus remained on preversity chancellor, said two university police chief, Albert cautionarylockdown, Leland said. The school was expected

RallieS ih Iran —Iran held rallies Wednesdayto mark the 36th anniversary of the storming of the U.S.embassy, the latest reminder that July's landmark nuclear dealhasdone little to reduce enmity between the Islamic Republic's top rulers andtheir longtime foe. In downtown Tehran, around 2,000 peoplegathered inTaleghani Avenue, where the building that oncehousedthe U.S. embassy is located. University students, school children andgovernment workers held placards emblazoned with "Downwith U.S.A." and chanted "Death to America." The protests are heldevery Nov. 4 tomark the day in1979 a groupof Iranian students stormed theU.S. embassy demanding the extradition ofthedeposedShahMohammed RezaPahlavi.Theyseizeddozensof hostages, holding 52 for more than 14months. — From wire reports

and a contractor were injured the commotion and, believ- to reopen Friday. in the attack. Two of the peo- ing it was a fight, ran into the ple who were stabbed were classroom to intervene. He taken by helicopters for treat- was stabbed in the process, ment, while the others were Vasquez said. treated on campus. None of

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The attacker then fled the

their injuries were considered classroom and stabbed the life-threatening, Leland said. student adviser and a student Officials said at a news con- who rushed to help the adference that the assailant was viser, Vasquez said. He was a student in his 20s who lived stopped by two university on campus. police officers, who shot him

• + %ST. 1983

CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0358.

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

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

QzQaQaQ zoQ ss© The estimated jackpot is now $40 million.

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Mystery ot Illinoisofficer's life anddeatharesolved

• ee • eeeeeeeee • e

By Richard Perez-Pena lice lieutenant made national news and brought a stretch

"Gliniewicz committed the ultimate betrayal to the citizens he

of northern Illinois to a tense

served."

New York Times News Service

The shooting death of a po-

standstill w i t h

r o a dblocks,

thudding helicopters and officers tramping with dogs through woods and over farmland, searching for the killers. The lieutenant, Charles

— George Filenko, commander of the Lake County Major Crime

Task Force

Come Celebrate 32 Years

with Us.

spent on travel, mortgage a hero, and some conserva- payments and adult websites, tives seized on this and other among other things. J. Gliniewicz, was hailed as shootings as evidence that

"Gliniewicz committed the

critics of the police were fuel- ultimate betrayal to the citiing a wave of violence against zens he served," Filenko said. law enforcement. ln a statement, the family But on Wednesday, more said that "today has been ant han t w o mon t h s af t e r other day of deep sorrow for Gliniewicz was found dead in the Gliniewicz family." The Fox Lake, a small town north- statement said the family had west of Chicago, law enforce- cooperated with the investiment officials said the truth gation and would have no furwas something very different: ther comment. He took his own life. Crucial evidence, investiStill more surprising was gators said, lay in 6,500 text the explanation they offered. messages the lieutenant deThey said Gliniewicz, 52, a leted shortly before he died local fixture admired for his but were recovered by the work with young people, had FBI's crime lab. The messagbeen stealing money from the es contained incriminating town for years and feared he statements and evidence of was about to be caught. his crimes, investigators said, There is "an overwhelm- and showed his growing fear ing amount of evidence that of being caught. Gliniewicz's death was a care-

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fully staged suicide," Cmdr. George Filenko of the Lake County Major Crime Task Force said at a news confer-

investigation. In texts released by inves-

in JAIL."

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Tak e an ADDITIONAL

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your ENTIRE purchase of $150 or more after discount

Filenko said, and at least two other people were still under

ence. He said that a review of tens of thousands of emails, tigators, Gliniewicz wrote to text m essages and p h o ne two unidentified people about calls, along with bank re- his conflicts with a new city cords, showed that for at least administrator. To one person, seven years, Gliniewicz had he wrote that he was in seribeen embezzlingand launder- ous trouble "if she gets ahold ing money from the Fox Lake of the old checking account," Police Explorer p rogram, and "you' ll have to start which he headed, as well as dumping money into that acforging documents and sig- count or you' ll be visiting me

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1983 us;

The amount s tolen was

"in the five-figure range,"

natures. The money had been

1900 NE 3r St, ¹104, Ben

Inside Wagner Mall - between Haggen & Rite Aid Must present coupon at time of purchase. One coupon per visit, please.

Make an offer on fixtures st decor. No reasonable offers refused. Natures

Revere

541-382-6732 1900 NE 3rd St, ¹104, Bend, OR 97701 (Corner of 3rd & Revere)


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, Nov. 5, the 309th

day of 2015. Thereare 56days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS 'Super Thursday' — Dn its "Super Thursday," the Bank of England will release three major pieces of information: a decision on interest rates, minutes from the policy-setting meeting and thequarterly inflation report.

HISTORY Highlight:In1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt won an unprecedented third term in office as hedefeated Republican challenger Wendell L. Willkie.

In1605, the "Gunpowder Plot" faile dasGuyFawkeswas seized before hecould blow up the English Parliament. In1781, the Continental Congress elected John Hansonof Maryland its chairman, giving him the title of "President of the United States in Congress Assembled." In1872,suffragist Susan B. Anthony defied the law by attempting to cast a vote for President Ulysses S. Grant. (Anthony was convicted by a judge and fined $100, but she never paid the penalty.) In1912,Democrat Woodrow Wilson was elected president, defeating Progressive Party candidate Theodore Roosevelt, incumbent Republican William Howard Taft and Socialist Eugene V. Debs. In1936, Parker Brothers began marketing the board game "Monopoly." In1942,American showman GeorgeM.Cohandied in New York at age64. In1968, Republican Richard M. Nixon won the presidency, defeating Democratic Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and American Independent candidate George C. Wallace. In1974, Democrat Ella T. Grasso was elected governor of Connecticut, becoming the first woman to win agubernatorial office without succeeding her husband. In1986,Spencer W. Kimball, president of TheChurch of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, died at age90; he was succeeded byEzraTaft Benson. In1990, Rabbi Meir Kahane, the Brooklyn-born Israeli extremist, was shot to death at a NewYork hotel. (Egyptian native El Sayyed Nosair was convicted of the slaying in federal court.) In1994, former President Ronald Reagandisclosed he had Alzheimer's disease. In2009, a shooting rampage at the Fort Hood Army post in Texas left13 people dead;Maj. Nidal Hasan, anArmy psychiatrist, was later convicted of murder and sentenced to death.

Ten years age:Pirates attacked a cruise ship off the coast of Somalia, but the ship changed course andsped away to escape. Five years ago: A judge in Los Angeles sentencedJohannes Mehserle, a white former transit officer, to two years in prison in the shooting death of Oscar Grant, an unarmed black man, on anOakland train platform; the minimal sentence provoked angry protests. (Mehserle ended upserving 11 months.) One year age:A dayafter sweeping Republican election gains, President Barack Dbamaandincoming Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell pledged to try to turn divided government into a force for good rather than gridlock, yet warned of veto showdowns as well.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Chris Robinson is 77. Singer Art Garfunkel is 74. Actor-playwright SamShepard is 72. Singer Peter Nooneis 68. TV personality Kris Jenner is 60. Actress-comedian Mo Gaffney is 57.Actor Robert Patrick is 57. Singer BryanAdams is 56. Actress Tilda Swinton is 55. Actor Michael Gaston is 53. Actress TatumO'Neal is 52. Rock singer Angelo Moore (Fishbone) is 50. — From wire reports

TRENDING

ma ownsare acin

sLiici e ra es

Adolescents in rural communities commit suicide at roughly twice the rate of their urban peers, a

fix himself, just as he had their

car, their dishwasher and anything else in need of repair. Eventually, fearing for the safety of their two children,

recent study reports. By Laura Beil

Lennie Jacobs' Sarah Jacobsfiled for divorce. father comThe day she brought him the fimitted suicide nal papers, in February 2014, he early last year. retrieved a gun she had never Country life seenfrom histruck and ended can be lonely his life as she watched, horrifor people in fied. It was their son's birthday. the grip of Leonard Jacobs n ever mental illness sought help. Sarah Jacobs says or emotional her husband's sense of self-sufupheaval. ficiency combined with a fear There is often of stigma to keep him from poor access to treatment. "For him, it was like mental health admitting weakness," she said. care compared Self-medication with alcohol

New York Times News Service

LARAMIE, Wyo. — After

her family moved from suburban New Hampshire to the

wind-whipped plains of southeastern Wyoming, Monica Morin embraced small-town life, forging lasting friendships and celebrating her own quirky style. Dark-haired, with hipster glasses and a disarming sense of humor, Monica was a "whynot kind of kid," her mother, Kim Morin, said. The kind

na, and some days withdrew from the dose relationship she

had always had with her parents, who, although long divorced,remained friends and partners in raising their only child. After her descent into

drinking, she started cutting herself. Morin was alarmed, aware that family history was not in

her daughter's favor. Her sister had developed bipolar disorder in her teens, eventually drink-

ing herself to death. Her father had taken his own life when

Morin was 19. Monica's parents sought help for their daughter' s despair, driving her 2t/z hours to Casper for inpatient treatment. As the

year drew to a close,Monica seemed to be improving, dinging to a fragile stability with twice-weekly counseling. On the afternoon of Feb. 4,

after Monica and her mother returned to their apartment from a doctor's appointment,

Monica said she needed to finish homework in her room. Some time later, she took a

shower and asked her mother if they could snuggle on the sofa and watchamoviebeforegoing to bed. "I love you, Mom," she said, as Morin stroked her hair.

Not long into the film, Monica suffered a seizure. The paramedics who responded to Mo-

rin's frantic call searched Monica's room and discovered an empty bottle of over-the-count-

er allergy pills pilfered from her mother's medicine cabinet. She died at Ivinson Memorial Hos-

pital that night. eYou replay everything in

your head," Morin said in her living room recently, her voice shaking. 'Wondering what else you could have done."

lenges, and a study this year in The American Journal of Drug

Hilary Swift The New York Times

because.

Last year, during Monica's sophomore year of high school, her mood began to darken. She turned to alcohol and marijua-

and dnacan add to the chal-

to urban settings

who would wear a giraffe costume to the grocery store, just

and Alcohol Abuse noted that

rural treatment centers have "reduced access to highly edu"Wyoming isa beautiful state. Wehave great lation, family issues and health cated counselors." openspaces. We are a state of small population. problemscan lead people to be Volunteers in Wyoming are consumed by day-to-day strug- trying to promote change from We care about one another. We' re resourceful, gles, said Emily Selby-Nelson, the bottom up, training citizens we' re resilient, we cowboy up. And of course,t've a psychologist at Cabin Creek to talk to someone who may Health Systems, which pro- be in danger of hurting themlearned it's those very things that have ledto a vides health care in the rural selves. The program has been high incidence of suicide in our state." hills of West Virginia. adopted by some of the state' s "Rather than say, 'I need help,' largest employers, community — Bobbi Barrasso, who has made suicide prevention a mission and is the wife ofSen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo. they keep working and they get organizations and churches, overwhelmed. They can start to said Terresa Humphries-Wadthink they are a burden on their sworth, a psychologist in Cody family and lose hope." who is the statewide director of A growing t1jral-urban gap people in 2012, far above the suicide prevention for the nonnational average of 12.6 per Isolated lives profit Prevention Management Stories like M onica's un100,000. Not far behind were Country life can be lonely Organization of Wyoming. fold with disturbing frequency Alaska, Montana, New Mex- for people in the grip of mental Since the effort began two across small-town America. ico and Utah, all states where illness or emotional upheav- years ago, she said, referral Rural adolescents commit isolation can be common. The al, and the means to follow rates to mental health services suicide at roughly twice the rate village of Hooper Bay, Alaska, through on suicidal thoughts are rising. She cautioned that of their urban peers, according recentlyrecorded four suicides are dose at hand. Firearms, meaningful change took time, to a study published in the May in two weeks. the most common method, are but said, "As we continue, we issue of the journal JAMA PeIn one telephone survey of a pervasive part of the culture; should see suicide rates coming diatrics. Although imbalances 1,000 Wyoming residents, half 51 percent of rural households down, because people are getbetween city and country have of those who responded said own a gun, compared with 25 ting help earlier and earlier." long persisted, "we weren' t someone dose to them had at- percent of urban homes, the expecting that the disparities tempted or died by suicide. Pew Research Center reported would be increasing over time," In September, mental health last year. said the study's lead author, experts, community volunteers Experts also note a mindset, Cynthia Fontanella, a psychol- and law enforcement officers bornlongago ofnecessity,dicogist at Ohio State University. gatheredin Casper to discuss tating that people solve their "The rates are higher, and possible solutions. Among the own problems. the gap is getting wider." participants was Bobbi BarrasLeonard Jacobs, who grew Suicide is a threat not just to so, the wife of Sen. John Bar- up in southeast Iowa, moved to the young.Ratesoverallrose7 rasso, who has made suicide Laramie when his wife, Sarah, percent in metropolitan coun- prevention a personal and po- enrolled in law school at the ties from 2004 to 2013, accord- litical mission. University of Wyoming. After "Wyoming is a beautiful 9/11, he enlisted in the Marine ing to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In ru- state," she told the crowd. "We Corps, and he spent a year deral counties, the increase was have great open spaces. We are ployedinIraqin2005. 20 percent. a state of small population. We He came back a different The problem reaches across care about one another. We' re man, Sarah Jacobs said demographic boundaries, en- resourceful, we' re resilient, we prone to anger and paranoia, compassing such groups as old- cowboy up. And of course, I' ve troubled by nightmares and er men, Native Americans and learned it's those very things obsession over deanliness and veterans. The sons and daugh- that have led to a high inci- order. He refused to discussthe ters of small towns are more dence of suicide in our state." war and insisted on trying to likely to serve in the military, Rural suicide arises from and nearly half of Iraq and Af- all the circumstances BarraseeT l ere Call Today ghanistan veterans live in rural so noted and more. Despite a sleepy "Mayberry" sort of imcommunities. Lights U s <~~ The CDC reported last year age, the realities of small-town that Wyoming has the high- life can take an outsize toll on Don't get caught on a Risky est suicide rate in the nation, the vulnerable. A combination LacPder. Catt the PROS! almost 30 deaths per 100,000 of lowerincomes, greater iso-

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Jellyfish andlampreysreally pull their weight when it mmes toswimming By Amina Khan Los Angeles Times

Other than living in water,

swimmers while studying the wakes of jellyfish a few years ago. Many researchers have long For this paper, the research-

sibilities," said senior author John Dabiri, a fluid dynamicist at Stanford University.

the bulbous jellyfish and the sinuous lamprey may seem thought that there would be to have little in common. And shared underlying principles to yet these two animals share a all forms of natural locomotion, remarkable secret ability that whether through air,w ater or allows them to move with great on land. efficiency — they essentially Animals generally move on land by pushing against surpull, rather than push, their way through the water. faces to propel their bodies forInstead of creating high-pres- ward, thus generating an area sure zones by pushing against of high pressure between their the water, these two very differ- feet and the ground. Humans ent animals actually creating swim this way, too, using our areas of low pressure that force arms and legs to push against water past their bodies, accord- the water, generating high-presing to new research out of Stan- sure regions in the places where ford University and the Marine

Biological Laboratory. The discovery, published in

we push it out of the way. It's long been thought that

this is essentially how the ocean's more naturally gifted cations, may force scientists to swimmers move: A fish might rethink some of the most fun- swing its tail back and forth, damental assumptions about pushing against the water. animal propulsion — and help Given the way that we move, it inform the future design of seems to make intuitive sense. bio-inspired swimming robots. But Dabiri began to suspect The findings "have opened that something else was going our eyes to a whole lot of pos- on in certain highly efficient the journal Nature Communi-

ers studied two very different

ocean-dwellers: la m preys, jawless fish with long, snaky bodies; and jellyfish, with their undulating bell-like profiles. These animals may look vastly

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ing water ahead of them to rush in and fill those zones. By cre-

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atingthese low-pressure areas,

the animals essentially were sucking their bodies forward through the water. And while

there were high-pressure zones created in this process, Dabiri's team found that those zones

were essentially the byproduct of the animal's motion, not the reason for it.

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A4

™E B U L LETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

Marijuana

the United States and run

Report

Continued fromA1

kidnapping and extortion

Continued fromA1

drugs across the border to

The trade is controlled by

r i n g s at home. The criminal

violent criminal gangs who infrastructure will persist also make money from oth- whether or not marijuana er drugs, kidnapping and u se is legal. extortion.

But for critics of the cur-

Experts say l egalizing r ent laws, that is hardly a

In the 2009 Mobilization

and Change Survey, 54.4 percent of black millennials answered yes to th e q ues-

tion "Have you or anyone you know experienced ha-

marijuana would do little to

r e a son to continue to crimi-

rassment or violence at the

diminish their power. The marijuana case has

nalize marijuana use. "The existing laws don' t

hands of the police?" Almost one-third of whites, 1 in 4

ignited a debate about the

r e d uc e v i o l ence, e i t her,"

effectiveness of imprison- said Catalina Perez Correa ing drug users, in a coun- Gonzalez,alawprofessorat try with some of the most

C I D E , a university in Mexi-

conservative drug laws in

c o City.

Latin America. But across

the region a growing num Court ruling ber of voices are questionTh elegal ruling Wednesing Washington's strategy day barely referred to the in the drug war. With little b l oody backdrop of the drug to show for tough-on-crime war. Instead, Justice Arturo policies, the balance ap- Z a ldivar wrote an 88-page pears to be slowly shifting o pinion based on principles toward other approaches. of h u m an rights, arguing the state recognizes anindiMatIluana in Latin AmeriCa vidual s autonomy to engage Uruguay enacted a law i n re c reational activities in 2013 to legalize marijua- that do not harm others. na, although the creation

Th e r u l i ng was the culmi-

of a legal marijuana indus- nation of an effort to change try in the small country t h e law by four members has unfolded slowly. Chile o f a p r o minent Mexican gathered its first harvest a nti-crime group, Mexico of medical marijuana this U n ited Against Crime. year.InBrazil,theSupreme

Torr e s L a nda and San-

Court recently debated the tacruz formed a cannabis decriminalization of mar- c l ub with two other people, ijuana, cocaine and other

c a l l e dt h e M e x ican Soci-

drugs. Bolivia allows tra- e t y f o r R esponsible and ditional uses of coca, the T olerant Consumption plant used to make cocaine, the Spanish acronym is w hile in the northern part of

the hemisphere,

S M A RT.

has pledged in the past to legalize marijuana. Many leaders i n Latin America have called for a shift in the war on drugs, including Presi-

T he g r o u p a pplied for a licen se from Mexico's drug <UySe/yeSgp S/pP r egulatory agen. t/Ie /JyDdUCtlOyi cy, b u t , as expf S pme/gjyig pecte d , was ~pa~ /S geadj<~ turn e d do w n . > Their a p p eal tD t/Ie U.S; o f t h a t de c i yy/Ieyeg'S/egci/." si o n e ventually reached the Su-

dent Juan Manuel Santos o f

— Armando preme Court. Sant a cruz, plaintiff in "We have

C anada's n e w Prime m i n ister "g/e ciye /fj//jyig

Colombia. I n May, his govern-

the m a rijuana case been trying to in Mexico's Supremestruggle against Court i llegality, a n d ment ordered a halt to the aerithe results were al spraying of almost negligiillegal coca fields, rejecting ble," said Torres Landa, who a major tool in the U.S.- sayshehasnevertriedmarbacked anti-drug campaign ijuana and does not intend because of concernsthat to."Five orsix yearsago,we the herbicide spray causes asked why? The answer, as cancer. the Americans say, was in Although Santos is one of the money." Washington's closest allies Bu t t h e r uling Wednesin the region, he has pointed day applies only to their peout the incongruity of jail- t i t ion. Forlegalmarijuanato ing poor farmers for grow- become the law of the land, ing marijuana while it i s t h e j ustices in the court's slowly being decriminalized criminal chamber will have in the United States. to rule the same way five Mexicans seeking a new t i mes, or eight of the 11 strategy have also been m embers of the full court struck by the situation.

will have to vote in favor.

"We are killing ourselves If t h e court decisions conto stop the production of t i nue in that direction, they something that is heading w ill be flying in the face of to the U.S., where it's legal," public opinion. Mexicans said Armando Santacruz, are so opposed to legalizing another plaintiff in the case. marijuana that a leading S till, few t h ink t hat le -

po l l ster t ol d t h e S M A R T

galizing marijuana w il l g r o up not to bother with a significantly reduce drug s u rvey, Santacruz recalled, violence or w eaken th e o r to limit it to young people. gangs. Although the rising The Mexican government, production of higher-qual- legislators and security and ity marijuana in the United

h e a lth officials all came out

States reduces demand for against legalization, as did Mexican imports, experts

t h e Roman Catholic Church.

say that Mexican gangs I ndeed, the authorities have continue to account for an n ot permitted even the use important percentage of the of medical marijuana. American supply. But Santacruz is d eter"It's clearly a significant mined to change people' s p art of the business," said Peter Reuter, an expert o n

m i n d s. Invok i n g t h e s pecter of

the global drug war at the M exico's most n otorious University of Maryland and drug kingpin, Joaquin Guza senior economist at th e

m a n L o e ra, known a s E l

RAND Corp."It'senoughto C hapo, Santacruz likes to fight about." remindpeople:"Bad regulaMarijuana is just one of

Latinos and 28 p ercent of

Asian-Americans surveyed said yes to the same question. The study, released to The

Associated Press on Wednesday, comes as the United States grapples with concerns over policing in minority communities following the deaths of Martin, 17, in Flor-

ida three years ago; Brown, 18, in Ferguson, Missouri, last

year; and Gray, 25, in Baltimore earlier this year. Their

Jeff Roberson/The Associated Press file photo

deaths, as well as those of other blackmen and women,

Protesters march on Aug. 9 to mark the one-year anniversary of Michael Brown being shot and killed

tests under the "Black Lives Matter" and "Say Her Name"

harassment from law enforcement.

by Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson. In a report released Wednesday, more than half of Afrihave inspired nationwide pro- can-American millennials indicated they, or someone they knew, had been victimized by violence or moniker s. But even while being the

wellspring of those movements, a clear majority of black millennials — 71 per-

more complexity." Another survey done by the project in 2013, the Black

Youth Project Quarterly Surcent — said i n t h a t s a me vey, showed the percentage of sor at Washington Universisurvey they believe police blacks and Latinos who said ty in St. Louis. For example, in their neighborhood were they knew people who car- white millennials don't report "there to protect you." Eighty- ried guns had declined, but having to explain themselves five percent of whites, 76 per- more of them knew someone to police, while millennials cent of Hispanics and 89 per- who was the victim of gun vi- of color report that officers cent of Asians also said police olence. Twenty-four percent stopped them simply to queswere in their neighborhood to of blacks and 22 percentof tion them about what they protect them. Latino millennials said they were up to, he said. "We know t hat y oung or someone they knew "car"We see story afterstory blacks are more likely to be ried a gun in the last month." about how this leads into a harassed by the police; we Almost half of white millen- more combative situation, know that they are more nials — 46 percent — said which has escalated and led likely to mistrust their en- they knew of someone who to, in some instances, tragic counters wit h t h e p o l ice," carried a gun. outcomes," said Rogowski, said Cathy Cohen, chair of However, 22 percent of who co-authored the Black the political science depart- black millennials and 14 per- Millennials In America rement at the University of Chi- cent of Latino millennials port. "So the experiences that cago and leader of the Black said they or someone they these different communities Youth Project. "But we also knew were the victim of gun have had based on where they know from actually collect- violence in the last year, com- live and the kinds of policing ing data that a majority of pared with 8 percent of white procedures thatare in place them believe that police in millennials. there, we would argue, lead to It's not surprising that these different patterns." their neighborhood are actually there to protect them, young blacks and whites feel After arrest, black millenso I think it provides us with differently on these issues, nials also don't believe every-

Veterans

Data compiled for the Los Angeles Times

Continued fromA1 Veterans groups and lawmakers are concerned about borrowing by GI Bill users, who ideally should be able to graduate debt-free. "It's a big issue," said Walter Ochinko,

in one academic year —2012, the latest available — 26 percent of undergraduates receiving veterans education benefits also

by the Department of Education show that

took out federal oy private education loans.

The average loanwas $7400 — slightly

503-309-4088

and 2014 and included 6,118 people. The surveys were done by GfK Knowledge Network using GfK's probability-based KnowledgePanel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.

ident for regulatory affairs at Derry University, one of the largest for-profit chains, said federal law should be changed to factor in the GI Bill when determining eligibility for loans. "The law does not allow us to deny students

But Ochinko said his or-

conducted every three to four

encouraged veterans to take

years with a r epresentative

ucation benefit since World

have many more responsibilities than their college

sample of students — about classmates, so it might make 95,000 undergraduates in sense to take out the loans. 2012, including 3,500 or so "They' re not your typical 18- veterans. to 20-year-old students who Beneficiariesat for-profit just got out of high school," schools — which take a dishe said. "In many cases, they proportionate share of GI Bill have families with children." funding and have been under Some also use the money fire for their high costs and to pay off other debts or ed- low job-placement rates ucational expenses not cov- are more likely than those at ered under the GI Bill. Veter- other institutions to take out ans with less than three years loans, data show. of active duty receive reduced Among veterans with benbenefits. efits at two-year schools, 31 How deeply do veterans go percent at for-profits took out into debt'? The problem is dif- loans in the academic year ficultto assess because fed- ending in 2012, compared eral financial aid forms don' t with 13 percent at public

out federal loans. One reason, he said, is that

War II. It took effect in 2009 and is available to veterans

who served after the Sept. 11, 2001,terroristattacks. More than 1.4 million vet-

erans and their family members — veterans can transfer their benefits to their children

and spouses — have used the bill, at a total cost of more than $42 billion.

Experts say one reason veterans take out student loans

is because they can. Federal law prohibits colleges and the government f rom considering GI B i l l benefits when determining financial aid. That allows veterans to take out low-interest

ask for veteran status.

At the Times' request, the

it allows the schools to be

paid faster. The GI Bill pays tuition directly to the school, but sometimes it d oes not arrive until a f ter th e t erm

has started, he said. Once GI Bill payments arrive, they are refundedto the veterans, Ochinko said.

schools. At four-year schools, the rates were 37 percent at

education loans to use as they Department o f

Ed u c ation for-profi ts,33 percent atpubcompiled data from it s l atlic schools and 28 percent at

see fit.

Will Hubbard, a spokesman for Student Veterans of

est National Postsecondary Student Aid Study, which is

NAPA

private nonprofits. Tom Babel, the vice pres-

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from a lot of veterans who

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taking out loans if they want them," he said in a statement.

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Troy Field

us more options about how to get a City Hall that meets our

Continued fromA1 The deal hinges on the switch, though the property is alreadyzoned forcommercial

needs and tie together other

use. A mismatch between a

downtown needs. Our motivation to get the property is to have additional land to work with downtown."

A5

O~EX HOARSE NOV 9m —13'"

If yougo What:Hearing on a change to the plan designation of Troy Field Whe:Bend-La Pine Schools is requesting the change When:9:30 a.m., Dec. 3 Where:City Hall, 710 NW

site's zoning and plan designaAt a community meeting tion is not uncommon. the school district held, comThe school district comm entsregardingthe plan despleted its application for the ignation proposal were largely change this week, and city negative. Wall St., Bend "I have not yet heard the of Bend Planner Amy Barry says city staff will make a rec- benefit to our community the ommendation to the hearings sale (would bring)," Ron Boo- development is City Councilor officer around Nov. 20. After zell, a c o mmunity a ctivist, Barb Campbell, who in May the officer issues a decision fol- wrote on a comment card at said, "I'd fight to stop anything lowing the Dec. 3 hearing, the the meeting. from being built on it. Whenev"The current diverse use er I drive by, people are on that matter will go before the City Council. of open space benefits the field." The council will be in an odd community as a whole," John Campbell has said she position, as this spring the city Speece wrote. "Removing would support building a new of Bendmade an offer on the the designation and allowing City Hall or another building property the district rejected. commercial development will on the site if the city were to The details of that proposal result in the loss of the benefit realize a plan first proposed in have not been disclosed. At the to the whole community and to the 1990s known as "Heritage time, City Manager Eric King the greater good." Square," which calls for turnsaid the offer was motivated by A petition on the website ing the parking lots between the city's cramped office space. Change.org titled "Preserve City Hall and Bend-La Pine's "We' re looking to have op- Public Facilities Designation administration building into a tions about how we program at Troy Field" had 1,018 signa- public gathering space. space downtown," King said tures as of Wednesday. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, at the time. "More land gives One of the opponents of the tieeds@bendbulletirLcorn

'/

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Brewery

J

Continued from A1

I

Deschutes Brewery is like-

ly to announce the location of its new production brewery

on the East Coast next year, brewery founder and CEO Gary Fish said Tuesday. The company goal, said brewery President and Chief Operating Officer Michael LaLonde in April, is brewing and shipping out of an East Coast facility by 2019. Deschutes Brewery executives for months have stirred

f I~i

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the economic development

pot in several cities, holding out the prospect of 100 or

Schedule an appointment with Hearing Aids by Tri ci a Leagjeld

Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin

more jobs, increased tour- The eunshines down on Deschutee Brewery inBend.Thecompaism and tasty beverages for ny ie seeking a location for its first East Coast brewery. thirsty locals and elected officials. In interviews, Fish and

LaLonde have avoided any hint of what location, if any,

Blue Ribbon and marries a sophisticated woman. In

has an edge. short, " he becomes a D e "We would rather be more schutes drinker," Primo said. public, but we want to make Although he's never tastsure the process is respected ed real beer,Primo said he and we have the ability to ne- hopes his songs show the gotiate in good faith with ev- welcome awaiting Deschutes eryone," Fish said. "It would Brewery and attract attention certainly simplify our lives a to his songwriting talent, as lot once this becomes public; I well. think we' ll all breathe a little

easier." Their movements, howev-

er, are tracked in the media in places like Asheville, North Carolina; Roanoke, Virginia; and the South Carolina cities of Greenville and Charleston. The Roanoke Times news-

paper editorialized several times in favor of Deschutes

this season and experience how the latest in hearing device technology can change your world.

ing as big a factor in our decision-makingprocess as some people may want to think." Roanoke claims eight relatively small breweries and a young beer scene, said Chuck Garst, a partner in Big Lick

Brewing Co. The first contemporary brewery opened there in 2000; another sev-

en opened in the past three years, he said. A meeting ucts are available four hours of Roanoke's brewers Tuesaway in Northern Virginia, day produced a statement of Deschutes Brewery prod-

but not in Roanoke.

Fish said the brewery team that undertook the site search

e

support for Deschutes Brew-

ery. Roanoke, a former railroad hub, is trying hard to

expected some buzz about a new Deschutes Brewery operation possibly coming

outshine Asheville, its rival

to town, but nothing like the

"It seems like all the news is that it's between Roanoke

outpouring of e n thusiasm Brewery locating in the Star and public jockeying he' s City. An editorial addressed seen. "I think we all imagined directly to LaLonde cited the relatively small but burgeon- something like this," he said. ing craft beer scene in Roa- "Personally, I didn't think it noke, a metropolitan area of would get to the extent that about 308,000 in southwest it has, people writing songs Virginia, and its proximity to about us and social media the Blue Ridge Parkway and campaigns. I'm getting hand-

* * *

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and Asheville," Garst said.

Asheville, with a metropol-

itan area of about 440,000, has 21 breweries in a nd

8

around the city and, like Ro-

8

anoke and Bend, is a regional destination for outdoor recreation. The Asheville area

is also where three Western brewing companies set up opposite sides of the city. sincere, heartfelt stuff, and shop: New Belgium Brewing " We are certainly not a that's hard to ignore." Co. and Oskar Blues Brewcommunity suffering from Fish said the team pared ery, both of Colorado, and 'brewery fatigue,' as some say the initial list of potential sites Sierra Nevada Brewing Co., they are," according to The to 110, then visited 35, many of California. It's also the Roanoke T i mes' e d i toriaL of those visits documented by last possible site reportedly "Craft beer is still something local media. Local media also visited by a Deschutes Brewof a novelty here. But we are reported on moves by local ery executive — in this case, starting to create something and state officials to secure LaLonde — around Oct. 22. of a 'beer culture' we think is property and create econom- He did not return a call Tuesreally cool — and which you ic incentives to lure a brew- day seeking comment. Asheville is "a p r etty would instantly define." ery, conspicuously unnamed, Inspired by the editorial, a to their areas. In mid-Sep- broad, diverse brewing com63-year-old teetotaling Bap- tember, Virginia Gov. Terry munity," Fish said. "We heard a lot of stories, both pro and tist gospel-songwriter and McAuliffe downed a pint at grocerycashier,Steve Primo, the Deschutes Brewery & con; do they want us, do they of Montvale, Virginia, wrote Public House during a swing not want us? Michael went a song, "Deschutes, a Brew- through Western states to at- out there to f ind out w h at ery for Roanoke." He said a tract economic development these people are really like co-worker from the seafood to his state. and to be open and honest, In Asheville, North Carofrom our standpoint. ... We counter, Jay McAllister, provided lead guitar and trans- lina, the Buncombe County don't do rumor and innuendo ferred the song from Primo's commissioners in early Oc- very well. We'd rather talk to tape recording to CD. Primo tober decided against selling people and find out what they mailed copies to his brother 137 acres where an unnamed want." Fish said Deschutes Brewin Missouri, who forwarded brewery had shown interest a copy to Deschutes Brewery, in building, according to the ery is not aiming to play one which tweeted a response Citizen-Times n e wspaper. community against anothInterstate 81, which pass on

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Primo said the song is the ginia, near Charlottesville, package or deal concessions first of a trilogy. He delivered the county board of supervi- to bring its brewery to town. the second installment, "De- sors approved a change in its The checklist for possible schutes Came to Roanoke, comprehensive land use plan sites ran to 100 categories, he a Redneck Conversion," on that made 35 acres available said. "We're trying to be very Monday to M cAllister with for an unnamed brewery, acthe hope it's ready soon for cording to The Daily Prog- respectful of these people," Fish said. "We' ve examined release. ress on Oct. 4. In "Redneck Conversion," some really outstanding comFish would not comment a man "is down and out, his directly on specific reports of munities. This is not easy for woman left him," so he turns economic incentive packag- us. That being said, this is the on the country radio station es. He downplayed their sig- process. If the worst you can and hears Primo's first song. nificance measured against say is, 'These people are real"Send me one of everything other factors. ly nice; they have a nice com"We' re trying to find the munity and they really want you make," sings Primo's prous to locate there,' that's not tagonist, and when he sips community with the best fit from his first bottle of De- for us," he said. "We need to the worst thing in the world. "The short end of that is schutes beer, he finds it tastes make the best decision for better than fine wine. us and negotiate the deal af- that it's good that this is a difHe burns his rebel flag, terward. It's an i n t eresting ficult decision." destroys his Garth Brooks blend. Whatever incentives — Reporter: 541-617-7815, records, pours out his Pabst are coming up are not playj ditzler®bendbulletin.corn

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A tremendous value, lot 15 at Yarrow is an elevated home site with a desirable southern exposure. With a minimum bid of only $15,000, this lot is priced well below recent sales in Yarrow, which average well above $20,000. Yarrow is a short walk, bike ride or drive to the popular Madras Aquatic Center. Yarrow is abeautiful planned community created byBrooks Resources Corporation. Visit www.yarrowliving.corn to learn more about the community, the neighborhood association, CCBRs, HOAs etc. This homesite would be a great "hold as an investment", or build right away to take advantage of current building costs. Additional Yarrow homesites are available at very low prices- call Jeff Jernstedt at SunForest Construction at 541-385-8522 for details. Visit www.sforest.corn for information about our company andconstruction history.

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

BRIEFING 4 arrested aAer drugs found Four peoplewere arrested Wednesday morning while Bend Police served asearch warrant at anortheast Bendhome believedto be a hub ofdrug activity. In a newsrelease, Bend Police reported the arrest of EsauiMutchler, 34, of Madras, Daniel LaCroix, 32, of LaPine, and Skyla Kistler, 21,and Paul Dilorenzo,20, both of Bend. Officers serveda search warrantjust after 7a.m. at a homeonNE KearneyAvenue.When police announcedtheir presence atthefront door, oneman,later identified asDilorenzo, jumped outa window and over aneighbor's fence in aneffort to flee, according to police. He was captured in theyard of the neighboring house. Police said asearch of the houserevealed methamphetamine, heroin, cocaine, LSD,hallucinogenic mushroomsand suboxone. Dilorenzowasarrested on suspicion of possession andmanufacturing of heroin, possession of a schedule controlled I substance, possessionof a schedule III controlled substanceandfrequenting a housewhere drugs are used, kept orsold. Kistler wasarrested on suspicion of possession and manufacturing of heroin, possession of methamphetamine, possession of aschedule I controlled substance and frequenting ahouse where drugsareused kept or sold. LaCroix wasarrested on suspicion of methamphetamineandheroin possession and aparole violation, andMutchler faces charges ofpossession of cocaineanda parole violation. All four werebeing held in theDeschutes County jail as ofWednesday afternoon.

Coun oo atceanu o an • Consulting firm to developmethodsfor processing, removingwaste at property

versity plans to eventually accommodate 5,000students

and has a nonbinding agreement with the county to con-

sider purchasing the landfill By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

Deschutes County has hired an environmental consulting firm to test methods

for cleaning up its former demolition landfill in west Bend.

The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality is providing $100,000 in funding toward the test project. Deschutes County com-

missioners approved a contract with Apex Companies LLC and an agreement with DEQ on Wednesday. The 76-acre landfill south

property within the next two

of SW Simpson Avenue was closed in 1995. It was used for

separateprocess from the university's evaluation of the

wood and demolition debris disposal from construction.

property. Finding ways to clean up the property is an ongoing requirement for the county, he said. The DEQ-funded work, however, will be available to

The site is next to the 10-acre

OSU-Cascades campus property that is being developed for 1,900 students. The uni-

Site of landfill 1I ~

)

P

:Former, county demolition~ landfill

si psooAe.

years. County Administrator Tom Anderson said the county

Affordable housingtee could rise in Bend

Pumi'ce mine

decisions Wednesday are a

By Tyler Leeds

osU-cascades Carli K rueger/The Bulletin

the university as it does its

own evaluation of the landfill, which could include help from OSU's College of Engineering. SeeLandfill /B5

The Bulletin

The subject of affordable housing dominated a Bend City Council meeting Wednesday night, with the councilors discussing how to encourage its construction through a fee on developers and policies relating to the annexation of new

land. A majority of the council backed holding a future

DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST

vote on whether to raise

the affordable housing fee back to its original, higher rate. The fee was first instituted in 2006, with the city

charging the equivalent of one-third of 1 percent of the value for every building permit issued. In 2011, the rate was reduced to onefifth of 1 percent as the

Great Recession shook the building industry. The fee is used to provide low- and no-interest loans to builders of rent-controlled

• Opportunities to lead interpretive skitours, snowshoewalksat Mount Bacheloravailable By Dylan J. Darling

their 70s, said Rika Nelson,

The Bulletin

executive director of Discover Your Forest in Bend.

The Deschutes National

Forest is looking for people interested in volunteering as wintertime interpretive and

"They are really the face

of the Forest Service out

conservation education rang-

there with visitors," she said Wednesday. The nonprofit

ers at Mount Bachelor.

partners with the national for-

Rangers lead interpretive ski tours, snowshoe walks and youth programs such as Junior Snow Ranger events, according to the national forest. The volunteers at Mount

Bachelor range from high school students to people in

est, as well as the Ochoco National Forest and the Crooked River National Grassland, to

run volunteer and education programs. A recruitment event for

If youoo What:Wintertime volunteer recruitment event When:6 to 7:30 p.m. Nov.12 Where:Deschutes National Forest headquarters, 63095 Deschutes Market Road,Bend Info:Volunteer wintertime interpretive and conservation education rangers arewanted by the Deschutes National Forest and Discover Your Forest. For more information, call StaceyCochran, volunteer andevent coordinator with Discover Your Forest, at 541-383-5530 or email her at stacey.cochran@discovernw.org. Source: Deschutes National Forest, Discover Your Forest

fiscal year 2013-14, which ran

The national forest ranked second nationally in terms of

from Oct. 1, 2013, to Sept. 30,

the number of volunteers and

the Deschutes National Forest

amount of time donated in

out $10 million. That mon-

ey, Long emphasized, has helped attract nearly $63 million in competitive federal and state funds. "The reason we win

more funding is because of this fee," Long said told the council.

headquarters.

volunteers is set for Nov. 12 at

units and low-cost homes for purchase. According to the city's affordable housing manager, Jim Long, the program has helped fund 615 units through loaning

2014, said Kassidy Kern, Deschutes spokeswoman. See Rangers /B5

Federal and state funding for affordable projects is limited, and having help from the city, Long noted, makes local projects more likely to receive additional

funding. To illustrate the impact of raising the fee, Long noted that in the last fiscal year the city collected $790,000

in fees. Based on the higher rate, the city would have collected $1.3 million. Councilor Victor

Man injured in vehicle collision

Chudowsky questioned

A San Jose,California, man wastaken to St. Charles Bendwith nonlife-threatening injuries after his pickup collided with a snowplow Wednesdaymorning just east of SantiamPass, according to OregonState Police. Police believeSebastian Caprino, 67,was traveling east onU.S. Highway 20 inhis 2007 Ford F-150 atabout 8 a.m. Wednesdaywhen he lost control of thevehicle on theicy highway. The truck crossedthe center line andcollided head-on with awestbound OregonDepartment of Transportation plow.

more projects, something Long said he thought was the case. Councilor Casey Roats said he would rather

Nore briefing, B6

STATE NEWS • Portland:Nonprofit

whether more money will allow the city to support

encourage the development

of more homes, which would generate more fees being collected, than directly raising the fee. If the rate is raised, the fee collected on a typical

single-family home would go fromabout$500 to$800. Councilor Nathan BodDeschutes National Forest volunteer ranger Bill Wallace leads a group of snowshoers through the trees during a "Snowshoe with a Ranger" hike in 2013. The Oeschutes National Forest is looking for more volunteers to lead such treks.

Well shot! Reader photos

Send us your best outdoor photos at beudbulletln.corn/ readerphotos.Your entries will appear online, and we' llchoose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and contact info. Photosselected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot bealtered.

heartburn here."

See Housing fee /B2

Joe K(inc I TheBulletin file photo

l(nopp will pushfor more jefferson Coun + treasurer resigns PERS reform, forestry bills

files lawsuit to

reinstate driver cards law,B3

die strongly backed raising the fee, saying, "We' re not talking about jacking this thing up but restoring it to pre-recession levels. No

• Bend senator announcesplans for Februarysession By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin

choices from a list of 12 general ideas that Knopp might propose in 2016.

Knopp

Out of 332 responses, 77 top

picks were for PERS reform

that would move "new public start of the 35-day legislative employees into a 401(k) plan session, Sen. Tim Knopp ancompetitive with the private nounced Wednesday he would sector, "andcap benefits"so spend the session pushing taxpayers are not on the hook Three monthsbefore the

for cost-saving measures to

for millionaire PERS retirees,"

Oregon's Public Employee Retirement System and for bills

according to Knopp's survey. Knopp filed several bills during the six-month legisla-

that push forest management

as a way to combat pervasive wildfires. Knopp, a Bend Republican who is up for re-election next year, asked constituents last month to pick their top two

By Claire Withycombe

Jefferson Coun-

The Bulletin

ty Commission had repeatedly

Nearly a week after a jury found her guilty of stealing

calledforGoss'

resignation. resigned from her position as In May 2014, Jefferson County Treasurer about one on Wednesday. month after the Oregon DeGoss, who served as partment of Justice began an treasurer since 2003 and is investigation into allegations scheduled to be sentenced Goss altered checks submitDec. 1, maintains her ted to the county, the county innocence. replaced the treasurer's an"I'm innocent," Goss nual salary with an hourly said in an phone interview stipend and limited the numWednesday. "I was forced ber of hours the treasurer and placed in a position ... could work. which forced me to resign, Had Goss chosen to stay county funds, Deena Goss

and that's all I have to say."

in her position as treasurer,

reducing the burden long-term

Though Goss technically remainedtreasurerthroughout the criminal proceedings

rising PERS liabilities will

against her, she had not

put on state and local govern-

reported to work or collect-

the county commission said it would have prohibited her from handling cash or writing checks. First-degree forgery,of

ments, but none passed.

ed compensation from the county since May 2014. The

tive session in 2015 aimed at

SeeKnopp/B5

which Goss was convicted

on one count Oct. 29, is a

felony carrying a maximum five-year sentence, though a judge has the say in sentencing. Goss was also found guilty on 14 counts each of first-degree official misconduct and third-degree theft,

as well as seven counts of second-degreeforgery,allof which are misdemeanors. Her trial marked the second time Goss faced accusa-

tions of misconduct during her tenure as treasurer. In 2011, a state investigation

could not find enough evidence Goss committed a crime after other county

offici alsaccused herofm ishandlingcounty money and investments, according to

Bulletin archives. County officials issued an official apology. — Reporter 541-383-0376 cwithycombe@bendbulletin.corn


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R

back-country snowmobile films, different each night; 6:30 p.m.; $9 plus fees, $7 for 17 andyounger; "JURY ROOM":A play by C.B.Gilford Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., about jurors makingdiscoveries as Bend; www.towertheatre.org or they act out a testimony; 7 p.m.; $5; 541-317-0700. Mountain View High School, 2755 NE ALL AGESCOMEDY IMPROV:Two 27th St., Bend; 971-645-3982. improv groups make upcharacters DOC RYANANDWYCHUS CREEK: and stories basedonyour ideas, The Americana group from Texas all ages;7to8p.m.;$5;Cascades performs; 8 p.m.; $5 plus fees in Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Bend; www.bendimprov.corn or Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, 541-771-3189. Bend; 541-323-1881. "JURY ROOM": A play by C.B. MAC MILLER:Featuring Goldlink, Gilford, about jurors making Domo Genesis and Alexander discoveries as they act out a Spit; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; testimony; 7 p.m.; $5; Mountain View $35.50 plus fees in advance, $37 HighSchool,2755 NE27thSt.,Bend; at the door; Midtown Ballroom, 51 971-645-3982. NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. "WILD":A showing of the 2014 bendticket.corn or 541-388-1106. biography of a woman hiking the MILAN PATELANDBENHARKINS: Pacific Crest Trail; 7:30 p.m.; free; The comedians perform; 8 to10 Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County p.m.; $8 in advance, $10 at the Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www. door; The Summit Saloon & Stage, jcld.org or 541-475-3351. 125 NW OregonAve., Bend; www. bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111. SHOOKTWINS: The indie folk-pop band from Portland performs, with John Craigie; 8 p.m.; $15 plus fees in FRIDAY advance, $18 at the door; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. FIRST FIRKINFRIDAY:Featuring live belfryevents.corn or 541-815-9122. music by The Pitchfork Revolution, SHAFTY: The Phish tribute band Descender IPAkeg from GoodLife Brewing and raffle prize drawings to from Portland performs; 9 p.m.; $8 plus fees inadvance, $12at support OLCV EducationFund;4:30 the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, to 9 p.m.; free; BrokenTop Bottle 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; Shop, 1740 NWPence Lane, Suite 1, www volcanictheatrepub.corn or Bend; www.olcv.org/content/first541-323-1881. firkin-friday or 541-241-4762. "MAROONED WITHOUTA FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: COMPASS" LONGFORM Art exhibit openings, artist talks, live IMPROV:Long form improv based music, wine and food in downtown encesuggestions;9 to Bend and the Old Mill District; 5 to 9 on audi 10 p.m.; $5; CascadesTheatre, p.m.; free; throughout Bend. 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; FIRST FRIDAYUNVEILINGOF 541-771-3189. ONDA'S 2016 WILDDESERT CALENDAR:Featuring the SATURDAY photographers of ONDA's2016 Wild Desert Calendar, with special release LORD'S ACREDAY:Featuring a craft beers, and live music from Coyote sale, bakedgoods,livem usic,aBBQ Willow; 5 to 8 p.m.; free; Deschutes dinner, an auction, a10K run and 5K Brewery 8 Public House, 1044 NW walk to benefit Powell Butte Christian Bond St., Bend; www.onda.org or Church projects; 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.; 541-330-2638. free admission,$20 raceregistration, "DAKOTA 36+2": A documentary $25 day of; Powell Butte Christian about the horseback ride Church, 8404 SW Reif Road, Powell commemorating the largest mass Butte; www.powellbuttechurch.corn execution in U.S. history, hasted or 541-548-3066. by the Native American program WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: at COCC; 6 to 8p.m.; free; Central Featuring work by more than 25 Oregon Community College, ceramic artists, with clay activities 1170 E. Ashwood Road, Madras; for kids, raffles and more; 10 a.m. 541-318-3782. to 5 p.m.; free; Highland Elementary "SLEDFILM15":Featuring School, 701 NWNewport Ave.,

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

"THE MASKYOU LIVE IN": Featuring a screening of a Sundance 2015 selection, about boys and young men struggling with America' s narrow definition of masculinity; 6-8 p.m.; $12 plus fees in advance, $14 at the door; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700.

TODAY

Housing fee Continued from B1 Councilor Barb Campbell said lowering the rate during the recession was "the right decision," but now that the economy has turned around, it's time to restore the rate.

The council is likely to vote on the measure in early De-

cember, according to City Manager Eric King. Separately, the council also

discussed how it could guide the annexation of new property into the city to encourage

the construction of affordable housing. The city is expanding its urban growth boundary to accommodate population growth. As part of that process, new land must be an-

nexed into the city. That can either happen at the behest of the city or the

property owner. If the owner is behind the request — a move that would likely increase the

value of the property — the city can require the owner to

set aside a portion of land for affordable housing. Most of the council, howev-

er,seemed tosupport offering incentives for those coming into the city to create afford-

able housing rather than requiring it. While coming into the city can be profitable, it also requires a number of costly up-

j

l'l

A

WEDNESDAY

Submitted photo

A showing of "Wild," starring Reese Witherspoon, will be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Jefferson County Library in Madras, Bend; 541-420-5889. STRIPED SOCK WALK: A fun 1.3- or 2.6-mile walk/run at the Bend Ronald McDonald House,loopingaround St. Charles, to benefit The Ronald

McDonaldHouse;10a.m.to noon; $35 for adults, $10 for kids 7 and older, free for 6 and under; Ronald McDonald House Charities of Central Oregon, 1700 NEPurcell Blvd., Bend; www.stripedsockwalkbend.org or 541-318-4950. "JURY ROOM": A play by C.B. Gilford, about jurors making discoveries as they act out a testimony; 3 and 7 p.m.;$5; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend; 971-645-3982. HOEDOWN FOR HUNGER:An all-you-can-eat chili dinner, with live music; to benefit the Feedthe Hunger program; 3 to 10 p.m.; $20, $10 for kids and seniors, free for kids 5andyounger;Bend'sCommunity Center,1036 NE Fifth St., Bend; www.bendscommunitycenter.org or 541-312-2069. "SLEDFILM15":Featuring backcountry snowmobile films, different eachnight;6 p.m.;$9 plusfees,$7 for 17 and younger; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.

RISING APPALACHIA:The world folk band performs; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; $17 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

SUNDAY WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: Featuring work by more than 25 ceramic artists, with clay activities for kids, raffles and more; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; free; Highland Elementary School, 701 NWNewport Ave., Bend; 541-420-5889. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS SUNDAYJAM: All ages welcome to listen and dance; 1 to 4 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SWReif Road, Powell Butte; 541-410-5146. SECOND SUNDAY:T.GERONIMO JOHNSON: Join writer T. Geronimo Johnson, author of "Hold It 'Til It Hurts," and "Welcome to Braggsvile," and OSU-Cascades MFAstudents; 2 to 3 p.m.; free; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-350-3537. "HOME ALONE":25TH

ANNIVERSARY: Celebrate the 25th anniversary of this classic holiday film; 4:30 and 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. "TRAILRUNNING FILM FEST TOUR":Featuring films about trail running; 6 p.m.; $20; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

KNOW SCANDAL:"CHINATOWN": See the classic movie, as part of the Know Scandal series at the library; 6 p.m.; free, limited seating; Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1034. VETERANSDAYCONCERT: Featuring The Notables Swing Band, Betty Berger and TheHarmonettes; 6:30 p.m.; $8 to $18 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.

MONDAY

THE BLACKBERRYBUSHES STRINGBAND:Themodern acoustic

NO EVENTSLISTED.

group performs; 7p.m.; free;

TUESDAY KNOW SCANDAL:MISSING MASTERPIECES: Community Librarian Paige investigates notable heists of the art world; noon to1 p.m.; free; Sisters Public Library, 110 N.Cedar St., Sisters; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. "PAPERTIGERS": A screening of the documentary about traumainformed education; 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m.; free; La PineHigh School, 51633 Coach Road, LaPine; 541-355-8405.

Also related to affordable housing, the council approved $750,000 worth of system development charge exemptions for five projects.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. mcmenamins.c orn or541-382-5174. JEFFREYFOUCAULT:The blues musician performs; 7 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; The Belfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; www.belfryevents.corn or 541-815-9122. HEAD FORTHEHILLS: The

bluegrassbandfrom Colorado performs, with Trout Steak Revival; 9 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

I

~(g /.~

grades to sewer and road in-

Also related to affordable frastructure, a cost that falls to housing, thecouncil approved developers and property own- $750,000 worth of system deers. Mayor Jim Clinton noted velopment charge exemptions some of those costs could be for five projects. excused if some land is dediThe fees, often referred toas cated to affordable housing. SDCs, are levied by both the "We'd still be messing with city and Bend Park & Recrethe market a l i t tle, but b y ation District to pay for infraserving a public purpose that structure related to population makes it easy for a landown- growth. The City Council aper ordeveloper to decide to do proved a program to waive up it without forcing them to do to $1 million worth of SDCs something they don't want to," this two-year budget cycle. Clinton added. Fees arealso collected by the Campbell said she's fine park district, though its board with requiring developers to voted to not participate in the build smaller homes, which exemption program. would mean cheaper homes. One of the largest projects Chudowsky said he's worried to receive a waiver is near St. about making the develop- Charles Bend and backed by mentprocessmore expensive Housing Works, the region's for developers, which may housing agency. The 53-unit only nake homes morecostly. project,recommended to reLong noted the city could ceive $306,305 in exemptions, require the construction of includes housing for low-inhomes priced for median in- come residents with complex comes, which may be profit- medical issues. able and what developers inBy not using the full $1 miltend to build regardless. lion worth of exemptions, the The topic is set to be dis- council will be able to consider cussed by the city's affordable other projects during this budhousing committee before re- getcycle. surfacing at the City Council — Reporter:541-633-2160, level.

16TH ANNUALVETERANS DAY PARADE:Bendcommemorates the 70th anniversary of the end of WWII and the 40th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, this year's parade will honor our "Living Legacies"; 11 a.m. to noon; free; Parade Starts, Harmon Blvd., Bend; 541-382-3221. "HOME ALONE":25TH ANNIVERSARY: Celebrate the 25th anniversary of this classic holiday film; 4:30 and 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342.

7:00 AM COFFEE!

r

9:00 AM 5K/10K RUN PIE BY THE SLICE YOUTH BOOTH 10:00 AM SALE •

11:30 AM MUSIC CONCERT

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NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 9:22 p.m. Oct. 9, in the 20100block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 3 p.m. Oct. 27, in the61100 block of Solitude Lane. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 8:49 a.m.Oct. 29, in the 1700 block of NE Taurus Court. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at

12:49 p.m. Oct. 29, in thearea of NW Franklin Avenueand NWBroadway Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported and an arrest made at4:34 p.m. Oct. 29, in the 600 block of NWHarmon Boulevard. DUII —Tyler JamesHarvey, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:54 p.m. Oct. 29, in the area of Empire Avenue andSherman Road. Theft —A theft was reported at10:31 a.m. Oct. 30, in the 300 block of NE Hawthorne Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at11:54 p.m. Oct. 30, in the 1200block of NW Galveston Avenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 4:46 p.m. Nov. 2, in the 63200 block of Logan Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:48 a.m. Nov. 3, in the 60900 block of

Lodgepole Drive. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:20 a.m. Nov. 3, in thearea of NW Brooks Street and NWFranklin Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:14 p.m.Nov.3,inthe20200 blockofSE Mt. High Drive Loop.

/j) •

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DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Theft —A theft was reported at 8:21 a.m. Nov. 2, in the53400 block of Brooktrout Court. Theft —A theft was reported at1:08 p.m. Nov. 2, in the 16400 block of Heath Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at1:59 p.m. Nov. 2, in the51300 block of U.S. Highway 97.

1:30 PM COUNTRY AUCTION

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

wsui aims oreinS e LIN e By Gosia Wozniacke The Associated Press

P ORTLAND — A n

O re-

gon nonprofit filed a lawsuit Wednesday seeking to reinstate a state law that would

have allowed people to get driver's cards if they can' t prove they are i n t h e U .S.

legally. The law was approved by the Legislature in 2013 then

overturned by voters the following year in a referendum.

i ' I vei'CBi' S Bw

Truck with frozen dlood crashes —Policesaid twotruck

ingto a state analysis. In the past, Oregon allowed

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DRIVENFOREQU4.ITV

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CONTINUOUS ETRU66LE.' HARTIN LUTHER RIN6JR. 'fOUCANNOT OPPRESS THE PEOPLE

ARE NOTAFRAID ANTPIORE." RCHAVEZ

In its lawsuit, the Oregon

Law Center says it's illegal for Oregon to enforceMeasure 88

Nathalie Marquez holds a sign modeled after an Oregon driver' s

because it was motivated by a

license during a rally in 2014. A nonprofit has taken legal action in

desire to regulate immigration laws and that's the job of the federal government. The group says the measure took driving privileges away from immigrants who lack legal status for reasons

order reinstate a state law that would have allowed people to get driver's cards even if they can't prove they are in the U.S. legally.

that have "no rational rela-

AX thl'88tS —Police arrested a manaccused of chasing people through aCorvallis park while dragging anaxandthreatening them. Two OregonState University students told police that themanfollowed them andsaid, "I'm the axman. I'm gonnaget you." Thestudents ran away andcalled police, whoarrested 27-year-old ZacharyWilliams. Court records showprosecutors accuseWilliams of harassing five people. He ischargedwith menacing, unlawful use of aweapon against another, disorderly conduct and aprobation violation. He's also charged with theft because heallegedly stole the axfrom a nearby yard.

Chad Garland /The Associated Press file photo

drivers from Texaswereinjured when their truck hauling frozen blood crashed over anembankment on arural Oregon highway.Oregon State Police said themenwere taken to ahospital in Springfield after the crash early Wednesdaymorning. Both areexpected to recover. Police say the truck waspulling a refrigerated box trailer carrying 30,000 pounds of frozen bloodand plasmabeing transported for medical purposes. Hazardousmaterials teams responded to the scene, andthe road wasclosed for more than six hours.

state residents to get a driv-

er's license regardless of legal status. But in 2008, to make licenses compliant with the federal REAL ID Act, legislators

enacted a law that required Oregonians to show proof of legal presence in the U.S. to obtain a license.

Pumpkin nnrnviruS —LaneCounty officials said they suspect one of two pumpkin-carving events mayhave beenthe origin of a suspected norovirus outbreak that closed aEugeneschool for three days. O'HaraCatholic School welcomed students and staff back on Tuesdayafteranextendedfive-dayweekend.Theschoolchoseto close after at least100 people fell ill. Principal TammyConway said about 40 percent of students wereabsent Tuesday. LaneCounty health officials said they haveruled out other potential causes of the outbreak, insteadzeroing in onthe pumpkin-carving events held before Halloween. Norovirus is a highly contagious pathogenthat can cause vomiting, diarrhea andstomach cramps.

The state reversed course

in 2013, joining seven other states in granting driving privileges to immigrants lacking legal status. The cards could not be used to vote, get benefits or buy firearms. Oregon voters, by a margin of 66 percent to 34 percent canceled that law before it went into effect.

Brown, the director the state

The complaint was filed in

Department of Transporta- the name of five anonymous tion, several Transportation immigrants who would have Commission members and the qualified for the driver's cards administrator of the Oregon and two organizations that

tionship to traffic safety or any other state interest that is DMV. serve Latinos and are affected legitimate." State Attorney General El- by their inability to drive. The The lawsuit also says the len Rosenblum's spokeswom- suit seeks to be certified as a measure was driven by ani- an, Kristina Edmunson, said class action that includes all mosity and the desire to pun- the Oregon Department of residents who have lived in the ish or to avoid rewarding a po- Justice will represent the de- state for more than one year litically unpopular minority, fendants. Edmunson declined and are denied driving priviand targets a group of people to comment on the pending leges solely because they are for unequal treatment based litigation. unable to prove legal presence.

— From wire reports

Proponents of Measure 88 — mostly represented by the

group Oregonians for Immigration Reform — said granting the driver cards would lead to more immigrants without legal status moving to Or-

egon, taking Oregonians' jobs and pushing up crime rates. Andrea Miller, director of

Free pipeinstallation estimates

the Oregon immigrant-rights group Causa which pushed for the driver card law, said Measure 88's invalidation of

About 120,000 immigrants The state estimated that, the law has led to a crisis in the in Oregon lack legal status, were it not for the passage Latino community. "Mothers and fathers are As a result, it is discrimina- according to the Pew Research of Measure 88, it would have tory and violates the U.S Con- Center. They make up about issued about 84,000 driver' s struggling to take their kids stitution, the suit says. 3 percent of the state's total cards in the first year after the to school, workers in the field The lawsuit does not ques- population. law took effect. Many would are struggling to get to work, tion the general validity of OreMore than 80 percent have have been issued to i m miand childrenwho come of gon's citizen initiative process. lived in the country for more grants who were longtime age have to drive their family D efendants targeted i n than five years and many have residents and whose driver' s around to take care of basic the lawsuit include Gov. Kate children who are U.S. citizens. licenses had expired, accord- needs," Miller said. on their Mexican and Central

American national origin.

E' f4 HWY 20E er Dean Swift Road (1 block west of Costco)

Volunteers try to protect Haystack Rock

541-323-3011• starks.corn I'

By Dani Palmer Dai(y Astorian

CANNON BEACH — Hay-

stack Rock is an iconic symbol

climbed or walked on, and animals should not be touched,

of Cannon Beach that draws thousands to the small coastal

The designations are meant

to guard the animals and plants that call Haystack Rock home.

Haystack Rock is what drew

Jason Phelps, 35, of VancouDon Ryan / The Associated Press file photo ver, British Columbia, and his A child gathers sea water in a bucket with Haystack Rock in the girlfriend, Abbey, to Cannon background in Cannon Beach in 2010. The 235-foot-tall rock is Beach during a trip to Oregon. protected and visitors are not allowed to touch or climbit. "We' ve seen tons of photos and had to stop by to see it for

fore. They want to check it out.

ber, Haystack Rock Aware-

"A lot of times it's an honest

ness Program staff intercepted

for a wedding or senior pic-

mistake," she added, but she also believes people should

tures. But a few just can't resist

know the rules of the places

an urge to reach out and touch, they visit. or even dimb. Even with the presence of "Sometimes they get tunnel program staff, signage and invision," Haystack Awareness formation, the number of peoProgram Coordinator Melissa ple dimbing the rock is high, Keyser said. "It's just not an en- she added. vironment they' ve been in beFrom February to Septem-

They also shield Haystack's visitors, Keyser added. This summer, a "huge rock" fell from the center that could have injured a dimber. She noted rock falls occur daily. The number of climbers interceptedrose from lastyear,

"Domestic violence is really

also reflects increased beach more than 1,200 people trying shifts and more volunteers. to climb the rock. That was just There's a counting device at during beach shifts, each a few each beach shift site and those hours a day. who interact with program Haystack Rock was incor- staff or volunteers are countporated as a national wildlife ed. This year, they had more refuge in 1968 and became a than 17,000 interactions. That marine garden in 1991, one of doesn't indude the thousands seven protected intertidal ar- who don't stop to talk to Awareeas along the Oregon Coast. ness Program members.

of a weapon and coercion. He said he emotionally, verbally and physically abused his former fiancee. "This is not about clearing my name," he said."The only way I'm going to get my fam-

(Salem) Statesman Journal He apologized, discussed his on Monday at his oldest son' s ongoing domestic violence and home in Keizer with no publi- drug abuse counseling, and cist or attorney by his side. then apologized again.

ily's trust back is to walk the

"I want to talk to my commu-

ing to hide," he said. "I was a nity, that's important," he said. verbally abusive man. I was a "I have to live here. I' ve lived physically abusive man." here all my life. My children He recounted details of what have gone to school here. My led up to his arrest on domestic children have friends here. "They deserve to be apoloviolence charges in June. Domestic violence counseling is gized to. I' ve got to make it right a component of his probation, now, no matter what it takes or and has taught him the 24-day what it costs." methamphetamine binge leadCastronovo is serving four ing up to his arrest is not to years of supervised probation blame, he said. on charges induding domestic

walk. I' ve let everybody in the community down, everyone who ever put any faith and trust in me."

The Statesman Journal could not reach the victim.

"Because domestic violence happens in the secrecy of the home, an apology to the public isn't where his change needs

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violence assault, unlawful use

SALEM — Former Journey achoice,anditis calculated,"he drummer Deen C astronovo said. "The drugs and the alcorecently sat down for a brutally hol exacerbated it immensely, honest interview, his first after but there's no excuse for what completing court-ordered drug I did. I deal with it every day, rehabilitation. and it's deeper than regret or Castronovo spoke with The remorse."

but Keyser noted that the data

Journeydrummeradmits abuse during post-drugrehabinterview

"It's my truth, I have noth-

onsERr

age them not to. The shells can provide habitat for animals.

— protectedas an Oregon Islands National Wildlife Refuge and Marine Garden — is more for looking than for touching.

The Associated Press

' l l

shells, but HRAP staff encour-

ness Program want the public to know the 235-foot-tall rock

Like Phelps, visitors come for that adventure; others are there

I

c:„.„" ,e

Keyser said. Visitors may take

town each year. But members of the Haystack Rock Aware-

ourselves," Phelps said.

I

Everything above the high tide line is a part of the protection, meaning it can't be

I

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

EDjTO

The Bulletin

s

e orme aws On rans aren e ae a a i n

SPV MG SMELLiN®

ublic records reform has to wait. Instead, what state government gives Oregonians are excuses, excuses, excuses. Earlier this year, Gov. Kate Brown called for action in 2015 on reforms. Then she said next year. Now the Oregonian reports, it's going to be 2017. It'd be an understatement to call that a fluid timeline. Do we hear 2018? We don't question that policymakers can't just slap together reforms to laws ensuring the timely release of public records. It takes time and care. But the lack of commitment to meeting deadlines on reform is exactly the kind of problem that the public faces when it requests records — there are effectively no real deadlines. There are excuses and delays.And even ifthe documents are purported to be available, the costs and legal fees to get the supposedly public documents can put them out of the reach of the public. Then there's ethics reform. Is the state going to get to that? There were a number of proposals that the Legislature didn't have time for in its 2015 session. For instance, all 49 other states have a system of impeachment in place to

remove top elected officials from office. Oregon does not. What ifOregon has a governor who is so surrounded by a cloud of controversy that he or she cannot lead effectively? Whatever former Gov. JohnKitzhaber may or may not have done wrong as governor, he did the right thing to step aside when he felt he could no longer be effective. But the state can't count on other public officials to make that correct judgment. The state should have a reform to enable that. Is Gov. Brown serious about these reforms? Is anyone in the Legislature? It's not like these issues are new to the Legislature or anyone in Oregon government.What would be new would be a firm commitment to actually doing something about them.

M nickel's Worth Dog owners

bound traffic on Third Street to get but both seek to eliminate your

should behave

to the parkway at Walmart. The alternative is to c ontinue up Brookswood and take Powers Road off the roundabout, go to the

an owner may think their pet is,

venient as Pinebrook has been. It' s

Here's a question to ponder: I am noticing more often the feelWhat good is free speech anyway ing of entitlement of dog owners if political correctness makes you along our public pathways when light and cross the parkway. Then too afraid of punishment to use it? they refuse to leash their pets and you then turn left, going to the stop (Therein lies the purpose of politithen have the nerve to complain sign where the traffic northbound cal correctness.) when it goes bounding up to anoth- on the parkway has just been reTerry LaPora er dog, putting it on the defensive leased from the light you crossed Redmond and reacting in an understandably over. This adds an additional wait aggressive manner. No matter how unless you' re lucky. Show off Halloween cute, friendly and mild-mannered Neither of these ways are as conthe "friendly" actions of their dog may not be read as such by the other (cute, friendly and mild-mannered) dog. Most, if not all, public trails require dogs to be leashed. Read the sign and follow the rules.

Oh, and pick up after your dog

S

tudent-athletes in A lbany, wished.

Lebanon and t h e B e thel school districts wear Nike. Their schools save money as a result because Nike subsidizes theirpurchases by asmuch as 40to 45 percent, freeing up money that would be spent on equipment and clothes. The districts have signed contracts with Nike, agreeing to use only Nike clothing in exchange for cold, hard cash. In all, some 33 high schools in Oregon contract with Nike. Now the Eugene School District is looking at taking the idea a step further. What Nike offers is not chump

But the board has decided it might be able to do even better. It will seek competitive bids from athletic gear suppliers, and presumably the one that offers the most money will have the right to outfit Eugene's high school sports participants. There are those who oppose the idea. And there are those who will argue that by actively seeking income from the world of commerce, the school district is somehow selling out to that commerce. Those people should remember that the district is talking about getting help to pay for such things as football uniforms. It is not attemptchange. It proposes giving Eugene ing topersuade chemical compaschoolssome $300,000 in product nies to take over teaching its chemrebates in exchange for exclusive istry dasses. use of Nike products over the next If the board sticks with Nike's five years. That, according to The (Eugene) Register-Guard, is about proposalor findsanother company $15,000 per year per high school. that offers a slightly better deal, the The schools could use non-Nike result can be good. Schools in the dothing at practice, and athletes Eugene School District will have a who purchased their own gear bit more money with which to educould wear whatever brand they cate students. That cannot be bad.

I am a little disappointed with

v ia the new r o undabout, but i t

the newspaper's coverage of Hal-

would alsobe nice to have access to the parkway going north, rather than taking away the existing access. Dan Mulholland

loween this year. Last year The

Bend Bend

Political correctness

goes toofar

Bend Parkway needs better access

decorations in the paper

nice to have access to Third Street

while you' re at it.

Duncan Brown

Uniform sponsorship can work for schools

First Amendment rights.

Bulletin had pictures and addresses of wonderfully decorated Halloween homes in Bend and Redmond, but not this year. So this

begs the question: why? Halloween is a fun time for all

young and old and it deserves more respect by the newspaper. There are many people that deco-

tion featured a front page article

rate their homes for Halloween, not for their own pleasure but for the

about campus Halloween costume

pleasure of others. With homeown-

completed to take traffic over to

warnings. Of course many groups claim

ers permission The Bulletin did a very good job of this coverage in

Third Street, ODOT is removing

to be offended by Halloween cos-

October 2014, but not in 2015. One

the light at Pinebrook Boulevard, and putting in a median strip so you can only turn off the parkway onto Pinebrook if you are going south, and you can only go south,

tumes. If you do not claim to be offended, then it follows, you cannot

of my greatest joys of Halloween is

claim to be a victim. Political cor-

trying to improve my display each year. It is for the joy of others that

not north, on the parkway if you' re

time, a perfect weapon for those

weeks it seems to work. Pictures of

coming from Pinebrook. For many of us, Pinebrook is the best way to access the parkway heading north, and it has a smart light. The Murphy Road leg off Brookswood takes longer, going through a second roundabout and

who would control everything you do.

my house can be seen in the gen-

The mindset of the politically

onto Third Street to then turn left where you have to cross south-

cartoon. It's just that the politically correct crowd is a little less violent,

line newspaper and I hope you will enjoy them. To all those who decorate, whether big or small, I say, "thank you," and maybe next year I will see you in the papers. Ronald Wouda

The Bulletin

Now that th e r o undabout on Brookswood Boulevard has been

H a l loween edi-

seeing what others have done and

rectness is the best tool false victim-hood ever had and, at the same I do what I do and for a few short

correct crowd, who will punish you for any perceived slight, is really not much different than the mind-

set of those who will kill you over a

eral submission section of the on-

Redmond

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

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

Fax: 541-385-5804

Supreme Court tackles sinister trends over regulation he IRS scandal — the deni- such entity — unfortunately for the atal o f e s sential t a x-exempt torney general, but fortunately for the status to conservative advo- causeoffreedom — isthe Center for cacy groups, thereby effectively Competitive Politics. Its litigators are

T

suppressing the groups' activities tenacious opponents of government — demonstrates this: When gov- attempts to appoint itself regulator of ernment is empowered to regulate the marketplace of ideas. advocacy, it will be tempted to sup-

The CCP asked the 9th U.S. Circuit

press some of it. And sometimes Court of Appeals for protection from government will think like Oscar the attorney general's decree. The Wilde: "The only way to get rid of appeals court sided with California's temptation is to yield to it." attorney general, so the CCP is asking These truths should be on the Su- the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse the preme Court's nine fine minds Fri- 9th circuit and rebuke California's atday when theyconsider whether to torney general. Doing so, the Supreme hear a challenge to a lower court's Court would be defending a doctrine decisionthat disregards some dear adumbrated in decisions over six Supreme Court pronouncements per- decades.

GEORGE WiLL

sponse to a specific and paramount

test: Any government regulation is

government interest.

permissible if the government asserts,

Because California's attorney gen- or a court can imagine, a rational baeral does not acknowledge this bur- sis for the regulation. den, she has not even attempted to Now, California's attorney general demonstrate how compelled disclo- implicitly wants the rational basis test sure ofdonors serves any plausible extended to government's infringe-

ing their constitutional rights of free law enforcement interest. Instead, she speech and association. misreads cases concerning the source The 1958 ruling was not, as Cal- of so much First Amendment mischief ifornia's attorney general suggests, campaign finance regulations. limited to the circumstances of that time and place. And the NAACP rul-

From these, and with the 9th circuit's

ing did not establish, as the 9th circuit

power todemand, upon the invocation of an unspecified law enforcement in-

believes, that governments can com-

pel disdosure of donors' participation unless the advocacy group (and charity and educational organization) can taining to the First Amendment. The In the 1950s, when the civil rights demonstrate the probability of threats amendment says there shall be no movement was surging, an Alabama or reprisals. This would leave govlaws abridging freedom of speech, but court, pursuant to a state law requir- ernments with effectively unlimited various governments are persistently ing corporations doing business in power to intrude into the conduct of trying to regulate, and perhaps chill, the state to produce certain informa- private associations. advocacy. The most recent wrinkle in tion, ordered the state chapter of the Actually, from the NAACP and subthis disreputable project comes from NAACP to produce, among other sequent decisions has come the prinCalifornia. things, its membership lists. In 1958, ciple that compelled disclosure is an There the Democratic attorney gen- the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the inherent injury to First Amendment eral has decreed that all entities wish- NAACP's refusal, arguing that forced rights. Therefore governments bear ing to solicit tax-deductible contribu- disclosure would serve no compel- the burden of proving, under exacttions in California must disclose their ling state interest and would deter ing judicial scrutiny, that compelled donors to the state government. One civil rights supporters from exercis- disclosure is a narrowly tailored re-

ment of rights to which courts have

ascribed "fundamental" status speech and association. This demon-

strates threeconverging dangers. One is that of relegating some rights

approval, she conjures government's to inferior status. A second is that of making those supposedly nonfundamental rights vulnerable to the nonterest, disclosure of donors to noncan- protection of the rational basis test. A didate private associations wishing to third is that of allowing government, solicit contributions. This is especially when it claims to be acting to prevent pernicious because it comes in the fol- corruption or the appearance thereof, lowing context: to merelyasserta rational basis for For almost eight decades, courts, regulatingadvocacy concerning pubwithout justification from the Con- lic affairs. stitution's text or history, have been By accepting the CCP's appeal, the distinguishing between "fundamen- Supreme Court can stand athwart tal" rights, such as speech and asso- this confluence of sinister trends. And ciation, and supposedly lesser rights it can achieve this large good by doing involving economic activity, property something modest — by reminding and contracts. When judging govern- the 9th circuit of a redundantly afment infringements of these second- firmed constitutional principle. ary rights, courts have adopted the — GeorgeWill is a columnist extremely permissive "rational basis" for The Washington Post.


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B5

BITUARIES FEATUREDOBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Robert "Bob" A. Ringer, of Bend Jan. 6, 1932 - Nov. 2, 2015 Arrangements: Please visit our website, www.bairdfh.corn, to

•I

share condolences and sign our online

guestbook.

Services: No formal services are being held at this time. Contributions may bemade to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Ct. Bend OR, 97701 partnersbend.org

Billie Kenneth Glover, of Redmond

The Bulletin file photo

Kids surround Jim Elliott while he speaks about the different kinds of trees in the forest during the Deschutes National Forest's kids Ranger Day in February at Mount Bachelor. A recruitment event for volunteers is set for Nov. 12 at the Deschutes National Forest headquarters.

July 18, 1923 - Nov. 1, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel (541) 382-5592. Please visit our online register book at

Rangers

deschutesmemorialchapel.corn

Continued from 61

Services: A Recitation of the Rosary will be held Sunday, November 8, 2015 at 1:30 PM with a Memorial Mass immediately following at 2:00 PM at St. Thomas Catholic Church, located at 1720 NE 19th Street in Redmond, Oregon. A reception will follow.

"They are just critical for us to maintain the forest in a way

Springs.

Contributions may bemade to: Diabetic Association or charity of ones choice.

Donald Lee Sargent

'A$ 4 Neshan H. N altchayan/ The Associated Press file photo Harrison Ford and his then-wife Melissa Mathison arrive at the White House in 1996. Mathison, the screenwriter who was known for writing "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial," has died. She died

Wednesday. Shewas 65.

She charmedaudiences with homesickalien E.T. Throughout her over 30-year career, (Melissa Mathison) often collaborated with producers Kathleen Kennedy

By Lindsey Bahr The Associated Press

L OS ANGELES — M e-

March, 1956 - fiovemder, 2015

lissa Mathison, the screenw riter

w h o c r a f te d t h e

enchanting worlds of iconic family films including "E.T. th e L:

E x t r a-Terrestri-

and Frank Marshall and worked with

al," has died. She passed away Wednesday at age 65

j7

after a bout with neuroen-

'r

directors like Frank

docrine cancer, her sister,

Oz on "The Indian in

Melinda Mathison Johnson, confirmed. T he L.A. n ative had a

humble but

the Cupboard" and Martin Scorsese on "Kundun."

h i gh-profile

start — her f i rst credited

work was in assistant roles on "The Godfather: Part II" Donald Lee Sargent, age

5 9, passed away

and "Apocalypse Now," before she broke out with her

Mathison, who was one of five children born to a journalist father and a mother

f r o m script for "The Black Stal-

b rain cancer i n h t s h o m e on Nov. 1, 2015. Don was born to Frank and Shirlee

lion," which was released as

a feature length film in 1979. T hroughout he r o v e r Sargent. Always a loving f amtly m a n , D o n l e a v e s 30-year career, she often behind h i s w i fe of 34 collaborated with producyears, J e anne; d a u ghter, Stacey Fr e d e r ick ; son , L ance S argent; m o t h e r , Shirlee Sargent; and sister, Pam Carey. After receiving his Bachelor o f Fo r e s t M a n a g em ent from H SU, Don h a d a r ewarding 3 4 -year c a reer w it h t h e U S F o r e st

ers Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall and worked with directors like Frank Oz on "The Indian in the Cup-

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnote from around the world:

Tommy Overstreet, 78: Country music artist who had several hits in the 1970s. Died

Monday at his home in Hillsboro. He struggled with heart and lung disease. Norm Siebern, 82:Solid outfielder and first baseman who

was an American League AllStar three times and played in three World Series, but who

may be best known as part of the trade that brought Roger Maris to the New York Yan-

kees. Died on Friday in ¹ ples, Florida.

B ut h i story

time. " Melissa ha d

— From wire reports

Discover Your Forest currently has about 30 or 40 peo-

est plans to start a member-

Knopp

issues. Senate President Peter

Continued from 61

forward.

licenses to Oregon National

Knopp said in an interview he would focus on the issue in the short session in part because a group is pushing a 2016 ballot measure that would raise up to $5 billion for the next budgetcycle through a 2.5 percent tax oncompanies'sales above $25 million in Oregon. He said "it dearly will be a campaign issue"ifa group ispushing for

Guard members and would

a tax increase while the PERS

that would "reduce the risk

education."

Knopp's proposals face an uphill dimb during the short session, when lawmakers typically don't address complex

i cal science major at U C

Landfill Continued from 61 Three sections of the landfill

statement. T he s c ript

the disposal site was in use. Two of the sections, known as

f o r "E.T."

which comes out next year.

earned Mathison her first Mathison wa s m a r r ied and only Oscar nomination. t o Harrison Ford f o r 2 1 She lost out to John Briley's years before they divorced "Gandhi" screenplay for the i n 2004. They h ave t w o prize. children. In a 1995 interview with

the Los A ngeles Times,

— AP Film Writer Jake Coyle contributed from New York.

were created and filled when cells, will be used in a pilot test

by Apex. The consulting firm plans to excavate up to 30 feet in the

two cells to examine the type and amount of debris within the landfill. The test project

will include developing ways to process the waste. Some of the material could be trans-

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmittedby phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825

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

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

ers voted in June to double the statute of limitations to 12

to hear? Call for your

years, up from six. Knopp said he wanted it much longer and later proposed eliminating the statute of limitations altogether.

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shade structures. Sun when you wantit,

HEARINGTEST.

e seen f (~,

Beltone-

shade trirhen you needit. SM

IS I I Q

V CI

O >N DEMA N D

541-389-9983

Serving Central Oregon for over 25 years!

541-389-9690 141 SE 3rd • Bend

www.shadeondemand.corn

LaVonne Denker November 26, 1932 — November 1, 2015

that shined with generosi- Times reported in 1995. ty and love and burned as Her last credited work is bright as the heart she gave on Spielberg's big screen 'E.T.'," said Spielberg in a adaptation of Roald Dahl's beloved novel "The BFG,"

have eliminated the statute of limitations for rape. Lawmak-

Struggling

Landers

Berkeley when she took a

a hea r t

the statute of limitations for

hensive transportation pack- rape unless the Legislature acts adjustments for public retirees, age that would raise the gas tax first in 2016 or 2017. which would have resulted in until 2017, after a new crop of — Reporter: 406-589-4347, systemwide savings. A state lawmakers is elected. tanderson®bendbulletin.corn Supreme Court ruling this year Other proposals that rethrew out most savings from ceived a high number of votes the reforms, putting govern- in Knopp's survey would have ments in a budget bind moving given free hunting and fishing

and spreadofw ildfires,create family wage jobs in the forest products industry, and increase timber revenue that funds

leave to work a s F r ancis Ford Coppola's assistant on "The Godfather, Part II," the

Knopp said he would file Courtney, D-Salem, has repeat- a ballot measure for the 2018 edly publicly announced there' s election that would eliminate no chance to pass a compre-

"We weren't your main-

treated us as friends as well. How your mind worked was considered important." Mathison was a p olit-

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

ship program. Donations of

Lawmakers in 2013 voted to reduce annual cost-of-living

issue lingers. The next top choice, receiving 75 votes, was for legislation that would allow "responsible thinning and other sustainablemanagement techniques"

w i l l m o s t centric, artistic friends who

Fred McNeill, 63: Former M innesota l i nebacker w h o

helped the Vikings reach two Super Bowls. Died Tuesday in Southern California

— Kassidy Kern, Deschutes National Forest spokeswoman

pie who volunteer as inter- $25, $35 or $50 earn donors a pretive rangers, including the year membership, giving them ed 47,159 hours that f iscal posts at Mount Bachelor and perks such as free lantern year, Kern said. The most re- others at Newberry National rentals at Lava River Cave cent fiscal year, which ended Volcanic Monument. Nelson and members only ranger-led Sept. 30, saw an increase to said the group would like to snowshoe walks and hikes. 2,936volunteers giving 52,667 add to its roster. Part of the fees go to wildlife "The more help, the better," conservation in the Deschutes. hours. National rankings were not yet available for 2014-15. she said. The membership program Along with guiding hikes and For people interested in is set to launch Dec. 1, Neloffering education, volunteers giving to Deschutes National son said. More information to do trail maintenance and oth- Forest who do not have time to come on discoveryourforest. er work around the forest. volunteer, Discover Your For- org.

who sometimes worked in publicity, remembered the Hollywood Hill s h o usehold in which she grew up as a place where independence and creativity were encouraged.

stream '50s family," she told board" and Martin Scorsese the newspaper. "Both my on"Kundun." parents had wonderful, ec-

fondly remember her for fleshing out the story of that S ervice. Don l o ved h i s friendly, homesick alien E.T. roles as a steward of both The film, directed by Steven the land and th e r elationSpielberg and released in s hips around h im . D o n 1982, would become one of was an avid outdoorsman, the highest grossing of all and loved sharing both his v ast kn owledge an d p a s sion for the natural world. S ervices will b e h e l d a t S t. Th om a s Cat h o l i c C hurch o f Red m o nd : a service on Saturday, Nov. 7, at 10:00 AM, and a Rosary on Friday, Nov. 6, at 6:00 PM. In lieu of flowers, lease donate to the Wildand F i r efighter F o u n d ation.

forest in a way that gives the users a really great user experience."

that gives the users a really great user experience," she sard. In all, 1,744 people donat-

Robert Neil Thomas, of Warm Springs June 29, 1964 - Oct. 31, 201 5 Arrangements: Bel-Air Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Were held on Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015. Burial was in Warm

"They are just critical for us to maintain the

ported and recycled off-site or stay and be processed at the property. "They' re going to do a map of the different types of material that exists," said Anderson.

"In order to come up with thorough mitigation we have to know how much of what and

where it is." Apex is also planning to monitor and evaluate any dust and noise generated during the pilot test, according to its contract with the county.

Field work is expected to begin at the site in January and

be completed by the end of the month. A draft report will be submitted to the county by Feb.

26, according to the contract. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.corn

Lavonne Denker Landers died in her home in Redmond on November 1, 2015. She was 82. Lavonne wasborn in Wagner, South Dakota, but moved to Mowhawk, OR, in 1934. She attended high school in Springfi eld,OR.Classof1950. Lavonne married George Landers January 19, 1951, and they had two sons, Alan, formerly of Cottage Grove, OR, and Keith, of Thorne Bay, Alaska. They settled in Pleasant Hill, OR. Lavonne worked for Eugene Water and Electric Board until she retired in 1990. Lavonne enjoyed hunting and fishing and wasn't afraid of hard workor getting her hands dirty. One of her favorite places was the vacation home in Jackpine Village, just south of Lapine. They made this their permanent residence in 1990. She was active in the community and even servedon the Road Committee for many years. Lavonne also enjoyed traveling and was able to visit many places in her life including Alaska, Canada, Arizona, California, Mexico, Florida, the Caribbean and many National Parks including The Grand Canyon,Zion,Bryce Canyon and Yellowstone. She enjoyed the outdoors and everything it had to offer. Lavonne is survived by:husband, George Landers; son,Keith Landers;daughter-in-law, Desiree Janzen;daughter-in-law, Lynn Lozier, her dog, Liza Jane; sisters, Lova Kordan and Karel Trotter; grandchildren, Connie Landers Crowell, Tricia Landers Ward, Kacy Reed,Shane Porter,Carmen Landers;great-grandchildren, Anna Crowell, Summer Crowell, Taylee Reed, Eathan Reed, Tyler Ward, Ryan Ward, Lorena Porter. A celebration of life will be held at Pleasant Hill Church of Christ, 84735 Flathead Ave, Pleasant Hill, OR 97455, Saturday, November7, 2015, at 2:00 pm. In lieu of flowers, donationsmay be made to Hospice ofRedmond, 732 SW 23rd St, Redmond, OR97756.


B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

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

I

1

i

'

I

TODAY

it

TONIGHT

HIGH 49'

Low

PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.32" in 1935 Month to date (normal) Tra ce (0.13") Year to date(normal) 7.99 " (7.90") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 7"

SUN ANDMOON

Nov11 Nov15

d

N ov 25 D ec 2

Tonight's utty:Denebof Cygnus is about 15 ti mes as massiveasthe sun and 50,000 times its brightness.

YESTERDAY High: 57 at North Bend Low: 9' at Burns

2

2 p.m. 4 p.m. ~ 1 I 0

The highertheAccuW ealher.fxim IIV Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protedion. 0-2 Low 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extreme.

POLLEN COUNT G rasses T r ee s Long Lo~w

Wee ds Ab s ent

WATER REPORT As of 7 a.m.yesterday

0'

54o

47'

34'

26'

Mostly cloudy

Source: USDA Forest Service

57/39 „, •

56/4

„ ,.

Happner

48/29

43/29

• •

Grande Union

Condon 1/35

47 35

Granite e 39/29 '

2/39 • Mitch II 49/31

Camp Sh man Red n

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• 53/

• ~®

46/24

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• John Day 48/37

• Prineville

'Baker C

/28 tario • Pa line 5 31 • Eugene o • Re d Brothers 4529 Valee Su iVere 49/2'7 50/31 Nyssa • 4 6 / 6 • La pine Ham ton Juntura Grove Oakridge • Burns 49/27 55/39 /36 • Fort Rock Riley 47/22 Greece t 45/25 43/26 Bandon Roseburg • Ch ristmas alley Jordan V Hey 58/45 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 56/41 40/29 Marsh Lake 45/28 43/28 47/24 Gra • Burns Jun tion • Paisley 8/ a • 46/29 Chiloquin 47/23 Medfo d 4 7 / 26 Gold ach Rome •

51/28

eee

53/2

57/

47/30

Klamath

• Ashl nd • FaRS 48/25

Yesterday Today Friday

• Lakeview

McDermi

45/24

39/27

Yesterday Today Friday

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

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City 54/38/Tr 58/48/c 60/51/c La Grande 46/32/0.00 47/36/c 49/28/pc Portland 45/27/0.00 46/24/c 49/23/pc L a Pine 47/12/0.00 44/28/c 50/27/c Prinevige Brookings 59/43/0.00 57/45/c 59/46/c Me dford 5 5 /35/Tr 55/35/c 59/34/cRedmond Gums 47/9/0.00 47/22/c 48/19/pc N ewport 55/3 9/0.00 54/43/sh 57/49/c Roseburg Eugene 53/33/0.00 55/39/sh59/39/c North Bend 57/43/0.00 58/45/sh 61/47/c Salem Klamath Fags 47/21/0.00 48/25/c 51/23/pc O ntario 54/39/0.00 50/31/c 53/28/pc Sisters Lakeview 45/27/0.00 45/24/c 50/20/pc Pendleton 50/29/0.00 53/39/c 55/37/pc The Dages

City Astoria Baker City

53/3 7/0.0054/46/sh 59/46/ c 48 / 1 8/0.00 51/28/c 50/27/c 49 / 1 8/0.00 50/25/c 55/25/c 56 / 41/0.00 56/41/c 60/40/c 53/34/0.00 56/42/c 59/43/c 50/1 7/0.00 50/28/c 54/27/c 5 7 / 31/0.00 57/39/c 60/37/c

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

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108 ~ g

s

~ gs

~ 10s

~ 208

~ 308

~ 408

~ 50s

~ 508

~ 708

~

age

eggs ~100s ~ 110s

Calge 41/22

8 52/45

Que c 48/

uillingg

84/44

42' dp+o

45/28

a

rou t e

po~ 6 8

City Abilene Akron Albany Albuquerque Anchorage

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 74/60/0.00 79/44/1 72/46/s 76/52/0.00 73/62/pc 71/43/r 69/40/0.00 69/54/pc 71/46/pc 59/48/0.14 52/31/c 55/33/pc 30/22/0.00 36/32/c 37/29/sh Aeanfa 69/63/Tr 74/67/eh 79/63/c Atlantic City 67/49/0.00 70/63/c 73/61/pc Austin 80/55/0.00 81/61/1 71/55/c Baltimore 74/41 /0.00 72/58/sh 78/58/1 Billings 41/35/0.01 45/28/pc 42/30/s Birmingham 80/65/0.00 80/69/c 80/67/1 Bismarck 44/42/0.00 45/28/an 43/20/c Boise 51 /33/0.00 49/33/c 50/32/pc Boston 60/50/0.00 70/59/pc 72/54/pc Bridgeport, CT 64/45/0.00 67/58/c 72/55/pc Buffalo 73/47/0.00 71/61/pc 68/44/r Burlington, VT 66/36/0.00 66/56/pc 67/47/sh Caribou, ME 48/37/0.00 43/40/pc 57/46/r Charleston, SC 73/67/0.32 82/65/c 84/65/pc Charlotte 62/59/Tr 74/62/c 76/66/pc Chattanooga 75/59/0.00 73/68/c 78/63/c Cheyenne 56/36/0.18 43/26/sf 40/20/pc Chicago 71/48/0.00 70/51/c 56/38/pc Cincinnati 77/51/0.00 75/65/pc 71/42/t Cleveland 78/45/0.00 74/63/pc 70/44/r ColoradoSprings 66/44/Tr 46/27/r 48/26/pc Columbia, MO 66/54/0.00 72/45/r 60/38/s Columbia, SC 68/65/0.08 78/64/c 81/67/pc Columbus,GA 76/66/0.01 81/67/c 83/66/c Columbus,OH 70/52/0.00 74/63/pc 71/42/t Concord, NH 68/33/0.00 71/49/c 71/49/pc Corpus Christi 83/68/Tr 85/70/c 81/66/c Dallas 76/60/0.00 75/51/1 72/51/pc Dayton 73/51 /0.00 73/63/pc 70/39/1 Denver 61/42/Tr 46/27/sn 47/22/pc Des Moines 66/54/0.00 70/41/1 56/37/pc Detroit 77/46/0.00 72/62/pc 66/42/r Duluth 54/43/0.02 62/37/r 42/30/c El Paso 77/53/0.00 63/39/pc 69/42/s Fairbanks 24/11/0.00 31/25/pc 29/21/c Fargo 52/39/0.03 42/31/sn 45/26/c Flagstaff 34/31/0.56 40/1 7/pc 44/21/pc Grand Rapids 75/46/0.00 71/57/pc 58/38/r Green 6ay 68/43/0.00 68/44/c 50/33/c Greensboro 67/56/0.07 76/63/c 77/65/c Harrisburg 74/42/0.00 73/58/c 77/52pc Harfford, CT 70/40/0.00 71/56/c 71/52/pc Helena 42/32/0.03 41/25/c 38/21/pc Honolulu 89/77/0.01 88/76/pc 88/76/pc Houston 79/60/0.00 82/67/c 78/66/c Huntsville 79/64/0.00 81/70/sh 80/59/1 Indianapolis 76/50/0.00 73/60/pc 64/38/pc Jackson, MS 77/66/0.00 82/69/pc 80/66/1 Jacksonville 86/71/0.02 84/66/pc 85/65/pc

slifax 8/44

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wf Memphis Miami

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

Omaha Orlando

Palm Spdings Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

O

59/54/c 70/54/s 64/49/s 75/62/t

64/55/r 70/54/s 67/53/s 75/61/1 93/78/pc 91/78/t 48/34/r 40/35/r 77/66/1 74/66/1 54/46/s 57/52/pc 64/48/t 65/50/t 53/29/s 52/33/s 74/49/s 77/55/s 88/62/s 88/62/pc 74/64/pc 76/63/pc 41/22/c 43/31/pc 82/77/t 85/77/t 57/47/r 62/45/r 55/45/r 60/42/r 58/44/s 59/45/s 77/46/pc 80/50/s 84/77/s 83/77/pc 64/53/s 63/52/c 66/56/1 64/56/1 76/48/s 78/52/pc 73/64/pc 72/64/pc 69/61/c 71/58/pc 61/56/r 64/58/r 65/49/pc 69/50/s 89/79/pc sgng/c

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 44/40/0.74 42/38/r 44/39/r 66/57/0.00 72/41/c 59/39/pc 76/48/0.00 55/46/0.17 78/53/0.00 73/57/0.00 71/60/0.00 69/50/0.00 77/53/0.00 70/52/0.00 75/67/0.00 88/77/0.22 69/52/0.00 61/52/0.00 76/59/0.00 80/63/0.00 70/56/0.00 69/50/0.00 67/55/0.03 69/59/0.00 72/58/0.00 90/72/0.14 70/51/0.00 74/60/0.00 80/49/0.00 69/57/0.01 76/45/0.00 64/35/0.00 65/45/0.00 70/59/Tr 49/37/0.00 42/33/0.01

Rapid City Reno Richmond 73/49/Tr Rochester, NY 78/41/0.00 Sacramento 66/45/0.00 St. Louis 70/59/0.00 Salt Lake City 45/37/0.04 San Antonio 79/65/Tr San Diego 70/56/0.99 San Francisco 64/51/0.00 San Jose 66/42/0.00 Santa re 57/38/0.03 Savannah 75/68/0.04 Seattle 50/38/0.00 Sioux Fags 68/55/0.00 Spokane 40/26/0.00 Springfield, Mo 71/54/0.00 Tampa 92/74/0.00 Tucson 68/54/0.02 Tulsa 73/57/0.00 Washington, DC 75/48/0.01 Wichita 74/60/0.00 Yakima 56/25/0.00 Yuma 70/55/0.00 8

Amsterdam Athens

57/48/0.43 cooks / uoetoh 70/55/0.00 ee/89 /59 IM c • * 0 Auckland 56/52/0.06 * 47/27 w York Baghdad 77/55/0.26 0/ea Bangkok 93/79/0.00 43/ ~ ~ ~ ~ he ' oTO/41 . iladelphie Beijing 62/45/0.03 Cof mb '' + 7~ Soft Lake Ivy '72/as • 4/43 Beirut 7993/0.18 7 /~81 * *o @y ~ 47/35 Berlin 47/30/0.00 1Eigton nFren' o ~x44/2 us lie Las V es Bogota 66/52/0.03 /49 * Te/47 61/4 Budapest 57/25/0.00 Buenos Ai r es 72/50/0.00 eih"II v Cherlo Los An lee Cabo San Loess 88/65/0.00 77/6 • Cairo 75/66/0.06 Phoen Calgary 41/23/0.01 e 0 Cancun 86P5/0.79 Bir inuhe Juneau Dublin 52/48/0.04 dd Edinburgh 50/46/0.32 i i i . 42/38 WXX'eXXX'+ Geneva 54/39/0.07 • riendo Harare 74/56/0.00 d d d+ w Orleans 2/67 Hong Kong 83/72/0.00 82/72 Chihuehuk ~, V ' 0 Istanbul 66/48/0.00 as/Te 79/38 Monte y Miami Jerusalem 74/59/0.01 d 88/de Johannesburg 69/41/0.00 Lima 73/63/0.00 Lisbon 68/63/0.54 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 58/52/0.13 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 59/52/0.02 Manila 91/77/0.04 Bofs •• 49/33

Yesterday Today Friday

City

72/59/pc 60/38/r 61/44/s 66/45/s 74/65/pc 73/46/1 71/35/c 60/32/pc 76/62/1 72/51/c 73/53/s 78/55/s 76/67/pc 75/46/1 67/44/sh 52/32/s 80/68/pc 74/54/c 87/77/pc 8697/pc

68/46/c 54/37/pc 66/39/r 47/33/pc 77/67/pc 74/52/c 82/72/c 8290/t

70/63/c 75/59/pc 71/62/c 77/57/pc 77/63/r 80/66/pc 74/46/r 65/41/s 72/38/r 58/35/pc 87/71/pc 88/70/pc 72/51/s 77/54/s 72/47/c 57/39/s

74/63/c 68/49/s 74/61/pc 62/48/c 70/58/c 76/63/c

said in a statement. "By not

these permits.

The Associated Press

fully evaluating the impacts of

SEATTLE — The Wild Fish Conservancy filed a l awsuit

these farms, EPA and NMFS

The farms are operated by Icicle Seafoods. The compa-

The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Seattle says that

ine Brogan, a spokeswoman

infectious viruses in salmon for the National Oceanic and farms are threatening wild fish Atmospheric Administration's in the region. fisheries division, said in an The National Marine Fisher- email that the agency does not ies Service and U.S. Environ- discuss ongoing litigation. mental Wotection Agency conThe Puget Sound Chinook duded in 2011 that commercial salmon and the Hood Canal salmon farms are not likely to summer-run chum salmon are have anadverse effecton wild listedas endangered species, salmon, the lawsuit said. and federal fisheries managers But the following year, it have designated critical habisaid, there was an outbreak of tat for these species, the group an infectious virus at a com- sard. m ercial salmon farm at t h e Commercial salmon farms south end of Bainbridge Island keep fish in floating net pens.

65/49/pc 66/50/s 66/43/pc 68/44/s 47/24/c 51/25/pc 82/66/pc 85/66/pc 52/45/sh 55/48/c 59/32/r 50/27/pc 44/27/c 44/34/pc 70/44/r 61/37/s 89/74/pc 8994/pc 65/43/s 71/45/s 74/46/r 66/40/s 73/62/sh 79/62/1 76/41/c 65/40/s

57/31/c 58/34/c 72/50/s 75/52/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

99/76/0.00 78/56/0.04 Montreal 57/36/0.00 Moscow 43/36/0.07 Nairobi 82/62/0.16 Nassau 84/79/0'.19 New Delhi 88/61/0. 00 Osaka 72/46/0.00 Oslo 38/35/0.00 Ottawa 61/34/0.00 Paris 63/55/0.15 Rio de Janeiro 82/75/0.36 Rome 72/54/0.00 Santiago 75/57/0.00 Sao Paulo 81/66/0.68 Sapporo 64/38/0.00 Seoul 65/37/0.00 Shanghai 69/55/0.04 gong/0'.05 Singapore Stockholm 50/45/0.00 Sydney 68/63/0.51 Taipei 87/73/0.00 Tel Aviv 80/71/0.05 Tokyo 68/51/0.00 Toronto 61/46/0.00 Vancouver 48/36/Tr Vienna 43/34/0.00 Warsaw 50/27/0.00

97/73/s 73/48/pc 61/50/pc 43/29/i 75/58/pc 87/74/pc 86/61/pc 74/53/s 49/49/c 66/54/pc 64/55/c 85/72/c 69/51/1 79/51/pc 78/63/1 63/45/c

65/44/pc 76/67/pc 90/78/c 49/41/c 72/67/1 86/76/pc 78/67/1 69/57/pc 69/57/sh 50/41/pc 55/40/s 43/32/c

The EPA updated its water

quality standards for the salmon farms in 2010, saying the facililies are not likely to harm

the endangered species or their habitat. The marine fisheries agency agreed in 201L But the conservancy group says the two agencies relied on

In 2012, there was an out-

break of infectious hemotopoietic necrosis virus, or IHNV, Orchard Rocks, Fort Ward and Clam Bay facilities, the group

occurred while wild j uvenile salmon were migrating through the area and likely had a significant impact on the wild fish, the group said.

on net-pen facilities are oper- said. ating in Puget Sound. They While the virus likely arose produce more than 10 million from wild salmon, the high pounds of salmon annually, the densities in the net pens artifilawsuit said. cially elevated the outbreak. Three are located near The three infected pens are Deepwater Bay of Cypress Is- located in wild salmon habitat, land nOrth Of ArtaCOrteS; three and the outbreak occurred in are south of Bainbridge Island; April and May, when juvenile one is northeast of Port Ange- Chinook salmon emigration les Harbor; and one is in Skagit neared its peak. Bay inWashington. The conservancy group is The facilities are considered asking the court to find that the "point sources of pollution" un- agencies' findings were unlawder the Clean Water Act, and ful and seeks an injunction retherefore require permits to quiring the agencies to comply OPerate. All eight of the Pttget with the Endangered Species Sound farms have secured Act.

mercial salmon farms in Puget

Sound in light of the outbreak. "Atlantic salmon feed lots in the open waters of Puget

Sound pose an unacceptable health risk to (Endangered Species Act-listed) wild salmon in Puget Sound," Kurt Beardslee, the executive director of the Wild Fish Conservancy,

fire was extinguished before it could spread to nearby firewood Continued fiom Bf Ashes spark fence fire in sheds. Caprino, who was cited for Investigators determined ashDeschutes RiverWoods failure to maIntain a lane of travel, es taken from a wood stove were Improperly disposed of ashes dumped on a pile of pine needles was pulled from the vehicle and ignited a fence in Deschutes taken to St. Charles Bend. The against the fence. Within an plow operator, George Ormsbee, River Woods onWednesday hour the pile was on fire and had morning, according to the Bend spread to the fence, melting the of Sisters, was not injured. Fire Department. A westbound lane of U.S. bumper of a nearby car. Firefighters were called to Highway 20 was closed for about Damages as aresult of the fire 5928 Navajo Road at 9:22 a.m., 90 minutes. were estimated at $1,000, acwhere they found a wooden fence cording to the fire department. OSP andODOTencourage — Bulletin staffreports travelers to keep abreast of road between two houses on fire. The

LOCAL BRIEFING

Op

in three of the farms — the

At present, eight Atlantic salm-

officials to reconsider com-

WiVIISaeeeS ueVn

outdated reports that suggest

in Puget Sound. The outbreak

The lawsuit seeks an injunction that would force federal

THROUGH NOVEMBER 11

the farms pose low risks to the Puget Sound salmon.

Factory Stores

conditions as winter sets in.

0>' K Qa

w

66/50/pc 70/56/pc 79/66/pc

72/55/s 75/55/s

are in clear violation of the En- ny dedined to comment on dangered Species Act." the lawsuit. On its website, the E PA s p okeswoman S u - company says %'e pay careful zanne Skadowski said late attention to feeding efficiency, Wednesday that they were still site security artd fish health and reviewing the lawsuit and did use no hormones of any kind." not have a comment. Kather-

72/44/sh

75/60/c 80/64/pc 74/58/pc 70/44/r 65/41/pc 68/42/s 73/51/1 61/42/s 47/35/c 47/30/pc 85/62/1 74/58/c

Conservation groupsuesto stop commercial salmonfarms By Martha Bellisle

79/58/pc 74/51/s

47/27/pc 43/20/c 46/24/pc 47/25/s

NORTHWEST NEWS

Wednesday against federal environmental and f i sheries managers for allowing commercial salmon farms in Washington's Puget Sound.

23'

Chilly with periods of snow

in the area

Yesterday Today Friday

Meac am l.ostine 44/31 Enterpd

dieNn 44/ •

5

• pray

5/41

57/41

tington 57/35 5 37

MONDAY

TRAVEL WEATHER

44/

Sale

58/

Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 273 9 1 50% EXTREMES (for the Wickiup 50378 25% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 4 9 0 15 55% 48 contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 9992 23vo National high:92 Prineville 42749 29vo at Fort Myers, FL River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low: 9 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 148 at Burns, OR Deschutes R.below Wickiup 24 Precipitation: 2.30" 422 at Marion SC Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 461 Little Deschutes near LaPine 52 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 29 * Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 23 %i* * Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 50 fvnchorege Crooked R. near Terrebonne 99 ~ *: 36/3 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 2

Not available Not available Not available Not available Not available

he Daa

andy e • 1/42 , ,

Bro ings

Reservoir C rane Prairie

FIRE INDEX

/40

Portland

Source: OregonAnergyAssociates 541-683-1577

Bend/Sunriver Redmond/Madras Sisters Prineuige La Pine/Gilchrist

Mostly cloudy

UV INDEX TODAY 'I g~

/

CENTRAL: A mixture of clouds andsunshine today; a couple Lincoln of spots acrossthe 56/49 north will have a Newpo shower. 54/43 WEST:Mostly cloudy Yaoh in the north today 56/47 with spotty showers; clouds andintervals of Floren e 57/45 sunshine south.

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

10 a.m. Noon

31'

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. Umatina Hood 57/35 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

/4 Tigamo • 55/48 Mc innvin

Fri. 6 : 4 8 a.m. 4: 4 9 p.m. 1: 5 2 a.m. 2 : 4 0 p.m. OREGON EXTREMES Last

i4

ik'Ji

SUNDAY

OREGON WEATHER ria

EAST:Clouds and occasional sunshine Seasid TEMPERATURE today; a coupleof 57/51 Yesterday Normal Record spots will have a 46 53 74' i n 1927 shower this afternoon Cannon 57/51 25' 30' 4' in 1935

Today 5:45 a.m. 4:50 p.m. 12:54 a.m. 2:12 p.m. First Fu l l

SATURDAY

52o

27' Partly cloudy

ALMANAC Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

High

wk»r

goII

Mainly cloudy andchilly

l f '1

FRIDAY

96/70/s 73/51/pc 67/45/r 38/27/s 76/59/1 87/76/pc 85/61/pc 75/56/pc 53/51/sh 64/40/r 64/55/pc 81/71/t 69/49/s 77/51/pc 71/61/c 50/38/pc 64/49/c 76/67/1 88/78/c 49/43/c 83/64/pc 87/75/pc 74/68/1 70/58/s 67/44/r 50/43/r 57/42/s 45/39/c


IN THE BACI4 BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4 NHL, C2 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

PREP VOLLEYBALL

PREP FOOTBALLTHIS WEEK

Local teamsset for state tourney Six Central Oregon volleyball teams have their sights set on state championships this weekend, as theClass 5A, 4A, 2Aand 1Astate tournaments kick off with quarterfinal matches Friday morning. Bend High, the No.9 seed, and No. 3Summit begin play at1:15 p.m. and 3:15 p.m., respectively, at the 5A tournament Friday at Liberty High School in Hillsboro. On opposite sides of the 4Abracket, No. 4 CrookCounty (8 a.m. start) and No. 2 Sisters (10 a.m.) will be in action at Forest Grove High School. At Ridgeview High School in Redmond, second-seededCulver is scheduled for a10 a.m. quarterfinal in the 2A tournament, while No. 4 Trinity Lutheran begins play in the 1Atournament at1:15 p.m. Consolation and championship final matches will take place Saturday at all tournament sites. Cost for the quarterfinal rounds at each tournament, for each session, is $7 for adults and $4 for students. The semifinal and championship rounds are $8 for adults and $5 for students. Tournament passes, which are valid for both days of competition, cost $25 for adults and $14 for students. For more information, visit www. osaa.org.

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

RODEO

u awsa 0

' in ie

• Former Wildcat coaches take control and lead experienced Sistersto solid 2015 season

the football season — Sisters

boys lined up in a shotgun formation, Gurney recalls, with a running back standing alongside the quarterback. As an Outlaws linebacker, Gurney quickly recognized the scheme. He had seen it on film. He practiced against it in the week leading up to this game. He read the offensive guard, made a quick play on the ball

at Crook County. The Cow-

carrier and stuffed the run.

GRANT

LucAs

O

t = . jy l

ne play in Jacob Gurney's memory bank

trumps all others. It was the third week of

Inside

He did not err, however.

• A breakdown of Friday's local playoff games,C4

Few times this season have

even think I would have seen

a defense that ranks third

that coming and probably would have overpursued on the sweep and get destroyed."

in Class 4A in fewest points allowed.

the Outlaws misstepped. Credit an experienced "It's taken me by surprise," squad, the stellar play of its Gurney says of his extended three-headedrushing attack knowledgeofthegame now in Logan Schutte, Mitch Gibversus even a year ago. "I don' t ney and Chance Halley, and

See Outlaws /C4

Locals to take part in CRC finals Bulletin staff report Central Oregon will be represented well at the 2015 Columbia River Circuit Finals Rodeo. The

annual event, which caps the 32-rodeo CRC season, takes place Friday and Saturday at the Yakima Sundome in Yakima, Washington. Twelve area cowboys and Terrebonne barrel

PREP GIRLS SOCCERPLAYOFFS

racer Brenda Mays are

among the qualifiers on the entry list for the circuit finals. The Columbia

River Circuit is one of 12 Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association circuits

nationwide and consists of Oregon, Washington and northernIdaho.

Central Oregon qualifiers include three cowboys

who also have qualified for next month's Wrangler National Finals Rodeo in

Las Vegas: bareback riders Austin Foss, of Terrebonne, and Steven Peebles, of

Redmond, and all-around cowboy Russell Cardoza, of Terrebonne, who has qualified for the NFR in

P~

team roping. In Yakima,

g «~

Cardoza is on the entry list

to compete in tie-down roping, steer roping and team roping.

— Bulletin staff report

SeeCRC/C2

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

RUNNING

Title game host cities named Atlanta, NewOrleans and SantaClara, California, were selected tohost College Football Playoff national championship games from agroup of nine cities andregions. The Atlanta Falcons' new stadium, which will open in 2017,will be the site of the championship game scheduled for Jan. 8, 2018. Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, the home of the SanFrancisco 49ers, will host

Winning: A Hopi tradition By John Branch New York Times News Service

ORAIBI, Ariz. — Above the creased high desert Photos by Joe Kline I The Bulletin

Summit's Michaela Gorman shoots past Putnam defenders for Summit's first goal of the game in the second half during the Class 5A

state playoff gameWednesday afternoon at Summit HighSchool.

the January 2019 title

game. TheNewOrleans Superdome will be the site of the January 2020 championshi pgame. The playoff management committee, comprised of the FBS conference commissioners and Notre Dame's athletic director, also considered bids from South Florida (Sun Life Stadium), Houston (NRG Stadium), Minneapolis(U.S. Bank Stadium), Detroit (Ford Field), Charlotte, North Carolina (Bank ofAmerican Stadium) andSan Antonio (Alamodome). "Any of the nine could have hosted this event," College Football Playoff Executive Director Bill Hancock said. Bidding communities were guaranteeing between $13 million and $18 million to the College Football Playoff. This season's championship gamewill be held Jan. 11 atUniversity of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. Next season's championship game will be playedat Raymond JamesStadium in Tampa,Florida. Each of the first six championshi pgames will be held in different states. — The Associated Press

• Top-seeded Stormpull awayfor playoff victory, set to hostHoodRiverValley on Saturday By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

Michaela Gorman thought she had misfired — yet another Summit shot attempt sailing just wide of the goal.

Maggi McEl-

rath goes up for a header during the Class 5A state

O See additional photos on The Bulletin's O website:benlbulletin.cern/sports

playoff game Wednesday at Summit High School.

mates stampeding her direction in

w iththreedefenders surrounding her,

celebration. What Gorman did not see was that her shot had caromed off the

the Storm freshman blasted a shot

inside of the right post and into the net

from atop the penalty area. She immediately turned around to run back

— a score that finally broke the barrier set up by Putnam, which kept 10 play-

In the 70th minute Wednesday, and

Summit's

toward midfield in preparation for

ers back to attempt to slow down the

an ensuing goal kick. What she met, however, was a herd of Summit team-

highest-scoring offense in Class 5A.

landscape of northeastern Arizona, the Hopi village Oraibi, continuously inhabited for nearly 1,000 years, sits atop a blond mesa crumbling at the edges. Each fall, during one of the Hopi calendar's dozen or so ceremonial races,

a hundred or more Hopi men gather in a pack on the scrubby plain below, all muted tones of mustard yellows and sage greens. A woman in Hopi dress

holds a woven basket in the distance. Onlookers shout, "Nahongvita" — loosely, "stay strong" or "dig deep" in Hopi. A signal is given. To the Hopi, to run is to

pray. And the men run,

SeeSummit/C4

several miles, past the bean

field, beyond the barely marked graves of ancestors, around the decayed facade

Bears pullawayfor win By Victoria Jacobsen The Buuetin

Inside

second half of games this season, and despite scoring three goals in the first 40 minutes of a first-round Class 5A girls soccer playoff match at 15th Street Field, the Bears found themselves look-

Bakker during Bend's 5-2 playoff win over North

ing for a little more late-game magic as they held tightly to a one-goal lead over North Eugene Wednesday afternoon. In the closing minutes of the game the Bend offense had plenty of scoring opportunities, sending the ball just wide or sailing over the crossbar half

Eugene on Wednesday.

a dozen times before Meagan Bakker

Jarod Opperman i The Bulletin

Bend High celebrates a goal bysenior Meagan

sages to the top of the mesa,

where they are received by a chorus of thanks"asqwali" from the women,

• Prep Scoreboard,C4

"kwakwai" from the men.

Bend coach Mackenzie Groshong saidher Lava Bears have shined in the

of a Spanish church and up the precariously steep pas-

finally connected and gave the No. 3 Lava Bears (13-2-1 overall) a two-goal cushion with five minutes remaining. TaylaWheeler scoredhersecond goal of the match soon afterward to put the

final score at 5-2. "It's interesting, because this team has definitely been a second-half team,"

Groshong said. "I don't have any doubt that they' re going to pull it off or that they' re going to figure out what they need to do to get it done, but I saw that fire in them still, taking those shots."

SeeBears/C4

Juwan Nuvayokva, a former all-America

cross-country runner at Northern Arizona University, has been the first to the

top in dozens of Hopi races. And he would probably win the one scheduled for

Saturday in Oraibi, where he was raised, if it did not fall on the day of Arizona's

high school cross-country championships, in suburban Phoenix.

SeeHopi/C3


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREB DARD

TODAY TENNIS

ATP, BNP Paribas Masters SOCCER Europa League, Q arabag(Azerbaijan)vs.Monaco(France) 7:5 0 a.m. FS 2 Europa League, RubinKazan(Russia)vs.Liverpool(England) 10a.m. FS1 Europa League,Borussia Dortmund (Germany) 10 a.m. vs. Gabala (Azerbaijan) Europa League,Tottenham Hotspur (England) vs. Anderlecht (Belgium) noon FS1 Europa League,Sparta Prague (Czech Republic) vs. Schalke 04 (Germany) noon FS2 U-17 World Cup,Mali vs Belgium 2 :55 p.m. F S 2 GOLF

PGA Tour, SandersonFarms Championship, Champions Tour,Charles SchwabCup PGA Tour, HSBCChampions

10:30 a.m. Golf 1:30 p.m. Golf 7 p.m. Golf

FOOTBALL

College, Arkansas St. at Appalachian St. College, Baylor at KansasSt. NFL, Cleveland atCincinnati College, Mississippi St. at Missouri College, Nevada atFresno St.

4:30 p.m. ESPNU 4 :30 p.m. F S 1 5 :25 p.m. N FL 6 p.m. E S PN 7:30 p.m. ESPN2

BASKETBALL

5 p.m. NBA, OklahomaCity at Chicago Men's college, CalState Monterey Bay at Utah 6 p.m. Men's college, Western Oregon at OregonSt. 7 p.m.

TNT P a c-12 P a c-12;

KICE 940-AM

NBA, Memphis at Portland

7:30 p.m. TNT; KBND 1110-AM;KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM

FRIDAY AUTO RACING

NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Texas 500, practice NASCAR,Xfinity, Texas, practice NASCAR,Truck Series, Texas, qualifying NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Texas 500, qualifying NASCAR,Truck Series, Texas FIA World EnduranceChampionship, Putrajaya FIA World EnduranceChampionship, Putrajaya

9:30 a.m. NBCSN

11 a.m. NBCSN 1 :30 p.m. F S 1 3:30 p.m. NBCSN 5 :30 p.m. F S 1 9 :30 p.m. F S 1 m idnight FS1

BASEBALL

Arizona Fall League,Peoria at Surprise SOCCER Bundesliga, Hannover 96 vs. Hertha BSC Berlin Women's college, OhioSt. at Rutgers Women's college, TeamsTBA Women's college, Oregon atOregonSt. Women's college, PennSt. at Michigan Women's college, TeamsTBA Women's college, Arizona St. at Arizona England, Bournemouth vs Newcastle United

11:30 a.m. MLB 11:30 a.m. FS1 12:30p.m. Big Ten 1:30 p.m. S EC 2 p.m. P a c-12 3 p.m. B i g Ten 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. P a c-12 4:30 a.m. NBCSN

GOLF

PGA Tour, CharlesSchwab CupChampionship PGA Tour, WGC-HSBC Champions

1:30 p.m. Golf 7 p.m. Golf

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Kentucky St. at Kentucky NBA, Miami at Indiana NBA, Houston at Sacramento

3 p.m. E SPNU 5 p.m. E S PN 7:30 p.m. ESPN

FOOTBALL

College, Temple atSouthern Methodist 5 p.m. E SPN2 High school, Hillgrove (Ga.) vs. McEachern (Ga.) 5 p.m. E SPNU 5 p.m. NBCSN College, Cornell at Dartmouth Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL KanSaS highSChOOISeniOr dieS after CallaPSe —A Kansas high school football player from Sharon Springs died after collapsing on the sidelines during a game,according to a school official. Brian McVay,superintendent and principal of Wallace County schools, said Wednesdaythat LukeSchemm, a senior at Wallace County High School, died at ahospital in Denver where hewastaken after collapsing during the game Tuesday night. McVaysaid hedidn't know why Schemmcollapsed during the Eight-Man Division I game at Wallace County High.

BASKETBALL WIIIBA preSident Stepping dOWII — WNBApresident Laurel Richie is stepping downafter more than four years on thejob. The WNBA said in arelease Wednesday that Richie is leaving to pursue other opportunities that include being anadvocate for girls and young women. NBAdeputy commissioner Mark Tatumwill oversee the WNBA until a newpresident is hired.

BASEBALL Greinke beCOmeS free agent again — PitcherZackGreinke has opted out of the final three years of his contract with the LosAngeles Dodgers, giving up aguaranteed $71 million to become afree agent again. Greinkewasamong 12additional players who became free agents, the Major LeagueBaseball Players Association said Wednesday, raising the total to 151.The32-year-old right-hander was 19-3 with a major league-best 1.66 ERA this season.

Nets managerCollins gets contract through2017Terry Collins has anewcontract to keep managing the NewYork Mets. He canonly hope for a secondchance in the World Series. Three days after their rousing seasonended with a stinging loss to Kansas City, the Mets rewardedCollins on Wednesdayfor piloting them to the National Leaguepennant. The Mets held aclub option on Collins for 2016, but instead gavehim atwo-year deal through 2017.

ON DECK Today Girls water polo: 5A/4Aplayoffsat OsbornAquatic Centerin Corvallis, Summit vs.CottageGrove, 5:10 p.mcBendvs.HoodRiverValley,6:20p.m.; Mount ai nViewvs.Sandy,7:30p.m.;Madrasvs. Ashland,8:40p.m. Boys waterpolo:5A/4Aplayoffsat DsbornAquatic Center,Summit vs. SouthAlbany,12:30 p.m.;Hood RiverValleyvs.Madras,1:40 p.ms MountainView vs. Parkrose, 2:50 p.m.;Ashlandvs. Bend,4 p.m.

TENNIS

IN THE BLEACHERS

ATP Tour BNPParibasMasters Wednesday at Paris SecondRound Kei Nishikori (6), Japan,def. JeremyChardy, France,7-6(4), 6-7(6), 6-1r DavidGoffin (16), Belgium,def. DusanLaiovic, Serbia,6-2,6-2. RichardGasquet(10), France,def.LeonardoMayer, Argentina,6-2,7-5. Grigor Dimitrov,Bulgaria,def. MarinCilic (12), Croatia,7-6(3), 7-6(2). AndyMurray(2), Britain, def.BornaCoric, Croatia,

In the Bleachers O 201 5 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck 11/5 www.gocomics.comiinthebleachers

Friday Football: 5A firstround,No.12Bend at No.5Ashland, 7 p.m.; 5Afirst round,No.14Lebanonat No. 3Redmond,7p.m.; 5Afirst round,No.11South AlbanyatNo.6Summit, 7pmc 4Afirst round,No. 12 Crook CountyatNo.5Mazama, 7p.m.;4Afirst round,No.15NorthMarionat No.2 Sisters,7p.m. Volleyball:5A quarterfinalat LibertyHSin Hilsboro, Bend vs. Marist; 5A quarterfinal at Liberty HS in Hilsboro,Silvertonvs. Summit, 3:15p.m. 4A quarterfinalat ForestGroveHS,Valley Catholic vs. CrookCounty, 8a.mc4Aquarterfinal at Forest GroveHS,Tilamookvs. Sisters, 10a.m.;2Aquarterfinal at Ridgeview, Weston-McEwenat Culver,10 a.m.; 1Aquarterfinal at Ridgeview,Powder Valey vs. TrinityLutheran,1:15p.m.

THATS® END oF QE F(RGT QLF. jT5 OUR.TL)Rg!

6-1, 6-2.

r +TEwesE

TI+-Mk SWSI

Saturday

Boyssoccer.5Aquarterfinals, No.7 Bendat No.2 HoodRiverValey, 5p.m.; 5Aquarterfinals, No.11 Summiatt No.3Hilsboro,1 pm44Aquarterfinals, No. 7MolalaatNo.2Sisters, 1p.m. Girls soccer: 5A quarterfinals, No.8 HoodRiver Valley atNo.1 Summit, TBD;5Aquarterfinals, No.6 SandyatNo.3Bend,TBD Volleyball: Class 5Astatetournament at Liberty HS, Hilsboro;Class4Astatetournament at Forest GroveHS;Class2Astatetournament at Ridgeview HS; Class1Astatetournament atRidgeviewHS

WTA Tour

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALLLEAGUE All TimesPST

America's Line AMERICAN CONFERENCE East Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog W L T Pct PF PA NFL 70 0 1.000249 133 Today 43 0 . 571 172 139 BENGALS 10 11 46 ' Iz Browns

Women's college Pac-12

Friday's Game Fort LewisatUtah,6p.m. Raiders Saturday'sGames South JETS Jaguars Academy ofArt at Stanford,1 p.m. W L T Pct PF PA VIKINGS 3 2t / t 39 i /t Rams S.C.-AlkenatColorado,6p.m. BILLS 3 3 44' / z Dolphi n s Houston 35 0 . 375 174 205 Sunday'sGames Indianapolis Titans Lewis-ClarkSt. atWashingtonSt., 1p.m. 35 0 . 375 173 203 SAINTS TS 14 1 4 5 2 Yt Redskins Westmont Jacksonvile 2 5 0 . 286147 207 PATRIO atCalifornia, 2 p.m. Tennessee 16 0 . 143 125 159 Packers 2'/~ 2'/~ 46t/t PANTHE RS WarnerPacific atWashington, 2p.m. North Falcons 4 7 44N 49ERS Cal StateSanMarcosat SouthernCal, 2p.m. W L T P ct PF PA Giants 2Nt 2Nt 4 7 '/tBUCCAN EERS Corban at OregonSt.,3 pim. 4I/2 5 45 COLTS EasternNewMexicoat Arizona,6p.m. 70 0 1.000198 132 Broncos 2 'Ii 2 'I i 4 4 / 2 COWB OYS 44 0 . 500 168 147Eagles Monday 26 0 . 250 167 216 SOCCER ERS 4 4 49i/t Bears 26 0 . 250 190 214 CHARG West COLLEGE W L T Pct PF PA MLS playoffs Today Denver 70 0 1.000 168 112 MAJORLEAGUESOCCER 1 7 18 67'/z KANSASST Oakland 43 0 . 571 178 173 Baylor All TimesPST 2'/z 2'/z 44'Iz K ENT ST Kansas City 35 0 . 375 195 182 Buffalo ST 11 11 61 ArkansasSt SanDiego 26 0 . 250 191 227 APP'CHIAN CONFERENCESEMIFINALS Bal l St WMICHIGAN 14 14'Iz 62i/t NATIONAL CONFERENCE (Two-legaggregatescoring) 7/i2 42'/z MISSOURI MississippiSt 7 East Sunday'sGames 4'/z 4'/z 55'/z FRESNO ST W L T P ct PF PA Nevada D.C.Unitedat NewYork, noon, NewYorkleads1-0 Friday N.Y.Giants 44 0 . 500 215 208 13'/z 13'/z 51'/z SMU MontrealatColumbus,2 p.m., Montrealleads2-1 Washington 34 0 . 429 148 168Temple 7 6 ' / z 5 8'/z UTE P Seattle atFCDallas, 4:30p.m.,Seattle leads2-1 Philadelphia 34 0 . 429 160 137Rice ST PortlandatVancouver, 7p.m., tied 0-0 f 2Yt 13'/z 56'/t SAN JOSE Dallas 25 0 . 286 133 171 Byu Saturday South P URDUE PK 2Nt 52'/t W L T Pct PF PA lffinois HOCKEY 57t/t Duke LINA BNt 8 Carolina 70 0 1.000191 136 NCARO UCKY 25 24N 67t/t Fla Atlantic Atlanta 62 0 . 750 213 173 WKENT NHL NewOrleans 44 0 . 500 213 234WVIRGINIA 7'/2 7'/2 79i/t Texas Tech 14'/z 14 58i/t K e ntucky GIA TampaBay 34 0 . 429 163 199GEOR NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE UL-Lafayette 6t/t 3 63'/~GEORGIAST North AO TimesPST 7 7 60i/t I N DIANA W L T P ct PF PA lowe E CARO L IN A 5 4 53i/t S Florida 61 0 . 857 174 130 EasternConference 2 0 21 37i/t Vanderbilt 52 0 . 714 147 122 FLORIDA Atlantic Division C h arlotte 25 0 . 286 140 202 FLA INT'L 19'/z 19 50i/t GP W L OT Pts GFGA 51i/t S y racuseMontreal 17 0 . 125 149 245 LOUISVILLE 12 14 1 4 11 2 1 2 3 5 1 2 6 H OUSTO N 8'/z 8'/z 72i/t C incinnati West Ottawa 1 2 6 4 2 14 3 7 3 7 UMASS 1 2 5 2i/t A kro n W L T Pct PF PA Tampa Bay 1 4 6 6 2 14 3 4 3 6 62i/t E Michigan Boston Arizona 62 0 . 750 263 153 MIAMI-OHIO 6'/z 5 1 1 6 4 1 13 4 2 3 6 Ru tgers Detroit St. Louis 43 0 . 571 135 125 MICHIGAN 22 24 51i/t 1 2 6 5 1 13 3 0 3 1 AIR FO R C E 1 7 1 7 50i/t A rm y Seattle 44 0 . 500 167 140 Florida 12 5 4 3 13 3 4 2 6 NC State 3'/2 4'/2 3 9'/ z B OS T O N CO L L SanFrancisco 2 6 0 .2 50 109 207N'WEST Buffalo 1 2 5 7 0 10 2 8 3 5 ERN 2'/z 2'/z 40t/t P e nn StToronto 12 2 8 2 6 26 40 TEXAS ST 14 17 72t/t New MexicoSt Today'sGame Metropolitan Division Connecti c ut 6 47'/t T U LANE Cleveland atCincinnati, 5:25p.m. GP W L OT Pis GFGA TEXAS 29N 29 54t/t Ka nsas N .Y. Sunday'sGames Rangers 12 8 2 2 18 3 6 2 3 ColoradoSt 11 51'/z WYOMING N .y.islanders 13 7 3 3 17 3 8 3 1 Tennessee at NewOrleans,10a.m. Stanford 16 16 56 COLORADO W ashington 11 8 3 0 16 3 6 2 8 St. LouisatMinnesota,10a.m. TULSA 15N 17 64t/t C Florida P ittsburgh 12 8 4 0 16 2 7 2 2 Green Bayat Carolina,10 a.m. UtahSt 14 14 55Nt NEWMEXICO N ew Washingtonat NewEngland,10 a.m. Jersey 12 6 5 1 13 2 9 3 1 WASHINGTON 1 1 Utah Miami atBuffalo,10 a.m. arolina 1 2 5 7 0 10 2 6 3 4 17'/z 18 USC 65 Ar i zonaC Jacksonvilleat N.Y.Jets, 10a.m. P hiladel p hia 12 4 10 2 4 3 7 TENNE SSEE 1 6 17 57i/t S Carolina C olumbus 13 3 16 0 2 OaklandatPittsburgh, 10a.m. 0 6 30 4 8 24 25i/t 61i/t io w a St O KLAHO M A AtlantaatSanFrancisco,1:05 p.m. WesternConference zOKLAHOMA ST Tcu 4N 5N 76'/ N.Y.GiantsatTampaBay, 1:05p.m. Central Division Ucla 1 6 17 57'/z OREGONST Denver at Indianapolis,1:25 p.m. GP W L OT Pts GFGA F l orida St CLEMSO N 12 55i/t Philadelphia at Dalas, 5:30p.m. Dallas 1 3 10 3 0 2 0 4 6 3 7 9 8 ' / z 63i/t N av y MEMPHIS Open:Arizona,Baltimore,Detroit, Houston, Kansas 1 3 9 3 1 19 3 6 3 1 13 12'Iz 48'Iz MARYLAND St. Louis Wisconsi n City, Seattle 1 3 8 4 1 17 4 0 3 5 NTexas Winnipeg LA TECH 29 30 62i/t Monday'sGame Minnesota 1 1 7 2 2 16 3 5 3 2 6 ' /z 48'/z ALABAMA 7 Lsu Nashville Chicag oatSanDiego,5:30p.m. 1 1 7 2 2 16 3 2 2 5 TROY 8 1 0 52i/t UL-Monroe Chicago 1 3 7 5 1 15 3 3 3 2 9 9/i2 54t/t Ha w aii UNLV Injury Report Colorado 12 4 7 1 9 33 3 6 ON 6 5 76t/t C alifornia NEW YORK—TheNationalFootball Leagueinjury OREG Pacific Division 12 10 55t/t Old Dominion report,asprovidedbytheleague(DUT- Definitely wil not UTSA GP W L OT Pis GFGA RGH NotreDame 8 8 53'/z PITTSBU play;DNP—Didnot practice; LIMITED—LimitedparticiMID TENN ST 1 3 56t/t M a rshallL os Angeles 12 8 4 0 16 2 9 2 5 pation ipra n ctice; FULL— Full participation inpractice): A r kansasV ancouver 13 6 3 4 16 3 8 2 9 CLEVEUINDBROWNS atCINCINNATIBEN- MISSISSIPPI 11 fly/t 54t/t Jose 1 2 6 6 0 12 3 3 3 3 ST 23 23 53t/t Minnesota S an GALS— BROWNS:OUT:CBJoeHaden(concus- OHIO 11 5 5 1 11 3 0 3 2 T EXAS A &M TNt 7 59i/t Aub urn A rizona sion, ankle), WR Brian Hartline (concussion), WR PK 2'/i 66i/t A rizona St E dmonton 1 3 5 8 0 10 3 6 4 1 AndrewHa wkins (concussion), OB Josh Mccown WASHST naheim 1 2 3 7 2 8 17 31 Virginia A right shoulder,ribs), CBJordanPoyer (shoulder), MIAMI-FLA 13 3 9 1 7 30 56 ALABAM A 61/t 91 /t 64i/t I dah o Calgary DonteWhitner(concussion). QUESTIONABLE; S S W ednesday' sGames 6 58'/z NEBRASKA TashaunGipson(ankle), LBNateOrchard (shoulder), MichiganSt Anaheim 3 Florida2 SO LB CraigRobertson (ankle). PROBABLE: QBJohnny Winnipeg 4,Toronto 2 Manziel(rightelbow).BE NGALS: OUT:TAndreSmith St. Louis6,Chicago5,OT BASKETBALL (concussion). QUE STIONABLE: DECarlos Dunlap Pittsburgh3,Vancouver2 (shoulder),LBReyMaualuga(calf). Today'sGam es Men's college TampaBayatBuff alo,4p.m. Pac-12 Bostonat Washington,4 p.m. College All Times PST N.Y.Islandersat Montreal,4:30 p.m. WinnipegatOtawa,4:30p.m. All TimesPST Today'sGames Nashville atMinnesota,5 p.m. PAC-12 Cal StateMontereyBayat Utah,6p.m. Philadelphiaat Calgary, 6p.m. WesternOregonat Oregon St., 7p.m. Saturday'sGames ColoradoatArizona, 6p.m. StanfordatColorado, 10a.m. SeattlePacificatWashington, 7 p.m. Florida atSanJose,7:30 p.m. Friday's Game ArizonaSt. atWashington St.,12:30 p.m. Columbus atLosAngeles,7:30p.m. P acific (Ore.) at W a shi n gton S t., 6 p. m . UCLAatOregonSt., 1;30p.m. Friday/sGames Utah atWashington, 4:30p.m. Saturday'sGame Detroit atToronto,4 p.m. Californiaat Oregon,7:30 p.m. WesternNewMexico atArizonaSt., 11a.m. Chicago at NewJersey,4 p.m. Arizonaat Southern Cal, 7:30p.m. Sunday'sGame Dallas atCarolina, 4 p.m. ChicoSt.atArizona,5 p.m. N.Y.RangersatColorado,6 p.m. Wednesday'sGame Monday'sGame PittsburghatEdmonton,6 p.m. BowlingGreen62, Ohio 24 Carroll (Mont.)at California, 7p.m. ColumbusatAnaheim,7p.m. 34 34

0 . 429 176 173 0 . 429 154 173 STEELE RS

Sunday

5 i/t

4i/t

BASEBALL

AmericanLeague CHICAGO WHITESOX—Declinedtheir optionon SS AlexeiRamirez. Selected thecontract of LHPZach Phillips from Charlotte(IL). CLEVEL ANDINDIANS— Declinedtheir optionon OF Ryan Raburn. KANSASCITYROYALS — Declinedmutualoptions on RH PJeremyGuthrie andOFAlexRios. LOSANGELESANGELS— Declined their option on DFDavid Murphy. NEWYORKYANKEES— Soldthe contract of RHP Chris Martin toNipponHam(Pacific League-Japan). ReinstatedOFMason Wiliams, LHPJacob Lindgren andRHP sChaseWhitleyandDomingoGermenfromthe 60-dayDLSelectedthe contract of RHPVicenteCampos from Tampa(FSL).AnnouncedRHPAndrewBailey declined outright assignmentanddeclaredfreeagency.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS— Reinstated18 IkeDavis andRHPsJesseChavez,KendallGraveman,A.J.Griffin, Jesse Hahn,JarrodParkerandEvanScribnerfrom the 60-day DL. National League CINCINNATI REDS— Promoted DickWiliamsto seniorvicepresident/general manager. LOSANGELESDODGERS— RHPZackGreinke optedoutof thefinal threeyearsof hiscontract. MILWAU KEEBREWERS—Exercised their option on18 Adam Lind. NEW YORKMETS—Agreedto termswith manager TerryCoffinsonatwo-yearcontract. ReinstatedOF DarrellCeciliani, 2BWilfredo Tovar, LHPsJoshEdgin and JackLeathersich andRHPs BuddyCarlyle, Rafael MonteroandZackWheelerfromthe60-dayDL. PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES—Declinedtheir option onLHPCliffLee. SANDIEG OPADRES—Declinedtheir optionon LHPCaryLuebke. FOOTBALL

National Football League NFL —SuspendedSt. Louis RBTreyWatts indefinitely forviolatingtheleague'ssubstanceabusepolicy. BALTIMORERAVENS — Placed WR Steve Smith Jr. on injuredreserve. ReleasedTEKonrad Reuland from thepracticesquad. SignedWRJoe Morgan. Signed WRChuckJacobstothepracticesquad. BUFFALO BILLS—SignedRBMikeGillisleeto the practicesquad. CHICAGOBEARS— WaivedWRJohnChiles. CLEVELAND BROWNS — PlacedTERobHousler on injuredreserve.SignedDBDe'AnteSaundersfrom the practice squad. DENVER BRONCOS— PlacedOTTySambrailoon injuredreserve.ReleasedDTDeandre Colemanfrom the practicesquad.SignedDBRyan Murphyto the practicesquad. DETROI TLIONS — Placed LB DeAndreLevyon injuredreserve.SignedLBJames-MichaelJohnson. INDIANAP OLIS COLTS—ReleasedGDavid Arkin from the practicesquad. KANSAS CITYCHIEFS—ReleasedLBJoshKeyes from the practicesquad. NEWORLEANSSAINTS— PlacedRBKhiryRobinson on injuredreserve. ReleasedDBSammySeamster from thepracticesquad. NEW YORKGIANTS— ReleasedGAdam Gettis from the practicesquad. SignedSCooper Taylor and TE MattLacossetothepractice squad. OAKLANDRAIDERS — Waived WR WaltPoweff . SignedWRMarcusThigpen.SignedDEShelbyHarris to thepracticesquad. PITTSBURGHSTEELERS — Released WR Tyler Murphy.SignedCBDoranGrant fromthepracticesquad. SAN DIEGOCHARGERS — Released LB Ryan Mueller fromthepractice squad.SignedDTDamion Squarefromthepracticesquadand WRIsaiahBurse, S Matt Daniels, LBBenGardner andRBDreamius Smith tothepractice squad.. SAN FRA NCISCO49ERS — Signed RBShaun Draughn.SignedRBJarryd Hayne to the practice squad. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — Released TERaShaun Allen fromthe practice squad. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS— SignedDELawrenceSidbury.SignedLBOuayshawnNealyandDE RonaldPowell to thepracticesquad. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL —FinedSt.Louis FRyanReaves$3,024.19 for roughing. COLLEGE GEORGIA — SuspendedLBNatrezPatrickandDE Chauncey Riversonegame. MICHIGAN — Signedmen'sbasketballcoachJohn Beilein to atwo-year contractextension throughthe 2020-21season.

CRC

Ducks takeshootout over Panthers

Continued from C1 Also qualified in two CRC events is Redmond's Roger Nonella, who is en-

The Associated Press ANAHEIM, Calif. — Chris Stewart

Roberto Luongo made 36 saves in a strong performance for Florida. Erik Gudbranson and Orange County na-

scored in the second period and again in the fourth round of the shootout, and the t ive Rocco Grimaldi scored for t h e Anaheim Ducks beat the Florida Pan-

thers 3-2 Wednesday night for their first Also Wednesday: consecutive victories of the season. Blues 6, Blackhavvks 5: CHICAGOCorey Perry tied it on his first goal of Vladimir Tarasenko scored at 3:54 of a the season with 5.1 seconds left in reg- whistle-free overtime to give St. Louis a ulation for the Ducks, who improved to come-from-behind win over Chicago. 3-7-2 with a dramatic rally. Jets 4, Maple Leafs 2: TORONTOFrederik Andersen stopped 23 shots Alexander Burmistrov scored the tiefor Anaheim, denying Jonathan Hu- breaking goal late in the third period to berdeau on the decisive shootout try. lift Winnipeg past Toronto. Jakob Silf verberg also scored in the PengklinS 3, CanLICkS 2: VANCOUshootout for the Ducks, who could be VER, British Columbia — Sidney Crosturning around their nightmare start by scored his second goal of the season with the NHL's lowest-scoring offense and Mare-Andre Fleury made 18 saves and worst power play. as Pittsburgh held off Vancouver.

— From wire reports

Transactions

NHL ROUNDUP

moted Dick Williams to general manager onWednesday as part of a succession plan for 64-year-old Walt Jocketty, who will stay on as director of baseball operations for one moreyear before moving into an advisory role.

OilerS' MCDGVid Out 'manthS' —Edmonton Oilers rookie forward Connor McDavid is expected to beout "months" with a broken left clavicle, says general managerPeterChiarelli. Chiarelli says McDavid will require surgery after breaking his collarbone inTuesday night's 4-2 win over the Philadelphia Flyers. The first overall pick in this year's draft was hurt after he crashed into the boards.

WTAElite Trophy W ednesday atZhuhai,China RoundRobin Group A: Standings:Wiliams1-0 (sets 2-1), Zheng 0-0(0-0), Keys0-1(1-2) Group B:Carta SuarezNavarro (2), Spain, def. AndreaPetkovic(10), Germany, 6-0,6-0. Standings:SuarezNavarro1-0 (2-0), Svitolina1-0 (2-0),Petkovic0-2(0-4) Group C:Karolina Pliskova(3), CzechRepublic, def. Jelena Jankovic (9), Serbia,6-4, 3-6, 6-2. StandingsPliskova1-0(2-1) Jankovic1-1(3-2) Errani0-1(0-2) Group D:RobertaVinci (4), Italy, def. Svetlana Kuznetsova (11), Russia,6-4, 6-4. Standings:Vinci 1-0 (2-0),Wozniacki 0-0(0-0), Kuznetsova0-1(0-2)

DEALS

AO TimesPST

RedS PrOmOteWilliamS to GM —TheCincinnati Redspro-

HOCKEY

John Isner(13), UnitedStates, def.AliazBedene, Britain,6-3,7-6(3). RafaelNadal(7), Spain, def.LukasRosol, Czech Republic,6-2, 6-2. TomasBerdych(5), CzechRepublic, def.Edouard Roger-VasselinFrance, , 6-3,4-6, 7-5. Viktor Troicki,Serbia,def. FelicianoLopez(15), Spain,6-7 (7), 7-5,6-4. RogerFederer(3), Switzerland, def.AndreasSeppi, Italy, 6-1,6-1. Jo-WilfriedTsonga(9), France,def. Roberto Bautista Agut,Spain,6-2, 6-2. KevinAnderson(11), SouthAfrica, def.Dominic Thiem, Austria, 6-7(3), 7-6(4), 7-6(5).

Panthers.

tered in both tie-down roping and steer

roping. Other Central Oregon entries for the CRC Finals are Brian Bain, of Powell

Butte, and David Peebles, of Redmond, both in the bareback; Allen Helmuth, of Redmond, in bull riding; Shane Erickson, of Terrebonne, in tie-down roping; Joe Scott, of Redmond, in saddle bronc riding; Todd Dickson, of Madras, in steer roping; Sean Santucci, of Prineville, in steer wrestling; and Charly Crawford, of Prineville, in team roping. Up to 12 qualifiers make up the field for each circuit finals event. Champions from the circuit finals rodeos, as well as

the year-end winners in each eventfrom each circuit, are invited to the Ram National Circuit Finals Rodeo, which takes

place April 7-10, 2016, in Kissimmee, Florida.


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

NBA ROUNDUP

Hi -scorin ac court ea s Bazers to victo over Jazz The Associated Press SALT LAKE CITY — Damian Lillard knew

he would need to carry more of the offense after an offseason of drastic changes for the Portland Trail Blazers, who lost four starters. The fourth-

year guard hasn't disappointed. Lillard had 35 points and C.J. McCollum added 27 as the Portland Trail Blazers defeated the Utah Jazz108-92 on Wednesday night. "It is a responsibility, when things aren' t

going well, when things are

NeXt uP

goin g well, I just have to be

Memphis

the team calm," Lillard said. "When it is time to make something happen I got to be willing to accept that challenge. So far I' ve been able to do that."

able to manage that and keep Nick Cote / The New York Times News Service

Hopi High School cross-country runners, from left, Ryan Honyumptewa, Andre Lucus, Diome Talaswaima and Latrell Lee practice at the school in Kearns Canyon, Arizona, in October.

Hopi Continued from C1 Nuvayokva is an assistant coach for th e boys cross-country team at Hopi

High, vying for its 26th Arizona state championship in a row. Its streak is the longest

The finishing place of each Running was the methteam's top five finishers (out od of sending messages beof seven starters) are added tween Hopi villages. It also together for a team scorebecame partof ceremonies, one point for the overall first- which can last days. Photoplace runner, two points for graphs from the early 1900s the second, 10 points for the show Hopi men lined up to 10th, 100 for the 100th, and so on. The team with the lowest

run in ceremonial races like

the women's basket dance race, most wearing loincloths

in the country for cross-country and the fourth-longest active run for any high school sport, boys or girls, according to the National Feder-

score wins. A perfect score is 15, if a

ation of State High School

k i d s don' t have a good life, a long life," have a lot of speed," Baker Kuwanwisiwma said. "That' s said. "If you timed them in what these ceremonial run-

Associations. "Hopi have that running blood in them," Nuvayokva

said. "It's up to us to find it and use it."

team sweeps the first five

places. The Hopi did that at state one year. "A lot of ou r

and no shoes.

"They are for the blessings of the cloud people, for the rain, for the harvest, so we

They can run and run and Starting a Tradition run." Hopi High, as modern as In early October, a Hopi any suburban school, has High bus, painted in the about 400 students in grades s chool colors, blue a n d 9 through 12. Before the white, drove five hours to a school opened in 1986, many night meet in Casa Grande, Hopi teenagers, like those between Phoenix and Tucfrom other tribes, went to In-

son. Members of the boys

dian boarding schools in faraway places. Among them, more than a century ago, was Lewis Tewanima. Sent to Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania — where he was a classmateand track teammate of Jim Thorpe of

cross-country team sat in the back half of the bus. The girls team, the winner of 22 state

defensive looks at Lillard and McCollum — unsuccessfully. "We let some guys get what they wanted and we got hurt for it," Jazz coach Quin Snyder said. "We' ll watch the film and I know it's not going to

be pretty.... There's games like this. I don't want to over-dramatize it. "For me to go in and throw stuff and scream and yell, that might have a little bit of an impact,

cred tokens in the ground as

offerings. "It might sound a little funny, but running in cultural races is a lot different than running in high school or college," said Devan Lomayao-

Cavaliers 96, Knicks 86: CLEVELAND

— LeBron James scored 23 points, Mo Williams scored 22 and Cleveland won its fourth

straight. Raptors 103, Thunder 98: OKLAHOMA

front.

Arizona, teaches at a Hopi

minutes to beat Oklahoma City and remain

elementary school and has won many Hopi races. "In

undefeated.

to running. Fewer committed

ervation attend. Baker men-

to the summer running program. There were too many

The bus stopped at Little

in Salt Lake City.

look like it against Portland. The Jazz gave up overtime, to help Houston outlast Orlando. 30 second-quarter points, their most in a single Wizards 102, Spurs 99: WASHINGTONperiod this season. Bradley Beal made a 3-pointer with 0.3 seconds Also Thursday: remaining to give Washington a victory over

CITY — DeMar DeRozan scored 10 of his 28 points in the fourth quarter, and Toronto

travel together, but they have

second quarter during Wednesday night's game

sive team in the NBA, but they certainly didn' t

championships in 28 seasons ma, 33, who won two individ— a seven-year string was ual state cross-country titles broken last year — sat in the at Hopi High, ran at Northern The teams sometimes

Rick Bowmer / The Associated Press

Utah center Rudy Gobert (27) and Portland forward Noah Vonleh battle for position in the

crops in all four directions. In other races, winners bury sa-

tioned how much Hopi High The championships are a had gained on its rivals in point of pride, but Hopi mod- distractions these days. This the past couple of meets. But esty inhibits boasting. The could be the year that the Tuba City is a substantially 25 state championship tro- streak ended. bigger school, in a different "People stop me and say, classification, so Hopi High phies are scattered in a small storage room, five of them 'How's the team doing?'" will not compete against it at on the floor, two on a plastic Baker said. "They know the state meet. "I feel pretty good," Bakbin next to a bike tire, one of we didn't start too well. But them broken. they say, 'You' ll be ready at er said. "Pretty good. We' re But the pressure to keep state.'" pretty much on pace for the the streak intact is palpable. Individual Hopi r u nners state meet." Boys onthis year' s team ad- finished nowhere near the But he also knew that plenmitted to nerves, and Baker top, and because of a regis- ty of other schools, including uses the streak as motivation tration glitch, their efforts a handful with reasonable — do not be the team that were not recorded. Still, hopes of an upset, dreamed breaks the streak. Baker boarded the bus reof ending the streak. "We' re banquet talk," Bak"I don't want to be part of laxed and relieved. He saw the team that doesn't win the progress. er said. "That's what I tell the boys. At the other teams'

Caesars to pick up 16 pizzas banquet, they' ll say, 'We beat and then unloaded the boys the Hopi,' or 'You outraced nior, said he knew that the and girls at a nearby Holiday the Hopi kid.'" team wa s w a tched, both Inn Express at about 11 p.m. As the boys cooled down "Be glad; be happy you fin- and put on their white warmby opponents around the state and by Hopi on the ished," Baker told the boys in up suits for the awards prereservation. the lobby. "But don't be satis- sentation, a 70-year-old Hopi "They know what we' re ca- fied. Because there's more in man n amed L e e G r o ver pable of," he said. "I definitely you somewhere." stood to the side. feel the eyes on me, even in the Leigh K u w anwisiwma, He still jogs a few miles in community. They say, 'Hey, director of the Hopi Cultural the mornings, to greet and you' re the one that runs.'" Preservation Office, said that pray to the sun, and hopes the tribe's tradition of run- that his running motivates A Test of Depth ning flowed from its scouts, the younger generations. Success is built on endur- men who directed tribal miThe team has helped "put the ance, not speed. While Hopi grations and searches for Hopi backon the map,"GroHigh has had its share of water. (One of roughly three ver said, but he worries that individual state champions dozen remaining Hopi clans, even the strongest of tradi(Nuvayokva did it t w ice), the Lizard clan, supposed- tions can fade. "We' re gifted with this talwinning a team title requires ly got its name from such depth. Courses are generally scouts, who were able to sur- ent of running," Grover said. 5,000 meters (3.1 miles). Time vive in the desert with little "It's something we should is less important than order. water, he said). never let die." Darion Fredericks, a se-

Mason Plumlee added 12 and Radio: KBND 16 rebounds for Portland. 1110-AM The Jazz sent a multitude of

to his cornfield to bless the

In some variations, the first

different coaches and do not culturalraces, you never got wanima became a two-time practice together. At the Casa recognition for it. They have Olympian. He finished ninth Grande meet, they got off the a deeper meaning." in the marathon at the 1908 bus and headed different diNuvayokva said the same London Games and won the rections into the cool night. thing. " It's different t ha n t h e silver medal in t h e 10,000 They were quickly abmeters in Stockholm in 1912. sorbed into an athletic car- Anglo culture, where you He remains a Hopi hero, and nival, acres of u n i formed run and it's every man for an annual race is held on the t eams wandering t o a n d himself," Nuvayokva said. reservation each year in Tew- from the course and hud- " When I c ompeted in t h e anima's honor. dled around team tents. The NCAA, you' re trying to beat Rick Baker, 56, grew up course crossed soccer fields, others. Here, you do it for in the Hopi village Tewa and a stretch of dirt and a golf others." ran cross-country80 miles course and then snaked back He had to cut his morning away at Winslow High and along several fairways to the run short because the team then in college in Oklahoma. finish. The air was filled with had a meet in Holbrook, He was hired in 1987 as a dust and the sound of gener- about 90 minutes south. Hopi High physical education ators powering temporary "Pretty Much onPace" teacher and coach and was lights. asked to start a cross-counBaker wa s n e rvous. A On a r o o m-temperature try program. quiet and poised man, with day under blue skies and cot"A lot of schools with Hopi glasses and spiky black hair ton ball clouds, the Hopi boys kids had won state champi- lightly freckled with gray, he finished second among 18 onships," Baker said. "And I felt that this year's team was teams. Among more than 100 thought if we could get all the vulnerable. The team was varsity competitors, the top Hopis here, we should have a young. It had melted in the five Hopi boys finished sixth, pretty good team." heat of a meet in Phoenix the 12th, 15th, 21st and 23rd. His first three boys teams week before. The meet was won by 'Isa finished in the top 10 in one More broadly, Baker had City, a rival school on Navaof Arizona's small-school di- found it increasingly difficult jo land that some Hopi on visions. His fourth, in 1990, to find Hopi boys dedicated the western side of the res-

26th in a row," freshman Jihad Nodman said.

finished with 13 points and

to the top receives a gourd of water, which he then carries

the Sac and Fox Nation — Te-

won the state title. The team has won every one since.

second consecutive 30-pluspoint game. Al-Farouq Aminu

but over the course of a season that's not going to get us where we need to go. Our guys need to take ownership and I'm right there with them." Gordon Hayward scored a season-high 19 for the Jazz while Trey Burke chipped in 17 off the bench. The Jazz began the night as the No. 1 defen-

the400 meters,theyprobably ners do. They bring this poswouldn't break 70 seconds. itiveness to the people." But they h ave endurance.

Lillard shot 14 for 27 for his

at ppitiand

overcame an eight-point deficit in the final 6 Bucks 91, 76ers 87: MILWAUKEE — Khris Middleton scored 21 points and Milwaukee wel-

comed backforward JabariParker from a left

knee injury with a victory over Philadelphia. Hawks 101, Nets 87: ATLANTA — Al Hor-

ford scored 21 points, Dennis Schroder added 20 and Atlanta beat Brooklyn for its fifth

straight win. Rockets 119, Magic 114: HOUSTON — James Harden scored 28 points, including seven in

San Antonio. Pacers 100, Celtics 98: INDIANAPOLISPaul George had 26 points and 10 rebounds and Jordan Hill added 16 points and 10 rebounds to

help Indiana beat Boston. Suns 118, Kings 97: PHOENIX — Eric Bled-

soescored 19points,Brandon Knight added 17 and Phoenixrouted Sacramento. Warriors 112, Clippers 108: OAKLAND, Calif.— Stephen Curry scored 31 points, including the go-ahead 3-pointer with just over a minute to go that led defending champion Golden State

to its fifth straight win to open the season.

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings All TimesPST

EasternConference Toronto Atlanta Cleveland Detroit Washington Chicago Miami Indiana Milwaukee NewYork Boston Charlotte Orlando Philadelphia Brooklyn

W 5 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 I 1 I 0 0

L Pct GB 0 1.000 I .833 I/t 1 .800 1 t .750 it/r 1 .750 1I/t 2 .600 2 2 .500 2I/t 3 .400 3 3 .400 3 3 .400 3 3 .250 3I/t 3 .250 3IA 4 .200 4 4 .000 4'A 5 .000 5

W 5 4 2 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 0 0

L Pct GB 0 1.000 t .800 1 I .667 2 2 .600 2 2 .600 2 2 .600 2 2 .600 2 2 .600 2 2 .500 2I/t 2 .500 2'A 2 .500 2I/r 3 .400 3 4 .200 4 4 000 4I/t 4 OpQ 41/2

WesternConference

GoldenState LA. Clippers Minnesota Oklahoma City Phoenix Portland Memphis SanAntonio Dallas Utah Denver Houston Sacramen to NewOrleans LA. Lakers

Wednesday'sGames

Iitdiana100,BOStan 98

Washington I02, SanAntonio99 Milwaukee 91, Philadelphia 87 Houston119,orlando04, QT Toronto103,Oklahom aCity 98 Cleveland96, NewYork86 Atlaitta101,Braaklyn87 PortlaiId108,Utah92 Phoenix118,Sacramento 97 GoldenState02, LA.Clippers108 Today'sGames Oklahoma City atChicago,5p.m. Miami atMinnesota, 5p.m. Charlotteat Dallas,5:30p.m. Utah atDenver,6p.m. Memphisat Portland,7:30p.m. Friday's Games Torontoat Orlando,4p.m. PhiladelphiaatCleveland, 4:30p.m. LA. Lakers atBrooklyn, 4:30p.m. WashingtonatBoston, 4:30p.m. Milwaukee atNewYork, 4:30p.m. AtlantaatNewOrleans,5 p.m. Miami atIndiana,5p.m. Detroit atPhoenix,6:30p.m. DenveratGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Housto natSacramento,7:30p.m.

Summaries

Blazers108, Jau 92 PORTLAND (108) Aminu5-92-513,Leonard1-2002, Plumlee5-9

2-9 12, Lillard 14-27 2-2 35,MCCOIII/m 10-13 4-6

27, Crabbe 0-31-21, Davis 1-30-22, Harkless5-8 3-415, Vonle0-31-21. h Totals 41-7715-32108. UTAH I92) Hayward 7-204-619, Favors2-72-6 6,Gobert 4-6 0 2 8, Nets2 50 06, Hood4-10 2 2 10,Burke7-13 2-217, Booker0-60-00, Bi/rks5-130-152I, Lyles 0-20-00,Ingles2-30-05,Millsap0-20-00,Johnson 0-10-00.Totals 33-88 21-33 92. Portland 27 30 19 32 — 108 utah 26 23 19 24 — 92 3-pointGoals—portland0-25 (Lilard5-11,McCoIlum3-5,Harkless2-2, Aminu1-2, Leonard0-1, Vonleh 0-2, Crabbe 0-2), Utah5-24(Neto2-5, Inglss1-2, Burke 1-4, Hayw ard1-5, Lyles 0-1, Milsap0-1,JohnsonO-I, Bi/rkS0-2, HO O d0-3). FOuled Out—NOne.Rebai/ndS-

Portland67(Plumlee16), Utah53(Favors 10). Assists — Poitlaitd u (McCollum4), Utah9(Hood4).Total Fouls—Portland 25,Utah22.A—19,911(19,911).

SulIS118, KingS 97

Hawks 101, Nets 87

SACRAM ENTO(97) Anderson5-151-1 15, Gay4-13 1-2 9, Cauler-Stein0-00-00, Rondo4-10 0-29, Collisoit 6-10 1-2 13, Belinelli 6-11 1-115,Koufos8-11 0-0 16, Casspi2-52-48, Butler0-10-00, McLemore 4-60-0 9, Curry1-20-03, Acy0-00-00, Moreland0-00-0 0. Totals40-84 6-1297. PHOENIX (118) Tucker3-4 1-3 IO,Morris 4-8 3-3 11,Chandler 1-3 56 7, Bledsoe 81 81-319, Knight716 0017, Warren 6-9 0-013, Weems1-1 2-24, Len7-122-3 16, Leuer2-30-25, Price2-40-06, Booker2-30-0 5, TeletoviI-I c 0-03, Goodwiit1-10-02.Totals 4583 14-22 118. Sacramento 18 22 29 28 — 97 Phoenix 28 21 32 37 — 118

BROOKLY N(87) Johnson 1-10 3-4 5, Young7-13 0-0 14,Lopez 11-16 5-7 27,Jack3-10 0-0 6, Brown2-6 0-0 6,

Rockets 119, Magic 114(OT) ORlANDO (114) Fournier 11-21 4-5 29, Harris 6-10 3-4 16, Vucevi c 3-6 0-0 6,Payton 2-8 0-0 5,Oladipo 7-1 63-3 18, Watson 3-5 0-0 7, Dedmon2-5 0-0 4, Gordon 7-u 5-719, HezonjaO-I 0-0 0,Smith 4-5 0-0 8, Napie1-3 r 0-0 2. Totals 46-91 1519 114. HOUSTO N(119) Thornton8-140-018, Ariza6-113-419, How ard to-t03-723, Lawsoi5-144-4 t 16,Harden6-221411 28,Capela4-50-0 8, Beverley 1-4 0-03, Brewer t-r 0-22, Harrel0-00-00, l Terry1-10-02. Totals 42-88 24-34119. Orlando 35 24 29 22 4 — 114 Houston 34 34 22 20 9 — 119

Bucks 91, 76ers 87 PHIULDE LPHIA(87) Grant 3-92-2 8,Noel8-161-217, Okafor 9-13 3-3 21, MCC Onnell 3-4 0-0 7,Stai/SkaS5-191-1 14,

Thompson 3-70-07,Holmes2-63-47,Sampson1-3 0-0 3, Canaan 0-4 3-3 3, Pressey0-00-0 0. Totals 34-81 13-1587. MILWAUKEE (91) Antetokoitnmpo 7-11 2-317, Parker1-6 0-0 2, Monroe7-14 4-518, Bayless2-6 0-0 5, Middleton 7-20 4-4 21,O'Bryant1-3 0-1 2,Vaughn1-3 0-0 3, Vasqi/ez4-122-3 u, Pli/mise 1-10-02, Ennis

1-2 0-0 2,Copeland3-9 1-1 8. Totals35-87 131791. Philadelphia Milwaukee

Cavaliers 96, Knicks 86 NEw YORK I86) Anthony 6-183-4 17, Porzingis 6-11 0-0 13, Lopez3-9 0-0 6, Calderon1-5 0-0 2, VuIacic 4-10 0-0 9, Seraphiit 2-40-0 4, O'Qi/inn4-60-0 8,Gallo-

way 4 91-2 12, Thomas 1-3 01 2, Grant0 56 6 6, D.Williams 2-4 2-2 7, Early0-0 0-00. Totals 33-84 12-15 86.

CLEVEL AND(96) James 9-234-723, Love4-131-2 11,Mozgov3-6 4-410, M.Wiliams 8-194-422, Jefferson2-64-69, Dell avedova2-70-05,Thompson4-62-2to,Cunningham 0-01-4 I, Jones1-33-3 5,VareIao0-00-0 0. Totals 33-8323-32 96. New York 32 14 23 17 — 86 Cleveland 18 20 32 26 — 96

Bogdaitovic5-110-0 12, Elliitgton 4-80-0 9, Larkin

1-3 2-2 4,Bargnani2-2 0-04, Robinson0-1 0-00, Hollis-Jefferson 0-20-00, Karasev0-10-0 0.Totals 36-83 10-1387. ATLANTA(101) Bszemore 3-60-08, Mil sap5-101-2 12, Horford 8104 421, Teague 4 88-10 16,Schroder7153 4 20, Holiday 3-90-06, Splitter4-70-08, Mack0-20-0 0, Sefolosha2-41-2 6, Scott1-32-24, Paterson 0-1 000,Muscala0-10-00.Totals37-7619-24101. Brooklyn 17 26 27 17 — 87 Atlanta 23 18 31 29 — 101

Wizards 102, Spurs99 SANANTONIO(99) Aldridge4-142-210, Leonard 10-22 2-223, Duncan 3-52-28,Parker6-114-517, Green3-103-312, Diaw0-11-21, Ginobili 4-72-212, Mills 2-40-04, KAnderson1-22-24, West 1-1 0-02,Butler 3-40-0 6. Totals 37-8118-2099. WASHING TON(102) Porter 8-102-219, Hum phries 3-70-0 7, Gortat

4-9 2-210,Wall6-164-517, Beal11-220-0 25, Mene

3-50-36, Gooden0-40-00,Sessions1-52-25,Meal 4-60-09, Temple0-00-00,Dudley2-30-04.Totals 42-8710-1 4102. San Aittonio 23 28 22 26 — 99 Washington 22 25 19 36 — 102

Pacers100, Celtics 98 BOSTON (98)

Crowder3-55-812, Johnson0-22-22, Sullinger 3-10 2-2 9,Thomas9-19 5-5 27, Bradley8-16 2-2 21, Olynyk0-50-00, Rozier0-40-00, Zeller0-20-0 0, ETurner5-10 0-011, Lee4-6 2-310, Hunter1-2 0-0 2,Jerebko2-20-04. Totals 35-83 18-2298.

INDIANA (100)

George 8-185-6 26, Allen3-81-2 7,J.Hill 7-14 2-216, G.Hil2-105-810,Ellis 5-152-213, Stuckey 3-10 0-0 7,M.TI/incr2-6 3-4 7,Budiitger 2-60-04, RobinsonIII 3-44-510. Totals 35-9122-29100. Boston 16 27 29 26 — 98 Indiana 23 26 24 27 — 100

Warriors 112, Clippers 108 L.A. CLIPPERS (108) Stephensoi2-5 t 1-27, Griffin10-213-323,Jordan 5-61-411,Paul9-165-724,Redick5-8 0-013,Pierce 0-34-64, Crawford 4-150-08, Smith2A 0-05, Rivers 4-80-08,Johnson2-20-05. Totals43-8814-22108. GOLDEN STATEI112) Barnes5-8 5-5 17,Green3-113-410, Ezeli6-8 0112, Curry8178931, KThompson7-182216, Livingston 2-50-04, Iguodala2-72-46, Speights2-t 3-47, Barbosa4-41-29, McAdoo 0-00-00. Totals 39-85 24-31112. LA. Clippers 25 3 1 27 25 — 108 Golden state 31 3 2 19 30 — 112

Leaders

ThroughWednesday Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Curry,GO L 5 58 3 5 179 35.8 Durant,OKC 5 48 36 146 29.2 Raptors103, Thunder 98 W estbrook, OKC 5 5 4 2 4 143 28.6 Griffin, LAC 5 56 29 141 28.2 TORONTO (103) Lillard,POR 5 51 19 137 27.4 Carroll 4-125-513,Scola1-60-02, Valanciunas Beal,WAS 4 38 12 101 25.3 6-9 5-517,Lowry5-144-617, DeRozait 7-1814-15 Harden,HOU 5 30 50 119 23.8 28,Biyombo2-43-67,Patterson3-50-07,Ross Thomas,60S 4 30 27 94 23.5 1-4 0-0 3,Joseph4-71-2 9. Totals 33-79 32-39 M ccollum, poR 5 4 4 u 03 22.6 103. James,CLE 5 47 1 5 111 2z2 OKLAHOM ACITY(98) D eROZai t,TOR 5 3 2 4 5 111 2z2 Duraitt 101856 27, Ibaka 47 2210, Adams Anthony,NYK 5 35 3t 109 21.8 5-7 0-0 10, Westbrook8-21 3-4 22, Roberson Leonard,SAN 5 45 14 108 21.6 1-3 2-2 5, Kaitter 7-11 0-0 15,Waiters 3-8 0-0 Wade,MIA 4 29 24 86 21.5 7, Collison I-4 0-0 2, Singler0-0 0-0 0, Aitgus- A ittetokoi/nmpo, MIL 4 32 1 7 85 21.3 tiit 0-0 0-0 0, Morrow0-3 0-0 0. Totals 39-82 Butler,CHI 5 34 2 8 104 20.8 12-14 98. Davis,NOR 4 25 2 9 83 20.8 Toronto 13 27 33 30 — 103 Wall, WAS 4 27 23 83 20.8 Oklahoma Cit y 2 3 1 6 42 17 — 98 Bledsoe,PHX 5 36 26 103 20.6 Foi/ritier, ORL

5 40 12 103 20.6


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

Bend High junior Tnyla Wheeler traps the ball over North Eugene

Prep footballthisweekend

sophomore Kara Ryker during Bend's 5-2 playoff

win over North Eugene

on Wednesday. Jarod Opperman / The Bulletin

Bears Continued from C1 Wheeler gave Bend an early lead when she took control of

a ball played forward and beat the North Eugene keeper. "I think it started with our

defense — our defense keeps us together and can distribute balls to our midfield and

play through with them," said midfielder Amidee Colleknon. "This whole season we' ve been

struggling to start really hard, so it was really nice to just come out and score a few. It motivates the whole team — it motivates

our goalie, it motivates our defense."

Midway through the first

Summit Continued from C1 What Gorman did not see

was a goal that proved to be the game winner, helping top-seeded Summit sneak past No. 16 Putnam 2-0 in the first

round of the 5A girls soccer state playoffs and setting the

Storm up for a home quarterfinal match against No. 8 Hood

River Valley on Saturday. "It was getting down to the last 15 minutes," Gorman said of her goal. "It was just like, 'Score or you can't move on.' We needed to score. I was just like, 'I' ll go through anything to score for my team.'" Frustration mounted for Summit (14-0-1 overall) from the match's onset. An eighth-minute score by Megan Cornett was wiped away by an offside call, and the 10-player defense of Putnam (3-8-5) prevented the Storm from getting quality looks at the net. A scoreless draw was taken into the half and continued

for 30 minutes after the intermission. Eight Summit shots

were saved by Putnam keeper Maleah Maier and another five

were just off line, such as Maggie McElrath's explosive shot that pounded off the crossbar. "Even on the bench, it was

just shot after shot to the goalkeeper or over the goal or something like that," Gorman

half, the Lava Bears scored together on the field it's a speagain when Wheeler sent a cialmoment. When you have cross in front of the goal that players who haven't played tobounced off teammate Sienna gether for a long period of time, Wall and a Highlanders' de- you get those 'Aha!' moments, fender and into the net. and that's one of the greatest No. 14 North Eugene (8-5-2) things of coaching." responded with a goal from JorWormdahl scored the second dan Wormdahl,who chipped Highlanders' goal early in the a shot over Bend goalkeeper second half, and Nelson left the Kaylie Nelson. Toward the end game after taking a kick just of the first half, the Bend de- below the kneecap during the fense played a ball forward to play. She was replaced by CassiWall at midfield, and Wall out- dy Flammang for the rest of the ran a defender and scored her game, although Groshong said second goal of the game. she expects Nelson to be ready "It was a lot of th e stuff for Bend's quarterfinal match we' ve been working on these on Saturday, when the Lava past weeks," Groshong said of Bears will host No. 6 Sandy. Bend's first-half goals. "When — Reporter: 541-383-0305, you start to see that stuff come vj acobsen@bendbulletin.corn

Lava Bearsroll Panthers inboys water polo Jason Soto scored four goals to lead BendHigh to a 13-2 Central Valley League boys water polo victory over Redmond in amakeup match Tuesday atJuniper Swim 8 Fitness Center. Among other scorers for the playoff-bound Lava Bears were IsaacDutcher, Cole Moore andJackson McMuldren with a goal apiece. AugieTobish and Shane Bidwell scored goals for the visiting Panthers.

ed a loose ball just outside the penalty area and uncorked a shot to provide the three-time

defending state champion Storm with a 1-0 advantage. Three minutes later, Sofia El-

lington padded Summit's lead

Outlaws

m atched opponent. "You can't

ing as an assistant at Linfield alongside Thorson for two

Fendall, who was a defensive backs coach for three years at Cal Poly after servseasons. Also on the current

Sisters staff is offensive line

beat. We just have to keep going out and find a way to win."

coach Clyde Powell, the Out-

laws' former head coach (after a long and successful run as head coach at Mountain

View High in Bend) who was previously an assistant at ... Linfield College. A n N CA A

D i v i sion I I I

school located in McMinnville, Linfield has boasted a

winning record for a national-record60 straight seasons and has won four national

championships (three as an NAIA Division II member). The number is spectacular, but the way th e W i l dcats have done it is not. It has

been a simple approach by Linfield coaches over the years and an approach Thor-

They had to create that and learn to adapt that into their

facility, their time schedules, their kids, all that. Hopefully what Gary and I are trying to do, long term, is try to develop a Sisters culture that can be successful year in and year out." The Outlaws still try to practice similar to how Thor-

son and his assistants conducted drills or watched film with at Linfield. The systems

Sisters run are much like LinThat blueprint has become field's, though Thorson deknown around McMinnville scribes this high school veras the Linfield Way. The fo- sion as "very watered down." cus is on what Gurney calls He explains that the Outlaws' CWE: character and work lone goal, like the Wildcats', ethic. Those are the two pil- is simply to improve during lars Thorson installed when each practice. Do that, Thorhe first took over at Sisters. son says, and "good things Those are what have built happen for a program." the Outlaws into a 4A title S till, regardless of t h e contender. coaching philosophy, players " Linfield, t h ei r re c o r d need to execute on the field. speaks for itself — the con- And the Outlaws have done sistency of how many years that this season. Credit their they' ve had that winning experience, their tenacity, streak," T h orson s a y s. their will to never settle. But "They' re a good model to try Gurney,the Sky-Em defento follow. I can't think of a sive player of the year as a jubetter place that I could have nior this season, redirects the went to and learn the game praise elsewhere — just like and become a better person his teammates. "They (the coaches) give than what I had with (legendary former Linfield coach) our guys more confidence," Ad Rutschman there and he says. "I feel like we' ve got with the other coaches I got more information now about to play and work under." what to do, and we just get Not brick by brick, Fendall so many reps in at practice emphasizes. That is where that we feel really confident coaches make mistakes. in games. We' re able to just with these kids."

this season, Thorson hired a

against you. You' re the team to

— Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.corn

"Ultimately, it boils down

to what we were taught as Sisters coaching staff blend- players and working there ing program familiarity with at Linfield," says Thorson, the "Linfield Way." who played for L i n field Before the 2014 season, from 1986 to1989. "We can Gary Thor son took over never be them, but we' re head coaching duties at Sis- trying to model after that tersafter serving as an as- program, that blueprint and sistant coach for six years what they' ve done to be sucover three stints at Linfield cessful. That's kind of how College. The Outlaws went we were taught and raised. 5-5 that year and advanced We' re just doing what we to the state playoffs for the can with that knowledge defensive coordinator, Neil

The Storm di d j ust t h at

arts school with hardly any facilities back in the day, to seed in the Class 4A state make it great. They didn' t playoffs. copy that from somebody. League title and the No. 2

praise should be directed — a

ing her. "The playoffs are like that," Parks said of the gritty Storm win against a clearly overoverlook anybody. Everyone' s going to play their best game

overall record, a Sky-Em

Continued from C1 Yet any Outlaw player will tell you where most of the

first time since 2007. Prior to

Wednesday, recording their ninth straight shutout and picking up their third straight playoff win over Putnam in as GOT to get one in.' It was pret- many years while improving to 47-0-4 against 5A compety frustrating." Summit coach Kourtney tition over the past three seaParks agreed but added that sons. Now Summit prepares the Storm adjusted to Put- for Saturday and a date with nam's crowding defense by No. 8 Hood River Valley, which moving the ball around the played to a scoreless draw with field at a faster pace, playing No. 9 Ashland but defeated the it wide, anything to force the Grizzlies 4-3 in penalty kicks Kingsmen from Milwaukie to W ednesday, as t h e S t o rm spread out their backfield. stride toward what would be "We tried to stay positive the their fifth state championship whole time, just do our thing: in six years. "No matter the boundary," keep pushing and keep pushing," Parks said. "You' ve got to Gorman said, "we can push have one go in with a bunch of through it if we believe that we can." shots." That proved true in the 70th

— Bulletin staff report

with a goal — also with three Putnam defenders surround-

— Bulletin staff report

said. "It was just like, 'We' ve minute, when Gorman collect-

FRIDAY Class SA first round, No.12 Bend(6-3) at No. 5 Ashland (7-2), 7 p.m.: A 27-6 Civil War victory at Mountain View last Friday locked up aplayoff spot for the Lava Bears, who nowface anAshland squad that has already defeated two Central Oregon teamsthis season (Summit and Ridgeview). RB Cole Rixe, who hasrushedfor 1,426 yards and 14TDs this season, leads Bendinto Ashland, which romped to a 55-16win at Eagle Point last week. In that contest, QBsTucker Atteberry and KyleWeinberg combined for 256 passing yards andfive TDs. Class SA first round, No. 14Lebanon(6-3) at No. 3 Redmond(7-2), 7 p.m.: In the playoffs for the first time since 2012, whenthey advanced asfar as the semifinals, the Panthers look to ride the momentum built from last Friday's 48-0 homeshutout against Ridgeview. Paced by RBDerek Brown, who has piledup2,166rushingyardsand 20TDsthisseason,Redmond takeson Lebanon,which also makes its first playoff appearance since 2012.TheWarriors won 26-21 at home against Crescent Valley last weekbehind a combined 246 rushing andpassing yards by QBTy Hargis. Class SA first round, No. 11SouthAlbany (6-3) at No. 6 Summit (6-1), 7 p.m.: The Storm, who won 50-7 at North Salem last Friday, havealready wonthe program's first IMC title, won eight games in a single season for the first time, andearnedthe first home playoff game in the school's 15-year history. Now, Summit is aiming for the school's first football playoff win. QBJohn Bledsoe, who has passed for 1,876 yards and 22TDsagainst just two interceptions, leads the Storm into a matchup against South Albany, which won35-34 at Corvallis last week as QBCadePerrizo passed for 266 yards and threeTDs. Class 4Afirst round, No. 12 Crook County (6-3) at No. 5 Mazuma(7-1), 7 p.m.: With a 49-23 home win against Henley last Friday, theCowboysadvanced to the state playoff for the second straight year — 27 years after they last madetwo straight playoff appearances. After rushing for three TDslast week, RBCole Ovensguides Crook County into Klamath Falls to take onMazama, which last played Oct. 23 in a 25-0 win at Phoenix. In that game,RBsCurtis Anderson and NoahMcGrew combined for 322 rushing yards for the Vikings. Class 4Afirst round, No. 15North Marion (4-5) at No. 2Sisters (7-0), 7 p.m.: QB Tyler Head needed just six completions to pile up179 passing yards and aTDin the Outlaws' 21-16 homewin against Elmira onOct. 23, helping Sisters secure theSky-Em Leaguetitle for the first time since 2007 — when the Outlawsadvanced to the 4Astate championship game. Sisters looks to follow a similar path beginning with North Marion, which won 35-20 at Phoenix last Friday thanks in part to RBAmmon Suchanski's 107 rushing yards andtwo TDs.

"You have to re-format the

son, Fendall, Powell and the

principles that you learned

rest of the Sisters coaching staff have followed for the

there into

fly around and trust what they' ve taught us, our tenden-

y ou r s i t uation, cies that we' ve learned to get which is kind of the beauty of to the footbalL" past two years. That includes Linfield," Fendall says. "They — Reporter: 541-383-0307, this season — a flawless 7-0 found a way, a small liberal glucasibendbulletin.corn

PREP SCOREBOARD Volleyball Class 6A state playoffs At Liberty High School, Hillsboro Friday's games Quarlerlinals No.tJesuitvs.No.9Roseburg,Ba.m. No.5Clackamasvs.No.4Sunset,8a.m. No.3sheldonvs.No.6Lakeridge,toa.m. No. 7WestSalemvs. No.2Central Catholic, 10am. Semitinals No. 1Jesttit/No. 9Roseburg winnervs. No.5 Clackamas/No. 4Sunsetwinner,6:30p.m. No.3Sheldon/No.6Lakeridgewinnervs.No.7West Salem/No. 2 Central Catholic winner,6:30p.m. Saturday'sgames Consolation semitinals No. I Jesuit/No. 9Roseburg loser vs.No.5 ClackamaslNo.4 Sunset loser,8 a.m. No.3Sheldon/No.6Lakeridgeloservs.No.7west Salem/No.2 Central Catholic loser,8a.m. Fourth-placematch Saturday,Nov.7,noon Third-placematch Saturday,Nov.7,noon championshipsnal Saturday,Nov.7,8:30p.m.

class 5A State playoffs At Liberty High School, Hillsboro Friday's games Quarterfinals

No. 1Maristvs.No.9Bend,1:15 pm.

No. 5 La Sale vs. No.13 Churchil,1:15 p.m. No.3summivs. t No.11silverton,3:15p.m. No. 7Ashlandvs. No.2Lebanon, 3n5p.m. Semifittals No. 1MaristlNo.9Bendwinnervs. No.5LaSalle/No. 13 Churchilwinner,8;30p.m. No. 3Sttmmit/No. u Silvertott winnervs. No.7 Ashlattd/No. 2Lebanonwinner,8:30 p.m. Saturday'sgames Consolation semitinals No. 1Marist/No. 9Bendloser vs. No.5 LaSalle/No. 13 Churchill loser,10a.m. No. 3 Summ it/No. 11Silverton loser vs.No.7 AshlandN /o.2Lebanonloser,10a.m. Fourth-placematch Saturday,Nov.7,2n5p.m. Third-placematch Saturday,Nov.7,2:15p.m. Championshipfinal Saturday,Nov.7,6 p.m. Class 4A State playoffs At ForestGroveHigh School Friday's games Gita rterfinals No.1Bartksvs.No.9HidtjertValley,Ba.m.

No. 5valleycatholic vs.No.4 crookcounty,8 a.m. No. 3Marshfieldvs.No.11Sttherliit, 10 a.m.

No. 10Tilamookvs. No.2Sisters,10 a.m. Semifinals No.1 Bartks/No.9 HiddenValley winnervs. No.5 Valley CatholIc/No. 4CrookCountywinner, 6:30p.m. No. 3 Marshfield/No. u Stttherlirt winnervs. No.10 Tillamook/No. 2 Sisters winner,6:30 p.m. Saturday'sgames Consolation semifinals No. 1Banks/No. 9HiddenValley loservs. No.5Valley catholic/No. 4crookcounty loser,8 a.m. No. 3 Marshfield/No.11Sutherlin loservs. No.10 Tillamook/No. 2 Sisters loser,8 a.m. Fourth-placematch Saturday,Nov.7, noon Third-placematch Saturday,Nov.7, noon Championshipfinal Saturday,Nov.7, 8:30p.m. Class 3A State playoffs At ForestGroveHighSchool Friday's games Quarlerliaals No. 1Creswell vs.No.9Sheridan, 1:15p.m. No. 5coqttillevs.No.4 Rainier, 1:15p.m. No. 3SarttiamChristian vs. No.6Glide, 3:15 p.m. No.7CascadeChristianvs.No.2vale,3n5p.m. semifinals No. 1 Cresw el/Nor 9 Sheridan winnervs. No.5 Coquille/No.4 Rainier winner,8:30 p.m. No. 3santiamchristian/No. 6 Glidewinnervs. No. 7 CascadeChristian/No. 2 vale winner, 8:30 p.m. Saturday'sgames Consolation semtsittals No. 1 Cresw el/No. 9 Sheridan loservs. No.5 Coquille/No.4 Rainier loser, 10a.m. No. 3 santiamchristian/No. 6 Glideloser vs.No.7 Cascade Christian/No. 2valeloser, 10a.m. Fourth-placematch Saturday,Nov.7,2:15 p.m. Third-place match Saturday,Nov.7,2:15 p.m. Championshipfinal Saturday,Nov.7, 6p.m. Class 2A State playoffs At RidgeviewHighSchool, Redmond Friday's games Quarlerlinals No. 1Burnsvs. No.9Imbler, 8a.m. No.5Keni iedyvs.No.4stpaul,8a.m. No.3GrantUnionvs.No.6Bonanza,10am. No. 10Weston-McEwenvs. No.2 Ctlver, 10a.m. semistttals No. 1 Bttrrts/No. 9Imblerwinnervs. No.5 Kennedy/ No.4Stpaulwinner,6:30p.m.

No.3GrantunionlNo.6Bonanzawinnervs.No.10 Weston-McE weii/No. 2 Culver winner,6:30 p.m.

Saturday'sGames Consolation semifinals No. 1Bur/is/No.9Imbler loservs. No.5Keniedy/No. 4st. paulloser,8a.m. No. 3 Grantunion/No.6 Bonanza loser vs. No.10 Weston-McE wen/No.2 Culver loser,8a.m. Fourth-placematch Saturday,Nov.7,noon Third-place match Saturday,Nov.7,noon Championship final Saturday,Nov.7,8:30p.m. Class 1A State playotfs At RidgeviewHigh School, Redmond Friday's games Guarlerlinals No. 1Country Christian vs.No.9perrydale, 1n5pm. No. 5powderValley vsr No.4Trinity Lutheran,in 5pm. No. 3HosannaChristian vs.No.6Crane, 3:15p.m. No. 7lonevs. No.2 North Douglas, 3:15 p.m. Semifinals No. t CountryChristian/No. 9perrydalewinnervs. No. 5powderValley/No. 4 Trinity Lutheranwinner, 8:30 p.m. No. 3Hosanna Christian/No. 6Cranewinner vs. No.7 lonelNo. 2North Douglaswinner,8:30p.m. Saturday'sgames Consolation semifinals No. 1 CountryChristian/No. 9 perrydaleloser vs. No. 5 powdervalley/No.4 Trinity Lutheranloser, 10 a.m. No. 3HosannaChristiatt/No. 6Craneloservs.No.7lone/ No.2Nort hDouglasloser,10a.m. Fottrlh-place match Saturday, Nov.7,2:15p.m. Third-placematch Saturday, Nov.7,2:15p.m. Championship final Saturday,Nov.7,6p.m.

Boys soccer Class 6A State playotfs ouatterfinals Saturday'sGames No. 25Roosevelt at No.1McMinnvile, 5 p.m. No. 28Barlowat No.4 Lincoln, 3p.m. No.14westSalemat No. u Jesuit,11 a.m. No. 23clackamasat No.15central catholic, 5p.m. Class 5A State playotfs Ottatterfinals Saturday'sGames No. 8Springfieldat No.t Wilsortville, 6p.m.

No.5WoodburnatNo.4Hermiston,2:30p.m. No.11Summit atNo.3 Hilsboro,1 p.m. No.7BendatNo.2HoodRiverValley,5p.m.

Class 4A state playotfs Quarteriinals Saturday'sgames No. 9Junctioncity atNo.1stayton, 2p.m. No.5NorthBendatNo.4Henley,2p.m. No. 6 La Grandeat No.3North Marion,3 p.m. No. 7Molallaat No.2Sisters, 1p.m.

Class3lvzA/IA

State playotfs Quarteriinals Saturday'sgames No. 8Delphianat No.1catlin Gabel, TBD No. 5Riverdaleat No.4 PortlandAdventist, 6 p.m. No. 6Riversideat No.3 St.Mary's,5 p.m. No. 7Creswell atNo.2OregonEpiscopal, TBD

Girls soccer Class 6A state playons Secondround

Wedttesday's results No. 1Jesuit 4, No.16Lincoln0 No. 8Lakeridge2, No.24Forest Grove1(OT) No. 21Tigard3, No.5sheldon1 No. 4Sherwood3, No.13Cleveland0 No. 3Sunset2, No.14 SouthMedford1 No.6WestLinn1,No.22 Glencoe0 No. 10LakeOswego 1, No.26Westj/iew0 No. 2Tualatin2, No.18southridge1 Qsarteriinals

Saturday'sgames

No. 8Lakeridgeat No.1Jesuit No. 21Tigardat No.4Sherwood No. 6WestLinnatNo.3Sunset No. 10LakeOswego at No.2Tualatirt

class 5A state playoffs First round Wednesday'sresults No. 1summit2, No.16putnam0

No. 8HoodRiverValley 1, No.9Ashland 0(PK4-3) No.12 Hillsjtoro 4,No.5Corvallis 3 No. 4Marist3, No.13Crescent Valley 2 No. 3Bend5, No.14 North Eugene2

No. 6sandy1,No.u churchil 0 No. 7 La salle 3, No.10silverton 0 No. 2Wilsonville 6,No.15Dalas 0 Qttarteriinals Saturday'sgames No. 8HoodRiverValley atNo.1Summit No.12HilsboroatNo.4 Marist No. 6Sandyat No.3Bend No. 7 La Salle at No.2Wilsonvile

Class 4A State playoffs First round Wednesday'sresults No. 1Molala3, No.16Banks1 No. 9Gladstone2, No.8CottageGrove0. No. 12Brookings-Harbor3,No.5 Cascade1 No. 4NorthBend4, No.13 HiddenValley 0 No. 14Henley4, No.3LaGrande0 No.11valleycatholic 6,No.6Northvalley1 No. 7Corbett 1,No.10Philomath 0

No.2scappoose5,No.15KlamathUnion0 Qttarlerfinals Saturday'sgames No. 9Gladstoneat No.1Molala No. 12Brookings-HarboratNo.4North Bend No. t4 Henleaty No.0 valleycatholic No. 7corbettat No.2scappoose

Class 3luzlVIA state playoffs First round Wednesday'sresults No. 9PleasantHil 2,No.8PortlandAdventist t No. 5 StMarys5, No.12Riverside0 No. 6Creswell 3, No.11WesternMennonite 0 No. 10CascadeChristian1, No.7Dayton 0 Qttarlerfinals

Saturday'sgames

No. 9PleasantHil atNo.1 OregonEpiscopal No. 5 StMarysat No.4BlanchetCatholic

No. 6creswell at No.3westsidechristian No. 10cascadechristian atNo.2 catlin Gabel

Football Class 6A State playotfs Fit3t round Friday's games No. 32Jeffersonat No.1Jesuit, 7 p.m. No.17LakeOswegoatNo.16Westview,7p.m. No. 24WilametteatNo.9Beaverton, 7p.m. No. 25Wilsonat No.BTttalatin, 7 p.m. No. 28McNaryat No.5Central Catholic, 7 p.m. No. 21southMedford atNo. 12clackamas, 7p.m. No. 20sunsetat No.13sprague,7p.m. No.9BarlowatNo.4Sheldon,7p.m. No. 30Roosevelt at No.3West Linn, 7p.m. No.19FranklinatNo.14WestSalem,7p.m. No. 22Southridgeat No.u at OregonCity, 7p.m. No. 27NorthMedford at No.6South Salem,7p.m. No.26NewbergatNo.7Lincoln,7p.m No. 23ForestGroveatNo.10 GrantsPass, 7p.m. No. 18Tigartj at No.15Centennial, 7 pm. No. 31NorthSalemat No.2Sherwood, 7p.m.

class sA

State playoffs First round Friday's games No. 16HoodRiver Valey at No.1 Liberty,7p m.

No. 9Wilsonville at No.8Hermiston,7 p.m. No. 12BendatNo.5Ashland, 7p.m. No. 13st. HelensatNo.4 sprmgfield, 7p.m. No. 14Lebanonat No.3Redmond, 1p.m. No. 11SouthAlbanyatNo.6 Summit, 7p.m. No. 10Hilsboro atNo.7 Central, 7p.m. No. 15Silvertonat No.2 Crater, 1 p.m. Class 4A State playoffs First round Friday's games No. 16Jttrtction city atNo.1philomath,7 pm. No. 9Cascadeat No.8LaGrande,7p.m. No. 12crookcountyatNo.5Mazama,7p.m. No.14GladstoneatNo.3scappoose,7p.m. No. u MarshfieldatNo.6 Molalla, 7p.m. No. 10Astoriaat No.7 North Bend,6p.m. No. 15NorthMarion atNo.2 Sisters, 7 p.m. Saturday'sgame No.13 Baker atNo.4 Banks, t p.m. Class 3A State playoffs Firstround Friday's games No.16NyssaatNo. I soo,7p.m. No. 9SalemAcademyat No.8 Ramer,7p.m. No. 12Coltonat No.5CascadeChristian, 7p.m. No.13LakeviewatNo.4Vale,5;30p.m. No. 11Taftat No.6 Coquile, 7 p.m. No. 10Daytonat No.7 Harrisburg, 7p.m. No.15PleasantHil atNo.2SantiamChristian, 7p.m. Saturday'sgame No. 14clatskanieat No.3Blanchetcatholic, 7 p.m. Class 2A State playoffs Firstround Fridatt's games No. 16NestuccaatNo.t Central Linn,7p.m. No. 9StanfieldatNo.8Vernonia, 7p.m. No. 14MyrtlePoint atNo.3Regis, 7p.m. Saturday'sgame No.12Toledoat No.5 Burns,1 p.m. No.13 Irrigonat No.4Kennedy,t p.m. No.111mbleratNo.6Lost River, t p.m. No.10Weston-McEwenatNo.7Reedsport,2p.m. No. 15MonroeatNo.2Heppner,3 p.m.

class 1A State playofts First round Friday's games No.12LowellatNo.5 HosannaChristian, 7p.m. No. 15CamasValley at No.2Yortcalla, 7 p.m.

Saturday's games No.16TriangleLakIat No.1Adrian, 1 p.m. No. 9Shermanat No.8Powers 1p.m. No. 13NorthDouglasat No.4Crane,1 pm. No.14Triadat No.3Wallowa,1 p.m. No. 11PineEeagle at No.6 Perrydale, noon No. 10DaysCreekat No.7Dttfur, 1pm.


C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

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DOW 17,867.58 -50.57

M

S&P 500 2,102 . 31 -7.48 M

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.corn/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

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Today Thursday, November 5, 2015

2 080

Weight Watchers International made a big splash last month when the company signed a five-year deal with Oprah Winfre) The former talk show host, whc has publicly struggled with her weight for decades, bought a 10 percent stake in the weight loss program operator and agreed to help promote the Weight Watchers brand. Investors will be listen ing for more details on Weight Watchers' strategy today, when the company reports its third-qua ter results.

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Vol. (in mil.) 3,980 2,038 Pvs. Volume 4,154 1,974 Advanced 1249 1355 Declined 1859 1392 New Highs 100 77 New Lows 29 44

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HIGH LOW CLOSE 17964.12 17828.83 17867.58 DOW Trans. 821 3.29 8132.73 8153.29 DOW Util. 584.68 580.65 583.45 NYSE Comp. 10638.69 10536.48 10563.97 NASDAQ 5162.57 5122.78 5142.48 S&P 500 2114.59 2096.98 2102.31 S&P 400 1470.55 1460.72 1464.49 Wilshire 5000 2201 6.76 21821.74 21885.96 Russell 2000 1196.13 1185.39 1190.38

DOW

CHG. -50.57 -53.42 +2.13 -45.95 -2.65 -7.48 -2.71 -75.30 -1.19

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%CHG. WK MO O TR Y T D -0. 28% L L +0.25% -0.65% L L T -1 0.79% $.0.37% L L -5. 60% -0.43% L L T -2.54% -0.05% L L L +8 . 58% -0.35% L L L +2 .11% -0.18% L L T +0 .83% -0.34% L L T +1 .00% -0.10% L L T -1.19%

: "'""Etsysinks on weak outlook

Etsy shares sank Wednesday after the crafty e-commerce site reported disappointing results for its third quarter and issued a weak outlook. The company said late Tuesday that its revenue increased 38 percent to $65.7 million, falling short of the $66.4 million that analysts expected, according to FactSet. The company also lost 6 cents per share last quarter, more than expected.

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1007279 775691 727755 442636 433936 403203 366734 354502 338364 328696

Gainers NAME

LAST MagHR pfD 3.30 EKodak wt 4.00 GeneticT rs 2.91 EngyFocus 20.00 Tantech n 4.90 MaxLinear 16.79 MagHR pfC 4.30 BioScrip 2.68 Five9 5.54 Veracyte 7.15

CHG +1.63 +1.25 +.80 +5.40 +1.17 +3.66 +.91 +.56 +.95 +1.14

%CHG + 97.6 + 4 5.5 + 3 7.9 + 3 7.0 + 3 1.4 + 27.9 + 2 6.8 + 2 6.4 + 2 0.7 + 19.0

Losers NAME

Enphase PyxisTkr n FaroTech FndtnMed

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L AST C H G %CHG -1.39 -37.4 2.33 2.73 -1.32 -32.6 -10.91 -31.0 24.34 17.31 -6.62 -27.7 -3.49 -26.6 9.61

Foreign Markets NAME

Price-earnings ratio:Lost money $35.74 (Based on past 12-month results)

$9.79 2Q '14

LAST Paris 4,948.29 London 6,41 2.88 Frankfurt 10,845.24 Hong Kong23,053.57 Mexico 45,373.17 Milan 22,312.63 Tokyo 18,926.91 Stockholm 1,529.43 Sydney 5,294.82 Zurich 8,951.76

Etsy said the number of active buyers and sellers increased for the quarter, and it expects a strong holiday season ahead. But it warned that the strong dollar, increased spending on marketing and other factors will weigh on its performance in the current quarter. The company, founded in 2005, went public in April amid much fanfare, but shares have declined fairly steadily since then.

Wednesday's close: $9.97

Price change

1-m o

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-30.4%

-57.1

*IPOdate was April 16, 2015

Source: FactSet

AP

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KORS Close:$42.57L3.25 or 8.3% The clothing and apparel company reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for its fiscal second quarter. $50 45

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CBS Range Resources RRC Close:$47.95T-0.29 or -0.6% Close:$34.08 %3.09 or 10.0% The media company reported betThe oil and gas producer agreed to ter-than-expected third-quarter prof- sell some properties for $876 milit, though revenue fell short of Wall lion, which it will use to reduce debt. Street forecasts. $60 $40

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TSLA Cerner CERN Close:$231.63 L23.28 or 11.2% Close:$61.63 T-4.46 or -6.7% The electric car maker reported a The company reported weaker wider third-quarter loss on higher earnings than analysts expected, costs, but it gave an upbeat outlook and its forecast for upcoming revefor production targets. nue also disappointed. $300 $70

Tesla Motors

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PE: . . . Vol.:9.1m (3.6x avg.) P Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$21.27 b

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GRPN Zillow Group Z Close:$2.97 T-t.06 or -26.3% Close:$27.65 T-1.85 or -6.3% The online daily deal service report- The real estate website operator reed mixed third-quarter financial reported a wider third-quarter loss as sults, provided a weak fiscal outlook it integrates Trulia and cut its reveand named a new CEO. nue outlook. $5 $35 4

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SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

IU HS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.23 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO GTR AGO

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

. 0 4 .0 5 -0.01 L . 2 7 .26 + 0 .01 L L

52-wk T-bill

.37

.35

+0 . 0 2 L

2-year T-note . 8 2 .77 + 0 .05 L 5-year T-note 1.64 1.59 +0.05 L 10-year T-note 2.23 2.21 +0.02 L 30-year T-bond 2.99 2.99 L

BONDS

'h5Q QS

FUELS

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

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

L

T L L

.01 .06 .09

L L .52 L T 1.63 L T 2.33 L L 3.05

NET 1YR TEST PVS CHG WK MOOTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.81 2.81 . . . L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.35 4.35 . . . L Barclays USAggregate 2.44 2.41 +0.03 L PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 7.32 7.37 -0.05 T RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.06 4.01 +0.05 L TEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.57 1.53 +0.04 L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.48 3.46 +0.02 L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

FAMILY

Fund Footnotes: tr - Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or redemption fee.Source: Moruinastar.

$63.95

Vol.:22.4m (3.4x avg.)

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AMCAPA m 28.85 -.86 +3.5 +5.3 +17.7+13.8 0 8 8 AmBalA m 25.11 -.86 +3.1 +5.1 +11.5+10.4 A A A The price of CaplncBuA m 58.18 -.14 +0.2 +0.2 +7.6 +6.9 8 A A crude oil fell to CpWldGrlA m 46.13 -.85 +1.7 +0.7 +11.0 +7.4 0 C C its biggest EurPacGrA m 48.58 -.14 +3.1 +1.4 +8.2 +4.2 C 8 C percentage FnlnvA m 53.83 -.19 +5.5 +8.0 +15.7+12.3 A C C drop in more American FundsEuroPacnc Growth (AEPGX) GrthAmA m 45.76 -.85 +7.2 +8.9 +17.4+13.0 C C C IncAmerA m 21.17 -.84 +0.4 +1.3 +9.3 +8.8 0 8 8 than three VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH InvCoAmA m 37.13 -.13 +2.1 +2.9 +15.4+11.9 0 C C weeks. In NewPerspA m39.89 -.87 +7.7 +9.2 +13.7 +9.8 A A A metals trading, WAMutlnvA m41.13 -.18 +1.8 +4.0 +14.7+13.0 8 8 A gold, silver and Dodge &Cox Income 13.5 2 ... + 0 . 2 + 0 .5 + 2.2 +3.6 0 A 8 copper fell. IntlStk 4 0.88 - . 2 8 -4.8 - 6.7 +8.8 +3.9 E A 8 Stock 176.8 0 -1.44 -0.4 +2 .7 +16.7+13.4 C A A Fidelity Contra 105. 3 6 +.82+8.6 +10.8 +17.6+13.6 8 C 8 ContraK 105 . 36 +.82+8.7 +10.9 +17.7+13.7 8 8 8 LowPriStk d 49.64 -.24 + 2.5 + 4 .9 +15.4+12.8 8 8 8 Fidelity Spartan 5 0 0 ldxAdvtg 74.21 -.24 +3.9 + 6.7 +16.5+13.8 8 8 A $$ FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m 2. 24 . .. -2.1 - 3.3 +5.9 +6.6 E 8 A FrankTemp-TempletonGIBondAdv 11 .86 +.83 -1.8 - 3.6 +1.6 +3.0 8 A A Co Oakmark Intl I 23.66 +.84 +1.4 + 3 .3 +11.1 +7.0 A A A MorningstarOwnershipZone™ Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 88 -.88+1.1 +5.3 +13.2+11.2 C 0 0 RisDivB m 17 . 73 -.87+0.4 +4.5 +12.3+10.2 C E E OsFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 17 . 60 -.87+0.4 +4.5 +12.4+10.3 C E E average of stock holdings Foreign SmMidValA m47.12 -.88 -3.0 + 1.4 +15.2 +9.5 0 C E • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings Exchange -3.6 SmMidValB m39.51 -.87 + 0.7 +14.3 +8.6 0 0 E T Rowe Price GrowStk 58.6 4 + .83+12.9 +14.3 +20.5+15.5 A A A News that the CATEGORY:FOREIGN LARGE GROWTH HealthSci 75.8 2 - . 31+11.5 +16.7 +32.0+28.0 A A A Federal Newlncome 9. 4 4 - .81+0.6 + 1 .1 + 1.4 +2.8 C C C Reserve will BIORNINGSTAR RATINBm **<<< Vanguard 500Adml 194.26 62 +3.9 +6.7 +16.5+13.8 8 8 A consider raising 500lnv 194.24 63 +3.8 +6.6 +16.4+13.7 8 8 A a key interest ASSETS$29,088 million CapOp 54.54 10 +3.4 +7.1 +22.8+15.3 0 A A rate at a EXPRATIO .83% DivGr 23.51 10 +4.4 +7.2 +15.7+13.7 A C A meeting next Bilif.INIT.INVES T. $250 Eqlnc 31.46 87 +2.9 +5.1 +14.5+14.1 A 8 A PERCEN TLOAD 5.75 month helped IntlStkldxAdm 25.44 10 -0.3 -2.8 +5.2 NA 0 0 HISTORICALRETURNS StratgcEq 33.81 12 +2.6 +6.0 +1 9.8 +1 5.8 A A A send the dollar TgtRe2020 28.84 86 +1.3 +2.5 +8.6 +7.6 A A A higher against Return/Rank TgtRe2025 16.76 85 +1.4 +2.6 +9.5 +8.1 A A A the yen and YEAR-TO-DATE +3.1 TotBdAdml 10.72 81 +0.7 +1.5 +1.4 +2.7 8 C 0 euro, among 1-YEAR +1.4/C Totlntl 15.21 86 -0.4 -2.9 +5.2 +1.9 0 0 E other maior 3-YEAR +8.2/8 TotStlAdm 52.51 15 +3.2 +6.1 +16.4+13.7 8 8 A 5-YEAR +4.2/C TotStldx 52.49 15 +3.1 +6.0 +16.3+13.5 8 8 8 3and5-yearretsics aresnnuaiized. USGro 32.76 85 +9.5 +12.9 +19.9+15.4 A A A

CHG %CHG +12.11 + . 25 +29.27 + . 46 -1 05.91 -.97 +485.14 +2.15 +18.58 + . 04 -1 46.82 -.65 +243.67 +1.30 +21.98 +1.46 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in +3.64 + . 07 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in +16.26 + . 18 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent.

Lumber Liquidators Close: $15.65 L1.43 or 10.1% The flooring retailer named a new CEO as it continues to struggle with sales following a controversy over Chinese materials. $20

CBS

DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.

$165.68

100

Stock indexes fell Wednesday, snapping a two-day rally. Sharp drops for energy stocks helped to drag down the Standard & Poor's 500 index as the price of oil dropped, reversing a recent gain. Energy was one of eight sectors in the S&P 500 index to decline. Only utilities and technology stocks notched gains. Investors monitored the latest crop of company earnings through the day and kept a close eye on the Federal Reserve. Fed Chair Janet Yellen told Congress that the nation's central bank could still raise its key interest rate from a record low in December if the economy stays on track. Short-term rates have remained at nearly zero since 2008. Michael Kors

North westStocks

Ralph Lauren reports its fiscal second-quarter results today. Financial analysts anticipate that the company's earnings declined from a year earlier, whilt revenue was flat. The global fashion, home decor and access( ries empire has been grappling this year with a tough economy ir Europe, the impact of the strong U.S. dollar, and increased comps tition in the luxury business. RL $113.57$200

StoryStocks

.

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L NAME TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO GTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV Alaska Air Group A LK 53.11 ~ 82.78 7 7. 4 1 -.27 -0.3 L L T +29. 5 +4 4 .0 1 001 13 0 . 8 0 -3.1 - 2.1 21 6 1 9 1 . 32 Aviate Corp A VA 29.77 ~ 38.34 34. 2 7 +. 6 9 +2.1 L L L -4.9 + 0 .6 77569 13 0 . 20 Bank of America B AC 14. 60 ~ 18.48 1 7. 0 1 -.17 -1.0 L L L Barrett Business BBS I 2 0 .05 — o 50.95 49 .50 + . 93 + 1 .9 L L L +80.7 + 1 15.8 2 6 0 1 7 0. 8 8 Boeing Co BA 115.14 ~ 158. 8 3 14 8.19 +1.01 +0.7 L L L +14. 0 +2 0 .2 2 642 19 3 . 6 4 L L + 10.8 +16 .7 77 21 CascadeBancorp CA CB 4 .14— o 5.92 5 .7 5 -.06 -1.0 L Mouse house L +23.2 +2 6 .5 23 1 2 1 0 . 72a ColumbiaBnkg COLB 24.60 — o 34.90 34.82 -.01 . . . L L Wall Street predicts that Walt -.53 -1.0 L T T +24. 0 +4 2 .8 22 3 2 8 0 . 68f Columbia Spo r t s wear COLM 38.55 ~ 74. 72 55.25 Disney's latest earnings and CostcoWholesale CO ST 117.03— o 15 9.401 57.15 -1.65 -1.0 T L L +10. 9 +2 3 .1 1 577 29 1 . 6 0 revenue improved from a year Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 6.92 o — 14.7 4 7.2 5 +. 0 5 + 0.7 T T T -45.7 - 49.2 20 7 9 1 ago. FLIR Systems F LIR 25.12 ~ 34.46 2 7. 3 2 -.08 -0.3 L T T -15.4 - 17.6 964 1 6 0 . 44 The media giant is due to L L -22.4 HP Inc H PQ 11.03 ~ 18.66 1 4. 1 4 -.15 -1.0 L -8.1 33836 deliver its fiscal fourth-quarter INTO 24.87 ~ 37.90 34. 1 5 +. 0 8 +0.2 L L L -5.9 +2 . 8 20356 15 0 . 96 results today. Disney is coming o Intel Corp K EY 12.04 ~ 15.70 12. 8 1 +. 0 3 +0.2 L T T -7.8 -1.2 17636 12 0.30 Keycorp a strong quarter that got a big L +15. 3 +3 5 .2 5 926 19 0 .42f K R 2 7 .32 ~ 39.43 3 7. 0 1 -.75 -2.0 T T boost from its movie studio and Kroger Co LSCC 3.25 ~ 7.66 4.69 ... ... L L L -31.9 -28.8 1358 dd the blockbuster hit "Avengers: Ag Lattice Semi L PX 1292 ~ 18 64 1709 + 21 + 12 T L L +3 2 +17 0 413 3 d d of Ultron." But a modest decreasr LA Pacific in ESPN subscribers during the MDU Resources MDU 1 6 .15 ~ 28.51 19 . 5 1 + . 7 3 +3.9 L L L -17.0 - 30.6 974 d d 0 . 73 third quarter caused the compan) Mentor Graphics MEN T 20.58 — o 27.87 27 .67 -.01 . . . L L L +26.2 +3 1 .0 89 1 2 1 0. 2 2 to taper its TV profit outlook. Microsoft Corp MSFT 3 9.72 — o 54.39 54 .40 + . 25 +0.5 L L L +17. 1 +1 6 .8 36673 37 1 .44f Nike Inc 8 NKE 90.69 — o 13 3.52130.36 -1.04 -0.8 T L L +35. 6 +4 1 .8 2 457 33 1 . 1 2 DIS $113.25T T -16.3 + 1. 0 1352 1 8 1.48a $150 NordstromInc J WN 63.50 ~ 83.16 6 6. 4 2 -.57 -0.9 L $91.71 -4.7 +4 . 3 15 5 2 5 1 . 87f Nwst Nat Gas NWN 42.00 ~ 52.57 47. 5 3 +. 4 8 +1.0 T L L 120 Paccar Inc P CAR 49.46 ~ 71.15 5 2.7 6 -.47 -0.9 L T L -22.4 -15.7 2125 1 1 0 . 96 Planar Syslms PLNR 3.50 ~ 9.17 6.28 +. 0 9 + 1.5 L L L - 25.0 +69.1 2 2 0 2 1 90 ' '15 L L -4.0 + 3 . 9 66 5 3 1 1. 7 6 Plum Creek P CL 36.95 ~ 45.26 4 1. 8 6 -.11 -0.3 L 60 - 4.1 + 2 . 9 6 1 7 2 0 0 . 1 2 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 245. 0 5 23 0.90 + . 09 ... L L SchnitzerSteel S CHN 1 2.64 ~ 24.75 16. 8 0 -.39 -2.3 T T L -25.5 -24.5 249 d d 0 . 75 Operating I Sherwin Wms SHW 218.27 ~ 294. 3 5 27 0.70 + . 71 + 0.3 L L L +2.9 +18 . 9 82 5 2 6 2. 6 8 EPS 3Q '14 3 Q ' 15 StancorpFncl SFG 61.56 — o 11 5.43114.74 - .05 . . . L +6 4.2 + 6 7.3 2 1 9 2 1 1 . 40f L L +51.0 +66 .7 8 7 32 3 4 0 . 80f StarbucksCp SBUX 37.74 ~ 64.00 6 1. 9 6 -.84 -1.3 T Price-earnings ratio: 24 UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 8.9 2 17.12 +.26+ 1.5 L L L +0. 6 -0.7 1460 17 0.64f based on past 12-month results US Bancorp U SB 38.81 ~ 46.26 4 2. 6 2 -.08 -0.2 L L L -5.2 + 1 . 8 4 031 1 3 1 . 02 WAF D 19.72 — o 25.57 25 .19 + . 23 +0.9 L L L + 13. 7 +1 7 .7 50 1 1 5 0. 5 2 Dividend: $1.32 Div. yield: 1.2% WashingtonFedl -0.4 + 5 .6 12209 13 1 . 50 Wells Fargo & Co W F C 4 7 .75 ~ 58.77 54. 5 8 +. 0 1 ... L L L Source: FactS Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.73 ~ 37.04 3 0. 9 2 -.14 -0.5 L L L -13.8 -5.9 4059 29 1 . 24

Unfashionable results?

EURO M $ 1 .0857 -.0109

CRUDEOIL $46.32 -1.58

Dow Jones industrials Close: 17,867.58 Change: -50.57 (-0.3%)

17,580

18,400"

"

M

M

'

1,920 " 1 840

.

GOLD $1,106.50 -7.70

17,160 ' ""' 10 DAYS "

2,080 2,000 "

r

L L T L T L L L L T L L

T L

2.88 4.38 2.28 5.82 3.90 1.93 3.06

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 46.32 47.90 -3.30 -13.1 -6.0 1.53 1.56 1.50 1.57 -3.99 -18.6 2.26 2.25 +0.40 -21.7 1.39 1.45 -3.71 -3.0

CLOSE PVS. 1106.50 1114.20 15.06 15.24 954.80 962.20 2.32 2.33 623.20 643.80

%CH. %YTD -0.69 -6.5 -1.19 -3.2 -0.77 -21.0 -0.32 -18.3 -3.20 -21.9

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.37 1.40 -2.14 -17.2 Coffee (Ib) 1.21 1.20 +0.21 -27.7 -4.2 Corn (bu) 3.81 3.81 Cotton (Ib) 0.62 0.63 - 1.01 + 2 . 8 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 243.10 246.20 -1.26 -26.6 -3.9 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.35 1.36 -0.66 Soybeans (bu) 8.82 8.79 +0.40 -1 3.5 Wheat(bu) 5.26 5.17 +1.89 -1 0.8 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5378 -.0058 -.38% 1.6004 Canadian Dollar 1.3 163 +.0120 +.91% 1.1392 USD per Euro 1.0857 -.0109 -1.00% 1.2556 JapaneseYen 121.57 + . 5 3 + .44% 1 13.57 Mexican Peso 16. 5 294 +.1375 +.83% 13.5543 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8856 +.0167 +.43% 3.7867 Norwegian Krone 8 . 6544 +.1543 +1.78% 6.8448 South African Rand 13.9753 +.2422 +1.73% 11.0283 Swedish Krona 8.6 3 9 1 + .0962 +1.11% 7.3774 Swiss Franc .9940 +.0035 +.35% . 9 595 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.3988 +,0096 +.69% 1.1436 Chinese Yuan 6.3368 -.001 6 -.03% 6.1155 Hong Kong Dollar 7 7510 +.0001 +.00% 7.7524 Indian Rupee 65.563 +.046 +.07% 61,410 Singapore Dollar 1.4039 +.0082 +.58% 1.2886 South KoreanWon 1137.24 +7.04 +.62% 1077,58 Taiwan Dollar 3 2.46 + . 0 1 + 03% 30.55


© www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

PERMITS City of Bend • Triad HomesInc., 21171 SE KaylaCourt, Bend, $235,655 • Bend Park & Recreation District, 19630 Mountaineer Way, $138,000 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership, 20768 Boulderfield Ave.,Bend, $183,217 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership, 20772 Boulderfield Ave.,Bend, $208,703 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20760 Boulderfield Ave., Bend, $208,421 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20764 Boulderfield Ave., Bend, $187113 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20916 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend, $187113 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20912 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend, $187113 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20908 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend, $187113 • Pahlisch HomesInc., 20904 NEHigh Desert Lane, Bend, $187113 • JKC Pilot Butte LLC,2001 NE LinneaDrive,Bend, $9,238,057 • JKC Pilot Butte LLC,2001 NE LinneaDrive,Bend, $8,365,557 • Union Corner Construction, 1133 NW Wall St., Bend,$920,000 • Holliday Properties LLC, 2257 NEJackson Ave., Bend, $217,243 • Heritage HomesNW, 1846 NWFields St., Bend, $222,614 • Hayden HomesLLC, 63273 NWRossbySt., Bend, $172,434 • C4 Inc., 62858 NE Kinley Lane, Bend,$160,488 Oeschutes County • Michael J. Saf icy, 13590 Penstemon, BlackButte Ranch, $150,000 •Benja m inandStephony Duda, 16060LowerCattle Drive, Sisters, $243,122.29 • Terry L and PamelaA. Woodson, 17470 Mountain View Road,Sisters, $381,695.18 • Richard J. andDeborah L McAlexander,3900 NW Tetherow BridgeLoop, Redmond, $280,900.04 • Patrick G inn,431 NEGood Pasture Loop,Terrebonne, $392,940.59 • Vern R. andShirley M. Belden, 932512th Lane, Terrebonne,$231,477.89 • Cloudcrest Homes LLC, 924Angus Lane, Terrebonne,$246,225.50 • Koby and Stephania S. Moye, 895013th St., Terrebonne,$103,992 • Roger A. andLindaS. Abbas, 8349 Fifth St., Terrebonne,$196,883.53 • Gregory J. and Jenifer L. McWade,16867Golden Stone Drive, Sisters, $437,827.36 • Richard T. Trammel, 16685 Buckhorn Lane, Sisters, $174,693.12 • Robert and Nancy C. Wotfenbarger, 350E. AspenwoodAve., Sisters, $223,405.10 • Dionne E.Sweeney, 17358 Ivy Lane,Sisters, $343,438.26 •LucasFamilyRevocable Living Trust, 1280 Killdeer Court, Redmond, $261,248.56 • Sage Builders LLC,315 Vista Rim Drive,Redmond, $256,872.92 • William S. McKinley, 1151 Trail CreekDrive, Redmond, $325,963.13 • Karoma Properties LLC, 955 NE Negus Way, Redmond, $419,623.23 • Sun Ridge Construction Inc., 3197 NWCanyon Drive, Redmond, $252,273.57 • Taylor Investments LLC, 1090 NWRedwoodAve., Redmond, $156,577.09 • Taylor Investments LLC, 1100 NWRedwoodAve., Redmond, $156,577.09 • Gonce Living Trust, 1034 NW Birch Ave.,Redmond, $272,383.83 • City of Redmond,437 SW Ninth St., Redmond, $202,000 • Hayden HomesLLC, 3175 SWCascadeAve., Redmond, $284,23714 • Hayden HomesLLC,277 SW32nd St., Redmond, $197,481.82 • Hayden HomesLLC,297 SW32nd St., Redmond, $183,050.13 • Pacific Western Homes Inc., 2590SW Kalama Court, Redmond, $ I 95,978.53 • Pacific Western Homes Inc., 2576SW KalamaAve., Redmond, $190,103.02 • Hayden HomesLLC, 4346 SWUmatilla Ave.,

oreurn o e mon By Stephen Hamway

again on Jan. 11, 2016. Howev-

The Bulletin

er, Nicole Jurgensen, security coordinator for Redmond Airport, said the airline now

Nonstop flights from Redmond to Los Angeles will be returning Dec. 17 after a three-month hiatus, Redmond

Airport officials announced Wednesday. The nonstop daily route offered by American Airlines to Los Angeles International

Airport was canceled Sept. 8. At the time, the airline

planned to bring the flight back seasonally, beginning in m id-December before ceasing

plans to continue the flight

beyond that date. "As long as our community keeps using the service, it' s going to stay," Jurgensen said. Redmond first received a

direct flight to Los Angeles in 2006 when Horizon Air began offering daily service. However, the carrier stopped flying to the airport in 2010, leaving Central Oregon without non-

stop air service to Southern California until 2013.

archives.

Embraer 175 aircraft, which

has 70 coach seats, as well as

American Airlines took

Flights from Redmond to L.A. averaged just over 85

over the route in June 2013

percent full from June 2013

class cabin. According to American Airlines schedules, Flight

after Central Oregon residents through December 2014, acbought $350,000 in prepaid cording to statistics collected tickets in exchange for a twoyear commitment to the air-

by the U.S. Department of

port. The airline also received $500,000 from a federal Small Community Air Service Development Program grant, an estimated $230,000 marketing

Transportation. With the December flights, Jurgensen said, American Airlines will be increasing its capacity for the nonstop service from Redmond Airport

campaign and $40,000 in airport-landing fee waivers,

to LAX. The route previously

according to The Bulletin's

now it will be upgrading to an

used a 50-seat airplane, but

six seats that comprise a first-

5991 will leave Redmond at 1:52 p.m. and arrive in L.A. at 4:08 p.m., at least through

early January. The flight from L.A. to Redmond, also Flight 5991, will leave Los Angeles at 11:10 a.m. and arrive in

Redmond at 1:22 p.m. — Reporter: 541-617-7818 shamway@bendbulleti n.corn

Guinness

is going

By Joseph Pisani The Associated Press

vegan

NEW YORK — It's time to

get saving. A government-backed individual retirement ac-

count announced nearly two years ago by President

By Liam Stack New York Times News Service

Barack Obama is now avail-

Guinness, the Irish stout

able across the country, the Treasury Department said several barriers that keep millions of people from sav-

that once famously advertised itself under the slogan "Guinness is good for you," took a step this week to inject 21st-century food

ing for their retirement. The

culture into its 256-year-

account, called a myRA, has no fees, no minimum balance, no risk of losing money and it doesn't have to be linked to an employer.

old product. Guinness is going vegan. The company announced Monday that starting at the end of 2016, its beer will no longer contain trace amounts of fish bladder, an integral part of

Wednesday, and it removes

"It's a great way to start

saving for retirement in a lowrisk way," said Ed Gjertsen II, president of the Financial

Planning Association. MyRAs are aimed at those

without access to employer-sponsored retirement plans like 401(k)s, but anyone under certain income levels is eligible. Workers can have contributions deducted automatical-

Charles Dharapak I The Associated Pess file photo

Vice President Joe Biden and former House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio listen as President Barack Obama gives his State of the Union address in 2014. In the address, Obama unveiled a new program

called "myRA." TheTreasury Department said Wednesday that the government-backed retirement savings plan is now available nationwide.

its filtration process.

Few customers — except perhaps vegans and vegetarians who enjoy a pintwere probably even aware that the famous inky-black

can be depositA •• Money ed from a checking or

ly from their paychecks into savings account or directly their accounts, and employers from your paycheck. If you are not charged any adminis- want moneytocome out trative fees to do so. Experts of your paycheck and your say regular, automatic contriemployer allows direct debutions are a crucial way for posits, myRA provides a form people to build nest eggs. to give to your employer at Here are more details about https://myra.gov/files/mythe account and how it works: ra-direct-deposit-form.pdf.

drink contained any fish parts at all. But it is quite

Q •• much I can save in a

average.

myRA account?

Q•

be filtered using isinglass, a gelatinlike substance

If you' re under 50 A •• Yes. you can deposit up to

• Many of the rules are A through banks or brokerage

derivedfrom the dried swim bladders of fish that

companies generally have

unwanted solids like yeast particles from a brew, the

Is there a limit on how

common for cask beers to How is this different • than a Roth IRA'?

$5,500 a year. Those who are or will be 50 or older by the end of the year can deposit

up to $6,500 a year. Once the account grows to $15,000, you

• the same, but Roth IRAs

fees or require minimum contributions that can be

is used to separate out company said. "Isinglass has been used

too high for some. Another

You will also have the option

m ust moveyour money toa

Q •• myRA' ?

private-sector retirement ac-

major difference is that with Roth IRAs you can invest in

widely within the brew-

to send your tax refund to your myRA when doing your

count like a Roth IRA.

stocks, bonds, mutual funds or

of filtration for decades,"

A • less than $131,000 a year or couples who earn be-

taxes.

other investments. They can

the company said after a report in The Independent.

Who is eligible for a

• Individuals who earn

low $193,000 a year.

Q • What if I move jobs?

A

• The account is in your How much money do I • name, so it stays with • need to open an account? you when you change jobs. • None. You can sign up at • https://myra.gov. You' ll Can I withdraw the

Q•

A

need a Social Security number

and either a driver's license, a U.S. passport or a state or military identification number to

sign up online.

Q •• money'?

How do I deposit

ing industry as a means

U.S. government bonds called

be riskier, but they may earn more moneythan government bonds. With myRA, the government hopes it can push more people to start saving for

the Government Securities Fund, and it will not lose

them to opening Roth IRAs.

use we could not label Guinness as suitable for vegetarians and have been looking for an alternative solution for some time."

Q•

moved from the beer after it has fulfilled its filtration

• Almost certainly not. • The government and financial planners caution that this is a way to get peo-

role. Zsoka McDonald,

A •• fund made up mostly of No. MyRA invests in a

Q •• money anytime I want?

money.

• Yes. There are no fees • or taxes to pay on the money you have deposited, but if you are younger than 59'/z, you will have to pay

A

much interest will Q •• How my money earn?

taxes on the interest that your

the investment earned near-

money has earned.

ly 3.2 percent annually on

retirement and eventually lead

"However, because of its

The substance is re-

A years ending last December,

• The interest rate changes • every month. In the 10

Will this leave me • enough to retire on?

ple to start saving for their retirements.

a spokeswoman for the company, said that only "trace amounts" ever make it into the final

product.

Facebookplacing moreadson Instagram By Brandon Bailey The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — If

you' re starting to notice more ads on Instagram, it's all part of Facebook's plan. Facebook, the world' s largest social network, has steadily built its advertis-

bought for $1 billion in 2012. Instagram recently an-

Instagram could produce

nounced it has more than 400

more than $250 million in

million monthly users, surpassing the 300 million who

revenue for the current quar-

use the rival social networking site Twitter. While Face-

Sena estimates. Businesses will spend about $600 million on Instagram ads this yearand nearly $1.5 billion in 2016, according to research firm

book has been introducing Instagram ads slowly — to avoid irritating users by overloading

ing business to become the world's second-largest digital them with commercial mesad platform after Google. Now sages — the company said in it's looking at ways to make September that it would allow more money from newer sermore kinds of ads, including vices like Instagram, the molonger video spots, on the phobile photo-sharing app that it to-sharing service.

Redmond, $395,980.87 • Hayden HomesLLC, 4368 SWUmatilla Ave., Redmond, $255,224.52 • Talmage Construction Inc., 2030 SWObsidian Ave., Redmond, $263,045.75 • Talmage Construction Inc., 2040 SWObsidian Ave., Redmond, $258,569.48

With those new formats,

ter, Evercore ISI analyst Ken

e Marketer. "When we talk to advertis-

ers and ad agencies, they' re

Eric Risberg /The AssociatedPress file photo

very interested in Instagram,"

Mark Zuckerberg talks about the Messenger app during the

saideMarketer analystDebra Aho Williamson.

Facebook FSDeveloper Conference. Facebook plans to implement more ada on Instagram.

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • ¹AdFedEdu cate — 72andSunny: A presentation by MillerCoors' advertising agency, 72andSunny; $25 nonmembers; 6 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 NWBond St., Bend. MONDAY • Bend PlanningCommission: The MarijuanaTechnical Advisory

Committee will present a newsection totheBend Development Code about definitions and regulations for marijuana businesses; 5:30 p.m.; City Hall — Council Chambers, 710 NWWall St., Bend, 541-388-5580. • Introduction toFinding Funders: A workshop to help nonprofits find funding; free; 10:30 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SWDeschutes Ave.,

Redmond, 541-617-7089. TUESDAY •SCORE BusinessCounseling: Business counselors conduct free one-on-one conferences for local entrepreneurs. 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend, 541-706-1639.

WEDNESDAY • I-CAR Course on Blueprinting Process and DamageRecovery: An I-CAR course; $164; 6p.m.; Precision Body8 Paint, 61530 S.U.S. Highway97, Bend, 541-382-3995, www.precisionfirst.corn/. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visitbsndbullstin. corn/bizcal


IN THE BACI4 ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT W Nutrition, D2 Money, D3 Fitness, D4 Medicine, D5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/health

Tracking, andlearning more about, e-cigs By Kathleen McLaughlin The Bulletin

American people can shine a light on the e-cigarette

As Bend vape shop manager Tim Schultz tells the his-

market, which up to now has been completely untracked

tory of electronic cigarettes,

and unregulated by the federal government," Wyden said in an October news release. "The public needs to have

they began with hobbyists who engineered their cartridges out of flashlight tubes. That bit of ingenuity grew into what's estimated tobe a $2.5 billion industry in the United States. E-cigarettes

robust access to information

about products they consume, especially when they come from abroad."

have sparked a debate over whether they' re

People in the vapor industry are mainly trackN UT RITION in g state laws and

helping people give up tobacco, or creating a new generation of smokers. The public-health debate is not yet settled, but in the meantime the U.S.

government is trying to gain

there's also the question of

an understanding of the in-

whether e-cigarettes eventually will be subject to excise

dustry, which remains largely unregulated. Photos by Joe Kiine /The Bulletin

Mark Cain puts socks and leg braces on his10-year-old son, Dylan, before going out on awalk at their home in Bend. Dylan has cerebral palsy and has difficulty walking or standing.

To learn moreabout Dylan's story or contribute to the family's fundraising campaign, visitwww.helpfordylan.corn

O

By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin

tax, a policy that e-cigarette

advocates argue would make understanding could be the them less attractive to people collection of data on imported trying to give up tobacco. e-cigarette devices, parts and Wyden staffers, who would liquid mixtures. The liquid speak only on background, is what typically contains said it's too soon to talk about nicotine and flavorings. It' s an excise tax, partly because vaporized by a battery-powso little is known about the ered heating element and market. It's not even dear at then inhaled. Thus the term this point which component "vaping." of an e-cigarette would be The data collection will logical to tax, one of the staffbegin for the first time next ers said. Schultz, who pays close year, according to the International Trade Commission. attention to regulatory issues U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, in his industry, thinks it's inof Oregonand theranking evitable that elected officials Democrat on the Senate will come to view vaping as An important step in that

Finance Committee, pushed

a vice and tax it like one. He

for the data gathering after

just hopes the regulations are basedon accurateinforma-

U.S. Government Account-

ami See H new reme or San wi

the next move by the

Food and Drug Administration, which is proposing to extend its tobacco-regulating authority to e-cigarettes. But

ability Office investigators reported they could find only anecdotal evidence about the industry, which is believed tobe dominated by Chinese

tion. e You can't do anything in this country without a tax,"

lnlpoIts. "For the first time, the

right."

he said. "There's just no way these people aren't going to do something. I'd rather it be

SeeE-cigs/D2

FITNESS

To run well, train brain along with your muscles

couple of weeks ago, 10-year-old Dylan Cain — whose severe cerebral palsy renders him unable to walk without

By Pam LeBlanc

assistance and severely limits his speech and

Cox Newspapers

AUSTIN, Texas — Run-

cognition — asked a family friend to pick him up. She told him her back was sore. "So he said, 'Pray for and over — while they' re beKaren's back,'" recounted ing held in proper alignment, Dylan's mom, Jinger Cain, either by straps or peoples' of Bend. "So he prays to help hands. herfeelbetterand Karen Cerebral palsy commonly said, 'I'd like to pray for you. leads to deformities caused What would you by a lack of muscle l ike?' He said, 'I want M E DICI N E control around the a Galileo.'" bones — a problem He was referring to a deDylan is already experiencing — and the Galileo is device he had tried a few days earlier at a conference in signed to train those muscles Seattle with his parents. It's a to hold the body in proper vibrating plate patients stand form. "We can change his brain on that stimulates voluntary and involuntary muscle con- with frequency, intensity and tractions — lots of them, over duration," Jinger Cain said.

chologist for the Boston Marathon medical team

and an assistant clinical

ners sip beet extract, ago-

professorinthe department

nize about shoe choice, an-

of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.

"That's what the Galileo

Mark Cain, are no strangers

alyze heart-rate data, wear compression socks and suffer through ice baths in a quest to drop a few seconds off their race times. But most hardly give their brains a second thought. Ignoring that 3-pound organ could be a mistake, according to a new book,

does. It falls completely in line with all of the stuff we' ve been doing with him for 10 years."

to choosing alternative remedies despite expert advice

"The Runner's Brain: How to Think Smarter to Run

to use your brain to maximize runningperformance

to the contrary. They' ve

Better," by psychiatrist Jeff

while he was in Austin

used a long list of such therapies on their son, and they

Brown with fitness writer

recently. First, if you' re new to run-

Dylan plays on a tablet at his home in Bend. He is legally blind but has some vision in his left eye.

There isn't a wealth of

research supporting the use of vibration therapy on cerebral palsy patients, but Jinger and her husband,

attribute all of his development to their willingness to

go against the grain. SeeGalileo /D5

Liz Neporent. "Our brains are neglected, and it's the one thing

behind everything else," says Brown, the lead psy-

The book offers strategies on how to deal with the

joy, pain and boredom of running, as well as a seven-step training program for your noggin. "It fills in a training gap that is easily overlooked," says Brown, who shared some of his best tips on how

ning or still don't think of

yourself as a "real runner," start self-identifying as one. See Brain /D4

Some Me icareA vanta e anssee remiLim i csin 2016 • Central Oregon market is seeing fewer changes this year By Tare Bannow

Some ofthe rate increases are

The Bulletin

similar to those seen in 2015, including one plan's premium

CentralOregon'sMedicare Advantage market won't see

the same shake-up this year

increase of 39 percent.

M edicare beneficiariescan

Cynthia Hylton, Central Oregon's field and training officer for the state's Senior Health Insurance Benefits

Assistance Program, said

ours exists," she said. "We can going to happen,'" she said

do that."

"Turns out, four of her meds

Since there are a lot of things basic Medicare doesn' t

would not have been on her plan if she had just let it roll over. That was going to really hurt her." Hylton said she knows how confusing it can be to sort

it did last — when five new

only switch their Medicare

MedicareAdvantage and Part

plans entered the playing field and two were discontinued — but some of those buying plans for 2016 will notice significant cost hikes. The monthly cost of one

Advantage and prescription drug (Part D) plans during

D plans can go through through, especially if significant changes M ON EY someone has a cognifrom year to year, espetive impairment or isn' t cially when it comes to good with computers, monthly premiums and which which is why they should doctors and drugs are covered. enlist the help of a friend or In an interview last week, family member or contact Hylton said she had just her office within the state' s worked with a woman who Insurance Division, which has had no intention of checking people like her whose jobs infor changes in her Part D plan. clude helping people enroll in "I said, 'You know, Agnes, Medicare plans. "That's why a program like you better let me do it because

a specific window: Oct. 15

through Dec.7. While some seniors and individuals with disabilities who rely on the

federal health insurance prodrug coverage will jump near- gram may be tempted to let ly 39 percentto $97perm onth. their old plans roll over into of Moda Health's plans with For another Moda Health

2016, experts warn that — al-

plan without drug benefits, the spike will be even higher:

though it may have been in

60 percent to $16 per month.

safe bet.

the past — that's no longer a

companiesalsocharge premiums on top of that. About 13,300 people in Deschutes, Jefferson and

scription drugs, dental care,

Crook county were enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans

alternative care and hearing

as of October, or about 26 per-

aids, many people buy extra coverage to fill in the gaps,

cent of the Medicare-eligible population, according to the

either Medicare Advantage

U.S. Centers for Medicare and

plans (also known as Part C) or Medicare Supplement plans (also known as Medigap plans). Which of those a person chooses depends on their specificneeds. The federal government pays private companies a set

Medicaid Services. Medicare Advantage plans generally cost less per month, but they have networks that determine which providers

cover,such as outpatient pre-

customers can see without

paying a boatload of money. Medicare Supplement plans, amount of money — in 2014 it by contrast, are good at any came to about $850 per person clinic that accepts original on average — to offer MediMedicare. care Advantage plans. The SeePremiums/D3


D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

N

TjoN

Amarketnearbyimproveseating habits, even if youdon't shopthere, studysays

E-cigs Continued from 01 Vaping continues to grow and evolve. Schultz moved to Bend from Port-

land to By Soumya Karlamangla Los Angeles Times

People without easy access to a supermarket eat healthier after one opens in their neighborhood, but not because they shop at the new store, new research found.

A study published Monday in the journal Health Affairs found opening a grocery store in a "food desert" — an area devoid of healthy eating options — lowered the daily calo-

rie intake of nearby residents, and their consumption of added sugars, solid fats and alcoholic beverages. "We found multiple positive changes following the opening of the supermarket in a former food desert," lead author Tamara Dubowitz, a

senior policyresearcher at nonprofit research organization Rand Corp., said in a statement. "Yet the changes in diet were not related to use of the supermarket."

Evaluating a neighborhood in Pittsburgh, Dubowitz and

her colleagues found the improvements in eating habits were not associated with

whether people shopped at the store. The researchers speculated the local advocacy efforts that led to the store's

not use of the store itself.

"This supports federal efforts to help open grocery

M ountain M i s t , wh i c h opened its second retail

hoods, with the supermarket

shop in Bend in October. High Mountain Mist is one

appearing to have little effect. provides a very strong case for They also found no significant continued evaluation of this change in rates of obesity or policy to understand exactly being overweight in Hill. what the mechanisms might They did find a drop in daily be," Dubowitz said. The fed- calorie intake and added sugeral government has spent ars in the Hill neighborhood, hundreds of thousands of dol- but it wasn't linked to whether lars in recent years to increase people shopped at the grocery the number of places selling store. Residents of Hill also refresh food in u nderserved ported better access to healthy neighborhoods. foods such as low-fat products The Rand finding adds to and fruits and vegetables, as a growing body of research well as improved satisfaction showing the solution to the with their neighborhood as a obesity epidemic is not as place to live. simple as dropping superThe positive effects, remarkets in food deserts, and searchers wrote, were perinstead requires a variety of haps due to the public dischanges, including to cultural cussions preceding the supreferences and advertising. permarket's opening t h at O ther studies by R and r e brought to light the need for searchers have found the food fresh food in the neighborenvironment in Los Angeles hood. This explanation unplays little role in what people derscores a conclusion found stores in food deserts, but also

eat.

m anage High

vegetablesand whole grains declined in both neighbor-

in much recent research: the

The new study compared importance of education and data from households in two personalchoicewhen itcomes predominantly African-Amer- to eating habits. "The new supermarket ican neighborhoods in Pittsburgh — Hill District and may have also stimulated Homewood — that had lacked economic development in the a supermarket. In 2013, a gro- neighborhood and instilled cery store opened in the Hill hope among community resineighborhood. dents who were heartened by The results were unexpect- public and private investment ed. The researchers found in their neighborhood and

arrival, and marketing campaigns around its opening, caused the dietary improve- that between 2011 and 2014, their health," the researchers ments in the neighborhood, c onsumption o f fr u i t a n d wrote.

of at least three dedicated

vapor businesses in town selling e-cigarette devices and a huge array of liquids, he said. Other shops sell e-cigarette products alongside trad i tional tobacco. With recreational mar-

ijuana sales taking off, H igh

M o u n tai n Mi s t ' s

new headquarters shop on Third Street has expanded

to include devices for vaping cannabis. A former heavy smoker who credits e-cigarettes with helping

E-cigarette statistics Young adults who've never smoked, current smokers and recent quitters are the adults most likely to use e-cigarettes, according to a recent briefing from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC began collecting information on e-cigarette use for the first time in 2014 through the National Health Interview Survey. Thesurvey is the first to place adult e-cigarette use in the context of smoking habits, an important consideration in light of the industry's claim it helps people quit smoking. Here are the key findings: • 12.6 percent of adults had ers, who pointed out users

tried an e-cigarette, and 3.7 percent of adults were currently using e-cigarettes. • Current smokers and people who had quit smoking within the past year weremore likely to use e-cigarettes than people who'd quit smoking more than a year ago or neversmoked. • Among current smokers trying to quit in the last year, more than half had tried e-cigarettes, and 20.3 percent were current users. • Among adults who never smoked, only 3.2 percent had ever tried an e-cigarette. Trying an e-cigarette was most common among adults ages 18to 24 (9.7 percent) and declined with age. cause it got a lot of press we

him qu it, S chultz s aid, know when they' re vaping got attacked pretty aggres"We wanted to bring harm at a t o o -high t emperature sively," he said.

reduction to that group as well." Researchers are finding potential harm in e-cigarettes themselves. Chemists at Portland State Uni-

After studying t obacco chemistry for 20 years, PanPortland State chemistry kow is continuing to research professor James Pankow said e-cigarettes, but he said the none of the critics took issue industry is so varied, it's difbecauseitgenerates an acrid flavor and a "dry puff."

with his team's methods. "We

ficult to establish the product

versity reported in a letter

set out to see if we could see and methods that are relevant to the New England Jour- any differences between the to a majority of consumers. "All these different devices. nal of Medicine, published fluid you would have in the in January, they found bottle and the material that All the different fluid. People high levels of formalde- comes out of an e-cigarette. are making their own fluid," hyde — a known carcino- Was it converted to some- he said. "You go into a vape gen — in e-cigarette vapor thing else' ?" he said. shop, and it doesn't even say when the liquid was heat-

ed at high temperature settings. The l e t ter

Pankow s a i d Po r t l a nd who made it. No address. No State's was not the first re- list of ingredients. There's no

search to find formaldehyde nothing.We don'tknow be-

p r o m pted in e-cigarettes, but it was the

an onslaught of criticism first published in a prestifrom e-cigarettedefend- gious medical journal. "Be-

cause there's no data on it." — Reporter: 541-617-7860, kmclaughlin@bendbulletin.corn

FITNEss EvENTs TODAY MONS RUNNINGGROUP:All moms welcome with or without strollers; 3- to 4.5-mile run at 8- to12-minute mile paces; meet at FootZone at 9:15 a.m., rain or shine; 9:30 a.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.corn or 541-317-3568.

FRIDAY

loop; 9 a.m.;$20,$25 onraceday; Powell Butte Christ Church, Bend; 541-977-3493. YOGA SCULPT: Learntotalbody strength and increase flexibility; 9:30 a.m.; $10; Thin Lizzy Athletics, 800 NW Wall St., Bend; www.thinlizzyathletics.corn or 541-749-0048. FOAM ROLLERCLASS:Learnto

help decreasemuscle soreness,

PSALM YOGA: A unique yoga class that infuses spiritual strength and focus, set to the timeless and powerful Psalms; 8:30 a.m.; Victor School of Performing Arts International, 2700 NEFourth St., Suite 210, Bend; www. victorperformingarts.corn or 269-876-6439.

improve flexibility and build core strength using a foam roller; 10 a.m.; $15; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876. HOT TIESOCIAL BALLROOM DANCE:Wearties of your choosing; 7 p.m.; $5-$7; Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive No. 3, Bend; www.blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490.

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

LORD'S ACRE10KANDSKRUN: ASK course is outandbackand kid-friendly; the 10K course is a

BEGINNINGTWO-STEP ROUND DANCE LESSONS:Beginningtwostep lessons, no partner necessary;

4:30 p.m.; $5 per person; Pine Forest Grange, 63214 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 503-856-4874. INTRO YOGA CLASS:A intro class suitable for adults, in any condition or level of flexibility; 5 p.m.; lyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NEThird St., No. 5, Bend; 541-318-1186.

MONDAY MOMMY & ME YOGA:Moms and babies 6 weeks old to newly walking are invited to stretch, breathe, relax and have fun together; 2 p.m.; $10$12; Namaspa Yoga 8 Massage, 1135 Galveston Ave., Bend; www. namaspa.corn or 541-550-8550. RUN FASTER,BETTERAND INJURY-FREE:PRESENTATION WITH ALTRAFOUNDER GOLDEN HARPER:An interactive clinic about getting faster, running more efficiently and running injury-free, Golden Harper will present; Q8 A afterward with Altra athletes lan Sharman and Jeff Browning; 6 p.m.; free, registration required;

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

TUESDAY TUESDAYPERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP:An intervalbased workout to help you get the most out of your running; distance and effort vary according to what works for you; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.corn or 541-317-3568.

WEDNESDAY NOON TACO RUN: Meet at FootZone a few minutes before noon; 12 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St.,

Bend; www.footzonebend.cornor

541-317-3568. TWEENYOGA:Ages10to12,build strength, focus, breath awareness and flexibility in this safe, fun

atmosphere, includesgames and partner work; 4 p.m.; $5-$6; Namaspa Yoga 8 Massage, 1135

NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www. namaspa.corn or 541-550-8550. BROLATES: A challenging workout focused on improving strength, flexibility and power; 5:30 p.m.; $20; Bend Pilates, 155 SWCentury Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876. WEDNESDAYGROUPRUN: Featuring a 3- to 5-mile group run; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www. fleetfeetbend.corn or 541-389-1601. BEGINNER WALTZGROUP DANCE COURSE:Learn basic partnership connection, patterns and technique; 6:30 p.m.; $40; Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive No. 3, Bend; www.blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490. BEGINNERNIGHT CLUB TWOSTEP GROUPDANCECOURSE: Learn a dance that can be danced in a confined area, as well as the dance that can fill and move across the entire dance floor; 7:30 p.m.; $40; Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive No. 3, Bend; www. blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490.

How to submit Events:Tosubmit an event, visit bendbulletin. corn/events andchck "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must beupdated monthly. Questions: health©bendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0351.

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

PEOPLE • Marlene Covey, MD, hasjoined EsthetixMD, 115SW Allen Road in Bend, asa physician injector. Covey will perform injections including neurotoxins, dermal fillers and Kybella.

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

core exercises; 8a.m.; $9 perclass, $30 per month; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter. corn/healthy-back-class/ or 541-330-0334. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12 p.m.; Cascade Bible Church, 52410 Pine Drive, La Pine; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.

FRIDAY 12-POINT KID INSPECTION: Screenings for young children in

hearing, speechandlanguage,

motor skills, cognitive development, vision, health and safety, dental, behavior and nutrition and more; 9 a.m.; Westside Church-South Campus, 1245 SE Third St., Bend; www.myhb.org or 541-383-6357. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch and Terrebonne Fire and Rescue, 6971 Shad Road, Terrebonne; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS.

MEMORIES INTHEMAKING: An arts program by the Alzheimer' s Association Oregon Chapter for people with early-stage memory loss from dementia, Parkinson' s, stroke and head injuries, all materials included;1 p.m.; Hospice of Redmond,732 SW 23rdSt., Redmond; 541-317-3977.

MONDAY

AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; Desert Song Community Church, 640 SW Evergreen Ave., Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD SATURDAY DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; MASSAGE CUPPINGWORKSHOP: Bend Blood Donation Center, Learn the ancient art of Chinese cupping and how it can be integrated 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or with soft tissue work, learn the 800-RED-CROSS. basic fundamentals on how to free

up adhesions, increaseenergy and decrease pain; 9 a.m.; $165-$270; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; www. actiondynamix.org/bend-massageworkshops or 541-678-4212. FOAM ROLLERCLASS:Learnto

help decreasemuscle soreness, improve flexibility and build core strength using a foam roller; 10 a.m.; $15; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876.

TUESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. DARKNESS TOLIGHT: STEWARDS OF CHILDREN (SPANISH): Learn

tools for recognizing thesigns

of sexual abuse, responding to suspicions and gives simple ways SUNDAY to minimize opportunities for abuse in our community; 1 p.m.; MASSAGE CUPPINGWORKSHOP: $20; Jefferson County Health Learn the ancient art of Chinese cupping and how it can be integrated Department, 715 SWFourth St., Madras; www.kidscenter.org/tourswith soft tissue work, learn the and-trainings or 541-306-6062. basic fundamentals on how to free up adhesions, increaseenergy, and DARKNESS TOLIGHT: STEWARDS decrease pain; 9 a.m.; $165-$270; OF CHILDREN:Learn tools for Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 recognizing the signs of sexual NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; www. abuse, responding tosuspicions actiondynamix.org/bend-massage- and gives simple ways to minimize workshops or 541-678-4212. opportunities for abuse in our

Find It All Onlinebendbulletin.corn

community; 6 p.m .;$20;Kids Center, 1375 NW Kingston Ave., Bend; www.kidscenter.org/toursand-trainings or 541-306-6062.

WEDNESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center,

815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.

I

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TOUCHMARK SINCE 1960

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View our presentation at Tompklnswealthpresents.corn

charles Tompkins,cFPI 54'f-2044667 securltlas s Advisory sarvlcss offerad throuph KMS Rnanclal Services,Inc. MembarFINWSIPC

541-647-2956

DESCHUTES RHEUMATOLOGY

Meet Central Oregon's newest Rheumatologist. Deschutes Rheumafology would like to welcome Dr. Amy Madison to our Central Oregon practice. Dn Madison earned her medical degree at the University of

Connecticut and completed training in both Internal Medicine and Rheumatology at the University of Washington. She is also trained in musculoskeletal ultrasound, an asset for the diagnosis

and management of patients with rheumatologic conditions.

/4(I,iI

il II' gI' Ii<

In her spare time, Dn Madison loves to be outside with her '/

family exploring all that Central Oregon has to offer, especially rock climbing, hiking and skiing.

Dr. Amy Modison is now accepting patients.

DR. DAN FOHRMAN I am pleased to welcome Dr. Amy Madison to Deschutes Rheumatology and Central Oregon.

541 368 3978 BEND 2200 NE NEFF RD. $302

bendarthritis.corn

DESCHUTES RHEUMATO LOGY


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D3

MoNEY

A re By Adam Beam and Ricardo Aionso-Zaidivar The Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The election of a conservative out-

sider as Kentucky governor has given Republicans a laboratory to show the rest of the

country how they'd replace President Bar ack Obama's health care law.

Three years into a coverage expansion that has brought the share of uninsured Amer-

icans to historically low levels, Matt Bevin's lopsided victory underscores how politically divisive the law remains. But

experts say slamming the brakes in a state already deep-

ly entrenched in the Affordable Care Act would cost lots of time and money, testing the

new Republican administration's ability to rein in costs. Kentucky has been one of

the health care law's success stories. The share of u n i n-

sured state residents has been slashed from about 20 percent in 2013 to 9 percent by the mid-

dle of this year, according to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Be-

a m acare state si na s 'no' to amacare ing Index, a major independent

fundamentally different views

survey. Experts credit that to a

surance, but they would do so us to $400 million of cost but stricter income requirements through the federal website still provide health insurance for Medicaid, which are cursynergy between Kentucky's Health Care.gov. and health care for those rentlybased on federalpoverstate-run insurance marketindividuals." ty levels. place and the decision to em- What happens now? The White House signaled Requiring modest premibrace Medicaid expansion. On Medicaid, it's unclear it expects Bevin to take a mea- ums from those newly enBut the expansion added how far Bevin would push sured approach once in the rolled might find acceptance 400,000 people to the state' s for changes. He has said he governor's office. Spokesman from a Democratic adminisMedicaid rolls, more than would reverse the expansion Josh Earnest keyed on com- tration. But dramatically retwice what officials had pre- "immediately," and his cam- ments made by Bevin before stricting eligibility for the covd icted. Combined with t h e paign website says the Med- the election that people would erage expansion would likely existing Medicaid program, icaid expansion "should be not be kicked off Medicaid. be rejected. "I think this is an indicaKentucky taxpayers now pay repealed." But Bevin has tried If Bevin and the Obama adfor the health insurance of a to walk back those comments tion ... that (while) vowing to ministration can thread a midquarter of the state's popula- when confronted with the fact repeal the Affordable Care dle path, Holtz-Eakin said that tion. The state will begin pay- that a complete rollback would Act in some cases has been might defuse some of the coning for the expansion in 2017, mean 400,000people losing used as an effective political tentious politics around the and costs could surpass $300 coverage. strategy, that's not a terribly health care law. In any case, million by 2020. Robert Stivers, president effective governing strategy," Democrats should be m ore Outgoing Democratic Gov. of the GOP-controlled state Earnest said. open to changes once Obama Steve Beshear initiated both Senate,said lawmakers are leaves office in 2017. "Once the president leaves, the insurance exchange and preparing to find an extra $75 Conservative options the Medicaid expansion by million to pay for the expanEconomist Douglas Holtz- his signature domestic accomexecutive action. Bevin has sion in 2017, plus another $175 Eakin, an adviser to Republi- plishment is on the history said he'd dismantle the inmillion the following year. He cans nationally, said conser- books, and they don't need to surance marketplace, which said he has already had dis- vatives do have options. preserve it in its current form," would revert to federal opcussions with Bevin about Bevin has said he wants to Holtz-Eakin said. e ration. K e n tucky wo u l d how to replace the program. do what Indiana and Montana So far, 60 votes in the GOP"I believe we can develop a have done by asking the feder- led House have failed to slow become the first state to do so for political reasons. Res- system where they will have al government to change the the health care law's momenidents covered through the health i n s urance," S t iver s expansion by charging recipi- tum. Two Supreme Court decimarketplace would continue said. "We think we can devel- ents a small premium. But he sions left the basic structure in to get subsidized health inop a plan that will not expose has also said he would impose place. Now, a Republican with

has a chance to get his hands

People can apply for Medicare Supplement plans any time during the year, but they' re only guaranteed to be accepted during their first six months of being on basic Medicare.

Aunt Matilda and spend a

That's also made carriers

few months there visiting all your cousins, your original

much more responsive than in the past to their customers'

Medicare an d

HumanaChoiceH6609-012 (PPO) HumanaChoiceH6609-013 (PPO) HumanaChoiceH6609-073 (PPO) HumanaGoldPlus H1036-219 (HMO)* Moda Health PPO (PPO) Moda Health PPORX (PPO) PacificSourceMedicare Essentials 2 (HMO) PacificSourceMedicare Essentials Choice Rx25 (HMO-POS) PacificSourceMedicare Essentials Rx14 (HMO) PacificSourceMedicare Essentials Rx 6(HMO) ProvidenceMedicareCompass+ RX(HMO-POS) ProvidenceMedicare Latitude+ RX(HMO-POS)

ment is r ewarding carriers

using a star rating system based on customer feedback.

s u p plement complaints, Hylton said.

"The key for the consumer to know is if you' ve got an network." issue with your plan, you' ve Jan Smith, a volunteer who got to call Medicare and tell helps people enroll in Medi- them," she said, "because it' s

travels really well," Hylton said. "There is no in or out of

care plans at the Central Or-

egon Council On Aging office in Bend, added that Medicare Advantage plans often allow services performed by outof-network providers to be

driven by that."

*Not available inCrook County; newto Jefferson County

— Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.corn

MONTHLY PREMIUM

CARRIER

much more proactive about making sure people get the medical services they need, she said. The federal govern-

drive to Missouri and see

tirement years, you want to

However, whatever Bevin

does, it's not likely much will be accomplished overnight. The federal government requires at least 12 months' notice from a state that's seek-

ing to shut down its insurance exchange, said Judy Solomon of the Center for Budget and

Policy Priorities in Washington, which supports the health care law. "You can't turn the switch

so quickly," Solomon said. Bevin takes office next month.

The currentopen enrollment season on Kentucky's marketplace started Sunday and ends

Jan. 31. Medicaid changes could also turn i nto a

p r otracted

negotiation if Bevin seeks a federal waiver to put a con-

servative spin on the coverage expansion. "We can all take a deep

breath and see how this plays out," Solomon said.

Some Medicare Advantage plans available in Deschutes, Jefferson and Crook counties will see premium hikes in 2016. The cost of one policy will increase by 60 percent to $16 per month. The plan options are unchanged from 2015, whereas last year's open enrollment saw five new plans and two discontinued ones. (+ or - numbers Inparenthesis) = changefrom 2015

questionsand deny applicants based on preexisting conditions.

Continued from 01 "If you' re a person who, in your happy, golden re-

'Seehow this playsout'

Medicare Advantageplan costs for 2016

After that, the carriers can ask health

Premiums

on it.

MONTHLY MAX OUT-OF-POCKET RX IN-NETWORKOR DED U CTIBLE DEDUCTIBLE PREMIUM WITHOUT I I-NETWORK/OUT-OF-NETINORK Rx $0 $3,600/$4,500 $0 N/A

N/A

$104 (+$9) $203 $73 (+$9)

N/A

N/A

$16 (+$6)

$97 (+$27)

N/A

N/A

$25

$203 (+$1) $107 (+$12) $187 (+$12) $118 (+$2) $144 (+$3)

N/A

N/A N/A

N/A N/A N/A N/A

$6,700/$10,000 $0 $320 $6,700/$10,000 $0 $360 (+$40) $4,900 $0 $320 N/A $3,400 $50 $120 $3,400 $125 (-$25) N/A $3,400 $0 $3,400/$4,500 $0 $0 $5,000 (+$1,600) $0 $0 $5,000 (+$1,600) $0 $0 $3,400/$6,700 $0 $30(+$30) $3,400/$5,500 (-$1,200) $0 $0

No te: some policies donot offer out-of-network coverage GregCross/The Bulletin

Source:Oregon Senior Health Insurance BenefitsAssistance

considered in network if the

patient couldn't get the care at an in-network provider. If someone from Bend broke

his leg while on vacation in New York, for example, his Medicare Advantage provider would cover care from

oeS menO auSe

I8

IS?

doctors there as in-network

because he wouldn't be able to travel back home, she said. Coverage through a Medicare Supplement plan is not as simple as that. People can apply for Medicare Supplement plans any time during the year, but they' re only guaranteed to be accepted during their first six months of being on basic Medicare. After that,

the carriers can ask health questions and deny applicants based on pre-existing c onditions. W h il e t h e A f -

fordableCare Act prevented traditional insurance policies

from denying coverage for people who are already sick, Medicare Advantage plans were exempted from that re-

WIth

our help, menopause doesn't have to be so confusing.

quirement, Smith said. The exception i s i f so m e one' s

Medicare Advantage plan is discontinued. In those cases,

people can enroll in Supplement plans without running the risk of being denied. There are 12 Medicare Ad-

vantageplans offered in CentralOregon by four carriers: Humana, Moda Health, Pa-

At the newSt. Charles Center for Women'sHealth, weprovideour patients with medicalcare,but we als oeducateyouonthings like fitness, nutrition, stress management andmore.Soyou don't have tostruggle throughthe menopausemazeon your own.

cificSource and Providence. Lisa Emerson, SHIBA's pro-

Schedule anappointment with one of our providerstoday.

gram coordinator, said that' s a healthy range of choices for the region's population size, and it doesn't hurt that Bend's

population is growing rapidly, especially among people of retirement age. Beginning in 2014, the Affordable Care Act r equired

that Medicare Advantage carriers spend 85 percent of their income on medical ser-

vices. The rest can go toward things like administrative expenses and profit. That's had a big impact on how the carriers interact with their customers, Hylton

said. These days, carriers are

St. Charles Center for

Women's Health

HOIF OPEH IH BEHDI 2600 NE NEFF RD. I 541-706-5920 REDMOND andPRINEVILLE I 541426-6635

SCharlesHealthCare.org/womenshealth 08


D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

FrmEss Barre dasses encompass a

Standing for a quarter of the day

wide range of coreexercises reducesodds of obesity, study finds By ArIana EunjungCha

In downtown LosAngeles. Barre classes mainly focus onsmall and I like barre as a comple- movements performed in precise ways, targeting muscles that ment to the high-intensity normally don't get much use.

also healthy, without a his-

workout," says Allison Ha-

cancer. For the first part of the

In women, standing a quarter, (metabolic syndrome) leads to half, and three-quarter was less standing." If you' re confused about the associated with 35 percent, 47 percent and 57 percent respec- health benefits of standing vs. tive reductions in obesity. sitting you' re hardly alone givIn both sexes, there ap- en the recent flurry of news pearedtobeno associationbe- about the topic. Last month, aftween standing and metabolic ter a widely shared study pubsyndrome. lished in October in the JourBased on the study, "clini- nal of Epidemiology found cians and public health prac- that sitting is not associated titioners should consider en- with an increased risk of dycouraging patients to achieve ing, a number of office workthe physical activity guidelines ers tweeted that they would be and increase standing time for saying goodbye to their standchronic disease prevention," ing desks. K erem Shuval, d irector o f Shuval's study supports physical activity research for previous research that points the American Cancer Society, to the dangers of being too and his colleagues wrote in the sedentary. In a 2010 study in paper. the American Journal of EpHowever, Shuval noted that idemiology, for instance, scithere's still "insufficient evientists found that people who dence specifically focusing on sat more than six hours a day the public health and medical had a much higher mortaliimplications of increasing dai- ty rate than those sitting less ly standing time as a potential than three hours. Earlier this tool for health promotion." year, experts writing in the The new study itself is limBritish Journal of Sports Medi-

study they were asked a

ited by the fact that it's imnumber of f i t ness ques- possible to conclude from the t ions induding t hi s o n e data "whether more standing

cine recommended that people

about standing: "For those reduces the risk of obesity activities that you do most and (metabolic syndrome) or days of the week (such as whether being obese or having work, school and housework), how much time do

least two hours — or a quar-

The Washington Post

By Mary MacVean Los Angeles Times

You may want to recon-

I never took a single ballet class as a girl, despite my whining, and while I got over that, I still can't ignore the allure of long, graceful muscles and good posture, which are the sweet promises behind

sider keeping that standing desk after all. A new study

published 'Itresday shows that people who stand for at least one-quarter of their

day appeared to have a significantly lower likelihood of obesity. The research, led by the American Cancer Society

barre workouts.

Barre teachers say the workout's combination of dance exercises, yoga and Pilates is perfect for an age when many of us spend hours

i n cooperation with T h e Cooper Institute, University of Texas and Univer-

sity of Georgia, involved analyzing data from more

hunched over devices, our

behinds on desk chairs. We seem to agree: There are hundreds of barre programs out there, from boutique studios to their corporate cousins, Dailey Method, Pure Barre

and Physique57 among them.

than 7,000 adult patients who visited th e C ooper

Clinic in Dallas from 2010

lit Al Seib / LosAngeles Times

LIz August, Chelsea DInkIns, Sharon Leal and AnnIe Kuo, from left, work out at the bar In Audra Skaates' The MaIn Barre class

"As an athlete, I do CrossFit

gendorf, a health coach and the founder of FitToFeast. Hollywood, one of 300 Pure corn. Barre locations. Her hourBarre is popular, she says, long class is full of exact, because it's "completely in- muscle-isolating movements clusive. Everyone can do it. in the company's structured I t's not i n t i m idating. A n d program of warm-ups, thigh it's about flexibility and tiny exercises, "seat lifters" and movements." other moves. "You should M uch of t h e w or k i n a

be thrashed by the end," she

barre class (generally mostly says. I was. "I nerd out about this. It women, though open to all) involves small movements absolutely changes how you done in precise ways. It might use your body," says Egbert, seem that such a workout can who began teaching barre hardlymake a difference,but while a student at University most practitioners look great, of California at Ir vine. She and a class can wear out even

a fit person. The idea is to target specific muscles, such as transverse abdominals,

has written a musical anthem in tribute to Pure Barre that' s

posted on You Tube. Hagendorf likes barre's

psoas majors, inner thigh and focus on the core muscles. obliques, ones that don't al- Working them out, among ways get attention. other benefits, can help peo"It works on your align- ple age gracefully. "Core is everything. It is ment ofthe body. Someone who is well aligned, stand- basically your home base of ing with ears over shoulders, strength. 'Abs' used to be the shoulders over hips, it creates buzzword, but 'core' is a more a fit look from the start. Your encompassing word," she shoulders are not rounded," says. "Every move you are says Elisabeth H alfpapp, doing, any functional movea former dancer who, with ment you are doing as a huher husband, created the man being, should come from Core Fusion barre exercise your core." "Instead of developing bulk program. Like any method, each stu- in one area, you really elondio has its own style, some gate," says Halfpapp, whose focusing more on cardiovas- Core Fusion Barre is found cular workouts, some more at more than two dozen Exon yoga. But barre has some hale gyms. They also have 11 core notions that play out in

most studios. There are work-

The real key to barre classes just might be that people like them.

"I'm not aware of any studies that have been published that say it's that method that

is significantly better than any other exercise. Any resistance-based exercise is good for the core," says Scott Silveira, a registered clinical exercise physiologist at the California Health and Longevity Institute. " The real secret i s

t hat

they' ve found a way to make exercise fun and enjoyable," Silveira says. "I think that is

really the magic ingredient." A nother r eason fo r t h e b arre explosion i s t h a t i t

doesn't require expensive equipment, such as P ilates r eformers, t r eadmills a n d

weight machines. Commonly, studios have mirrors and

ballet barres along two walls. Students also use small hand weights, stretch bands and

balls. Barre exercise classes are traced toLotte Berk, a dancer

in Europe who opened a studio in 1959. A student of hers brought the workout to New

York more than a decade later. Halfpapp began teaching

barre workouts in 1980, at the Lotte Berk Method studio; at the time it was for wom"It's a workout that teaches en only. And Berk teachers

DVDs and a book coming out in November.

outs at the barre and on mats

to work specific parts of the you about your body, about body — thighs, for example. actively working with your Position and alignment are body. In those poses, you are key. There's lots of clenching isolating your muscles; that' s of glute muscles and pulling where the focus is," says Aubelly buttons in toward the dra Skaates, who has been spine. teaching barreclasses since Brittany Egbert, 25, owns 2007 and opened the Main a Pure Barre studio in North

Barre late in 2011. "I fell in

Brain

ning, and associating good things with running and disassociating bad things from

ContInued from 01 T ell your f r i ends a n d co-workers you' re a runner. Hang race bibs in your work cube. Invite people to join you on a training run. Put together a playlist of running music.

love with the w orkout and what it gave me."

it.

"The popularity i s t h at people feel like they' re not really working out," Hagendorf says. "It's for all levels: dancers and those who never danced."

son, Joan Benoit Samuelson, Dean Karnazes and Amby

Burfoot. Five-time Olympian Fran-

Brown has spent a lot of

cie Larrieu Smith, who now

coaches track and field and

letes before marathons and emotional athletes who find

cross country at Southwest-

ern University in Georgetown, gets a spotlight, too.

Buy a subscription to a run-

race for whatever reason.

She explains that before in-

ning magazine. Put a quote from a runner in your email tagline. "People start treating you differently," Brown says. Second, set some goals. They should be measurable and moderately difficult, but

"People will d o w h atever they can to get to the Boston

door track races, which are noisy and somewhat chaotic,

Marathon, and sometimes they end up in the medical tent," he says. "Some become depressed because they miss

she would block out all the

outside factors. For example, you might not hit a personal record in a race if it's unusual-

raced in memory of a loved

ly hot or humid.

o ne, they m i ght

f eel t h a t

they' ve failed that person. B rown helps t hem s o rt like pain and boredom while through feelings and recogyou are running. Instead, nize that just by training for focus on the things you see the race they' ve already honalong the way, and spend ored that person. He helps some time describing them runners deal with pain manin intimate detail inside your agement, lends an ear for head. some emotional releases and Work on v isu a l ization reminds them that all good skills, too. Picture yourself athletes fail sometimes. "A lot of runners by their winning a race. If it's cold out, imagine yourself by a toasty own admission are obsessive fire. Visualize yourself strug- people," he says. "That's why gling, but then overcoming 'The Runner's Brain' is so imthat struggle. Watch yourself, portant. It helps them underinside your head, giving an stand how the brain can be impressive kick at the end of useful in the course of their a race. running." Brown has other tips, too: The book i ncludes interdevelopinga pre-raceroutine, views with a slew of elite runrelaxing while you are run- ners, including Michael JohnThird, talk positive — or at least don't focus on downers

tory of serious conditions like heart attacks, stroke or

you spendstandi'?" The answers were grouped into five categories — almost all

of the time; approximately three-quarters of the time; approximately half of the time; approximately one-quarter of the time; almost none of the time.

The second component of the study involved measuring the study participants' body mass index, body fat percentage and

stand, wiggle and otherwise move or take breaks for at ter of of the typical eight-hour work day.

FREE

Hearing Screening for Adults Semi-Annual Event for New Patients

November 11-13 Appointments please

waist circumference and

determining whether they had metabolic syndrome (a cluster of symptoms that in-

cludes high blood pressure or elevated blood sugar). The results, published in

this month's Mayo Clinic Proceedings, were striking for both genders. In men, standing a quarter of the time was linked to a 32 percent reduction in

obesity and standing half

Rain checks available if requested by dates above.We offer these free clinics once each fall & spring. Take this opportunity to have your hearing assessed by aCertified Clinical Audiologist.

the time with a 59 percent

Canm.OaamN

reduced likelihood of obesity. Interestingly, standing

a HEARINGAID CUNIC

three-quarters of the time

did not appear to be associated with reduced obesity.

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them.

themselves unable to finish a

they should also account for

lege-educated. They were

and others opened their own barre businesses — lots of

time talking to anxious ath-

the time by 8 minutes." They don't take i nto account the fact that a Nor'easter blew in, or a heat wave settled on the city. If they' ve

to 2015. Most of the participants were white and col-

K%%ll K ~M iKEÃ8

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

distractions and focus on the lights in the rafters for a few moments before lining up at the starting blocks. Meb Keflezighi, who won the 2014 Boston Marathon,

describeshis experience at the 2013 New York Marathon, when he wasn't in peak condition and hit a wall at mile

19. After maintaining a pace of less than 5 m i nutes per

mile, he suddenly slowed and walked parts of the next mile, turning in a mile split of 9:58. Instead of giving up, though, he decided that even though

he wasn't going to win, he was going to find a way to finish. And he did, crossing hand in hand with an amateur runner

who encouraged him along those last few miles. It's a reminder that even the

best runners fail sometimes,

KIDS Center

a child abuse intervention center

and that positive thoughts can

outweigh the negative ones. And it turns out that run-

ning well isn't just about legs and hearts and lungs. It's also about what's going on inside your head.

Sign up at kidscenter.org


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

MEDICINE

esui e ena es in artisttosee aintin innew i t By Alex Harris

ed to say," Gomez-James said.

computers. He's adept at art

Miami Herald

When he was 3, James started watching "Sesame Street,"

he creates using Photoshop. Prints of his computer-gener-

MIAMI — W h e n S e l r is James painted a month ago,

his face three inches from the ated self-portraits and images of flowers were among those gave him apenciland paper included at his art sale in early and he started scribbling, October,an idea developed by long, loopy lines that eventual- his sign language instructor at

he held his face so close to the canvas his nose nearly

television screen. His mother

smeared the paint. But when he went to paint his

latest piece, James, who was born blind and deaf in his home country of Trinidad and Tobago, was able to sit a comfortable

ly turned into the alphabet.

By 7, James was communicating with cartoon strip-like

art. He asked why he couldn' t hear or see, and drew cartoons of himself with hearing aids and glasses. Schooling presented a prob-

distance from the canvas.

Just two weeks before, Dr. Guillermo Amescua, a cornea specialist at the University of

Miami's Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, removed the cataract

in James' right eye, which he said had become ingrained behind the pupil. The pro bono surgery, plus a pair of tortoiseshell and gold glasses, gave James, 41, sight. "He was really excited when

he realized it was working," said Amescua.

James' scarred r e tinas mean his sight will never be perfect, but for a legally blind man, sight in both eyes is a miracle. An artist since childhood,

James uses acrylics to paint colorful bursts of f lowers, landscapes and scenes from his travels. He painted the

American Airways plane he flew to Miami on, the Metro-

rail he rode, the giraffe he fed at Zoo Miami and a photo of

UM, Kirsten Schwarz Olmedo. The communication thera-

py at UM, as well as the surgery at Bascom Palmer, are possible because of Harry, now a professor at UM. "It was a great blessing in my life when I met Selris," said Harry,

who met him when he was 7. the Blind rejected him because Olmedo's goal is for James he was deaf, and a school for to return to Trinidad with the the deaf didn't want him be- ability to communicate and to cause he was blind. make a living as an artist. "I want to give him the gift G omez- James took h e r son to a parish priest, Father of language," she said. Eugene Delahunt, who introJames is learning to read, duced the pair to the local Ro- to use sign language and to tary Club. From there, James speak through an iPad app, was sent to Beth Harry, a spe- where he arranges images the cial education teacher at the app translates into a sentence. Immortelle Children's Centre His family charts his progress in Trinidad, a school for chil- from his Facebook pageCarl Juste /The Miami Herald dren with disabilities. The Selris James Fund. Selris James, right, smiles as he points to the painting of the exterior of Bascom Palm Eye Institute Harry said James was the Harry recently made a book that he presented to Dr. Guillermo Amescula. James was born with congenital rubella syndrome, only deaf and only visually from a collection of James' impairing his vision and hearing. impaired student, which led to drawings. She self-published "Deaf, blind, and smart as some difficulties. "We didn't actually know a whip" on Shutterfly and himself, posing on the giant bella, a contagious disease Doctorssoon confirmed her what we were doing," she said. wants to find an internation"U" at the UM Coral Gables caused by a virus, during son was doubly impaired. Eye "We did the best we could." al publisher to take the book campus. her pregnancy. Her son was surgery helped his left eye reHe remained at the Immor- mainstream. "We think it's a universal His mother, Gwenie Go- born with congenital rubella gain some sight, but after that, telle until he was 21, where "he drew everything he want- he fell deeper in love with story," she said. mez-James, contracted ru- syndrome. lem. The Trinidad School for

Galileo

theiraverage walking speed by

Continued from 01 Dylan has undergone cranial sacral therapy to get more oxygen into his brain. He re-

was no change in the control that." group. The study, published She is launching a fundraisin the journal Journal of Mus- ing campaign in hopes of raisculoskeletal and Neuronal In- ing enough to buy the device. teractions in 2010, concluded A local therapist has already the difference was statistically committed $1,000, she said. significant. This, in addition to all of the Jinger Cain said there is no equipment the Cains already doubt in her mind the Galileo own, would eventually allow would help Dylan. them to launch a nonprofit to

a median of 38 percent. There

ceived an experimental stem

cell infusion, despite one doctor's assertion, Jinger Cain said, that it wouldn't help. They

did exercises called patterning, which most experts dismiss as unfounded. He also continues

to get a form of therapy called neurofeedback. The Bulletin's High Desert

Pulse magazine chronicled the family's foray into hyperbaric oxygen therapy, which involves sitting in a chamber breathing pure oxygen under high air pressure, in 2009. Dylan was 4 years old at the time.

Dylan's first 120 oxygen treatmentswere done atBend Memorial Clinic. In the be-

"This isn't ]ust an experiment for us," she said.

help other community mem-

'I want it yesterday'

said. "Other parents, I don't think,

bers with similar disorders, she

The Galileo is not cheap. realize that there is so much we Jinger Cain said the device can do for our kids," she said. costs roughly $8,300 for the — Reporter: 541-383-0304, vibrating base and another tbannow@bendbulletin.corn nearly $11,000 for a tilted table that's used with the base.

ASSURANCE

She's trying to raise money to purchase the devices before Joe Kline /The Bulletin Thanksgiving. "I want it yesterday," she said. Caregiver Kaci Aslamov helps Dylan Cain, 10, as they walk around the neighborhood while parents Mark and Jinger Cain walk along and watch last week in Bend. The Caine occasionally bounce balls as When Dylan was born,

ginning, the family lived in they walk with Dylan since he likes the sound they make. Corvallis and stayed in Bend ments. They officially moved standing,'" Russman said. "The votec Medical, mechanically answer is, how about those stimulates the musdes in peopurchased their own oxygen children who did not receive ple who can't move them using chamber to use at home. the therapy who are as severe- vibrations, said Marilyn Hamly involved? What will they be ilton, who owns Carmel, CalImprovement, but how? doing a year later? Some of ifornia-based, STIMDesigns Although Dylan's parents them will be standing and will LLC, the only U.S. company can't pinpoint which therapy walk with support." that distributes the device. In did what, they say everything Russman disagreed with the Dylan's case, his ankles would they' ve done over the years therapies the Cains have used be held in proper alignment has led to significant improve- — including the stem cell infu- either using straps or people' s ments in their son's ability to sions and cranial sacral thera- hands. The brain's plasticity alwalk, talk, see and think. py — citing a lack of evidence. lows it to learn and relearn how He can walk short distances Jinger Cain said she's heard to position the body, Hamilton after being helped into a walk- that from several neurologists, said. er. He speaks full sentences. including more than one from He doesn't need diapers. On OHSU. She said she doesn' t Limited research OHSU's Russman said via recent weekday morning, take her son to neurologists Dylan, prompted by his moth- anymore. bration will indeed loosen the "My whole world is, 'I hear muscles, but that would not er, even said "Hello" in seven languages. what you say, I hear what carryover once the vibration they' re saying, and I'm going to stopped. For his cerebral palsy A few months into the hyperbaric oxygen therapy, Mark do what I want,'" she said. patients, he said he commonly Cain said, his son spoke better recommends surgery, casting and conveyed his needs more The earlier the better or Botox injections. clearly. In his home recentPeople with cerebral palJinger Cain said she's thorly, Dylan casually asked his sy can't control many of the oughly vetted all of those opcaregiver to help him get rid of same muscles other people tions and found none would an ad that had popped up on can. Without the typical use work for Dylan. An orthopedic his iPad. He asked a reporter associated with daily activities, surgeon in Bend recently gave where she had gone to school. those muscles become tight her a list of surgeries he felt "He's been progressing at and shorten,rendering them would help Dylan, but she said this level," Mark Cain said, unable to support proper bone he has a condition called adre"but we' re hoping that the Gal- growth. This leads to joint de- nal insufficiency, which preileo will give him a big jump up formities and sometimes even vents his body from releasing and give him that strength and dislocations. hormones that protect one' s balance." That lack of muscle control body under stress. She said Dr. Barry Russman, a pedi- is causing Dylan's ankles to surgery would be especially atric neurologist with Oregon turn sharply inward, a defor- life-threatening for her son. Health & S c ience Universi- mity that will only worsen with Russman said those horty, questioned how much of time, further diminishing his mones can be given artificialDylan's improvement came chances of walking. ly to people with adrenal infrom the therapies they' ve When it comes to children sufficiency during surgeries. used. He's researched hyper- with cerebral palsy, interven- Jinger Cain said she's aware baric oxygen therapy and de- tions should happen earlier in of that but that the medication termined it's not effective. their development, Jinger Cain w ouldnotofferenough protecAll children with cerebral said. tion. She said Botox injections "They' re growing. They' re would be "excruciating" and palsy, a condition caused by damage to the developing getting taller. They' re getting the casts would prevent Dylan brain, will improve to some de- heavier. Their muscles are set- from improving his mobility gree without intervention as a ting. Their bone plates are set- while wearing them. result of normal development, ting," she said. "Literally every A handful of small studies he said. day that your child is not mak- have found vibration therapy "With parents, they say, ing progress, they' re falling improved mobility and, in one 'See? My kid could not even further behind." study, bone strength in cerestand and then we did this therThe Galileo, developed by bral palsy patients. apy and a year later, look, he' s the German device maker NoResearchers in South Korea

iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications

Jinger Cain, a real estate bro-

ker, said she had built up a healthy savings account. But

during the week for the treatto Bend in 2012 and have since

debt," she said. "My family can' t afford for me to keep doing

found after using whole body vibration, children with cerebral palsy displayed "significantly better gait speed, stride length and cycle time." The study, published in the jour-

after a few years, all of the ther-

apies they tried deaned it out, she said. "To get where we' ve gotten,

I' ve buried us in credit card

nal Clinical Rehabilitation in

EVERGREEN

In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome. corn

2013, also found the therapy strengthened two leg muscles below the knees. It was very small, however, involving only

Thank you to all Vets

30 children.

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from the Pine Tavern. P

Researchers at S h riners Hospital for Children in Montreal randomly assigned 20 children with cerebral palsy to either only physiotherapy or physiotherapy plus vibration therapy. Those who received

Reservations are encouraged.

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Aziz Ansari ives comicvoice to new series TV SPOTLIGHT

than I am, I'd like to think. But there's some overlap."

"Masters of None" Streaming onNetflix

ed no more harshly than were

the fat kid, the new kid and

By Frazier Moore

An overlap item: Dev's drol- other outsiders. "My skin color and different ly grating ringtone was erupting from Ansari's phone first. background was just the thing But Ansari says that, in kids made fun of when they ways small and large, he made fun of ME," he explains.

The Associated Press

wants his show to feel authen-

N EW YORK — B y o n e measure, Aziz Ansari has tak-

OK." tic as well as funny. Before the bedroom scene He enrolled as a marketing

en just a baby step with "Master of None."

was scripted, he recorded an

starting Friday

latest in a TV genre of stand-

ups (think Jerry Seinfeld, Louis C.K., Jim Gaffigan) depicting versions of themselves both on and off the stage. But "Master" is its own distinctive thing, thanks to the distinctive voice of Ansari-

a top stand-up who can pack Madison Square Garden in ad-

dition to being a capable actor building on his seven-season run as p int-size impresario

Tom Haverford on "Parks and Recreation." He also created, produced and wrote "Master"

(in cahoots with fellow "Parks and Rec" alum Alan Yang) and directed two episodes. Granted, the 32-year-old Ansari hasn't strayed too far for his new character, Dev, a

first-generation Indian-American and aspiring actor who lives in

N e w Y o rk , w h ere

he has found moderate success doing TV commercials and spends his ample free time with a varied troupe of friends.

student at New York University, where his future vocation

improv conversation with Noel Wells, who plays Rachel.

The new Netflix c omedy

series, whose 10 episodes premiere Friday, arrives as the

"But for the most part, it was

suggested itself in the stories he'd spin for chums that kept

"I said, 'Let's pretend we

just had sex and the condom them in stitches. "They'd say, 'You should broke,' and I used that to help us craft the dialogue." do one of those New Talent Along with putting out nights at the comedy clubs," "Master of None," this year he recalls. "So I did one and I Ansari joined forces with so- enjoyed it. "But my voice as a comediK.C. Bailey/ Nefflix vi The Associated Press ciologist Eric Klinenberg to Eric Wareheim, Aziz Ansari and NoelWells appear in a scene from publish "Modern Romance," a an has continued to evolve into the Netflix original series "Master of None." The comedy series research-basedmeditation on more complicated ideas:deeppremieres Friday. finding love. What he learned er stuff about race, my immihas definitely informed "Mas- grant parents, police brutality. ter," he says, "although I didn' t The real trick isn't just making "There's no big premise," mishap: His condom breaks want to do what might be it funny, but getting the audisays Ansari. "I tried to make while in bed with Rachel, called a dating show." ence to think, 'You' ve found "Master" isn' t. Besides his a deeper insight that strikes a the series similar to stand-up whom he met hours earlier at in theway each episode deals a bar. amorous adventures with Ra- chord with me.'" with a particular topic: longAfter a dash to the phar- chel, Dev hangs with a crowd Still, it doesn't always have term relationships, elderly macy for a morning-after pill, played by castmembers in- to be complicated. "Like, I was feeling frustratpeople, how Indians are ste- Dev spends the rest of the cluding Eric Wareheim, Lena reotyped on TV. I' ve enjoyed episode in an exploration of W aithe and Kelvin Yu. H e ed how I don't read enough all the acting work I' ve done, the pros and (many) cons of also has an onscreen mother books. All these great books, but, until now, only in my parenthood as he observes it and dad, portrayed by Fatima and I'm wasting time looking stand-up have I felt like I' ve among his friends. and Shoukath Ansari (on hi- at Ludacris' Instagram page! been able to get out my voice." Was that scene inspired by a atus from his regular job as a So I talk about that onstage That voice is as bright as his condom crisis of his own? gastroenterologist), who hap- and when people laugh, I real"There's been similar expe- pen to be the star's real-life ize I'm not the only one. sparkling eyes and luminous "Once you develop a voice, grin, and he imbues Dev with riences in the bedroom that parents. I' ve drawn from, sure," he conan open-minded attitude and Ansari was raised in tiny you can share things that almost childlike wonder. cedes. "I don't think this show Bennettsville, South Carolina, might seem specific to you. In the series' first scene, he is autobiographical, and this where, despite his minority But they' re universal, and evfaces a potentially disastrous guy is a few years less evolved status, he recalls being target- eryone will respond."

au ter avoi s mom's ca s

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

Dear Abby:My mother calls me

is an emergency. Continue to be

all?) all of the time. I answer sometimes, positive and upbeat, and stop hiding Dear Abby:I am 13 and the only but sometimes I don't because I feel from your mother. job I have is baby-sitting. My brothshe wants to know too much about Dear Abby:Would you PLEASE er and his girlfriend ask me to bamy life. say a few words to those discour- by-sit their two kids, ages 9 and 6. I work full time with the public. teous individuals in the gym who, They haven' t paid me for the last five When I get home, I'm tired. I have

even at 6 a.m., think it's all right to

talked to people all day long, and I really don't feel like entertaining her. My mother tends

times I' ve watched them. They say I

sit on a piece of ex- should do it for free because it's my ercise e q uipment, niece and nephew.

DE/,R

ABBY

to be negative, snotty and, most of the time,

offensive. If there's a storm or an accident on the news, she calls me

repeatedly until I call back. Who wants to call someone back who acts that ways I try to be positive and upbeat. Sometimes she drains my energy. Do you have any advice for me? —Put Off in the Pacific

texting, while others wait to complete their

weight-training workouts and get to work'? — Ted on the East Coast Dear Ted: The first rule of basic etiquette ANYWHERE is to show

consideration for the people around you. This applies not only to gym-goers who hog the equipment while texting, but also to the ones who carry on extended conversations while

Shouldn't I get paid? What should

I do'? Shouldn't they pay me for the other times before I watch them again? — Working Teenin Iowa

Dear Teen:If you had another way of earning money, I would say, yes, you should watch your niece and nephew occasionally without charging. However, if your brother and his girlfriend agreed to pay in the past and have suddenly stopped, they are taking advantage of you. If that's the case, you have the right to deny your services until you receive

callsbecause she'sworried thebad

straddling the treadmill, sitting on equipment others are waiting to use and failing to wipe away the perspi- what they owe. ration they dripped on the machines A word of advice: This will hapwhile they were exercising. pen less often if you communicate Oh! And let's not overlook those in advance that you charge for bawho slather on perfume before go- by-sitting, and that you want to be ing to the gym, despite the fact that paid a certain amount at the time of

news she hears in the media could

as one sweats the odor is magnified

Northwest

Dear Put Off:Yes. Explain to your mother that at the end of the day you

don't have the energy to carry on a lengthy conversation with her. It wouldn' t be rude; it's the truth. If she

be aboutyou, tellheryou have her — or worse, people who "forget" to listed as someone to contact if there use deodorant. (Have I covered it

service. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.corn or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069

I

I

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) noon, 3:20, 7, 10:15 • BURNT(R) 12:30, 3, 5:30, 7:55, 1 0:25 • CRIMSONPEAK(R) 4:15, 7:30, 10:30 • DANCIN' IT'S ON (PG) 1:05, 3:25, 6:40, 9:35 • EVEREST(PG-l3) 1:25, 4:20, 7:15, 10:05 • GOOSE8UMPS(PG) 1:15, 3:45, 6:45 • GOOSEBUMPS 3-D(PG)9:15 • HOTELTRANSYLVANIA2 (PG)1:25, 3:30, 630, 9 • THE INTERN (PG-13) 12:10, 3:05 • JEM AND THE HOLOGRAMS (PG)1:20 • THE LASTWITCHHUNTER(PG-13) l2:40, 4:05, 7:10, 9:50 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 12:20, 3:40, 7:25, 10:35 • THE MARTIAN 3-D IMAX(PG-13) 12:05, 3:15 • OUR BRANDIS CRISIS(R) 1,3:35, 7:20, 9:55 • PAN(PG)1:30, 4:25, 7:05 • ROCK THE KASBAH(R) 9:45 • SPECTRE (PG-13) 7:30, 10:45 • SPECTREIMAX (PG-13) 7,10:25 • STEVE JOBS (R) 12:45, 3:55, 6:55, 10:10 • TRUTH(R)1:40, 4:40, 7:45, 10:35 • WOODLAWN (PG) 12:15, 3:40, 6:50, 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Grey's Anatomy" —A resident transfers to Grey Sloan Memorial in the new episode, "The Me Nobody Knows " arriving as a patient stirs much conversation because of an accidentally distributed sex tape. A visiting friend gives Richard (James Pickens Jr.) input on how to proceed with Maggie (Kelly

McCreary). April (Sarah Drew)

takes the case of a Middle Eastern youngster. Veteran director Jeannot Szwarc (" Somewhere in Time" ) guided the tale. Ellen

Pompeo also stars. 8p.m. on5,8, "Heroes Reborn" —Erica (Rya Kihlstedt) is prompted by a tragic turn of events to effect her plan in the new episode, "June 13th — Part Two," featuring a guest appearance by Greg Grunberg in his original "Heroes" role as Matt Parkman. Hiro and Angela (guest stars Masi Oka and Cristine Rose) find themselves with an assignment that's pretty weighty, since it could impact the entire course of civilization. Luke and Joanne (Zachary Levi, Judi Shekoni) face a personal tragedy. 8p.m. on 6, "The Big Bang

Theory" — Thenewepisode, "The Spock Resonance," involves the Spock this series is most likely to invoke, the "Star Trek" character played by the late Leonard Nimoy. The tale features his filmmaker son, Adam, and Wil Wheaton as themselves as Sheldon (Jim

Parsons) is interviewedabout the world's most famous Vulcan ... but has trouble keeping his mind off ex-girlfriend Amy (Mayim Bialik). Stephen Merchant (" Hello Ladies" ) also guest stars. 9 p.m. on LIFE, "Project Runway" —The new episode, "Finale Part 2," follows a template familiar to any longterm fans of the show: The designers present a preview of each of their collections, only to get pretty devastating feedback from the judges. That critique sends the designers scurrying frantically back to the workroom to "make it work" for runway time at New York Fashion Week, which is attended by a crowd of New York's elite, as well as former "Project Runway" contestants. Carrie Underwood weighs in with the judges as to who will be crowned the winner of Season 14. o zap2it

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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, NOV. 5,2015:Thisyearyou open up to a world full of potential. Some of these opportunities come from the people you know, whereas others are a result of you being in a lucky period. You can practically wish upon a star and have your wish come true. Know what you want, and go for it. If you are single, you will have to fight to keep that status

and choosenot to

8tnrssbow fbn ging commit. However, recognize that of tiny yon 8hstre ** * * * D ynamic others see you as ** * * p ositive being highly de** * Average sir a ble. If you are attached, you and ** So-so your significant * Difficult other will happily proceed down the path you both have laid out. Make it OK to take emotional risks. VIRGOusually is critical.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * * You can't help but succeed with all the support, ideas and energy around you. You could do well, even without

others' help, asyou areunusually creative even more than you would like. Know that, despite the demanding nature of what is going on, your home life will be a source of happiness in the near future. Tonight: Avoid complications.

and dynamic right now. Go off and manifest what you want to happen. Tonight: A little extra oomph goes a long way.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

game-changer.Peoplerespond much

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * Your attitude could be a real

** * * You come up with the right words at the right time. Communication could be overwhelming. You might be more optimistic and positive than you realize. You' ll be able to melt any resistance from a dear friend or loved one. Tonight: In the thick of things.

better to positive energy. If you feel isolated, hold up the mirror. Only you can

LEO (July23-Ang.22)

** * * * I f you back off and take a long, hard look at what is going on, you might like what you see. There could be a

** * Balance your checkbook before you take a risk. The gamble might be worth it, but be aware of the implications involved. A close associate could challenge your ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You' ll feel as if the time has come decision. Listen to what is being said, as to take control of a difficult situation. This there is likely to be some validity here. Tonight: Indulge a little. is likely to cause a commotion for some, but a resolution for you. Trust your efforts VIRGO (Ang.23-Sept. 22) when it comes to your work ethic. You ** * * * You could be challenged by a make a big difference. Tonight: A partner loved one. This person might give you the has anicewayofsaying "thankyou." cold shoulder or do something else that he or she believes will draw you in. Let TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * D espite someone else's athim or her know what your plans are, but titude, which might hurt you on a deep express yourappreciation nonetheless. level, you' ll keep it together. You succeed Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off. because of your resourcefulness. PresLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) sure builds because you would like to be ** * You might act as if you have aseacknowledged. Give it up, and refuse to cret that might be too big or too wonderpush. Tonight: Let your imagination take ful to keep to yourself. Stay mum. Focus the lead. on routine matters, and try to infuse them GEMINI (May 21-June 28) with more energy and creativity. Don' t ** * * A matter revolving around your hesitate to share your ideas. Tonight: Vanhome might keepyougrounded,perhaps ish quietly, then do what you want!

change howyou present yourself. Ask

friends for some feedback to help you turn the corner. Tonight: Burn the candle at both ends.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)

profound disagreementbetweenyou and another person. One of you is far more imaginative than the other. Learn how to compromise. Tonight: Consider a getaway

AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb.18) ** * * * A partner or loved one will pull you away from a problem. You could be awestruck by this person's suggestions. You' ll see a plethora of options as a result. Slow down before committing. Sit on your impulsiveness a little longer. Tonight: Time to be with a favorite person!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * You might not intend to be as critical or as challenging as you are today. You could hear a comment or two, which you probably would prefer not to acknowledge. Rather than create any uproar, ignore the comment. Watch the other party's reaction. Tonight: Say "yes" to an offer. © King Features Syndicate

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • PEOPLEPLACESTHINGS (R) 8:45 I

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • GOOSE8UMPS(PG)5: 45,8 • THE LASTWITCHHUNTER(PG-13) 5:30, 8 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 5:15, 8:15 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEGHOST DIMENSION (R) 5:30 • SPECTRE (PG-13) 7:30

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

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You Can Bid On: $2,000 Gift Certificate Retail Value $2,000 M. Jacobs Fine Furniture (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 10, at 8:00 p.m.)

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Estate SaleThe Bulletin Cash only! recommends extra ' Bedroom set: double bed w/headboard & I caution when purchasing products or, mattress, 3 drawer from out of I dresser w / m irror, services the area. Sending lI nightstand, SOLD. cash, checks, or Breakfast table: 4' i n f ormation round oak, seats 4+ I credit may be subjected to leaf seats 6, 4 up- I FRAUD. more holstered ch a i rs, informationFor about an l SOLD. advertiser, you may I Dining room: e n I c all t h e Oregoni 76 x18 dark wood State Atto r ney buffet $150 72nx42n O f f i ce beautiful glass din- I General's Consumer Protec- • ing room table, 8 tion h o t line at i upholstered chairs, I 1-877-877-9392. $400. 541-504-8228

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ESTATE SALE Keeney Moving Moving Sale, Nov. 6 & Pets & Supplies Quality items! Modern Estate Sale given by ** FREE ** 7, 9AM-SPM. L azy Boy s of a 8 Farmhouse Estate 17065 Sacramento Rd., Garage Sale Kit loveseat, leather chair Sa/es Sun River. The Bulletin recomPlace an ad in The & r e c liner, K i n g Friday - Saturday, 9-4 B ulletin fo r yo u r Take Spring River Rd., mends extra caution memory foam bed 8 61542 SE Baptist Way, sale and receive a turn left on Solar, left when purc h asing products or serdressers, grandfather just off Reed Market. on Upland, right on G arage Sale K i t clock, oak dining set, Contents of home and FREE! Sacramento. vices from out of the oak dinette 8 hutch, garage. Leather furTools, saws, d esks, area. Sending cash, G ENERATE SOM E Thomasville 7 pc. wall niture, f la t s c r een KIT INCLUDES: boat, clothes, work checks, or credit inunit, trundle bed, full TVs, washer 8 dryer, • 6 Garage Sale benches, sto r age f ormation may be People Look for Information EXCITEMENT in your neighborhood! Plan a kitchen, flat screen TV dining set, plus so shelves, and more! subjected to fraud. Signs About Products and For more informa- Services Every Daythrough garage sale and don' t & 2 s tands, Oreck, much more! See pix • $2.00 Off Coupon forget to advertise in patio set, I nvacare and descriptions at tion about an adverTo Use Toward BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS The Bulletin Classifieds classified! tiser, you may call motorized wheelchair, farmhouseestateYour Next Ad Search the area's most 541-385-5809. ladies clothing, tools, sales.corn O regon State • 10 Tips For comprehensive listing of the Attorney General' s ANTIQUES in c lude "Garage Sale Bid Now! classified advertising... 282 1800's primitive corC o n sumer www.BulletinBidnBuy.corn Success!" real estate to automotive, Office Protection hotline at ner cabinet, bench 8 Sales Northwest Bend merchandise to sporting desk, Shaker settee & PICK UP YOUR goods. Bulletin Classifieds 1-877-877-9392. chairs, wood trunks, Moving Sale-2640 NW GARAGE SALE KIT appear every day in the ie decoys, s i deboard, College Way ¹1, 11/7The Bulletin at 1777 SW Chanprint or on line. Serving Oencrel Oregon sinceSglg primitive items, Fen- 11/8, 9-3. Household, dler Ave., Bend, OR Call 541-385-5809 t on, g l assware & furniture & sport goods. 97702 Pakistani Bohkhara www.bendbulletin.corn Adopt a great cat or Buy IVew...Buy Local china, pewter, Singer 541-385-5809 ax10 rug.Ivory and twol A l tered, vacciYou Can Bid On: f eatherweight, f l a t Brown. $500. Have an item to The Bulletin nated, ID chip, tested, $1000 Carpet and The Bulletin ware sets, m irrors, Senng Control Oregon srnce iggi 541-633-5309 ServrngCentral Oregon since regs sell quick? more! CRAFT, 65480 Pad Certificate lots o f in t e resting 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Retail Value $1000 small col l ectibles, If it's under Sat. 11/7, 10-4 11190 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 CarpetcoFlooring jewelry & more! SW Red Cloud Rd, www.craftcats.org 288 '500 you can place it in (Bidding closes FRI. & SAT. 9-4, numPowell Butte, rain or Sales Southeast Bend snow! Antiques, oak Cans & bottles wanted! Tues., Nov. 10, bers Fri., 8 a.m. The Bulletin at 8:00 p.m.) SE 15th to Desert desk, much more! They make a big difClassifieds for: Antiques and old stuff. It Woods to 20998 ference in the lives of all goes! Sat. 11/7; Need help fixing stuff? Greenmont Dr. animals. Sofa & Love Seat'13 -3 lines, 7 days 7:30am-3pm. 21080 Call A Service Professional abandoned www.atticestatesanBid Now! Local nonprofit uses EXC. CONDITION M ajestic View C t . , find the help you need. www.BulletinBidnBuy.corn dappraisals.corn '20 -3 lines, 14 days for spay/neuter costs. Sofa is 90" L x 26" D Bend. CASH ONLY. 541-350-6822 www.craftcats.org or x 36" H. Loveseat is www.bendbulletin.corn (Private Party ads only) call 541-389-8420 for 67" L x 26" D x 36" 290 pickup or to learn loH. Asking $319 for Marilyn Rohaley NOTICE cations of trailers. set. Also, s e lling Sales Redmond Area Remember to remove ESTATE SALE Queen Mattress and Garage Sale signs Chi-Poo puppies, first 21004 KING HEZEKIAH DR., BEND Garage/Moving Sale, your Buy New...Buy Local Boxsp ring. Asking shots, dewormed, way (nails, staples, etc.) Take 15th St. south from Reed Market Rd. multi-family. 312-320 $179. Both i t ems You Can Bid On: cute! $30 0 -$400. after your Sale event Follow to King Hezekiah go east about 1 mile to SW Canyon Dr. Nolightly used in 2nd 54'I -977-0035 Oreck Axis Upright is over! THANKS! sale site. vember 7, 9AM-SPM. home For info call Steering Vacuum From The Bulletin Friday, Nov. 6 • Saturday, Nov. 7 Free to good home, feMeredith O Retail Value $399.99 and your local utility 9:00 am to 5:00 pm male black and white 360-607-9908. Oreck Vacuums 292 companies. CROWD CONTROL NUMBERS atsrAM FRIDAY cat. I n door/outdoor, (Bidding closes Seven Foot b y s i x f o o t a n tique fireplace• Sales Other Areas very f riendly. C a ll Tues., Nov. 10, The Bulletin surround-oak? wood; Pool Table; Ping Pong ServingCentralOregon since Sggg 541-420-0097. at 8:00 p.m.) MOVING SALE! 12445 Table; Lawn Mower; Beige Leather reclining www.bendbulletin.corn German Shepherds NW Rainbow Dr.Folsofa; Two large china cabinets; Mahogany Dinwww.sherman-ranch.us ing table and six chairs; Maple dining table and low signs on Crooked Quality. 541-281-6829 Bid Now! six chairs; Large Buffet cabinet; Two half moon Riyer Ranch. Fri/Sat, www.BulletinBidnBuy.corn 9-4, Sun, 9-noon, Tick, Tock shaped smaller china cabinets; Loveseat; two Lab Pups AKC, black & Early Birds, by appt matching wing back chairs; King bed with white yellow, Master Hunter Tick, Tock... sired, only, Thurs 11/5f & brass metal frame; Matching nightstands and performance pediFurn., Hsehld, tools, quilt rack; Victrola -works; Two recliners; Hun...don't let time get gree, OFA cert hips 8 elconstr., collectables. dreds of books; hundreds of CD's; VCR's; bows, 541-771-2330 away. Hire a see craigslist ad DVD's; Records; 45's; Dressers; nightstands; www.kinnamanretrievers.corn 541.923.1781 professional out Duncan Phyfe dining table and three chairs; Labrador pups AKC, Buy New...Buy Local Quilts; comforters; sheets; towels; blankets; lots of The Bulletin's yellow, $ 3 0 0-$400. You Can Bid On: of table cloths; Lots of Large ladies clothing Hunter Douglas Find It in 541-954-1727. "Call A Service -size 2-3X; Lots of tools and tool boxes; OutVignette Modern door furniture; Wicker items; About 50 collector The Bulletin Classifiedsl Professional" POODLE or POMAPOO Roman Shades dolls from Heritage; Boxed Games; Embroidery 541-385-5809 pupstoyor tiny. Adult Retail Value $1,000 Directory today! projects need to be finished; Fat Quarters and 0 also 541-475-3889 Redmond Window see t)s some supplies; Brother Sewing machine; Treats (;0 ' Queensland Heelers Purses like Dooney & Burke; Lots of size 8 1/2 (Bidding closes Pub l ic Auction & Garage Sale f Standard & Mini, $150 to 9 ladies shoes; Antique small drop front desk; I Tues., Nov. 10, Abandoned Rental Home & up. 541-280-1537 Antique small bar cabinet; Silverplate items; at 8:00 p.m.) Contents for Sale!! www.rig htwayranch.wor Lots Gold plate items; Sets of dishes and stainTHIS ISNOT HAUL AWAY JUNK. dpress.corn less flatware; lots of Xmas decor; Loveseat and I Monitors, Xboxes, brand new golf clubs, matching wing back chairs; Coffee, endtable, Schnoodle p u p pies, furniture, antiques and everything else! half round tables; Large office unit that unfolds; ready Nov. 4, $600 F, Also office printers/copiers. Pictures and Prints; Lots of Costume jewelry; $500 M, C a l l Kari: One Day ONLY!!! Antique dressers; oak dressers; Electrical appli541-390-6471 Saturday, November 7th, 2015, ances and huge amount of Kitchenware; Lots of stem ware and glasses; Large refrigerator; 11:00 am- 3roopm. Registered AKC Yellow Washer and Dryer; Vacuums; Lots of Glass- I Every i t em must be sold! Labs, born 9/15/15, Dinette,seats 6, good ware and Cookware; We hope to be ready by Location: ready 11/1. 4 females, cond., $400; Coffee Friday, so much stuff to handle!! See you Partners Property Management 3 m a l es , mi c ro- table, nic e w ood, soon, Deedy, Norm, Ken, chipped & vaccinated, $400; Queen b e d, I 2326 SIN G lacier Pl., Handled by parents on site, dog Serta mattress, headRedmond, OR • 541-389-4149 Deedy's Estate Sales Co. trial 8 hunting back- board, v ery clean, (Nyi/corner of Highland and 19thj Info Call- 541-41 9-4742 grounds. $500. $1200. 805-720-3515 See craigslist ad for more information estatesales.net for pictures and info 541-523-3782 IgIMore Pix at Bendbulletin.ci

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Private collector buying postagestamp albums & collections, world-wide and U.S. 573-286-4343 (local, cell phone). 241

Bicycles & Accessories 2013 Santa Cruz Solo mtn. racing bike, med. full-suspension, good cond, must sell, $26tt00. ' 541-480-2652 G iant Talon 1 29 e r hardtail, small, excellent condition $475 541-408-1676

i The Bulletin i

Exercise Equipment 212

1930s Empire Style scano ed table top,

Precor Multi-station strength and fitness unit,high quality always inside, exc. cond., paid over $1500 sell for $600. Must see! You move 541-330-0733.

35t/~n diameter, has

Ski Equipment

Antiques & Collectibles

243

sailing ship design on the top. Base is a capstan, could sell separately. $299 obo Also Vintage wash bowl & pitcher set, white 8 light blue with gold trim. $65. See more pix at bendbulletin.corn 541 <19-6408 Look at:

Bendhomes.corn for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

Bid Now!

www.BulletinBidnBuy.corn &whap

Buy Hew...Buy Local

You Can Bid On: Ski or Snowboard Tune-Up. Retail Value $40 Mountain Water Snow (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 10, at 8:00 p.m.)

Antiques Wanted: Marbles, old tools, fishing gear, collector character glasses, John The Bulletin Deere toys, Breyer To Subscribe call horses, old signs. 541-385-5800 or go to 541-389-1578 www.ben dbulletin.corn

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E2 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5 2015 • THE BULLETIN 245

246

Golf Equipment

Guns, Hunting

CHECK YOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

your ad, please contact us ASAP so that

corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 246

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?

Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad

with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 13 OI'

~s weeks 2 0 !

Ad must include price of

un le tern ofssso ~

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

260

267

Misc.Items

Bernina 820 in excellent condition. Price includes lot of bobbins, carrying case, all sewing feet, Barbie case and all instruction books. $4700 cash. 541-205-8525.

Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655

BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. BUYING &

SE LLING

476

Fuel & Wood

Bid Now!

www.BulletinBidnBuy.corn

Buy New...Buy Local

You Can Bid On: $600 Certificate toward Non-Guided Upland Bird Hunting Sage Canyon Outfitters (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 10, at 8:00 p.m.) •

257

Musical Instruments VOGUE BANJO with stand, exc e llent c ondition, $30 0 . 541-385-4790 BASS GUITAR SOUNDGEAR by Ibanez 4-string, black exc. cond., with premium padded case, strap and amplifier. $250. Fender electric guitar, Squire Strat 8 case, SOLD. Vintage banjo, 5-string, new keys 8 strings, SOLD. 541-385-4790. 260

Misc. Items

Daniel: on 10/4 @ St Francis Service you sat behind me. Please call for lunch.thanx R. 503. 305. 5191

Misc. outdoor Christmas decorations, like new. 541-408-0846

Tow Bar, for Chevy C olorado, $100 . 541-788-6442

cash, check, Visa, MC 541-420-3484, Bend

421

Pine & Juniper Split

Schools & Training

PROMPT DELIVERY

269

11TR TruckSchool REDMONDCAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

476

541-389-9663

WWW.I1TR.EDU

Employment Opportunities

Bid Now!

www.BuiietinBidnsuy.corn

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme caution when r es ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline

This position is located in Chiloquin.

For more information contact: The Kiamath Tribes PO Box 436 Chiioquin, OR 97624 jobs © klamathtribes.corn www.klamathtribes.org 541-783-2219 x 113 Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

r.=.-"-,.— .a products or i I chasing services from out of I I the area. Sending I c ash, checks, o r I credit i n formation I I may be subjected to FRAUD. I more informaI For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General's I C o n sumer 1 I Office Protection hotline at I I 1-877-877-9392. I

gThe Bulletin g

For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Garage Sales Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n d ustry, Garage Sales Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.

The Bulletin

Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin's let Lost at14th and web site, www.bendAlbany. Black with bulletin.corn, will be white stripes with tional fraud. Deal loable to click through more pro m inent cally whenever posautomatically to your w hite than a w i l d sible. website. skunk. She cannot Y Watch for buyers spray. Hides in dark who offer more than attracted to your asking price and areas, Get your easily a c c essible who ask to have food. Please do not business money wired or to catch her, handed back to them. attempt please call Fake cashier checks 563-357-7503 or e ROW I N G and money orders 319-493-1361 with are common. any information. with an ad in YNever give out personal financial inforThe Bulletin's mation. "Call A Service V'Trustyour instincts Professional" REMEIIIIBER: If you and be wary of have lost an animal, someone using an Directory don't forget to check escrow service or The Humane Society agent to pick up your Early Childhood Bend merchandise. Development Center 541-382-3537 Supervisor Redmond The Bulletin Senses central Oregon since t903 $40,945 - $58,623 541-923-0882 Full Benefits Madras 263 Prof-Mgt., Regular, 541-475-6889 Full-Time • Tools Prineville 541-447-7178 This position is located Chicagopneumatic4.5" or Craft Cats in Chiloquin. angle a i r gr i nder, 541-389-8420 C P9110 12,00 0 For more information RPM, used very little. contact: $245. 503-936-1778 The Kiamath Tribes Jenerac 4000W-XL 7.8 PO Box 436 HP generator, $275. Chiioquin, OR 97624 541-316-1045 www.klamathtribes.org jobs@klamathtribes.corn 541-783-2219 x 113

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

Don't track it in all Winter

•Leaves •Cones • Needles • Debris Hauling

Winter Prep •Pruning .Aerating •Fertilizing

Compost Applications Use Less Water

$$$ SAVE $$$ Improve Plant Health

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

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Fall Clean Up

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Sprinkler

wood stoves. 267

Fuel & Wood

Blow-Outs Fall Clean up ~Landsca in •Landscape Construction eWater Feature Installation/M aint. •Pave rs •Renovations •Irrigation Installation

Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759

Personal Services At Your Service Errands & Notary I stand in line so you don't need to. errandsandnotary @ gmail.corn 541-815-4731

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood

purchased.

• Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

The Bulletin swwsecentral cacaossince ele

bendbulletin.corn which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results!

Call 541-385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn 383

Produce 8 Food

Vaquero Valley Ranch & Cattle Co. Grass finished Beef. Open year round. All orders welcome from whole beefs to 1 lb. pkg of ground beef. Contact Ron Miller 541-382-0043 or text 541-350-2520, email

vvrccbeef O gmail.corn

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The successful candidate can expect to write a weekly front-page centerpiece for the paper, as well as report on local prep and community sports and recreation. As a lead reporting position, it also entails a modest amount of editing of the paper's copy, and is responsible for coordinating coverage. Photography experience and skills a plus. This is a full time position.

To apply,please email resume and any relevant writing samples to: spokesmaneditorObendbulletin.corn

The Bulletin PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT s •

ADVERTISING SALES EXECUTIVE

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

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

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

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

All hiring contingent upon passing a drug test. EOE

t I i tB $8INN

We are looking for an Executive Assistant to provide administrative support to our executive management team. Will serve as the point of contact for internal and external constituents and perform other support duties such as calendar management; travel planning; and preparing correspondence, reports, documents and visual presentations.

Position requires 5+ years of experience supporting C-Level Executives, proficiency in Microsoft Office (experience in Google apps preferred), excellent writing and proofreading skills, strong organizational and prioritization ability and ability to communicate effectively and deliver world class customer service to individuals at all levels. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. Please go to www.lesschwab.corn for more information and to apply.

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@$300-$500+ per week environment, with a great opportunity to advance Meet and greet the public at various retail locations, 9rocery stores, sporting venues, trade shows, and other events. Gain valuable sales experience by promoting

The Bulletin (the most trusted media source in the region) If you are 16 or older, outgoing, enthusiastic, personable, positive, self motivated, dependable, and willing and able to work five days a week including weekends- Your Neighborhood Publications, LLC wants to talk to you. Though prior sales experience is helpful — it's not required. Applicants must have dependable transportation. We offer you: • complete snd thorough training • flexible work schedules • weekly bonuses • unlimited earning po tential •

Currently seeking 2-3 people to start immediately! •

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Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.

The Bulletin

L +**** * * * * * * * * * * A y

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

Western Communications seeks a reporter to cover community news and local sports for the Redmond Spokesman, its 4,000 circulation weekly newspaper in Redmond, Oregon.

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Reporter

No agencies or telephone calls p/ease

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Please send your cover letter, resume, and a work sample attention: sportsassistant© bendbulletin.corn

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WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you' ll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

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If you are a sports-minded journalist and have a positive "Can Do" attitude

* ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * I

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Community/Sports

• Proven interpersonal skills • Professional-level writing ability and sports background a must • Working knowledge of traditional high school sports • Proven computer and proofreading skills • Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadlineoriented environment • Must be able to successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen

541-385-5809

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Call 54 I -385-5809 ro m o te o u r s ervice

Redmond Spokesman

The successful candidate will work weeknight and Saturday shifts.

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

General Snowblower, A r iens, 326 24", electric start, like Hay, Grain & Feed new. $450. 541-788-6442 Building/Contracting L a ndscaping/Yard Care First Quality green grass / * Great Supplemental Income!! * / hay, no rain, barn stored, 265 NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land$250/ton. I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I law requires anyone scape Contractors Law Building Materials Call 541-549-3831 night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all Patterson Ranch, Sisters day construction work to businesses that ad- All Kohler components: Premium orchard grass, currently have openings all nights of the week.• / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Jetted tub, 2 s inks, Construction Contrac- Landscape Construc- faucets & commode; barn stored no rain, start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: c ondition A+. P i cs $250/ton, straw 3 tied / endbetween 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoactive license p lanting, deck s , available, $ 4 85/all. bale $5/per bale. De- • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• l ivery a v a il . Ca l l I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI means the contractor fences, arbors, 541-788-1226 541-420-9158 is bonded & insured. water-features, and inI minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI REDMOND Habitat • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irGood classified ads tell RESTORE COB l i c ense at rigation systems to be / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackwww.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e Building Supply Resale the essential facts in sn ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and interesting Manner.Write / other tasks. Quality at contractor.corn Landscape ContracLOW PRICES from the readers view - not or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit 1242 S. Hwy 97 the seller' s. Convert the IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl The Bulletin recom- number is to be in541-548-1406 mends checking with cluded in all adverfacts into benefits. Show / including life insurance, short-term 8 long-term Open to the public. the CCB prior to con- tisements which indithe reader howthe item will disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. tracting with anyone. cate the business has help them in someway. 266 Some other t rades a bond, insurance and This ~ Please submit a completed application also req u ire addi- workers c ompensa- • Heating & Stoves advertising tip attention Kevin Eldred. tional licenses and tion for their employbrought to you by Applications are available at The Bulletin cert ifications. ees. For your protecNOTICE TO front desk (f 777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or tion call 503-378-5909 ADVERTISER The Bulletin an electronic application may be obtained SNVIAg CNlsII OISgNl ShKCtae or use our website: Since September 29, upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via Handyman www.lcbtstate.or.us to 1991, advertising for o rchard/grass email (keldred@bendbulletin.corn). check license status used woodstoves has Quality mix $225-$245 ton, I DO THAT! before contracting with been limited to modbales, between Home/Rental repairs No phone calls please. the business. Persons els which have been small Bend Redmond, del. Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape certified by the Oravai. 541-280-7781 * No resumes will be accepted * Honest, guaranteed maintenance do not egon Department of work. CCB¹151 573 r equire an LC B l i - Environmental Qual- Wheat Straw for Sale. Dennis 541-317-9768 Drug test is required prior to employment. cense. Also, weaner pigs. ity (DEQ) and the fedEOE. 541-546-6171 eral E n v ironmental Landscaping/Yard Care USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Protection A g ency Looking for your (EPA) as having met The Bulletin servrngcentre oregon since wet Door-to-door selling with smoke emission stannext employee? fast results! It's the easiest dards. A cer t ified Place a Bulletin woodstove may be way in the world to sell. help wanted ad Z~rre r' /iy identified by its certifitoday and cation label, which is Za~<0a ~r,. The Bulletin Classified reach over permanently attached 60,000 readers 541-385-5809 MANAGING to the stove. The BulAdministrative each week. Central Oregon letin will not k now- Your classified ad ingly accept advertisLANDSCAPES will also ing for the sale of Since 2006 appear on uncertified

to

Employment Opportunities

In this position you will play a vital role on our Sports Staff!

Garage Sales

Pet Skunk Vio-

Snow RemovalEquipment

Employment Opportunities

SPOVESMAN The Bttjlettrt

at 1-503-378-4320

FOUND swimming suit top, little girl size, pink with ruffles, near TuGolden West pool table e x c . c ond, malo School 1 1 /1. 541-419-6408 dark cherry finish, black felt, has racks, and balls and cues. $1000 professional move or $700 you move. 541-588-0508

264

$49,541-$77,184 Full Benefits Prof.-Mgt., Regular, Full time

Multi-cord discounts!

All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, CASH!! class rings, sterling silFor Guns, Ammo & ver, coin collect, vinReloading Supplies. tage watches, dental 541-408-6900. Call Classified at gold. Bill Fl e ming, Buy New...Buy Local 541-385-5809 541-382-9419. Central Oregon's You Can Bid On: Largest Gun & Knife bendbulletin.corn Spring Lawn and Show! Yard Clean up. Nov. 7, 9-5 Nov. 8, 9-3 Retail Value $500 249 Deschutes County Fair YernSamples & Expo Center Art, Jewelry Landscaping Admission $6.00! 8 Furs (Bidding closes 503-363-9564 Tues., Nov. 10, wesknodelgunshows.corn Beautiful 1 .5 0 c a r at Copper Fire Pit at 8:00 p.m.) r ing, recently a p Cover Colt .44-40 Frontier praised at $ 15,400. For newspaper Six Shooter 1892, Asking $10,400 obo. Restored & Patinaed delivery, call the $3,400 4s/4" barrel. 541-617-0846 66" dia. 20" high Circulation Dept. at 541-233-3156. New Smaller Cover 541-385-5800 Desperately Seeking To place an ad, call GUN SAFETY CLASS- Missing 1940s diaFor Owner - $3000 m ond ring sold a t 541-385-5809 Armed Self-Defense, $1800 or email taught by police fire- Bend Pawn approx. 541-480-7823 classified ebendbuiietin.corn Sept.13-17, 2014 has arms trainer and law- central diamond and 2 Richard yer. 11/17, 6:30 pm. little side stones, one The Bulle6n serving ceneal oregon sinceste $65. CHL T raining is missing. Sz. 7.5. Cert extra. 541-213-1221 Please Register/directions: 270 keep trying! Will pay 503-585-5000. Lost & Found any reasonable price.

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Employment Opportunities

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or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.

KAHR pistols; P9 255 9 mm, $495 o b o . Computers P45 .45ACP, $475 obo, with case, ex- T HE B U LLETIN r e cellent co n dition. quires computer ad541-389-9836 vertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple sysWaffen Bennewitz tems/ software, to disclassic mauser close the name of the mountain rifle, as business or the term new, SOLD "dealer" in their ads. Ithaca single barrel Private party advertistrap shotgun, very ers are defined as nice, $650. those who sell one 541-548-3408 computer.

Employment Opportunities

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Ail Year Dependable Firewood: dry Lodgepole, split, del, 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 .


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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 5, 2015

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

rsday, November 5,2015 DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Thu

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD willi'sbortz

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency At the A CBL Summe r Championships, South had a bit in reserveforher "balancing" bid of one heart, so when North cue-bid two clubs to show heart support, South leaped to game. West led a trump. South won, led a club to dummy's king, returned a trump to her hand and led a second club. West took the ace and led a third club ... and declarer erred. She took the queen and discarded a diamond. Declarer next led a diamond to her king, and West took the ace and returned a diamond. Declarer then had to break the spades, and she lost two spades to go down.

passes, you double, and your partner bids one spade. The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: This case is close. If y ou had d o ubled i n t h e d i r e ct position, you would pass. But you might have doubled with a weaker hand in the " r eopening" position. Raise to two spades to tell partner that you have a sound double, not the shaded "balancing" variety. West dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH

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TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5 2015 E5 850

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Loans & Mortgages LOCAL MONEY:We buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13. WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for ad-

vance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,

1-877-877-9392. BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party

will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

Homes for Sale

Mot o rcycles & Accessories

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Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Pickups

$550,000 Eagle Crest B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , Forest River ( Rockw/Privacy. O r i ginal one slide, low milewood) 2015 A122S, owner, custom home, age, very clean, lots Loaded; fridge, micro., 3255 sq. ft., 1 story in of storage, $26,500. stove, shower, grill, 541-639-9411 the trees, backs to resleeps 4, lots of storl sort course ¹4, formal age. $11,600 obo. H arley Road K i ng Itasca 2003 31' Class C Southwind 33 ft. 1989 living 8 dining rooms, jgeist © stoneacq.corn at end o f g a t ed Classic 2003, 100th MH. Great cond., 31K on Chevy chassis, cul-de-sac. Dee Anniversary Edition, miles, slider, $32,000. 64k mi., 454 motor, new front brake pads, Baker, Broker, 16,360 mi., reduced 541-508-9700 541-977-7756. B ob $9,999. 541-647-7078 6.5k Onan generator. $9000. 541-389-7669 Ahern, Broker, 541-420-3891 WindStowmaster 5000 veermere Central Orhicle/motorhome tow R-Pod 176 2016, egon Real Estate hitch, cables, wiring Awesome Trailer! and some brackets. Like new, only used NOTICE: two weekends. Beaver Contessa 40'- $250. 541-410-5959 All real estate adverFully loaded. 2008, four slide dietised here in is sub- Moto Guzzi Breva Upgraded batteries. sel pusher. Loaded, ject to th e F ederal 1 100 2007, o n l y Perma plate exterior great condition. WarFair Housing A c t, 11,600 miles. weather coating. ranty. Pictures/info at which makes it illegal $5,500. Winterization and www.fourstarbend.corn to advertise any pref- 206-679-4745 de-winterization 541-647-1236 erence, limitation or package incl. A/C, discrimination based Sunseeker 2500 T S heat, media center, on race, color, reli- SUZUKI 2006 SV650S Columbus by Thor 30' 2015 by Forest River fridge, micro, stove, win d s hield, m otorhome, 19 9 4 , triple slide Class C. ion, sex, handicap, tinted shower, toilet. Lots fra m e Chevy 454, B anks Purchased amilial status or na- H ELI-Bars, June new e r 2015, used twice (wife of storage.$19,800 tional origin, or inten- guards, almost new p ower w / 206-228-3467 tion to make any such tires, red color, 10k transmission, w a lkbecame ill) F ULLY around queen bed, Loaded with Platinum preferences, l i mita- miles, extras, exc. tions or discrimination. cond., only $3,100. 41K miles, full gas Full Body paint auto RV t ank! $ 9,500 o b o . level system, Arctic We will not knowingly 541-548-3443 CONSIGNMENTS 541-598-6978 accept any advertisPkg, rear c amera, WANTED ing for real estate B luetooth. Also i n - We Do The Work ... which is in violation of cludes NEW Adco all- You Keep The Cash! this law. All persons weather coach cover. On-site credit are hereby informed $74,900. Call Jim cell approval team, that all dwellings ad209.401.7449 (can web site presence. vertised are available email addt'I photos) We Take Trade-Ins! on an equal opportuV-Max 2009 Fleetwood D i scovery Tow Dolly Roadmaster, BIG COUNTRY RV nity basis. The BulleYam aha 40' 2003, diesel, w/all m odel 3 4 77 , li k e tin Classified Lots of factory 541-330-2495 options - 3 slide outs, new-never used, Bend:Redmond: extras: windshield, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, electric breaks, mag750 saddlebags, back 541-548-5254 etc., 34,000 m iles. netic lights w/wiring Redmond Homes rest, rear cargo Wintered in h eated harness, professionrack, bike cover, shop. $78,995 obo. ally wired. $1450. motorcycle hoist, 541-419-5151 541-447-8664 Looking for your next alarm system, also emp/oyee? set of new tires. Place a Bulletin help $10,500. wanted ad today and 541-508-1554 reach over 60,000 =' v v'— ~ readers each week. Unique R-Pod 2013 Your classified ad trailer-tent combo, 870 will also appear on fully loaded, exBoats & Accessories Winnebago 22' bendbulletin.corn Fleetwood Southtended service con2002 $26,900 which currently retract and bike rack. 14' 2006 Tracker fish- wind, F o rd, 3 2 ' , Chevy 360, ceives over 82,000 miles, $14,500. ing boat, 15hp motor, 1994, heavy duty chassis, 1.5 million page 541-595-3972 or bed & sleeper nice trailer. Like new. queen cab & roof A/C, views every month sofa, TV, coo ktop, 503-780-4487 $4500. 541-719-0050 tow hitch w/brake, at no extra cost. oven, m i c rowave, 22k mi., more! Bulletin Classifieds refrigerator & 541-280-3251 Looking for your Get Results! freezer, trailer hitch next employee? Call 385-5809 or equipped, new tires, Advertise your car! Place a Bulletin help place your ad on-line serviced. just Add A Picture! wanted ad today and at $9,800. Reach thousands of readers! reach over 60,000 bendbulletin.corn 503-459-1580. Call 541-385-5809 readers each week. 16' Seaswirl Tahoe The Bulletin Classifieds Your classified ad 755 with trailer, 50 HP will also appear on Sunriver/La Pine Homes Evinrude, bimini top, bendbulletin.corn Winnebago excellent condition. which currently reJourney 15323 Bear Street, La $3,500 ceives over 1.5 mil2001 36' 2nd owner, 541-647-1918 Pine, $265,500. 3 lion page views ev300 Cummins Turbo bdrm, 2 bath, 24x36 ery month at no diesel, Allison 5 spd, insulated shop. High Lexington 2006 extra cost. Bulletin 80k miles. D river Lakes Realty & Prop283TS class B+moClassifieds Get Res ide s l ide, g a s erty Management tor coach, full GTS sults! Call 385-5809 stove, oven, 2 flat 541-536-0117 pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 or place your ad screen TVs, refer, burner range, half on-line at generator, inverter, time oven, 3 slides bendbulletin.corn La Pine 1 a cre / King Dome, tow bar. w/awnings, Onan older si n gle-wide 16' Smoker C raft no gen., King Dome sat- Non-smoker, mobile home, de- fishing boat, 50 HP pets, no c hildren. Say "goodbuy" Yamaha ou t b oard ellite system, Ford tached garage, unC lean, an d w e l l V10 Triton, auto-levmotor w/electric tilt & derground well to that unused maintained $43 000 eling system, new electric trolling motor house. 1 mile from 541-390-1472. item by placing it in w/remote con t rol tires, Falcon tow bar. state park. $89,900 Non-smoker, mainmounted on bow, walk 541-420-361 1 The Bulletin Classifieds through w indshield, tained in dry storage. 881 Can email additional exc. cond. $ 8,500. Travel Trailers 771 541-233-6223 pictures. $55,000. 5 41-385-580 9 541-520-3407 Lots

, • ie--

604

Storage Rentals 27'x13.5', 14' overhead door, thermostat heated, rec. 8 rest

room. GarajMahal on Crusher Ave. in Bend. Annual rent neg. Tenant pays utilities. 541-389-4111 627

Vacation Rentals & Exchanges

Eagle Crest 2 b drm. condo for Thanksgiving week, Nov. 22-29. $500. 541-923-5631 Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.corn Updated daily 630

Rooms for Rent Room rental/Bend. Nice master bdrm, private full bath, $500 mo. + sec. dep/references. 541-350-1281 632

Apt./Multiplex General CHECKyOUR AD

-

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,

FOrd Flatbed t 952. No engine. Located in La Pine. Contact Jeff

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T

hanger in Prineville. @ 530-613-0624. Dry walled, insulated, Pickup, 1995, new and painted. $23,500. Ford paint, 4x4, $800 obo. Tom, 541.788.5546 541-350-0079 or

You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

541-220-6330 GMC Pickup 1983 w/ topper, 4 wheel drive, BIG COUNTRY RV goo d Bend: 541-330-2495 Progressive 2006 cargo r uns good, hauler, 28' w/gas tank winter truck. $1,500 Redmond: & water tank, 110 &12 obo. 907-310-1877 541-548-5254 volt, stainless steel cupboards, drop door CAL LW & side door, excellent 885 TODAY% cond., 5,000 lb. axles, Chevy Canopies & Campers Pickup 1978, $8,500. 541-207-7137 long bed, 4x4, frame or 541-903-0522 up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, 931 fresh R4 transmisAutomotive Parts, sion w/overdrive, low Service & Accessories mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, 4 P195/70/r14 Hank- n ew wheels a n d Northlander 1993 ook studded t ires, tires, You must see 17' camper, Polar great cond., used 4 it! $25,000 invested. 990, good shape, months, $300 obo. $12,000 08 0 . new fridge, A/C, 541-923-6303 541-536-3869 or queen bed, bathroom, indoor/outStudded snow t i r es 541-420-6215. door shower, lots of 235/70R16 on 16" rim, storage, customized good cond. $200 obo. to fit newer pickups, 541-312-7042 $4,500.00 obo. Four Toyo Eclipse All 541-419-9859. Season Tires on '99 Honda 4-lug wheels. P195/65R-15 89T with Dodge Big Horn less than 4k miles. Ram 2500, 2005, 6 o OBO speed manual. Ex$400 0 0 541-419-6907 tra tires and rims, 4.2L 6 cyl. engine from canopy goes with. 2001 Chevy T r ail- Excellent condition, mai n tained, blazer, complete with well runs great. 160K computer, starter alternator. A p p rox. miles. $2 8 ,500 15K mi., stored inside 541-620-1 212 for many years, $800 908 obo. 541-617-0211 Aircraft, Parts & Service Four Wild Country Tires -265/65R17 mounted on six bolt 2004 Lexus GX-470 Dodge Ram 3500 rims. Less than 2008, 8,000 miles on tires. VIN ¹146871 $895. 541-604-6099 $38,990 fexp. 11/30/1 5) 1/3 interest in 932 DLR ¹366 925

Utility Trailers

Columbia400,

Antique & Classic Autos

Financing available.

$125,000

SMOLICH

V O LV O

(located © Bend)

541-749-2156

541-288-3333

smolichvolvo.corn Find It in

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

541-385-5809

1/5 share in very nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 Cessna 150 with Lycoming 0-320 150 Ford F250 Crew Cab hp engine conversion, SuperDuty 2012, 4000 hours. TT air(exp. 11/30/1 5) frame. Approx. 400 brake pads, gauges, Vm ¹C52424 hours o n 0- t i med warn hubs, dual exStock ¹83414 0-320. Hanga red in haust, 5 wide traction $32,977 or $449/mo., nice (electric door) tires, 5 new spoke, $1000 down, 84 mo., city-owned hangar at chrome wheels. NO 4 .49% APR o n a p the Bend Airport. One rust, garage stored. proved credit. License of very few C-150's $7,495 OBOI and title i ncluded in that has never been a payment, plus dealer in(775) 513-0822 stalled options. t rainer. $4500 w i l l consider trades f or © s uSUBARUOPSEHD.CON e aau whatever. Call Jim Frazee, 541-410-6007 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354

882

Fifth Wheels

Bid Novv!

www.eulletimBidneuy.corn

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 TheBulletin Classified Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily 1 & 2 Bedrooms Avail. NOW at StoneLodge. Call 541-460-5323

17' SunCraft, 2 motors. $1,000. 541-593-7257

Boy Hew...Boy Local

You Can Bid On: Lot 11 at Yarrow Community, Madras Retail Value $25,000 SunForest Construction (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 10, at 8:00 p.m.)

I = -,

I I

18' 2 003 S u n i Cruiser - pontooni boat, fully equipped. I Has only been used I

ga~-

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

648

PUBLISHER' S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination

List your Home JandMHomes.corn We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available.

4•

.

i has been in covered i Monaco Monarch 31 ' i storage. Ask ingi 2006, Ford V 10, miles, 28,900 auto-level, 2 slides, queen b ed & hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, convection microwave, 2 TVs, tow FUN & FISH! package. a handful of times &

775

Houses for Rent General

based on race, color,

:, =

I

Mirada CLASS A 2014 Silver Edition, 2 slides, 6K MILES, exc. cond. Just Reduced! Now $77,777! 503-438-6060

541-548-5511

PRICE REDUCTION!

NEW MODELS ARE HERE,two homes available for fast

541-815-6319

$59,000.

delivery, come see, jan dmhomes.corn

2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and many extras. Stored inside $19,900 541-350-5425

541-548-5511

PRICE REDUCED

By $8000! religion, sex, handi- Brand New model home cap, familial status, Sunhaven Community, marital status or na3 bdrm, 2 bath tional origin, or an in- NOW ONLY $71,900 tention to make any Jan dMHomes.corn such pre f erence, 541-548-5511 Ads published in the limitation or discrimi"Boats" classification nation." Familial stainclude: Speed, fishtus includes children : I. under the age of 18 ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boat . living with parents or legal cus t odians, For all other types of watercraft, please go pregnant women, and people securing custo Class 875. 541-385-5609 tody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly acervin Central Ore on since 190 cept any advertising 850 for real estate which is 875 Snowmobiles in violation of the law. Watercraft O ur r e aders a r e hereby informed that Ads published in "Wa all dwellings advertercraft" include: Kay tised in this newspaI' ks, rafts and motor per are available on zed personal an equal opportunity waterc Fo basis. To complain of 4-place enclosed Inter- 'boats"rafts. please se d iscrimination ca l l state snowmobile trailer lass 870. HUD t o l l-free at w/ RockyMountain pkg, 541-385-5809 1-800-877-0246. The $7500. 541-379-3530 toll f ree t e lephone number for the hear860 ing im p aired is liilotorcycles & Accessories 1-800-927-9275.

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

GMC 2500 1990 Mercedes 450 SL 1979 Roadster, soft 4x4, long bed, & hard tops, always overloads, over19' Ampex. 2011. Slide garaged, 122k mi., sized wheels/ tires, out and other extras. 1947 Stinson 108-2, new tires, shocks Tows well $12,500. $1990 or best offer. engine has been gone and brakes, $7900. 541.316.1367 541-548-7137 through, the m a gs 541-548-5648 30' Alpenlite 1990 5th h ave b ee n g o ne wheel i n e x c ellent through, new c a rb, Just bought a new boat? cond., $4,800 obo. brakes rebuilt, new in- Sell your old one in the 541-410-6945 s trument panel & classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! gauges, new ELT, 8 '01, Cameo 32' LXI, much more. F resh 541-385-5809 3 slides, rear lounge, annual.Signed offby Toyota Tacoma 2006, 34' Winnebago One island kitchen, new Bend Ace mechanics, reg. cab, 4x4, 5 spd 2013 30RE. tires, wheel pack, Bend airport. $24,000. standard 4 cyl engine, 541-385-5662 $23,000. Two slides. new batteries, Onan 2 2+ mpg, one s e Fully loaded. generator, rear nior owner, Full photos and info cargo carry hitch, non-smoker, well sent upon request. $16,500 maintained, n e a r ly 541-923-2595. Sunbeam Tiger 1966 Family illness new tires, o r iginal Very clean car. Alrequires sale. spare near new, runs 541-923-2593 ways garaged since excellent. $ 1 4,750. repaint 30 y e a rs 541-633-9895 Laredo 31'2006, Superhawk N7745G ago. Original 260 5th wheel, fully S/C Owners' Group LLC V-8 engine totally one slide-out. Cessna 172/180 hp, rebuilt 9,400 miles Awning. Like new, full IFR, new avionics, ago. Factory hard hardly used. GTN 750, touchtop, good condition Must sell $20,000 screen center stack, soft top, many LAT or refinance. Call exceptionally clean. dealer sold options 541-410-5649 Desert Fox 21SW Healthy engine T OYOTA T A C O M A so car is considered 2014 toy hauler in reserve fund. "stock" at car shows. 4x4 1999 4 cyl., non Hangared at KBDN. excellent condition, smoker, snow tires, I have owned the car has a l l fe a tures TURN THE PAGE One share canopy, extra cab, f or 18 year s . shown on N o rthavailable. Tons of e x tras, 2 For More Ads $ 70,000. Tel 5 4 1 Call 541-815-2144 w ood website, 4 safes, 332,000 miles. 548 3458 The Bulletin season trailer, fuel $6900. 541-389-9115. s tation fo r AT V , non-smoker owned, never h a d ATV inside, u p g raded memory foam mattress, wheel bearings re- p acked. $31,000 406-396-1043

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: 0 9

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I'

The Bulletin

'- 95@RnRs

lRe Mko

Sport 1 5 0 Ta o T ao S cooter, 2014 Al most New , $ 9 9 5. 541-548-0345

880

Motorhomes

Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 738 BARON 2003 cus- transmission, dual exMultiplexes for Sale tom built on '03 Vul- haust. Loaded! Auto-levcan chassis, 1600 eling system, 5kw gen, Comfortable duplex, full V-twin, 4600 miles, power mirrors w/defrost, of character, near the custom paint, fend- 2 slide-outs with awheart o f Pr i neville. ers, wheels, etc., nings, rear c a mera, AD¹1682 comes with helmet, trailer hitch, driver door TEAM Birtola Garmyn w/power window, cruise, windshield and High Desert Realty more! Discounted for exhaust brake, central 541-312-9449 off-season. $8,495. vac, satellite sys. Rewww. BendOregon duced price: $64,950. 541-280-9404 RealEstate.corn 503-781-8812

@~@ •Pi

S ell y o u r s tuff f a s t .

'

S ell y o u r s tuff f a s t e r w it h c o l o r . BEFORE

FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch! AFTER

FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!

Classifieds www.bendbulletin.corn

To PlaCeyOur PhOtOad, viSit uS Online at

WM!ne.bendbulletin.COm or call with questions,

5 41 - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9

e Qi -e~tgi '

In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds

FOR JUST ADDITIONAL $1 PER DAY!

ng

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needed items with one of theseSpecial Rate

~ Classifieds! / Ledr

3 lines, 3 days — items under $200 ......................................... 3 lines, 7 days — items under $500..........................................

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)

(whichever comesRrst!

The Bulletin

ServingCentra( Oregon since 1903

Call The Bulletin br Defai%j

541-385-5809 *Some Restrictions Apply


E6 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5 2015 • THE BULLETIN 935

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

Auto m obiles

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, never been off road or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, very clean. $26,000. Call or text Jeff at

Ford Explorer 4x4 2012, VIN ¹A21323 $19,988. (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

~ONE

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

975

975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

SubaruLegacy Kia Optima SE 2013, LL Bean 2008, silver, leather, pan(exp. 11/30/1 5) orama roof, keyless, Vin ¹203053 back-up camera, only Stock ¹82770 9200 mi, Exc. $19,700 541-788-4229 $16,977 or $199/mo.,

BNM/Z4 3.1 Convertible 2003, VIN ¹U06112 $9,977 (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

SMOLICH

V OL V O

541-729-4552

541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.corn

Oe

541-548-1448 smolichusedcar center.corn

Lexus ES350 2010, Excellent Condition 32,000 miles, $20,000 214-549-3627 (in Bend)

Toyota Highlander Ltd 2003, V-6, all wheel, garaged, A/C, leather, DVD, hitch, sunroof, extra se t w h eeled B lizzak tires, n e w timing belt, 187,700 m i., 2 2 -2 3 mp g , $7,500. 541-549-6896

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

Buick Lucerne 2008 Need to get an Very clean 6 cylinder, auto., leather interior, ad in ASAP? 87k mi. $6950 Will You can place it consider part trade. online at: Call or text Ron at 541-419-5060 www.bendbulletin.corn

541-385-5809

Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

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

541-385-5809 Chrysler Aspen Lmtd 2008, 4x4, VIN ¹101118

$15,988 (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

~

(exp. 11/30/1 5)

Vin ¹688743 Stock ¹82316

$10,979 or $155/mo.,

$1500 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

around. Has A ri-

zona plates. This is car is a great mix of luxury, com f ort, style, and workmanship. $24,000 Call 541-408-3051

Volvo XC60 2014, VIN ¹556164 ~

Mercedes Benz E Class 2005,

$33,997 /exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

a

541-548-1448

SMOLICH

smolichusedcar center.corn

payment, plus dealer installed options.

©

G UBAR U .

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.corn 940

Chevy E/ Camino

®

SllBNIUOWBRNO COM

Automobiles SEL 2012, Lexus RX350 2 0 1 1, Ford Fusion (exp. 11/30/1 5) 23K miles. Loaded, Vin ¹117015 silver, i m maculate, Stock ¹44382A 541-954 0902 OCC

$14,979 or $199/mo.,

Ford EscapeAM/D

'70

2012, (exp. 11/30/2015) Vin ¹B18831 Stock ¹45590A

Impala $2,500. '76 $1,800. '03 700cc MC, 541-410-5349

$2400 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

E 4 0 0, Nova, Honda $ 2 000.

payment, plus dealer installed options. $2500 down, 72 mo., LX SuaWau 4 .49% APR o n a p - Honda A c cord SUMRUOPMXD OtM proved credit. License Wagon '91, r uns, and title included in fixer-upper o r for 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 payment, plus dealer in- p arts. $1,00 0 . stalled options. Dlr ¹0354 541-606-5950

$15,999 or $199/mo.,

©

®

S UBA R U .

SVBARUOPERHD.OOII Find exactly what 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. you are looking for in the 877-266-3821 CLASSIFIEDS Dlr ¹0354

Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.corn

Ford LTD 1985

Country Squire Wagon Exc. shape.

stalled options.

©

S UBA R U

106,300 miles.

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

$2700 541-548-1821

Dlr ¹0354

877-266-3821

Small V-8 Engine. Chevy Impala 2007, V IN ¹334268 $6,988. (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

mi., 1 7 " wh e els, R aceland Ulti m o coilovers, Kenwood stereo. New radiator hoses, motor mount & new CV axle. $2200 obo. 541-420-2016 or 541-279-801 3

Looking for your next employee?

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 PRIUS C3 2014 readers each week. w/12,000 miles, asYour classified ad sume lease with 20 will also appear on months remaining at bendbulletin.corn $240 mo., 50+ mpg. which currently re$3000. Call L a r ry ceives over 1.5 mil541.728.1775 e mail lion page views Imbatstar O aol.corn every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn I Scion TCcoupe 2007, (exp. 11/30/1 5) The Bulletin's Vin ¹198120 "Call A Service Stock ¹44193B $10,379 or $149/mo., Professional" Directory is all about meeting $2800 down, 60 mo., payment, plus dealer in-

BUY 17' SELL IT/ The Bulletin Classifieds

your needs. Call on one of the professionals today!

r----

The Bulletin recoml

extra caution I I mends when p u r chasing • f products or servicesf from out of the area. f S ending c ash ,f q checks, or credit in-

I formation may be I J subject toFRAUD.

For more informaabout an adverSubaru Impreza2013, l tion tiser, you may call (exp. 11/30/1 5)

f

Hyundai Santa Fe GLS 541-548-1448 smolichusedcar center.corn

2012, (exp. 11/30/2015) Vin ¹151185 Stock ¹45197A

$15,979 or $199/mo.,

$1900 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment, plus dealer installed options.

® s um au Ford Freestyle Limited AWD 2005, 7 seats, leather, heated front seats, radio/CD in-dash player, moonroof, roof rack, Has been ga-

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

4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in

FIND IT!

Ford Explorer XLT 1991 r eliable w e l l cared for, clean, nonsmoking, incl. 4 studded winter tires, new H D b attery, 1 9 0 k miles, 20k towed behind moto r home $1500 obo Message 541-241-4896.

SLK230 2003,

Toyota Corolla 2008, V IN ¹013663 $8988 (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

raged, no smoke or dogs, Good cond.

541-548-1448

$3,300. 541-390-1602

smolichusedcar center.corn

Vin ¹027174

I the 'Oregon

Statal

g I Attorney General's C o n sumer I $19,965 or $249/mo., I Office Protection hotline at/ $1300 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p - 1-877-877-9392. proved credit. License and title included in ~ TheMlet ~ Stock ¹83205

payment, plus dealer installed options.

©

S UBA R U

servingcentra/ oregon since /as

Bid Now!

www.sulletinsidnsuy.corn

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

877-266-3821

Dlr ¹0354 REDUCED! Buy New...Bay Local

Infinity G35 coupe 2006. Mint! 44K mi. Must see! $15,500. 541-389-9836.

You Can Bid On: $100 Toward any Auto Detailing Toyota Camry Hybrid Retail Value $100 2007, 151k m i les, Heavenly Touched one owner, garaged, Auto Detailing cruise, non-smoker, (Bidding closes fully l o a ded, all Tues., Nov. 10, records, Now $7900. at 8:00 p.m.) 541-350-9806

\

YOUR /io WILL RECEIi/E CLOSE To 2,000,000 EXPOSURESFOR ONLY12SO!

Mercedes-Benz GL 450 4NATIC 2012,

Toyota Corolla 2013,

Oegoncl svedAd~<~N~ d a a M >mofd 0 gwNmspq puvacnAssw~

(exp. 11/30/1 5)

Reek of November2, 2015

$15,979 or $199 mo.,

The Bulletin

V OL V O

proved credit. License

541-385-5809

541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.corn

payment, plus dealer installed options.

VIN ¹765775

Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072

$37,990 (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

$2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -

SMOLICH

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I 2011 VERY cean I 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 30+ mpg hwy (25+ Dlr ¹0354 I in town). Runs great! I ) AWD, white w/black ) interior, air, cruise,

DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property, and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced in

( tilt, single CD, rear ( defrost, factory win-

) dowtint, powerlocks ) & windows.

Serving Central Oregonsince 19fB

and title i ncluded in

Nissan Ro ue

1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. www.

New

I Toyo AT tires (less I

A4 Quattro 2010, ~ than 6k miles and ~ Audi VIN ¹017492 siped). New AGM $18,997 b attery. Alw a y s ~ maintained. G reat ~ (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366 [ commuter - winter driver. $13 , 500 S IVIOLIC H

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Tahoe 1996 165K.

miles, Leather. Clean. Ford Taurus 2007 80k Runs & looks good mi l es, 4 studded tires $4250 OBO i ncluded w/ri m s. 541 420-3301

$4800 . 541-416-9566

bonus. AACO Nursing Agency. 1-800-6564414, ext. 9

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

PUBLIC NOTICE PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87 Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 11/9/2015. The sale will be held at 10:00 a.m. by MTC SALES, 56400 SPENCER W E L LS RD., BEND, OR. 2003 Weekend Wa r r ior Trailer. VIN 5HRFF303X2C000014 . Amount due on lien $8335.00. R e puted

LEGAL NOTICE In the Matter of the Estate of R O BERT RAY GO O D R ICH, Deceased. PERSONS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Allan F. Griffith has been appointed Personal Representative of th e a b ove-captioned estate. All persons having claims against the estate are required to p resent them, with voucher attached, to the undersigned Personal o wner(s) Jam e s Representative, Allan Asher, Steve Hogue. F. Griffith, P.C., Attorney at Law P O. Box 12982, Salem, O regon 97 3 09-0982, LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT within four (4) months COURT O F THE after the date of first STATE OF OREGON publication of this NoFOR THE COUNTY tice, or the claims may OF DES C HUTES be barred. All persons whose r i ghts NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC dba may be affected by CHAMPION M O R T- the proceedings may GAGE COMPANY, a obtain additional inlimited liability com- f ormation from t h e pany, Plaintiff, vs. ALL records of the Court UNKNOWN H EIRS or the Personal Representative, Allan F. AND DEVISEES OF JAMES H. MURRAY, Griffith, P.C., Attorney at Law, P. O. Box a deceased individual; M ARIAN E. M U R - 12982, Salem, O r9 7 3 09-0982, RAY, an i n dividual; egon Julian Castro, solely 503-399-0180. in his capacity as Sec- Dated and first pubretary for U N ITED lished this day of Oct. STATES D E PART- 29, 2015. MENT OF HOUSING /s/ Allan F. Griffith A ND U R BAN D E - Allan F. Griffith, OSB ¹050600. Personal VELOPMENT; DOES Representative 1 through 10, inclusive, and ROE S 1 through 10, inclusive. HEREIN, IN THE D efendants. C A S E Find exactly what NAME OF THE NO.: 15CV 2 1966 you are looking for in the STATE OF OREGON: SUMMONS for PUBCLASSIFIEDS LEGAL NOTICE You a r e her e by L ICATION To: A L L Date of Publication: required to a p pear UNKNOWN H EIRS 11/2/2015 and defend against AND DEVISEES OF LEGAL NOTICE the allegations JAMES H. MURRAY TO: PAT R ONS, contained i n the 17081 Faun Lane La NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL P ARENTS, S T U Complaint filed Pine, OR 97739 THE DENTS, S T A FF, against you in the STATE OF OREGON FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL AND OTHER INabove entitled TO T H E DE F EN- CLAIMANTS AND TO TERESTED P ERp roceeding wi t h i n DANT/RESPONALL UNKNOWN SONS thirty (30) days from D ENT(S) A B O V EPERSONS READ THIS the date of service of N AMED: Yo u a r e CAREFULLY On December 17, this Summons upon hereby directed and 1987, C o n gress you. I f y o u fail to required to appear in, signed into law an appear and defend and defend against, If you have any interact titled "Asbestos this matter within thirty this legal action within est in t h e s e ized Hazard Emergency (30) days from the 30 days after the first property d e s cribed Response Act date of p u blication date of publication of below, you must claim that interest or you will ( AHERA)." Thi s specified herein along summons, which is l aw d i rected a l l with the required filing the 15th day of Octo- automatically lose that schools, public and fee, WELLS FARGO ber, 2015, and de- interest. If you do not private, to inspect BANK, N.A. will apply fend the above en- file a claim for the b uildings fo r a s to the Court for the t itled action i n t h e property, the property bestos c o ntaining relief demanded in the above entitled court, may be forfeited even materials, develop Complaint. The first and answer the com- if you are not conan inventory of the date of publication is plaint of the plaintiff victed of any crime. To claim an interest, materials, and preO ctober 29 , 2 0 1 5. NATIONSTAR p are a p l a n f o r NOTICE TO MORTGAGE LLC dba you must file a written management of the DEFENDANTS: Champion mortgage claim with the forfeiasbestos containing READ THESE company, and serve a ture counsel named The w r itten materials i n the PAPERS copy of your answer below, buildings. CAREFULLY! You upon the undersigned claim must be signed must "appear" in this attorneys for plaintiff, by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury B end- L a Pin e case or the other side LAW OFFICES OF Schools, utilizing the will win automatically. LES ZIEVE, at their before a notary public, services of profesTo "appear" you must office below stated; and state: (a) Your sional i n s pectors file with the court a and in case of your true name; (b) The and co n sultants, legal paper called a failure so to do, judg- address at which you has completed this "motion" or "answer." ment will be rendered will a c cept f u t ure directive for all DisThe " motion" o r against you accord- m ailings from t h e trict buil d ings. " answer" must b e ing to the demand of court and f orfeiture These m a n age- given to t h e c o urt the complaint, which counsel; and (3) A ment plans h ave clerk or administrator has been filed with the s tatement that y o u been accepted by w ithin t h i rt y da y s clerk of said court. have an interest in the the State Departalong wi t h the This is a Complaint for seized property. Your ment of Education required filing fee. It Judicial Foreclosure deadline for filing the and are available for must be i n p r oper of Deed of Trust. You claim document with co u nsel review in the form and have proof must "appear" in this forfeiture Principal's Office at o f service o n t h e case or the other side n amed below is 21 each school and at plaintiff's attorney or, will win automatically. days from the last day the District Mainteif the plaintiff does not To "appear" you must of publication of this nance Department have a n a t t orney, file with the court a le- notice. Where to file a claim and for more Office. proof of service on the gal paper called a plaintiff. I F YOU "motion" or "answer." i nformation: D a i na The School District HAVE ANY The "motion" or "an- Vitolins, Crook County is required to conQUESTIONS, YOU swer" must be given District Attorney Ofduct ongoing surS HOULD SEE A N to the court clerk or fice, 300 N E T h ird veillance of asbesATTORNEY administrator w i t hin Street, Prineville, OR tos containing IMMEDIATELY. If 30 days along with the 97754. Notice of reasons for materials every six y ou need help i n required filing fee. It Forfeiture: The propm onths. Dur i ng finding an a ttorney must be i n p roper erty described below July, 1993, the EPA y ou may c all t h e form and have proof was seized for forfeireviewed the Oregon State Bar's o f service o n t h e AHERA m a nageLawyer Ref e rral plaintiff's attorney or, ture because it: (1) m ent plans a n d S ervice a t (503) if the plaintiff does not Constitutes the prowalked through a 684-3763 or toll-free have a n at t orney, ceeds of the violation few of the schools. in Oregon at (800) proof of service on the of, solicitation to vioThis review found 452-7636. The object plaintiff. If you have late, attempt to viothe School District in of the said action and any questions, you late, or conspiracy to compliance and the the relief sought to be should see an attor- violates, the criminal laws of the State of management plans o btained therein i s ney immediately. If in good status. fully set forth in said y ou need h elp i n Oregon regarding the complaint, an d is finding an attorney, manufacture, distribuDuring the summer briefly s t ated as you may contact the tion, or possession of of 2016 there will be follows: Foreclosure Oregon State Bar's controlled substances projects occurring of a Deed of Lawyer Referral Ser- (ORS Chapter475); (2) Was used throughout the DisTrust/Mortgage. vice on l i n e at and/or or intended for use in trict including JuniGrantors: FRANK www.oregon statebar. committing or f aciliper Elementary, La CENIGA and org or by calling (503) Pine E l ementary, SHELBY C E N IGA. 684-3763 in the Port- tating the violation of, Thompson ElProperty ad d ress: land met r opolitan solicitation to violate, ementary, La Pine 2967 SW F O REST area. DATED: Sep- attempt to violate, or Middle School, Pilot AVE., Redmond, OR tember 24, 2015 LAW conspiracy to violate Butte Middle School 97756. P u blication: O FFICES OF L E S the criminal laws of and the Education The Bend B u lletin. ZIEVE By: /s/ Ben- the State of Oregon Center. DATED this 13th day jamin D . Pet i prin regarding the manuof October, 2015. Lisa Benjamin D. Petiprin, facture, distribution or Q uestions a b o ut McMahon-Myhran, OSB No. 136031 At- possession of consu b stances these matters may OS B ¹ 0008 4 9 , torneys for P laintiff trolled be directed to the (ORS Chapter 475). Robinson Tait, P.S., NATIONSTAR following p a r ties: Attorneys for Plaintiff, MORTGAGE LLC dba Mike Tiller at (541) Tel: (206) 676-9640, C HAMPION M O R T - IN THE MATTER OF: 355-4702, or Fax: (206) 676-9659. G AGE CO M P A N Y Paulsen E n viron(1) $1,586.00 in US A-4545931 Currency, Case No. mental Consulting, FIND IT! 10/1 5/2015, 15-00268897, seized Steven Inc., 10/22/2015, BUY IT' September 22, 2015 Paulsen at ( 5 41) 10/29/2015, SELL ITr from Francisco Anto473-2243. 11/05/2015 nio Echavarria. The Bulletin Classifieds

FAST!

VW Jetta 1999, 187K

Mercedes-Benz

1000

Legal Notices

PUBLIC NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Cellco P a r tnership CIRCUIT COURT OF $2600 down, 84 mo. at and its controlled af- O REGO N FO R 4 .49% APR o n a p - filiates doing b usiDESCHUTES proved credit. License ness a s Ver i zon C OUNTY. WE L L S and title i ncluded in Wireless (Verizon FARGO BANK, N.A., payment, plus dealer Wireless) proposes to PLAINTIFF, VS. installed options. build a 150- f oot FRANK CEN I GA; S elf-Support T e l e - T HE E STATE O F S UBA R U . communications SHELBY C E NIGA, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Tower in the vicinity of DECEASED; 877-266-3821 61604 Grib b ling UNKNOWN H E I RS Dlr¹0354 Road, B e nd , OR AND DEVISEES OF 97702. Public com- SHELBY C E NIGA, ments regarding po- DECEASED; K O LT tential effects from LAMONTE CENIGA; this site on h istoric G ENTRY LANE ALLI E properties may be C ENIGA; submitted within 30 JANAE STOUT; AND days from the date of PERSONS OR Toyota Corolla S publication t o : PARTIES UNKNOWN 2007, 93 k m i l es, this Project CLAIMING ANY automatic, s i l ver. 6115005969-HER c/o RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, New brakes and EBI Consulting, 11445 O R I NTEREST I N battery. Super clean, East Via Linda, Suite THE PRO P E RTY no smoking. Cruise 2 ¹ 472, Scottsdale, DESCRIBED IN THE control, CD player, AZ 8 5259, h r obin- COMPLAINT c loth s eats, A C . son@ebiconsulting.co HEREIN, Price: $6500. Call m, or (225) 316-7900. DEFENDANTS. NO. 541-480-2700 to 15CV0360FC. view. N O T E X TS PLAINTIFF'S PLEASE! SUMMONS BY pattym51@q.corn PUBLICATION. TO: Sell an Item GENTRY LANE CENIGA; THE ESTATE OF SHELBY CENIGA, DECEASED; UNKNOWN H E I RS If it's under$500 AND DEVISEES OF VW Bug 2002, 117k you can place it in SHELBY C E N IGA, mi., 5 speed, sun roof, D ECEASED; A N D heated leather seats, The Bulletin PERSONS OR includes studded tires. Classifieds for: PARTIES UNKNOWN $3,600 OBO. CLAIMING ANY 541-410-1685 RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, $10- 3 lines, 7 days O R I NTEREST I N $16 • 3 lines, 14 days THE PRO P ERTY DESCRIBED IN THE (Private Parly ads only) COMPLAINT

Vans

Ford Expedition Eddie Toyota Sienna XLE Van 1987, Classic! 2006, F W D , v6, Bauer 2005, 4x4, Small Block 327 VIN ¹B06769 l eather, A C , til t , Modified engine. cruise, JBL s t ereo, $9,988 duration roller 6-CD, a l l po w e r, Large (exp. 11/30/1 5) Cam. Edlebrock heated front seats, DLR ¹366 Alum Heads and climate control, lugmore.$8,000 gage rack, set snow Runs Great! tires. 1 o w ner, a ll 541-977-2830 maint. records. 175K mi. Excellent condit ion! $10,0 0 0 . 541-548-1448 541-595-1180 smolichusedcar center.corn 975

1000

Legal Notices

FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN Yourfutureis justa pageaway. Whetheryou'relookingfora halor aplaceIo hangil, TheBulletin Classifiedisyourbestsource. Everydaythousandsof buyersand sellersofgoodsaridservicesdo businessinthesepages. They know youcan't beatTheBulletin Classified Sectionforselection arid conven ience- everyitemis just ph aonecall away. TheClassifiedSectionis easy Io use.Everyitemis categorized andeverycategoryis indexedon the seclion'front s page. Whetheryouarelookingfor ahome or need aservice, yourfutureisin the pages ol TheBulletin Classfied.

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since1%8

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E P U R LI C

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An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate fo make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo citizens who want fo know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go fowww.bendbullefin.corn and

click on"Classi%edAds". Or go to www.publicnoticeoregon.corn

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