Bulletin Daily Paper 09-09-15

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Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1

WEDNESDAY September 9,2015

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Outdoors D1-6

BUSINESSC6

bendbulletin.corn TODAY’ S READERBOARD

KITZHABER SCANDAL

MOuntain biking Charl› ton Lake ride is a unique, rug› ged backcountry experience it can also begrueling. D1 The Associated Press SALEM The Oregon governor’s office on Tuesday released5,000emailsfrom an account used by former Gov. John Kitzhaber for official

business beforeheresigned in

an influence-peddling scandal. Some of the emails show Kitzhaber’s fiancee, Cylvia

Hayes, weighing in on en› vironmental policy matters, such as crafting a 10-year en› ergy plan and discussions of

coal exports. Kitzhaber stepped down in February amid allegations that Hayes used the governor’ s office to win contracts for her green-energy consulting business. The allegations have

spawned a federal criminal investigation.

was conscientious about and included Hayes on energy and

The emails give a glimpse at the internal debates and prior›

environmental issues. Like›

ities during the first 16 months of Kitzhaber’s third term.

from her contacts up to the

wise, she pushed information governor.

SeeKitzhaber/A4

They show that the governor

Plus: National parks A study finds that one of their top draws is the lack of light pollu› tion for stargazing.A3

IN D.C.

Wyden backs Iran deal cautiously

Shipwreck find Ahigh› way department archaeologist winds upwithan unusualcase: an underwater find.A4

lh SpurtS Prepsoccer and other events. Plus: A look ahead at college football.C1

By Taylor W.Anderson

And a Wed exclusive›

The Bulletin

Federaltask force warns cities on efforts against homeless camps. bestibslletin.cern/extras

SALEM

While

noting he still finds Iran untrustworthy,

Sen. Ron Wyden on Tuesday became one of the final Demo›

cratic senators to announce his support of a proposed nuclear

EDITOR'5CHOICE

deal with Iran.

Wyden told The

Firefighters’ social media use creating a hazard?

Bulletin he decided

late Monday night to become one of 42 likely votes in support of a deal that would end some crippling economic restrictions

on the country in exchange for restric› tions on Iran’s ability

to enrich materials needed to make a nu›

By Alina Hartounian

dear weapon. The deal is a pri›

The Associated Press

Firefighter Stephanie Preheim had only just ar› rived at the storage facility she was assigned to pro›

ority for President

Barack Obama and is opposed by all Re› publicans and several

tect from a massive wild› fire near the tourist town

Democrats.

"This is essentially

of Chelan, Washington,

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

when the winds shifted,

A view looking north across the Deschutes River shows the planned 184-acre site for the Riley Ranch Nature Preserve in Bend. The Bend Park & Recreation District is seeking a permit from Deschutes County as part of the development of the park, which will offer different amenities than other parks.

pushing the blaze back her way.

consistent with my

)

smoke-filled scene and

posted it on Instagram. "People always ask ’How was it’?’ and it’s im›

possible to describe what it’s like fighting a fire,"

By Ted Shorack The Bend Park & Recre›

ation District hopes to begin developing a 184-acre nature reserve northwest of Bend lat› er this year,partofaprocess that could last several years. The park district will first

have to gain approval from Deschutes County, which will

with the Cashmere Fire

decide whether to approve a permitforthereserve.

a quick second, why not snap a quick photo and be able to share it with people

you love and let them know what you’ re doing’ ?" Preheim, and other firefighters like her, are

capturing some of the most stunning images of

ings officer heard testimony about the proposal and will

Riley Ranch Nature Reserve would be accessed at O.B.

landscape architect, said

at a future date.

education, cultural and phys› ical biology and all sorts of opportunities on the site," said Figur ski.

to develop. It’s expected to include restrooms, trails, a

our country."

mostly undisturbed and has seven different ecosystems. "There are many oppor›

Wyden said he receivedaletterfrom

Glen Vista Rd.’

Obama very late on

Labor Day assuring that any cheating by

tunities for environmental

The park district plans to

The project has received mild opposition from neighbors, a

boardwalk, three parking ar› eas, river access and overlook

and ball fields won’t be

few of whom raised concerns

decks with guardrails. The park district also hopes to

allowed.

about traffic and parking at a

alternatives are even more dangerousto

I

Tuesday that the reserve is

develop the trails and the bridge in phases. Dog parks

Riley and Glen Vista roads.

’Ibesday. "And yet the

$o

the Deschutes County Plan› ning Commission. Deschutes County com› missioners could review the proposal if the planning com› mission decision is appealed The park district’s pro› posed reserve is expected to cost about $3.7 million

Under the present plan, the

falls short of what I

wanted," Wyden said in a phone interview

Reserve

the river. Jim Figurski, the district’s

make recommendations to

they’ re duplicitous, and this agreement

Rgelf Ranch Nature

build a bridge across the De› schutes River linking up with the existing trail system along

A Deschutes County hear›

said Preheim, a volunteer Department. "If you have

public hearing Tuesday night.

The Bulletin

is untrustworthy,

Park

Told to stand down, the

suddenly sidelined Pre› heim did what any idled 19-year-old would do› she got out her cellphone, snapped a photo of the

basic judgment that the Iranian regime

Stat

Iran, however small,

y--. Sa ~~ Park s

1

"would be treated very seriously by the

Ayybrey

allies and the United States."

o,

See Reserve/A4

SeeWyden/A6

(

Related

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

Clinton vs. Cheney, A6

wildfires in the West this

season. And that has fire officials grappling with how to approach the digital landscape even contem› plating banning cellphones as they balance a young workforce’s desire to share with their safety in a haz›

ardous environment. Hotshot Ian Schlake, who was also battling the

fire near Chelan, said in an email from the fire lines that firefighters are like ev›

eryone else looking to stay connected in an increas›

New helmets couldhelp doctors'see'lnlssions By John Tozzi

University of Pennsylvania may eventually help detect When the Steelers and Patri› too: Sports-related brain trau› when a hit is hard enough to ots clash on Thursday night in ma sends a quarter-million damage the brain. Researchers football’s season opener, you’ ll American kids to the emergen› led by Shu Yang have created see 250-pound men slam into cy room annually, but symp› a chemical strip that changes each other, head to head, at toms may unfold over hours, color on impact to measure the high speed. days, or even weeks. force of a collision. The mate› Bloomberg News

And get concussions’?

There’s no easy way to tell. That goes for young athletes,

A material developed at the

rial could be integrated into

helmets for athletes or soldiers. measure or prevent concus› The goal is to make something sions in sports, though it hasn’ t akin to litmus paper, which yielded breakthroughs yet. A changes color according to contest by the National Foot› acidity, to show the severity of ball League and General Elec› football tackles or bomb blasts. tric is funding approaches to There’s already a small in› detect brain injuries with blood dustry trying to develop helmet tests and imaging. sensors and other devices to SeeCon cussions /A4

ingly digital world. "I’d like to show people at home the scale of fire, its

power and its spectacle. It’ s not something we get back home in St. Louis, Missou› ri," wrote Schlake, 31.

SeeFirefighters/A6

TODAY’S WEATHER Sunshine High 85, Low 46 Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1 6 $ E1-8 Dear Abby D5 Ob ituaries B5 TV/Movies

An Independent

G1 4 D5

Q l/i/e userecycled newsprint

Vol. 113, No. 252,

s sections

0

88 267 0 23 29

1



WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news

It’s Wednesday,Sept. 9, the 252nd day of 2015.There are 113 days left in the year.

NEED TO KNOW

HAPPENINGS

Ic

Iran nuclear deal Aral› ly is scheduled onCapitol Hill in opposition to the deal, head› lined by presidential candidate Sen. TedCruz, R-Texas.

the things you needto know to start out your day

o s aunc con ressiona can i ates?

There’s lawyers, of course, and officials elected on the state level, but some other professions might surprise you.

MigfentS EuropeanCom› mission President Jean-Claude Juncker is expected to propose plans to resettle up to160,000 refugees across Europe.

Apple Thecompany is expected to announce anew iPhone amongother products at an event in SanFrancisco.

HISTORY Highlight:1965, Sandy Koufax of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitched a perfect gameagainst the Chicago Cubs atDodger Stadium. Final score: 1-0. In1543, Mary Stuart was crowned Queen ofScots at Stirling Castle, nine months after she was born. In1776, the second Conti› nental Congress madethe term "United States" official, replacing "United Colonies." In1850, California became the 31 st state of the union. In1893, Frances Cleveland, wife of President Grover Cleveland, gave birth to a daughter, Esther, in the White House; it was the first (and, to date, only) time a president’s child was born in the executive mansion. In1919, some 1,100members of Boston’s1,500-man police force went on strike. (The strike was broken byMassa› chusetts Gov. Calvin Coolidge with replacement officers.) In1948, the Democratic Peo› ple’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) was declared. In1956, Elvis Presley made the first of three appearances on "The EdSullivan Show." In1971, prisoners seized con› trol of the maximum-security Attica Correctional Facility near Buffalo, NewYork, be› ginning a siege that ended up claiming 43 lives. In1986, Frank Reed, director of a private school in Lebanon, was taken hostage; hewas released 44 months later. In1997,Sinn Fein, the IRA’s political ally, formally re› nounced violence as it took its place in talks on Northern Ireland’s future. Ten years age:Federal Emer› gency Management Agency Director Michael Brown, the principal target of harsh criti› cism of the Bushadministra› tion’s response to Hurricane Katrina, was relieved of his on-sit ecommand. Five years age:A natural gas pipeline explosion killed eight people and destroyed dozens of homes in the SanFrancisco suburb of San Bruno, Cali› fornia. One year age:President Barack Obamamet privately with congressional leaders at the White House to discuss his plan for taking action against Islamic State militants.

BIRTHDAYS Actress Sylvia Miles is 81. Ac› tor Topol is 80. Rhythm-and› blues singer Luther Simmons is 73. Singer InezFoxx is 73. Singer DeeDeeSharp is 70. Rock singer-musician Doug Ingle is 69. Country singer Freddy Weller is 68. College Football Hall of Famerandfor› mer NFLplayerJoeTheismann is 66. Rock musician John McFee (TheDoobie Brothers) is 65. Actor TomWopat is 64. Actress Angela Cartwright is 63. Musician-producer Dave Stewart is 63. Actor Hugh Grant is 55. Actor-comedian Charles Esten (formerly Chip) is 50. Actor David Bennent is 49. Actor AdamSandier is 49. Rock singer Paul Durham (Black Lab) is 47.Actress Julia Sawalha is 47.Model Rachel Hunter is 46. Actor Eric Stonestreet is 44. Actor Henry Thomas is 44. Actor Goran Visnjic is 43. Pop-jazz singer Michael Buble is 40. Latin singer Maria Rita is 38. Actress Michelle Williams is 35. Country singer-songwriter Hunter Hayes is 24. — From wire reports

into "pastor mode" do a good job of engaging with their

By Simone Pethe

cQ-Roll cau W ASHINGTON

With

audience,a Republican cam-

an actress, an opera singer and a former NFL linebacker jockeying for Congress, it’ s again apparent that there’s no professional barrier to mount› ing a congressional, or even a Senate, campaign. But the best candidates are

paign operative said. There arethreemembers ofthe2014 freshman class with clergy backgrounds.

Doctors Doctors almost fall into the

same category as business owners, Walsh said: They’ re viewed as community leaders with some legitimacy outside Washington.

really the ones with the best

personalities. Indeed, the desire to seek federal office often attracts

s

.

s-,, f

a certain kind of person. As Democratic former I n diana Sen. Evan Bayh recently told

I,

: ’4 IW

Celebrities

’s

Besides the obvious benefits

’JIIII 0"1~$,

CQ Roll Call, "Not too many people get elected to the U.S.

of name recognition, celebrity status often means wealth, or

Senate if you suffer from low

at the very least, it confers the

esteem."

ability to fundraise. This year, actress Melissa

But w h i c h pro f essions make the best candidates?

Gilbert, the star of "The Little

Here in no particular or› der is CQ Roll Call’s list of

Jabin Botsford /The New York Times file photo

House on the Prairie" TV se› ries, is running for Congress

professions most recruited to

Certain professions seem to produce congressional candidates at greater rates than others, and they

as a Democrat in Michigan.

run for Congress, based on conversations with campaign operativesfrom both sides of the aisle.

sll have their pros end cons.

But fame doesn’t always breed political success. In Il›

Lawyers

linois, for example, state Sen.

a surprise they know how busy they will be."

Political aides freshman classof 2014 are and operatives

owned by current members that Walsh said the GOP has are actually "small" given that been craving.

Napoleon Harris, an ex-NFL linebacker, is considering a

it takes so much money to run

run for the Democratic nomi›

But veterans are popular

on both sides of the aisle. A nation to challenge Sen. Mark veteran is almost guaranteed Kirk. lawyers. Besides their knowl› At least 17 members of the CEOs andexecutives to have a compelling story. edge of the law and persua› current freshman class have These are the business lead› "There’s no downside to run› Academics sive speaking faculties, law› worked as aidesto federal ers with money and the ability ning as a vet," one Democrat The biggest political upset yers can make good candi› elected officials or candidates. to raise money. said. "But running as a veter› of 2014 came from an ecodates, especially if they have Congressional aides, and Republicans tend to run an doesn’t mean you’ re going nomics professor unseating ties to people who can help their sometimes more politi› more business owners than to win." the House majority leader. them raise money. cally savvy operatives on the Democrats, one Democratic Heroism doesn’t guarantee Virginia Rep. Dave Brat joined O n the o t her h a nd, t r i › campaign trail, know what it operative acknowledged. But fundraising prowess. a group of professors in Con› al lawyers are often tied to takes to run a campaign. Democrats see the allure, too. And though they make gress, who told CQ Roll Call "You want someone who shady characters they may But as campaign sources disciplined campaigners, vet› earlier this summer that their have defended. repeated Monday, itcomes can put in the time and finan› erans "don’t always have the higher educationexperience down to personality. Do the cial means (to not work) and best outgoing personality" prepared them well for higher State legislators behind-the-scenes operators spend 40 hours a week rais› when meeting voters, a Re› office. and elected officials have the charisma to stand ing money," said a Democrat› publican noted. Legislators on the state lev› in front of the curtain’? And ic campaign operative. The At least 21 members of the

el have a natural affinity for

can they tolerate other people

congressional service. "They telling them what to do? Not get the process," said one always. GOP campaign operative. The downside of that experience, Small-businessowners however, is having a voting re› Everyone lov e s a cord that can be used against them. But even more important,

s mall-business owner, a n d there are at least 38 mem›

for Congress.

alternative, he added, is to be

Clergy

independently wealthy. While veterans may have "For CEOs, it can be a hum› difficulty connecting with bling experience to be a can› voters on a p e rsonal level, didate," Walsh said. "It’s not religious leaders who can go glamorous sitting in a call

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shade structures. Sun when yorJ wantif, shade when yorJ needit.

suite."

se

bers of the freshman class Military and law they have campaign experi› with a business background. enforcementveterans ence. ’They tend to know what But as one Republican oper› A m i litary b ackground they’ re getting into," said a ative admitted, it’s not clear lends a candidate a similar Democratic operative. "It’s not how many of the businesses kind of outsider credibility

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SURVEY

Dark, star-filled skiesdraw visitors to national parks By Deborah Netburn Los Angeles Times

tures that allow light to "leak" into the atmosphere with those

e

0

0

Ii

e

What do you look for in a va› that focus light down on an cation rest and relaxation? Gorgeous vistas? Cultural ex›

periences’? How about a view of the cosmos? A new study suggests that gazing upon a naturally dark sky that is unpolluted by arti› ficial light plays a significant role in visitors’ enjoyment of national parks. "There is a growing con› sciousness in the U.S. about the disappearance of naturally dark skies that’s kind of par›

intended target, for example.

Keeping artificial light from surrounding areas out of the park maybe more challenging, but it is not impossible, Man› nmg sard. To help parks service work› ers communicate the draw of naturally dark skies to near›

by communities, Manning’s group conducted two surveys at Acadia National Park in

Maine. The first was designed to quantify how important a

adoxical," said Bob Manning, clear view of the stars is to park who runs the Park Studies Lab› visitors. The second looked at oratory at the University of Ver› what point the level of light pol› mont. "It’s one of those things lution in a park would be con› that we start to notice only sideredunacceptable by most when it begins to disappear." visitors. Scientists estimate that 99 percent of the planet’s skies

The results of the two sur›

For many Americans, the

dia was important to them,

veys were published last week are light polluted and that as in the journal Park Science. of 15 years ago, two-thirds of Nearly all of the hundreds Americans could no longer of groups surveyed agreed see the Milky Way from their very strongly that seeing the backyards. night sky on their visit to Aca›

Nlonday, September 14, 2Q15 at 12:00 PM WHAT:An MS Speaker Even WHERE: The Riverhouse Hotel 3075 North Business 97 Bend, OR 97701

itself to visit a national park, and the National Park Service has taken notice. For the last

that when people reported see›

SPEAKER: Jack Florin, MD Fullerton, CA

ing natural light sources such as the moon, stars, constella›

decade its Natural Sounds and Night Sky Division has worked to manage both acoustical and dark night sky environments

tions and the Milky Way, it im›

Please RSVP so we can reserve your seat. Use event code TR313126.

opportunity to see the night and saidthey recognized the sky glittering with the full cast park as a good place to see the of stars our ancestors once ob› night sky. served has become a reason in The researchers also found

proved their experience of the park. Seeing man-made light sources such as headlights, throughout the National Park streetlights and light from System. nearby cities had a negative ef› Within the park, managers fect on their experience of the can replace older lighting fix› park.

1-866-682-7502 This special event is for people with relapsing MS and their care partners to learn more about an infusion treatment option. Copyright '2015. All rights reserved. GZUS.MS.15.06.1785a


A4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

’ iar oans’re urn o a By JodyShenn and MattScully ~Bloom bergN ews

The pitch arrived with an iconic image of the American Dream: a neat house with a white pick› et fence. But behind that picture of a $2.95 million home in Manhattan Beach, California, were hints of something darker: liar loans, those toxic mort›

Years after the great Amer› home. His l e nder, Velocity ican housing bust, mortgages Mortgage Capital LLC, says akin to the so-called liar loans it writes mortgages for people which were made without buying homes only for busi› verifying people’s finances› ness purposes, such as renting are creeping back into the mar› them out, and requires all cus› ket. And, like last time, they’ re tomers to sign documents stat› spreading risks far and wide ing their intentions. via Wall Street. Soon Velocity was bundling Today’s versions bear only the $1.92 million mortgage and passing resemblance to the hundreds of other loans into se› ones that proliferated in the curities through Wall Street’s mid-2000s, and they’ re by no securitization machine. Kroll means as widespread. Still, Bond Rating Agency featured they reflect how the business a picture of the house in a re› is starting to join in the frenzy port on the $313 million deal, that’s been creating booms in

isn’t nearly as worrisome as borrower handwrite and sign letters testifying to their plans. "Our goal is to never make During the housing bubble, a consumer loan," Farrar said. countless borrowers fibbed Velocity’s lawyers have ad› about their income, often with vised the company, previously lenders’ encouragement. For known as Velocity Commer› lenders and investors let cial Capital, that its processes alone knavish borrowers who would put it on solid ground mightgetinovertheirheads› even if it somehow failed to the potential for trouble is real weed out inaccurate applica› the kind that first brought liar loans to widespread attention.

this time, too.

gages of the subprime era.

most of which was rated AAA.

ree

That’s because federal reg› ulations put in place following the crash effectively outlawed liar loans. Under so-called abil› ity-to-pay requirements, lend› ers must take specific steps to ensure homebuyers actually can afford the mortgages. If they don’ t, homeowners can sue and potentially win dam›

tions, he said.

Velocity, based in Westlake Village, California, also keeps skin in the game by retaining the parts of its bond deals that

would be the first to suffer loss› es,Farrar said. He declined to comment on the buyer in Man›

hattan Beach, citing privacy laws. As Velocity and others hunt

ages that can dwarf the value

for profits, the question is also

of the homes.

how carefully these lenders

But in a throwback to sub› prime times, Velocity and other

are vetting customers and loan brokers.

specialty lenders routinely offer certain mortgages with limited reviews, if any, of borrowers’ finances. That’s because the rules exempt mortgages made for "business purposes." The setup lets borrowers avoid typ›

everything from subprime car Marketing documents for the loans to junk-rated company offering, which was managed bonds. by Citigroup Inc. and Nomura The Manhattan Beach sto› Holdings Inc., characterized ry how the mortgage on the buyer as an "investor." that house was made and sub› But when a reporter re› sequently packaged into se› centlyknocked on the door in

paying higher mortgage rates. Velocity, for instance, sends mortgage brokers emails with subject lines like, "Stated’? Re› ally??" a reference to stated›

curities with top-flight credit

Manhattan Beach, the buyer

income loans, which became

ratings recalls a time when borrowers, lenders and inves› tors all misjudged the potential danger. The story begins earlier this year, when a TV produc› er bought the cream-colored

answered and said he never

ical paperwork, in return for

In Velocity’s recent bond

deal, an outside due-diligence company reviewed about 30 percent of the loans. The

post-crisis standard in resi› dential transactions has been at least 90 percent. The review

revealed at least one other questionable loan, and Velocity removed it from the deal.

In assigning AAA grades, Kroll partly relied on Velocity’s promise to buy back any loans that fell short of the standards,

known as liar loans. said Nitin Bhasin, a Kroll man› planned to rent out the place. Chris Farrar, Velocity’s chief aging director. "That’s a question for Veloc› Nor, he said, had he signed executiveofficer,says his comdocuments stating he would. pany takes steps to ensure ity, I think: How do they make He was living in the house with customers really are buying sure when they’ re making a his family. homes for business purposes. loan that it’s not owner-occu› The apparent discrepancy These indude having every pied," Bhasin said.

Kitzhaber

elude her.

Continued fromA1 Following a September, 2011 meeting about energy and the economy, an official

sion, my idea and I have no role at all," Hayes wrote. "I

"Well, I’m not totally OK with the fact that it’s my vi› have assumed all along that

I’d have a part to play in the ers Fund’s Sustainable De› overarching vision and di› velopment Program sent a rection for this." thank you note to Kitzhaber Kitzhaber’s reply: "And and others in the office. that is exactly why I sent the "I look forward to see› draft to you. What do you ing your draft document," have in mind’?" Kitzhaber replied. "And Gov. Kate Brown’s office could you please copy Cylvia says that 12,000 emails from on all this as we are pretty Kitzhaber’s account have much joined at the hip in this yet to be reviewed for public policy space." release. Other t i m es, h o w ever, Emails from a separate Hayes was left out, to her account that Kitzhaber used from the Rockefeller Broth›

frustration. for private business are In O c t ober, K i t zhaber not included in the release.

staffers circulated a draft 10› Those emails were archived year energy plan. The gov› inadvertently on state serv› ernor forwarded it to Hayes, ers, and Kitzhaber’s lawyers who was disappointed the are fighting to keep them s taffing outline didn’t i n ›

Reserve

private.

Daniel Kiesow, who lives

on Glen Vista Road, said Tuesday he is concerned

Continued fromA1 The reserve will have 66 about traffic at the intersec› parking spaces and 40 bi› tion with O.B. Riley. "My concern is there’ s cycle racks. Five overlooks are proposedfor the site and only one vehicular access three water-access points. point to this park," said "The nature reserve con› Kiesow. cept doesn’t exist anywhere Kiesow suggested the city else," said John Gist, who and the district be required lives next to the proposed re› to do something about the in› serve and was on a commit›

tersection such as widening

tee reviewing the project. "In this situation the property is

the road. Three loop trail systems

more of an island.

are proposed for the first

"It does fulfill a gap that exists in our community,"

phase, which could start this year. The second phase is

he said. "This protects it for

expected to take two to eight

many moredecades to come being in the middle of the development that’s going to continue from the city."

years after the first phase is completed.

Concussions

leagues at Villanova Univer›

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

IN FOCUS:ODD DISCOVERY FOR A ROAD CREW

iversurren erss i wrec e secret CHESAPEAKE J BAY BRIQQ E

By Julie Zauzmer The Washington Post

The wooden ship was built

I i Dov r I

t

De w / r , Bay

napoli~

in Maryland before the Amer› ican Revolution. It ended its

life as a carrier of tobacco

~Am ilge

and foodstuffs on the Eastern

ShorebeforeAmerica entered the 19th century. When it went under

+

pos›

Salisbu

M ARY L A N P

sibly as a result of poor con› struction, possibly of battle

Point

Chincoteague

it sank to the bottom of the Nanticoke River.

MILES

V A~’ ’

The Washington Post

And then this spring, when no one expected it, it r o se

constructi on, and slaves grew

again, recovered from the wa› tery depths during the most prosaic of projects a high› way repair. "The ocean, the bay, the

the crops that it carried and worked on its deck.

The archaeologists spec› ulate that the ship was built

rivers: You’ re so used to them

at a small local facility, not a major shipyard, because they

taking people. They take ships. They take things. And then

can see some elementary mis› takes in construction. An extra

hole drilled in a log, a missing

the time when all of a sudden,

200-something years later, all of a sudden, it gives you something back?" marveled Julie Schablitsky, chief ar› chaeologist for the Maryland

fastener that should have tight› ened the keel those details

are telling, centuries later. M ost evocative of all a r e

State Highway A d ministra›

the logs themselves. Scien› tists can date and locate trees

tion. "Shipwrecks, they’ re very

with r e markable p recision.

The pattern in the rings of the oaks that became the ship tell archaeologists precisely when and where they were chopped down: 1743, somewhere in

romantic."

Schablitsky said the ship› wreck was found when a high› way repair crew was at work

on what seemed to be an ordi› nary project. It happened near the Route

Maryland between the Poto› Maryland State Highway Administration file photo via The Washington Post

50 bridge, midway between Julie Schablitsky, chief archaeologist for the Maryland State High› Cambridge and Salisbury on way Administration, inspects the shipwreck in April. Maryland’s Eastern

S h ore,

which crosses over the Nan› ticoke before the river feeds it was found. into the Chesapeake Bay. Af› This shipwreck did not look ter a barge crashed into a pro› like a movie-set image, a ghost› tective barrier, a crew went ly ship still holding its shape out on a boat to pull up pieces under the clear blue sea. First of the barrier that had been of all, the river bottom is dark: damaged. 30 feet deep, low in oxygen, But some of the wood that douded by muddy sediment they dragged from the water stirred up b y t h e f ast-mov› in April seemed much older ing current. No one saw this than the material from the bar› shipwreck at the bottom; they rier that protects the highway brought it up piece by piece, by bridge. The key clue: The logs feel, with a crane. were held together with wood› Second, the boat probably en pegs, not metal bolts. No did not retain its shape. Scha› one has used wooden pegs for blitsky said its top parts may well over a century. have been swept away by the That’s when the crew mem› current soon after it sank. The

bers called Schablitsky. Her job often entails making sure highway crews don’t pave over historically significant ground, or evaluating what they’ ve un› covered if they do dig up arti› facts while laying down roads. It does not normally include

rest may have survived by splaying out, its sides flatten› ing into the mud. "There’s deterioration and

decomposition, much like a human body. You start los›

ing the cargo. You start los› ing the exterior of it, which is

mac River and Annapolis. " I was shocked that w e could get that sort of detail,"

Schablitsky said. That means the ship was

"As an archaeologist, we’ re used to seeing things that are in fragments and in pieces. We don’t see the broken planks

built sometime after

and the disarticulated timbers. We see the shipwreck in our

have beenpurposely scuttled by because it was no longer

1743,

Yang’s team and col› vidual will be."

probably soon after. And Scha› blitsky said it is clear that it went down before 1800. It may

mind," she said. "We look at it, seaworthy. Or it may have met and we see the keel and where a more dramaticend. the planks would have gone, Documents from the time tell of a Revolutionary War and it starts taking shape." The highway crew kept the skirmish in the town of Vien› logs wet with hoses and a lawn na, Maryland where the sprinkler. "As soon as it hits wreck was found in which air, it’s going to start deteriorat› British sympathizers shelled ing," Schablitsky said. "Once the town and sank several it dries out, it falls apart and boats owned by colonists who you’ re left with toothpicks." supported the Revolution. Spared from that fate, the Intriguingly, the logs from ship traveled with Schablitsky the wreck were scorched, as if to a Calvert County lab on a they had been burned just be› 50-foot-long flatbed truck. fore sinking. The research that Scha› This ship started its tumul› blitsky and her co-workers tuous life marked by the errors have done indicates that less of inexperienced craftsmen. than half of the ship was Its seaworthy years were brief recovered. and were scarred by slavery. It It was 40 to 45 feet long, she met its end soon, possibly un› said, and was meant to travel der the bombshells of war. on the Chesapeake Bay, not But somehow, its afterlife on the ocean. The ship proba› was much longer and more bly carried barrels oftobacco, fortunate. Currents tumbled grain, corn and other products past, sediment swirled, bridges from local plantations to ports were built and the remnants and warehouses. survived.

shipwrecks, certainly not one the planks. You get to a point of the oldest shipwrecks found where you have the skeleton in Maryland. left," Schablitsky said. "Some "We hardly have the chance people might liken that to our› to do underwater sites," Scha› selves you see this cycle of blitsky said. "We’ re not really life." paving the bay." So when the shipwreck first Now, she is working on a reached land, it resembled "This is the luckiest ship› Its history was almost cer› d igital r e construction t h at a pile of logs, not the classic will let the public see the ship, vessel of movie fans’ imagina› tainly tainted at every step by wreck," Schablitsky said. "I’m enslaved carpenters not a big believer in luck. But both as it w o uld h ave ap› tions. But it wasn’t a hurdle for no doubt participated in it s this ship was lucky." peared before sinking and as Schablitsky.

slavery ›

sity tested the material with

Continued fromA1 a tiny probe that can apply a The problem is determin› carefully controlled amount ing what really happens to of force. Then they exam› the brain on i m pact. "No ined it under a microscope one’s been able to predict to record color changes. Dif› in clinical cases how much ferent levels of force turned force it a ctually t akes to the crystals green or purple, cause a concussion," said the about the equivalent of a ve› Cleveland Clinic’s Richard hicle hitting a brick wall at 80 Figler, former team physi› miles per hour. cian for the Browns. Players One challenge will be to caught off guard by a soccer measure the speed of an im› ball kicked from behind, for pact, because the same force example, can sustain con› can bemuch more damaging cussions from much smaller to neurons at higher speeds. forces than someone braced "Imagine Silly Putty," Yang for a tackle, whose neck mus› said. "If you stretch slowly, cles absorb some of the blow. you will not break it. But if "The threshold is extremely you stretch very fast, it will wide," Figler said. break quickly." The University of Penn› While most people fully sylvania technology needs recover from a single con› further research to show cussion, successive injuries whether it ca n a ccurately can raise the risk of lasting predict injuries, rather than brain damage and have been just measure the force of a linked to depression. Many hit. Still, it might become an parents and coaches are al› elegant tool built into hel› ready trained to recognize mets. The material relies on the signs of a concussion, tiny crystals whose color is such as memory problems, linked to t heir underlying sluggishness, or headaches shapes, not to pigmentation. that follow a blow, but play› The same kind of "structural ers can hide symptoms to color" produces the irides› stay in a game. Any tool that cence in butterfly wings and can help accurately identify peacock feathers. When a when a concussion has oc› hard blow changes the shape curred would be a welcome of the crystals, the color advance because "the brain changes as well. is in a heightened state of "It’s a very porous, Swiss› vulnerability after it’s been cheese like structure," said injured," said Gerard Gioia, Yang, a 45-year-old veteran chief of neuropsychology at of Bell Labs. "If you provide Children’s National Health external force, very high System in Washington. "The force, the structure basically earlier we can detect this is cracked open, damaged." problem, the safer that indi›

Pope announcesplan to simplify annulments New York TimesNews Service

at great cost.

"To ensure that a c a se VATICAN CITY Pope Francis announced new pro› doesn’t sleep, tribunals and

cedures Tuesday to make it judges will have to sleep a easier for Roman Catholics little less," said Monsignor to obtain marriage annul› Alejandro Bunge, secretary ments, a move intended to of the commission that draft› streamline a process long ed the changes, speaking at criticized by many Catholics a Vatican news conference as too cumbersome, compli› Tuesday. cated and expensive. Church officials acknowl› The new rules take effect edge that there are still many Dec. 8 and are expected to details to be worked out, in› speed up cases in which nei› cluding instructing bishops ther spouse is contesting the on the annulment process. In annulment. These fast-track the past, Francis has said the cases can be heard as soon annulment process should as 30 days afteracouple files be free, and Vatican experts an application, and at most said the new system was ex› within 45 days. pected to be free, not count› The new procedures also ing legitimate fees to main› eliminate one of the two tain the tribunal process. c hurch trials that ar e r e ›

Divorce is a topic that has

quired of all couples seek› long splintered many of the ing an annulment, a process Catholic faithful from the that can drag on for years, church.


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 THE BULLETIN

TODAY’S READ: ELIZABETH II

W

Europe makes room

I I

for refugees; Japan asks: Why not us? By Anna Fifield

on them too’?" he asked.

The Washington Post

By Adrian Higgins The Washington Post

Scholars say the first king of a united England was an An›

I

glo-Saxon warrior named Ath›

.S

; j2 S

though many ofhis successors have left their mark. The tyr a n n ical and m uch-married H e nr y V I I I , who ruled from 1509 to 1547, was the Tony Soprano of Tu›

dor England; cross him at your peril. Before him, the fiendish Richard III (1483-85) is thought to have put a hit on his neph› ews and was the last English king killed in battle. George IV (1820-30) was a dandy who built a gaudy seaside palace

According to th e A m nes›

ty report, Japan is not alone Abe, Japan’s prime minister, among high income countries was visiting Egypt earlier in not taking in refugees from this year, he pledged $200 Syria. It noted that Russia, Sin› million in aid for refugees gapore and South Korea were displaced by the rise of the also in the zero resettlement so-called Islamic State. "We dub. are going to provide assis› But Japan, which has gone tance forrefugees and dis- to great lengths to rehabilitate placedpersons from Iraq its image since World War II, and Syria," he said. prides itself on being a good TOKYO

elstan, crowned in A.D. 924. He is lost in the mists of time,

A5

When Shinzo

N ow, as torrent a of ref-

ti +8g;. , Ii,l e’

and ate and drank his way into

a 50-inch waist.

Tim Ockenden I The AssociatedPress file photo

History is f estooned with

Queen Elizabeth II, with small-arms instructor Lt. Col. George Harvey, fires the last shot on a rifle in dozens of English, Welsh, Scot› 1993, when she attended the centennial of the Army Rifle Association at Bisley, England. BELOW: The tish and Irish royals they are queen’s time on the world stage spans decades; world leaders she has hosted at Buckingham Palace the stuff of Shakespearean dra› include John F. Kennedy in 1961 and Nelson Mandela in 1996.

mas, Hollywood movies and Broadway plays. But today, the incumbent sovereign, Queen Elizabeth II, beat them all with

a reign that will surpass in lengththerecord of63years,7 months, 2 days set by her great› great-grandmother, Queen

global citizen. It is one of the

ugees flows out of the Mid› largest aid donors in the world. dle East and into Europe, Last year Japan gave $181.6 many people are wonder› million to the U NHCR, the ing why rich Gulf nations UN’s refugee agency, making and the United States are it second only to the United not doing more to help. States. And some in Japan are also When it comes to putting its wondering if the country mouth where its money is, how› should be doing more than ever, Japan is not doing well. It giving money. accepted just 11 asylum seek› After all, Japan has of› ers out of a record 5,000 appli› fered zero resettlement plac› cations last year, according to es for refugees from Syria, Ministry of Justice data, giving according to Amnesty In› Japan a refugee recognition t ernational, although th e rateofjust0.2 percent,one of Japan Association for Refu› the lowest among industrial› gees says three were grant› ized economies. "The low recognition rate is ed refugee status in 2013. Either way, there have shameful," immigration law› been mounting calls here yer ShogoWatanabe told Refor a more indusive policy. uters when the statistics were "There are things Japan released. But this was almost can do," the Mainichi Shim›

double the number taken in

bun, a left-leaning Japanese during 2013, when Japan ac› paper, wrote in an editorial cepted just six refugees, the

Victoria.

on ’Iliesday, adding that To› lowest number in 15 years.

Third place, if you’ re count› ing, goes to George III, who

kyo could be more actively Immigration is a touchy is› supporting the countries sue in Japan, an astonishingly that are taking in Syrian homogeneous country where refugees, especially Turkey outsiders often remain "the and Jordan. other" even if they’ ve lived "Japan is called ’a country here for decades and speak w ith cl aosed-door for refu- perfectJapanese.That makes gees.’We should change this it ahard place for refugees to

lost the Thirteen Colonies and

then his mind during his 59› year reign. The first Queen E lizabeth, the one with t h e

pastyface and the orange hair, The AssociatedPress file photo reigned for a little more than 44 years. breeding and racing thorough› Bagehot had advised against. It But this week’s milestone is breds. If you want to see her set the tone for an increasingly more than just the stuff of par› unguarded, joyful side, look up unfettered and insatiable tab› lor games. Queen Elizabeth II the video of her watching as her loid appetite for the royal fam› is one of the rare human beings horse Estimate wins the Ascot ily, especially when the queen’ s who have been on the world Gold Cup in 2013. sister, Princess Margaret, stage for as long as most of us What is less known: She has gained a reputation as a petu› can remember. (Only 1 in 5 Brit› a prodigious memory for peo› lant jet-setter during and after ons alive were around when ple and events, is a mischievous the collapse of her marriage. she became queen in 1952.) mimic, has enjoyed photogra› Media obsession with the During her reign, technologi› phy and jigsaw puzzles in her House of Windsor reached its cal, political and social systems time, is a big fan of Scottish giddy depths in the 1990s, aid› have changed beyond recog› country dancing (think square ed and abetted by a new gener› nition. The world’s population dancing in kilts) and will dean ation of princes and duchesses has grown from 2.6 billion to up your dishes if you attend one whose behavior made such 7.3 billion. of the royal family’s summer prime-time soaps as "Dallas" Over 63 years and counting, barbecues at Balmoral Castle. and "Dynasty" seem decorous she has advised a dozen prime She is also a deeply religious by comparison. The marriag› ministers (the first was Win›

Christian but not evangelical,

ston Churchill) and observed and observers say that she 12 U.S. presidents and seven viewshermonarchy asadivine popes. She’s still going strong, call, affi rmed by her coronation slowing a little, but it is not in oath in 1953. her DNA to retire i.e., abdi› Her sense of duty was un› cate in favor of Prince Charles. doubtedly also shaped by the Her mother lived to 101. missteps of her unde she Elizabeth has aged through was 10 when Edward VIII ab› the decades from glamorous dicated to marry the American princess to a somewhat dour, divorcee Wallis Simpson in behind-the-times figure to a 1936, suddenly putting Eliza› loving granny, but she has al› beth in direct line to the throne. ways been there, seemingly Edward’s brother and Eliza› immortal and increasingly, yes, beth’s father, George VI, was beloved. portrayed as the stammering At first, the queen did not good egg by Colin Firth in the want to mark the day (to be 2010 film "The King’s Speech." seen lording it over Victoria, The king’s daughter has whom she admires greatly), but shepherded the institution so has now decided to take a train deftly for so long that the role journey with Scottish officials and the person are indistin› on a stretch of railway line re› guishable from each other, said openedaftermany years.This Philip Murphy, director of the seemingly bland gesture actu› Institute o f C o m monwealth ally gets to the heart of Eliza› Studies at the University of beth’s significance, argues Eliz› London. "We have been lulled into abeth biographer Robert Lacey. "It’s invested with all sorts of this sense, because of Eliza› meaning, and it’s the most ex› beth, that constitutional mon› traordinary example of the ap› archy in Britain is immutable," parently passive but in fact very Murphy said, "and yet Britain is active role that Elizabeth plays

in the psychology of her coun› try," he said. The success of Elizabeth’s reign has not been in its length so much as in its nature, in how

she has subsumed herself into the role. She has avoided per› sonal scandal, has never con›

es of three of the queen’s four children failed, most notori›

Louisa Buller/The AssociatedPress file photo

was never going to go quietly." And so the queen in her gold› en years is enjoying the sort of adoration not seen since she

was a young woman. And per› haps it is now more profound. "Everyone has grown up with the idea that Queen Victo› ria was the great 19th-century

queen and, hey, presto, we have produced amodern Elizabeth Age," Lacey said. "Here’s a woman whose achievements we can celebrate, and if you compare her to Queen Victoria, perhaps she’s done a lot better." "In the last decade or so," Murphy said, "there’s a great› er senseof admiration forher, even among peoplewho call

ously when Prince Charles themselves republicans." and Diana split amid squalid There are some obvious dif› recriminations. ferences between Elizabeth Whatever Elizabeth’s pri› and Victoria. The latter ruled vate matriarchal stance over when Britain grew into a world each catastrophe, she remained power with a broad colonial publicly stoic

too stoic after

was manifest during the rain›

that have worked in her favor

Prince Philip in 1947, the wed›

owed by those around her. Her

and her political views. ding was as sensational in its mother, a colorful and some› In sum, she has heeded the day as Charles and Diana’s in what eccentric character, was advice of a Victorian political 1981 or William and Kate’s in the darling of the people and essayist named Walter Bage› 2011. Churchill called it a mo› the media. Princess Margaret, hot, who said that the monar› rale-lifting "flash of color on the the glamorous black sheep, chy must wrap itself in Oz-like hard road we have to travel" af› was the tabloids’ gift who kept mystery to remain precious. ter World War II. on giving. Then as Margaret’s "We must not let in daylight In the 1960s, with the flow› publicity star faded, Diana’s upon the magic," he wrote in ering of television and satire rose. Diana became known as "The English Constitution." in England, the royal family the most photographed woman "People actually know much began to be lampooned, gen› in the world. When her mar› less about the queen than they tly. By the end of the Swinging riage soured and the palace imagine," Lacey said. "But it Sixties, the staid royals thought sought to contain the damage, seems to me that’s less import› that they should let some of she portr ayed herselfas a vicant than that people feel they the daylight in with a TV doc› tim, if not a prisoner. "If Diana had not died, the know her very well." umentary called "Royal Fami› ly." It showed them as mortals, monarchy would still be racked Familyand duty even if their speech and dress by the sort of discord that There are self-evident truths seemed to place them in the characterized her years," Lac› about Elizabeth. We know that early 1950s. ey said. She would have been she loves dogs Labradors as The view today is that the "sniping from the sidelines, well as corgis and horses. documentary was a mistake, having boyfriends, having hus› One of her passions has been because it did precisely what bands, who knows what. She

year that she had spent about 30 months under lock and key.

On T w itter, Y a sunori Immigration officials give the Kawakami, a former Mid› impression that they just want

dle East correspondent for Asahi Shimbun who now freelances from Egypt, has been encouraging his com› patriots to open their doors

refugeestoleave,shesaid. ButJapan alsofacesademographic time bomb one that could be significantly eased by an influx of new people. With and their minds to its rapidly aging population Syrian refugees. While Ja› and paltry birth rate, Japan is pan can’t solve the problem, getting smaller and grayer by it can help ease the despair the year. felt by some Middle East youth, he said. "The root of this despair

comes from them feeling completely isolated. The world is turning their back

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bert, retreated greatly from her

ing so venerated now, Lacey queenly duties. said. This national adulation But the two queens share uncanny similarities: Neither

she hasfor more than six de-

fused fame with celebrity, has When the peachy Princess since the 1990s. For much of cades: spending late summer in declined interviews and has Elizabeth married the dashing her reign, she was overshad› Victoria and Albert’s Scottish shrouded both her private life

only for Europe."

British dominions and colonies,

soaked river pageant that was destined to become the marked her Diamond Jubilee monarch, they both married in 2012, and during the London German princes, they became a country that cut off the head Olympics that year, when Eliz› creatures of routine and proto› of one of its kings (Charles I) abeth went along with a James col, they loved horses and dogs, and got rid of another one (Ed› Bond spoof in which a double they survived gun-wielding ward VIII) less than a century jumped out of a helicopter. That youths, and they were women ago. Like anything, it’s fragile." was followed by the queen en› operating in a man’s world. This seemshard to accept tering the Olympic Stadium to a What the future holds looking back at Elizabeth’s life. prolonged ovation. Lacey sees several factors Elizabeth will carry on as

In the public eye

itarian crisis is not an issue

Scotland, flew the flag at half› and is the queen of 15 "realms" staff and addressed the nation besides the United Kingdom, and said nice things about induding Australia, Canada Diana. and Jamaica.) Victoria inter› fered politically with her prime 'ModernElizabethan Age' ministers and, after the early It would have been hard death of her consort, Prince Al› then to imagine the queen be›

settle into.

accepting refugees from Indeed, Gloria Okafor Ifeo› conflict zones proactively," ma, a Nigerian asylum-seeker the paper said. "Figuring out who arrived in Tokyo in 2007, how to tackle this human› told The Economist earlier this

empire. Elizabeth has seen the

Diana died with her boyfriend, recession of the United King› no longer imperial, Dodi Fayed, in a car crash in dom Paris in 1997. Her death trau› uneasy in Europe and, with matized Britain and fostered a Scotland' sindependence movedark anti-royal mood not seen ment, not even an internally since the 1930s and the abdi› secure union. (Elizabeth is also cation. But Elizabeth woke up head of the Commonwealth, a and smelled the PR disaster: 53-nation federation of former She returned to London from

closed nature and consider

castle, returning to London for a working routine little altered

since she was 25

CAUSE

THANK YOU Thanksto you,w e raised more than

$3.5 million

presenting

honors to local worthies, offe›

forthe March of Dimes and other local charities across the country.

ring privat counsel to the prime minister, cutting the ribbon on the latest charitable asset,

opening Parliament in full re› galia, leading the nation’s war remembrance on a Sunday in

We greatly appreciate your support & participation in Macy’s 10th Annual Shop ForA Cause charity shopping event.

November at the Cenotaph in Whitehall. If the ghost of Charles I

haunts these precincts

he

Learn moreabout Macy's support ofthe March of Dimes and other charitable causes at macys.corn/magicofgiving

was executed in Whitehall in

1649 amid the English Civil War, leaving the country king› less for several years he will discern that the English (and British) monarchy is well and truly restored.

"As long as Queen Elizabeth is still around," Murphy said, "the monarchy is safe."

~~ ~

mac s

t h e magic of giving

BEND RIVER PROMENADE, BEND

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A6

TH E BULLETINe WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

e

e

gO ". (.ETAG E CAN DO So ~U

EliPeterson / Submitted photo via The Associated Press

A firefighting plane drops retardant over the Soda Fire in Owyhee County, Idaho, in a photo taken last month by Utah state firefighter Eli Peterson. Firefighters have captured some of the most dramatic images of wildfires this season, but officials fear the focus put on their smartphones to capture the image and post it online may put them in danger.

Firefighters Continued fromA1 Utah-based firefighter Eli Peterson’s daredevil

I n sta›

THIS SPECIAI. EVENT IS 3 DAYS ONIYl

gram account includes photos Fire of him leaping update,B1 from a b r idge into

t h e w a›

ter below, rock climbing and camping along with images of rollicking flames. "(Fire is) a beautiful, alive thing that makes beautiful photos," said Peterson, 19.

BEND LOCATION ONLY TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY

But, Peterson, like Schlake,

said he won’t sacrifice safety for likes online. "There are tons more times

Stephanie Preheim/ Submitted photo via The Associated Press

September 15, 16, 17

Firefighter Stephanie Preheim captured this wildfire photo in Chelan,

Washington. "People alwaysask ’Howwas it?’ and it’s impossible

when I could have taken pic› to describe what it’s like fighting a fire," said Preheim. "If you have tures, but I can’t pull out a a quick second, whynot snap aquick photoand beable to share it camera because it’s not a safe with people you loveand let themknow what you’re doing?" time," he said. F ire officials, wh o h a v e seen an uptick in such post› idea remains on the table.

ings, warn that the act of fo› The agency says for now, cusing on a handheld screen however, it’s trying to avoid can be deadly when crews such a drastic measure. are surrounded by danger. Casey Judd, president of

lf you really want to save some money with the best technology available, don't delay another moment!

the photos and posting them online. There is also another

problem the photos can pose questionable content. "We understand people "There have been incidents t he Federal W i l dland F i r e wanting that digital scrap› in the past where firefighters Service Association, a fire› book or having that con› have captured the last mo› fighters’ union, said it’s not nection with t heir f a milies, ments, literally, of their lives," something h e’ s w o r r ied children or spouse when it’ s saidDave Teter,deputy direc- about. at an appropriate level," said "Pictures have been taken tor chief of fire protection at the Cal Fire spokeswoman Janet California Department of For› out on the fire lines forever, Upton. "But if it’s a picture of estry and Fire Protection. and it’s a learning tool, too," someone with their thumbs up The problem is especially he said. and a cheesy grin and a house heightened in California as The photos can indeed burning in the background, the parched state makes for be used for training and to this is unacceptable." an explosive fire landscape. document extreme fire b e› Authorities have had fire› "Burning conditions and havior, like fire tornadoes, fighters pull videos with au› rates of spread and the en› points out Jennifer Jones, a dible profanity, but they also ergy release associated with spokeswoman with the U.S. acknowledge the eye candy these fires is really unprece› ForestService's office offire that can come from those out dented," said Teter. management. amid the flames. "They do certainly capture Cal Fire has discussed the E ven so, t h e U . S . F o r › possibility of stripping crews est Service discourages its some very nice photographs," of their cellphones, and the young workforce from taking Teter said.

Wyden Continued fromA1 Three other Democrats also announced Tuesday they’ d support the deal, which effec› tively handed Obama a land› mark diplomatic victory after

months of negotiations with Iran and European nations. S en. Jeff M erkley a n › nounced Aug. 30 he would also support the deal despite "trou› bling concerns" with it."

"It is certainly p ossible, p e r › haps probable, Wyden

t hat I r a n w i l l use its addition›

al resources and access to conventional arms to increase its support for terror›

ist groups," Merkley said last month. However, he added, "when all is added up, the best

option for the U.S. is strong engagement in the (deal), uti› lizing that engagement to hold Iran strictly accountable to the agreement." Republicans hoped to send a motion of disapproval to Obama’s desk. Having 41 or more votes assuresDemocrats can block the motion. Oregon’s lone congressional Republican Rep. Greg Walden, of Hood River, opposes the deal. "The regime in Iran exports terror around the globe, threat› ens the security of the United States and our ally Israel, and

continues to relentlessly pur› sue the world’s worst weap›

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Clinton vs. Cheney; 2visions of Iran WASHINGTON Tohear Dick Cheneytell the tale, he and President George W.Bushwere slowly but surely squeezing Iran into submission until President BarackObamaand his teamcame along and recklessly let up the pressure. To listen to Hillary Clinton, sheandObamasucceeded where the Bush-Cheneyadministration failed by escalating pressure and forcing Tehran to the bargaining table andtoday shewill out› line a tougher stance to enforce the resulting deal. The sharply contrasting narratives reflect not just the ideological poles of adivisive debatethat formally got underway inCongress on Tuesday.Theyalso illustrate the divergent goals of two political leaders with keeninterests in writing, or rewriting, the history of one of the most consequential foreign policy initiatives of recentyears. For Cheney,the former vice president now in retirement, the debate represents achance to defend his team’s approach evenif that means overlooking some ofthe background. During aspeech tosupportersonTuesday,Cheneydenouncedwhathecalleda "shameful deal" that would risk anewHolocaust and possibly lead to a nuclear attack on theUnited States. "It is madness," hesaid. For Clinton, the former secretary of state now running for presi› dent, the challenge is to walk acareful line between claiming cred› it for a much-criticized deal while positioning herself as tougher than her former boss. In aspeech today, aides said, she will go beyond Obamabyvowing to make it official policy to take military action if Iran races for the capacity to build a bomb,not just keep the option on the table, as hewould. Both are selectively presenting the history of the Iran issue. Cheney left out the fact that Iran went from afew hundred centri› fuges spinning early in the Bushyears to more than 5,000 when the two of them left office atotal the Obamadeal would return Iran to. Nor did Cheneymention that the Bushadministration ig› nored a diplomatic offer that would have limited Iran to just a few hundred centrifuges in a pilot plant. Clinton has her ownspin on history. In the speechset for today, she will argue that shewas acentral player in escalating pressure on Iran through sanctions far tougher than anything the Bush administration put in place. Thoseincluded drastically limiting the country’s ability to sell oil and access international financing. She plans no reference to the other form of pressure: U.S.and Israeli sabotage of the Iranian nuclear complex, a covert program that began under Bushand Cheney.

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ons," Walden said in a state›

ment opposing the deal not long after it was unveiled in July. "This is unacceptable for oursafety and security." Wyden also invoked his support of Israel as something that made his decision "as dif›

portion of that will go into the where there are shared inter›

ficult as they come." "I’m very concerned that

not going to continue the sanc› nent members of the United tions. So Iran would get its Nations security council and

hands of enemies of the United States and our allies in Israel,"

Wyden said. "The concern, however, is without this agreement, our

ans will get, that there’s a very

the U.S. wouldn’t have the

real probability that a large

protections of an agreement

The U.S. negotiated the agreement with Iran, formal› ly known as the Joint Com›

prehensive Plan of Action, allies have said that they’ re with the other four perma›

the sanctions relief the Irani› money anyway," he said, "and

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

' www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

eas ac o e m on By Beau Eastes

others got together with the

The Bulletin

again in Redmond. The High Desert Stampede,

goal of bringing a third PRCA rodeo (the Sisters Rodeo and Prineville’s Crooked River Roundup being the other two)

a newly created Professional

back to Central Oregon."

Rodeo Cowboys Associa› tion-sanctioned rodeo, will be

Organizers have planned a series of events throughout

The broncs are set to buck

hlthF. Ih

FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon.For more information, visit the Northwest Interagen› cy Coordination Center’s webpage:bit.ly/bbfires 1. County Line 2 Acres: 67,207 Containment: 97% Cause: Unknown 2. Canyon Creek Complex Acres: 110,410 Containment: 85% Cause: Lightning 3. National Creek Complex Acres: 15,458 Containment: 70% Cause: Lightning

people from outside the area and put heads in beds.... Any time you get an influx of visitors in the area, you see

Get thelowdown For more information on the High Desert Stampede, go to highdesertstampede. corn.

more gas consumed, restau›

rants are full, people are shopping. The residuals are

PaCtSWith

businesses

tremendous."

Organizers expect lineups schutes County Fair 5 Expo deo, including a beer and wine for the High Desert Stampede Center. The Stampede expects tasting and barbecue at Cen› to include some of the area’s to fill the void created when tennial Park, a golf tourna› top cowboys and cowgirls. the Columbia River Circuit ment at Juniper Golf Course The new rodeo hopes to draw Finals, which spent 15 years at and concerts and tailgating at competitors already in the re› the fairgrounds, moved to Ya› the fairgrounds. gion for the Pendleton Round› "There’s a lot of enthusiasm Up, which takes place the kima, Washington, in 2014. "When the Circuit Finals and support behind it," said week before the High Desert left, everyone felt it," said Sean Eric Sande, executive director Stampede, and bulldoggers Ryan, president and rodeo oftheRedmond Chamber of and barrel racers hoping to chairman for the High Desert Commerce. "It’s a huge, huge earn one last payday before Stampede. "Myself and a few draw any time you can bring the end of the 2015 PRCA reg› held Sept. 25 and 26 at the De›

Redmond councilOKs

ular season. "The guys that go up to

the week for the inaugural ro›

Pendleton to finish out the

season, we’ re hoping to keep them (in Oregon) a couple more days," Ryan said. "Our rodeo will be make or break for a lot of guys trying to make the (Columbia River) Circuit Finals, and it could

possibly affect who goes to the (National Finals Rodeo)." SeeRodeo/B5

By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

REDMOND

The City

Council approved a pair of economic development performanceagreements Tuesday night designed to protect infrastructure

investments the city made to help lure two large busi› nesses and retain them in Redmond.

Councilors unanimously approved agreements with Medline ReNewal, an in› ternational medkcal supply

THE PAVILION

e n icerin s a e or ovem er o enin

BRIEFING

company based in Illinois, and Ammunition Develop› ment Corp., a subsidiary of Bend-based Nosier Inc. Medline, which bought the Redmond company Surgical Instrument Ser› vices and Savings Inc. in 2012, opted to keep its

medical-device reprocessing operation in Redmond after flirting with moving it

to Temecula, California. To help retain Medline,

the city guaranteed $1.3 million in improvements to the medical company’s new 12.4-acre site. Grants

are covering $919,013 of those costs, Redmond

iiationai Merit semifinaiists

Community Development Director Heather Richards said. The performance

Three Deschutes County high school seniors wereamongthe 16,000 National Merit Scholarship semifinalists announcedTuesday. They are lanChurchill of Bend HighSchool, Tyler Guyer ofRedmond High School andLogan Danek of RedmondPro› ficiency Academy.

agreement will protect the city in the event Medline does not create or sustain a

certain number of jobs. Similarly, Nosier chose Redmond as the location for its Ammunition Devel›

opment Corp. manufactur› ing plant based in part on site improvements paid for by the city. Through grants provided by the Oregon Department of Transporta› tion’s Immediate Opportu› nity Fund and the Oregon Infrastructure Finance Authority’s Special Public

See Local briefing /B5 1 II

hll ’I

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

Works Fund, Redmond

will contribute $209,606 in transportation, sewer and water improvements to

The Bulletin

Ih

the company's60-acresite

h

Call a reporter

Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond.............. 541-e17-7829 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine ...................541-617-7831

sunriver .................541-e17-7831 oeschutes.............541-e17-7820 crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem .................. 406-589-4347 Business............... 541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands.......... 541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Submissions Letters andopinions: Email: letters@bendbUlletin.corn

Mail:My Nickers worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-633-2117

near the Redmond Airport.

t.

e Andy Tullisi The Bulletin

Construction continues on The Pavilion ice rink in Bend on Tuesday afternoon. Ice making is planned to begin Nov. 1.

with the city is contingent

Community members show strong interest in park district curling andhockeyprograms By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

If the weather is right, the Bend Park & Recreation Dis›

trict expects to make the first ice at its new skating pavilion

Nov. 1 and open to the public Nov. 30. The Pavilion, as the dis› trict refers to the facility, has

been under construction at the corner of SW Colorado

and Simpson avenues since November of last year. The $11.4 million project, funded through a $29 million bond approved by voters in 2012, will operate as a skating rink in winter and host court sports like pickleball and

2004, when a rink at Juniper Park was tom up for the

More than half the anticipat› ed 77 hours a week The Pavil›

construction of the 50-meter

ion will be open have already been dedicatedto organized programs like ice hockey, curling and skating lessons. Kevin Collier, sports pro›

basketball in the warmer

With opening day now less than three months away, the park district has begun

months. The Pavilion will be the first ice rink in Bend since

pool at Juniper Swim 8 Fit› ness Center. There are also ice rinks at Sunriver Resort, Seventh Mountain Resort and in Redmond.

Like Medline’s perfor› m ance agreement, theammunition company’s deal upon a certain number of jobs being created and sus› tained. If either company fails to live up to its end of the deal, it will be on the

hook for the improvements paid for by the city. "It’s important to note

both these businesses bought property here and bought more than they cur›

gram coordinator with the district, said interest in both

rently need," Richards said. "They’ re committed to this

hockey and curling has been brisk.

community in the immedi›

setting schedules for the rink.

See Pavilion/B5

ate and the long term." SeeCity Council/B5

Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletln.corn, with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, and include acontact name

and phone number. Contact: 54f-e83-0367

School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneral interest to news@bendbulletin.corn. Email announcements ofteens’ academic achievements to yeuth@bendbulletin.corn. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info to bulletlnObendbulletin.corn. Contact: 541-e33-2117

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

Community events: Visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "AddEvent" at least10 days beforepublication. Details on the calendarpageinside

Local andGo!Magazine. Contact: 54f-383-0351, communitylife@bendbulletin.corn

Engagements,weddings, anniversaries, birthdays: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Forms areavailable online at bendbulletin.comimilestones. Contact: 541-633-2117, milestones@bendbulletin.corn

Nonprofit recognizesSt. Charles Student profiled inBulletin doctor for work withnewborns meets fundraisinggoal By Kathleen McLaughlin The Bulletin

Jill Leonard and Nir Mal›

achy already are planning

often in our house as a hero, never left the hospital or basically," Leonard said. stopped working on how to Azimi-Zonooz is being rec› help Aviv, Leonard said in her

By Abby Spegman

ognized nationally with the

in The Bulletin on Tuesday

nomination. "I can’t recall the exact moment I met Dr. Azimi, but I

their son’s first birthday cele›

NICU Heroes Award from

bration in November, but not

the Austin, Texas, nonprofit

in the way most parents do.

Hand to Hold and sponsor

The Bend couple intend to place a blue candle on Aviv Malachy’s birthday cake to honor the doctor who saved

Mead Johnson, which will result in a $2,500 donation to the Ronald McDonald House

remember he was clean-shav› en, and then I watched his fa› cial hair become stubbly and thicken as he watched over

of Central Oregon. Leonard said nominating Azimi-Zo›

and cared for Aviv in the days to come," she wrote.

nooz was the least she could

During that time, Leonard

his life after a bout with new›

born pneumonia and collapsed lungs. Blue is

and Malachy had a multitude of questions, but Azimi-Zo›

scrubs worn by

do after the kindness he showed her family while also throwing himself into her son’s care.

Dr. Aryan Az› imi-Zonooz and

Aviv was born full term at a little over 37 weeks and

the rest of the

weighing 7.8 pounds. About had to ask the doctor for an an hour later, he began hav› update because Azimi-Zo› ing trouble breathing. He was nooz came right up to him

the color of

neonatal inten› sive care team at St. Charles

Bend, where Aviv stayed for 10 days. "Dr. Azimi’s talked about

transferred to the NICU, and

his health was touch-and-go for three days. Azimi-Zonooz

The Bulletin

A Madras student profiled has raised enough money to afford his tuition at Portland State University this fall.

Brayan Gonzalez, 23, is an undocumented immigrant and doesn’t qualify for in› state tuition under Oregon’s tuition equity law, meaning at PSU he will to pay $19,500 in out-of-state tuition. He

has scholarships and some

nooz answered each one as

savings, but as of earlier this

though it were the first, Leon›

week he was about $5,000

ard said. Malachy said when he visited the NICU, he never

short. After his was story was

and shared the latest chest X-rays and other information. SeeDoctor /B5

Tuesday, he had raised more than $7,000, induding $5,000 from an anonymous donor. "When I got the notice for

the person who donated the $5,000, I jumped. I was out of my mind; I started crying, my mom started crying, my sister started crying," he said. "It’ s

amazing. Never did I imagine that the community would respond to the level it did. I’m

so grateful to everyone who donated." He said any money raised over the $5,000 he needed for tuition would go toward books or food.

featured on Tuesday, Gon›

Sue Nell Phillips, of Bend, donated $50. She has vol›

zalez said he woke up to the

unteered with the Latino

sound of his phone beeping, Community Association and alerting him each time some› knows students in Gonzalez’s one donated to his page on situation. gofundme.corn. Asof5p.m . See Donations /B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

Evxxr TODAY

ENm a

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.

Neighborlmpact’s Emergency FoodAssistance Program; 9a.m.; Art Station, 313 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-279-0343. SISTERS FOLKFESTIVAL: A three-day celebration of American roots music; 10 a.m.; sold out, $40› $65 for Sunday only; downtown Sisters, various locations, Sisters; www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4979. 26TH ANNUALGREATDUCK RACE: Featuring music, food, activities and more, kids race at noon, duck race at 1:30 p.m.; 11 a.m.; $5 per duck, free for spectators; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.

FRIDAY

BEND FARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NW Brooks St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket. corn or 541-408-4998. "HOW TO CHANGETHE WORLD": The story of a group of people who wanted to change the world, with an exclusive Q8 Apanel discussing both the film and the Greenpeace movement from its earliest days to the present; 7:30 p.m.; $15; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive,

SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locall y made goodsand more;2 p.m.; Barclay Park, Hood Street, between Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. MUNCH AND MOVIES:"PITCH PERFECT":Watch the sing-along version of "Pitch Perfect" in the park, with a performance by Seattle’s own a cappella group, The Coats, bring blankets and low chairs; 6 p.m.; Compass Park, 2500 NW Crossing Drive, Bend; www. northwestcrossing.corn/activities/ Bend; www.fathomevents.cornor 844-462-7342. munch-movies or 541-382-1662. IRA WOLF:Theindie-rock artist SISTERS FOLKFESTIVAL: A three-day celebration of American from Nashville, Tennessee, performs, with Larry and His Flask’s roots music; 6 p.m.; sold out, $40› Jeshua Marshall; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic $65 for Sunday only; Downtown Sisters, various locations, Sisters; Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4979. or 541-323-1881. "AVENUE O,THEMUSICAL": A modernmusicalcomedy abouta THURSDAY group of 20-somethings in the big THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Discuss city, looking for love, jobs and their "The Big Burn" by Timothy Egan; purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27-$38 noon; Redmond Public Library, plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. 541-617-7089. org or 541-317-0700. "THE BOOKOF LIFE":A showing HARMONY4WOMEN"MAMMA MIA" SING-ALONG:Featuring of the animated film, with pre-show a sing-along version of the entertainment by Manny Diaz, musical ABBA movie, with Onasis Adame and Brianna Sumner; Harmony4Women; 5:30 p.m.; $15 7:30 p.m.; Sahalee Park, Seventh suggested donation;McMenamins and B Streets, Madras; www.jcld. Old St. Francis School, 700 NW org or 541-475-3351. Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. DIEGO UMBRELLA: Thegypsy-rock corn or 541-383-3142. band from San Fransisco performs, JERRY JOSEPH ANDTHE with Broken Down Guitars; 9 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the JACKMORMONS: The rock ’n’ roll band from California performs; door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or SATURDAY 541-382-5174. 32ND ANNUALHIGHDESERT AMY MILLERAND SEAN JORDAN: SWAP MEET:Featuring automotive Featuring a member of NBC’s Last collectibles, antiques and a car ComicStanding season nine,and show; 7 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair the winner of Helium Portland’s 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport 2015 Funniest Person Contest; 8 Way, Redmond; www.coocc.org/ p.m.; $8 plusfees inadvance,$10 swapmeet.htm or 541-585-1569. at the door; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage, 125 NWOregon Ave., MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: Bend; www.bendcomedy.corn or Featuring food, drinks, live music 541-419-0111. and more; 9 a.m.; Sahalee Park, 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; LOCALS:Featuring Stereo Treason, 541-546-6778. Victory Swig and Zero Static; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, RAVENSRUN:A5K run or walk to 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; benefit the students of Ridgeview www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or High School; 9 a.m.; $15-$30, $15, 541-323-1881. $20 for student w/shirt, $25 for

theduckrace.corn.

Joe Kline /The Bulletin file photo

The Great Drake Park Duck Race, which features music, food, activities and, of course, duck races, is

slated for Sunday. People can purchase ducksfor $5 or watch the race for free. nonstudent w/shirt; Ridgeview High School, 4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond. 9-11MEMORIAL POKER RUN: Featuring a poker run to benefit local first responders and veterans in need and Central Oregon Veterans Ranch, all vehicles and patriots welcome; 9 a.m.; Wild Ride Brewing Co., 332 SWFifth St., Redmond; www.ovma-hde.corn or 541-350-3802. LA PINE CHAMBERGUNAND RECREATIONSHOW: Featuring ATV PokerRun,a BBQ andsalsa contest and more; 9 a.m.; Frontier Heritage Park, First and Huntington St., La Pine; 541-536-9771. THE POTTERYGAMES:An event of pottery bowl throwing, as a precursor to the Empty Bowls Fundraiser benefiting Neighborlmpact’s Emergency FoodAssistanceProgram; 9 a.m .; Art Station, 313 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-279-0343. NWX SATURDAYFARMER’S MARKET:Featuring local organic artisans in produce, meats, baked goods, skin care and more; 10 a.m.; NorthWest Crossing, NW Crossing Drive, Bend; www. nwxfarmersmarket.corn or 541-350-4217. YOGI UNITEBEND — BEND'S YOGA FESTIVAL:A yoga festival for those who may have never tried it before,

to benefit local charities; 10 a.m.; $15; Troy Field, downtown, 680 NW Bond St, Bend; 541-306-9583. SISTERSFOLK FESTIVAL:A threeday celebration of American roots m usic; 11:30 a.m.;SOLD OUT,$40$65 for Sunday only; downtown Sisters, various locations, Sisters; www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4979. PACIFICGOSPEL MUSIC ASSOCIATIONTOUR 2015: Featuring The Knox Brothers, Bethel Mountain Band, Cornerstone and m ore; 3 p.m.;$12;Redmond High School Auditorium, 675 Rimrock Way, Redmond; www.pacificgospel. org or 541-923-3085. A NIGHT INETHIOPIA: Featuring the sights, sounds, colors and tastes in celebration of Ethiopian culture and cuisine, to benefit ReachAnother Foundation focused on raising funds for it’s Hydrocephalus Campaign; 5 p.m.; $100 per person, includes dinner, wine and no-host bar; St. Charles Bend, 2500 NENeff Road, Bend; www.anightinethiopia.org or 503-580-0088. SECONDANNUALCHARITY POKERTOURNAMENT:Featuring a Texas Hold ’em poker tournament to benefit the Kemple Memorial Children’s Dental Clinic and Dental Foundation of Oregon; 5 p.m., doors open at 4 p.m.; $25 buy-in, $100 donation suggested; The Riverhouse Hotel 8 Convention

Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.smileonoregon.org or 503-594-0880. LISTENLOCAL LIVE SOLO VOCAL RECITAL:Featuring classical songs and arias; 7 p.m.; free, donations accepted; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; 541-550-9318. "AVENUE O,THEMUSICAL": A modernmusicalcomedy abouta group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs and their purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27-$38 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. HUMP FILM TOUR:Featuring a screening of the self-made dirty film festival; 8and10 p.m.; $15; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. humptour.boldtypetickets.corn or 541-323-1881.

OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS SUNDAYJAM: All ages welcome, listen and dance; 1 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Road, Powell Butte; 541-410-5146. SECONDSUNDAY:DENISE FAINBERG: Fainberg reads from her latest book, the account of a walking pilgrimage along the French trails of Camino de Santiago; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-31 2-1032. "AVENUE O," THEMUSICAL:A modernmusicalcomedy abouta group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs and their purpose in life; 3 p.m.; $27-$38 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. TAKEN BYCANADIANS: The California rock ’n’ roll band performs, with Cosmonautical; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

MONDAY NO EVENTSLISTED.

SUNDAY

TUESDAY

LA PINE CHAMBERGUNAND RECREATIONSHOW: Featuring ATV PokerRun,a BBQ andsalsa contest and more; 9 a.m.; Frontier Heritage Park, First and Huntington St., La Pine; 541-536-9771. THE POTTERY GAMES:An event of pottery-bowl throwing, as a precursor to the Empty Bowls Fundraiser benefiting

LUNCH 8[LECTURE:CREATING BY HANDTHROUGH MEMORY: Join Vivian Adams, Yakama Indian and co-curator of By Hand Through Memory, as she recounts the design and intended messages of this exhibit; noon; $9-$15; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754.

reported at 2:52 p.m. Sept. 6, in the area of SW15th Street andSW Highland Avenue. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at 5:13 p.m.Sept. 6, in the 300blockofNW OakTree Lane. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:43 p.m. Sept. 6, in the 2000 block of SW 23rd Street.

criminal mischief was reported at 12:45 p.m. Sept. 3, in the 6100block of SW RimRoad. DUII Richard Chavez,56, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:09 p.m. Sept. 6, in thearea of State Highway 361andEureka Lane.

1VEwsOF 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 and an arrest madeat10:26 a.m. Aug. 28, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:42 a.m. Sept. 3, in the 20600 block of Sierra Drive. Theft A theft was reported at1:49 p.m. Sept. 3, in the area ofShevlin Park RoadandPark Commons Drive. Theft A theft was reported and an arrest made at3:21 p.m. Sept. 3, in the 2500 block of NEU.S. Highway 20. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at 4:36 p.m. Sept. 3, in the area of NWHarmon Boulevard and NWNashville Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at 6:45 p.m. Sept. 3, in the2100 block of NE Eighth Street. Burglary Aburglary and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest madeat1:25 a.m. Aug. 30, in the 200 block of NEFranklin Avenue. Burglary A burglary and acts of criminal mischief were reported and arrests made at10:47 p.m. Sept. 3, in the 600 block of SE Woodland Boulevard. Burglary A burglary was reported at 7:05 a.m. Sept. 4, in the 61400 block of Blakely Road. Burglary Aburglary and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest made at5:29 a.m. Sept. 4, in the 600 block of SENinth Street. Burglary Aburglary and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest made at8:37 a.m. Sept. 4, in the 900 block of SE Armour Road. Burglary Aburglary and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest made at8:56 a.m. Sept. 4, in the 900 block of SE Armour Road. DUII Lawrence TanderReitz, 58, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:56 p.m. Sept. 5, in the area ofNW Newport Avenueand NWWall Street. DUII Michael Hugh McGean,45, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:58 p.m. Sept. 5, in the1200 block of NW Galveston Avenue. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 4:11 p.m. Sept. 6, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft A theft was reported at 6:12 p.m. Sept. 6, in the 300 block of NE

10th Street. Theft A theft was reported at10:36 p.m. Sept. 6, in the 20600 block of Daisy Lane. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at5:51 p.m. Sept. 6, in the 1400 block of SWKnoll Avenue. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest made at2:06 p.m. Sept. 5, in the 700 block of SENinth Street. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest made at7:29 a.m. Sept. 4, in the 700 block of SENinth Street. Theft A theft was reported at 8:02 a.m. Sept. 4, in the 700block of SE Ninth Street.

DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE Theft A theft was reported at11:20 a.m. Sept. 3, in the 68700 block of Junipine Lane. Theft A theft was reported at12:17 p.m. Sept. 3, in the 60500 block of Umatilla Circle. Theft A theft was reported at 2:44 p.m. Sept. 3, in the 7900 block of W. State Highway126. Theft A theft was reported at 2:59 a.m. Sept. 3, in the 17100block of Island LoopWay. Theft A theft was reported at 4:20 p.m. Sept. 3, in the 63300 block of U.S. Highway20. Theft A theft was reported at 5:04 p.m. Sept. 3, in the 16600 block of Wyatt Drive.

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft A theft was reported at 5:59 p.m. April 27, in the 300 block of NW Oak TreeLane,andanarrest was made at 7:20p.m.Sept.4. Theft A theft was reported at 4:34 p.m.Aug.27,inthe800 blockofSW Rimrock Way,and anarrest was made at 4:45 p.m. Sept. 6. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 2:03a.m.Aug.29,inthe800 blockof NW Rimrock Way, andarrests were made at1:46 p.m. Aug.31, andat 4:12 a.m. Sept.4. Burglary A burglary was reported and an arrestmadeat8:24 a.m .Aug. 29, in the 2300 block of SWVolcano Avenue. DUII Kyle Mandfred Vezie, 31, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:01 a.m. Aug. 31, in the1500 block of SW Highland Avenue. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 4:26 a.m. Aug. 31, in the1400 block of SW Evergreen Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was

reported entered at 7:58 a.m.Aug. 31, in the 1200 block of SWBlack Butte Boulevard. Theft A theft was reported at 7:59 a.m. Aug. 31, in the1100 block of SW 17th Street. Theft A theft was reported at 8:47 a.m. Aug. 31, in the300 block of NW Oak TreeLane. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 9:18 a.m. Aug. 31, in the2400 block of SW Indian Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at10:59 a.m. Aug. 31, in the 1100block of SWCascade Avenue. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest made at12:28 p.m.Aug. 31, in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. Unauthorizedttse Avehicle was reported stolen at1:09 p.m. Aug. 31, in the 1200 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at1:16 p.m. Aug. 31, in the 2300 block of SWGlacier Avenue. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at 3:04 p.m. Aug.31, in the 2400 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at 3:57 p.m.Aug. 31, in the 700 block of NWFifth Street. Burglary A burglary was reported at 5:07 p.m. Aug. 31, in the2000 block of SW CanyonDrive. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at10:01 p.m. Aug.31, in the area of SWIndian Avenueand SW Veterans Way. Burglary Aburglary and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest madeat1:36 a.m. Sept.1, in the 2700 block of SWJuniper Avenue. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:01 a.m. Sept. 1, in the300 block of NW 27th Street. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat11:35a.m. Sept.1, in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:52 a.m. Sept. 1, in the1700 block of S. U.S. Highway97. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at 2:11 p.m.Sept. 1, in the area of U.S. Highway 97andSW Highland Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at 2:57 p.m. Sept. 1, in the1900 block of SW 33rd Street. Theft A theft was reported at 4:02 p.m. Sept. 1, in the 800 block of SW Deschutes Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at 4:33 p.m. Sept.1, in the 700 block of SW 17th Street. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest made at6:44 p.m. Sept. 1, in the 1200 block of NWCanal Boulevard. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at9:21 p.m. Sept.1, in

the area of SW15th Street andSW Pumice Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at 7:32a.m. Sept. 2, in the 3500 block of SWWickiup Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at 8:22 a.m.Sept. 2, in the 3100 block of SWTimber Court. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest made at11:59a.m. Sept. 2, in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. DUII Patricia Mae Amperse, 60, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:24 p.m. Sept. 2, in the1900 block of NW CedarAvenue. Theft A theft was reported at 2:11 p.m. Sept. 2, in the 100block of NW Elm Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at11:13 a.m.Sept. 3, in the 2600 block of NWCedar Avenue. Theft A theft was reported and arrests were madeat1:38 p.m. Sept. 3, inthe300blockof NWOakTree Lane. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at 2:58 p.m. Sept. 3, in the 600 block of SWRimrock Way. Theft A theft was reported and arrests were madeat 4:46 p.m. Sept. 3, inthe300blockof NWOakTree Lane. Burglary A burglary was reported at 6:51 p.m. Sept. 3, in the 600 block of NE RedwoodAvenue. Theft A theft was reported at11:29 p.m. Sept. 3, in the area of SW27th Street and SWSalmon Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered and items stolen and an arrest was madeat 3:52 a.m. Sept. 4, in the 700 block of NENegus Place. Theft A theft was reported at11:09 a.m. Sept. 4, in the 3400 block of SW Salmon Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at12:22 p.m. Sept. 4, in the 200 block of NW Sixth Street. Theft A theft was reported at 3:37 p.m. Sept. 4, in the 300 block of NW Oak TreeLane. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at 9:04 p.m. Sept. 4, in the area of SW23rd Street and SW Obsidian Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered and anarrest made at 3:57 a.m. Sept. 5, in the 2200 block of SW Obsidian Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at11:49 a.m. Sept. 5, in the2100 block of NW Elm Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at12:31 a.m. Sept. 6, in the2400 block of S. U.S. Highway97. Theft A theft was reported and arrests were madeat1:03 p.m. Sept. 6, inthe300blockof NWOakTree Lane. Vehicle crash Anaccident was

OREGON STATE PRINEVILLE POLICE POLICE DUII Christopher J. Dillberg, 33, DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:18 a.m. Sept. 4, in thearea of NE Elm Street. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:49 a.m. Sept. 4, in thearea of NE Mariposa Avenue. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at10:18 a.m.Sept. 4, in the area of NWO’Neil Highway. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:57 p.m. Sept. 4, in thearea of N. Main Street. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:28 a.m. Sept. 5, in the area of NE Third Street. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:02 a.m. Sept. 5, in the area ofNW Fifth Street. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered anditems stolen at 3:22 a.m. Sept. 6, in the area ofN. Main Street.

JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at7:28 p.m. Aug. 31, in thearea ofU.S.Highway26and NW Mecca Road. DUII Darnell Severson, 51, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:02 p.m. Aug. 31, in thearea of SW Peninsula Drive andPrairie Road. Burglary A burglary and theft were reported at 9:30a.m. Sept. 1, in the 3000blockofSW Highland Lane. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at11:44 a.m. Sept. 1, in the area of SWChinook DriveandSW Badger Road. DUII RandyWilliam Maitland, 44, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:31 p.m. Sept.2, intheareaof U.S. Highway 26and NWHess Road. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at10:32 a.m. Sept. 3, in the 7200 block of SWShadRoad. Criminal mischief Anact of

was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:41 p.m. Sept.4, intheareaof U.S. Highway 20 nearmilepost 92. DUII — RalphAnthonyUpshaw,72, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:41 p.m. Sept.4, intheareaof U.S. Highway 20 nearmilepost 92. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at 8:26 p.m. Sept. 4, in the area of U.S. Highway 20andBig Lake Road. DUII Lauren L. Backes, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:21 a.m. Sept. 5, in thearea of Third Street and Brosterhous Road. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at12:21 p.m. Sept. 7, in theareaofU.S.Highway97and SW Colfax Lane. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at1:04 p.m. Sept. 7, in the area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost 99.

BEND FIRE RUNS Sept. 2 24 Medical aid calls. Thursday 7:54 p.m. Authorized controlled burning, 2806 NE Lotno Drive. 20 Medical aid calls. Friday 6:39a.m. Unauthorized burning, 64210 Hunnell Road. 19 Medical aid calls. Saturday 4:33p.m. Unauthorized burning, area of Deschutes Junction. 7:58p.m. Authorized controlled burning, 24395 DoddsRoad. 9:12p.m. Authorized controlled burning, 20088 BeaverLane. 15 Medical aid calls. Sunday 2:48p.m. Brush or brush-and› grass mixture fire, 2000 NEThird St. 7:55p.m. Authorized controlled burning, area of NE ElkCourt. 19 Medical aid calls. Monday 9:13p.m. Smoke odor reported, 2465 NWHemmingway St. 17 Medical aid calls.


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

ov. Brown touts t e im ortance o u - a i n er arten ro ram The Associated Press BEAVERTON

spent years pushing for an expanded kindergarten day, citing the state’s persistently low rate of third-graders who read at grade level. Curriculum dire c tors and kindergarten teachers say half-day classes are too rushed. In a six-hour school day, lessons go into much greater depth and allow for more practice. Being together as a class all day also permits

B eaver›

ton schools opened Tuesday and Gov. Kate Brown visited

one elementary school to wel› come the youngest students.

The governor touted the importance of full-day kin› dergarten, which was avail› able to less than half of Ore› gon’s 5-year-olds a year ago. The Legislature increased funding earlier this year, leading school districts to cre›

more attention to skills such

ate more than 1,000 new full›

as cooperation, patience, per›

day kindergarten classes. Brown said a focus on ear› ly learning is vital to lifting Don Ryan/The Associated Press test scores and closing the Oregon Gov. Kate Brown greets students on the first day of school "opportunity gap." at Nancy Ryles Elementary School in Beaverton on Tuesday.

severance and anger controL

"It’s really important that

Brown visited the school, kicking off the first school year with full› day kindergarten statewide.

we follow up full-day kin› dergarten with high-quali› ty, rigorous and strong and aligned classroom work at their share of the new mil› everysingle grade level and lions if they don’ t. The Orego› that’s what we’ re working on niannewspaper reported that doing," Brown told KOIN-TV. it could not find any districts Schools are not required to sticking with half-day classes. offer more than half a day of The change has been espe› kindergarten, but they forfeit cially great in districts such

"You can do real teach› ing, not just a drive-by," said Paula Nelson, a

teacher who taught half-day kindergarten for 19 years be› fore switching to full-day last year. At least 12

as Hillsboro, Salem and Eu› gene. Last year, nearly every kindergarten class in those districts lasted two hours and 45 minutes. Now, they are all

full-day. Oregon educators have

P o r t l and

o t her states

already provide f u l l-day kindergarten to all their stu› dents. Washington schools will hold full-day classes for 72 percent of kindergartners this year and all of them next

AROUND THE STATE Stnlen paCkagaS Portland police arrested a United Parcel Service worker accused of stealing packages hewas supposed to sort. Sgt. Pete Simpson said Tuesday the investigation began when Microsoft products were not arriving at their final destinations. De› tectives found that 21-year-old Chad Lovewas removing packages from the sorting line at the UPSfacility on Swan Island and hiding them in a restroom. Police say he took the packages homeafter work and sold the stolen goods to online buyers. Love was booked into the Multnomah County jail on charges of first-degree theft.

COmplaint againSt pOliCe Chief Apolice officer in Clats› kanie said his family has faced retaliation since he andanother officer filed complaints against the police chief for making racist statements. Officer Alex Stone said he’s being followed on his shift, his wife has twice been forced off the road and people are yelling the N-word at him. Stone, who is white, submitted the com› plaint against Chief Marvin Hoover with the Oregon Department of Public Safety Standards and Training. It alleges the chief compared African-Americans to monkeys and sang "Dixie." Hoover was placed on paid administrative leave Aug. 5 andallowed to retire two weeks later. The state investigation remains active. Hoover had been chief since 2002.

UO board attendance policy University of Oregon’s board of trustees may consider re-evaluating its attendance policy as members have racked up multiple absences since the board first formed in January 2014. Less than half of the board’s 14 members have attended all meetings. A couple members have been absent five or seven times. The board holds its quarterly meetings in Eugene for two- or three-day sessions. Members sometimes phone in or Skype when they can’t make it in person. Many board members juggle high-level job responsibilities and their board positions, such as Peter Bragdon, who is senior vice president and general counsel for Columbia Sportswear Co. and Andrew Colas, president of Colas Construction in Portland. The board will review its attendance policy when it convenes Thursday and Friday. — From wire reports

year, state officials said.

New regulationsdraw ire Lane Coun to open 41 more beds of somebassfishermen in effort to curb early jail releases

By George Plaven

Lonnie Johnson, conserva›

(Pendleton) East Oregonian

tion director for the Oregon PENDLETON Bud Hart› Bass Angler Sportsman Soci› man can sense 55 years of ety, or B.A.S.S., said most bass progress beginning to unravel. fishermen are catch-and-re› As one of the original mem› lease only, removing bag limits bers of the Oregon Bass and might open the doors to a po› Panfish Club in 1958, Hart› tential cottage industry. "We’ re very concerned man, of Portland, fought for the state’s first ever bag limits about what’s the writing on the on bass fishing to protect the wall here," Johnson said. speciesfrom overharvest. ODFW has said the propos› The Oregon Fish and Wild› al is meant to lower the rate life Commission last week at which bass prey on native approved sport fishing regu› salmon and steelhead smolts, lations for 2016 that includes especially in the John Day removing bag limits on all River where rising water tem› warm-water fish including peratures have lured small› bass, walleye, crappie, panfish mouth bass higher into the and catfish in the Columbia, watershed. John Day and Umpqua rivers, But Steve Fleming, of Mah› leaving Hartman deflated. Hah Outfitters in Fossil, cited "I’ ve been at the forefront of an ODFW study from 1999 making sure these fish have that concluded smallmouth the right to exist in Oregon," bass are not major predators of he said. "As of last Friday, I felt spring chinook and steelhead like all of these efforts we put smolts in the John Day, since in have all been in vain." the bass are not particularly Hartman, w h o a t t ended active when smolts migrate in the commission’s meeting in colder water. Seaside, said he felt his ar› On the other hand, northern guments against ending bag pikeminnow prey on smolts limits on warm-water fish fell year round, Fleming said, and on deaf ears. He isn’t worried bass have actually helped de› the fisheries will become over› crease pikeminnow numbers ly degraded, but said it simply in the river. "I just don’t see the science sends the wrong message to angler s. supporting this decision-mak› "To me, it devalues the re› ing," Fleming said. source," Hartman said. "It says Fleming, who has guided to the angling public that (these fishing trips on the John Day fish) don’t mean anything." for 27years, said the vote to reEighteen percent of Ore› move bag limits on warm-wa› gon fishermen said they con› ter fish was thoughtless. He sider themselves primarily doesn’t expect his business to warm-water anglers, accord› suffer, though he said the fish› ing to a 2006 survey by the ery, along with rural commu› state Department of Fish 5

nities, will all be impacted.

"The word will get out that Wildlife. Another 26 percent said they fished for warm-wa› you can’t find anywhere to ter species at some point fish on the John Day unless during the past year. you have a boat," he said. "The When it comes to bass fish› summer traffic will die down." ing, Oregon has become a The new rules are part of an world-class destination. Last effort to simplify warm-water year, Bassmaster Magazine and trout fishing regulations ranked the Columbia River statewide. Other changes ad› 14th in its list of top 100 plac› opted by the Fish 8 Wildlife es to fish for bass in the U.S., Commission include elimi› while Field & Stream Maga› nating the April trout opener zine also named the John Day and removing bag limits on River as the best smallmouth bass river in the West in its May 2015 issue.

non-native brown and brook trout in streams, with a few

exceptions.

Man chargedafter allegedly shooting at papercarriers The Associated Press

Saturday. Parker says they had ROGUE RIVER Author› justdelivered a newspaper and ities say a man has been ar› drove off when they heard gun› rested after allegedly chasing shots. Dunbar, who lived near› down two people who were de› by, had allegedly got into his fa› livering newspapers in Rogue ther’s car and started firing and River and shooting at them. chasing the victims. Shad Gary Dunbar, 34, is be› Police say two houses were ing held on attempted murder hit with bullets and one bullet and other charges for allegedly struck the victims’ back-seat firing at newspaper carriers, windows. Dunbar fled the scene Linda Parker and Roger Price, and wasn’t found until Monday.

The Associated Press

Attrition as well as slow

hiring and training for jail ty is opening up 41 beds at a deputies meant the coun› Eugene jail in an attempt to ty didn’t have enough staff reduce early releases due to to keep 84 beds in Eugene overcrowding. open. The county announced Capacity-based releases fell Monday that about half of EUGENE

Lane Coun›

dramatically in the first year

those beds would be made

enough people to open all 84 what the jail may consider the beds by June. future norm. "We have learned over the "A 60 percent reduction in years that it’s really quick and (capacit y-based releasesfrom expeditious in cutting bud› the pre-levy period) is still a gets to lay people off," Trapp pretty darn good investment said. "It is painfully slow to from the community," he said. hire people back." By July, unspent levy dol› He said while variety of lars will total $15 million. Any

of a tax levy that provides available. funds to keep beds available, Lane County Sheriff By- factors i n f l uence c a paci› money that remains after five but more than doubled from ron Trapp says the county ty-based releases, data in the yearscan be rolled overinto last June to this summer. probably won’t be able to hire levy'ssecond year iscloserto the jail’s future budgets.

OregonStateUniversity researchgrants set record By Bennett Hall

technologydeveloped by OSU

Corvallis Gazette-Times

Oregon State University has set a new record for re›

"It ts a big, big number for a campus of our size in this funding environment."

scientists also made a contri› bution to the bottom line, near›

ly doubling from less than $6

search funding, bringing in Cynthia Sagers, OSUvice president for research $308.9 million in contracts and licensing fees during the 2015 fiscal year, which ended that overall federal support for million). June 30. academic research has been M ost of t h e g r o wt h i n OSU’s research enterprise, The total was up from about decliningoverthatspan. "On the federal side, just however, came from private $285 million last year and was more than $20 million above keeping our nose above wa› industry, which has upped its the previous high water mark ter has been a challenge," he sponsorship from $25 million of $288 million, reached in fis› said. "We’ ve seen significant in 2010 to $45 million today, cal 2010. decreases in the amount of Holdren said. "It’s phenomenal," said OSU federal research f unding "We’ ve been working to Vice President for Research available." make those connections any Cynthia Sagers, who stepped The National Science Foun› way we can and looking to into the job Aug. 31 following dation was OSU’s most gener› extract a lot more value from the retirement of Ron Adams. ous federal supporter last year them," he said. "It is a big, big number for with grants totaling $61.5 mil› The list of companies pick› a campus of our size in this lion, according to Holdren, fol› ing up part of the tab for OSU funding environment." lowed by the U.S. Department research projects includes While the federal govern› of Agriculture at $27 million, corporate heavyweights such

million last year to more than

ment remains th e

ing drones into mainstream

l a r gest the Department of Health and

Human Services ($18.7 mil› OSU, that number has been lion), the Department of En› relatively flat over the past ergy ($9 million), the National five years - an achievement in Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad› itself, according to Associate ministration ($7.8 million) and Vice President for Research the National Aeronautics and Rich Holdren, who points out Space Administration ($5.2 sourceof research dollars for

as Hewlett-Packard, Nike and

$10 million in fiscal 2015. Another strategy that has helped OSU grow research revenuesisto go after large federalcontractsby cooperating acrossdepartmental and institutional lines. One recent example is AS› SURE, the Alliance for Sys›

tem Safety through Research Excellence, a consortium led

by Mississippi State Universi› ty that also included OSU and a dozen other academic insti›

tutions. In May, the group was awarded $25 million in fund› ing overfiveyearsbythe Federal Aviation Administration

to find ways of safely integrat›

Boeing as well as smaller Ore› aviation. "We’ ve worked very hard gon firms such as Benchmade Knife in Oregon City, Shel› here at OSU trying to build don Manufacturing in Cor› more collaborative, team nelius and NuScale Power in science," Holdren said. "Our Corvallis. faculty have been wonderful Licensing revenues from about this."

Case outlined against MarionCountyjudge By Jonathan J. Cooper

they’ re after me on is that I

versely on the judge’s charac› had stopped doing weddings ter, competence, temperament SALEM A n Or e g on because I have a firmly held orfi tnessto serve asajudge." judge under an ethics inves› religious conviction." Day is the head of the Vet› tigation after refusing to per› A spokesman for Day said erans Treatment Court, which form same-sex weddings has last week that the judge was aims to provide intensive been accused of several other being investigated for refus› monitoring of veterans to treat allegations, including hang› ing to perform same-sex mar› drug and alcohol problems as ing a picture of Adolf Hitler in riages but declined to disclose an alternative to jail. Several the courthouse, the commis› the other allegations against of the allegations against him sion charged with investigat› him. stem from hi s i n teractions ing him announced Tuesday. Six allegations were re› with veterans and displays he Marion County J u dge vealed in a press release Tues› placed around his courtroom. Vance Day said the Hitler day by the Commission on Day said a l o cal doctor The Associated Press

portrait was not intended to glorify the Nazi dictator but

Judicial Fitness and Disabil›

serving in World War II cut

ity, which investigates com› the portrait of Hitler from a was part of a display on de› plaints against judges and German government build› mocracy'sdefeat of fascism. can recommend sanctions. ing and sent it home. When Day, a former chairman of Day is accused of violating the doctor died, his son do› the Oregon Republican Party, several rules from the Code n ated memorabilia t o t h e said he’s being targeted be› of Judicial Conduct. They veterans court. The H i tler cause of his Christian beliefs. include a requirement that portrait became part of a col› "It appears that the com› judges "observe high stan› lage, surrounded and partial› mission has thrown every› dards of conduct" so that their ly obscured by photographs, thing in but the kitchen sink," integrity or independence is medals and the doctor’s diary Day told The Associated preserved and a prohibition entries, he said. Press. "The clear issue that on conduct "that reflects ad› It hung outside Day’s court›

room for several weeks last year until the presiding judge said it might be offensive. "The purpose was to show that these young Americans

triumphed over fascism," Day sard. When a federalcourt rul-

ing in May 2014 made same› sex marriage legal in Oregon, Day instructed his staff to

refer same-sex couples look› ing to marry to other judges. Later, he decided to stop per› forming marriages altogeth› er. Day said same-sex mar›

riage violates his religious beliefs. The compliant, which Day provided to the AP, also al› leges he allowed a veteran on multiple occasions to handle

guns even though he knew the man had a felony convic› tion on his record. Oregon law

prohibits felons from being in possession of a weapon.


B4

TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

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The Bulletin

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...SKCAUS K FEWER LAW-ASIANS CITIZENS

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regon’s land use laws are supposed to promote good and smart city planning and growth. But they have a contradiction.

g g)N::. :

They ask rapidly growing cities like Bend to do something stupid. The laws tell Bend that even as it is on the cusp of expanding its boundary, it can’t properly plan for that expansion. Think about sewer lines. If they are properly built and constructed, sewer lines will last 100 years, may› be more. So when the city is planning for sewer capacity, it needs to be able to think far into the future. It needs to plan for growth not just 20 years in the future but 100 years. It needs to be able to think about what Bend might look like with an expanded urban growth boundary. It needs to build smart for expected future capacity. But there' s a notable dumb section in state law. When a city is mak› ing calculations for future needs, it can’t consider growth that is very likely to happen outside its urban growth boundary.

One way this gets messed up is in determining system develop› ment charges. SDCs are those fees on new construction designed for growth "to pay its way." For sewer SDCs, the city figures its future needs by looking at its current capacity and estimating the costs of projects to get to a predicted level of future capacity. It then di› vides by projected growth to calcu› late an SDC fee the city can charge new development. Even though Bend knows it is very likely growth will occur out› side its urban growth boundary, it cannot design the size of a sewer line to plan for capacity outside its UGB. Bend is effectively prevented

Don’t neglect the 3 R’s in students'education

A

s Central Oregon schools kick off the 2015-16 school year this week, teachers will, no doubt, work to instill their stu› dents with the 21st-century goals of education: collaboration, creativity, critical thinking and communica› tion. Those skills, the National Ed› ucation Association and others tell us, will give the current generation of American school students the tools they need to lead the world. It’s a concept that’s caught on. In Bend-La Pine Schools, for ex› ample, school board members say Shay Mikalson’s vision of just those ideals was one of the things they liked when they made him district superintendent. They' re good skills to have, no doubt, and the district has new tools to track progress on them. We must admit, however, that we’ re less clear about how the results of studentsurveys on such things as "hope" and "well-being" advance education. Left out of the mix, unfortu› nately, are two skills many Oregon students lack. They cannot read or write as well as they should, and their math skills are also subpar. The result? A study released in May found that nearly 75 percent of Oregon high schoolgraduates who entered

a en e e ve o ment ro ose on e oa

from properly planning for growth. Oregon’s land use laws have served to block sprawl and preserve some of Oregon'sprecious beauty. But when they compel a community to underplanand undersave for the future, the laws fail.

community college in the academ› ic year following graduation had to take at least one developmental (formerly called remedial) course in reading, writing or math before they could take college course› work. Developmental courses car› ry no college credit, but students have to pay for it. The study, by Mi› chelle Hodara of Education North› west, was done for the Institute of Education Sciences in the U.S. De› partment of Education. That’s an appalling number, and for those students, the impli› cations are terrible. They’ re far less likely ever to graduate from com› munity college and far less likely to complete a four-year degree program. Moreover,college readiness is a better predictor of their future than race or poverty level. So while critical thinking and communication skills are import› ant, we suspect students, be they at Bend-LaPine Schools or somewhere else, who do not graduate from high school with those three old basics reading, writing and ’rithmatic well in hand won’t be able to do much with the four C’s. A broad education may well be a worthy goal, as Mikalson told teachers. But depth is import› ant,too, and fortoo many Oregon youngsters, depth in t h e b asic skills is clearly lacking.

:

By Colleen Miller he lush, unique, 12-acre par› cel at 1810 Neff Road is pro› posed to be developed into home sites. Pending city approval and according to current zoning, this could be approximately 22 lots

T

or increased to approximately 80.

This land includes several varieties of trees, including cottonwoods, as› pen, ponderosa, juniper and those from the historical experimental fruit orchard of the early 1900s. The wetlands, outcroppings and fertile soil are a gem in the center of our town and established neigh› borhoods. Wildlife enjoy this oasis in the center of our beautiful town. Not only is it a shame this rich soil will be plowed and developed into high-density housing, but the ef› fect on traffic and safety is also a

huge concern. Neff Road is already a mess as it services access to the schools

and hospitals. Entering Neff from streets such as Cliff Drive and Shepherd is quite the frustrating feat, especially before and after school and work. I imagine ambu› lance drivers have their own frus› trations as well, which is another

safety threat. This poses a danger to schoolchildren, bicyclists and

pedestrians, as well as cars try› ing desperately to enter and exit. Neighbors are concerned about

the old water pipes that are already

IN MY VIEW burdened and resulting in low

This meeting is our opportuni› ty to present concerns to the land owners and developers. The de›

veloper is then required to address decreaseas density,noise and traf- those concerns before submitting fic increase. its application to the city for ap› I realize our town is growing proval. Its plan must include a traf› and more homes are needed. But fic study and water/sewer study as I hope developers can understand well as look at current city code the concerns of those already es› compliance. Fire, life and safety is› tablished in the area and work sues are critical. Please attend and toward a more reasonable plan. offer your own concerns regarding Larger lots and p reservation of these matters. more trees, water and green spac› A very large number of trees will es? Homes and yards that blend be removed from this land. Please in rather than disrupt the current come and fight for their preserva› neighborhoods? Cliff Drive, which tion. This will not only affect the is currently a dead-end, quiet, safe wildlife such as owls, deer, water› street, will be pushed through and fowl and yellow-bellied marmots, potentially service a hundred cars. but also our microclimate and the Will there be pathways, sidewalks, pure aesthetics of this area. Cast gates and lights that offer protec› your vision for a truly remarkable tion? Will there be an upgrade to subdivision that displays this won› the city services? Will there be derful piece of ground. An oasis berms and fences that provide pri› that people will be thrilled to call vacy and noise reduction for those home. with adjacent property lines? Application for the subdivision Please attend the public meet› is proposed for this month with ing to discuss the proposed devel› construction anticipated to begin opment today at 6 p.m. at Juniper in the summer of 2016. Then large Elementary. Please help us save all construction vehicles will begin to we can of this gorgeous estate and move in and out of Neff. Our time protect our neighborhoods, driv› is short. Our opportunity to speak ers and children. Things will con› up is now. Come to the meeting, tinue to grow quickly, but places talk to the city, tell your neighbors. like these make our city our town. Please do your part to keep Bend It is worth careful thought and beautiful. preservation. — Colleen Miller lives in Bend. pressure. Home values are sure to

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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 appro› priate for other sections OfThe Bulle› tin. 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 colum› nists. 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

Anti-pa m en: Trump, Carson, San ers, Cor yn p olitical parties are civic institu›

tions. They are broad coalitions

built for the purpose of creat› ing a governing majority that can be used to win elections and pass agen›

das. This summer three American politicians have risen to the fore, and they all sit outside or at the margin of

considered the most outside of the out› individualism.

siders until a cult of personality de› There has always been a tension veloped around him, rocketing him to between self and society. Americans DAVID the top of the polls. have always wanted to remain true BROOKS These four anti-party men have lit› to individual consciousness, but they tle experience in the profession of gov› also knew they were citizens, mem› erning. They have no plausible path to› bers of a joint national project, tied to defeat in May because people did not ward winning 50.1 percent of the vote one another by bonds as deep as the think its leader was strong enough in any national election. They have no bonds of marriage and community. and they thought its policy agenda prospect of forming a majority coali› As much as they might differ, there w as too farleft. tion that can enact their policies. was some responsibility to maintain

the party they are trying to lead. Donald Trump didn’t even swear allegiance to his party’s eventual nom› inee until last week. He is a lone indi› And yet at the moment the favorite vidual whose main cause and argu› to become the next leader of the Brit› ment is himself. ish Labour Party is Jeremy Corbyn. Ben Carson has no history in politics Corbyn has existed for decades on and a short history in the Republican the leftward fringe of the Labour Par› Party. He is a politically unattached ty, tolerated as sort of a nice but dotty figure whose primary lifetime loyalty uncle.

has been to the field of medicine. He spent much of his career at the Bernie Sanders is a socialist inde› edge of the parliamentary party, writ›

pendent, who in the Senate caucuses ing columns for The Morning Star, a with the Democrats.

communist-founded newspaper. He’ s

And yet, these anti-party figures are a pacifist who called for British with› surging in the party races for the presi› drawal from NATO. He’s spent his dential nominations.

career consorting with the usual lita›

This phenomenon is even more ex› ny of anti-Western figures, including his friends in Hamas and Hezbollah. Party suffered a crushing election Until about three months ago, he was

treme in Britain. The British Labour

These sudden stars are not really

coalitions with people unlike them›

about governing. They are tools for selves. That meant maintaining con› their supporters’ self-expression. They versations and relationships, tolerat› allow supporters to make a statement, ing difference, living with dialectics demand respect or express anger or and working with opposites. The resentment. Sarah Palin was a pioneer Democratic Party was once an illog› in seeing politics not as a path to gov› ical coalition between northeastern ernance but as an expression of her progressives and southern evangel› followers’ id. icals. The GOP was an alliance be› Why has this type risen so tween business and the Farm Belt. suddenly? But in the ethos of expressive in› First, political parties, like insti› dividualism, individual authenticity tutionsacross society, are accorded is thesupreme value. Compromise less respect than in decades past. But and coalition-building is regarded we’ re also seeing the political effects as a dirty and tainted activity. Peo› of a broader culture shift, the rise ple congregate in segregated cultural of what sociologists call expressive and ideological bubbles and convince

themselves the purest example of their type could actually win. Thesecultsneverlastbecausethere is no infrastructure. But along the way the civic institutions that actually

could mobilize broad coalitions the parties get dismissed and gutted. Without these broad coalition parties,

the country is ungovernable and cyni› cism ratchets up even further. I wonder what would happen if a sensibleDonald Trump appeareda former Cabinet secretary or some› body who could express the disgust for the political system many people feel, but who instead of adding to the cycle of cynicism, channeled it into citizenship, into the notion that we are

still one people, compelled by love of country to live with one another and

charged with the responsibility to make the compromises, build the coa›

litions, practice messy politics and sus› tain the institutions that throughout history have made national greatness

possible. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 THE BULLETIN

BITS DEATH NOTICES Violet Amy May

(Palmer) Shaver, of Bend May 4, 1921 - Sept. 4, 2015 Arrangements:

Niswonger-Reynolds

Funeral Home, 541-382-2471 www.niswonger-reynolds.

corn

Services: Funeral service will be held at 11:00 a.m., on Friday, Sept. 11, 2015, at Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Chapel, 105 NW Irving Ave., Bend, OR, followed by a graveside service at Pilot Butte Cemetery, Bend, OR. Contributions may be made

Pavilion

skills to beginning players ages 6to 14.

Continued from 61

Brian Hudspeth, construc› tion manager for the district, said The Pavilion remains on

Collier said the district filled

Pavilionschedulefilling up The BendPark & Recreation District released theschedule for the newice rink from Nov. 30through Dec. 20, and only about half rink’s hours will be devoted to openskating. The remainder havealready beenbookedfor recreational leagueactivity and classes. Anyadditional classes would likely cut into "flex skate" times.

all available slots for curling when it first began signing up target for a Nov. 30 opening. playersin August. So far,58 The system that pumps pro› people have signed up for the pylene glycol through a series district’s curling league, and of tubes beneath a concrete Collier said he expects the re› slab to keep the ice cool is in maining 14 slots will fill up by place, he said, and contractors the end of this week. will largely be focused on fin› The district has signed up ish work from now until open› 21 players for its adult hockey ing day. league and aims to create a Siding will go up on the six-team league for roughly 90 building adjoining the rink in players. the coming weeks, Hudspeth Competitive youth hockey said, followed by paving of the is being coordinated through parking lot to the north of the Bend Ice, an independent building and painting and tile group. Collier said Bend Ice work inside. is organizing a team for play› A Zamboni ice-grooming ers 10 years old and younger machine has been ordered, that will compete against oth› er teams around the region,

* ~ T i mes when individuals could access the rink for a $7-$9 fee, or with a pass ~ Ti mes when the rink is reserved for classes or league activities

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Parent-tot skate and learn to skate

Parent-tot skate and learn to skate

9 to11:39 a.m.

11:45 a.m. to Adult hockey Fitness skating Adult hockey Fitness skating Adult hockey Learn hockey pm 1:15 to 3:45 p.m. 4to 515 P.m. Learn to Play hockey 5 3Q tp 3 p m

,

It,

I earn to skate

Learn to Play hockey

U SA Youth club hockey

I .

.

I earn Y outh hockey to skate US A Youth club hockey

Curling league I

Curling A dult hockey Adult hockey 3 15tp1Qp m Adulthockey league time league lea g ue *Sticks, pucks andskating maneuvers that could endanger other skaters are not allowed during "open skate" times.

Hudspeth said, as have rental

skates and other equipment.

while the district is creating programs to teach hockey

65

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulleti n.corn

Source: Bend Parks and Recreation District

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NW Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701

Violet Amy May Shaver May 4, 1921 September 4, 201 5

Doctor

Handling the sttess of new› born intensive care becomes

Rodeo

nals’ move to Yakima was a blow for the local rodeo

"We only have to answer to

Continued from 61 "He made us feel like our son was his only patient," Mal› achy said.

easier with experience, he said. "At some point, as they say, somebody has to keep calm." Most of the babies he treats

Continued from B1 Ryan said the High Des› ert Stampede will offer a $24,000 purse this year›

community, Ryan said the

nity. If everyone likes the rodeo and the concerts, we

$3,000 an event

hope of growing that to

tral Oregon’s economy. "The nice thing is we

$40,000 in the next couple of

don’t have to answer to a

years.

board up in Washington," Ryan said, referring to the

Hand to Hold founder Kelli

Kelley said Azimi-Zonooz was are born premature, and the chosen for the award because NICU team has a chance to of his compassion toward the prepare the parents for what parents. "Sometimes it’s really comes next. That’s not the difficult for doctors to connect case with babies like Aviv, emotionally because they see whose parents expected to so many babies, and not all take him home quickly. "The outcomes are positive," Kelley parents are shell-shocked," he said. said. "You try to absorb that Hand to Hold trains parents

Born i n L o n d on , E s sex England t o W al t e r an d Amy Ma y ( P almer) B r an› don. Violet was raised and attended school in D agen› h am, England. Violet w a s c onscripted int o t h e B r i t › i sh A r m y i n 19 4 2 an d worked as a staff clerk for t he m i l i t ar y u n t i l 19 4 5 . She met her husband, Ed› win w h il e h e w a s r e c ov› e ring i n an A mer i c a n A rmy h o spital n ea r L o n › don. They married April 28, 1945. They w ere m ar › r ied fo r 6 6 y e a rs. E d w i n p assed o n Jan u a r y 2 1 , 2012. Violet was a homemaker t hroughout h e r l i f e , a n d w ith t h e h e l p o f E d w i n they raised three sons. Violet is survived by h er three sons and their wives, R odney ( C i n d y) , E d w i n

(Peggy) and John (Cathie),

six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren, her sister, Betty ( B ob) St okes of England and nieces and n ephew on b o t h s i des o f the Atlantic. V iolet w a s p r e ceded i n death by her parents, hus› band, her brother, Ronald and two nephews. Violet w a s a Chr i s t i an a nd longtime m e mber o f the Vale Christian Church a nd after moving b ack t o Bend from Vale, Oregon, s he r e g u l a rl y att e n d e d Missionary Baptist Church of Bend. A funeral Service will be h eld i n V i ol e t ’ s h o n o r 11:00 a.m. Friday, Septem› ber 11, 2015 at Niswonger -Reynolds Chapel, 105 NW Irving A v e . Ben d , OR 9770I . 54 1- 38 2 -2471. G raveside service t o f o l › l ow a t P i l o t B u t t e C e m › etery, Bend, Oregon. Fol› I owtng th e g r av e s i d e s ervice, A C e l ebration o f Life, to be held at Rod and Cindy’s home, 61149 Ward Road, Bend, Oregon. In lieu of f l ow ers, please m ake d onations t o P a r t › ners In Care Hospice, 2075 N E Wy att C t . , B en d O R 97701. N iswonger Reynolds i s honored t o ser ve t he Shaver family. Please sign our on line Guest Book at www.niswonger-reynolds. corn

Gene Brandon

ELSE% THERE Deathsof note from around the world:

James W. Mangan, 87: 36› year career with The Associat›

ed Press. Died Friday in Texas. — From wire reports

bankrupt yourself the first stop," he said. W hile t h e

economic benefit for Cen›

continue to go in that direc› tion. If the concerts don’t go

so well, maybe we look at something else that benefits the community.

"My plan is to keep this going," he added. "I’d love C olumbia R i v e r Ci r c u it for this rodeo to eventually board, which is made up of have a 60th anniversary."

representatives from O r e› C i r c uit F i › gon, Washington and Idaho.

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletin.corn

stress."

said she hopes the award, which is in its third year, in›

City Council

and antibiotics very well, he said. But A zimi-Zonooz also did not take any chances, sleeping at the hospital for two

spires better care at hospitals across the country. Azimi-Zonooz, 49, has been

ing his annual salary up to $137,916. "We appreciate what Continued from B1 Councilors also amended you do," Redmond Mayor

session. "You’ ve made a huge dif› ference in Redmond. It’ s been a marvelous experi›

C ity Manager Keith W i t ›

ence," he said.

George Endicott told Wit›

cosky’s contract and gave co sky after the c ouncil him a 3 percent raise, boost› emerged from executive

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bend bulletin.corn

nights until the baby was sta› a neonatologist for 15 years. ble. "Babies like him can turn He joined St. Charles Health

on you in a matter of minutes,"

System two and a half years he said. ago after working at Oregon — Reporter: 541-617-7860, Health & Science University.

in Central Oregon. She said she heard of Gon› zalez from colleagues but didn’t know him personally.

Continued from B1 "This story resonated with their stories, and I wanted to

help," she said. Cheryl Puddy, also of Bend, donated $100. She works at Oregon CommunityFoundation, which administers char› itable funds induding college scholarships, and with OCF’s

Latino Partnership Program

"Today when I saw that sto› ry I thought, ’I just need to con›

tribute,’" she said. "When you see a kid like this that has his goals set out and just needs to

get there, it really inspires you to help." — Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbullet in.corn

SCHOOL NOTES COLLEGE NOTES Luke Davis,of Redmond, has completed the Diesel Technology Training Program at the Universal Technical Institute in Sacramento, California. He received several Student of the Coursehonors. He attended Redmond High School. Ann Lewis, of Bend, has

earneda Bachelor of Fine Arts in communication design from the Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland. She is a 2011 graduate of Summit High School. Itltcote Rodrtgues,of Bend, has earned a Bachelor of Science in health sciences from the University of Cincinnati. She was also named to the 2014 summer dean’s list.

land use planning and include discussion of transportation Continued fiom Bt systems that have worked for Semifinalists represent fewer other cities. than 1 percent of U.S. high The event will also allow for school seniors. input on the central west side About 90 percent of the land use and transportation semifinalists will qualify as planning study. finalists, who are scheduled to The City Club event will be be announced in February, and moderated by RedmondCity Manager Keith Witcosky. Reg› about half of the finalists will win a scholarship, which will be istration for the forum ends at announced beginning in April. 5 p.m. Monday. Members can About 7,400 National Merit attend for $20 and nonmem› Scholarships worth more than bers for $35. A buffet lunch will be included. $32 million will be awarded.

LOCAL BRIEFING

kmclaughlin@bendbulletin.corn

Donations

food to donate to Neighborlm› pact and outdated or unwanted prescription drugs. Needles and nonprescription medication will not be accepted.

Haggen grocerychain files bankruptcy

One week after filing a $1 billion lawsuit against Albert› sons, Haggen grocery filed for bankruptcy. Based in Belling ham,Wash› ington, Haggen filed Tuesday to reorganize under Chapter 11 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in according to a news City Clud todiscuss Shet iff’s Office to hold Delaware, release issued Tuesday night. transportation shredding event On Sept. 1, Haggen filed the The City Club of Central The Deschutes County Sher› federal lawsuit, accusing Alb› Oregon is hosting a forum next iff’s Office has scheduled a free ertsons of unfair competition. week about Bend’s continued personal document shredding Albertsons and Safewayan› urbanization and the needfor a event Saturday. nouncedin December thesale transportation system. The event is set for10a.m. of 168 grocery stores combined The forum is scheduled to 1 p.m. at the Sheriff’s Office to get federal approval for their for 11:30 a.m. Sept. 17 at St. substation in Terrebonne, at merger. Charles Bend’s Center for 815411th St., Suite 3. Hag gen, which had 18 Health and Learning. Attendees will be able to stores, agreed to buy146 from Speakers at the event include shred up to four boxes of per› the two grocery giants. The two Wayne Kittelson, of Portland sonal documents. At the event, Bend Albertsons becameHag› founder of Kittelson 8 As› there will be information on gen stores earlier this year. sociates, an engineering and how to avoid identity theft. The Haggen has asked the U.S. planning firm as well as Nick event is not intended for busi› Bankruptcy Court to allow it to Arnis, city of Bend growth man› ness documents. continue day-to-day operations agement director. The Sheriff’s Office will also during the restructuring pro› The forum will cover local be collecting nonperishable cess.

At Peak, Brad AndeiSan’S’MarmadLIke’

comic strip appeared in 20countries The Associated Press MONTGOMERY, Texas› Brad Anderson, creator of the

"Marmaduke" cartoon strip

that for more than 60 years

featured the antics of a lovable Great Dane, has died. He was 91.

Anderson died Aug. 30, ac› cording to a Tuesday statement from Universal Udick, which

syndicated the comic strip. Company spokeswoman Ju› lie Halper did not immediately G ene B r a ndon, a r e s i › provide additional details on dent of Port Hadlock, WA, the death of Anderson, who lived in Bend from 1978 to lived in Montgomery, near 2001 and helped raise two daughters › A my a n d Houston. A nderson was born i n Heather. H e w o r k ed as a

DEATHS

"You want to start with a bang, but you don’t want to

who’ve been through a NICU Aviv was not the sickest experience as volunteer men› baby Azimi-Zonooz has ever tors to support parents as they treated, and he responded to deal with the follow-up care the barrage of treatments a for a premature baby. Kelley special ventillator, sedation

May 7,1938- August17, 2015

s ub. teacher, m e d ical l i › b rarian, and at P in e M t n . Observatory. Gene was in› volved wit h t h e r e cycling center and U n i t arian F el› lowship.

with the

High DesertStampede has a higher ceiling in terms of

ourselves and the commu›

FEATURED OBITUARY

sisted him in later years on the

popular comic strip, and a 2010 Jamestown, New York, in 1924, "Marmaduke" film featured the and as a boy expressed an af› voice of actor Owen Wilson as finity for drawing. the gregarious pooch. "Brad’s interest in cartoon› At its peak, the comic strip ing dates back to his early appeared in more than 600 childhood, when he drew popu› newspapers in 20 countries, ac› larcartoon characterstoam use cording to biographical infor› himself," according to his biog› mation from Anderson’s alma raphy on the Udick website. mater. Anderson was honored He served in the Navy during in 2013 with a lifetime achieve› World War II before graduating ment award from the National from Syracuse University and Cartoonists Society. doing freelance work for mag› Universal Udick did not im› azines, induding the Saturday mediately provide information Evening Post, before creating about how many affiliates cur› "Marmaduke" in 1954. rently run "Marmaduke" or the Anderson’s son, Paul, as›

future of the comic strip.

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for one day, but spe› cific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone,mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include con› tact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obitu› ary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825

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

Mail:Dbituaries P.D. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

Deadlines:Death Notices are accept› ed until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,andby9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.

s I I ( HeatherAnne Red'matTof cnk, rcgon passed ’peacefully Septembei 2nd, ’P)15,5 at St. Charles Hospital surrounded by her loving family and dearfriends. Heather was born in the Tachikawa Air Force BaseHospital, Tachikawa, Japan on August 27th, 1966, the first born of F rank and Linda (Brown) Redman.

Heather is survived by her daughter, Shauni LeeJohnson,RN from Pittsburgh, PA and herson Spencer Morgan Johnsonof Bend, OR. Ihese two adult children were the center of her universe.She is also survived by her parents, Frank and Linda Redman, Boothbay, ME; a brother, Eric Christopher Redman, Pittsburg, PA; a sister, Kristen Waldron, and her husband,Jim, Colorado Springs, CO; and asister, Holly Khera, and her husband, Harbinder, Pittsburgh, PA; aunts(Gloria Dauphinee,Jennifer Brown); anuncle (Rodman Redman), plus several nieces(Carrie Waldron, Payton Redman, Sophia Khera); nephews (Tanner Waldron, Nicholas Waldron, Braden Redman, Rohan Khera); and cousins (Jane Sanborn, Debra Darling, Darren Redman,Yvette Gross, Heidi Gallant, Denise Bernier). Her spirituality was expressedin her love of family and &tends, her immersion in nature’s beauty, and in caring for her amazing garden.lhe essenceof this mother, daughter, sister, aunt, and friend was her bright, brilliant, sparkling personality, her extraordinary beauty, and adventurous spirit. She felt so alive and free when she explored the mountains, rivers, streams, and desert of her adopted home with her friends. Heather also loved and was the queen of "projects"; making ordinary cast offs into beautiful works of art. In remembrance of Heather, reach out to others every day, bring a smile, plant a flower or tree, love your family and friends a little more, sing, dmce, and love with abandon.


TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

B6

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. '2015

i

l

i

I

TODAY

it

TONIGHT

HIGH Pleasant with plenty of sunshine

i f’ 1

ALMANAC

Low

PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.52" in 1918 Month to date (normal) 0.0 8" (0.12") Year to date(normal) 6.64 " (6.88") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 9"

SUN ANDMOON

CENTRAL:Aftera chilly start, it will

68/57

Cannon 66/56 70/52

O ct 4

Tonight’6 sky:Fomalhaut, in Piscis Austrinus the Southern Fish is low abovethe southeast horizon after sunset.

dat/s. WEST:Anonshore

a /53

Or V RI6

Plenty of sun

e

e

85/52

/56

The highertheAccuWsalher.rxrmIiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyesndskin protscgun.0-2 Low 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extreme.

POLLEN COUNT Wee ds Ab s ent

Yesterday Today Thursday

Burns Jun tion 91/48 Rome 93/47 McDermi 89/46

Yesterday Today Thursday

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 73/52/0.00 71/54/pc74/54/pc Ls Grande 79/37/0.00 84/47/s 85/46/pc 78/32/0.00 84/37/s 85/37/pc L a Pine 82/28/0.00 84/44/s 87/50/s Brookings 91/59/Tr 7 4/56/s 75/57/s Me d ior d 95/5 1 /0.00 96/57/s 100/59/s sums 82/31/0.00 88/40/s 90/43/s Ne wport 68/5 0 /0.00 66/50/s 65/51/s Eugene 85/45/0.00 84/50/s 88/52/s No r th Bend 72 / 50/0.00 68/54/s 69/55/s Klsmath Fags 85/40/0.00 89/43/s 91/47/s O n tario 82/44/0.00 89/49/s 91/50/s Lakeview 84/39/0.00 88/42/s 90/45/s Pendleton 82/45/0.00 85/53/s 85/53/pc

Yesterday Today Thursday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 81/5 3/0.0081/57/s 86/58/s Prinevige 78/ 40/0.0087/50/s 87/51/s Redmond 84 / 32/0.0088/42/s 90/44/s Roseburg 89 / 51/0.00 90/56/s 94/59/s Salem 84/51/0.00 84/55/s 87/56/s Sisters 81/27/0.00 87/45/s 89/48/s The Dages 8 8 /51/0.00 89/55/s 92/56/pc

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

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

~ gs ~ 1 06 ~ g s As ut 7 s.m. yesterday Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL C rane Prairie 268 0 5 48% EXTREMES (for the Wickiup 26685 13% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 5 3 9 78 62% 48 contiguous states) Ochoco Reservoir 12321 28vo National high: 115 Prinevige 55734 37vo at Death Valley,CA River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low: 19 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 135 at Mystic Lake, MT Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1190 Precipitation: 3.86" 127 at Harrison, AR Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFags 1670 Little Deschutes near LaPine 126 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 1 9 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.

85/48

90/45

88/42

City Asturis Baker City

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

Crooked R.below Prineville Res.

Jordan V gey

Frenchglen

Fields

Lakeview

89/43

Nyssa

Riley 88/40 87/40

Kiamath

Ashl nd Falls

49

Burns Juntura 90/55

Beaver Marsh

95/5

74/5

3

Ham ton

La pine

tario Vates 88/49

Ch ristmas alley Silver 85/46 Lake 85/40 87/44 Gra Paisley 69/ Chiloquin 64 MedfO d '87/44 Gold ach

Bro ings

84/37

47

84/49

Ro seburg

’Baker C

John eu Day 5/41 86 / 5 1

Pa lina Brothers 8548

Fort Rock Greece t 87/46

90/56

8 1/46

81/41

Prineviiie

8 4/ 1

~ t gs

~ 20 8 ~ 3 0 s ~ 4 0 s ~ 5 0 s ~ e g a ~ 7 0 6 ~ a g s Cstgs 42/43

9

’ ’

53’

+p Tq+

FIRE INDEX High Ve ry eighh

~Mode~rate High High

Source: USDA Forest Service

Abundant sunshine

Brilliant sunshine

eggs ~100s ~ t t gs 4

.Ai

i

i nlpeg T

n d er Bay 0

City Hi/Lu/Prue. HiRu/W Hi/Lu/W Abilene 100/75/0.00 86/67/t 92/68/c Akron 91 /69/0.00 81/64/1 78/56/c Albany 94/69/Tr 91/67/1 79/62/t Albuquerque 88/61/Tr 86/63/1 88/63/t Anchorage 55/51/1.16 59/49/sh 58/49/r Atlanta 84n1/0.18 83/71/s 84/70/t Atlantic City 84n1/0.00 85/74/s 81/70/t Austin 98n4/0.00 oono/t 87/69/1 Baltimore 93/68/0.00 91/71/t 79/63/t Billings 80/46/0.02 78/50/s 76/50/pc Birmingham 87n1/0.00 86/71/t 82/70/t Bismarck 76/39/0.00 76/47/pc 68/40/pc Boise 80/50/0.00 89/57/s 90/57/s Boston 96n4/0.20 92/70/s 82/66/t Bridgeport, CT 94n4/0.00 87/71/s 82/68/t Buffalo 88n2/0.00 77/61/1 76/56/c Burlington, VT 88/72/0.35 89/65/t 80/58/c Caribou, ME 74/67/Tr 76/61/1 77/56/sh Charleston, SC 90n3/Tr 89/75/pc gon54 Charlotte 88/68/0.00 87/70/pc 89/68/1 Chattanooga 87/68/0.03 84no/t 82/68/t Cheyenne 79/50/0.00 83/49/s 79/46/pc Chicago 81n4/1.01 74/57/pc 77/58/pc Cincinnati 90/66/0.02 85/63/1 79/59/1 Cleveland 88/73/0.00 79/64/t 77/57/c ColoradoSprings 82/55/0.02 84/53/pc 85/53/pc Columbia, MO 80n4/Tr 81/64/c 82/62/pc Columbia, SC 90n3/0.09 92/74/pc 94/73/t Columbus,GA 84/73/0.25 87n2/s 87/72/t Columbus,OH 88/68/0.00 82/67/t 78/59/1 Concord, NH 88/65/Tr 91/65/s 82/59/t Corpus Christi 93n6/Tr 93/77/pc 92/75/t Dallas 99/80/0.00 87/73/t 94/73/c Dayton 89n1 /0.00 80/64/1 79/59/c Denver 83/50/0.00 87/52/pc 85/49/pc Des Moines 82/67/0.21 79/60/s 78/53/pc Detroit 90/72/Tr 78/60/c 78/59/pc Duluth 74/56/0.01 70/50/s 63/44/1 El Paso 98n4/0.00 90/69/pc 85/66/1 Fairbanks 61/41/Tr 60/45/c 60/43/c Fargo 76/48/0.00 72/48/pc 64/41/pc Flagstaff 77/47/Tr 78/48/t 78/46/pc Grand Rapids 84no/0.63 76/54/pc 76/57/pc Green Bay 74/68/2.50 74/53/s 66/49/1 Greensboro 87/68/0.00 87/71/s 86/69/t Harrisburg 93/66/0.00 91/69/1 74/61/1 Harffurd, CT 96/67/0.00 91/68/s 80/63/1 Helena 74/37/0.00 79/48/pc 77/46/pc Honolulu 91/76/0.02 song/pc 89/78/c Houston 92n4/0.21 89/74/pc 86/73/t Huntsville 90/69/0.00 85/70/pc 79/68/1 Indianapolis 91n1/0.00 78/64/1 81/62/c Jackson, MS 96/71 /0.00 94/73/pc 87/70/t Jacksonville 89n2/0.33 91/73/s 90/73/t

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

Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W HiRu/W 55/47/Tr 60/49/c 59/52/r 81/70/0.52 82/63/pc 82/60/pc 85/70/0.1 2 76/54/c 76/56/pc 103/81/0.00 102n8/pc102n8/pc 92/69/0.00 85/66/1 79/61/1 80/65/1.42 82/61/s 81/54/pc

oonwo.oo 84no/t

86/69/1 97/73/0.00 97n5/pc 98n5/pc 92/70/0.00 84/69/1 82/65/1 Tsno/o’.49 74/54/pc 73/53/1 95/73/0.00 87n2/t 84no/t Miami 91/78/0.19 91n9/pc 91n9/pc Milwaukee 78/71/1.18 73/57/pc 74/57/c Minneapolis 78/66/0.13 75/58/s 68/50/t Nashville 92/68/0.00 87no/t 81/66/1 New Orleans 92/75/0.00 89n5/s 88n5/t New YorkCity 97ns/o.oo 91/75/s 83/70/t Newark, NJ osn2/0’.00 92ft4/s 83/69/1 Norfolk, VA 86/72/1.43 87n4/t 87n2/t OklahomaCity 99/76/0.13 88/65/c 89/65/pc Omaha 80/65/1.22 81/62/s 80/54/pc Orlando 91/75/0.04 91 ft6/s 92n5/pc Palm Springs 110/86/0.00 104/85/pc101/85/pc Peoria ssn5/D.st 82/60/pc 83/60/pc Philadelphia 94n2/o.oo 92/75/s 83/68/1 Phoenix 105/85/0.00 98f/9/t 93/81/pc Pittsburgh 91/66/0.00 85/66/1 75/58/1 Portland, ME Sgna/rr 85/65/s 80/61/1 Providence 97/69/0.00 89/71/s 82/67/1 Raleigh sono/o’.o4 87ft2/s 86no/t Rapid City 77/48/0.00 80/49/s 73/46/pc Rene 89/49/0.00 94/57/s 96/59/s Richmond 92/68/0.00 90/73/t 84/67/1 Rochester, NY 92/71/Tr 82/62/1 75/55/c Sacramento 101/55/0.00 105/66/s 106/66/s St. Louis 91/78/0.11 82/69/1 84/67/pc Salt Lake City 82/49/0.00 87/59/s 89/60/s

San Antonio osng/o’.oo 94nt/pc San Diego sonwo.oo 89n6/pc San Francisco 92/61/0.00 89/61/s San Jose 96/59/0.00 100/65/s Santa re 87/54/0.01 83/53/1 Savannah 86nsn.'o4 88n4/pc Seattle 73/56/0.00 75/56/pc Sioux Falls 77/62/0.79 77/57/pc Spokane 72/46/0.00 77/51/s Springfield, Mo Tsnstt.st 80/65/1 Tampa 90/78/0.02 91n8/s Tucson 95ns/o.oo 91/74/t Tulsa 95/76/0.01 86/66/c Washington, DC 92/72/0.00 92n4/t Wichita 82/73/0.61 86/65/pc Yskims 81/45/0.00 88/51/s

Amsterdam Athens

s

86/61/s 95/66/s 85/53/1 91n4/t 76/56/pc 70/44/pc 79/54/pc 81/64/pc

90n8/pc 88/71/pc 87/66/pc 84/67/1

I

Mecca Mexico City Montreal

Moscow Nairobi Nassau

92n6/t 89nT/pc

88/63/pc 89/52/pc 107/86/0.01 100/84/1 98/82/pc

Turns i

9/es

cols 89/57

Yesterday Today Thursday

City

63/55/0.00 65/51/pc 67/51/pc Boston 91 n7/0.00 85/73/pc 86/73/pc Milw k e 0 Auckland 59/47/0.03 59/52/pc 59/51/r Rspl mtti 73/5 w York Baghdad 11 3/90/0.00 114/80/pc 115/85/s Bangkok 93/82/0.00 95ng/t 92/78/t , . 77/41 TW40 83/49 Beijing 83/63/0.07 79/60/pc 71/58/r Beirut 90/84/0.00 94/82/s 92/83/s im snclsco Ss l i Lake ity t . u is , Den 67/59 Berlin 69/48/0.04 65/49/pc 67/51/sb 89/61 lngton 87/6 61/62 Sa/ WW 9~ Bogota 68/46/0.00 69/46/c 67/49/c Kansas City Budapest 66/48/0.00 69/50/pc 71/53/pc 62/63 BuenosAires 72/46/0.02 60/43/sh 59/38/s tos An tes ahoma Ct ,, 84/79/0.61 87/77/t sons/t 86/43 Csbu Ssn Loess y + + + utv/tl , 0 6 /65 .c~~t Cairo 95ng/o’.oo 101/76/s 100/77/s ghoen Anchorage Calgary 64/39/Tr 62/43/pc 66/46/s 69 Caucus 93n5/0.00 91/77/pc 92/77/s Bir lnohs . W W W ~ ~~~~ ~ ~~ ~~ ~ + Juuu Dublin 63/50/0.00 60/53/pc 65/52/pc 86 1 ci i / . Edinburgh 57/52/0.00 63/48/pc 67/48/pc 60/4th ~ kkk Geneva 70/48/0.00 74/51/s 73/53/pc ~x$ oa rtshdu Harsre 83/57/0.00 85/58/s 86/56/s w Orleans 9/74 Hung Kung 89/80/0.80 90/80/t 87no/r Honolulu Chihuahua 89/76 o ~.t Istanbul 81/73/0.01 81/73/pc 84/73/pc swee Miami Jerusalem 94n5/0.02 94n2/s 94nO/s Monte y 91ne treno Johannesburg 70/54/0.03 76/54/s 80/56/s 4 Lima 70/62/0.00 73/63/pc 73/63/pc Lisbon 84/66/0.00 77/61/pc 76/59/pc Shown are today’s noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 61/52/0.00 66/54/pc 70/54/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 84/55/0.00 84/59/pc 85/58/pc Manila 93/79/0.34 87/77/t ssnT/t

220 151 6

83’ 47’

i

JosePh Grande 84 47 union

Gran itee

/53

Mitch II 8 6 / 46

87/50

’Be d Su iVere 85/46

Grove Oakridge

Bandon

"

He PPner Condon 6/53

1\

90’

Yesterday Today Thursday

Meac am Losti ne 83/47 Enterprise

dl N, 78/3

pray

Ca mPSh man R8t I

Eugene C

/53

4

upi

SUNDAY

TRAVEL WEATHER

W co

87/51 85/45

85/50

68/56

0 ’

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

~ 6

Bend/Sunriver Redmond/Madras ~ Sisters Prinevige La Pine/Gilchrist

51’

+Pfq+

Plenty of sunshine

75/

84/5

70 3

High: 95 at Medford Low: 27’ at Sisters

89/55 Gove nt

Sale

66/50

UV INDEX TODAY

G rasses T r ee s Long Lo~w

53

lington 89/50

he Oae

andy

Mc innvill

Newpo

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

6

2/51

be sunny today.The Lincoln afternoon will be a bit 67/54 warmer than recent

YESTERDAY

g

Sep 12 Sep 21 Sep 27

3 I~

46’

Portland se/55

Tillamo

Thu. tions somewhat cool, 6 : 3 8 a.m. but there will be a Floren e 7: 2 6 p.m. good deal of sunshine 70/55 4:1 1 a.m. today. 6:0 7 p.m. OREGON EXTREME Co Last

g ik’

10 a.m. Noon

87

Shown is today’s weather.Temperatures are today’s highs andtonight’s lowe. umatilla Hood 89/54 RiVer Rufus ermiston

I

Seasid

flow will keep condi› Yach 66/54

Today Sunrise 6:37 a.m. Sunset 7:28 p.m. Moonrise 3:1 3 a.m. Moonset 5:3 3 p.m. New F i r s t Full

SATURDAY

0

LOW

Clear

FRIDAY

OREGON WEATHER

EAST:Highpressure will strengthen TEMPERATURE over the area today, Yesterday Normal Record 76 9 4 ’ in 1958 leading to plenty of 81 41’ 41’ 26’ in 1922 sunshine andhigher temperatures.

ria

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

High

THURSDAY

New Delhi

Osaka Oslo

105/84/0.50 105/81/s 78/56/0.15 76/53/1 82/70/0.10 84/61/1 57/48/0.04 56/44/pc 81/49/0.00 80/55/s 90/81/0.04 91/78/pc

97nT/o.oo 99n8/pc

75/72/2.05 66/50/0.00 Ottawa 81/68/0.01 Paris 64/54/0.00 Riu de Janeiro 81/68/0.02 Rome 79/61/0.00 Santiago 54/44/0.02 Sau Paulo 66/63/1.52 Sap porc 75/61/0.00 Seoul 84/58/0.00 Shanghai 84/68/0.00 Singapore 90/81/0.00 Stockholm 59/48/0.00 Sydney 66/47/0.00 Taipei 86/73/0.00 Tel Aviv 95/80/0.00 Tokyo 72/70/1.93

Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw

84n2/D.os 68/57/0.00 66/52/0.00 61/50/0.16

77/65/r 63/51/pc 79/54/1 73/52/s 78/68/r 77/58/pc 58/39/c 71/62/sh 73/62/c 83/63/pc 84/67/s 88/80/1 62/43/pc 66/54/s 86/73/pc 95/81/pc 78/72/r 79/58/c 68/52/pc 63/47/sh 64/46/1

106/81/1 75/54/1 76/56/pc 55/47/pc 79/56/s 90/81/pc 100/77/pc 79/64/t 64/50/pc 74/53/pc 73/49/s 79/69/sh 78/58/s 63/35/pc 71/59/sh 73/65/c 81/62/pc 85/69/pc 89/80/1 65/45/pc 67/53/s 84/72/pc 94/80/s 79/71/r

75/58/pc 69/54/pc 66/50/sh 66/50/sh

PUBLIc OFFIcIALs U.S. SENATE Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http: I/merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-31B-1298 Sen. Ron Wyden,D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http: I/wyden.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Rep.GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 21B2 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http: I/walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-3B9-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97310 Phone: 503-986-1523 Fax: 503-9B6-1 61 6 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us Treasurer Ted Wheeler, D 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-37B-4329 Email: oregon. treasurer'state. Ol’.US

Web: www.ost.state. or.us Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-37B-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state. or.us Labor CommissionerBradAvakian 800 NE OregonSt., Suite 1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boii.mail'state. or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boii STATE SENATE

STATE OF OREGON Gov. Kate Brown, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-37B-4582 Fax: 503-37B-BB72 Web: http: //governor. oregon.gov Secretary of State Jeanne Atkins,

Sen. TedFerrioli, R-District 30 (Jefferson, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-9B6-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioii'state. or.us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/ferrioli Sen. TimKnopp,R-District 27 (part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR97301

Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp'state. or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District 28 (Crook, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett'state.or.us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/whitsett STATE HOUSE Rep. Knute Buehler, R-District 54 (part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE, H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.knutebuehier@state. oi’.Us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/buehier Rep. JohnHuffraa, R-District 59 (part of Jefferson) /I76 900 Court St. NE, H› Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman'state. oi’.Us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/huffman Rep. Mike MCLane, R-District 55 (Crook, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE, H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane'state. or.us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/mclane Rep.Gene Whisnant, R-District 53 (part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE, H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.

OI’. Us

Web: www.leg.state. or.usl whisnant DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 NWWall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone:541-3B8-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692 DeschutesCounty Commission TammyBaney,R-Bend Phone: 541-3BB-6567 Email :Tammy Baney@co.deschules.or.us Alan Unger, D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger@co.deschutes.or.us TonyDeBone,R-La Pine Phone: 541-3BB-656B Email :Tony DeBone©o.deschutes.or.us CROOK COUNTY 300 NEThird St., Prineviiie, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: adrninietrationcc.ccroO.or.us Web: co.crook. or.us

Crook County Court Mike MCCabe (Crook County judge) Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mnie.mcccabecc.ccroO.or.us Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahigren'co.crook. or.us Seth Crawford Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: seth.crawford@co.crook. ol’.Us

JEFFERSON COUNTY

66 SE DSt., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson. or.us Jefferson County Commission Mike Ahern,MaeHuston, Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner@co.jefferson. or.us

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CITY OF REDMOND

716 SWEvergreenAve. Redmond, OR97756 /I1-923-7710 Phone: 5 Fax: 541-548-0706 CITY OF SISTERS 520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Sisters, OR97759 Phone: 541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561

CITY OF BEND 710 NWWall St. Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-388-5505 Web: www.ci.bend. or.us CityManagerEricKing Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: citymanager'ci.bend.or.us

CITY OF LA PINE P.O. Box3055, 16345 Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739 Phone: 541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462

Bend City Council Jim Clinton (mayor) Phone: 541-3BB-5505 Email: jclinton@ci.bend.or.us NathanBoddie Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: nboddie'ci.bend. or.us Barb Campbell Phone: 541-3BB-5505 Email: bcarnPbeiico.bben.or.us Victor Chudowsky Phone: 541-749-00B5 Email: vchudowsky©ci.bend.or.us Doug Knight Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: dknight'ci.bend. or.us Casey Roats Phone: 541-3BB-5505 Email: croats'ci.bend. or.us SallyRussell Phone: 541-480-8141

, 1 ’› 0 y 1~ 1 ~ O~ y ’ O ~ y N t •

Email: srusseii@ci.bend. or.us

CITY OF PRINEVILLE 3B7 NEThird St., Prineviiie, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-5627 Fax: 541-447-562B Email: cityhall@cityofprineville.corn Web: www.cityofprineviiie.corn CITY OF MADRAS 71 SE DStreet, Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2344 Fax: 541-475-7061 CITY OF CULVER 200 W. First St., Cuiver, OR97734 Phone: 541-546-6494 Fax: 541-546-3624 CITY OF METOLIUS 636 Jefferson Ave. Metoiius OR97741 Phone: 541-546-5533

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4

THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

COLLEGE

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

FOOTBALL

Oregon staysat No. 7 in APpoll The Southeastern Conference has arecord 10 teams ranked in the first Associated Press college football poll of the regular season. Ohio State remained a unanimous No. 1after pulling away42-24 at Virginia Tech onMon› day night. The14-team SEC already held the record for most teams from one conference in the Top 25 with eight, a mark it matched in the preseason. After the conference went 12-1to open the season, No.16 Texas ALM andNo.25 Mississippi State moved into the poll to go with the eight teams already there. Alabama moved upa spotto No.2. The restof the SECroll call is: No. 6 Auburn, No. 10Geor› gia, No.14LSU, No.17 Mississippi, No. 18Ar› kansas, No. 20 Missouri and No. 23Tennessee. For the second straight season, Oregon and Michigan State will face off in a battle of top› 10 teams. TheSpartans held steady at No.5, while Oregon stayedat No. 7 before Saturday’ s game in East Lansing. Other ranked Pac-12 teams are: No. 8South› ern California, No. 13 UCLA, No. 22Arizona and No. 24 Utah. Arizo› na State dropped out of the poll from No. 15 last week after losing to Texas A8M.

Next hurdle for Beavs’ Collins: TheBig House By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

Michigan St.coach It runs throughOregon’

Next up

By Joe Rexrode Detroit Free Press

Oregon St. CORVALLIS Freshman at Michigan quarterback Seth Collins When:9 a.m. hurdled his way into the job as Oregon State’s starter. The Saturday next obstacle is Michigan› TV:ABCRadio:KICE940-AM, at the Big House. KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM The prospect of playing in front of more than 100,000 justa senseofurgency to see fans is not rattling the du›

some film and work hard this

al-threat quarterback. He is looking forward to it.

week. It’s a big opportunity." Collins was solid in his de›

"Just really excited. It’ s

but against Weber State last

something you dream about as a little kid, growing up playing youth football," Collins said. "Really, (it’ s)

Friday, sharing duties with redshirt freshman Marcus

McMaryion. See Beavers /C4

maybe all gatherings at 92-year-old Spartan Stadi›

No. 7 Oregon at No. 5 Michigan St. When:5 p.m. Saturday

um in the past half century.

TV:ABC Radio:KBND1110-AM

EAST LANSING, Mich.

From all angles, Saturday evening towers above most

No. 7 Oregon (1-0) at No. 5 Michigan State (1-0) is the highest pairing of rankings, and the first top-10 meeting, The AssociatedPress file photo

Oregon State’s Seth Collins will get the start at Michigan on Satur› day, though he may still split time with backup Marcus McMaryion.

since that 10-10 tie between No. 1 Notre Dame and No.

2 Michigan State in 1966. It is likely to be the highest pairing of rankings in a nonconference matchup this

PREP GIRLS SOCCER

season. It is the winningest col›

lege football program of the 2010s (Oregon, with 60 wins this decade) against the sixth-winningest program of the 2010s (Michigan State, with a Big Ten-best 54). See Ducks /C4

TENNIS SALLY JENKINS

Still looking out for each other, after

all theyears

N

EW YORK As if a meeting between

SerenaandVenus

— The Associated Pass

Williams with a Grand Slam at stake wasn’t a

InSide

stagy enough drama, there was Oprah’s entrance for added emphasis. The TV camerastreatedherarrival at the U.S. Open like an

Complete AP and coaches’ polls. Scoreboard,C2

awards show red carpet. Then there was Dr. Oz, and

NBA

Nas, and Donald Trump’s hair, all of them upstaged by Serena Williams’s per› formance under the high pressure and brilliant tung› sten lights of Arthur Ashe

Teams to de

seeded dy record NEW YORK

Next up

The

NBA will now seedplay› off teams solely by their record, throwing out the top-four protection for teams who win their

Stadium. The U.S. Open can some›

times try too hard to be a Broadway-style "event," and betweenthetense mo-

divisions.

The expected change was unanimously approved Tuesdayby the league’s Board of Governors. Teamsin each conference will be seeded from oneto eight by their won-loss record. Previously, division winners were guaran› teed no worse than the No. 4 seed, a rule that became heavily criti› cized last season when Portland ended upNo.4 in the powerful Western Conference despite the sixth-best record in the conference. The leaguealso changed the tiebreaker procedures, making head-to-head results the first tiebreaker for seeding and home-court advantage, andwhether a team won its division second. A division win› ner previously got the home-court advantage if it met a team with

the same record in the playoffs. — The Associated Press

MLB Nets rally to take 6-game lead The NewYorkMets score six runs in the seventh inning andadd a home run in theeighth to come backand beat Washington 8-7 and take a six-game lead over the Nationals in the National LeagueEast.

ments there was a certain distracting sideshow silli› ness to their quarterfinal

match Tuesday evening, what with John McEnroe

swapping bro handshakes with Trump in his luxury box to boos, and beauty

shots of Candice Bergen and Alan Cumming on the big screens. RyanBrenneoke /The Bulletin

Ridgeview’s Sailor Woodward, left, attempts a shot on goal around Avery Flowers during the second half against Parkrose in Redmond on Tuesdayafternoon. The Ravens lostthe nonconference match 4-2.

The combination of buzz

and stress might have un› done Serena in her quest to

become the first woman in 27 years to complete a cal› Bulletin staff report REDMOND

Saylor

Goodwin scored two goals for Ridgeview, but the Ravens

For more Central Oregon preps:hendhnlletln.corn/ sports/highschool

O

were defeated by Parkrose 4-2

for their first loss of the season. Inside Culver, La Pine tie in boys The visiting Broncos took soccer. Prep roundup,C4 an early lead, scoring in the eighth minute, but Goodwin tied the game in the 27th min› Aspen Jeter. ute off of a corner kick from

The tie did not last for long,

however, as Parkrose retook

by Hailey Williamson. The Broncos (2-0) scored their fourth goal with four minutes

endar Grand Slam sweep,

the lead a minute later and entered halftime with a 2-1

advantage.

remaining to close the door

older sister put on her, with

on any chance of a Ravens comeback. Goodwin’s goals were her secondand third oftheseason. The Ravens (2-1) return to play Thursday when they host McKay.

her javelinlike strokes. It was fair to say there was no such thing as an unforced error in this peculiar match, won by Serena in three sets of wildly diverging quality, 6-2, 1-6, 6-3.

The Broncos struck again

five minutes into the second half to increase their lead to 3-1. With 15 minutes remain›

ing in the game, Goodwin knocked in her second goal, this time off a ball played in

and that was to say nothing of the coercive pressure her

SeeWilliams /C4

MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR

Drivers won’t get new rulespackage for Chase By Jennn Fryer The Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C. Mo› ments after Carl Edwards

climbed from his winning Southern 500 car, he began lobbying for NASCAR to apply the rules package used at Darlington Raceway in the upcoming playoffs. Edwards and his Joe Gibbs Racing teammates are among the loudest supporters of an

Next up NASCARSprint Cup at Richmond When:Qualifying, 2:45 p.m. Fri› day; Race, 4:30 p.m.Saturday TV:NBCSN

age used in the 10-race Chase for the Sprint Cup champion› ship, team owner Joe Gibbs is content using the much-ma›

ligned current rules. "There’s some things that I can’t change, and NASCAR

aerodynamic package that has been experimented with twice this summer, most

recently Sunday night at Dar› lington. Although his drivers want the low-downforce pack›

said ’Hey, look, we’ re not go› ing to go changing things and go to a different package for the Chase,’ and I think that’ s fair," Gibbs said Tuesday in a telephone interview.

NASCAR did indeed an›

nounce on Aug. 14 that the current package will be used in the Chase, which begins next week. The decision came five weeks before the playoffs begin, and Gibbs agreed with NASCAR’s rationale that there was not enough time for

teams to prepare for a new package that would be when the stakes are the highest. See NASCAR/C4

Julia Cortez / The AssociatedPress

Serena Williams, left, hugo Venus Williams after win› ning their quarterfinal match

at the U.S. Open onTuesday in New York.


C2

TH E BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREB DARD

TODAY Time TV/Radio Jockey Club RacingTour, Saratoga RaceCourse 6 a.m. FS1 HORSERACING TENNIS

U.S. Open, men’sandwomen’s quarterfinals U.S. Open, men’s quarterfinal

8 a.m. 5 p.m.

E S PN E SPN2

BASEBALL

MLB, ChicagoCubsat St. Louis MLB, N.Y. Mets at Washington

MLB, L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels MLB, Texas atSeattle

10:30 a.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB E S PN E S PN Roo t

GOLF

LPGA Tour,Evian Championship, first round

2 a.m. (Thu) Golf

THURSDAY GOLF LPGA Tour,Evian Championship, first round 6:30 a.m. Golf Web.corn Tour, Hotel Fitness Championship, first round noon Golf LPGA Tour ,EvianChampionship,second round 2 a.m. (Fri) Golf MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Xfinity, Richmond, practice NASCAR,Xfinity, Richmond, final practice

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

BASEBALL

MLB, Texas atSeattle MLB, Toronto at N.Y.Yankees SOCCER Women’s college, TexasA&M at Florida Men’s college, SanJose St. at Stanford

12:30 p.m. Root 4 p.m. MLB 4 p.m. 6 p.m.

SEC P a c-12

4 p.m.

E S PN

TENNIS

U.S. Open,women’s semifinals FOOTBALL

College, Southern at Mississippi Valley St. College, LouisianaTechat W. Kentucky NFL, Pittsburgh at NewEngland

4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5 p.m. FS1 5:30 p.m. NBC

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL FOrmer CardinalS All-Star Andujar, 62, dieS Joaquin Andujar, a star pitcher with the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1980s, died Tuesday in his native Dominican Republic. Hewas62. Leonardo Matos Berrido, president of the Dominican Baseball League,said the cause was diabetes complications. TheCardinals planned atribute to the fiery right-hander before playing the Cubs.Andujar was atwo› time All-Star during five seasons with the Cardinals from 1981-85. He had 20-win seasons in 1984and’85, led the National Leaguein victories in ’84 andwas amember of the Cardinals World Series title team in 1982.

FOOTBALL Goodell OPen to Changing rale in diSCiPline After a series of stinging legal defeats, NFLcommissioner Roger Goodell said he would consider changing his role in governing the league’s personal conduct policy. Goodell said Tuesday onESPNRadio’s "Mike 8 Mike" program that a discipline officer or a panelthat makes the initial decision on whether to suspend aplayer "would makefor a better system." But hesaid the league is against having a third-party arbitrator something other leaguesuse because "the standards of the NFLare important to uphold, and wedon’t want to delegate that responsibility or standard." Goodell has recently had four sus› pensions overturned by judges or arbitrators, some of whomhave criticized the commissioner for exceeding the limits of his authority. After Judge Richard Bermanlast weekvacated the league’s four› game suspension of NewEngland Patriots quarterback TomBrady, several team owners suggested that the leagueshould overhaul the commissioner’s role in the disciplinary process. NFLPA COIIIISiOII IOMISGit ITS. NFL rO IOCtOd BgGiiI The NFL Players Association’s lawsuit alleging that leagueowners set a secret salary cap in 2010hasbeenrejected again in federal court. U.S. District Judge Michael Davis issued his order Tuesday,denying the motion filed by theNFLPAin 2012 to reopen the longrunning case that was closed in 2011when the lockout ended. Theunion sought $4 billion in damages, citing collusion.

GOLF MICkelSOngiVen SPOtOnU.S. PreSidentS CuP team›

PhilMickelson kept alive a streak andearned afootnote in Presidents Cup history Tuesdaywhen hewas selected to his 21st consecutive U.S. team. Mickelson wasNo. 30 in thestandings, the lowest of any player to be acaptain’s pick. U.S. captain Jay Haasalso took his son, Bill Haas, though that wasexpected. Bill Haaswon his sixth PGATour title this year, finished oneshot out of a playoff at The Players Cham› pionship and was11th in the standings. His father said heintended to take No. 11regardless of who it was. International captain Nick Price selected StevenBowditch of Australia, who missed qualifying by less than one-hundredth of anaverageworld ranking point, and Sang-moon Bae ofSouth Korea, which attracted the most attention. The Presidents Cup isOct. 8-11 inSouth Korea, the first time it has been held in Asia.

SOCCER United StateS rOuted dy Brazil in friendly Neymar scored twice after entering at the start of the second half, Rafinha got his first international goal andBrazil routed the United States 4-1 Tuesday night in the Americans’ last gamebefore meeting Mexico next month in a playoff for a 2017Confederations Cupberth. Hulk scored in the ninth minute for Brazil, which opened a 4-0 lead before Danny Williams scored from about 30 yards in injury time. Brazil is 17-1 against the United States, winning 10 in arow.

SWIMMING LOChte’S neW turnS danned in medleyS

RyanLochte’s

new underwater turns were alittle too radical for swimming’s govern› ing body. The11-time Olympic medalist will no longer beable to swim underwater on his backduring freestyle legs of individual medley events. FINAsent a newrules "interpretation" notice to all member federations Monday. Instead of rotating onto his stomach immediate› ly after pushing off the wall at last month’s swimming world champi› onships in Kazan,Russia, Lochte remained onhis backfor 10 meters, since he kicks better that way.Theinterpretation was based on an existing rule which said that "in individual medley or medley relay events, freestyle meansany style other than backstroke, breaststroke or butterfly." Lochte used thetechnique to win the 200 individual medley at the worlds for a fourth consecutive time. TheAmerican can continue to usetheturns in freestyle events. — From wire reports

ON DECK Today Volleyball: Madras,Redm ond at Ridgeview,4:30 p.m. Thursday Football: CulveratBonanza, 6 p.m. Boys soccer: Redm ond at Dallas, 4 p.m.; Sisters at Molalla, 4p.m.;LaPineat East Linn Christian, 4:30 p.m. Girls soccer:McKayatRidgeview,4 p.mc Redmondat SouthAlbany,4p,m4 Molalla atSisters, 4p.msPleasantHil at LaPine,4:30p.m. Volleyball: CrookCountyat Bend, 6:30p.ms Sum› mit at Sisters,6:30p.ms LaPineat Lakeview, 6 p.m.; Culver,Burnsat Madras, 4 p.m. Friday Football: BendatKlamathUnion, 7p.ms Mountain View atCentral, 7 p.m.;Mazama at Redmond, 7

IN THE BLEACHERS

SOCCER MLS

In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Diat. by Univeraal Uclick 9/g www.gocomica.corn/inthebleachera

MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AU TimesPDT

EasternConference

BE. QnL,Ave(.~’T› TRYYO MIN THETHE

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p.msSouthAlbanyatRidgeview,7p,ms Franklin at Summit, 7p.m.;CrookCountyat McLoughlin, 7 p.msMadrasat Sisters, 7 p.m.; LaPineat Jef› ferson, 7p.m.; McKenzieat Gilchrist, 4 p.m. Boyssoccer:Bend atCrescentValley,4 p.m.; MountainViewat Corvallis, 4 p.msRidgeviewat Milwaukie,4:30p.m. Girls soccer: Corvallis atMountainView,4 p.mc CrescentValleyat Bend, 4p.m. Volleyball: TrinityLutheranat Chiloquin,515 p m.; McKenzie at Gilchrist, 4 p.m. Saturday Boys soccer:Bendat Corvallis, 11 a.msMountain View atCrescent Valley, 11a,ms Summit at North Medford,1:30p.msHenleyat Sisters, 11a.m.; Marshfield atCrookCounty, 2 p.m.; Umatillaat Culver,1:30p.m. Girls soccer: Crescent ValleyatMountain View,11 a.m.; Corvagisat Bend,11a.m.; North Medford at Summit, 2p.msMarshfield at CrookCounty, 2 p.msSistersatHenley,noon Volleyball: Summit atCentral Catholic Invite, 8 a.mcRidgeview,Redmond at North Marion Tour› nament,TBD;Mountain Viewat Turalatin Varsity Tourna ment,8:30 a.m.;Banks,HenleyatCrook County, 8:30a.m.; Madras,Sisters at Cascade Invite, TBD;Culver at Reedsport Tournament, 8 America’s Line RODEO a.ms Gilchrist atLaPineJVTournament, 9 a.m. Home teamia CAPS Cross-country: Bend, Mountain View,Summ it, CrookCounty,LaPineat JereBreeseMemorial Professional RanchStampede in Prinevile, 9:30 a.m.; Red› Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog LEADERS NFL mond at SaxonInvitational in Salem, 10a.mc AU Around 1, Trevor Brazile, Deca tur, Texas, Thursday Summit atAshCreekXCFestival in Monm outh, $189,321. 2,TufCooper, Decatur, Texas, $123,756. 7 51’/ t 10 a.m.;Sistersat Molalla Invitational, 9:30a.m.; P ATRIOTS 7 3, JoJo LeMond, An drews, T e xas, 398, 9 36. 4, Caleb Sunday Culver atUltimookRaceCrossCountry Invitation› Packers 6 t /t 7 50’/ t BEARS Smidt, Bellvige,Texas,$94,084. 5, RhenRichard, al in Tillamook,8:15a.m. TEXANS 1 1 41 Chiefs Roosevelt, Utah,$83,371.6, RyanJarrett, Coman› JETS 3 3 39’ / t Browns che, Okla.,$82,621.7, ClaytonHass, Terrell, Texas, Colts 3 3 46 BILLS 380,396. 8,JoshPeek, Pueblo, Colo., 379,329.9, TENNIS Dolphins 3 t /t 4 43t / t REDSKIN S Clint Robinson,SpanishFork, Utah, $75,236.10, Panthers 3 t /t 3 t / t 41’/t JAGUAR S Russell Cardoza,Terrebonne,Ore., $73,576. 11, Seahawks 3 t /t 4 41’ / t RAMS Dakota Eldridge,Elko, Nev.r$70,782. 12, Jordan Professional CARDINALS 2’I~ 3 46 Saints Ketscher,SquawValey, Calif., $62,583.13, Doyle U.S. Open CHARG ERS 2’I~ 3 46 Lions Hoskins,Chualar, Calif., $61,720.14, Garrett Smith, Men B UCCAN EERS 3 3 41 ’ / t Titans Rexburg,Idaho,$61,440. 15,StevenDent, Mullen, Guarlerlinals Bengals 3 t /t 3 t / t 43t/t RAIDER S Neb.,$56,543. Marin Cilic (9), Croatia,def. Jo-WilfriedTsonga BRONCOS 4’/t 4 / 2 4 8’/t Ravens BarebackRiding — 1,Kaycee Feild,SpanC OWBOYS 5’/t 6 51’ / t Giants ish Fork,Utah,$95,245. 2, EvanJayne, Marseile, (19), France, 6-4, 6-4,3-6, 6-7(3), 6-4. France ,$90,480.3,Bobby Mote,Culver,Ore., NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia,def.FelicianoLopez Monday F ALCONS$88,486. 4,JakeBrown,Higsboro, Texas,$82,272. Eagles 3 3 55t/t (18), Spain6-1, , 3-6,6-3, 7-6(2). 5, Austin Foss,Terrebonne, Ore.,$80,617. 6, Seth 49E RS Vikings 2t /t 2 t / t 4 1t/t Women Hardwick, LaramieWyo., , $77,381. 7, Glint Laye, Ouarlerlinals Cadogan,Alberta, $77,092.8, CalebBennett, Trem› College Roberta Vinci, Italy, def. Kristina Mladenovic, onton,Utah,376,983.9, Glint Cannon,Wailer, Texas, Thursday France, 6-3, 5-7,6-4. 10,WinnRatliff, Leesvile, La.,$74,308.1I, P K 62t/t L a Tech376,488. Serena Wiliams (I), UnitedStates,def.VenusWil› WKENTUCKY 2 Friday StevenPeebles,Redmond, Ore., $73,144.12, Tim liams(23), UnitedStates, 6-2, 1-6,6-3. Miami-Fla 18 18 55 FLA ATLA NTIC O’ Connell,Zwingle, iowa,$73,092.13, Will Lowe, UTAH 11’/t 13’/t 44 Ut a h St Canyon,Texas,$71,569. 14, Orin Larsen, Inglis, Manitoba,$69,776. 15,TannerAus,Granite Falls, Saturday $69,326.19,R.C.Landingham,Pendleton, FLORIDA ST 27t/t 27t/t 53t/t S Florida Minn., FOOTBALL WMichigan 31/2 4 56'/ tGA SOUTHERN Ore.,358,772. PENNST 19 21 50t/t Bu ffalo Steer Wrestling 1, Ty Erickson,Helena, College $79,409.2,LukeBranquinho,LosAlamos, CONNE CTICUT 6 7 ’/t 4 7 Arm y Mont., PAC-12 FLORIDA 18’/t 20 53t/t E Carolina Calif., $76,191. 3, HunterCure, Hogiday,Texas, AU TimesPDT LOUISVILLE 12 12’/t 55 H o uston$71,270.4, NickGuy,Sparta, Wis., $70,929.5, Trev› MISSISSIPP I 26’/t 29 54 F resno Stor Knowles,MountVernon, Ore.,$69,473. 6, Seth 7 /t 6 ’ / t 51t/t Te mple BrockmanWh NorthDivision CINCINN ATI , eatland,Wyo.,$69,459.7,Clayton M I SS STHass,Terrell, Texas,366,544. 8, KyleIrwin, Rob› Conf Overall Lsu 3 4 49’/t 53t/t Miami-Ohio ertsdale, Ala., $66,507. 9, DakotaEldridge, Elko, SIN 34 33 W L W L PF PA WISCON 52 TX-SANTONIO Nev., KansasSt 20 17 $66,270.10,TylerWaguespack,Gonzales,La., California 0 0 1 0 73 14 5 3 1 /2 60’/t OH IO U 365,826.11,K.C.Jones,Decatur, Texas, $63,223. Marshall Oregon 0 0 1 0 61 42 59t/t Ha w aii OHIO ST 40 40 12, Tanner Milan, Cochrane,Alberta, $60,424.13, Oregon St. 0 0 1 0 26 7 UE 5 ’/t 4 ’ /t 44 Wake Forest Blake Knowles,Heppner,Ore., $60,397.14, Olin Stanford 0 0 0 1 6 1 6 SYRACS N 17’/t 17’/t 58t/t App’chianSt Hannum,Malad, Idaho,$59,141. 15,Tyler Pearson, Washington 0 0 0 1 13 16 CLEMSO 12’/t 11 59 ARKANSA SST Louisville, Miss.,$56,684. WashingtonSt. 0 0 0 1 17 24 Missouri WYOMING 13 13 54 E Michigan Team Roping(header) 1, ClayTryan, Bil› South Division 62t/t Massachusetts C OLOR A D O 14 13 ings, Mont.,$105,982.2, ChadMasters, Cedar Hil, Overall Conf Minnesota 4 ’/t 5 ’ /t 53'/ tCOLORADO ST Tenn.,$89,066.3, Derrick Begay, Seba Dalkai, Ariz., W L W L PF PA MICHIGAN 15 15 48 O regon St$84,575. 4,TrevorBrazile, Decatur,Texas, $82,096. Arizona 0 0 1 0 42 32 G A TEC H 30 28’/t 54t/t Tul ane 5, Aaron Tsinigine, TubaCity, Ariz., $72,422.6, Erich SouthernCal 0 0 1 0 55 6 Georgia 20 20 52’/t VANDERB ILT Rogers,RoundRock, Ariz., $71,845.7, JakeBarnes, UCLA 0 0 1 0 34 16 BoiseSt 2 ’/t 2 ’ /t 54’/t BYU Scottsdale,Ariz., $70,916.8, ColbyLovell, Madison› Utah 0 0 1 0 24 17 NotreDame 10t/t 11 47t/t V I RGINIAville, Texas,$67,561.9, NickSartain, Dover,Okla., ArizonaSt. 0 0 0 1 17 38 iowa 4 ’/t 3 ’ / t 52 I O WA ST367405.10,ColemanProctor, Pryor,okla., $67194. Colorado 0 0 0 1 20 28 CALIFOR NIA 7 t/t 1 2 61 San Diego St 11,JakeCooper,Monument,N.M.,$65,692.12, Memphis f ft/t 1 3 58 K ANSASLukeBrown,Stephenville,Texas,$64,633.13,JoJo Friday’s Game ARKANS AS 22 21t/t 54t/ Tol edo LeMond, Andrews,Texas,$63,597.14,MattSherUtahSt, atUtah,6p.m. ALABAMA 34 34 56t/t Mid TennSt wood, Pima,Ariz., $61,551. 15,ClaySmith, Broken Saturday’sGames AIR FOR CE 6N 6N 58t/t San JoseSt Bow,Okla.,$61,110. OregonSt. atMichigan,9 a.m. Pittsburgh 14 13 51 AK R ON Team Roping (heeler) 1, JadeCorkig, Sacramento St.at Washington,11 a.m. MARYLAND BN 7t/t 70 Bowl Green Fallen, Nev., $105,982. 2, Clay O’ Brien Cooper, 10’/t 11 MassachusettsatColorado,11a.m. Arizona 62 NE VADA Gardnerville,Nev.,$85,695. 3, Patrick Smith, Lipan, WashingtonSt.atRutgers, 12:30p.m. SCARO LINA 9 57 K e ntuckyTexas ,382,096.4,TravisGraves,Jay,Okla.,$81,673. San Diego St.at California, 2p.m. SMU 3 4 N 59 NTexas 5, Travis Woodard,Stockton, Calif., $74,470. 6, 63t/t Bal l St Dory Petska,Marana,Ariz., $73,203. 7, Junior ArizonaatNevada, 4p.m. TEXASA&M 29 30 Utep Nogueira,Scottsdale,Ariz., $70,338.8, RichSkelt› TEXASTECH 1 gt/t 20t/t 66’/ Idahoat SouthernCal, 5 p.m. PK 2 RUTGE RS 62 W a sh Ston, Llano,Texas, $67,405. 9, PaulEaves, Lonedeg, Oregonat MichiganSt., 5 p.m. T ENNES S E E PK PK 61t/t O klahoma UCFatStanford, 7:30p.m. Mo., $67,401.10,KoryKoontz, Stephenvile, Texas, TEXAS 15’It 15’It 51t/t Rice UCLAat UNLV,7:30 p.m. $67,198.11,JakeLong, Coffeyvige, Kan.,$65,409. N MEXICO S T 5 6t / t 63t/t Georqia St Cal PolyatArizonaSt., 8p.m. 12, RyanMotes, Weatherford, Texas,$64,591.13, NEBRA SKA 26 26’It 54 S Alabama Kollin VonAhn, anchard, Okla.,$64,447. 14,Quinn MICHIGAN ST 3 3 1 /2 67 Or egon Kesler,Holden,Bl POLLS Utah,$61,386.15, RussellCardoza, INDIANA 7t/2 7 t/2 55t/t Florida Int’ I The AssociatedPressTop25 Ore., $58/106. 43 43 66 Ida h o Terrebonne, SaddleBroncRiding— 1,CodyDeMoss,HeR ecord Pls P v USC N EW M E X IC O 5 4 7 1t/t Tuls a flin, La., $119,397. 2,RustyWright, Milford, Utah, 1. OhioSt. (61) 1 -0 1,525 1 STANFO RD 17t/t 19 43t/t C Florida 3105,981. 3, IsaacDiaz,Desdemona,Texas,$96,450. 2. Alabama 1 -0 1,420 3 Ucla 29 29 64 UNL V 4, TaosMuncy,Corona, N.M.,$91,732. 5, Jacobs 3. TCU 1 -0 1,365 2 Crawley,Boerne,Texas, $86,481. 6, Dort Scheer, 4. Baylor 1 -0 1,252 4 Elsmere ,Neb.,$82,203.7,Wade Sundell,Cole1 -0 1,198 5 5. MichiganSt. NFL man,Okla.,$82,057.8, JakeWright, Milford, Utah, 6. Auburn 1 -0 1,166 6 NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE $77,774. 9,ChuckSchmidt, Keldron, S.D.,$77,fgf. 7. Oregon 1 -0 1,081 7 AU TimesPDT 10, Spencer Wright, Milford, Utah,$67,427. f f, Zeke 8. Southern Cal 1 -0 1,074 8 Thurston, Big Valley, Alberta, $66,161.12, Heith 1 -0 1,061 11 9. NotreDame Thursday’ s Game DeMoss, Hefl in, La., $65,182.13, BradleyHarter, Lo› 1-0 98 1 9 Pittsburghat NewEngland,5:30p.m. 10. Georgia ranger,La.,362,866. 14,JesseWright, Milford, Utah, 11. FloridaSt. 1-0 9 4 2 10 Sunday’sGames 353,699.15,ChadFerley, Oelrichs, S.D.,$53,078. 12. Clemson 1-0 8 6 2 12 GreenBayat Chicago,10a.m. Tie-downRoping 1, Tuf Cooper,Decatur, 1-0 83 3 13 KansasCityatHouston, 10a.m. 13. UCLA Texas,$116,079.2, Marty Yates, Stephenvile, Texas, 0-0 6 5 3 14 Seattle atSt.Louis,10 a.m. 14. LSU 391,536. 3,HunterHerrin, Apache,Okla., $90,443. 15. GeorgiaTech 1-0 6 3 6 16 ClevelandatN.Y.Jets, 10a.m. 4,TimberMoore,Aubrey,Texas,$89,649.5,Caleb 16. Texas A&M 1-0 6 2 9 N R IndianapolisatBuffalo, 10a.m. Smidt, Bellville, Texas,$79,353. 6, RyanJarrett, 17. Mississippi 1-0 60 0 17 Miami atWashington, 10a.m. Comanche ,Okla.,$78,938.7,DorySolomon,Prai1-0 48 0 18 CarolinaatJacksonvile,10 am. 18. Arkansa s rie View,Texas,$77,473. 8, MontyLewis, Hereford, 19. Oklahom a 1-0 4 6 9 19 NewOrleansat Arizona 1:05p.m. Texas,$77,431. 9, TrevorBrazile, Decatur,Texas, 20. BoiseSt. 1-0 2 7 9 23 Detroit atSanDiego, 1:05p.m. 372,619.10, CadeSwor, Winnie, Texas,$70,279. 21. Missouri 1-0 27 4 24 Cincinnatiat Oakland, 1:25p.m. 11, Matt Shiozawa, Chubbuck, Idaho,$68,765.12, 1-0 2 5 9 22 BaltimoreatDenver, 1:25p.m. 22. Arizona MarcosCosta,Childress, Texas,$66,663. 13, Clint at TampaBay,1:25p.m. 23. Tenne ssee 1-0 1 6 9 25 Tennessee Robinson,SpanishFork, Utah,$66,373.14, Michael 24. Utah 1-0 1 3 7 N R N.Y.GiantsatDalas, 5:30p.m. Utero, Lowndesboro, Ala., 363,548. 15, Sterling Monday’sGames 25. MississippiSt. 1-0 1 0 4 NR Smith,Stephenvige,Texas, $62,580. 1 Others receiving votes: Wisconsin79, BYU PhiladelphiaatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. Steer Roping 1r MikeChase,McAlester, M innesota at Sa n F r anc i s co, 7:20 p. m . 74, Northwestern 72,ArizonaSt.49, OklahomaSt. 30, Okla., $61,089. 2,VinFisher Jr., Andrews,Texas, WestVirginia23,Florida 8, Temple8, Cincinnati 7, $58,879. 3,TrevorBrazile, Decatur,Texas, $58,722. Kansas St. 7, Minnesota5, Louisville 4,N.C.State4, 4, JessTierney,Hermosa,S.D., $53,100.5, Rocky BASKETBALL W. Kentucky 3, California 2, Stanford1. Patterson,Pratt, Kan.,$52,384. 6, Scott Snedecor, Fredericksburg, Texas, $51,231. 7, Neal Wood, WNBA AmwayTop25Coaches Poll Needville, Texas,$46,662.8, CodyLee,Gatesvile, Record Pls Pvs WOMEN'SNATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION Texas,$46,057. 9, ChetHerren,Pawhuska, Okla., 1-0 1599 1 $42,517 .10,ShayGood,Midland,Texas,$39,273. 1. OhioSt. (63) AU TimesPDT 1-0 1485 3 11, Jo Jo Le M ond, Andrews, Texas,$38,724. 12,Troy 2. Alabam a(I) Tillard,Douglas,Wyo., $37,789.13, BrodiePoppino, 3. TCU 1-0 1464 2 EasternConference B ig Cabi n , Okl a.,$33,732.14, ChanceKelton, Mayer, 4. Baylor 1-0 1349 4 W L Pct GB York Ariz., $33,271.15,JasonEvans, Huntsvile, Texas, 1-0 1279 5 z-New 22 9 710 5. Oregon 1-0 1252 6 x-Chicago 20 12 625 2’/t 333,163. 1 6. MichiganSt. Bull Riding 1, SageKimzey, Strong City, 1-0 1190 7 x-Indiana 18 14 563 4’/t 7.Auburn x-Washi n gton Okla., $146,870.2, BrennonEldred, Sulphur, Okla., 17 15 531 5N 8. FloridaSt. 1-0 1090 8 438 8’/z $107726. 3, Parker Breding, Edgar Mont., $107639. Connecti c ut 14 18 9. Georgia 1-0 1075 9 13 18 419 9 4, WesleySilcox, Santaquin, Utah,$105,688.5, Joe 1 -0 1035 1 0 Atlanta 10. SouthernCal Frost, Randlett,Utah,$79,342. 6, Chandler Bownds, WesternConference 1-0 99 4 11 11. NotreDame W L Pct GB Lubbock,Texas,$79,041. 7, CodyTeel, Kountze, 12. Clemson 1-0 8 7 0 12 x-Minnesota 22 11 667 Texas,$75,947. 8, ShaneProctor, GrandCoulee, 13. UCLA 1-0 8 0 1 14 19 13 594 2’/~ Wash.,$72,139.9, Brett Stall, Detroit Lakes,Minn., 14. Mississippi 1-0 73 5 15 x-Phoenix 17 15 531 4t/t $70,889.10,ClaytonFoltyn, Winnie,Texas,$64,348. 0-0 73 4 13 x-Tulsa 15. LSU x-LosAngeles 14 18 438 Zt/t 11, CalebSanderson, Hallettsville, Texas,$61,204. 16. GeorgiaTech 1-0 65 1 17 Seattle 9 23 281 12’/t 12, ReidBarker,Comfort, Texas,$58,927. 13,Aar› 17. Oklahom a 1-0 5 4 1 19 San Antoni o 7 26 212 15 on Pass,Dallas,Texas, $57,782. 14,KodyDeShon, 18. Arkansas 1-0 49 5 20 x-clinchedplayoff spot Helena,Mont., $55,791.15,Trevor Kastner,Ardmore, 1-0 4 1 8 N R z-clinched 19. Texas A&M conference Okla.,355,379. 20. Arizona 1-0 3 3 6 22 Barrel Racing 1, Callie Duperier,Boerne, 21. Missouri 1-0 3 0 1 23 Tuesday’ s Game s Texas,$152,393. 2, Lisa Lockhart, Oelrichs,S.D., 22. BoiseSt. 1-0 2 7 7 24 Washington76,Indiana72,OT $150, 969.3,SarahRoseMcDonald,Brunswick,Ga., 1-0 21 2 25 Tulsa74,SanAntonio64 23. Tenn essee $121,070.4, SherryCervi, Marana,Ariz., $102,854. 0-1 10 8 18 Minnesota73,Seatle 67 24. Wisconsin 5, Mary Walker,Ennis,Texas,$101,754. 6, Nan› 25. Utah 1 -0 1 0 6 NR Today’sGames cy Hunter,Neola,Utah, $96,692.7, Fallon Taylor, Others receiving votes: Mississippi St. 97, Los AngelesatAtlanta, 4p.m. Cogins vige,Texas,$86, 828.8,Carley Richardson, ArizonaSt. 66, OklahomaSt. 52, Northwestern35, ConnecticutatNewYork, 4p.m. Pampa, Texas,$76,976.9,TaylorJacob,Carmine, BYU23,KansasSt.23,SouthCarolina22,Duke Friday’s Games Texas,$71,579. 10, CassidyKruse, Gilette, Wyo., 15, WestVirginia 13, Miami (Fla.) 12, Florida 7, Washin gtonatNewYork,4:30p.m. $64,022. 11,Michele McLeod,Whitesboro,Texas, Louisville 6,Marshall 6, Minnesota5, N.C.State4, IndianaatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. $63,774.12, Jill Welsh, Parker,Ariz., $59,444. 13, Maryland3, Nebraska3, Temple3, ilinois 2, Pitts› Tulsa atChicago,5:30p.m. JackieGanter,Abilene, Texas, $59,398. 14, Vickie burgh 2,California 1,LouisianaTech1, Memphis LosAngelesatPhoenix,7p.m. Carter,Richfield, Utah,$57,740.15,MeghanJohn› 1, Stanford1. MinnesotaatSeatle, 7p.m. son, Deming, N.M., $53,780.

W L T Pls GF GA D.C.United 1 3 10 5 4 4 35 3 4 NewYork 12 7 6 4 2 43 28 Columbus 11 9 8 4 1 45 47 NewEngland 11 9 7 4 0 38 36 TorontoFC 11 11 4 37 45 44 Montreal 9 11 4 3 1 3 4 3 7 Philadelphia 8 14 6 3 0 35 45 Orlando City 7 13 8 2 9 33 50 NewYorkCity FC 7 13 7 2 8 38 46 Chicago 7 14 6 2 7 3 4 4 2 WesternConference W L T Pls GF GA L os Angele s 13 8 7 46 4 9 3 3 Vancouver 14 10 3 45 38 28 FC Dallas 13 8 5 4 4 38 30 Seattle 1 3 13 2 4 1 34 3 1 Sporting KansasCity 11 7 7 40 40 35 Portland 11 9 7 4 0 29 32 SanJose 1 1 11 5 3 8 33 3 1 Houston 9 10 8 3 5 35 34 Colorado 8 9 9 3 3 25 27 R ealSaltLake 8 11 8 3 2 2 9 4 0

Today’sGames ColoradoatVancouver, 7p.m. SportingKansasCity atPortland, 7:30p.m. Friday’s Game ChicagoatNewYork, 4p.m. Saturday’sGames Columbus at Philadelphia, 4p.m. NewYorkCity FCat FCDallas, 5:30p.m. RealSaltLakeatHouston, 5:30p.m. D.C.Unitedat Colorado, 6p.m. Seattleat SanJose, 7;30p.m. Montrealat LosAngeles,7:30p.m. Sunday’sGames NewEnglandatTorontoFC,2p.m. SportingKansasCity atOrlandoCity,4 p.m.

GOLF Professional PRESIDENTSCUP Oct. 8-11 inSouthKorea (x-Captainsselection) International roster Captain: NickPrice.x-Sang-moonBae, South Ko› rea. x-Steve Bowditch, Australia. JasonDay,Australia. Branden Grace, SouthAfrica. ThongchaiJaidee,Thai› land. Anirban Lahiri, India. DannyLee,NewZealand. MareLeishm an, Australia. HidekiMatsuyama,Japan. Louis Oosthuizen,SouthAfrica. Charl Schwartzel, SouthAfrica.AdamScott, Australia United Statesroster Captain: Jay Haas. RickieFowler. JimFuryk. x-Big Haas.DustinJohnson.ZachJohnson. Chris Kirk.Mat Kuchar.x-Phil Mickelson.Patrick Reed.JordanSpieth. Jimmy Walker. BubbaWatson.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL AmericanLeague BALTIMOR EORIOLES ReinstatedINFJ.J. Hardy from the15-dayDL. Recaled OFDariel Alvarezfrom Frederick (Carolina). BOSTON REDSOX Activated28 Dustin Pedroia from the15-day DL.Recalled RHPsJonathanAroand Matt Barnes fromPawtucket (IL). Selectedthecontract of LHPRichHil fromPawtucket. CHICAGO WHITE SO X Recalled INFMicah JohnsonfromCharlotte (IL). CLEVEL ANDINDIANS Activated RHPCarlos Carrascofromthe15-dayDL. LOSANGELESANGELS— Recalled38KyleKubitzaandOFDaniel RobertsonfromSalt Lake(PCL) OAKLANDATHLETICS— RecalledOFCraigGentry andINFMaxMuncyfromNashvile (IL). SEAlTLE MARINERS— Recall edOFJamesJones and18-DH JesusMontero,fromTacoma(PCL).Selected the contract ofCStevenBaronand RHPJCRamirezfrom Tacoma. TransferredLHPCharlie Furbushto60-day DL National League ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS Recalled RHP Jhoulys ChacinRHP , Allen Webster, INF-OFJamie RomakandLHPAndrewChafin fromReno(PCL) and OF Socrates Brito Mobile (SL).Purchasedthecontract of OFPeter O’BrienfromReno.PlacedRHPEvan Mar› shag on the60-dayDL. CHICAGO DUBS Activated RHP Neil Ramirez from the15-dayDL. Recalled RH P Yoervis Medina from iowa (PCL). CINCINN ATI RED S Reinstated OFBrennan BoeschandCFBily Hamiltonfromthe 15-dayDL RecalledLHPTony Cingrani, LHPBrandonFinnegan, RHPJoshSmith andINF/OFKristopher Negronfrom Louisville(IL). COLORADOROCKIES — Reinstated OF Corey Dickersonfromthe15-dayDL. MIAMIMAR LINS Named Mare DelPianovice president,playerdevelopment. NEWYORKMETS Selectedthe contract ofRHP Tim StaufferfromLasVegas(PCL). Recalled OFDar› rell Ceciliani from LasVegas and placedhim onthe 60-DayDL. SANDIEGOPADRES— AnnouncedINF/OFTommy Medicawasclaimedoff waiversbyMiami. SANFRANCISCOGIANTS Activated LHPJere› my Affeldtfromthe 15-dayDL. ST.LOUISCARDINALS— RecalledRHPSamTuivailalafromMemphis (PCL). BASKETB ALL

National Basketball Association NBA FinedPhoenix FMarkieff Morris $10,000 for a publicstatementdetrimental tothe NBA. FOOTBALL

National Football League BALTIMORERAVENS— PlacedDEBrentUrban on injuredreserve-return. SignedRBTerrenceMagee. BUFFALOBILLS— SignedQBMattGasset.Released TENick O’Leary. CHICAGO BEARS Terminated the practice squadcontractof RB-FBPaul Lasike. DALLASCOWBOYS Signed RBGus Johnson, WRVinceMayle,QBKellenMoore, WRRodneySmith andLBJoeThomastothepracticesquad. DETROILION T S Signed QBRicky Stanzito the

practicesquad. GREENBAYPACKERS— SignedWREdW illiams to thepracticesquad. INDIANA POLISCOLTS Signed LBAmarlo Her› rera tothepracticesquad. Released OLDavidArkin. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS— Signed OLCameron Fleming tothepractice squad.Released DLXzavier Dicksonfromthepractice squad. NEWYOR K GIANTS Waived CBAsa Jackson and DTLouisNixIII. NEWYORKJETS— SignedDEMikeCatapanoto the practicsqu e ad. TAMPA BAYBUCCANEERS SignedTECameron Brate, T ReidFragel andWRRannegHall to theprac› ticesquad.RelasedTsEdawnCoughmanandTerren Jonesfromthepracticesquad. HOCKEY National Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES SignedGLouis Domingue to a one-year contract. NEWJERSEYDEVILS— SignedFPierre-LucLetourneau-Leblond toa one-yearcontract.

socCER

Major League Soccer COLUMBUSCREW SC— LoanedDSergioCampbell toAustin(USL). COLLEGE MANHA TTAN Named Cat Clifford assistant

FISH COUNT


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 THE BULLETIN C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL cata ndings

A RALLY,THEN THE WINNING SHOT

AN TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE

L

East Division

Toronto NewYork Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston Kansas City Minnesota Cleveland Chicago Detroit Houston Texas LosAngeles Seattle Oakland

W L 79 59 77 60 67 71 66 72 65 73

Central Division W 83 71 67 66 64

L 55 67 70 71 74

West Division W L

75 64 73 64 69 69 66 73 60 79

Pct GB

his home

run as he returns to the

Pct GB .601 .514 12 .489 15’/r

dugout during the eighth

inning against

.482 16r/r .464 19

Washington

on Tuesday

Pct GB .540 .533 1

night. The Mets scored six I’uns HT the bottom of the seventh at Washington before Nieu›

.500 5’/2 .475 9 .432 15

Tuesday’sGames

wenhuis’s go› ahead shot to win 8-7.

Today’sGam es Baltimore (U.Jimenez10-9) at N.Y.Yankees(Sabathia 4-9), 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay(Odorizzi 6-8) at Detroit (Lobstein3-6), 4:08 p.m. Toronto (Hutchison13-3) at Boston (J.Kelly 9-6), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland(Tomlin 4-1) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Sa› mardzila9-11),5:10p.m. Minnesota(Pelfrey6-9) at KansasCity (Medlen3-1), 5:10 p.m. Houston(McHugh 15-7) at Oakland(Brooks 1-2), 7;05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Latos4-9) atL.A.Angels (Richards 13› 10), 7:05p.m. Texas (M.Perez2-4) atSeatle (Nuno0-2), 7:10p.m. Thursday’sGames Texas at Seatle, 12:40p.m. TorontoatN.Y.Yankees, 4;05p.m. Detroit atCleveland,4:10 p.m. W L 77 61 71 67 58 81 55 84 54 85

NewYork Washington Miami Atlanta Philadelphia St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Milwaukee Cincinnati Los Angeles SanFrancisco Arizona SanDiego

Central Division W L 87 51 82 55 80 57 61 77 57 80

West Division W L 80 58

72 67 66 73 66 73 57 81

Colorado

New York’ s Kirk Nieu›

wenhuis (9) celebrates

.572 .562 1’/r .486 12 .478 13 .471 14

Baltimore 2, N.Y.Yankees1 Detroit 8,TampaBay7, 13innings Toronto5, Boston1,10 innings Chicago WhiteSox7, Cleveland4 Kansas City4, Minnesota2 Oakland 4, Houston0 LA. Dodgers 6, LA.Angels 4 Texas 9, Seattle 6

NATIONALLEAGUE East Division

Cnbs 8,Cardinals5

Pct GB .558 .514 6 ,417 19H 396 22r/r

.388 23’/r

Pct GB .630

599 4I/2 .584 6r/r

.442 26 .416 29’/r

Pct GB .580 518 Br/r .475 14’/r .475 14’/r

.413 23

Tuesday’sGames

Philadelphi5, a Atlanta0 N.Y. Mets8,Washington7 Miami 6,Milwaukee4 Pittsburgh 7, Cincinnati 3 Chicago Cubs8, St.Louis 5 SanFrancisco6, Arizona2

L.A.Dodgers6,LA.Angels 4 SanDiego2, Colorado1 Today’sGam es ChicagoCubs(Lester9-10) atSt. Louis(C.Martinez 13-7), 10:45a.m. Atlanta (Tehe ran 9-7) at Philadelphia (D.Buchanan 2-7), 4;05 p.m. N.Y. Mets(deGrom12-7) at Wa shington (Strasburg 8-6), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (A.Pena 1-0) at Miami (Koehler8-13), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh(Happ4-1) at Cincinnati (Sam pson2-3), 4:10 p.m. Colorado(Rusin5-7) at SanDiego(Shields 10-6), 6:10 p.m. SanFrancisco(Heston11-9) atArizona(Godley4-1), 6:40 p.m. LA. Dodgers (Latos4-9) atLA.Angels (Richards 13› 10), 7:05p.m. Thursday’sGames Coloradoat SanDiego,12:40p.m. ChicagoCubsat Philadelphia, 4:05p.m. Milwaukee atPittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. N.Y.MetsatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. St. Louiat s Cincinnati,410 p m.

Leaders AMERICANLEAGUE BATTINGMicabrera, Detroit, .351; Brantley,

Cleveland,.319;Bogaerts, Boston,.317;Lcain, Kan› sas City,.312;Hosmer, KansasCity, .311; Ncruz,Se› attle, .310;Fielder,Texas, .310;Altuve, Houston, .310. RBI Donaldson, Toronto, 115; CDavis,Balti› more, 102; KMorales,KansasCity, 101; Bautista, Toronto, 96; Encarnacion,Toronto, 94; JMartinez, Detroit, 91;Ortiz,Boston,87. DOUBLESBrantley, Cleveland, 42; KMorales, KansasCity, 39; Donaldson, Toronto,38; Kipnis, Cleveland,37;Betts, Boston,34; Dozier,Minnesota, 34; Kinsler,Detroit, 34. TRIPLESKiermaier, Tam pa Bay, 12; ERosario, Minnesota, 11; RDavis, Detroit, 9; DeShields, Texas, 9; Gattis, Houston, 9; Betts, Boston,8; Burns,Oakland, 8; Eaton, Chicago,8. HOMERUNS CDavis, Baltimore, 41; Ncruz, Seattle, 39;Donaldson,Toronto, 37;JMartinez,De› troit, 36;Pulols,LosAngeles, 35;Trout, LosAngeles, 34; Bautista,Toronto,33. STOLENBA SES Altuve, Houston, 36; Burns, Oakla nd,26;Lcain,KansasCity,26;JDyson,Kansas City,23;DeShields, Texas,22; Gose, Detroit, 20; RDavis,Detroit,18;Gardner,NewYork,18; Marisnick, Houston,18; Pilar,Toronto,18. PITCHINGKeuchel, Houston, 17-6; FHernan› dez, Seattle,16-8; McHugh, Houston, 15-7; Eovaldi, NewYork,14-3;Price,Toronto, 14-5;Buehrle, Toron› to, 14-7;Lewis,Texas,14-8. ERA — SGray,Oakland,2.28;Keuchel,Houston, 2.29; Price,Toronto,2.43; Price, Toronto,2.43; Ka› zmir, Houston,2.63; Kazmir, Houston,2.63; Archer, Tampa Bay, 2.88. STRIKEO UTS Sale, Chicago,247; Archer,Tam› pa Bay,228; Kluber,Cleveland,219;Price, Toronto, 196; Keuchel,Houston,185; Carrasco,Cleveland, 178; Salazar, Cleveland, 173. SAVESBoxberger, TampaBay, 34; Perkins, Minnesota,32; Street, LosAngeles, 32; AMiger,New York,32. NATIONALLEAGUE BATTINGHarper, Washington, .333;DGordon, Miami, .330;Posey,SanFrancisco,.329;YEscobar, Washington,.320;LeMahieu, Colorado, .318; Gold› schmidt,Arizona,.318; Voto, Cincinnati, .316. RBI Arenado, Colorado, 107; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 97;Kemp,San Diego,91; Mccutchen, Pitts› burgh, 88;Rizzo,Chicago,87;Bryant,Chicago,86; CaGonzalez, Colorado,86. DOUBLESFrazier, Cincinnati,39; Arenado, Col› orado,35;Mcarpenter,St. Louis,34;Harper,Wash› ington,33;Markakis, Atlanta,33; Mccutchen,Pitts› burgh,33;Bruce,Cincinnati, 32;Pollock,Arizona,32. TRIPLESDPeralta, Arizona,9; Blackmon, Col› orado, 8; DGordon,Miami, 8; Fowler, Chicago,7; Grichuk, St. Louis,7; 7tiedat 6. HOMERUNS Arenado, Colorado, 37; CaG on› zalezrColorado,36;Harper, Washington, 34; Frazier, Cincinnati,30; Rizzo,Chicago, 29;Goldschmidt, Ar› izona,27;Stanton, Miami, 27;Votto, Cincinnati, 27. STOLENBASE S BHamilton, Cincinnati, 54; DGordon,Miami, 50;Blackmon, Colorado,36; Pol› lock, Arizona,33; SMarte, Pittsburgh,26; Revere, Philadelphia24; , GPolanco,Pittsburgh, 23. PITCHINGArrieta, Chicago,18-6; Bumg arner, San Francisco,17-7; Greinke,LosAngeles, 16-3; Gcole, Pittsburgh,16-8;Wacha,St.Louis,15-5; Ker› shaw,LosAngeles, 13-6; CMartinez, St. Louis,13-7; Bcolon,NewYork, 13-11. ERA Greinke,LosAngeles,1.68; Arrieta,Chica› go, 2.03;Kershaw,LosAngeles, 2.15; deGrom, New York, 2.40;Gcole,Pittsburgh,2.54; SMiler, Atlanta, 2.81; Harvey, NewYork, 2.88. STRIKEOUT S Kershaw, Los Angeles, 259; Scherzer, Washington, 225;Bumgarner, SanFrancis› co, 203;Arrieta,Chicago,197;Shields, SanDiego, 188;TRo ss, SanDiego,179; Liriano,Pittsburgh,178. SAVESMelancon, Pitsburgh,43; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 42;Familia, NewYork, 38;Kimbrel, SanDiego, 36; FrRodriguez, Milwaukee,34.

Alex Brandon /The Associated Press

ST. LOUIS Starlin Castro and Anthony Rizzo homeredand combined for sevenRBls asChicago won its fifth straight. St. Louis has dropped five of six, and its lead over Pittsburgh in the NLCentral slipped to 4/z games. Chicago

St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi AJcksncf-rf 5 2 2 0 Mcrpnt2b 5 0 1 0 Stcastr2b 4 3 2 4 Piscttylf-1b 4 0 2 2 D.Ross c 0 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 3 0 0 0 Coghlnlf 3 0 0 0 Molinac 2 0 1 0 Denorfiph-If 1 0 1 0 T.cruzpr-c 1 1 1 1 Rizzo 1b 4 1 2 3 Moss 1b 2 0 0 0 Bryant rf-3b 5 0 1 0 Villanv p 0 0 0 0 MMntrc 4 0 0 0 Grichkph 2 1 1 2 Fowlerph-cf 1 0 0 0 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 J.Baez3b-2b 4 1 2 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Hammlp 3 1 1 1 MrRynl3b 3 1 0 0 Grimmp 0 0 0 0 GGarciss 4 0 1 0 R ichrdp 0 0 0 0 Jaycf 3100 Stropp 0 0 0 0 Wachap 1 0 0 0 S chwrrph 1 0 0 0 Phamlf 3 1 1 0 Rodney p 0 0 0 0 HRndn p 0 0 0 0 ARussll ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 38 8 11 8 Totals 33 5 8 5 Chicago 2 40 000 200 8 SI. Louis 0 00 000 500 5 E— Wacha(3).DP— Chicago2.LOB— Chicago7, St. Louis7.28 A.Jackson(3), St.Castro (17), J.Baez

2(2) Mcarpenter (34) G G arcia (4) 38 Denorfia (1), Piscotty(4). HR St.castro (7), Rizzo(29), Gri› chuk (1 6).

American League

Tigers 8, Rays7 (13 inn.j

Rangers 9,Mariners6

DETROIT Rajai Davis lifted De› troit with a sacrifice fly in the 13th SEATTLE Cole Hamelsshook inning after he dropped aroutine off a line drive that deflected off his fly ball in jaw, andTexas homered four times Bay to tie.the ninth to allow Tampa to win. Mitch Moreland, Shin-Soo Choo andRougned Odorconnect› TampaBay Detroit ab r hbi ed off Seattle starter TaijuanWalk› G uyerlf 2ab0r0hbi 0 Gosecf 6 2 2 0 er, who lasted just three innings. Sizemrph-If 4 1 1 1 Kinsler2b 6 1 1 0

Athletics 4,Astros0

Meta 8, Nationais7

OAKLAND,Calif. Sonny Gray outpitched close friend Scott Kazmir, andOakland spoiled the former A’s lefty’s return to the O.co Coliseum.

WASHINGTON Kirk Nieuwen› huis hit a tiebreaking, pinch-hit homer in the eighth inning off Jonathan Papelbon, andNewYork rallied from a six-run deficit to extend its lead in the NLEast to six games.

Houston

IP H R Chicago HammelW,8-6 6 4 3 1-3 1 2 Grimm 1-3 0 0 Richard 1-3 2 0 Strop Rodney H,1 1 0 0 H.RondonS,27-31 1 1 0 St. Louis WachaL15-5 4 6 6 Viganueva 3 4 2 Cishek 1 0 0 Siegrist 1 1 0 Hammelpitchedto 3baters in the7th. HBP byGrimm(Jay). T 3:07. A 42,206(45,399).

E R BBSO 3 2 0 0 0 0

4 0 0 1 0 0

6 1 0 1 2 2

6 3

2

2 0 0 0 0 1

3 1 1

Oakland ab r hbi ab r hbi S pringrrf 4 0 1 0 Burnscf 4 2 2 1 Pirates 7, Reds 3 NewYork Washington Altuve2b 4 0 0 0 Canha1b 4 1 2 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi Mahtokrf 3 2 1 0 Micarr1b 5 1 2 0 Correass 4 0 0 0 Lawrie2b 4 0 0 0 G rndrsrf 3 1 1 1 Werthlf 5 0 2 0 CINCINNATI Andrew Mc› Texas Seattle N avaph-rf 2 0 1 1 JMrtnzrf 5 2 1 2 CGomzcf 4 0 1 0 Valenci3b 4 0 1 0 Cespdscf 5 1 1 3 Rendon2b 5 1 2 1 Cutchen hit a three-run homer, ab r hbi ab r hbi Longori3b 4 0 2 3 Cstgnsdh 6 0 2 0 Lowrie3b 4 0 0 0 BButlerdh 4 0 3 0 DnMrp2b 4 0 0 0 Harperrf 4 0 0 0 Venalecf 4 1 2 1 KMartess 5 0 0 1 Forsyth2b 5 1 1 1 JMccnc 5 1 2 1 Gattisdh 3 0 0 0 Pheglyc 4 0 0 0 and left-hander Francisco Liriano DWrght3b 4 2 2 1 YEscor3b 5 2 3 0 Choorf 3 1 1 3 KSeagr3b 4 0 1 1 Acarerss 6 0 1 0 DMchdss 2 0 0 0 Valuen1b 3 0 1 0 Reddckrf 3 0 0 0 Duda1b 3 0 0 1 CRonsn1b 3 1 2 1 Fielderdh 4 0 1 0 SRomrrf 3 1 0 0 TBckh dh 3 0 1 1 Tycllns ph 1 0 0 0 Congerc 3 0 1 0 Smlnsklf 2 0 0 0 pitched six shutout innings as he dArnadc 4 0 1 0 Dsmndss 3 1 1 1 finally beat Cincinnati on his 11th Albertopr-dh 0 1 0 0 Cano2b 4 1 1 2 Jasoph-dh 2 0 0 0 JoWilsn3b 1 0 0 0 Mrsncklf 2 0 0 0 Gentry lf 0 0 0 0 Confortlf 3 1 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 B eltre3b 5 0 0 0 Trumolf 4 1 2 0 JButlerph-dh1 0 0 0 JMarteph-3b 1 0 0 0 Tuckerph-If 1 0 1 0 Semienss 2 1 0 0 Clip prdp 0 0 0 0 WRamsc 4 0 0 0 career try. Morlnd1b 5 1 1 1 Morrsn1b 4 1 1 0 Shaff erfb 6 0 1 0 AnRmn3b-ss 5 0 2 2 Totals 32 0 5 0 Totals 3 1 4 8 4 Andrus ss 5 1 0 1 JMontr dh 4 2 2 1 Kiermrcf 4 2 1 0 RDavislf 5 1 2 2 Houston 0 00 000 000 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 MTaylrcf 3 2 1 1 4 WFlorsss 4 1 1 1 Zmrmnp 1 0 0 0 Odor2b 4 2 1 2 OMallycf 2 0 0 1 Arenciic 3 1 2 0 Oakland 001 030 ggx Pittsburgh Cincinnati G allolf 4 2 2 1 Sucrec 3 0 2 0 Rivera c 0 0 0 0 LOB— Houston7,Oakland5.28— C.Gomez(8). Teladass 0 0 0 0 Thrntnp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Harveyp 2 0 0 0 TTurnrph 1 0 0 0 Stubbslf 0 0 0 0 BMillerph 1 0 0 0 Loney ph 1 0 1 0 HR Burns(4), Canha(14). SB Semien(11). GPolncrf 5 2 2 1 Bourgscf 4 1 0 0 Gimenzc 3 0 0 0 Frnkln pr 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Goeddlp 0 0 0 0 Treinenp 0 0 0 0 SMartelf 5 1 3 0 Suarezss 5 0 1 2 KJhnsn ph 0 0 0 0 Rivero p 0 0 0 0 Totals 37 9 8 9 Totals 3 4 6 9 6 M ailec 2 0 0 0 Houston Mcctchcf 4 1 1 3 Votto1b 3 0 0 0 Texas 0 13 201 011 9 Totals 4 8 7 137 Totals 4 8 8 147 KazmirL,7-10 6 7 4 4 2 3 Uribeph 0 1 0 0 Storenp 0 0 0 0 ArRmr1b 4 0 0 0 Phillips2b 4 0 2 0 ss 1 0 0 0 Seattle 0 01 000 320 6 Tampa Bay 000 104 101 000 0 7 Quags 1 0 0 0 0 2 A.Reed p 0 0 0 0 Espinos SRdrgz1b 1 0 1 1 Frazier3b 4 0 0 0 E K.Seage Detroit 001 004 110 000 1 8 J.Fields 1 1 0 0 0 2 Niwnhs ph-If 1 1 1 1 1 5), TWa l k er(4). DP T e xa s 1 . L O B › K ang3b 5 2 2 1 Brucerf 4 1 2 0 r( Texas7,Seattle4.28 Venable(2),Morrison(14),Sucre Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. Oakland Totals 3 3 8 7 8 Totals 3 57 11 4 N Walkr2b 4 0 0 0 Duvalllf 1 0 0 0 E Rivera(11), Bellatti (1), R.D avis (2). DP De› S.GrayW,13-7 7 5 0 0 2 4 N ew York 010 0 0 0 610 8 JHrrsn2b 1 0 0 0 Contrrsp 0 0 0 0 (3). HRChoo(17), Moreland(19), Odor(12),Galo (6), troit 2. LOB Tampa Bay8, Detroit 8. 28 Arencibia Dull 2 0 0 0 0 1 W ashington 21 0 0 0 4 000 7 Cervellic 2 0 0 0 Brnhrtph 1 0 0 0 Cano(15).SB Venable(3). SF O’Malley. E Cespedes(2). DP NewYork 1, Washington Stewart c 0 0 0 0 Balestrp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO 3). 3B Mahtook(1). HR J.Martinez (36), R.Davis T 2:33. A 11,364(35,067). Texas 7). CS Kiermaier (4), Castelanos (3). S J.Marte, 1.LOB— New York5,Washington6.28— Cespedes Mercerss 3 0 0 0 Matthsp 0 0 0 0 HamelsW,3-1 7 8 4 4 1 3 An.Romi ne.SF— Longoria2,R.Davis. (9), Werth(14). 38 Granderson(2). HR D.Wright Lirianop 3 1 2 0 DJssJrph 1 0 0 0 National League Diekman 0 1 2 2 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO (3), Nieuw enhuis (4). S Desmond, Zimmermann. JHughsp 0 0 0 0 B.Penac 4 0 2 0 KelaH,18 1 0 0 0 0 2 TampaBay IP H R E R BBSO PAlvrzph 1 0 0 0 Rlglessp 1 0 0 0 Sh.Togeson S,31-33 1 0 0 0 0 2 E.Ramirez New York Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 JsSmthp 0 0 0 0 Giants 6,Diamondbacks2 51-3 8 7 7 2 6 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Negronph-If 1 0 0 0 Seattle Andriese Harvey 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Camlnrp 0 0 0 0 Schmkrlf 2 1 1 1 TWalkerL,10-8 3 6 6 5 0 2 Colome BS,1-1 Goeddel J.Ramirez 2 0 0 0 1 0 Karns PHOENIX Tim Hudson pitched A.Reed W,3-2 1 1 0 0 0 2 Totals 38 7 11 6 Totals 35 3 8 3 Jo.Ramirez 1-3 1 1 1 2 1 B.Gome s ClippardH,6 1 0 0 0 0 2 P ittsburgh 005 0 0 0 011 7 six effective innings in his return Guaipe 12-3 0 0 0 0 2 Bellatti L,2-1 FamiliaS,38-43 1 1 0 0 1 0 C incinnati 000 0 0 0 003 3 to the rotation and hit his first Zych 1 1 1 1 0 0 Detroit Washington E Bourgeois (2). LOB Pittsburgh8, Cincinnati Beimel 1-3 0 1 0 1 0 Boyd 5 3 3 3 2 5 homer in two seasons to leadSan Zimmermann 52 - 3 3 1 1 1 6 9. 28 G.Polanco (28), S.Marte(27), S.Rodriguez Kensing 23 0 0 0 0 1 Alburquerque 1 - 3 3 2 2 0 0 ThorntonH,18 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 10), Kang(23), Liriano(2), Schum aker (15). 3B› TWalkerpitchedto2 batters inthe4th. Gorzelanny 1 1 0 0 0 2 Francisco. Treinen 2-3 2 3 3 1 0 uarez(2). HR Mccutchen(21), Kang(14). Diekman pitchedto 2battersin the8th. N.Feliz 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 Rivero 0 0 2 2 2 0 IP H R E R BBSO HBP byJ.Ramirez(Venable), byJo.Ramirez(Odor). B.Hardy 0 1 0 0 0 0 San Francisco A r izona StorenBS,5-34 1- 3 1 1 1 3 0 Pittsburgh WP Beimel. A.Wilson 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi PapelbonL,3-2 2 1 1 1 0 1 LirianoW,10-7 6 3 0 0 1 10 T 3:12. A 13,389(47,574). B.RondonBS,2-6 1 1 1 1 2 1 Pagan cf 5 1 1 0 Pollock cf 4 0 0 0 Riveropitchedto 2 batters inthe7th. J.Hughes 1 2 0 0 0 1 Krol 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Panik2b 3 2 2 2 Gosseln2b 4 0 0 0 WP Storen. Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 0 VerHage n 21-3 1 0 0 0 2 MDufly3b 5 1 1 1 Gldsch1b 4 1 1 0 T 3:20.A 27,507(41,341). 2-3 2 3 3 1 1 BlueJays5, RedSox1(10 inn.) K.RyanW,2-3 1 1 - 3 1 0 0 0 0 P oseyc 4 0 1 0 DPerltlf 4 0 1 0 Melancon 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Caminero Boydpitchedto2 batters inthe6th. Byrdrf 4 0 0 0 Sltlmchc 3 1 2 1 Padres 2, Rockies1 Cincinnati BOSTON Troy Tulowitzki sin› B.Hardypitchedto 1batterin the7th. Belt1b 3 0 1 1 JaLam3b 2 0 0 1 R .lglesias L3-7 3 6 5 5 1 4 E.Ramirez pitchedto 3battersin the6th. Bcrwfrss 2 0 0 0 Tomas rf 3 0 0 0 gled in the go-ahead run off Alexi Andriese Jos.Smith 2 1 0 0 0 2 pitchedto 1batterin the6th. SAN DIEGO Brett Wallace’ s Adrianzss 2 0 0 0 Owingsss 3 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 3 Ogando to trigger a four-run 10th HBP by Colome (J.Mccann). WP Colome 2, GBlanclf 4 1 1 1 ChAndrp 0 0 0 0 fielder’s choice grounder drove in Contreras Balester 1 1 1 1 1 1 Karns.Balk B.Gomes,Alburquerque. THudsnp 3 1 2 1 Brachop 0 0 0 0 inning that lifted Toronto. Mattheus 1 2 1 1 1 1 the winning run in the bottom of T 5:03.A 26,526 (41,574). Osichp 0 0 0 0MtRynlp 0 0 0 0 H BP by Li r i a no (Votto, Duval l). PB B.Pena. S trcklnp 0 0 0 0 Britoph 1 0 1 0 the ninth to lift San Diego. Toronto Boston Balk R.lglesias. Romop 0 0 0 0 Cgmntrp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi White Sox 7, indians4 T 3:19. A 16,151(42,319). DeAzaph 1 0 0 0 Romakph 1 0 0 0 R everelf 1 1 0 0 Bettscf 4 0 1 0 Colorado San Diego Casillap 0 0 0 0 Hesslerp 0 0 0 0 Smoakph 1 0 0 0 Pedroia2b 4 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi CHICAGO— RobBrantlysmacked Burgosp 0 0 0 0 Interleague Carrerlf 1 0 0 0 Rutledg2b 0 0 0 0 Blckmncf 4 0 0 0 Myers1b 4 1 1 1 Inciartph 1 0 0 0 a three-run homerfor his first Dnldsn 3b 4 1 1 0 Bogarts ss 3 0 0 0 Reyesss 4 0 0 0 Solarte3b 4 0 2 0 DHrndzp 0 0 0 0 B autistrf 4 0 0 0 Ortizdh 3 0 0 0 American League C Gnzl z rf 3 0 0 0 Kemprf 4 0 1 0 hit to lift Chicago. Totals 3 6 6 9 6 Totals 3 02 5 2 A renad3b 4 1 1 1 Uptonlf 3 0 1 0 Dodgers 6,Angels4 Encrncdh 3 0 0 1 Rcastgpr-dh 0 0 0 0 San Francisco 005 000 001 6 Pompypr-dh 0 1 0 0 TShaw1b 4 1 1 1 Mornea1b 3 0 1 0 Gyorkoss 3 0 1 0 Cleveland Chicago Arizona 000 100 100 2 Tlwtzkss 4 1 2 1 Sandovl3b 4 0 1 0 LeMahi2b 3 0 1 0 DeNrrsc 3 0 0 0 ANAHEIM, Calif. Clayton Ker› ab r hbi ab r hbi LOB— San Francisco 6,Arizona 2.28— Panik Paulsnlf 3 0 0 0 Spngnr2b 4 1 1 0 C olaell1b 4 1 2 1 B.Holtlf 4 0 0 0 K ipnis2b 5 0 0 0 Eatoncf 5 0 0 0 (27), Belt(31). HR Panik (8), G.Blanco(5), THud› G arneac 2 0 0 0 Reap shaw won his eighth consecutive Pillarcf 4 0 1 1 Swihartc 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Avilesss-rf 5 1 3 1 AIRmrzss 4 2 2 0 son (1), Sal t al a m ac chi a (6). SF Ja .L am b. Pnngtn2b 5 0 0 0 BrdlyJrrf 3 0 0 0 J.Grayp 2 0 0 0 UptnJrph 1 0 0 0 decision, and Justin Ruggiano hit Brantlylf 4 1 1 2 Abreu1b 4 2 3 2 IP H R E R BBSO Germnp 0 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 T holec 2 0 0 0 Raburnrf 3 0 0 0 Mecarrlf 3 0 0 0 a leadoff homer for the LosAnge› San Francisco RuMrtn ph-c 1 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Lindorph-ss 1 0 0 0 AvGarcdh 4 1 2 0 4 1 1 0 4 CDckrsph 1 0 0 0 Barmesph 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 4 5 6 4 Totals 3 31 4 1 C Santn1b 2 0 1 0 TrThmrf 3 1 2 2 THudsonW,7-8 6 les Dodgers in their 13th victory in 5 Osich 23 1 1 1 0 1 Toronto 100 000 000 4 Mcastrp 0 0 0 0 Jnkwskcf 2 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 0 0 0 Brantlyc 3 1 1 3 15 games. 1 S trickland H,16 13 0 0 0 0 1 Boston 010 000 000 0 Logan p 0 0 0 0 Wallacph 1 0 0 1 Jhnsndh 4 0 1 0 Olt3b 4 0 0 0 RornoH3 ,0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 2 9 1 3 1 Totals 3 02 7 2 E Swihart (3). DP Boston2. LOB Toronto 9, C Urshel 3b a 3 0 0 0 CSnchz 2b 3 0 1 0 (N) Los Angeles (A) Casiga 1 0 0 0 0 2 C olorado Boston4.28 Colabello (17), Pedroia (16),Sandoval JRmrzph 1 1 1 1 000 0 0 0 001 1 LosAngeles ab r hbi Arizona (25). 38 Donaldson(2). HR TShaw(9). SB Re› M rtnzcf 4 1 1 0 S an Diego 0 0 0 0 0 1 001 2 Rugginlf 5ab1 r2hbi 1 Calhonrf 5 1 2 1 L6-6 2 5 5 5 1 3 Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. vere(3),Bautista 2(8), Encarnacion(2). CS R.cas› Totals 3 6 4 8 4 Totals 3 37 117 Ch.Anderson 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 tillo (3). SF Pillar. DP Colorado1, SanDiego1. LOB Colorado4, U tley2b 5 0 1 0 Troutcf 2 0 0 0 Cle v eland 00 0 0 1 0 021 4 Bracho IP H R E R BBSO Chicago Mat.Reynold s 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 SanDiego9. 28 Solarte 2 (30), Spangenberg(14). JuTrnr3b 3 0 0 0 Pulolsdh 4 0 0 0 7 031 010 20x AGnzlz1b 3 1 1 0 Cron1b 4 0 0 0 Toronto Collmenter 2 1 0 0 1 2 HR A renado (37),M yers (6). S Rea, Barmes. E Olt (1). LOB Cleveland7, Chicago6. 28› Dickey 6 4 1 1 1 4 Aviles (9), M.Martinez(1), AI.Ram 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO VnSlykrf 4 1 1 0 Aybarss 4 2 1 0 irez (27), Abreu Hessler Ethierph-rf 1 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 0 3 1 Cecil 11-3 0 0 0 0 3 (31). HRBrantley (13), Jo.Ramirez(3), Abreu(26), Burgos 12-3 1 0 0 0 1 Colorado CSeagrss 3 1 2 1 Cowartpr 0 1 0 0 Lowe 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Brantly(1). SB C.Sanchez(2). CS C.Sanchez(2). D.Hernandez 1 1 1 1 0 1 J.Gray E llisc 4 0 0 1 Victornlf 3 0 0 0 Aa.Sanchez W,7-5 1 0 0 0 1 0 pitched to5 batters inthe3rd. Germen IP H R E R BBSO Ch.Anderson Guerrrdh 1 1 0 0 DvMrpph 1 0 0 0 Osuna 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cleveland HBP byCollmenter (Panik). Brothers Crwfrdph-dh 2 1 0 1 lannettc 3 0 0 0 Boston T 2: 4 9. A 1 8,683 (48,51 9). M.castro CarrascoL,12-10 22-3 4 4 4 3 5 Heiseycf 2 0 0 1 Joyceph 0 0 0 0 Owens 51-3 3 1 1 4 3 LoganL,0-3 Gi.Soto 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 Pedrsnph-cf 1 0 0 0 Fthrstn2b 2 0 0 0 Machi 1 0 0 0 0 0 A.Adams San Diego 2-3 3 1 1 0 1 Marlins 6, Brewers 4 Layne 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Crockett DeJess ph 1 0 0 1 Rea 7 2 0 0 3 4 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 No.Ramirez 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 McAllister QuackenbushH,2 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 6 7 5 Totals 3 34 6 3 1 1 0 0 0 1 Tazawa 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 R.Webb Los Angeles (N) 101 004 000 6 MIAMI J.T. Real m uto hit two K imbrel W, 2 -2 BS , 3 -391 1 1 1 0 2 1 3 2 2 0 0 RossJr. 1 0 0 0 0 1 Floyd LosAngeles(A) 100 000 102 4 T 2:40.A 19,112 (41,164). 1 0 0 0 1 1 home runs, including an in› A.OgandoL,2-1 1 3 4 4 1 1 E C.Seager2(2), lannetta (3). DP LosAngeles side-the-parker, to lead Mi a mi. HBP byOwens(Revere, Tulowitzki), by No.Ramirez Chicago (N) 2. LOBLosAngeles (N) 8, LosAngeles (A)6. odonW,7-6 7 5 1 1 1 8 Phiiiies 5, Braves0 (Encarnacion). WP Owens2,A.ogando. Balk Ow› R 2B Ruggiano(2), C.Seager(4), Aybar(22), Freese N.Jones 1 2 2 2 1 1 ens,A.Ogando. (21). HRRuggiano(2), Calhoun(23). SB JuTurn› Milwaukee Miami Duke 2-3 1 1 1 0 2 T 3:23. A 33,432(37,673). PHILADELPHIA Odubel Herrera er (4),C.crawford(9). SF Heisey. ab r hbi ab r hbi Dav.Robertson 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Segurass 5 0 3 0 DGordn2b 5 2 2 1 WP Carrasco. hit a three-run homer to leadPhil› LosAngeles(N) IP H R E R BBSO L ucroyc 5 0 0 0 Yelichlf 2 1 1 0 T 2:54.A 11,990 (40,615). Orioies 2, yankees1 adelphia, which handedAtlanta its KershawW,13-6 7 4 2 1 2 8 Braunrf 5 1 3 0 Prado3b 3 0 1 1 Nicasio 1 0 0 0 1 0 K Davislf 3 0 1 0 Bour1b 3 0 1 2 20th loss in the past 22 games. NEW YORK Chris Davis led off Royais 4, Twins 2 P.Baez 0 2 2 2 0 0 JRogrs1b 5 2 2 1 Ozunacf 4 0 1 0 Jansen S,31-33 1 0 0 0 1 1 DoSntncf 3 1 2 2 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 the ninth inning with his major Atlanta Philadelphia L os Ang eles (A) Eric HPerez3b 2 0 0 0 Realmtc 4 2 2 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi league-leading 41st home run, and KANSAS CITY, Mo. HeaneyL6-3 5 6 5 5 3 6 Lindph 1 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 3 1 0 0 Markksrl 4 0 1 0 CHrndz2b 4 2 2 0 Bedrosian 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Baltimore won for just their fourth Hosmer hit a three-run double in Sardins2b 1 0 0 0 Rolasss 1 0 0 0 Olivera3b 3 0 1 0 OHerrrcf 3 1 2 3 2-3 0 1 0 0 1 the first inning, and KansasCity W.Wright EHerrr2b-3b 5 0 2 1 DSolanss 3 0 1 0 time in19 games. FFrmn1b 4 0 0 0 Altherrrf-If 3 0 1 0 J.Alvarez 1 1 0 0 0 0 Jngmnp 2 0 0 0 Conleyp 1 0 0 0 snapped afour-game skid. Przynsc 4 0 2 0 Howard1b 4 0 0 0 or.Rasmus 2 0 0 0 2 2 CJimnzp 0 0 0 0 Brrclghp 0 0 0 0 Swisherlf 3 0 1 0 ABlancss-3b 3 1 2 0 C Baltimore NewYork Heaneypitchedto 3batters in the6th. SPetrsn ph 1 0 0 0 McGeh ph 1 0 0 0 Cnghmpr-If 0 0 0 0 Bogsvclf 2 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Minnesota KansasCity Lohsep 0 0 0 0 BMorrsp 0 0 0 0 JPetrsn2b 4 0 0 0 Sweenyph-If 1 0 0 0 PBaezpitched to 2batters inthe9th. Reimldlf 4 0 0 0 Ellsurycf 4 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi HBP by CorRasmus (Ju.Turner). WP Heaney. Gennett ph 0 0 0 0 Dunn p 0 0 0 0 ASmnsss 4 0 10 Gilesp 0 0 0 0 GParracf 4 0 1 0 Beltranrf 4 0 1 0 A.Hicksrf 4 0 2 0 Zobrist2b 4 1 1 0 alk Kershaw. Maldndph 1 0 0 0 Gillespicf 0 0 0 0 B ourncf 3 0 1 0 Ruppc 3 0 0 0 B MMchd3b 4 0 1 0 BMccnc 3 0 1 0 Dozier2b 3 1 1 1 AGordnlf 4 1 3 0 T 3:12. A 41,086(45,957). Knebelp 0 0 0 0 Weberp 2 0 0 0 Asche3b 2 0 0 0 C.Davisrf 3 1 1 1 ARdrgzdh 4 1 2 1 Mauer1b 4 0 2 1 JDysonlf 0 0 0 0 Dcastrph 1 0 0 0 Galvisss 1 0 0 0 P aredsdh 4 0 2 0 Bird1b 4 0 0 0 Plouff e3b 4 0 0 0 Lcaincf 3 1 0 0 Jeffrssp 0 0 0 0 Totals 39 4 134 Totals 3 0 6 9 6 M cKrhp 0 0 0 0 Nolap 2000 Schoop2b 4 0 1 0 CYounglf 3 0 0 0 ERosarlf 4 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 4 1 1 3 History M ilwaukee 0 2 0 0 0 0 200 4 Burawap 0 0 0 0 LuGarcp 0 0 0 0 Wietersc 4 0 2 0 Gregrsss 4 0 0 0 TrHntrdh 3 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 3 0 1 1 0 Miami 111 300 00x THIS DATE IN BASEBALL D etwilrp 0 0 0 0 Francrrf 1 1 1 0 JHardyss 4 0 0 0 Drew2b 3 0 0 0 EdEscrss 3 0 0 0 Mostks3b 2 0 0 0 DP Milwaukee 1, Miami 1. LOB Milwaukee Ciriacoph 1 0 0 0 Flahrly1b 3 1 1 1 Headlyph 1 0 0 0 Hrmnnc 2 0 0 0 SrPerezc 3 0 0 0 › Sept. 9 B.Ryan3b 3 0 1 0 D aSntnph 1 0 0 0 Ries rf 3 0 0 0 13, Miami7.28 D.Gordon (20), Ozuna (23). HR Totals 33 0 7 0 Totals 2 9 5 9 4 (5), Realmuto 2 (9). SB Segura (22), Atlanta 1014 GeorgeDavis of the BostonBraves T otals 3 4 2 9 2 Totals 3 31 6 1 Fryerc 0 0 0 0 Orlandrf 0 0 0 0 Do.Santana 0 00 000 000 0 D.Gordon 2 (50), Ye l i c h (15). S C on ley , Gi f f e sp i e . pitched a 7-0 no-hi t ter againstthePhiladelphiaPhil› B altimore 000 0 0 1 001 2 Buxtoncf 3 1 1 0 AEscorss 3 0 0 0 Philadelphia 00 0 110 03x 6 IP H R E R BBSO E Rupp (4). DP Atlanta 3, Philadelphia 1. lies in the secondgameof a doubleheader. Davis’ N ew York 000 0 0 1 000 1 Totals 31 2 6 2 Totals 2 9 4 6 4 E Wieters (4). DP NewYork 2. LOB Balti› M innesota LOB Atlanta 9, Philadelphia 2. 28 C.Hernandez no-hitterwasthefirst thrownat FenwayPark. 0 0 2 0 0 0 000 2 Milwaukee 1966 SandyKoufaxofthe LosAngelesDodg› Jungmann L,9-6 32-3 7 6 6 2 3 (19). 3B A.Blanco (3). HR O.Herrera (8). SB› more 6,Ne wYork7.2B Wieters(12). HR C.Davis Kansas City 4 0 0 0 0 0 Ogx 4 11-3 0 0 0 3 0 DP Minnesota 1, KansasCity 2. LOB Min› C.Jimenez ers tossed hisfourth no-hitter, aperfect game, against Bourn(3). CS O.Herrera(7). (41), Flaherty (8),A.Rodriguez(30). CS Paredes(4). Lohse 1 0 0 0 0 1 the Cubs. Koufaxfanned14in the1-0 victory IP H R E R BBSO nesota3, Kansas City 3. 28 Mauer (27), A.Gordon IP H R E R BBSO Chicago Knebel 1 1 0 0 0 1 while Cubs pitcherBobHendley allowedonehit a Baltimore Atlanta (16), Hosme r(28),K.Morales(39). SB Buxton(2). 1 1 0 0 0 0 Gausman 5 6 1 1 1 5 IP H R E R BBSO Jeffress Weber L,0-1 6 4 2 2 1 2 doublebyLouJohnson. 21-3 0 0 0 1 1 Minnesota Miami 1992 RobinYountbecamethe17th playerto McFarland McKirahan 13 2 0 0 0 1 O’DayW,6-2 2 3- 0 0 0 0 0 GibsonL,9-10 8 Conley 4 1-3 8 2 2 3 7 6 4 4 2 4 Burawa 1 3 3 3 1 1 reach3,000hits inthe MilwaukeeBrewers’ 5-4lossto BarracloughW,2-0 12-3 0 0 0 0 4 Detwiler Indians. Yount singledto right center off BrittonS,31-34 1 0 0 0 0 1 KansasCity 23 0 0 0 0 0 the Cleveland 23 3 2 2 1 1 NewYork Volquez W,13-7 7 6 2 2 0 3 BMorris Philadelphia Cleveland’Jose s Mesain theseventhinning. 1998 TheNewYorkYankeesclinched the AL Tanaka 8 6 1 1 1 10 W.DavisH,17 1 0 0 0 0 1 DunnH,22 1 1 0 0 1 2 NolaW,6-2 7 6 0 0 1 7 ShreveL,6-2 1 3 1 1 0 1 G.HollandS,30-34 1 0 0 0 0 0 A.Ramos S,24-30 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 Lu.GarciaH,15 2- 3 1 0 0 1 1 Easttitle,theearliest inALhistory, beating theBoston WP Jeffress. Gausman pitchedto 1 batter in the6th. HBP byVolquez(Dozier). Giles S,12-15 11 - 3 0 0 0 1 2 Red Sox7-5. TheYankees improved to 102-41› 20~/ rgamesaheadofsecond-placeBoston. T 2:58. A 30,785(49,638). T 2:29.A 31,834 (37,903). T 3:37. A 14,958(37,442). T 230.A 15610(43651).

I)›


C4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

Short-handed Bulldogsscorelate to tie Hawks Bulletin staff report

the scoring in the 14th minute, half, Jesus Egoavil, Alex San› ika Olivera scored a goal in

CULVER A David Guti› errez hat trick was not enough

Nick Sperber made it 2-0 with

chez, Kevin Goicochea and

both halves to lead the White

an assist from freshman Jes› Jose Romero each scored. Er› Buffaloes (2-1). The Panthers for Culver. Good thing there se Lomas. Stalberg netted his nesto Chavez scored the lone dropped to 0-2-1 with their was still time for another. first goal in the 36th minute, goal for the Panthers (0-2) in second straight loss. Gutierrez scored his fourth thentheseniorforward scored the 70th minute. Volleyball goal with 30 seconds left in a again in the 56th minute to Girls soccer nonconference boys s occer make it 4-0. Joey Brant and Sisters 3, Bend 1: Allie match ’IIIesday, helping the T.J. Smith added second-half Bend 3, Grants Pass 1: Spear had 16 kills and 16 digs Bulldogs salvage a 4-4 draw goals for the Class 5A Ravens GRANTS PASS Jasmine as the Outlaws remained un› with La Pine. (1-1-1). The match was the C hapman scored twice o n defeated, defeating Bend on Despite grabbing a 1-0 lead season opener for 4A Crook penalty kicks for the Lava the road, 25-16, 27-29, 25-18, midway through the first half, County (0-1-0). Bears, who came back from 25-12. JessieBrigham chipped the Hawks (0-1-1) had to over› Bend 3, Grants Pass 1: a goal down. Ch in with 26 digs and six aces come a 3-2 halftime deficit. GRANTS PASS The Lava first goal, in the 39th minute, for Sisters, Hawley Harrer Consecutive goals by Tristan Bears built a 3-0 lead on the evened things up l-l less than had 19 assists, and Alex Hart›

apman’s

Wilson in the 73rd and 78th

way to their first road victo›

minutes, both assisted by Ian ry of the season. Bend’s Kelly Johnson, gave La Pine a 4-3 Gieberopened the scoring in lead, and it seemed the Hawks

the 30th minute on an assist

had completedthe comeback

by Chance Flammang.Eight

win. But Gutierrez scored his

m inutes later, I a n

L e vine

scored for the Lava Bears (2› fourth and final goal late in the 0-1). In the second half, Flam› contestto force the draw for mang recorded his second as› Culver (0-2-1), which played sist of the night on a Gustavo the entire match with only 10 Loza goal. players. Madras 11, Redmond 1: Trey Plamondon and Ian MADRAS The White Buf› Johnson also scored for La faloesstruck early and often Pine. as they raced to an ll-l victo› Also on ZIIesday: ry over the Panthers. Miguel Alonso scored the first goal of Boyssoccer the game in the second min› Ridgeview 6, Crook Coun› ute and notched a hat trick by

10 minutes after the Lady Cav› ford added 16 assists. The

ers grabbed a one-goal lead. Lava Bears were led by Katie Bend’s Tayla Wheeler was Reed with nine kills and four fouled inside the penalty area blocks, Kaci Cox with eight in the 74th minute, and Chap› kills and two aces, and Cam› man gave the Bears (2-0-1) bree Scott with five kills and the lead for good with another five blocks. successful penalty kick. Just Trinity Lutheran 3, Mitchell/ a few minutes later, Wheeler Spray 0:MITCHELL Emily found Amidee Colleknon for

a goal. Summit 2, Westview 0:

23, 25-10 nonconference road win. Mariah Murphy had six kills for Trinity, and Allison in as many games to open the Jorge had 23 assists. season. Christina E dwards Burns 3, La Pine 0: BURNS had her hand in both Summit The Hawks lost the non› goals, scoring early in the sec› conference match, 25-12, 25-8, PORTLAND The Storm (3› 0) recorded their third shutout

ond half off a Megan Cornett

assist and then finding Piper Stalberg scored a goal in each Giovanni Aguilar and Cesar Flannery 13 minutes later for half to lead the host Ravens to Aguirre also scored in the first the second goal. their first win of the season. half to put Madras (2-0-1) up Madras 2, Redmond 0: After Jonathan Irby opened 7-0 at halftime. In the second REDMOND Freshman Er› ty 0: REDMOND

Malachi

Eidler had 11 kills to lead the Saints of Bend to a 25-18, 25›

the 19th minute. Alex Diaz,

25-12. North Lake 3, Gilchrist 0: SILVER LAKE The Griz› z lies were swept i n t h e i r

Mountain Valley L e ague opener, 25-19, 25-21, 25-14.

The Associated Press file photo

Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio says Saturday’s game against Oregon’s isn’t a must-win, but the team that loses will

have work to do tomake upground.

Ducks

brown-out.

Continued from C1 It is easily the biggest game of this week nationally and the Saturday home for ESPN’s "GameDay" crew.

that loss and the fact that

Add the incentive from

And in the second year of the

um since No. 4 Wisconsin in 2011 a thrilling prime-time win for the Spartans with

pants Oregon and Ohio State

canlp.

last year, and Notre Dame in

This game is "definitely up there" with any game the Spartans have played in any venue in the past few years, senior quarterback Connor Cook said. Some might also say it is an unnecessary risk for both teams, even though the College Football Playoff committee is supposed to take schedule strength into

College Football Playoff, it is "GameDay" on hand and going to elevate one of these this looks bigger. "They were somewhere teams and put the other in catch-up mode. we tried to get last year," It is what Michigan State Michigan State senior safety coach Mark Dantoniohad in R.J. Williamson said of the mind when he made "reach Ducks. "They beat us along higher" his team’s motto this with Ohio State, those two season. The Spartans have teams beat us and ended to lift themselves past the up playing for the national Ducks to put some force be› championship. If we want to hind those words. get where we need to go, then "We’ ve lost three games we need to take this game out of the last 30, and we seriously. Not that we don’ t know the teams we’ ve lost take any other game seri› to," Dantonio said, referring ous, but this is a big one and to national title game partici› it’s been on my mind since 2013. "Our M.O. was to try to

Williams

Williams, left,

Continued from C1

and Venus

Serena

But fittingly, it ended with

a purely sincere and unforced gesture, when the two siblings

Williams switch sides during their

met at the net. As Serena met

U.S. Open

her with a grimace, Venus

quarterfi› nal match Tuesday night in New York.

Williams put one arm around

her younger and better sister, and then she put another arm around her, for a full familial embrace. It brought the larg› est applause of the night from

."-ir7.

the sellout crowd of 23,771.

Jason Decrow /

think we all understand that.

ramifications that go beyond this game later on down the line." The Spartans are familiar with big games, and winning big games. Michigan State has actually won three of its past four against top-five

play a sister, doubles partner and lifelong roommate? Sere› na said frankly after advanc› draw I don’t want to play. And

not only because she’s my sis› ter." It was because Venus was a seven-time winner of Grand Slam titles who knew her ev›

ery mental and physical hab› it. They had trained together daily since they were small children, and they share a home together. "I’m playing, for me, the best player in the tournament,

and that’s never easy," Sere› na said. "She’s beaten me so many times. I’ ve taken a lot

of losses off her more than anybody. She’s a player that

Djokovicreachessemisfor 9thstraight year NEW YORK Novak Djokovic’s U.S. Openquarterfinal was suddenly tied at asetapiece, and hetore off his shirt as he headed to the sideline. Hesat, halfheartedly tried to smash his racket, then began screaming. Gathering himself after getting pushedaround abit by an op› ponent with an unconventional style, Djokovic wound upreaching the semifinals at Flushing Meadows for the ninth consecutive year with a 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (2) victory over 18th-seededFeliciano Lopez that finished a little after 1 a.m.Eastern this morning. For all of that successgetting to the closing days, though, Djokovic has one championship to show for it, in 2011. His other eight major titles came ateither theAustralian Openor Wimbledon. On Friday, hewill take on defending champion Marin Cilic, who beat19th-seeded Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France 6-4, 6-4, 3-6, 6-7 (3), 6-4 earlier Tuesday. — The Associated Press

knows how to w i n , k n ows

how to beat me and knows my weaknesses better than anyone. So it’s not an easy match at all."

But this was why they had surrendered their childhoods

a match like this was the end game, the final prize. "We trained all our lives to be on

this court," Serena said af› terward. They began playing tennis in public at the ages of

8 and 10, respectively, trum› peted by their father Richard

as "Cinderellas of the ghet› to," prodigies from a public park in Compton, California, hitting with dead balls on a

cracked court.Shortly after Venus won the Southern Cali› fornia girls 12-and-under title

at age 10, Richard used her

NASCAR

That’s why ’GameDay’ is here. That’s why people talk about it. It’s a big game. It has

tional stance from which to

ing to the quarters that Venus was "the only player in the

team, if we win that football

three sets. The Associated Press

"It’s a really great moment," Serena said. "She’s toughest player I ever played in my life, and the best person I know." How to find the right emo›

reach higher, and to do that, right now, it runs through Or› egon. I also think that if you look at last year’s football game (at Oregon), you’ re talking beyond (previous achievements). "I think we’ ll be very mo› tivated for the game, as will they, because this is a step› pingstone game. It’s not a conference game, but it’ s a big, national game, and I

Serena won in

ents, Richard and Oracene, long ago announced thatthey couldn’t bear to watch when the sisters had to play each other.

Earlier in the week, Serena said frankly that she deals with any psychological vul› nerability on the court by treating her sister as an "en› emy," just another faceless

opponent. That attitude was in evidence when she won ter’s serve in the final game.

They traded massive slugging strokes, forcing each other off balance for much of it. "She came out hitting so h ard,"

"It separates the race car

drivers from the pretenders, and that’s the way it should be," said D arlington run› ner-up Brad Keselowski. It is quite possible NA› SCAR will ultimately use a

Cotton Bowl over No. 5 Bay› lor and the previous season’ s

"These games are awe› some," Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said ’Dresday, for fans and media, and for the long-term growth of teams that get to play them.

For playoff positioning? Maybe not so much. "If you win every game, you have no worries," Hel› frich said. "As soon as you lose one game, it’s out of your control. And the good/bad thing about other people’ s schedules is a lot of people set themselves up to win ev› ery one of those (nonleague) games. "At some point, would it be good if a one-loss team got

Big Ten title game against No. 2 Ohio State and Rose in over a team that played Bowl against No. 5 Stanford. whoever in their nonconfer› The only loss? A 46-27 set› ence? Maybe, but that’s nev› back against No. 3 Oregon er gonna happen, somebody last season at Autzen Sta› undefeated versus a one-loss dium, a 27-18 third-quarter

team. But this is global stuff

lead dissolving in defensive we can’t control. We just gaffes and a rare offensive need to focus on Sparty."

the three, by breaking her sis›

have grown from pure power Serena said. to Florida so Venus and Sere› players into craftier all-court› But an autoimmune disease na could train on scholarship ers, but the main component means that V e nus s uffers with Rick M acci, who h ad of both their games remains from fatigue and joint pain, tutored Jennifer Capriati and pure force and competitive and has lost of her speed and Mary Pierce. wilL agility through lack of train› "She’s fast; I’m fast," Ser› ing. Serena exploited that Now they are 33 and 35 years old, bold and m a› ena said earlier in the week. lack of mobility to create the ture versions of the leggy, "She hits hard; I hit hard. She definitive service break of the spring-loaded kids who hit serves big; I serve big." set, with a ruthless drop shot out on every shot, unafraid to If there was an emotional followed by a lob. "She’s able to come up with spray errors into the backstop toll to the rivalry, any buried in their efforts to beat the ball resentments or family psy› greats shots when she needs deep. Venus was the more chodramas, they were not it, that’s just a hallmark of her willowy and mature player inclined to admit it publicly. game," Venus said. "I feel like that’s what we al› initially at 6 feet 1, but with She added, "Losing isn’ t the milder voice and tempera› ways wanted growing up, just fun. But I’m still excited to see ment. Serena glowered at be› to be out there on the big stage Serena have a chance at the ing smaller, and overlooked, duking it out when someone Grand Slam." which may explain the furi› named Williams wil l w i n ," — Sally Jenkins is a columnist ous thrust of her game. Both V enus said. But t h eir p a r› with the Washington Post.

aerodynamic packages. The Continued from C1 tests, though, came during ac› "That’s fair, and that will be tual Sprint Cup races, giving a fair way for us to approach fans a glimpse of three dif› the Chase this year," he said. ferent ideas: the current rules That is in direct contrast to package, the low-downforce what the sport’s biggest stars package used at Kentucky want. and Darlington, and a high› NASCAR chairman Brian drag package used at India› France has tasked his upper napolis and Michigan. management with improving The current rules are not the on-track product, which satisfying anyone, and the has becoming increasingly low-dragpackage didnothing boring this year. The poor on› to improve the racing. But the track product came as a bit of low-downforce package has a surprise after the dramatic wide support, mostly because racing that occurred in last the majority of the elite driv› fall' s 10-raceplayoffs. ers strongly back these rules, As the quality of racing which make the cars diffi› deteriorated throughout the cult to handle and forces the spring, NASCAR decided to wheelmen to up their game.

teams, including last season’ s

account.

the first set, the most taut of

promise to move the family

in-season test some different

Oregon is the first top-10 opponent in Spartan Stadi›

Beavers

would be the starter going forward. However, the Beavers will

Continued from C1

Since neither quarterback continue to play McMaryion had ever taken a snap in a too, to get him some expe› college game, Oregon State rience. Andersen said both coach Gary Andersen and could play Saturday when the his offensive coordinator Beavers play in Ann Arbor. "Seth’s gonna take the ~ Dave Baldwin decided both would play for the opener. snap, so that’s that magical Collins quickly separated word of the ’starter.’ So, yeah, himself, passing for 92 yards that’s out there. He’ ll take the and two touchdowns while first snap and, at this point, also leading the Beavers with it’s scheduled for him to get 152 yards rushing on 17 car› the majority of the snaps. But ries. Oregon State won 26-7. we have to continue to pre› It was the most rushing pare ourselvesas a football yards foran Oregon State team to play the whole year, q uarterback since Tim A l › and giving Marcus an oppor› exander ran for 205 yards tunity to prepare knowing in the 1996 season against that he has a really, really Northern Illinois. Collins was good opportunity to get into also the first true freshman that football game and play is to start at quarterback for the Beavers since David Moran

important at this point," said

Drivers were forced to con›

Storm Barrs-Woods was al›

ing to have to learn when to

serve their tires, and com›

ready a big Collins fan, but the hurdle was something else.

take risks

Goodyear had enough notice about the rules to prepare a companion tire that was soft›

er and made degradation a primary theme of the race.

version of the low-downforce b ined with a c a r t hat w a s package when setting the more difficult to drive, it con›

Andersen, the Beavers’ first› against Washington State in year head coach. 1996. Michigan, which is play› The San Diego native ing its first season under Jim made one play that particu› Harbaugh, was regrouping larly stood out: his hurdle of after a season-opening 24-17 Weber Statefree safety Josh loss at Utah last Thursday. Burton on a run in the second About A n dersen’s only half. criticism of Collins after his Beavers running back first outing was that he is go› like the hurdle

and know when not to. His second test c omes

with the show at Darlington. JGR driver Denny Ham› l in, who f i n ished thir d a t Darlington, is on board with

how much tire fall-off there

er downforce. At Darlington, where Hamlin finished third,

and then in racing. It’s a lot of

"When he did the hurdle I Saturday. "Seth has a game under was like, ’All right, all right,’" Barrs-Woods said, smiling. his belt, which is invaluable "Other than that I w a sn’ t at this point," Andersen said. surprised at all by the per› "The challenge for Seth, just formance. That’s who Seth like everybody on this team, is. He’s a guy who’s always is to understand who you’ re locked in, he stays focused. playing and what you’ re lin› And he loves football, he tru› ing up against. Take care of ly loves football." yourself first, execute the Andersen was quick to say game planand know exactl y following the Weber State what type of game it’s going

fun from our perspective."

performance t ha t

2016 rules, and series exec›

tributed to the track-record 18

utive vice president Steve

cautions. "It’s the package we need O’Donnell seemed to indicate after Sunday’s race that the to run from now on," said sanctioning body was pleased Hamlin. "It’s unbelievable is. You’ re sliding around, there’s more wrecks, which is unusual, but it’s a good thing scrapping all rules packages because guys are messing up. "That happens every now right now in favor of the low›

C o l lins

tobe."


C5 THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 16,492.68+390.30 4 DOW ,

S&P 500 1,969 . 41+48.19

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Wednesday, September 9, 201 5

Strategy update?

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Barnes & Noble reports its fiscal first-quarter results today. The bookseller recently completed the spinoff of its college book store business, which was made up of more than 720 stores on college and university campus› es. Investors will be listening for an update on how the retailer’s sales trends fared during the quarter, especially at its struggling Nook and e-book businesses.

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...... Close: 1,969.41 Change: 48.19 (2.5%)

1,840’ " ""’10 DAYS

2,160 "

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GOLD $1,120.40 -.20

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Dow jonesIndustnals Close: 16,492.68 Change: 390.30 (2.4%)

16,160

18,400"

Stocks closed sharply higher on Tuesday, bouncing back from a deep slide last week. The Dow Jones industrial average surged more than 390 points, while the Nasdaq composite returned to posi› tive territory for the year. The 10 sectors in the Standard 8 Poor’s 500 index notched gains, with health care posting the biggest in› crease. Investors welcomed a pickup in China’s stock market. The U.S. stock market has been volatile for the past three weeks as in› vestors have worried that growth in China is slowing more rapidly than previously thought. Uncertainty about the outlook for interest rates in the U.S. has also unsettled investors.

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 16503.41 16109.93 16492.68 +390.30 DOW Trans. 8020.49 7813.51 8012.86 +21 9.03 DOW Util. 553.43 543.35 553.37 +11.40 NYSE Comp. 10113.26 9974.78 10109.68 +237.82 NASDAQ 481 5.04 4754.89 4811.93 +128.01 S&P 500 1970.42 1934.22 1969.41 +48.19 S&P 400 1420.63 1391.63 1419.68 +33.41 Wilshire 5000 20806.03 20304.16 20795.28 +491.12 Russell 2000 1161.76 1161.76 1161.76 +25.59

DOW

NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,469 1,724 Pvs. Volume 3,109 1,537 Advanced 2480 2199 Declined 6 77 6 4 4 New Highs 16 50 New Lows 42 32

M

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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.2.42% -7.46% -1 2.33% $.2.81 % $.2.10% -1 0.47% $.2.41% -6.73% $.2.73% +1.60% $.2.51% -4.35% -2. 26% $.2.41% $.2.42% -4.04% $.2.25% -3.56%

NAME

Eye on jobs Economists anticipate that a gauge of job openings will show a slight pickup for July. The Job Openings and Labor Turnover survey, or JOLTS, is due out today. The survey provides figures for overall hiring, as well as the number of quits and layoffs. Total hiring rose 2.3 percent to 5.18 million in June, the most in six monthsand the second-highest total since the recession ended in June 2009.

JOLTS job openings in millions 5.4

est.

5.3 5.2 5.1

5.0

F

M

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2015 source: Factset

Housing barometer

1

1

Media General (MEG) 52-WEEK RANGE

$10 ~ 7/24 7/31

8 / 7 8 / 1 4 8/21 8/28

Week ending source: Factset AP

Marhetsummary Most Active NAME

BkofAm FrptMcM

Apple Inc Alibaba n Gen Elec Netflix s

Microsoft JD.corn TECO FordM

LAST CHG 16.16 +.51 10.40 +.69 112.31 +3.04 60.91 -3.00 24.96 +.96 94.95 -3.84 43.89 +1.28 23.95 +1.14 26.34 +5.27 13.67 +.11

VOL (80s) 716019 631247 525043 492693 445443 429583 311324 311028 293289 291583

Gainers NAME LAST MidstPet rs 7.15 6D GlbT rs 3.29 DelTaco wt 5.14 LaJollaPh 43.90 Capnia h 2.53 TECO 26.34 Celgene rt 2.21 AbengoaSA 5.89 CIM CmTr 18.45 HovnEn pf A 4.76

CHG +2.07 +.70 +1.09 +9.20 +.51 +5.27 +.42

%CHG + 4 0.7 + 2 7.0 + 2 6.9 + 2 6.5 + 2 5.2 + 25.0 + 2 3.2

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Losers NAME LAST B enitec wt 2 . 0 2

ArchCoal rs 3.98 DxChi Bear rs 111.60 PUVixST rs 64.50 CSVixSh rs 14.03

CHG %CHG -.88 -30.3 -1.43 -26.4 -30.30 -21.4 -13.92 -17.8 -2.95 -17.4

Foreign Markets NAME

LAST Paris 4,598.26 London 6,146.10 Frankfurt 10,271.36 Hong Kong21,259.04 Mexico 43,083.94 Milan 21,941.31 Tokyo 17,427.08 Stockholm 1,488.88 Sydney 5,133.45 Zurich 8,760.95

~

0.2

0.1

0

Tuesday’s close:$10.48 p

Source:FactSet

~

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Price-earnings ratio: 11

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AP

&md Focus Royce Pennsylvania Mutual Investment ranks near the bottom of its peer group so far this year; Morningstar has lowered its analyst rating to neutral, from silver.

Selected Mutualpunds

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds AmBalA m 23 . 93 +.35 -2.2 -0.1 +9.6+11.0 A A A CaplncBuA m 56.45+1.84 -3.6 -3.8 +6.2 +7.8 8 8 A CpWldGrlA m 44.23 +.98 -2.8 -5.0 +9.6 +9.0 C C C EurPacGrA m 46.48 +.70 -1.4 -6.0 +7.2 +6.0 C 8 C FnlnvA m 50. 2 5+1.23 -1.8 -0.6 +12.9+13.1 C C C GrthAmA m 43.35+1.81+1.6 +2.2 +15.2+14.4 C 8 C Royce PennsylvaniaMutual Investment(PENNX) IncAmerA m 20.29 +.34 -4.5 -4.1 +7.6 +9.4 E C 8 InvCoAmA m 35.19 +.87 -3.7 -2.2 +13.0+13.1 0 C 0 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m36.79 +.85 +1.4 +0.9 +11.3+11.3 A 8 A $$› WAMutlnvA m 38.50 +.91 -5.1 -2.9 +11.8+13.5 8 C 8 $$ Dodge &Cox Income 13.5 6 - . 81 -0.2 + 0 .4 + 2.5 +3.9 0 A B CD $$ IntlStk 38.86 + . 87 -7.7 - 15.5 +8.2 +6.4 E A A Stock 169.4 8 +4.16 -4.8 -4.2 +14.9+15.0 C A A $$› Fidelity Contra 99.36 + 2.34+2.4 + 3 .9 +14.2+15.0 C C C $$ ContraK 99.3 5 + 2.34+2.5 + 4 .0 +14.3+15.1 C C C CI LowPriStk d 50.20 +.87 -0.1 +1 .2 +14.2+14.9 A 8 A Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg 69.68+1.71-3.0 +0.4 +13.4+14.7 B 8 A FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeC m 2.19 +.83-6.8 -10.9 +4.0 +6.4 E C B IncomeA m 2. 1 7 +.84 -6.0 - 10.1 +4.6 +7.1 E 8 A FrankTemp-TempletonGIBondAdv 1 1 .43 . . . -5.9 -8.5 +1.4 +2.9 Oakmark Intl I 22.51 +.53 -3.6 - 7.5 +9.8 +8.2 0 A A MorningstarOwnershipZone Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 81 +.46 -4.5 0.8 +10.6+12.3 C E 0 RisDivB m 16 . 78 +.41 -5.0 1 .5 +9.7+11.3 0 E E OoFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 16 . 65 +.40 -5.0 1 .6 +9.7+11.4 0 E E average of stock holdings SmMidValA m45.89+1.82 -5.6 2 .9 +14.4+11.7 C 8 E Represents 75% of fund’s stock holdings -6.1 SmMidValB m38.49 +.85 3.7 +13.5+10.8 C C E T Rowe Price BIChpGr 70.8 0 + 1.72+5.2 + 7 .5 +17.3+18.3 A A A CATEGORY:SMALL GROWTH GrowStk 55.3 5 +1.35+6.5 + 8 .8 +16.9+17.6 A A A HealthSci 79.1 8+2.17+16.5 +28.8 +32.2+31.8 A A A BIORNINGSTAR Newlncome 9. 4 5 - . 82+0.3 + 1 .3 + 1.6 +3.1 C C 0 RATING~ **<<< Vanguard 500Adml 182.44+4.49 -3.0 +0.4 +13.4+14.7 8 8 A ASSETS $2,477 million 500lnv 182.40+4.48 -3.1 +0.3 +13.3+14.6 8 8 8 EXPRATIO .94% CapOp 52.56+1.37 -0.3 +4.1 +20.6+17.5 C A A BIIH. INIT.INVEST. $2,000 Eqlnc 29.29 +.73 -4.9 -2.4 +11.5+14.2 8 C A PERCEN TLOAD N/L IntlStkldxAdm 24.48 +.55 -4.6 12.7 +4.2 NA E 0 HISTORICALRETURNS StratgcEq 31.81 +.75 -1.1 +1.1 +17.7+18.1 B A A TgtRe2020 27.91 +.36 -1.9 -1.5 +7.4 +8.7 8 A A Return/Rank TgtRe2025 16.16 +.24 -2.2 -2.0 +8.0 +9.3 8 8 8 YEAR-TO-DATE -9.1 TotBdAdml 10.73 -.84 +0.4 +1.9 +1.5 +3.0 A C 0 1-YEAR -9.7/E Totlntl 14.64 +.33 -4.6 12.7 +4.2 +3.8 E E E 3-YEAR +8.0/E TotStlAdm 49.77+1.20 -2.7 +0.3 +13.6+14.9 8 8 A 5-YEAR +10.4/E TotStldx 49.75+1.20 -2.7 +0.2 +13.5+14.8 8 8 A 3and5-rearretcnts aremnualtzed. USGro 31.10 +.73 +4.0 +8.7 +16.9+17.2 A A A

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:::";"" A media merger

3.6

50

Strategic Hotels

2 A steep drop in average rates for 5 long-term U.S. mortgages sent home loan applications sharply higher two weeks ago. Dividend Footnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c -Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declared or paid inlast t 2months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I sum of dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mortgage applications jumped dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend 11.3 percent the week ended Aug. 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. PE Footnotes: q Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/Eratio shown. cc P/Eexceeds99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. 28. That marked the biggest weekly increase since January. The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose last week to 3.89 percent. Did the rebound Media General is buying Meredith in a roughly $2.4 own approximately 35 percent. dampen home loan applications? billion cash-and-stock deal to create a combined Meredith CEO Steve Lacy will serve as CEO and Find out today, when the television and publishing company. president of the combined company. Media General Mortgage Bankers Association The new company, which will be called Meredith Chairman J. Stewart Bryan III will serve as chairman. releases its latest weekly data. Media General, will have 88 television The business will maintain corporate and stations in 54 markets and media brands executive offices in Des Moines, iowa and Mortgage applications survey including Better Homes and Gardens, Richmond, Virginia, which are the existing seasonally adjusted percent change headquarters of the two companies. est. Allrecipe.corn, Parents and Shape. 12% 11.3 Media General stockholders will own The deal is targeted to close by the end of about 65 percent of the combined June 201 6. It still needs shareholder and company, while Meredith shareholders will regulatory approval to move forward.

Disney

Close:$104.01%3.04 or 3.0% Fans canstream the media company’s movies in more places after it signed agreements with Amazon and Microsoft. $140

J

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

Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ Aviate Corp AVA 29.77 o Bank ofA merica B AC 14. 6 0 ~ B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ Boeing Co BA 115.14 ~ Cascade Bancorp C A C B4 . 14 ~ Columbia Bnkg C O L B 23.90 ~ ColumbiaSportswear COLM 34.25 ~ Costco Wholesale CO ST 117.03 ~ Craft Brew Alliance BREW 7.00 o FLIR Systems F LIR 26.34 ~ Hewlett Packard H PQ 24 . 85 ~ Intel Corp INTO 24.87 ~ KEY 11.55 ~ Keycorp Kroger Co K R 2 5 .42 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 3.25 ~ LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ MDU Resources MDU 1 6 .22 o Mentor Graphics ME N T 18.25 ~ Microsoft Corp MSFT 39.72 ~ Nike Inc 8 NKE 79.27 ~ Nordstrom Inc JWN 66.08 ~ Nwst Nat Gas NWN 42.00 o Paccar Inc PCAR 53.45 ~ Planar Syslms PLNR 3.02 ~ Plum Creek PC L 37,42 0 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ Schnitzer Steel SCH N 15.06 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 202.01 ~ Stancorp Fncl SFG 60.17 ~ Starbucks Cp SBUX 35.38 ~ UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 ~ Weyerhaeuser WY 2 6.84 o

MDP

Close:$50.47%4.53 or 9.9% The TV station owner and publisher of Parents magazine is being bought by TV station owner Media General for $2.4 billion. $55

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BEE Close: $14.07%0.47 or 3.5% Private equity firm Blackstone plans to pay nearly $4 billion to buy the real estate investment trust, which focuses on high-end hotels. $15 14

General Electric

GE Close:$24.96 %0.96 or 4.0% The European Union approved the conglomerate’s $14.1 billion take› over of the power and transmission division of French company Alstom. $28 26 24

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Tempur Scaly

TPX Depomed DEPO Close:$78.48L6.73 or 9.4% Close:$27.48 L0.82 or 3.1% Scott Thompson was named CEO, Rival Horizon Pharma continued its president and chairman of the mat› hostile takeover bid for the drug de› tress seller. Thompson was CEO at veloper by offering to exchange a car rental company Dollar Thrifty. portion of its stock for shares. $80 $35 30

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TACO Close: $1 4.58X1.56 or 12.0% A Citi analyst gave the taco and burger chain a "Buy" investment rat› ing, saying it has potential to grow its restaurant count. $18 16

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JD.corn

JD Close:$23.95 %1.14 or 5.0% The Chinese online retailer plans to buy back up to $1 billion of its own American depositary shares over the next 24 months. $40 30

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SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 3-month T-bill . 0 4 .0 3 + 0 .01 L 6-month T-bill .27 .23 +0.04 L 5 2-wk T-bill .36 .34 +0 . 0 2 ~

T L L

L L L

The yield on the 10-year Trea› sury rose to 2.19 percent Tues› day. Yields affect rates on mort› gages and other consumer loans.

2-year T-note . 7 4 .71 + 0 .03 L 5-year T-note 1.52 1.47 +0.05 L 10-year T-note 2.19 2.13 +0.06 L 30-year T-bond 2.96 2.89 +0.07 L

L T L L

L .51 T 1.69 T 2.46 T 3.24

Commodities

FUELS

The price of gold dipped for the fourth straight day. Copper rose for the third time in four days and hit its highest settlement price in seven weeks.

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

BONDS

NET 1YR TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.80 2.73 +0.07 L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.43 4.42 +0.01 Barclays USAggregate 2.38 2.40 -0.02 T PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 7.23 7.21 +0.02 T RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 4.03 4.13 -0.10 T T TEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.48 1.43 +0.05 L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.43 3.46 -0.03 T T 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

METALS

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

The dollar was mixed against other currencies. It dipped against the British pound, Canadian dollar and euro. But it rose against the Japanese yen.

h58 88

L L T L

T T T L T T T L

3.06 4.44 2.30 5.36 4.0 3 1.97 2 97 .

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 45.94 46.05 -0.24 -13.8 -9.7 1.47 1.45 +0.28 1.59 1.60 -0.14 -13.7 -6.2 2.71 2.66 +2.07 1.40 1.42 -1.14 -2.3

CLOSE PVS. 1120.40 1120.60 14.75 14.54 1002.90 992.40 2.44 2.32 585.70 576.80 CLOSE 1.43 1.18

Coffee (Ib) Corn (bu) 3.55 Cotton (Ib) 0.63 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 231.70 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.26 Soybeans (bu) 8.91 Wheat(bu) 4.65

Foreign Exchange

.02 .05 .08

%CH. %YTD -0.02 -5.4 +1.42 -5.2 +1.06 -1 7.0 +5.13 -1 4.1 +1.54 -26.6

PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.40 +2.14 -13.4 1.16 +1.60 -29.4 3.50 +1.57 -1 0.6 0.63 + 0.35 + 5 . 0 233.20 -0.64 -30.0 -9.8 1.29 -2.13 8.77 +1.54 -1 2.6 4.58 +1.64 -21.1 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5396 +.0116 $-.75% 1.6121 Canadian Dollar 1.3 2 16 -.0091 -.69% 1.0963 USD per Euro 1.1187 +.0017 +.15% 1.2908 JapaneseYen 119.95 + . 5 9 + .49% 1 05.88 Mexican Peso 16. 7940 -.2040 -1.21% 13.1377 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9082 -.0254 -.65% 3.6063 Norwegian Krone 8 . 2381 -.0791 -.96% 6.3283 South African Rand 13.7083 -.2500 -1.82% 10.8035 Swedish Krona 8.4 0 75 -.0443 -.53% 7.1074 Swiss Franc .9812 +.0065 +.66% . 9 344 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.4226 -.0207 -1.46% 1.0763 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.3668 +.0009 +.01% 6.1405 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7511 +.0009 +.01% 7.7507 Indian Rupee 66.365 -.435 -.66% 60.315 Singapore Dollar 1.4179 -.0100 -.71% 1.2575 South KoreanWon 1195.49 -7.25 -.61% 1029.88 -.23 -.71% 2 9.98 Taiwan Dollar 32.54


' www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed Sept. 1 Michael P. andDiane M. Clinkscales, 19664 Hiller Drive, Bend Christopher M. Purcell, 2007 SWTimber Ave., No. 7, Redmond Filed Sept. 2 Brady W. Knowles, 622 NW GreenForest Circle, Redmond Filed Thursday Justin B. Lagrimas, 949 NE SavannahDrive, Bend Filed Friday Jason L. Cobb, 520 NE Dalton St., No. 201,Bend Edgar Ibarra-Becerra and Leticia B. Ibarra, 61445 SE 27th St., Space46, Bend Jeremy C. Benton, 3009 SW26thCourt,Redmond Anthony E. and Trina Y. Baker, 50675 DoeLoop, La Pine

re ona rees oim rove No job? Not a wor se in s or isa e problem By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

SALEM

The state of Ore›

gon has agreed to a settlement requiring it to scale back sup› portforsegregatedworkplaces where people with mental dis› abilities often do menial work for pay below minimum wages, state and federal officials an› nounced Tuesday. The settlement with the U.S.

Department of Justice stems from a class-action lawsuit filed in 2012 alleging that Or› egon relies too heavily on so› called "sheltered workshops,"

where people with disabilities work almost exclusively with

workshops by 20 percent to a

using sheltered workshops

maximum of 1,530 over the

as a first-choice option for

disabled co-workers. The

next two years. The number of hours worked must drop near›

young people leaving school or for adults newly eligible

state’s practice prevented people with disabilities from ly 30 percent to no more than working alongside nondisabled 66,100. ’%’ork is a fundamental peers in violation of the Amer›

for state-funded employment

icans with Disabilities Act, the

aspect of most people’s lives,"

lawsuit alleged. The lawsuit was filed on be› half of employees in sheltered workshops, and the Depart› ment of Justice joined a year

Vanita Gupta, head of the Jus› tice Department’s Civil Rights

assistance. Instead, the state will develop individual plans and support systems to help people with disabilities work for traditional employers if they

Division, said in a statement.

prefer it.

later. Under the settlement, the

state agreed to reduce the number of people in sheltered

"People with disabilities de› serve opportunities to work alongside their friends, peers and neighbors without disabili› ties and to earn fair wages." The state agreed to stop

Federal officials say they’ re not trying to close sheltered workshops, but they want to

ensure people who want jobs at traditional worksites have a re›

alistic opportunity to succeed.

Out of the job market, many working-agemen aren’t comingback By Don Lee and Samantha Masunaga Los Angeles Times

Millions of workers who dropped out of the job mar› ket during the last econom› ic slump were supposed to jump back in once things turned around. But more

BEST OF THE

BIZ CALENDAR TODAY CLA Estate Services Workshop: Aworkshop for seniors about estate and retirement planning; free, but seating is limited; to register, call1-666› 252-6721 between 7a.m. and 3 p.m.; registration required; 9:30 a.m.;Awbrey Glen Golf Club,2500NW Awbrey GlenDrive, Bend, 666-252-6721. Pints withOurPillars: The BendChamber of Commerceeventfeatures Michael LaLonde,president of Deschutes Brewery Inc.; $15 chambermembers; $20 nonmembers; 5p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 NW Bond St., Bend, http: /I business.bendchamber. org/events. SATURDAY Hemebuyer EducationWorkshop:A Neighborlmpact workshop to help prospective homeowners understand the home-buying process; $45 per household; 9a.m.; Bend Neighborlmpact Office, 20310Empire Ave., Suite A100,Bend, 541-323-6567, www. neighborimpact.org/ homebuyer-workshop› registration. TUESDAY SCORE Business Counseling:Business counselors conduct free one-on-one conferences for local entrepreneurs. 5:30 p.m.; DowntownBend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend, 541-706-1639. SEPT. 16 •Laborand Employment Law Update: A presentation covering newOregonlabor and employment laws from the 2015Oregonlegislative sessions; $30 for members of the HumanResource Association of Central Oregon, $45 nonmembers; 7:30 a.m.; Shilo Inn, 3105 O.B. Riley Road,Bend, 541-406-4557, www. hrcentraloregon.org. SEPT. 17 Business Startup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class anddecide if running a business is for you; $29; 6 p.m.; LaPine Public Library, 16425First St., La Pine,541-363-7290, www.cocc.edu/sbdc. SEPT. 18 Contractors CCB Test Prep Course:Two-day live class to preparefor the state-mandatedtest to bea licensed contractor; $359; 6 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College› Technology Education Center, 2030 SECollege Loop, Redmond,541-363› 7290, www.cocc.edu/ccb. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday’sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.corn/ bizcal

Correction In a story headlined "Collaboration between conferences brings fall visitors," which appeared Sunday,Sept. 6, on pageE1,the dates of the BendVenture Conference were re› ported incorrectly. The conference is scheduled for Oct. 15-16. The Bulletin regrets the error.

a rne esi e r r i n s vir ua reai o en

than six years after the re› cession ended, the missing millions are increasingly looking like they’ re gone for good. The nation’s labor participation rate de› fined as the share of the

working-age population either working or looking for work hasn’t budged from a38-year-low of62.6 percent this summer. And most experts don’t see an

upswing on the way. By Stephen Hamway

The reasons include the

The Bulletin

M oravetz remembers seeing

nation’s aging population, swelling ranks of people on disability and the changing

an article about the impend›

nature of jobs. But one of

ing and transformative arrival of virtual reality gaming.

the biggest factors has to

"It captivated me like no›

of their work lives, par› ticularly those with less

In the early 1990s, Justin

do with men in the prime

body’s business," Moravetz said. "I could be somewhere else completely, in a world cre› ated by a game designer." While virtual reality fell by the wayside for many devel› opers, it stayed on Moravetz’s mind during his time at the

education.

Labor participation for men ages 25 to 54 has been declining for decades but sped up during the recession with large-scale layoffs in construction

and manufacturing. Their growing withdrawal from the job market is especially worrisome because it car› ries significant social and

DigiPen Institute of Technolo›

gy, a university in Redmond, Washington, dedicated to var› ious elements of video game design, and during a stint at Bend Studio, part of Sony

economic costs.

Collectively, these trends

Computer Entertainment. In

2014, Moravetz left Sony’s Bend operation to found his

own company, Zero Trans› form LLC, devoted entirely to

AndyTullis/The Bulletin

Justin Moravetz, founder of Zero Transform, pauses while playing a virtual reality game in his home computer lab in Bend.

creating content for virtual-re›

ality platforms. So far, the company has released a full version of the

arcade-style virtual reality game "Proton Pulse," and a five-minute playable demo for the virtual reality shooter

billion industry by 2020. In cares," Moravetz said. "And addition to Google Cardboard, that’s where I come in." tech giants HTC, Samsung Fornow,themain impedand Sony, along with the iment to growth for Zero Facebook-owned virtual re› Transform is money. Mora› ality startup Oculus VR, are vetz said he has had mixed

"Vanguard V" for Google expected to release virtual Cardboard, the company’s reality headsets to consumers virtual reality platform. Mora› within the next 12 months. "The hardware’s ready. vetz added that a 90-minute version of "Vanguard V" is What they’ re looking for now on its way, as are two other is ironing out the fine details, games. the drivers and such, and sup›

luck with venture capitalists

"It’s been quite the adven› ture," Moravetz said.

porting the content," Moravetz said.

Just as during the 1990s, articles have begun touting

Moravetz said, more than 45

the rise of the virtual real›

percent will come from the

in the past, and a Kickstarter campaign to build a team that could finish "Vanguard V" fell short. "If you’ re one guy looking only to build something pretty small, people get that. But if you’ re the guy trying to build a team for a platform people are mostly not familiar with, (funding) is hard to get,"

ity market, and they have

content side, though the num›

Moravetz said.

numbers to support their

ber of game developersfor virtual reality remains low.

claims. The industry website Digi-Capital projected virtual

Of the projected $30 billion,

Transform is one of 23 final› ists for the 2015 Bend Venture

Conference, though he ac› knowledged that the specu› lative nature of the virtual reality industry makes future

projections a challenge.

"It’s a massive market, but

it’s still emerging," Vierra said. For now, Zero Transform employs four people in Bend,

game world as VR, as a $30

something to run on it, no one

catalyst for EDCO, said Zero

Oregon. Brian Vierra, venture

as well as eight international

freelancers. Ideally, Moravetz said, he would like to see 12 employees working in Bend, which has a strong video game design staff thanks to Bend Studio.

Moravetz said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamvvaylbendbullet in.corn

Food companiescrambl s eto satisfy ’cleaneating’ trend By Teresa F. Lindeman

was one of the fastest grow›

"(Many consumersseem to feel) these foods that I know and loved over the years contain something t didn't expect." Darren Seifer

NPD Groupfood andbeverage industry analyst content and the nutritional

sumers who claim they were misled or misfed. Among the lawsuits filed this year alone are cases targeting trans fat in Heinz’s Ore-Ida Extra Crispy fries, complaining about a Kraft shredded-cheese product

and health qualities of Ger›

labeled "natural cheese" and

blaming Ritz crackers and Cheerios cereal for gluten issues. In July, Nestle and

Gerber were sued in Florida for "deceiving consumers about the fruit and vegetable

been caught unaware, but conglomerates with dozens

ing areas of concern between

As Darren Seifer, food and beverage industry analyst

work. But more and more ex›

of products sometimes take

workers wanting to work full time remains unusual› ly high today, and there’ s some evidence this in› crease since the recession is largely permanent. If there are millions

more jobless workers than the unemployment rate

would indicate, the think› ing went, the Fed could

2010 and 2014, according to NPD’s research. Yet ballot

keep stimulating the econo›

initiatives to require GMOs be listed on labels kept failing around the country, Seifer sard. The Food Marketing

rates to help absorb more of the unemployed without

Institute, a trade group in

has been pinned near zero

Arlington, Virginia, also has

since the depths of the re› cession in December 2008.

tracked a rise in interest in

GMOs, although it found only awhile to shift their recipes. about one-quarter of shop› And the food hot spots keep pers say they actually seek with Port Washington, New evolving. out non-GMO food products. "More sophisticated analy› York, consulting firm NPD Numerous cereals are now Group, put it, many consum› made with whole grains, sis further indicates that this ers seem tofeel "these foods which was a key consumer active engagement in GMO that I know and loved over focus a few years back. Now, avoidance is most strongly the years contain something I Seifer said, many shoppers aligned with an interest in didn’t expect." are worrying about their minimal processing, rather Companies that spend mil› sugar intake or hoping to add than with nutrient avoidance lions of dollars on marketing more protein to their diets. or seeking," the trade group and on gathering consumer Interest in genetically mod› reported in its recent report feedback haven’t exactly ified organisms or GMOs on grocery-shopper trends. ber Graduates Puffs."

rently 5.1 percent, because officials don’t count people as unemployed if they’ re not actively looking for

The number of part-time

ic Development for Central

lion-dollar penalties for con›

m ent-reported rate,cur-

"It’s almost like a tiny In April, Zero Transform Silicon Valley in a way, but began working with Econom› without the cost of living,"

"You can have the best VR headset in the world; without

The steady, national swing toward "clean eating" has helped trigger an industry move toward clearing prod› uct labels of unpronounce› able ingredients. So have the numerous class-action lawsuits chasing multimil›

thus productive capacity may be considerably smaller than previously thought. Some economists have long argued that the true unemployment figure is a few percentage points higher than the govern›

perts are concluding that the great flight of workers in recent years isn’t going to reverse. Meanwhile, many work› ers who have been able to land only part-time jobs are finding that a stronger economy doesn’t necessari› ly lead to more work hours.

reality, known in the video

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

indicate that the U.S.’s potential workforce and

my with super-low interest worrying about inflation shooting higher. The Fed’s benchmark interest rate

Butthougheconomic growth has been slow and uneven, employers have added new jobs at a fairly steady and solid pace in re› cent years, about 8 million

since mid-2012. The unem› ployment rate has fallen

from a high of 10 percent in October 2009 to 5.1 percent last month, very close to

what many economists see as an optimum level before inflation pressures build.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D3 Fishing Report, D4 THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

O< www.bendbulletin.corn/outdoors

MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL GUIDE

WATER REPORT

Glacier’s

For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6

popular Highline

BRIEFING Women Inthe Outdoorsevent set The third annual National Wild Turkey Federation’s Women in the Outdoors event is scheduled for the Redmond Rod and Gun Club on Saturday, Sept. 19. For $75, participants can take advantage of more than 20 classes on outdoors topics including dutch oven cooking, shotgun shooting, archery, xeriscaping and turkey hunting. According to a news release, the National Wild Turkey Federation uses the event to en› courage women to try new outdoor activities in a safe environment that makes them feel at ease. This year’s event has expanded to include an optional camp at Paulina Lake, east of La Pine, and additional courses on Sunday, Sept. 20, that offer birding, fly-fishing, mountain biking, as well as standup pad› dleboard and kayak instruction. According to the release, the National Wild Turkey Federation outreach locally funds a "Wheelin’ Sportsman" hunt for disabled hunt› ers, a holiday donation of food to local chari› ties, a college scholar› ship, wildlife conserva› tion efforts and a grant to run the Women in the Outdoors program. Those interested can register for the Women in the Outdoors event in advance online at www.regonline.corn/ wito-centraloregon. — Bulletin staff report

Trail gets a facelift By Erin Madison The Great Falls (Mont.) Tribune

GREAT FALLS, Mont. The first mile of the

Highline Trail is unfor› gettable. It’s also heavily used. "The Highline is prob› ably one of the most pop› ular trails in the park," said Denise Germann, spokeswoman for Glacier National Park.

All that use is leading to some wear and tear on the trail, which is why it will

be having some work done to it this fall.

The Highline Trail starts at Logan Pass and follows a cliff side with a

steep drop-off on one side, traversing the west slope of the Continental Divide.

A seriesofhandrails offer something for hikers to hold on to as they make

their way along the cliff. Those handrails are

actually old garden hoses. This project will replace those worn hoses.

"It won’t be a hose any› more," German said. Instead, hundreds of feet

Mark Morical l The Bulletin

Charlton Lake is a pristine body of water located in a remote area of the Deschutes National Forest.

LITTLE CULTUS LAKE›

Editor’s note: Mountain Bike Trail Guide, by Bulletin outdoorswriter Mark Morical,

The trail guide

appears in Outdoors on alternating Wednesdays

With ChrisSebo Fire restrictions are still in effect in the Deschutes National Forest, due to very little rain and hot tempera› tures expected over the weekend. Campfires are pro› hibited in all areas in the Deschutes National Forest, Crooked River National Grassland, Ochoco National Forest and on Bureau of Land Management Prine› ville District lands. No exceptions will be made for developed or hosted campgrounds. Updates to the Public Use Restrictions in the Deschutes National forest will be posted online at www.fs.usda. gov/deschutes. Per› sonal chainsaw use is currently prohibited on forest lands until fur› ther notice. This could result in a short fire› wood-cutting season again this year. Bow hunting season is open now and trail users may encounter hunters. During bow and rifle hunting sea› son, it’s a good idea to wear bright colors when using the trails. Tumalo Falls and its viewpoint remains closed to all public access until further notice. Phil’s Trailhead is open, but be awareof construction equipment and work crews. SeeTrails /D4

season.

have wandered off trail. Crews will also work at

little difficulty? Well, turns out that now it’s pretty

vouSee video on TheBulletin’s ’ YouTube channel: https: //yoete.be/H BheSWOJE8

difficult. The Charlton Lake Trail is a gem of singletrack located in one of the more

remote areas of the Deschutes National Forest.

CharltonLakeloop

h

Oeel Lake

Glacier plans to work tion Corps, which recruits youth to do trail work, for the project. The project comes with a $40,000 price tag. The

Cultus Mountain

Little

s Lake

Glacier National Park

raillt a I

My map noted that the

Lemish Lake

it is an ideal choice.

loop is "great for strong rid› ers." I figured that included me, right’? Wrong. Despite the challenges of

Lake and takes bikers on an 18-mile loop deep into an

the Charlton Lake ride, for

gettable sections, just steady,

mountain bikers seeking a unique, rugged backcountry experience at high elevation,

fun singletrack that takes rid›

Conservancy contributed $20,000 for the project,

I

Lemlsh tte

About a one-hour drive southwest from Bend, the route starts near Little Cultus

sard. Work on the project the trail won’t be closed during reconstruction.

Cultus Lake

at least for this mountain biker.

quite so hard several years ago.

"It is a very narrow

section of trail," Germann

with Montana Conserva›

THREE SISTERS WILDERNESS

Lemish Lake to Charlton Lake is downright

I don’t remember it being

stabilizing and widening the narrow section of trail in the Rimrock area.

will begin this month, and

Problem is, the climb along the trail from brutal

over the years as visitors

MORICAL

That 18-mile ride you did seven years ago with

through the riding

TRAIL UPDATE

head, which has widened

MARK

limitations.

trails in Central

Oregon and beyond.

over the years. It also includes the trail›

n mountain biking, it is always best to know your

features various

of cable will be used. Some of the anchors for the cable will be replaced as well. The project will also re› construct the first quarter mile of the trail, including work on some switch› backs that have eroded

Crane Prairie Reservoir

Lily Lake ~<i<~~ ~ cl Meadow

Charlton Butte &I

4

+ ’%

alpine forest. The ride offers

"The park appreciates the work of the Con› servancy as our official fundraising partner," Ger› mann said. "This project

Charlton Lake

t Charlton4~ ..

:

Me tolIus› Wlndlgo

Trail

ers past two pristine lakes.

SeeCharlton Lake/D2

National Park Service Centennial Cost Share funds.

DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST

r

no mesmerizing mountain views or particularly unfor›

which was matched with

46 Greg Crossi The Bulletin

wouldn’t have been possi› ble without their help."

SeeHighline Trail/D4

Westernersareweakest link in Minnesota bearcamp ell, you know, you get three squares at hunting camp up here in Minnesota, but it’ s not like they’ re going to feed you lutefisk."

stand. Every time I see a bear,

GARY LEWIS

’That isavery small bear,’ I told myself. My heart skipped another beat. Another small

bear.

Rod Martino, of Bend, and

keep a neutral point of view

Tony Collins,

and a face to go with it. Yah,

HUNTING from South

my heart skips a beat.

Momma came in wary. I didn’t move a muscle. We were

youbetcha. According to Bachman, the berry crops had failed. "Last year’s crop was so big, the plants couldn’t physically do it

11 yards apart. For 15 minutes, the bears fed in front of me,

Outfitter Brian Bachman

two years in a row." That meant

It was time to leave before the

had faithfully applied for our tags each year. When we arrived in camp, Bachman was positively giddy. For a

bears would be hungry and on the move. "This could be the

big one killed the little ones.

Carolina, and I had planned our hunt with Ar› rowhead Wilderness Outfitters

for three years.

Minnesotan. You see, the natural ten› dency of the Minnesotan is to

best season we’ ve ever had."

Martino tagged his bear the first evening. On the second afternoon, a bear padded out

into the open in front of my

then their ears perked up and

they looked back into the tim› ber. They’d heard another bear. Forty-five minutes later, I connected on the big male

when I glimpsed him back in the timber. Collins tagged his bear the same evening. SeeBear hunt/D4

Gary Lewis / For The Bulletin

Alerted to the danger of a big male in the area, this sow and her cube make aquick exit.


D2 THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

Submit your best work at Q bentibullefin.cern/reatierphetes. Your entries will appear online, and we’l choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Also contribute to our other categories, including good photos of the great Central Oregonoutdoors. Submission requirements:Include as much detail as possible cannot be altered.

when and where you took a photo, any special technique used

as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and

CAMP LAKE Brian Guiney captures South Sister’s reflection on an early morning at Camp Lake.

Charltonlake Trail

at Little Cultus Campground. Trail features:A challenging, Directions:From Bend, take remote loop in the high coun› Highway 97 south andRoad try to pristine Charlton Lake. 40 west from Sunriver. Takea Length: Entire loop is18 right on CascadeLakes High› miles. Length can becut way. After 1 mile, take aleft in half by taking the Clover onto Cultus Lakeaccess road. Meadow Trail. After 1 mile, take aleft on gravel road 4630 to Little Cul› Rating:Aerobically strenuous tus Lake. After 2t/~ miles, park and technically advanced. the west. A number of small, remotelakes in thearea areaccessible via hiker-only trails. offering unobstructed views of As I proceeded to the south the water, and Gerdine Butte portion of the loop from the take in the solitude. The Charlton Lake T rail skirts the west side of the lake,

back. Bailing on completing the loop was disappointing, but my energy was completely sapped after nearly three hours of dimbing. The ride back toward Lem› ish Lake included fast, burly downhill sections with l o ts Recent rain had put the trail in

gletrack. I arrived back at Little Cultus Campground more than

fourhours afterIhad started.

tolius-Windigo Trail, the uphill

Clover Meadow Trail

which

Next time, I will know my limitations. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.corn

Central Oregon Trail Alliance, who take the time to d ear the remote trails. Evidence of

the direction from which I had chainsaw-cut logs and downed come, knowing it would be trees was noticeable through› mostly downhill on the way outtheride. 0 ~O

For mountain bikers seeking a shorter ride in the area, the

taken to cut the loop’s distance

south.

Crest Trail and a path that leads to Waldo Lake a few miles to

recommended.

prime shape and quelled the in half. late-summer dust that often In hindsight, that might have plagues Central Oregon sin› been a better option for me.

juts up in the distance to the

the world-renowned Pacific

and insect repellent is highly

of roots and rocks, and some connects the Charlton and Me› frighteningly steep descents. tolius-Windigo trails can be

The trail was almost entire› ly free of blown-down trees, Charlton Lake Trail to the Me› thanks to volunteers with the

The trail connects with sev› continued. I finally decided to eral hiker-only trails, including turn around and ride back in

Aside from blowdown, bugs can be a nother annoyance on the Charlton Lake Loop,

e

I

4

DISC OVERTHEVERYBESTCENTRALOREGONHASTOOFFER,: : Mark Morical/The Bulletin

Volunteers with the Central Oregon Trail Alliance work hard to keep trails clear of blowdown. Here is pictured a chainsaw-cut tree along the Charlton Lake Trail.

Charlton Lake

ous short, challenging ascents that continue deep into the high Continued from D1 alpine forest. The trails in the area are When I f i n ally a r rived popular among equestrians, so at Charlton Lake, elevation mountain bikers should ride 5,704 feet, I had dimbed some under control at all times and 1,200 feet and was thoroughly yield to horseback riders to exhausted. avoid any conflicts. The clear, blue water of the From the Little Cultus Lake lake was completely undis› campground, bikers can ride a turbed by any human activ› dirt road to Lemish Lake. From ity. I felt like the only person Lemish, the loop can be ridden

around for miles, and I might

dockwise or counterdockwise. have been. The only sounds I I chose counterclockwise and could hear were the wind rac› took a right onto the Charlton ing past my ears, the water lap› Lake Trail. ping at the shore and my tires It was a grind right from the as they whirred along the trail. start. The trail features numer› I stopped to rest, eat lunch and

r

I

Available at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offeredto Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year-round and at The Bulletin.

112 WAYS TO,DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON IS 'A COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE to places, e v ents a n d a c t ivities t a king place throughout Central Oregon d uring the year.

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate The Bulletin

k

The Bulletin:: sh

WWW.delIddiIlletilI.COm


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 THE BULLETIN

UTDOORS CYCLING MBSEF THRILLACYCLOCROSS SERIES:Wednesday nights through Sept. 30 at the Athletic Club of Bend; variety of categories for ages 12 and older; 30-minute race starts at 5:15 p.m., 45-minute race starts

at 6 p.m.; entry feesare$10for ages 12 to 18 and $20 for adults; course is a mix of grass, dirt, sand and pavement; OBRA licenseis required to race; registration is available at www.mbsef.org/login› sign-up; day-of-race registration begins at 3:45 p.m.; contact molly' mbsef.org, 541-388-0002, or www. mbsef.org.

FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.;

meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby’s Pizza, Redmond;

www.cobe.us.

E AD

D3

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn,541-383-0318.

sunriveranglers.org. THECENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m.;m eets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.

DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeach m onth at6 p.m.; HIKING 50 SW Bond St., Bend, Suite 4; 541› 306-4509, deschutestu'hotmail. FULL MOON HIKE:Join a Sunriver corn; www.deschutes.tu.org. Nature Center Naturalist for a guided full moon hike along LakeAspen, BEND CASTINGCLUB:Agroup the Deschutes River and through a of fly-anglers fromaround Central meadow; listen and look for nocturnal Oregon who are trying to improve creatures; registration required; 8-9 their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday p.m. on Sept.28,0ct.27; $6for of each month; location TBA; 541› adults, $4 for kids; kirstinrea'gmail. 306-4509orbendcastingclub@ corn or 541-593-4394. gmail.corn. DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Ledby skilled volunteer THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of naturalists, these outings explore each month; Sunriver Homeowners new hiking trails, observe migrating Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www. songbirds and take in spring

wildf lowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.

HUNTING CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION:Meetings are scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on select Wednesdays, including Sept.16, Oct. 21, Nov. 18, and Dec. 2; meetings are held at the VFWHall in Redmond; contact Dave Fuller at 541-447-2804. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meetsthesecondWednesday ofeachmonth; King Buffet, Bend;

ohabend.webs.corn. THE OCHOCOCHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall;

541-447-5029. THE REDMOND CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.

PADDLING PICKIN’ ANDPADDLIN’. Sept. 19 from 4 to 9 p.m. at Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe in Bend; boat demos from 4 to 7 p.m. and live music from 5 to 9 p.m.; $10 per person, no charge for children 12 and younger; bands include Renegade String Band and Franchot Tone; proceeds support the Bend Whitewater Park; visit www.tumalocreek.corn.

SHOOTING COSSAKIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear

and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www.

pinemount ainposse.corn. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns;10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www. hrp-sass.corn.

Teac ers earntoma et eout oorst eircassroom By Anthony Rimel •Corvallis Gazette-Times

CORVALLIS› onni Villaman and Deanna Wilson, both elementary school teachers, set the tone of the day early by ramming their canoe into a kayak being piloted by another teacher. Later, two other kayaking teachers ambushed a different canoe, attacking it from both sides by splashing its occupants with their paddies. And of course, after taking a dip near the end of a river trek, a few dripping-wet teachers hugged a dry teacher, so she too got to enjoy the sensation of being soaked. Of course, the teachers also spent most of their time on the river learning about how to teach lessons that incorporate the outdoors. "I’ ve been shocked by teach› Preparing teacherstodolessons in which kids do things er groups before," she said, such a s m a c roinvertebrate adding that there is often sampling and water quality talking and texting. "It’s stuff testswas a major focus ofthe like ’you would be so angry Photos by Andy Gripe / The Corvallis Gazette-Times four-day workshop, which if your students were doing Jeff Mitchell, a retired ecology teacher from Philomath High School, teaches about freshwater mussels during a morning stop along the ended with the river trip. (The this.’" Willamette River near Corvallis. workshop was put on by the However, Guentherpointed Institute for Applied Ecology, to two reasons why this group the Corvallis School District had behaved better: First, all shop progressed, the lessons around 60 to 70 years. have been proven toeff ect dence to go out in whatever and other partners, with help the participants had volun› for the teachers followed trib› "(Mussels) are kinda bor› mussels in research studies. stream I choose and do my from a grant from the Gray tarily chosen to attend the utaries from the mountains ing when you look at them, While Mitchell said mus› own project," he said. Family Foundation.) workshop. down to the Willamette River. but when you start to learn sels aren’t a critical species, But the chance for teachers And, second, Gunther said: They started by doing lessons about them they are interest› they are an important indica› ing," he said. to get to know each other and The lessons were almost all with the teachers at Wells tor of the overall health of the bond through the outdoor held outdoors, she said, testa› Creek on the Alsea Highway. Mitchell said the mussels waterway. data collection and activities ment to the power of the scen› The next day, the participants have a complicated life cy› Nathan Harris, an Adams has its own benefit: Wilson, ery to engage not just teachers, moved down to Greasy Creek cle: their sexual reproduction Elementary School fourth› who teaches third grade at but also students. and then later studied the depends on males releasing grade teacher, said after Franklin School, said the re› Stacy Moore, the ecological Marys River. their genetic material in the participating in the work› lationships the teachers are education program director The last day was spent on water and the females filter› shop he wants to do his own developing will enable them to with the institute, said that the the Willamette River. While ing it out, and their eggs are stream-research lessons and support each other and share workshop’s goal was to give on the Willamette the teach› released in the current and a restoration project. "It gets kids connecting resources and ideas. teachersconfidence to teach ers had a special lesson at a depend on getting caught in "We didn’t all know each lessons that involve nature. bed of freshwater mussels, the gills of salmon species, w ith t heir w o rl d a n d l e t s "Teachers have often said did water testing, sampled where they can leech blood them know they can make other, and now we’ re getting to know each other. Ram› they don’t feel like they have macroinvertebrates and ob› for survival while getting positive changes," he said. ming is a way to get to know the expertise to t ake t heir served birds. a ride upstream. They then He said he’s brought stu› each other," she said, as she kids out in the outdoors," she Jeff Mitchell, a retired Phi› drop out of the gills after dents to programs where they We will clean and attempted to explain why she said. lomath High School science about a month and then grow did similar lessons, which had rammed the othercaAnother goal, she said, was teacher, presented the lessons to maturity. were put on by other orga› check your hearing noe. (She added that she is a helping the teachers realize on the western p Mitchell said many things nizations. The problem with aids for FREE, friend of one of the teachers in how many resources are avail› mussels. could be responsible for the that, he said, is if the program regardless of make the rammed canoe). She also able forfree to schools from He said giving students a decline of the mussels: deple› dries up, he wouldn’t be able or model. claimed that she and Villamin organizati ons such as the Or- chance to do lessons where tion of salmon populations, to continue the lessons. had been "learning to control egon Department of Fish and they are doing real-world increasing acidity of water as Now, he feels capable of the canoe." Wildlife, or some of their local data collection gives them a a result of atmospheric car› doing the lessons himself, Despite this "incident," Lar› partners, such as the Green› chance to get really engaged. bon dioxide that affects shell and is planning four different kin Guenther, the environ› belt Land Trust, the Marys In fact, the bed of mussels he growth and chlorine byprod› stream research visits for his mental education coordinator River Watershed Council and showed the teachers is the ucts released into the water class this year. Limit one percustomer. "This gives me the confi› with the Institute for Applied Oregon State University’s site of a research study he’ d by treatment plants, which Ecology, said that the 16 teach› Streamwebs program. involved his students with for ers in the workshop were actu› a decade. ally much better behaved than Moving downstream During hi s l e sson, he many teachers she'staught. Moore said as the work› helped the teachers learn how to find the mussels and lead a

Are your hearing aids working properly? Cau

Beltone-

541-389-9690

earlshe l

FREE

, BATTERIES, I

discussion about their biol›

THIS WKEKEHD’5 ISSUE

ogy. Much of the discussion centered on the fact that the teachers did not find any ado›

lescent mussels. Mitchell said this was expected in 10 years of having his students do annual daylong surveys at the site where they collected,

The star of NBC’ new variety sho is having the BES TIME EVER

measured and released more

than a thousand of the mus› sels, they never found adoles›

PLUS: ACT LIKE A KI Get happier, healthier, smarter, p. 6

cent mussels.

Advertisement Mitchell told the group that this had been verified by

more in-depth investigations, all of which concluded that the mussels at the site are not Nathan Harris, a fourth-grade teacher at Adams Elementary

reproducing. Oregon State University researchers have

School, looks at macroinvertebrates at Tripp Island along theWilla›

determined that some of the

mette River. Harris was one of the teachers participating in an edu› mussels at the site are about cation program coordinated by the Institute for Applied Ecology. 55 years old. Their lifespan is

HAPPY GRANDPARENT /DAY Qw

+< fi --’-;-’› ~~I.I~c ys.


D4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015

M ontanarefuge a havenfor

migratory andgrasslandbirds By Ben Pierce The Bozeman (Mont.) Dai(y Chronicle

MALTA, M o nt.

The

Sprague’s pipit is a tiny grass› land bird very similar in ap› pearance to the Horned Lark. breast allow the Sprague’s pipit to conceal itself in short› grass prairie. The bird flies steeply when flushed before tucking its wings and plum› meting distinctly back to the earth.

Sprague’s pipits nest and Ben Pierce /The Bozeman (Mont.) Daily Chronicle

Refuge just east of Malta along

An American avocet walks through an alkali flat on the Bowdoin National Wildlife Refuge, east of Malta, Montana. More than 260

Montana’s Hi-Line. They are

birds frequent the refuge.

one of morethan 260 birds that frequent the refuge. "We have grassland song› birds including the Sprague’s pipit, Baird’s sparrow and chestnut-collared longspur," said Jessica Larson, BNWR wildlife biologist. "Birders typically come for the upland birdsand some come to see the waterfowl, but we will get

people coming through just to seethose three grassland songbirds."

of the Lakeside Unit and Dry Lake Unit where visitors get an intimate view of thriving wetland habitat.

In the spring and summer large flocks of American avo› cet and black-necked stilts can be observed wading in the al› kali flats along the shoreline. These shorebirds look a bit out of place, but they’ re not.

ducks to come, lay their eggs and nest," Larson said. "They key in on the grasses and wet› lands. Without the Prairie Pot›

holes, we wouldn’t have the ducks that we have." A hot-button issue for hunt›

ers on the Bowdoin is the removal by the refuge of in› vasive Russian olive trees. En› demic to Europe and western

"With their color, long legs Asia, the trees create good The BNWR sits on an an› and elegant bodies, you don’ t coverfor upland game birds, cient oxbow of the Missouri expect to see them on the prai› but they also crowd out native River that cut t h rough the rie, but they are very much species and spread quickly. "We have to manage for all area thousands of years ago. prairie birds," Larson said. During early land surveys "Avocets are the jewels of the the birds and wildlife, not just of Montana conducted in the wetland, but they lose their pheasant," Larson said. late 1800s, Bowdoin Lake was rusty color through the sum› Prime time to visit BNWR known as Alkali Lake. mer. By the time they leave is in the spring and fall. From During the early 1900s, the they are primarily white and mid-May to mid-June, numer› Montana Hi-Linebecame an black." ous species of songbirds move important agricultural region. The BNWF exists as part into the area. The Bureau of Reclamation of the larger Bowdoin Nation› The summer sees colonial began using Bowdoin Lake al Wildlife Refuge Complex, nesting birds such as great and the area of the future ref› a vast 84,724-acre swath of blue heron, d o uble-crested uge as a reservoir for used water and land in Blaine, Hill, cormorant a n d A me r i can irrigation water. The result› Phillips and Valley counties. white pelican. ing wetland habitat attracted

The complex includes BNWR,

ducks, geese, swans and nu› Black Coulee, Creedman Cou› merous other bird species. In lee, Hewitt Lake and L ake 1936, the BNWR was formed Thibadeau National Wildlife to protect the wetlands and Refuges, and nine waterfowl wildlife as a migratory bird production areas. refuge. The complex is part of the Today, a 15-mile auto tour Prairie Pothole Region, which ushers visitors around Bow› s tretches from t h e R o c k y doin Lake. The route passes

Mountain Front east to Min›

through grasslands and along nesota. The region is known the lake shore offering nu› as the nation’s "duck factory" merous vantage points from and provides critical habitat which to observe birdlife and for migratory waterfowl. take in the views. The Display Ducks of all types visit the Pond near the refuge head› BNWF, many nesting and quarters has a paved path and raising their young in the tall bird blind for those interested grasses and wetlands. Hunt› in a shorter outing. ers flock to Bowdoin Lake in

"In the cattail and bulrush

areas of refuge wetlands, thereare colonies ofoverwa ter nesters such as white-faced

ibis and Franklin’s gulls," the refuge website says. "Eared grebes build a floating nest of aquatic vegetation on which to lay their eggs. Like other grebes, the young can be seen ’hitching’ a ride on the back of one of their parents."

doin, the 15,551-acre refuge

FLY-TYING CORNER

rainbow trout. CRESCENTLAKE: Anglers report fair fishing for lake trout. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM:Fishing for trout and whitefish has been good. Fish that are being released should not be removed from the water. CULTUS LAKE:Anglers report fair fishing for lake trout. EAST LAKE:Anglers report good fishing for kokanee and trout. Unmarked rainbow trout must be released. FALL RIVER: River was stocked two weeks ago with rainbow trout. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. HOOD RIVER:Steelhead fishing on the Hood will be slow through the summer and early fall. Anglers can expect a few fish in November and December. HOSMER LAKE:Anglers report good fishing for all trout species. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK:Fishing for 11- to 13-inch kokanee is excellent. Fish are beginning to concentrate in the upper end of the Metolius Arm. LAURANCELAKE: Should provide excellent opportunities. Anglers fishing early in the morning will find best success. LOST LAKE:Lost Lake should be great fishing at one of Oregon’s most scenic lakes. METOLIUS RIVER:Special fishing regulations apply to the Metolius River. All tributaries except Abbot, Lake and Spring Creeks are closed to fishing. Opportunities for challenging catch-and-release flyfishing for native redband trout and bull trout in a pristine mountain stream are excellent. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day with

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Near Nuff Sculpln, courtesy The Patient Angler.

I like the NearNuff series for the simplicity, weight and profile. This sculpin pattern has anice wide-barred grizzly tail, a great, flared marabou collar and big, frightened eyes. Alittle bit of Krys› tal Flash gives the imitation a bit of sparkle. Sculpin stay close to the bottom unless they get caught in current. Then they’ revulnerable. Fish a sculpin pattern that way, on a sink-tip line. Cast it across and let it swing, then strip it back. Rainbows, browns andsmallmouth bass will hit it hard. Tie this pattern with olive thread on astout, long-shank No. 4-6 streamer hook. For the tail, use apair of olive grizzly rooster body feathers and two strands of pearl Krystal Flash. Wrapthe body with olive dubbing. Tie in dumbbell eyespainted yellow with a black pupil. For the hackle, turn olive grizzly rooster body feather, palmered, up to theeyes. Finish with olive dubbing wound between and in front of the eyes. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin an 8-inch minimum length. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: The water level is low. The boat ramp is closed. ODELL LAKE: Closed to fishing for bull trout and any incidental caught bull trout must be released unharmed. All tributaries to Odell Lake are closed to fishing. PAULINA LAKE: Anglers report fair fishing for trout. Unmarked rainbow trout must be released. PINE HOLLOWRESERVOIR: Water levels are dropping considerably due to drought conditions and irrigation demands. We have been getting reports that many of the trout have copepods, which are tiny parasites on their bodies and gills. These are not harmful to humans but the meat should be thoroughly cooked. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR:The water level is low. All boat ramps

at the Reservoir are now closed. Crappie and smallmouth bass opportunities are excellent. ROCK CREEK RESERVOIR: Anglers should be prepared that low water conditions due to irrigation withdrawals will limit success in Rock Creek reservoir. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Pond will be stocked this week with rainbow trout. Open to fishing all year. Limit is two trout per day with an 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to anglers17 years old and younger. WALTON LAKE:Anglers will have the most success fishing early in the morning when the temperatures are cooler. As a reminder, the bag limit includes only one trout over 20-inches per day. WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Closed upstream of ODFW markers located near West South Twin boat ramp.

Dogs must be on a leash at trail› heads anddeveloped recreation areas year-round. Continued from D1 Days are growing shorter and Dog leash regulations remain temperatures are dipping, espe› in effect throughTuesdayalong cially in the morning andevening. the DeschutesRiverTrail, Green An emergency situation could Lake, MoraineLake,ToddLake involve an unintended overnight and BrokenToptrails and areas stay. Before venturing out on of the ThreeSisters Wilderness. extended hikes, be prepared

with the 10 essentials: naviga› tion tools (map andcompass or GPS), water, food, extra clothing, light source (headlamp or flash› light), first-aid kit, fire source (waterproof matches or lighter), sun protection (sunscreen and sunglasses), repair kit and tools (knife or multipurpose tool) and emergency shelter.

andthelesionscanberemoved,

In the fall, waterfowl and

tundra swans cover the lake. The tundra swans show up in mid-October and stick around

until Bowdoin Lake freezes over before flying south for the winter.

"You cancome up any time, there is always something to includes several other smaller and upland game bird hunters. see," Larson said. "But spring "The Prairie Pothole Re› and fall is when you get the lakes and ponds. The auto tour leads through the marshlands gion is the perfect habitat for wow factor." In addition to Lake Bow›

ANTELOPEFLATRESERVOIR: The water remains dirty and low. Sampling indicated many trout available in the reservoir, but fishing effort remains low. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: Anglers report fair fishing for rainbow trout. Trout daily catch limit may include one rainbow trout over16 inches and one

nonfin-clipped (unmarked)

Its pale face and s treaked

winter in the prairie habitat of the Bowdoin National Wildlife

FISHING REPORT

the fall when the refuge sees a notable influx of waterfowl

Trails

turns out, are a more compli› hotdishes, dessert negotia› cated lot than the average per› tions and neutral conversa› son might think. tions that ended with "’Pose

Some people buy bear tags, so," or "Yinyet?" they bring their rifles and gear Yinyet, by the way, means to Minnesota, often from the "Are you in the car and ready other side of the world, and to go, yet?" Grandpa would they don’t really want to shoot

a bear. They may not even

say that without looking at us, sitting in the truck.

And I guess, that’s what I re› There is something elemen› ally love about hunting. It puts

know that about themselves.

tal about the bear hunt that gets to a part of us that a lot of

us in touch with the land and

oriented to the front, eye teeth

understand them a little better.

the people in ways we don’ t people never explore. Like a expect. Here I am in a t r ee human, a bear has eyes in the stand, not far from where my front of its head, ears that are grandparents grew up, and I for eating meat. Like a human, You get a lot of time to think in it will eat just about anything. And it is a beast of the for›

a tree stand. Next time I think I’ ll try the

est, a beast out of our ancient history.

lutefisk. Youbetcha.

It turns out that westerners,

who are used to wide open spaces, are the hardest hunt› ers to work with in a North

woods bear camp. "I think you are claustro›

phobic," Bachman said. "West› erners are used to seeing long

Highline Trail Continued from D1 Almost 3,000 hikers per

week make their way along the Highline Trail. "You get hikers of all abili› ties who go on the Highline," Germann said.

Some wander a few hun› dred yards to take in the view. Others embark on long back› country trips. It’s also one of the access points for Granite Park Lodge. This project will result in a much improved trail for a wide variety of hikers, she said. In addition, the rehabil› itation will make this section

Find the trailhead atLo› gan Pass, across theGoing› to-the-Sun Roadfrom the visitor center. Plan an out-and-back hike for whatever distance you like, or travel 7.5miles to Granite ParkChalet. From there, another 4 mileswill get you to the Loop,where you can pick upthe shuttle. much safer and reduce re› source damage from hikers skirting around rough tread and rocks.

Visit Central Oregon's

and they can’t see more than

HunterDouilas

15 yards." Yes, and then there are theelemental fears:bears,

tree stand on a black bear hunt in Minnesota.

wolves and the dark.

Gary Lewis / For The Bulletin

Bear hunt Hike theHighline

distances, and they get here

Outfitter Brian Bachman hands a rifle up to Tony Collins In a

Erin Madison / The Great Falls (Mont) Tribune

The popularity of the Highline Trail Glacier National Park, Montana, has led to wear and tear on the trail. This fall, the trail will undergo maintenance to improve the quality of the area.

Bachman tells his hunters to stay in the stand until dark. are regulated, strict and often

Guides will walk in and get the

more astute than the average hunter. "Hunting is part of their his› We spent the last three days of our trip trying to tory," Bachman said. "It’s a big get Minnesotans to say deal because they just don’ t how they really felt. Bach› have the kind of hunting we man was one of our favor› do, and when they hunt a bear, it’s like they’ re the king." ite targets. He said a few of his cli› Europeans, however, are ents come from Europe, but "move-around kinds of guys," most come from the Mid› B achman s a id , a n d tha t

trees and cedars, in a habitat

west and East Coast.

not unlike their native state.

Continued from D1

doesn’t work for bear hunting. "Eastern tree-stand hunters

Everyone brings their own cultural tendencies are the best," Bachman said.

— Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV" and author of "John NoslerGoing Ballistic," "Fishing Mount Hood Country," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Gary at www.Garyi.ewisoutdoors.corn.

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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 THE BULLETIN

D5

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

’S Onn

ina ac TV SPOTLIGHT

this outlaw, this tough guy, this against the grain person, and

"Johnny Cash: American Rebel"

man." That’s evidently an inherited Tappis, co-director of the CMT trait. Rosanne, who won three documentary. "More than any- Grammy Awards earlier this

thing, Cash was a sensitive art› year for her most recent album

The Associated Press

If only ev›

ery iconic musician could have a final act as heartening as Johnny Cash’s. l a t e-career r e v i val

i:li l !!tt

boosted his spirits and was a memorable bookend for his work, and the story behind it

"The River and the Thread,"

what would shine through was the artistic side of him, the sen› sitive guy who liked to stay up late taking photographs and writing in his journal, reading poetry and writing poetry." Tappis and Executive Pro›

is remarkably understanding

cooperation of Cash’s family, which opened the door to a

’ill’ ’sI

rich trove of interviews and archival m a t erial. B e sides

umentary thatpremieres Sea-

turday on the 12th anniversa› ry of Cash’s death at age 71. r o mance with

ist ... When I investigated him,

ducer Derik Murry earned the

lifts "Johnny Cash: American Rebel," a two-hour CMT doc›

While hi s

most compelling part of the

in his personality," said Jordan

By David Bauder

His

Rosanne said: "Honesty is the

there was an element of that

9 p.m. Saturday, CMT

NEW YORK

aS im

Mark Humphrey/The Associated Press

Country music legend JohnnyCash isshown during an October

June Carter and 1960s hey› 1986 performance in Jackson, Tennessee. day are entertaining to revisit, the story is familiar to much

said. "Then, of course, I saw what they did together and can Recordings" was released I felt the whole family owed tain fell is lesser known: Cash’s in 1994 and continued for the Rick a great debt. Rick came in of America through the 2005 with Cash’s. The first of the feature film, "Walk the Line." What happened after that cur›

minimalist series of "Ameri›

career foundered in the 1970s

rest of Cash’s life.

and reminded him of who he

Rosanne, the film includes interviews

with

Joh n n y ’s

in the film about things many

daughters would have a hard time forgiving. Her father’s ad› diction to amphetamines, for

example, "didn’t start because he was looking to get high," she explained. "It started be› cause he was trying to do his job." That’s not to say the path to understanding was short or easy. "You gain perspective as you get older and I saw that

son John Carter Cash, June’s daughter Carlene Carter and he and June were meant to musicians Sheryl Crow, Eric be together and I accepted it," Church, Merle Haggard, Kris she said. "It’s not to say that I Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, didn’t suffer. I did. That still Kid Rock and Cash’s former rings about in some ways. It son-in-law Rodney Crowell. made me who I am. I had a dad More importantly, that co› who was absent a lot and was o peration didn’t w r a p t h e a drug addict. A lot of people film in gauze, with a family have that, and it plays out in a reluctant to show a balanced similar way for everyone." p ortrait. The t r i als the Twelve years after his pass› drug addiction, the divorce to ing, she said, "I miss the con› Rosanne’s mother are dis› versations, talking about all cussed alongside the triumphs. of the things we talked about, "Johnny himself was not music and politics, other peo› afraid of being open and hon› ple and travel and whether est about his flaws," Tappis we could get one of his grand› said. "I thought it was import› children married off to Prince

Cash’s daughter, Rosanne, was, revitalized him and loved admitted to trepidations when him like a brother. They loved the long-haired, bearded, gu› each other like brothers." ru-like Rubin connected with The film includes two min› her father. utes of Johnny’s chilling video "Dad had been brought a for "Hurt," and Kurt Loder’s lot of ridiculous ideas, some interview wit h C ash about of which he had tried. He was his musical resurgence. What Yet when rap and hard rock kind of flailing about," said comes across in "American producer Rick Rubin began Cash, who was interviewed Rebel" is how that period looking for a specific chal› in the film. Her first thoughts: stripped away the mystique lenge, to work with a conse› Oh, no. Not again. and trappings of stardom to ant not to whitewash things." William. "I met Rick and I saw how "That was a late conversa› quential musician whose ca› return Cash to his first love He believes Cash’s open› music. reer had fallen on hard times, they worked together and I ness was one of the reasons tion of ours," she said, laughing "He has this reputation as fans were drawn to him. As about anunrealized dream. his interests aligned perfectly was really h eartened," she and 1980s, he was dropped by his record company and fell back into drugs. Finally, as re› countedby John Mellencamp in "American Rebel," he had resigned himself to a musical graveyard of performing in Branson, Missouri.

ewwie’s ami a airs ou ble mistake. Should I explain this to my

eep my shamefulsecreta se-

left flowers in my car with a note, fects your employment. and keeps asking me to go to con› Dear Abby:For the past year I certs out of town because he says

have been married to a man I love

his wife doesn’t want with all my heart, but we have yet to go and he doesn’ t to reside in the same house. He

uncle. It was a terri›

DE/,R

ABBY

cret? Please tell me

want to go alone. I h ave t r ie d t o

d ownplay his vances, but

lives in another city with his child’ s

mother and gives me excuse after a d › excuse as to why he won’t leave.

I am

what I should do. — ConfusedWife in the East Dear Confused Wife:I vote for

It’s either that he’s scared to have to

afraid it might cost me my job, my boyfriend and the ability to help my parents financial› telling your husband the truth. Bet› ly. I am aware my co-workers are ter he should hear it from you now probably wondering what is going

pay child support, or he’s afraid of my temper (which I’m seeking help for), or it’s just not the right time. I think I should take priority over his child’s mother because I am his

than hear about it later from his

WIFE. I am fed up with the excus›

on. How do I handle this delicate

uncle. Dear Abby:I started a new job four months ago after being out of work because of a large downsiz› ing at my last employer, an insur› ance company. My new job is close to home, and I really like the work

situation and do the right thing? es and ready to call it quits. What —In a Quandary should I do? in New England — Married but Alone Dear In a Quandary: Tell your in Maryland boss that you are involved in a Dear Married:Keep working on committed relationship, and so is your anger issues, but call it quits. he. The next time he invites you Obviously, your "husband’ s" prior› involved. to lunch, inform him that his in› ities lie elsewhere. Whether in the I’m single, in my early 40s and vitations are making you uncom› legal sense or the emotional, he ap› have a wonderful relationship with fortable. After that, if he persists pearstobe very much married to a widower I met in church. My in leaving flowers with little notes, his child’s mother. As it stands, you problem involves my immediate hang onto t hem b ecause they are already living as a divorcee, so boss, who is a married man with would be evidence that you were make it official and move on. a family. He has asked me to join being harassed in case your refusal — Write to Dear Abby at dearabbycom him for lunch several times. He has

to have a personal relationship af›

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNES› DAY, SEPT. 9, 2015:This yearyou have many great ideas. Often others chime in and support you in the pursuit of one or more of your potential plans or schemes. You need to take someextra time for your› self this year, as so much happens so fast. If you are single, use care with someone you meet whom you might want to get closer to. You are 8tars showths kistt likely to encounter of dsy yos’8 have at least one Person ** * * * D ynamic who is emotionally ** * * Positive un a vailable. If you ** * Average are attached, the ** So-so two of you love * Difficult to run away from your life and go somewhereyoucan'tbefound!These escapades support your bond. LEOmakes a great healer for you.

ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Your need to take action in conflicts is likely to emerge. As a result, interactions with others could become unstable and touchy. Your follow-through with these matters will attract a supervi› sor’s or older friend’s attention. Tonight: Listen to a loved one’s news.

TAURUS (April 20-May20)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

serve you well, unless you want to shut others out. Remember that very few have your vigor or are as romantic as you are. Tonight: Say "yes" to an offer.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You might want to rethink a question that is likely to affect your spending. You have long-term goals and certain desires involving travel and education, and you still might not be able to hold yourself back from overindulging. Tonight: Count your change.

LEO (July 23-Aug.22) *** * Tap into your energy,andhelp someone else bypass a limitation that seems to affect nearly every aspect of his or her life. Your caring gesture, interest and support helps this person far more than you can imagine. Deal with others gently at the moment. Tonight: As it is.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You could be in a position where you feel as if someone is taking advan› tage of you, and you might wonder why. Your discomfort comes from not facing an internal issue and growing past it. It is easy to blame these feelings on someone else. Tonight: Get a good night’s sleep.

** * * Fussing over a domestic issue will only frustrate you. Calm down, and keep your eye on the long term. You could be in a position where you are tired and worn out. Don’t push someone LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oot. 22) as hard as you have. Act from a more ** * * Gentleness takes you a lot fur› detached perspective. Tonight: Where the ther in discussions than any other way of gang is. dealing with a friend right now. A differ› GEMINI (May 21-June20) ent type of approach could backfire. Walk ** * * * Y ou could be at a point where in this person’s shoes and gain a better you might saysomething andlive to perspective of his or her life. Tonight: Get regret it. Being a little less forceful would together with loved ones.

• There may be an additional fee for 3-O and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

e rou touto t e ar Dear Abby: I recently married the love of my life. However, a few years ago, I had an affair with his

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY

or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21) *** * You often haveaway of saying things that makes others feel uncomfort› able or confused. Try to relate in the same language in which each person thinks and speaks. Your imagination will have a ball identifying with others. Tonight: Could go till the wee hours.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * Even if you want to get into an intense discussion or argument right now, you would be well-advised not to. A new insight or two allows you to understand why others are reacting the way they are. Lighten up about what is happening. To› night: Where there is great music.

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * You often have discussions that take you into a new realm of thought, espe› cially with a close loved one. Stay centered, even if you’ redealing with some new con› cepts. Don’t rely on what has worked in the past. Be willing to step into new territory. Tonight: Accept an invitation.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You could be in a situation where you no longer can tolerate everything that is happening. As aresult, you might becomesomewhatsnappywithseveral associates. You probably will need to walk

away forawhile. Tonight: Decidewhat you want to do, but listen to suggestions first.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * You might be asked to handle a matter for a close friend or associate. This person knows how to get you to say "yes" and pitch in. On the other hand, you have your hands full with your own responsibil› ities. Make it OK to say "no" more often. Tonight: Get some extra R andR. ' King Features Syndicate

I

I I

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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Shark Tank"› Doesthe idea of an exercise out› fit that provides built-in weight training grab you? A Georgia man hopes so ... and also hopes it does the same for the Sharks as he presents his unique clothing line in this episode. A Spokane man with a view toward maintaining well-kept facial hair also is featured, as are New Yorkers whose karaoke machine lets its users sound like actual music superstars. The Sharks include Mark Cuban, Lori Greiner and Kevin O’Leary. 8 p.m. on10, "MasterChef"› Howmuch did former champs from this show help the current contestants? That becomes clear in the new episode "Think Inside the Box," as tips from the veterans are put into practice ... and more than once. The cookshaveto m akean appetizer and an entree three times, with hostand judgeGordon Ramsay joined by judge Graham Elliot in supplying the ingredients. Fellow judge Christina Tosi’s special chocolate layer cake then has to be prepared by the losers. 8 p.m. on CW, "America’s Next Top Model" It’s no surprise that as this competition pro› ceeds, some of those vying for the win can get stressed out› and that overwhelms several of them in the new episode "The Girl Who Gets Possessed." That title refers to the models’ next challenge, which requires them to look as if they’ ve beenover› taken by evil spirits while they’ re hanging in mid-air, a la Linda Blair in "The Exorcist." Host Tyra Banks and her fellow judges have quite a time making their decisions.

8:30p.m. on FAN,"Kevin FromWork" Kevin’s (Noah Reid) in no mood to celebrate his birthday, so he’s fine with Julia’s (Amy Sedaris) request that he andAudrey (Paige Spa› ra) run the office whensheis called away by anemergency. Any hope hehadof just quietly getting through the daygoes out the window, though, as Audrey wants to seize this opportunity to show off all her dormant management skills in the newepisode "Birthday From Work." Elsewhere, Roxie and Brian (Jordan Hinson, Matt Murray) go overboard while planning Kevin’s surprise party. ' Zap2it

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D6 T H E BULLETIN

0

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AARP’s only nationally endorsed Auto Insurance Program. * Savings amounts are averagesbased oninformation from The Harfford’s AARPAuto Insurance Program customers who became newauto insurance policyholders between 1/1/14 and 12/31/14 and provided data regarding their savings and prior carrier. Your savings mayvary. Based on customer experience reviews shared online at www.theharfford.corn/earp as of July 201 5. The AARP Auto Insurance Program from The Harfford is underwritten by Harfford I ire Insurance Companyand its affiliates, OneHartford Plaza, Harfford, CT06155. CA License „5152. In Washington, the Program is underwritten by Harfford Casualty Insuranc Company. In Michigan,thePr forthe use ofis ogramisunderwrittenbyTrumbulllnsuranceCompany. AARPanditsaffiliates are notinsurer. Paid endorsement. The Harfford p ays royaltyfeestoAARP intellectual property. These fees are usedfor the general purposes of AARP.AARPrnernbership is required for Program eligibility in most states. Applicants are individually underwritten and some maynot qualify. Specific features, credits, and discounts mayvary andmay not be available in all states in accordancewith state filings and applicable law.

t If you are age 50 orolder, onceyou’ re insured through this Program for at least 60 days, you cannot be refused renewal as long as applicable prerniurns are paid whendue. Also, you andother customary drivers of your vehicles must retain valid licenses, remain physically andmentally capable of operating an automobile, have no convictions for driving while intoxicated andmust not have obtained your policy through material misrepresentation. Benefit currently not available in Hawaii, Michigan, NewHampshire andNorthCarolina. HLimitations apply. N C R-AO-7/1 5


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.corn THE BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 t

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AKC Doberman Pup› Seniors & ve t erans,Sofa bed queen sze by CHECKYOUR AD How to avoidscam pies. Blue f e male, adopt a great adult Englander, like new, and fraud attempts Fawn Male. Ready to companion cat, fee blue 8 cream plaid John Wayne com› YBe aware of interna› 0 9/20 $ 7 0 0 waived! Fixed, shots, $450. 541-668-5364 memorative holster go tional fraud. Deal lo› 541-383-4552 ID chip, tested, more! WHIRLPOOL CABRIO For newspaper and gun belt set, cally whenever pos› delivery questions, Cans & bottles wanted! Sanctuary at 65480 washer and d r yer, Model JW81, unit „ sible. 711 of only 3,000. Deluxe LOG Cabin please call the They make a big dif› 78th St., Bend, Sat/ never used, still in on the first day it runs Y Watch for buyers k it i n cludes l o g Circulation Dept. Sun. 1-5pm.389-8420. New in box w/ all ference in the lives of boxes. $1000 for both. to make sure it is cor› who offer more than 202 n a orig. printed mate› w alls, r oo f an d at 541-385-5800 abandoned animals. www.craftcats.org. Antique wicker baby rect. Spellcheck and your asking price and porch str u cture, Want to Buy or Rent rial incl. certificate Local nonprofit uses Shih-Tsu fern.born April bassinet/buggy, $100. human errors do oc› signed who ask to have by Michael $9,950. P a ckage To place an ad, call for spay/neuter costs. 30, all shots, wormed, Call 541-408-9813, or cur. If this happens to money wired or with windows, door Cash paidfor wood 541-385-5809 www.craftcats.org or your ad, please con› Wayne. Perfect con› handed back to them. and roof materials, raveling c age, 2 706-851-7881 dressers; dead wash› or email dition. $695. call 541-389-8420 for tdoses tact us ASAP so that Fake cashier checks of Advantage2. ers and dryers classified'bend› 541-420-5184 $14,500. pickup or to learn lo› $450. 541-350-7280 corrections and any and money orders The Bulletin 541-420-5640 406-241-5339 bulletin.corn cations of trailers. adjustments can be are common. recommends extra ’ made to your ad. PNever give out per› Yorkie AKC pups, 3M, I caution when pur› The Bulletin Remington 11-87 12 Serving Central tt eyon sincetgtg MADRAS Habitat 541-385-5809 adorable, tiny, UDT chasing products or sonal financial infor› a. automatic, 28" ROCK HOUND The Bulletin Classified RESTORE shots, health guar., pics, services from out of I arrel with / venti› mation. SALE: slab & rough Building Supply Resale $750/up. 541-777-7743 8 the area. Sending 8 lated rib, and long v’Trustyour instincts Hollyhocks; two young rock. NW & SW "LIKE NEW" Adam’ s Quality at cash, checks, or r ange choke + 2 and be wary of g ravenstein a p p l e collected. Equip., Combo irons. more. Prem. grade LOW PRICES 210 someone using an I credit i n f ormation 3Idea starts; white bleeding Lapidary & Jewelry -4-5 H . B . 6-P W 84 SW K St. may be subjected to with etched receiver, escrow service or hearts; yellow rose Dachshundsminilong- Furniture & Appliances tools, Beads, Find› GRPH S R sh a fts, 2 stocks, wood & 541-475-9722 haired AKC. $500 & up agent to pick up your I FRAUD. For more bush starts. You dig. ings, wire & metal. obo. camo. Very n ice. Open to the public. 541-598-7417 information about an 8 $360 merchandise. 541-548-2879 4520 SE Moki, piece be droom advertiser, you may I 951-454-2561 $650 obo. Mike at Deere Chihuahua/Pom 7set, People Lookfor Information Prineville,OR The Bulletin 1 roll top $ call th e 541-610-7656 Or e gon $ 208 Serving Centrat ttregon since tggg Fri-Sat 9/1 1-9/1 2 mix, wellness exam + desk$350. About Products and 246 8 chair, $300. ’ State Atto r ney ’ 1 Dam-4pm first s h ots, $350. 1 hall tree, $200. 2 Pets & Supplies Services EveryDaythrough Guns, Hunting WANTED: Collector I General’s O f f i ce 54’I -729-2905 541-550-0933 Miscellaneous The Bvlletfe Cleeei Bede leather chair reclin› Consumer Protecseeks high quality fish› & Fishing e q uip› bo t h . tion h o t line at I ing items & upscale fly camping The Bulletin recom› German Shepherd pup› e rs, $ 30 0 266 ment & Competitor 541-504-9945 pies, AKC, 2 Females, rods. 541-678-5753, or i 1-877-877-9392. Wanted: $Cash paid for mends extra caution School Muscle exer› Heating & Stoves $850 ea. Cute! 3 salmon, steel› 503-351-2746 when purc h as› vintage costume jew› cise bench com› 541-771-4857 > The Bulletin > head fishing poles, elry. Top dollar paid for ing products or ser› Serving Central Oregon since i903 Want to buy plete with weights. NOTICE TO Abu Garcia, Gold/Silver. I buy by the vices from out of the quality bark collar! Call f o r pr i ces ADVERTISER Browning & Berkley, area. Sending cash, Estate, Honest Artist 541-408-0014 and/or p i ctures. Since September 29, 212 $40 each. 3 casting Elizabeth,541-633-7006 checks, or credit in› 702-249-2567 (Sun› 1991, advertising for reels, Daiwa, Abu Winchester „100 semi river). f ormation may b e Antiques & used woodstoves has 308 cal., $350. subjected to fraud. Garcia, $25-$35 Collectibles been limited to mod› 203 For more informa› each. Call for de› 300 Savage „99 lever Call The Bulletin At Beautiful designer els which have been with 3x9x40, $350. tion about an adver› German shepherd tails. 503-936-1778 Holiday Bazaar sectional Antiques Wanted: Old certified by the O r› 541-385-5809 Coast 12 ga. pump, tiser, you may call puppies, AKC, Excellent condition tools, beer cans, fish› & Craft Shows $150. the O regon State teens, adults, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail egon Department of $850 ing/sports gear, our bloodlines make Call 541-977-3091, Jim. At: www.bendbulletin.corn Environmental Qual› Attorney General’ s Pre-’40s B/W photog› Find exactly what 503-781-5265 Central Oregon ity (DEQ) and the fed› Office C o n sumer all the difference! Saturday Market raphy, marbles, Breyer you are looking for in the 247 E n v ironmental Oneida King C e dric eral windridgek9.corn Protection hotline at "Where the seller is animals. 541-389-1578 CLASSIFIEDS Sporting Goods sterling silverware, 30 Protection A g e ncy the maker" since 1974. 1-877-877-9392. Labrador pups AKC, (EPA) as having met p ieces. $1400 . The Bulletin reserves - Misc. Open this Sat. 8 Sun. yellow, black, $300 smoke emission stan› 541-475-4618 the right to publish all The Bulletin from 10:00 AM - 4:00 -$400. 541-954-1727. serving Central gragon sincetglg dards. A cer t ified ads from The Bulletin 1970 Pool table, PM, in Downtown Bend, w oodstove may b e newspaper onto The Maremma guard dog across from the Public like new. Balls and identified by its certifi› Bulletin Internet web› Adopt a great cat or pup, purebred, $350 I Library. The largest cation label, which is 4 cue sticks site. two! Altered, vacci› 541-546-6171 Beautiful Oval Table selection of local permanently attached included. Slate top, nated, ID chip, tested, QueenslandHeelers Solid walnut, hand› artists and crafters, to the stove. The Bul› The Bulletin 50 BIIIIG Armalite crafted by an Amish more! CRAFT, 65480 Standard 8 Mini, $150 felt is in new East of the Cascades. Serving Central Oregon sincetggg letin will not know› 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, artisan for Schanz rifle, single shot bolt condition. $750. Call (541) 420-9015 or & up. 541-280-1537 Furniture Co. Exc. condi› Wonderful Beautiful Classical ingly accept advertis› 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 bas e ball gun, exc. cond., low visit us on Facebook www.rig htwayranch.wor tion w/lovely patina. 27" card 541-388-6910 Persian rug from ing for the sale of coll e ction! www.craftcats.org md. count. Very accu› dpress.corn Original Karastan uncertified H, top 30 Land20" 1978-91. Topps, full rate, great m uzzle C rossbow, Wic k e d collection, 9’x5.9", woodstoves. wide. Graceful curved sets, + many other break, light recoil, 20 Ridge Invader, a exc. condition. legs with 2-1/2 sets, individual cards gauge maybe, HD 330FPS, many extras, 267 hand-turned center A $2000 value, of Mantel/Mays, Ar› bi-pod & H D c a rry a s ne w . $30 0 . selling for $1000 Fuel & Wood support. Orig. $649; ron + o t her stars. bag. 60 loaded rnds. 541-306-8111. 541-788-4229 sell $150 Call included. C o mplete $950. 541-385-4790 253 541-729-1677 or loading set up avail. WHEN BUYING email w/ comp o nents. TV Stereo & Video Sunvision tanning bed, Dining room set, ebony dbwassom ' gmail.corn. FIREWOOD... must see to appreci› $2,950. 503-781-8812 table ha s b e v eled ate! 325 hrs. on 1500 Free 34" Sony Trin-XBR, To avoid fraud, glass cover, 36" high, 215 g reat pic , n o t fl a t hr. lamps. $500. CASH!! The Bulletin x41 n widex57" long. 541-385-9318 282 286 290 Coins & Stamps For Guns, Ammo & screen, 541-647-2685 recommends pay› shelf under table for Reloading Supplies. ment for Firewood Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Redmond Area Wanted: Seamstress in s torage o r kni c k› Private collector buying 255 541-408-6900. Tumalo/Sisters area. only upon delivery knacks 4 upholstered stamp albums & Computers and inspection. BIG sale-look for signs 3 family garage sale: stools. Almost new, postage Repair zippers, hem collections, world-wide A cord is 128 cu. ft. at Awbrey Rd and ** FREE ** Fri. 8 Sat 9 -3, 13’ pants, sew s i mple 4’ paid $900 sell f or and U.S. 573-286-4343 I ON’INIIS H TJ H T HE B U LLETIN r e › x 4’ x 8’ Sonora Drive. House› Garage Sale Kit Gregor alum. boat, $450. 541-953-9256 C hristmas (local, cell phone). quires computer ad› patterns, Receipts should hold, furn., tent, ar› Place an ad in The trailer an d m o t or, gifts. Call vertisers with multiple 541-388-6849 include name, chery, hunting, weight B ulletin fo r yo u r h ousehold mis c . , Dining table with 6 lad› 240 DO YOU HAVE ad schedules or those phone, price and bench, generator, art, sale and receive a horse trailer 8 tack, der back chairs, solid SOMETHING TO Crafts 8 Hobbies selling multiple sys› kind of wood 263 popcorn mach., high G arage Sale K i t Rigid wood l a t he, maple $130; Kitchen SELL tems/ software, to dis› purchased. chair and M O RE!! FREE! 3766 SW Xero Pl., table with 4 captains Tools FOR $500 OR Crafters Wanted close the name of the Firewood ads Saturday only, 8-3. Redmond chairs, solid maple, LESS? Open Jury business or the term H eavy d u t y dra i n MUST include KIT INCLUDES: $85; 2 s mall white Sat. Sept. 12, 9:30 a.m. Non-commercial "dealer" in their ads. 8 cost per BARN SALE old, new 4 Garage Sale chairs, $20 both; 2 advertisers may fo r s e p tic species Highland Baptist Private party advertis› cleaner and in-between! West turquoise stools, $10; cord to better serve Signs tanks or drain field, place an ad Church, Redmond. ers are defined as our customers. of Helmholtz, 5753 $2.00 Off Coupon round oak table with 2 GIANT GARAGE with our Eel, w/1/2 HP Jan 541-350-4888, those who sell one Electric SW Wickiup Ave, Fri. leaves, $70; Maple To Use Toward "QUICK CASH electric motor, 50 ft. SALE Empty-Nest› Tina 541-447-1640 computer. & Sat., 8-4 Bulletin Your Next Ad Lectern $30; s o l id www.snowflakebou› ers downsizing! SPECIAL" 3/4 in. flex drive coil The serving Central Oregonsince tgttg 10 Tips For maple king bed, $45. 260 line on wheels. Cost Washer/dryer, 1 week3 lines 12 tique.org D OWNSIZING S A L E "Garage Sale large beveled mirror in clothing, glassware, or $2,250 new, bargain All Year Dependable Misc. Items Fri & Sat. 8-4 house› frame Success!" $40; antique FIND IT! at $ 3 7 5 or ? snowboarding ~aweeke 2N hold, co n struction, Firewood: dry dresser with swivel 541-410-3425 equipment, decora› NUY IT! Ad must Buying Diamonds fishing gear. 2 1 31 beveled mirror and 4 Lodgepole, split, del, PICK UP YOUR tive items, office include price of SELL IT! NW Poplar Ave /Gold for Cash Lincoln ar c w e l der, 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . GARAGE SALE KIT drawers; $80. The Bulletin Classifieds a supplies, stereo ~n le item oi geon Saxon’s Fine Jewelers 200V AC/DC, lightly Multi-cord discountsl at 1777 SW Chan› 541-383-2961 equipment, TVs, or less, or multiple 541-389-6655 cash, check, Visa, MC Moving Sale used, „ 10 4 26-906 dler Ave., Bend, OR kitchen items and items whose total 241 541-420-3484, Bend $300. 541-318-0292 Friday only 9/11, 8-4 97702 BUYING much more. Satur› does not exceed Bicycles & 2515 NW Canyon Dr. 541-385-5809 Lionel/American Flyer day & Sunday, Sept. $500. 269 Redmond Accessories 12-13 O 1938 NW trains, accessories. Gardening Supplies The Bulletin Household items, Misc. 541-408-2191. 1st St. Starts at 7:30 iervrng Central Ctregon srnce t903 Call Classified at tools & furniture Tour Easy recumbent & Equipment 541-385-5809 AM. Mobile: BUYING 8t SE LLING 541-548-4965 b ike, s i z e med . 650-619-7582 bendbulletin.corn All gold jewelry, silver Frigidaire- Gallery Se› $2,500, bearing & and gold coins, bars, BarkTurfSoil.corn 292 ries gl ass-t op self mesh USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI seat. MARK V SHOP› rounds, wedding sets, cleaning range, like 541-536-7619 Sales Other Areas SMITH Model 510 class rings, sterling sil› Door-to-door selling with new $300. ver, coin collect, vin› bandsaw, scrollsaw, PROMPT DELIVERY Whirlpool refrigerator, 542-389-9663 fast results! It’s the easiest FINAL Seasonal tage watches, dental strip sander, thick› Tick, Tock Sales Northeast Bend way in the world to sell. cubed or crushed ice Garage Sale! ness planer, dust col› gold. Bill Fl e ming, and water in the door, Sept. 10,11,12, 8 to 4 541-382-9419. lector, support table, Tick, Tock... 9/12 only - Garage Sale The Bulletin Classified like new, $5 50 . In Fall and Christmas› For newspaper lathe chisel set, ring› Hot dog/ hambuger bun 8 a.m., 1188 NE 27th Madras, please call Howa 15 0 0 30 0 decorated trees, ...don’t let time get dehvery, call the master, wall mount› 541-385-5809 Street „126 in Bend Win. Mag. New, never warmer, $75; cement 541-419-8035 antiques & collectibles, ing brackets for stor› Circulation Dept. at away. Hire a (back row of Snow› fired. W ood stock, mixer, $100. antique a ge, s e t-up an d handmade crafts, 541-385-5800 futon, $125. berry Village) Furni› G ENERATE SOM E stainless barrel and glassware, furniture, professional out operation manuals. To place an ad, call 288 530-598-6004 ture, lamps, women’ s tools, lots of craft sup› EXCITEMENT in your action. Great deer or 541-385-5809 $2,500. 541-383-7124 of The Bulletin’s clothing, t o n s of Sales Southeast Bend neighborhood! Plan a plies. No clothes. elk gun , b a rgain or email "Call A Service kitchen items, Christ› 4504 SW Minson Rd., garage sale and don’ t priced-wife says sell TURN THE PAGE Snap-on roll away tool classified ggbendbulletin.corn mas decorations, a bit PICKER’S SALE! forget to advertise in :-) $65 0 . Call box wi t h many Powell Butte. For More Ads Professional" Bulletin of everything. Lots of Sat. and Sun., 9-3 Sue, 541-416-8222, or classified! 541-389-3694, leave Snap-on and Mateo The Serving genteel ttregon sincetggt The Bulletin Directory today! nice items. 60601 Tekampe Rd. Georgia, 541-548-0927 541-385-5809. message. tools, 907-310-1877

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E2 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.corn

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday Tuesday. Wednesday Thursday

5:00 pm Fri .Noon Mon. Noon Tues.

Noon Wed. Friday. Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday Sunday.

. 3:00 pm Fri. 5:00 pm Fri

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

Place a photo inyourprivate party ad for only $15.00 parweek.

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 intotal merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

*Illlust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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Add your web address Redmond M e m ory to your ad and read› Care Facility Now ers on The Bulletin's Hiring when pur› web site, www.bend› Country Side Living of caution bulletin.corn, will be Redmond wil l b e chasing products or I opening in O ctober services from out of a able to click through automatically to your 2015. We are hiring I the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r for ail positions. website. P lease refer t o o ur I credit i n f ormation website w w w.coun› I may be subjected to CDLTruck Driver trysideliving.corn, and FRAUD. Needed. download the applica› For more informa- I (54K per year) CDL tion. Please send your tion about an adverTruck driver needed. application and/or re› I tiser, you may call Our wood chip and sume as an attach› the Oregon State lumber drivers aver› ment to your emailed I Attorney General’s Office C o n s umer g age 54K annually response to g l Protection hotline atl (.48 cent ave). Off kathys@coun› weekends, paid va› I 1-877-877-9392. trysideliving.corn cation, health insur› LThe Bull~n ance. For 35 years RN's up to $45/hr we have serviced LPN'sup to $37.50/hr Eastern O r e gon, CNA's up to $22.50/hr Central Or e g on, Free gas/weekly pay Southern O r egon Get your $2000 Bonus and the Boise Val› AACO Nursing Agency business ley and you can live 1-800-656-4414 EXL38 in any of these loca› tions. We run late Check out the a ROWIN G m odel Petes a n d classifieds online Kenworths all 550 with an ad in cats with 13 speeds, www.bondbullelin.corn Updated daily our trailers are Cur› The Bulletin’s tin vans (no tarps to "Call A Service deal with) 4 0’-23’ Taxi Drivers Needed! Professional" doubles year around Full time day s hift, work. We our look› a pply at 1 919 N E Directory ing for long term Second St. drivers, our average employee has EPIC AIRCRAFT CAREER NIGHT w orked for us f or over 8 years. So if you are looking for a home, give us a call

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Wednesday,Sept.9th from 5-7PM 22550 NelsonRoad by the Bend Airport Medical Reception/ 541-318-8849 Medical Records BRING YOUR RESUME 8l BE PREPARED Bend Urology Associ› FOR A BRIEF JOB INTERVIEWates, LLC is seeking positive, s e l f-moti›Seeking highly motivated professionals who vated front office per› are quality-focused, team-oriented, mechani› PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction son for phone, recep› cally proficient and reliable. Prior experience is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right tion a n d me d ical preferred. Candidates should review j ob to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these and requirements for each position at: newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party records. Candidates duties must exhibit excellent www.epicaircraft.corn/company/careers. Classified ada running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. communication skills, MANUFACTURING have electronic medi› 269 270 341 cal record experience, Final Assembly Technician Gardening Supplies Lost & Found Horses & Equipment be able to multi-task with multiple phone & Equipment Sub-Assembly Technician LOST RC AIRPLANE l ines and h av e a White/Blue Near Miller knowledge of medical Composite Fab/Pre-Preg Technician Elem. 541-408-4949 terminology. ~nenne rowao ge W This is a full time posi› massive plants? Bonding Technician Get some locally tion in a fast paced environment with mul› [ produced Worm H orse T r ailer 16 ’ tiple providers. Cus› Tooling Inspector Castings. REMEMBER: If you 325 Gooseneck 1 9 8 9 tomer service is high ( Worm Castings are have lost an animal, dual axle donated to priority. This position Trim Drill Technician the most potent don’t forget to check Hay, Grain & Feed Equine Ou t reach. offers a full benefit I naturally occurring I The Humane Society GVW, 7X16, Aircraft Interiors Technician fertilizer known to p ackage. Ple a se Bend First Quality green grass 12,000 overall length, 6 send your resume and man. Visit us, and 541-382-3537 hay, no rain, barn stored, 23’ 1/2’ tall, slider/swing Senior Purchasing 8 Materials Coordinator cover let t e r to ( orderat: Redmond $250/ton. rear door, tack shelf, miriamg©bend Jollyworms.corn 541-923-0882 Call 541-549-3831 Shipping & Receiving Clerk 4 Patterson Ranch, Sisters mid-swing door, pad› urology.corn. Madras ded walls with new PT L 541-475-6889 Second c u t ting o r› deck. $$3,995 Call QUALITYASSURANCE Prineville chard grass mix, small Gary 541-480-6130 270 541-447-71 78 bales, $220/ton, no Lab Technician Lost & Found or Craft Cats Journeymen rain. 5 4 1 -420-9736 383 541-389-8420 Madras, Oregon Dimensional Inspector Produce 8 Food FOUND: Set of keys Needed for New Wheat Straw for Sale. outside Bend library 282 Non-Destructive Inspector (NDI) Also, weaner pigs. THOMAS ORCHARDS I Co nstruction. I on sidewalk on 9/6, Sales Northwest Bend 541-546-6’I 71 Kimberly, Oregon call to ID. Start Quality Control Inspector 541-382-7292 U-PICK Guys 8 Girls Garage immediately! Good classified ads tell Freestone Canning Sale! Selling automo› the essential facts in an Good pay/ FLIGHT SUPPORT Lost: Aug. 8 from Em› tive, fishing, tools & Peaches: Elberta, An› pire near OB Riley other household. Fri. interesting Manner.Write benefits. gelus, Monroe. from the readers view not Avionics Technician peach-faced Lovebird, 18th from 8 - 2 a t O’Henry, 60tt lb. Company Van. I looks like small parrot, 20840 Hereford Ave. the seller’ s. Convert the Nectarines, 700 lb. Call Gary at ENGINEERING green body, answers facts into benefits. Show Bartlett pears, 65tt lb. to "Wednesday". Summit the reader howthe item will Asian Pears $1.00/lb. 266 541-385-8367 Research & Development Engineer help them insomeway. P l umbing I Gala Apples 650/lb. I Sales Northeast Bend This Honeycrisp apples› g541-41 0-1 655g LOST POODLE, small • Research 8Development Technician advertising tip call for availability! black male, "Cricket" Upscale Yard sale! An› brought toyou by BR/NG CONTAINERS! in Madras, by Culver tiques and collectible ADMINISTRATION The Bulletin Open 7 days a week, mostly. 9-5 Thur, Fri, Hwy/Fairgrounds on The Bulletin To Subscribe call Serene Central Oregonrtncefate 8 a.m.to 6 p.m .only 9/7/1 5. RE W A RD! Sat. 462 NE DeKalb Bookkeeper 541-385-5800 or go to 541-934-2870. 541-280-3629 or Look at: 541-475-3889 Weare at the Bend www.bendbulletin.corn We are a equal opportunity employer Looking for your Bendhomes.corn Farmer’sMarket next employee? on Wednesdays. for Complete Listings of Place a Bulletin n t I Visit us on Facebook help wanted ad Area Real Estate for Sale for updates! today and St. Jude Novena. May 292 reach over the Sacred Heart of 60,000 readers Sales Other Areas Jesus be adored, glo› each week. 5(jill) s o rified, loved and pre› C.R.R. Garage Sale. Your classified ad served throughout the 15th-17th. Ret i r ed will also world, now and for› M.B. Tech selling met› appear on ever. Sacred Heart of sockets, wrenches, bendbulletln.corn Jesus pray for us; St. ric isc. t o ols, te s t which currently Jude, w o rker of m guy stuff, receives over miracles, pray for us; equip., ome g i r l stu ff . 1.5 million page St. Jude, helper of the s 541-548-2808 hopeless, pray for us; views every 421 Say this prayer 9 month at no Schools & Training Where can you find a times a d ay, your extra cost. prayers will be an› helping hand? Bulletin IITR Truck School s wered by th e 8 t h From contractors to Classifieds REDMOND CAMPUS day,. It ha s n ever Get Results! OurGrads Get Jobs! been known to fail. yard care, it’s all here Call 541-385-5809 1-888-438-2235 Publication must be in The Bulletin’s or place your ad WWW.Hm. EDU promised. Thank you "Call A Service on-line at Jesus and St. Jude. 470 Mary L. Professional" Directory bendbulletin.corn Domestic & In-Home Positions

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Circulation Night Dock Assistant The Bulletin is looking for a motivated, re› sponsible individual to join our Circulation De› partment team and fill a vital position working within our circulation Dock crew.

Person is responsible for all dock issues: sort› ing, distribution, and loading all WesCom products to haulers and carriers. Knowledge of packaging, transportation and d istribution methods, as well as inventory skills and cus› tomer service skills a plus. May drive com› pany vehicles to transport various WesCom products from time to time (such as post office, etc.). Interacts with Home Delivery Advisors, Carriers, Customer Service Representatives, and all management at The Bulletin. Ability to lift 50 pounds, work night shift. Ap› proximately 24 hours per week shift to start. Wage DOE. All hiring is contingent on passing drug and DMV screening.

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has openings l i sted b e low. G o to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97703; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Administrative Assistant II for IT and HR Support all college technology purchasing. Provide general office support for the IT Ser› vices Department and administrative support for the HR Department. Req Associates De› ree + 3 - yrs exp. F ull-Time. $ 2 , 740› 3,261/mo. Closes Sept 9.

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Do you need help with light domestic duties, errands, misc...? Please call Carol at 541-480-0263

Looking for someone to c lean m y hou s e Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care weekly, 1700 sq.ft., 4

bdrm, 2 b a th. C a ll NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land› 541-382-1144 law requires anyone scape Contractors Law 476 who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all Employment construction work to businesses that ad› be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Opportunities Construction Contrac› Z~oeZQaafiep Landscape Construc› tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: CAUTION: active license Za~<C’a r,, p lanting, deck s , means the contractor fences, arbors, Ads published in Full Service is bonded & insured. water-features, and in› "Employment Op› Landscape Verify the contractor’s stallation, repair of ir› portunities e include Management COB l i c ense at rigation systems to be employee and inde› www.hirealicensed› l icensed w it h th e pendent positions. contractor.corn Fire Protection Landscape Contrac› Ads for p o sitions or call 503-378-4621. and Fuels Reduction tors Board. This 4-digit that require a fee or The Bulletin recom› Tall Grass number is to be in› upfront investment mends checking with Low Limbs cluded in all adver› must be stated. With the CCB prior to con› Brush and Debris tisements which indi› any independent job tracting with anyone. cate the business has opportunity, please Some other t rades Protect your home with a bond, insurance and i nvestigate tho r › also req u ire addi› defensible space workers c ompensa› oughly. Use extra tional licenses and tion for their employ› caution when ap› cert ifications. ees. For your protec› plying for jobs on› Landscape tion call 503-378-5909 line and never pro› Maintenance or use our website: vide personal infor› Full or Partial Service Handyman www.lcb.state. or.us to mation to any source Mowing eEdging check license status you may not have Pruning .Weeding I DO THAT! before contracting with research ed and Sprinkler Adjustments Home/Rental repairs the business. Persons deemed to be repu› Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape table. Use extreme Honest, guaranteed Fertilizer included with maintenance do not when r e › monthly program work. CCB„151573 r equire an LCB l i › cs aution ponding to A N Y cense. Dennis 541-317-9768 online employment Clean-V ps ad from out-of-state. Its not to late to have a We suggest you call Beautiful Landscape Have an item to the State of Oregon sell quick? Consumer Hotline WeedFree Bark at 1-503-378-4320 If it’s under 5 FlowerBeds Personal Services For Equal Opportu› ’500you can place it in nity Laws contact Lawn Restoration Oregon Bureau of The Bulletin At your Service Labor & I n dustry, Experienced Errands8 Notary Classifieds for: Civil Rights Division, Commercial I stand in line so you 971-673- 0764. 8 Residential don’t need to. ’10 - 3 lines, 7 days Free Estimates errandsandnotary The Bulletin Senior Discounts ’16 -3 lines, 14 days I gmail.corn 541-390-1466 541-815-4731 541-385-5809 (Private Party ads only) Same Day Response

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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii’shortz

C L U B w edn~day, septmber9,2015

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ACROSS 1 King of rhyme 5 Antelope with iwisly horns 10Crunched material 14Name shared by five Norwegian kings 15Lowest field rank 16It’s big in movies 17"I merely agreed to serve beer at some pubs, and n ow I’m ! " 19Corresponding 20 Where the biennial Vinaxpo is held 21 Fruits at an oasis 22 China and environs, with li st

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "So I m a d e a m i s take," E ast shrugged after South wrapped up his game contract. "Life doesn’t come with an instruction manual." After South jumped boldly to four hearts, West led the seven of spades, and East took the ace and returned a spade to the ten and jack. West then ledthe king, and when dummy ruffed with the nine, East overruffed with the jack. South won East’s club shift and cashed the A-K of t r umps. West’s queen fell, so South drew East’s last trump with the ten and claimed the rest.

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It’s true that life doesn’t come with a user’s manual, but there are some good books on bridge out there. If East had read one on basic defensive play, he might have beaten four hearts. The book would tell him that a defender is seldom right to overruff with a trump trick he will get anyway. When dummy ruffs the third spade, East should discard. Then the defense gets two trump tricks instead of one, and South goes down. W hen all e l s e f a i ls, r ead t h e instructions.

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Youhold: 4 5 A 6 9 J 8 4 2 Opening lead 47 0 K 8 4 2 A J 8 7. T h e d ealer,at your left, opens one spade. Your (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Findfive gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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partner doubles, and the next player bids two spades. What do you say? A NSWER: Y o u r p a r tner h a s opening values with support for the unbid suits, and you have nine points. To sell to two spades would be too timid. Since partner is likely to have good support for the other major, bid three hearts. If the opponents go to three spades, you’ ll try for a plus on defense. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

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By Pawel Fludzinski and Amy E. Hamilton O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

09/09/1 5


THE BULLETIN eWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809 860

Employment Opportunities 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

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Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

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Homes for Sale

NOTICE

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Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

870

V-Max 2009 Yam aha Lots of factory extras: windshield, saddlebags, back

Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner m~ › low engine hrs. fuel injected V6 Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. Monaco Monarch 31’ $11,590. 2006, F ord V 10, 541-546-0345. miles, 26,900

17’ SunCraft, 2 motors. $1 400. 541-593-7257

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auto-level, 2 slides,

Hobie Mirage tandem queen b ed 8 k ayak, $2,5 0 0 . hide-a-bed sofa, 4k 541-536-7619 gen, convection mi› crowave, 2 TVs, tow 875

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,

Winnebago Journey 2001 36’ 2nd owner, 300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 60k miles. D r iver s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat screen TVs, refer, generator, inverter, King Dome, tow bar. N on-smoker, n o pets, no c h ildren. C lean, an d w e l l maintained, $43,000 541-390-1472.

Unique R-Pod 2013 trailer-tent combo, f ully l oaded, e x › tended service con› tract and bike rack. $16,000. 541-595-3972 or 503-760-4487

You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

BIG COUNTRY RV All real estate adver› rest, rear cargo I "= Bend: 541-330-2495 tised here in is sub› rack, bike cover, Redmond: ject to th e Federal motorcycle hoist, 541-548-5254 F air Housing A c t , alarm system, also package. Watercraft which makes it illegal PRICE REDUCTION! set of new tires. 18’ 2003 S un 885 Looking for your to advertise any pref› $59,000. $11,000 ( Cruiser - pontoon ds published in eWa next employee? erence, limitation or 541-506-1554 541-815-6319 Canopies & Campers boat, fully equipped. tercraft" include: Kay Place a Bulletin help discrimination based I Has only been used I aks, rafts and motor Find It in wanted ad today and Lance Squire 4 000, on race, color, reli› a handful of times & Ized personal reach over 60,000 ion, sex, handicap, e Oll 1996, 9’ 6" extended ~ has been in covered ~ waterc rafts. The Bulletin Clesslfieds! Fo readers each week. Iamilial status or na› cab, bathroom w/ toi› 541-385-5809 ( storage. As king "boats" please se Your classified ad tional origin, or inten› let, queen bed, out› i $13,000. C II W Class 870. will also appear on tion to make any such side shower. $5,700. 881 Take care of 541-365-5609 bendbulletin.corn preferences, l i mita› Call 541-362-4572 Pace A rrow V i s ion Travel Trailers which currently re› tions or discrimination. Yamaha V Star 1100 your investments 1997, Ford 460 en› We will not knowingly Classic, year 2004, ceives over 1.5 mil› Serving Central Oregon since1903 with the help from gine w/Banks, solar, lion page views ev› accept any advertis› -Many extras. 17K walk-around q ueen The Bulletin’s ery month at no ing for real estate miles. $4800. 880 8 bed, 2 door fridge, mi› extra cost. Bulletin which is in violation of 541-546-2109 pets "Call A Service cro-convection oven, Motorhomes Classifieds Get Re› this law. All persons WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, Professional" Directory 870 sults! Call 365-5809 are hereby informed needs work, (photo or place your ad that all dwellings ad› Boats & Accessories Northlander 1993 19’ Bayliner 1998, I/O, similar to actual rig) 19’ Ampex. 2011. Slide on-line at 17’ camper,Polar vertised are available IB $9,500. 541-280-0797 out and other extras. great shape, call for bendbulletin.corn on an equal opportu› 12’ Valco alum. on 990, good shape, Tows well $12,500. info. $65500. In Bend aa I RIMXSQ nity basis. The Bulle› trailer 9.9 J ohnson 661-644-0384. new fridge, A/C, 541.316.1367 RV tin Classified queen bed, bath› 0/B, plus amenities, FIND IT! CONSIGNMENTS room, indoor/out› exc. shape. $1250. Winnebago Outlook BUY I7’ 750 WANTED 541-549-8126 door shower, lots of 2007 Class "Cn31’, SELL ITI We Do The Work ... Redmond Homes storage, custom› clean, non- smoking You Keep The Cash! 14’ aluminum boat w/ The Bulletin Classifieds ized to fit newer exc. cond. Must See! trailer. Trailer has 2 On-site credit pickups,$4500 obo. e 882 Looking for your next Lots of extra’s, a very brand new tires & approval team, 541-419-9659. emp/oyee? wheels. Trailer in exc. 19’ Classic 1 9 90 good buy.$47,900 web site presence. Fifth Wheels Place a Bulletin help For more info call cond., guaranteed no We Take Trade-Ins! 34’ Winnebago One 528 ski boat. 541-447-9268 wanted ad today and leaks. 2 upholstered Mastercraft 2013 30RE. Pro-star 190 conven› Loans & Mortgages reach over 60,000 Cameo LXf 20 01, swivel seats, no mo› tional BIG COUNTRY RV $25,000. Two slides. o in-board, cus› 32 ft. 5th wheel, 2 readers each week. tor. $2,900. tom trailer, exc. cond. Bend: 541-330-2495 Fully loaded. WARNING I slides, A/C, micro, Your classified ad 541-410-4066 Redmond: Full photos and info The Bulletin recom› $6,995. 541-369-6562 541-548-5254 DVD, CD p l ayer, will also appear on ae sent upon request. mends you use cau› conv. and i n vert. bendbulletin.corn Family illness tion when you pro› New batteries, tires which currently re› requires sale. vide personal and shocks. Quad ceives over Garage Sales 541-923-2593 information to compa› 2009 Skyline Park carrier. Quad avail. 1.5 million page nies offering loans or Model Beach Cottage, Garage Sales views every month $11,900 OBO. see Bend Craigslist, credit, especially 541-390-7179 at no extra cost. 14’ Lund aluminum 908 those asking for ad› type 5204278937 in Garage Sales : = : : : ’5% Bulletin Classifieds Il 19’ Willie Predator, vance loan fees or fishing boat, 8 HP s earch bar o r c a ll Aircraft, Parts Get Results! CHECK YOUR AD Mercury e n g ine, 175 HP sport jet, Find them companies from out of Benjamin Call 385-5809 or & Service long shaft. $2,500. 160 hours. Also 9.9 541-390-9723 state. If you have place your ad on-line in 702-249-2567 (Sun› Yamaha tro l l ing concerns or ques› at J a F l i h t 26 4 B H The Bulletin tions, we suggest you river) motor with Garmin Just bought a new boat? bendbulletin.corn 2011. like new, sleeps TR-1 aut o - pilot, Sell your old one in the consult your attorney Classifieds classifieds! Ask about our n 9, self contained, 1/2 or call CONSUMER 16’6 2005 T racker Scotty electric down Super Seller rates! n ton towable $13,900 on the first day it runs riggers & accesso› HOTLINE, Say ngoodbuy Targa V16 boat. 60 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 OBO (541) 410-9017 1-877-877-9392. ries, dual batteries to make sure it isn cor› HP 4-stroke Mercury to that unused rect. eSpellcheck and motor & 8 HP 4-stroke with selector switch. BANK TURNED YOU 1/3 interestin Full canvas & stor› RV human errors do oc› item by placing it in motor, Minnkota fowl DOWN? Private party CONSIGNMENTS cur. If this happens to mounted, foot c on› age cover, always Columbia 400, The Bulletin Classifieds will loan on real es› WANTED your ad, please con› trolled motor, Low› stored inside. Financing available. tate equity. Credit, no We Do The Work ... tact us ASAP so that $19,500. ranges fish finder, top $125,000 541-460-9277 problem, good equity 5 41-385-580 9 You Keep The Cash! corrections and any & fold and close top. (located @ Bend) is all you need. Call On-site credit adjustments can be $17,500. Ask a bout Allegro 32’ 2007, like S outhwind F o r d 541-268-3333 Oregon Land Mort› approval team, made to your ad. new, only 12,600 miles. Fleetwood motor› extras. 541-632-2676. 763 gage 541-388-4200. web site presence. 541-385-5809 Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 home, 19 9 4, 32’, FUN & FISH! Recreational Homes We Take Trade-Ins! TheBulletin Classified transmission, dual ex› gasoline, 82K miles, LOCAL MONEY:Webuy haust. Loaded! Auto-lev› Good & Property con d ition, BIG COUNTRY RV secured trust deeds & eling system, 5kw gen, $7,000 note, some hard money Cabin in the woods on power mirrors w/defrost, 503-607-5490 obo. Bend: 541-330-2495 loans. Call Pat Kellev 2 slide-outs with aw› Redmond: trout stream, private, 541-382-3099 ext.13. 541-548-5254 nings, rear c a mera, off the grid, 80 mi. 1/5 share in very nice 16’ Lowe, „1 6 05 Sprinter RV van cus› trailer hitch, driver door from Bend. 638 ac. deep water, four-man 150 HP Cessna 150; 2006 Smokercraft w/power window, cruise, tom built dbl mattress, $849K. Fo r d r o ne bass boat with dual Sunchaser 820 1973 Cessna 150 with exhaust brake, central Cougar 27.9 RKS $175. 541-536-1044 video li n k , cal l Cannon down-riggers model pontoon boat, vac, satellite sys. Re› Lycoming 0-320 150 2015 5t h W h eel. 541-480-7215. hp engine conversion, 75HP Mercury and duced price: $64,950. for trolling to 100 feet. Like new, loaded, Stow Master 5000 by 4000 hours. TT air› Excellent c o n dition electric trolling mo› 503-781-8812 automatic l eveling 775 Tow Master. $350. frame. Approx. 400 tor, full canvas and with f as t 40 HP jacks, Polar pack› Manufactured/ Generator exhaust hours o n 0- t i med many extras. Johnson ou t board age, everything you RVision C r ossover system, Gen Turi, 0-320. Hangared in Stored inside Mobile Homes with automatic oil in› need to take on a 2013, 19ft, exc. Well with case. $7 5. nice (electric door) $19,900 jection. E a g le-Elite equipped, $ 1 1,500. trip, hitch included. 503-936-1778 city-owned hangar at 541-350-5425 List your Home fish finder and GPS to 541-604-5387 $33,900 or best rea› the Bend Airport. One JendMHomes.corn locate the abig ones". sonable offer. 630 of very few C-150’s We Have Buyers New trolling kick plate 541-615-3076. that has never been a Rooms for Rent Get Top Dollar + Minn Kota electric Beaver Contessa 40’› t rainer. $4500 w i l l Financing Available. trolling motor. New 2008, four slide die› , IN I › consider trades f or For rent: bedroom 8 541-548-5511 2-way radio. Water› sel pusher. Loaded, Laredo 31’ 2006, whatever. Call Jim bath inmy home. No proof cover, life-jack› great condition. War› 5th wheel, fully S/C Frazee, 541-410-6007 s moking. Use o f ets, bumpers, and ex› ranty. Pictures/info at one slide-out. Silver Streak Sabre kitchen & w/d. Call tras. All tuned and www.fourstarbend.corn Winnebago 22’ Awning. Like new HANGAR FOR SALE. 17’ 1963 beautifully 541-788-1215 2002 - $28,000 ready to go. $4,500. 2 3’10" S R 2 3 0 0 541-647-1236 hardly used. 30x40 end unit T restored, vertical grain Phone (541) 593 7774 ’95, own with pride, Chevy 360, Must sell $20,000 hanger in Prineville. 632 always compliments, B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ’ , heavy duty chassis, fir cabinets, shower, - NW Bend. or refinance. Call Dry walled, insulated, no salt, head never toilet, kitchen s ink, one slide, low mile› cab & roof A/C, pt./Multiplex General 541-410-5649 and painted. $23,500. used, due for 5 year stove & refrigerator. age, very clean, lots tow hitch w/brake, Tom, 541.788.5546 cooling ma i n t., of storage, $28,500. Better built than an 22k mi., more! CHECKYOUR AD $9500 firm. Extras. Airstream! $10,500. 541-639-9411 541-280-3251 W eekend only . 541-350-4077 NIAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN 805 541-678-3249 Misc.Items Bright Wood Corporation, a 50+ year old wood Home Delivery Advisor 16’ Navarro canoe, remanufacturer located in Madras, Oregon is Advertise your car! The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking Loon 16. Fi b e r› 5250 Falcon tow bar looking for a maintenance Electrician report› Add APicture! a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time on the first day it runs $150; Guardian, $75; glass with lots of Reach thousands of readers! ing to the Maintenance Supervisor. The shift position and consists of managing an adult to make sure it is cor› box of misc. $60; 4 wood. $ 80 0 . Call 541-385-5809 Electrician is a key member of the Mainte› carrier force to ensure our customers receive 702-249-2567 (Sun› rect. eSpellcheckn and Fleetwood D i scovery tire covers 22.5, $25; The Bulletin Classlfieds nance team which is responsible for repairs service. Must be able to create and human errors do oc› Will take $250 for ev› river) 40’ 2003, diesel, w/all superior and maintenance for all machinery and equip› strategic plans to meet department cur. If this happens to erything. options - 3 slide outs, perform ment such as conveyor systems, hydraulic objectives such as increasing market share your ad, please con› 541-852-5843 satellite, 2 TV’s, W/D, and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a components, machine control,and much tact us ASAP so that etc., 34,000 m iles. self-starter who can work both in the office more. These positions are for swing and grave corrections and any 850 Wintered in h eated and in their assigned territory with minimal shifts and may include weekends. adjustments can be shop. $78,995 obo. supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary Snowmobiles made to your ad. 541-447-6664 RESPONSIBILITIES to include repair, main› with company vehicle provided. Strong 541-385-5809 25’ 2006 Crestliner tain, and troubleshoot electrical and mechani› customer service skills and management skills TheBulletin Classified 16’ Seaswirl Tahoe p ontoon boa t , cal equipment such as AC motors, DC motors are necessary. Computer experience is model 2485LSI An› and servo motors, servo controllers, variable with trailer, 50 HP required. You must pass a drug screening Senior Apartment› gler Edition, 115 HP frequency drives, AC and DC control circuits, Evinrude, bimini top, and be able to be insured by company to drive Independent Living Mercury outboard, PLC communications networks, pneumatic excellent condition. vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we ALL-INCLUSIVE dual cano p ies, components,hydrauli c components, conveyor b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o with 3 meals daily 4-place enclosed Inter› $3,500 change room, bath› systems, and o t her i nterrelated process advancement within company is available to 2 Bedrooms Available state snowmobile trailer 541-647-1 918 Lexington 2006 room, all accesso› equipment. right person. If you enjoy dealing with NOW. Check it out! w/ RockyMountain pkg, 283TS class B+mo› the ries. $2 0,000. people from diverse backgrounds and you are Call 541-460-5323 $7500. 541-379-3530 tor coach, full GTS 702-249-2567 (Sun› Shall perform a variety of electrical/mechani› energetic, have great organizational skills and pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 river) cal tests to determine exact cause of issue; 860 interpersonal communication skills, please 636 burner range, half Performs unscheduled maintenance to the send your resume to: time oven, 3 slides Apt JMultiplex NW Bend llotorcycles & Accessories equipment and machinery to repair or replace Ads published in the The Bulletin w/awnings, Onan defective parts; "Boats" classification c/o Kurt Muller gen., King Dome sat› Near downtown, park 16’ Smoker C raft Perform adjustments and calibration proce› include: Speed, fish› PO Box 6020 ellite system, Ford and Old Mill, small 1 dures on various forms of process equipment; fishing boat, 50 HP ing, drift, canoe, Bend, OR 97708-6020 V10 Triton, auto-lev› bdrm. All util. paid. Perform scheduled maintenance as in› Yamaha ou t b oard house and sail boats. or e-mail resume to: eling system, new $550 + $550 security structed on all equipment/machinery/facility; motor w/electric tilt & For all other types of kmuller@bendbulletin.corn tires, Falcon tow bar. dep. 541-382-7972. Shall track labor, parts, and machine history electric trolling motor watercraft, please go No phone calls, please. Non-smoker, main› in plant CMMS; control Harley 2003, Dyna w/remote to Class 875. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE tained in dry storage. Make necessary temporary or permanent 648 wide glide, 100th An› mounted on bow, walk 541-385-5809 Pre-emp/oymentdrug screen required. Can email additional electrical installations, repairs, or modifica› Houses for n iversary mod e l . through w i ndshield, pictures. $55,000. tions in line with plant policies; 13,400 orig. mi., cus› exc. cond. $8,500. Servrn Central Ore on since 1903 Rent General 541-520-3407 Works with each department providing nec› tom paint, new bat› 541-233-6223 General essary support to ensure day-to-day mainte› tery, lots of e xtras, PUBLISHER’ S nance issues are resolved. show cond. Health NOTICE Maintain a written log of any highlights occur› All real estate adver› f orces s ale. W a s ring during shift coverage in conjunction with $11,000 OBO, now tising in this newspa› * proper CMMS entries. firm. per is subject to the $8,000 / * Great Supplemental Income!! or F air H ousing A c t 541-633-7856 IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I The position responsibilities outlined above are which makes it illegal 360-815-6677 no way to be construed as all encompass› day night shift and other shifts as needed. We fi in to a d vertise "any ing. Other duties, responsibilities, and qualifi› currently have openings all nights of the week. a preference, limitation cations may be required and/or assigned as / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts or disc r imination necessary. start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and based on race, color, i / end between 2:00 a. m. and 3: 30 a. m. Al l poreligion, sex, handi› EDUCATION/EXPERIENCE AS SHOWN BEsitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. cap, familial status, I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI LOW IS REQUIRED: marital status or na› H arley Road K i ng In this position you will play a vital role fi minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts fi tional origin, or an in› Classic 2003, 100th Must have Oregon Electrician license, Gen› on our Sports Staff! are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of tention to make any Anniversary Edition, eral Journeyman or Limited Manufacturing / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack› such pre f erence, 16,360 mi., reduced Plant Journeyman; The successful candidate will work ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and limitation or discrimi› $9,999. 541-647-7078 At least 3 years Industrial Electrical experi› weeknight and Saturday shifts. / other tasks. nation." Familial sta› ence or equivalent combination of education tus includes children and experience; IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl under the age of 18 Allen-Bradley PLC and automation experi› TO Italo I including life insurance, short-term & long-term ence living with parents or ~ a plus; disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Proven interpersonal skills legal cus t odians, Proven experience and ability in mechanical, Professional-level writing ability and pregnant women, and electrical and electronic troubleshooting and ,3 t sports background a must people securing cus› ~ Please submit a completed application maintenance techniques; Working knowledge of traditional high attention Kevin Eldred. tody of children under Moto Guzzi Breva Must have the ability to demonstrate working school sports 16. This newspaper 1 100 2007, o n l y Applications are available at The Bulletin knowledge of mech anical/electrical Proven computer and proofreading skills front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or will not knowingly ac› 1 1,600 miles . principles/concepts; Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadline› cept any advertising $5,500. an electronic application may be obtained Have the ability to read and comprehend in› oriented environment upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via for real estate which is 206-679-4745 structions given via OEM or third party opera› Must be able to successfully pass in violation of the law. email (keldred@bendbulletin.corn). tion and/or technical/installation literature. a pre-employment drug screen O ur r e aders a r e I No pho ne calls please. hereby informed that We offer a competitive compensation plan that If you are a sports-minded journalist and all dwellings adver› includes medical, dental and vision benefits; have a positive "Can Do" attitude * No resumes will be accepted * tised in this newspa› profit sharing plan; Paid vacation and holidays; WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU! per are available on Life insurance; Disability Income Protection; an equal opportunity Drug test is required prior to employment. Flexible Spending Accounts; Employee As› Please send your cover letter, resume, EOE. basis. To complain of Victory TC 2 0 0 2, sistance Program. and a work sample attention: d iscrimination cal l 40K mi., runs great, sportsassistant@bendbulletin.corn HUD t o l l-free at s tage 1 kit, n e w If you meet the above qualifications please ap› The Bulletin 1-800-877-0246. The sarong canrral oregon sincele03 tires, rear brakes 8 ply in person in the Personnel Dept. to: Bright toll free t e lephone more. Health forces Wood Corporation, 335 NW Hess St., Madras No agencies or telephonecalls p/ease number for the hear› s ale. $3,50 0 . OR 97741. Pre-employment drug testing ing i m paired is 541-771-0665 required.

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E6 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 THE BULLETIN 908

932

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own air›

Pontiac 1966 Bon› neville Convertible. 3 89 Engine, 3 2 5 Horsepower $6500 Call John 541-389-6116

c raft. 1 96 8

A ero Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.

Superhawk N7745G Owners’ Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touch› screen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available. Call 541-815-2144 916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment 1997 Utility 53’x102" dry

freight van. S liding axles, leaf s prings, good tires, body 8 swing doors in exc. cond., has no dings, road ready! $ 7500 o bo. Sisters, O R . 541-719-1217 927

Automotive Trades

2013 7 f t .X18 ft.

Carry-On open car hauler trailer. Used only three times to haul my 1967 Ca› maro, and looks like new. I had the front barrier made and in› stalled and added the tool box. It also has a mounted new spare tire. $3995 obo. 541-876-5375

or

503-701-2256.

cell:

932

Antique & Classic Autos

CHEV ELLE MALIBU 1 971 57K original miles, 350 c.i., auto, stock, all original, Hi-Fi stereo $15,000 541-279-1072 Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809

935

935

975

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

Ford Explorer Sport 2011, 6 cyl. auto., 4WD, 3rd seat, $21,995. 541-598-5111

Automobiles

Illlercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft 8 hard top, exc. cond., always ga› raged. 155K miles, $9,500. 541-549-6407

1977

Hyundai Santa Fe 2012, 4 cyl., 4 door, GLS, 2WD, kayak car› rier, new tires, 51K mi., $15,500. 541-419-7960

F J40 Toyota Lande ruiser with winch, $21,000. 541-389-7113, Michelle 975

Automobiles

Chevy El Camino 1973, Mercedes-Benz RARE! Manual trans. SLK230 2003, 4 spd, Exc. Cond. I nfiniti F X3 5 A W D Acura TL 06, 3.2L V6, exc. cond., auto, $7500. 541-389-1086 2009 Sporty 3.5 V6, 7 auto, F WD , b l a ck convertible retract› spd auto, 40K miles, color, A/C, 115,971 able hard top. Bose sound sys, 20" miles, clean title and miles, carfax alloy whls. Nav sys. carfax. Call or t ext 54,250 available. $13,000. Dlx tour, premium and 541-834-8469 541-389-7571 tow pkgs. Most op› t ions included. A l › Need to get an Find exactly what maintained and VW Beetle c lassic ways araged. Just d e › ad in ASAP? you are looking for in the 1972, Exc. shape, no g non smoker. You can place it CLASSIFIEDS rust, very clean, fully tailed, Midnight Mocha color, restored, has had 2 online at: tan leather int. Exc. o wners. $4,0 0 0. cond. in & out. Clean www.bendbulletin.corn Toyota Avalon 2003, 541-815-8147 150K m i . , si n g le title. $2 6,950.OBO owner, great cond., 541-647-2257 933 541-385-5809 new tires and battery, Pickups maintenance records, leather seats, moon› roof, full set of snow CAL LW tires on rims, $7000. TODAY% 541-548-6181 Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame Jeep CJ5 1981. Winch, BMW Z3 Roadster up restoration. 500 tires, v-8. lift, 1997, Call Cadillac eng i ne, off-road ood condition. $3500 541-548-0345 to see. fresh R4 transmis› BO. 541-306-0346. $4500 sion w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom Toyota Corolla 1999 interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d 4 cyl. 5 spd, 200K mi., new tires last spring. tires, You must see studs incl.!! A/C, cas› it! $25,000 invested. sette, headliner needs $1 2,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or Jeep Grand Chero› Buick LeSabre 2005 help. Runs G reat!! 541-420-6215. kee Overland 2012, Custom. Clean, 96k $1800 541.480.9327 4x4 V-6, all options, miles. 32 mpg hwy, running boards, front 22-25 in town. $4250 guard, nav., air and obo 541-419-5060 heated leather, cus› tom wheels and new tires, only 49K miles, $29,995 541-408-7908 Toyota Corolla S Chevy S-10 1988 4.3L 2007, 93 k m i l es, V-6, s unroof, many automatic, s i l ver. custom features, su› New brakes and Cadillac CTS 2010, per clean, always ga› V 6 I n j ection, 6 battery. Super clean, raged. $3200 obo. no smoking. Cruise Speed A u tomatic. 541-388-0811. Luxury series. Exte› control, CD player, c loth s eats, A C . rior Black Raven, Jeep Wrangler Rubi› Interior: Light Tita› Price: $6995. Call con 2 0 04, $17,500 nium/ E b ony 541-480-2700 to Mileage: 065 , 1 54 2 2,555 m i les. 4 view. N O T E X TS Automatic, Cr u i se door. Excellent con› PLEASE! Control, Tow Bar, Air dition all a r ound. Conditioning, Power Has Arizona plates. Dodge Big Horn Door Locks, Alarm This is car is a great Looking for your Ram 2500, 2005, 6 and much more. Call mix of luxury, com› next employee? speed manual. Ex› Gary: 541-280-0558. f ort, s t yle, an d Place a Bulletin help tra tires and rims, workmanship. wanted ad today and canopy goes with. $24,000.00 reach over 60,000 Excellent condition, Call 541-408-3051 readers each week. well mai n tained, Your classified ad runs great. 160K will also appear on miles. $2 8 ,500 bendbulletin.corn 541-620-1212 Lincoln Na v i gator which currently re› 2 003 A WD , or i g . ceives over 1.5 mil› Ford F-150 XL V8 2007 owner, local vehicle, lion page views super cab, 32k orig. always gar a ged, every month at mi., one owner, exc. auto., navigation, sun› Honda Accord 2005, no extra cost. Bulle› shape, no accidents. roof, DV D p l a yer, tin Classifieds fully l o aded, $12,500. heated & A/C seats, V6, Get Results! Call Nav, Moon roof, CD, 541-617-0846 custom g r i ll , all perfect leather inte› 385-5809 or place records, new Michelin rior, one owner, full your ad on-line at t ires. $10,0 0 0 . maintained, always bendbulfefi n.corn 541-815-5000. garaged, never wrecked, 143K road miles, $9,399. Great I The Bulletin recoml mends extra caution I car ready to drive. Ford F-350 XLT 2006, Mike 541-499-5970 when p u r chasing Crewcab, 150K mi., f products or services bed liner, good tires, out of the area. SP E CIAL:f from exc. shape. $16,500. Mercedes ML350 2004 HUNTER S ending c ash , Jeep Cherokee, 1990, Please call, 3.7L V-6, auto trans., 4x4, has 9 tires on checks, or credit in- I 541-350-8856 or 4-wheel traction con› wheels. $2000 obo. formation may be I 541-410-3292 [ subject to FRAUD. trol, sunroof, white 541-771-4732 For more informal› with java leather. One GMC Pickup 1983 w/ f tion about an adver› o wner l o ca l car. topper, 4 wheel drive, 9 0,100 miles. E x c Kia Forte SX 2012 tiser, you may call r uns good, go o d condition. $ 1 0,500. hatchback, $15,900, I the Oregon StateI winter truck. $1,500 541-593-2053 Attorney General’s g 32,015 miles, still obo. 907-310-1877 under 60k warranty, Office C o nsumer I exc. condition, see / Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392. craigslist for full de› tails. 541-948-7687

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CORVETTE 1979,

glass top, 31k miles, all original, silver & maroon. $12,500.

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~Th.au.t ~

541-388-9802

Ford Mustang Hard top 1965, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condi› tion.$1 2,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

Serving Central Oregon since$93

Toyota Tacoma 2006 crew cab 4 dr. 4x4 pickup, 130k hwy miles, runs excellent, new tires, V-6, auto, TRD pkg $15,400. 928-581-9190 La Pine

Toyota FJ C ruiser 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

Lexus ES350 2010, Excellent Condition 32,000 miles, $20,000 214-549-3627 (in

541-729-4552

Bend)

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T oyota Taco m a 2 006, r eg . c a b , 4x4, 5 sp d s tan› dard 4 cyl engine, 22+ mpg, one se› owner, FORD TAURUS SHO nior 1992show car, rare 5 n on-srnker, w e l l s pd., l oaded, l o w maintained, nearly miles, second owner, new tires, original have all receipts, only s pare near n e w, $ 4,500.00. Cra i g runs exce l lent. 503-849-7571 $14,750. 541-633-9895

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Sport Utility Vehicles Jeep CJ5 4x41967, first year of the orig. Dauntless V-6, last year of the "All metal" body! Engine over› hauled: new brakes, fuel pump, steering gear box, battery, al› ternator, emergency brake pads, gauges, warn hubs, dual ex› haust, 5 wide traction tires, 5 new spoke, chrome wheels. NO rust, garage stored. $7,495 OBO! (775) 513-0822

Illlercedes 450 SL 1979 Roadster, soft & hard tops, always garaged, 122k mi., e xtras, $9,7 0 0. 541-548-5648

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BMyi/ X3 SI 2007, Low Miles - 68,500 mi., AWD, leather Interior, s u nroof, b luetooth, voi c e command system, and too much more to list here. $15,900. Please call Dan at 541-815-6611

Chevy Tahoe 1995 4x4 4 dr. auto, tow pkg, new brakes and ro› tors, g r ea t ti r e s, leather, power, runs g reat, v er y go o d cond., $4800 . 541-385-4790

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The Bulletin’s "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs.

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Legal Notices

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form and have proof Deschutes County LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Off i c e, Nationstar Mortgage, Ally Bank, Plaintiff/s, o f service o n t h e Sheriff’s v. Kingdon P. Palmer, plaintiff’s attorney or, 63333 W. Highway LLC, its successors JR., Cindy A. Palmer, if the plaintiff does not 20, Bend, Oregon, and/or assigns, Plain› have a n a t t orney, sell, at public oral D efendant/s. C a s e t iff/s, v. J a son M . No.: 1 4 C V0847FC. proof of service on the auction to the high› H igham; Angie K . I F YOU est bidder, for cash N OTICE OF S A L E plaintiff. Higham; LibertyBank U NDER WRIT O F HAVE ANY QUES› or cashier’s check, NKA Home Federal YOU the real p roperty Bank; Mark Higham; EXECUTION - REAL TIONS, PROPERTY. Notice is S HOULD SEE A N commonly known as Ruby Higham; and All hereby given that the ATTORNEY I M ME› 2661 S W 27t h Other Persons or Par› DIATELY. If you need Street, R e dmond, Deschutes C o unty ties Unknown claim› 977 5 6 . ing any right, title, lien Sheriff’s Office will, on help in finding an at› O regon Thursday, October 22, torney, you may call Conditions of Sale: or interest in the Real b i d ders Property c ommonly 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the O r egon S t ate Potential the main lobby of the Bar’s Lawyer Referral must arrive 15 min› known as 21417 Bra› (503) u tes prior t o t h e Deschutes C o u nty S ervice a t detich Loop, Bend OR Sheriff 's Office,63333 684-3763 or toll-free auction to allow the 97701, Defendant/s. W. Highway 20, Bend, in Oregon at (800) Deschutes County Case No.: 452-7636. The object Sheriff’s Office to Oregon, sell, at public 1 3CV1219FC. N O › of the said action and review bid d er’s o ral auction to t h e TICE OF SALE UN› the relief sought to be funds. Only U . S. highest bidder, f or DER WRIT OF EX› c urrency an d / or ECUTION › REAL cash o r ca s hier’ s o btained therein i s check, the real prop› fully set forth in said cashier’s c h e cks PROPERTY. Notice is is made payable to erty commonly known complaint, an d hereby given that the as 60872 Defiance briefly stated as fol› Deschutes County Deschutes C o u nty Rd, Bend, O regon lows: Foreclosure of a Sheriff’s Office will Sheriff’s Office will, on Deed of Trust/Mort› be accepted. Pay› 97702. Conditions of Tuesday, October 20, ment must be made Sale: Potential bid› gage - Grantors:Mor› 2015 at 10:00 AM, in ders must arrive 15 ris Case. Property ad› in full immediately the main lobby of the B o y d upon the close of minutes prior to the d ress:63177 Deschutes C o u nty auction to allow the Acres Road, Bend, the sale. For more Sheriff’s Office, 63333 Deschutes C o u nty OR 97701. Publica› information on this W. Highway 20, Bend, Sheriff’s Office to re› tion:The Bend Bulle› sale go to: http: //or› Oregon, sell, at public egonsheriffssales.or view bidder’s funds. t in. DATED this 1 9 o ral auction to t h e day of August, 2015. Only U.S. currency g/ h ighest bidder, f o r Brandon Smith, OSB and/or cashier’ s cash o r ca s hier’ s LEGAL NOTICE Emai l : checks made payable „ 124584, check, the real prop› to Deschutes County bsmith ' robinsontait.c Green Tree Serviang, erty commonly known Sheriff’s Office will be om, Robinson Tait, LLC, its successors as 21417 Bradetich and/or assigns, Plain› Loop, Bend, Oregon accepted. P ayment P.S., Attorneys for must be made in full Plaintiff, Tel: ( 206) tiff/s, v. George W. 97701. Conditions of immediately upon the 676-9640, Fax: (206) Kennedy; George W. Sale: P otential bid› Kennedy, Trustee of close of the sale. For 676-9659. ders must arrive 15 the George and Ar› minutes prior to the more information on LEGAL NOTICE lene Kennedy Trust auction to allow the this s al e g o to: Estate of Donna Lee Dated 06/01/1 992; 1st Deschutes C o u nty http://oregonsheriffs› Rackley. Notice to Security B an k of Sheriff’s Office to re› sales.org/ Interested Persons. Washington; and all view bidder’s funds. Case No. other Persons or Par› LEGAL NOTICE Only U.S. currency 15PB03041. In the ties unknown claim› CIRCUIT COURT OF and/or cashier’ s Circuit Court of the ing any right, title, lien, OREGON FOR DES- State of Oregon for checks made payable or interest in the Real to Deschutes County CHUTES COUNTY. Property commonly Sheriff’s Office will be THE BANK OF NEW the County of Des› known as 51494 Riv› accepted. P ayment YORK MELLON FKA chutes. In the Mat› ter of the Estate of erland Ave., La Pine, must be made in full THE BANK OF NEW Donna Lee Rackley, OR 97739, D efen› immediately upon the YORK, AS TRUSTEE deceased. Notice is d ant/s. Case N o .: close of the sale. For FOR THE CERTIFI› hereby given that 1 3CV1247FC. N O › more information on CATEHOLDERS OF Goulart has TICE OF SALE UN› this s al e THE CWABS INC., Amber g o to: been appointed as DER WRIT OF EX› http: //oregonsheriffs› ASSET-BACKED personal repre› ECUTION › REAL sales.org/ CERTIFICATES, SE› the the PROPERTY. Notice is RIES 2005 - BC5, sentative o f a bove estate. A l l hereby given that the PLAINTIFF, VS. persons ha v i ng Deschutes C o u nty LEGAL NOTICE DAVID MIC H A EL claims against the Sheriff’s Office will, on NOTICE OF PUBLIC B EARDSLY; CI T I › estate are required Tuesday, November AUCTION MORTGAGE, INC 4 present them to WRIGHT MINI 3, 2015 at 10:00 AM, EMPIRE CROSSING to un d ersigned in the main lobby of STORAGE HOMEOWNERS AS› the personal represen› the Deschutes County S OCIATION IN C . ; tative in the care of Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 The contents of the MID OREGON FEDW. Highway 20, Bend, following storage units E RAL CREDI T the undersigned at› torney: Kristin Lar› Oregon, sell, at public will be auctioned to UNION; MORTGAGE OSB „023639, o ral auction to t he collect unpaid stor› ELECTRONIC REG› son, h ighest bidder, f o r age fees on Saturday, I STRATION SY S › Hansen & Larson, LLC, 698 NW York cash o r ca s hier’ s September 12, 2015 TEMS, INCJ PLAZA check, the real prop› at 10:00 a.m. HOME MO RTGAGE, D rive, Bend, O r › erty commonly known INCJ THE ESTATE egon 97703 within four months after as 51494 Riverland WRIGHT MINI OF M O R RI S L. the date of first pub› STORAGE Avenue, La Pine, Or› CASE, DECEASED; lication of this no› egon 97739. Condi› 1835 S. HIGHWAY 97 UNKNOWN H E IRS as stated be› tions of Sale: Poten› REDMOND, OR 97756 AND DEVISEES OF tice, t ial b i dders m u s t (541) 548-2138 MORRIS L. C ASE, low, or such claims may be barred. All arrive 15 minutes prior DECEASED; ; THE who s e to the auction to allow UNIT „’s: E STATE OF B E N › p ersons rights may be af› the Deschutes County „5 Adamson, Tara J AMIN WOOL D › fected by the pro› Sheriff’s Office to re› „34 McCoy, Randy RIDGE, DECEASED; in this es› „46 Denley, Laura view bidder’s funds. UNKNOWN H E IRS ceedings tate ma y o b t a in Only U.S. currency „116 McAllister, Jon AND DEVISEES OF informa› and/or cashier’ s „A3 Chaffins, Leanda BENJAMIN WOOLD› additional fr o m the checks made payable „B45 Grum, Kip RIDGE, DECEASED; tion records of the Court, to Deschutes County „B74 Altenbach, Julie AND PERSONS OR the personal repre› Sheriff’s Office will be „E5 Ellis, George PARTIES UN› or the at› accepted. Payment „E35 Johnson, Sabrina KNOWN CLAIMING sentative torney for the per› must be made in full „E75 Arellano, Diana ANY RIGHT, TITLE, „E90 Kane, Eric immediately upon the LIEN, OR INTEREST sonal representative. Date close of the sale. For „E103 Kane, Enc IN THE PROPERTY First Publication: more information on „E104 Legg, Beth Ann DESCRIBED IN THE of September 2, 2015. this s al e go to: COMPLAINT http: //oregonsheriff› HERE IN, DE F E N› LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ssale.org/ DANTS. NO. Estate of Michael A. O ne West B a nk, 15CV0135FC. Graham. Notice to FSB, a federal sav› PLAINTIFF’S SUM› Interested Persons. Find It in ings bank, MONS BY PUBLICA› Case No. The Bulletin Classifieds! Plaintiff/s, v. K e n› T ION. TO:THE E S › 15PB03282. In the neth E. Thomas and 541-385-5809 TATE OF MORRIS L. Circuit Court of the Kristin L. Thomas, CASE, DECEASED; State of Oregon for individuals; John C. LEGAL NOTICE UNKNOWN H E IRS the County of Des› Lattanza, an i ndi› AND DEVISEES OF chutes. In the Mat› N ationstar Mo r t › vidual; and DOES MORRIS L. C A SE, ter of the Estate of gage LLC, 1-5, D e fendant/s. D ECEASED; T H E Michael A. Graham, Plaintiff/s, v. R. Co› Case No.: rey Egner; Wash› E STATE OF B E N › deceased. Notice is 11CV0846. NO› J AMIN WOOL D › hereby given that ington Mutual Bank; T ICE O F SA L E RIDGE, DECEASED; Carolyn G r a h am RHW Enterprises, UNDER WRIT OF UNKNOWN H EIRS has been appointed Inc.; Occupants of EXECUTION AND DEVISEES OF as th e p e r sonal the property, Defen› REAL PROPERTY. BENJAMIN WOOLD› representative of the dant/s. Case No.: Notice is h e reby 12CV1025. NO› RIDGE, DECEASED; a bove estate. A l l given that the Des› AND PERSONS OR persons T ICE O F SA L E ha v i ng UNDER WRIT OF c hutes Cou n t y UN› claims against the PARTIES Sheriff’s Office will, KNOWN CLAIMING estate are required EXECUTION on Tuesday, Octo› REAL PROPERTY. ANY RIGHT, TITLE, to present them to b er 27, 2 0 1 5 a t LIEN, OR INTEREST the un d ersigned Notice is h e reby 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e IN THE PROPERTY personal represen› given that the Des› main lobby of the DESCRIBED IN THE tative in the care of c hutes Cou n t y Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office will, COMPLAINT the undersigned at› S heriff’s Offi c e, HEREIN. IN THE torney at: K r istin on Tuesday, Octo› 63333 W. Highway b er 20, 2 0 1 5 a t NAME OF THE Larson, OSB 20, Bend, Oregon, STATE OF OREGON: „023639, Hansen 8 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e sell, at public oral main lobby of the You are hereby re› L arson, LLC, 6 98 auction to the high› quired to appear and NW York D r ive, Deschutes County est bidder, for cash S heriff’s O ffi c e, defend against t he B end, Oreg o n or cashier’s check, 63333 W. Highway allegations contained 97703 within four the real p roperty in the Complaint filed m onths after t h e 20, Bend, Oregon, commonly known as a gainst you i n t h e date of first publica› sell, at public oral 62550 Eagle Road, auction to the high› above entitled pro› tion of this notice, as B end, Oreg o n est bidder, for cash ceeding within thirty s tated below, o r 97701. Conditions or cashier’s check, (30) days from the such claimsmay be of Sale: P o tential date of service of this barred. All persons the real p roperty bidders must arrive commonly known as Summons upon you. whose rights may 15 minutes prior to If you fail to appear be affected by the 53140 Bridge Drive, auction to allow La Pine, O regon the and defend this mat› proceedings in this the Desc h utes ter within thirty (30) estate may obtain 97739. Conditions Sheriff’s Of› of Sale: P o tential County days from the date of additional informa› f ice to revi e w bidders must arrive publication specified tion fr o m the bidder’s funds. Only 15 minutes prior to herein along with the records of the Court, U.S. currency required filing f e e, the personal repre› the auction to allow ca s hier’ s the Desc h utes and/or THE BANK OF NEW sentative or the at› checks made pay› YORK MELLON FKA torney for the per› County Sheriff’s Of› able to Deschutes f ice to revi e w THE BANK OF NEW sonal County Sheriff’s Of› bidder’s funds. Only YORK, AS TRUSTEE representative. Date f ice will b e a c › U.S. currency FOR THE CERTIFI› of First Publication: cepted. P a yment CATEHOLDERS OF and/or c a s hier’ s September 2, 2015. must be made in full checks made pay› THE CWABS INC., immediately u pon ASSET-BACKED LEGAL NOTICE able to Deschutes t he close o f t h e County Sheriff’s Of› CERTIFICATES, SE› Federal N a t ional sale. For more in› RIES 2005-BC5 will Mortgage Associa› f ice will b e a c › f ormation on t h is apply to the Court for tion, its successors cepted. P a yment sale go to: http: //or› the relief demanded in in interest and/or must be made in full egonsheriffssales.or immediately u pon the Complaint. T he assigns, Plaintiff/s, g/ first date of publica› v. Ben Carmichael; t he close o f t h e sale. For more in› tion is A u gust 2 6, RBS Citizens, N.A. 2 015. NOTICE T O dba Citizens Bank, f ormation on t h is Sell an Item sale go to: http: //or› DEFENDANTS: National A s socia› READ THESE PA› tion; an d O c c u› egonsheriffssales.or PERS CAREFULLY! pants of the p re› g/ You must "appear" in mises, Defendant/s. this case or the other Case No.: Call a Pro side will win automati› 14CV0619FC. NO› Whether you need a If it’s under$500 c ally. T o "appear" T ICE O F SAL E you must file with the UNDER WRIT OF fence fixed, hedges you can place it in court a legal paper EXECUTION trimmed or a house The Bulletin called a "motion" or REAL PROPERTY. "answer." The "mo› Notice i s built, you’ ll find h e r eby Classifieds for: tion" or "answer" must given that the Des› professional help in be given to the court c hutes Coun t y The Bulletin’s "Call a $10 3 lines, 7 days clerk or administrator Sheriff’s Office will, Service Professional" w ithin t h i rty d a y s on Tuesday, No› $16 3 lines, 14 days a long with the r e › vember 3, 2015 at Directory q uired filing fee. I t 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e 541-385-5809 (Private Party ads only) must be i n p roper main lobby of the

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Sheriff’s Office to re› ment of R e venue) eluding a reasonable and recorded July 7, LEGAL NOTICE by the 2014 as Instrument Provident Funding As› view bidder’s funds. a long with the r e › charge T rustee. Notice i s Number sociates, L.P., Plain› Only U.S. currency q uired filing fee. It and/or cashier’ s must be i n p r oper further given that any 2014-21664 and re› t iff/s, v. Nanc y O’ Connor; C e n t ral checks made payable form and have proof person named in Sec› corded August 3, Oregon Intergovern› to Deschutes County o f service o n t h e tion 86.753 of Oregon 2015 as Instrument Revised Statutes has Number mental Council; and Sheriff’s Office will be plaintiff’s attorney or, Persons or P arties accepted. P ayment if the plaintiff does not the right to have the 2015-31718 and re› a t t orney, foreclosure proceed› corded August 25, unknown cl a i ming must be made in full have a n any right, title, lien, or immediately upon the proof of service on the ing dismissed and the 2015 as Instrument interest in the prop› close of the sale. For plaintiff. If you have Trust Deed reinstated Number 2015-035171 of offi› erty described in the more information on questions, you should by payment to t he g o to: see an attorney im› Beneficiary of the en› cial records in the complaint her e i n, this s al e mediately. If you need tire amount then due Office of the Re› D efendant/s. C a s e http: //oregonsheriff› help in finding an at› (other than such por› c order o f Des › No.: 15 C V0002FC ssale.org/ torney, you may con› tion of said principal chutes County, Or› N OTICE OF S A L E LEGAL NOTICE U NDER WRIT O F The Residence Club tact the Oregon State as would not then be egon to-wit: APN: / EXECUTION - REAL at Pronghorn Villas Bar’s Lawyer Referral due had no default 250866 S ervice o n line a t occurred), t o gether 181202CC05503 PROPERTY. Notice is Condominiums www. w ith t he cost s , L OT T W O hereby given that the Owners’ Association, (2), oregonstatebar. Deschutes C o u nty an Oregon non-profit org or by calling (503) Trustee’s or attorney’s WESTBROOK VIL› fees and curing any LAGE, PHASE 11, Sheriff’s Office will, on corporation, Plaintiff/s, 684-3763 ( in t h e Tuesday, November v. John Pressley and Portland metropolitan other default c om› DESCHUTES OR› 3, 2015 at 10:00 AM, Valerie Pressley, indi› area) or toll-free else› plained of in the No› COUNTY, in the main lobby of viduals, and Any Par› where in Oregon at tice of Default by ten› EGON. Commonly dering the known as: 6 1652 the Deschutes County ties in possession or (800) 452-7636. performance required KACI LANE, BEND, Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 claiming any right to under the obligation or OR 97702 Both the W. Highway 20, Bend, possession, D efen› LEGAL NOTICE Beneficiary and the Oregon, sell, at public dant/s. Case No .: TRUSTEE’S NOTICE Trust Deed, at any have o ral auction to t h e OF SALE T r ustee time prior to five days Trustee 15CV0116. NOTICE Sale No. before the date last elected to sell the h ighest bidder, f o r OF SALE U NDER set for sale. In con› said real property to cash o r ca s hier’ s WRIT O F E X ECU› OR01000018-15 struing this notice, the satisfy the obliga› check, the real prop› TION - REAL PROP› APN: erty commonly known ERTY. N o t ic e is 1 32618/1 61221 A0028 masculine gender in› tions secured by cludes the feminine said Trust Deed and a s 95 0 N E L e n a hereby given that the 00 Title Order No. Place, Bend, Oregon Deschutes C o u nty 8557409 Reference is and the neuter, the notice has been re› 97701. Conditions of to that certain singular includes plu› corded pursuant to Office will, on madeDeed Sale: Potential bid› Sheriff’s made by, ral, the word "Grantor" Section 86.735(3) of Tuesday, October 13, Trust R e v ised ders must arrive 15 2015 at 10:00 AM, in MARY STRONG, IN- includes any succes› Oregon minutes prior to the the main lobby of the DIVIDUALLY AND AS sor in interest to the Statutes. The de› Grantor as well as any fault for which the auction to allow the Deschutes C o unty T RUSTEE OF T H E Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff’s Office, 63333 M ARY STRO N G other persons owing foreclosure is made T a n o b ligation, t h e is the Grantor’s fail› Sheriff’s Office to re› Highway 20, Bend, F AMILYMAY TRUS performance of which ure to pay: failed to view bidder’s funds. W. 9,1997 Oregon, sell, at public DATED FOR THE BENEFIT is secured by said pay payments which Only U.S. currency o ral auction to t he Trust Deed, the words became due and/or cashier’ s h ighest bidder, f o r OF MARY STRONG as Grantor to FIRST "Trustee" and "Ben› Monthly P a yment checks made payable cash o r ca s hier’ s to Deschutes County check, the real prop› A MERICAN TI T L E eficiary" includes their $1 999.29 Monthly Sheriff’s Office will be erty commonly known INSURANCE COM› respective s u cces› Late Charge $0 By sors in interest, if any. this reason of said accepted. P ayment as 65690 Adventure PANY OF OREGON must be made in full Court, Bend, Oregon as Trustee, in favor of Dated: 8/10/2015 First default the Benefi› immediately upon the 97701. Conditions of MORTGAGE E LEC- American Title Insur› ciary has declared close of the sale. For Sale: Potential bid› TRONIC REGISTRA- ance Company By: -, all obligations se› more information on ders must arrive 15 TION SYSTEMS INC. Authorized Signatory cured by said Trust this s al e g o to: minutes prior to the ("MERS"), as desig› First American Title Deed immediately Insurance Company due and payable, http: //oregonsheriff› nominee for auction to allow the nated MORTGAGE, c/o Special Default said sums being the ssale.org/ Deschutes C o unty GMAC Services, Inc. 17100 following, to-wit: The Beneficiary of Sheriff’s Office to re› LLC,security LEGAL NOTICE instru› Gillette Ave Irvine, CA sum of $366,001.88 T he Bank o f N e w view bidder’s funds. the its successors 92614 (844) 706-4182 together with inter› York Mellon FKA The Only U.S. currency ment, INF O RMA› est thereon at the nd a ssigns, r e › SALE Bank of New York, as and/or cashier’ s a June 4, 2007 TION CAN BE OB› rate of 4 . 00000% Trustee for the Certifi› checks made payable corded Instrument No. TAINED ON LINE AT per annum f r om c ateholders of t h e to Deschutes County as June 1, 2014 until of official www.lpsasap.corn CWABS, Inc., Sheriff’s Office will be 2007-31540 in the Office FOR A UTOMATED paid; plus all ac› Asset-Backed Certifi› accepted. Payment records SALES I N F ORMA› crued late charges the Recorder of cates, Series must be made in full of Deschutes, Oregon, TION PLEASE CALL: t hereon; an d a l l 2006-18, Plaintiff/s, v. immediately upon the covering following Agency Sales and Trustee’s fees, fore› Floyd Newton; The close of the sale. For describedthe at closure costs and real prop› Posting Estate of Ella Newton, more information on erty situated 800-683-2468 THIS a ny s um s ad › in t he g o to: above-mentioned deceased; Unknown this s al e COMMUNICATION IS vanced by the Ben› Heirs and Devisees of http: //oregonsheriff› FROM A DEBT COL› eficiary pursuant to county and state, to E lla N ewton, d e › ssale.org/ wit: LOT 32, BLOCK LECTOR AND IS AN the terms of said ceased; Am e r ifirst LEGAL NOTICE Deed. SECOND ADDI› ATTEMPT TO COL› Trust Home Improvement This is an action for T19, ION T O WHI S › LECT A DEBT. ANY Wherefore, notice is Finance Co.; and Per› Judicial Foreclosure PERING INFORMATION OB› hereby given that, PINES ES› sons or Parties Un› of real property com› TATES, DESCHUTES T AINED WILL B E the un d ersigned known claiming any monly k n ow n on as COUNTY, OREGON. U SED FO R T H A T Trustee w il l right, title, lien, or in› Whitetail Lane, Commonly known as: P URPOSE. To t h e January 4, 2016 at terest in the property 16301 OR 97707. A 6 5510 OL D B E N D extent your original the hour of 11:00 described in the com› Bend, motion o r a n swer R EDMOND H I G H › obligation was d is› A M, Standard o f plaint herein , Defen› must be given to the WAY, B E ND , OR charged, or is subject Time, a s e s t ab› d ant/s. Case N o .: court clerk or admin› 97701 APN: to an automatic stay lished by S e ction 1 4CV0362FC. N O › istrator within 30 days 132618/1 61221A0028 of bankruptcy under 187.110, O r e gon TICE OF SALE UN› of the date of first 00 Both the Benefi› Title 11 of the United Revised Statues, at DER WRIT OF EX› specified ciary and the Trustee States Code, this no› the Bond Street en› ECUTION › REAL publication along with the have elected to sell tice is for compliance trance steps to the PROPERTY. Notice is herein filing fee. IN the said real property and/or informational Deschutes County hereby given that the required HE CIRCU I T to satisfy the obliga› purposes only and Courthouse, 1 164 Deschutes C o u nty T OF T HE tions secured by said does not constitute an NW Bond St, Bend, Sheriff’s Office will, on COURT OF OREGON Trust Deed and no› attempt to collect a OR 97701 County of Tuesday, October 27, STATE THE COUNTY t ice has b een r e › debt or to impose per› Deschutes, sell at 2015 at 10:00 AM, in FOR OF DES C HUTES sonal liability for such public auction to the pursuant to the main lobby of the BANK OF AMERICA, corded obligation. However, a highest bidder for Section 86.735(3) of Deschutes C o u nty N. A., Plaintiff, v. Oregon Revised Stat› secured party retains cash the interest in Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 rights under its secu› the said described VANDER SYS utes. The default for W. Highway 20, Bend, JOHN nd A L L OT H E R which the foreclosure rity instrument, i n› real property which Oregon, sell, at public a the Grantor had or PERSONS OR PAR› is m ad e is the cluding the right to o ral auction to t h e TIES UNK N OWN Grantor’s failure to f oreclose it s li e n . had power to con› h ighest bidder, f o r A-4539255 vey at the time of ANY pay: THE INSTALL› cash o r ca s hier’ s CLAIMING TITLE, LIEN, MENT OF P RINCI- 08/1 9/2015, t he execution by check, the real prop› RIGHT, him of the said Trust R I NTEREST I N PAL AND INTEREST 08/26/2015, erty commonly known O REAL PROP› WHICH BE C A ME 09/02/2015, Deed, together with a s 15964 Bull B a t THE any interest which RTY C O M M O N LY DUE ON January 20, 09/09/2015 Road, La Pine, Or› E AS 1 6301 2010 AND ALL SUB› the Grantor or his egon 97739. Condi› KNOWN IN› successors in inter› HITETAIL L A N E , SEQUENT LEGAL NOTICE tions of Sale: Poten› W TS No. est acquired after O R 9 7 707, STALLMENTS, t ial b i dders m u s t BEND, t he execution of Case No. ALONG WITH LATE OR05000138-14-1 arrive 15 minutes prior Defendants. C HARGES, P L U S APN 2 5 0 86 6 / said Trust Deed, to SUM› to the auction to allow 15CV0300FC satisfy the forego› BY PUBLICA› FORECLOSURE 181202CC05503 the Deschutes County MONS - ALL OTHER COSTS AND LEGAL TO N o 8 5 0 0332 ing obli g ations Sheriff’s Office to re› TION OR PAR› FEES, IN ADDITION T RUSTEE’S N O › thereby secured and view bidder’s funds. PERSONS UNK N OWN T O AL L O F TH E T ICE O F SAL E the costs and ex› Only U.S. currency TIES ANY TERMS AND CON› Reference is made penses of sale, in› and/or cashier’ s CLAIMING TITLE, LIEN, D ITIONS AS P E R to that certain Trust cluding a r eason› checks made payable RIGHT, able charge by the R I NTEREST I N THE DE E D O F D eed made b y , to Deschutes County O THE REAL P ROP› TRUST, PR O MIS› TIMOTHY Trustee. Notice is J Sheriff’s Office will be E RTY C O M M O N LY further given that ORY NOTE A N D BOOHER AND accepted. P ayment KNOWN AS 1 6301 S RELATED LOAN KIMBERLY M any person named must be made in full W HITETAIL L A N E , ALL in Section 86.753 of DOCUMENTS. BREHM as Grantor immediately upon the BEND, OR 97707. TO Monthly Pa y ment to AMERITITLE as Oregon R e v ised close of the sale. For D EFENDANTS A L L S tatutes has t h e Monthly Late Trustee, in favor of more information on OTHER P ERSONS $143.93 $6.12 By this MORTGAGE r ight to h ave t h e this s al e go to: O R PARTIES U N › Charge f oreclosure pr o › reason of said default ELECTRONIC http: //oregonsheriff› KNOWN CLAIMING the Beneficiary has REGISTRATION ceeding dismissed ssale.org/ and the Trust Deed ANY RIGHT, TITLE, declared all o bliga› S YSTEMS, I NC . LEGAL NOTICE reinstated by pay› LIEN, OR INTEREST tions secured by said ("MERS"), as desig› ment to the Benefi› T he Bank o f N e w IN THE REAL PROP› Trust Deed immedi› nated nominee for York Mellon FKA The E RTY C O M M O N LY ciary of the entire ately due and pay› OREGON CORPOBank of New York, as KNOWN AS 1 6 301 able, said sums being RATION, B e n efi› amount then due Trustee for the Certifi› WHITETAIL L A NE, the following, to-wit: ciary of the security (other than s u ch portion of said prin› cateholders of BEND, OR 97707: IN The sum of instrument, its suc› CWALT, Inc., Alterna› THE NAME OF THE $24,764.70 together c essors and a s › cipal as would not then be due had no t ive L o a n Tru s t STATE OF OREGON: with interest thereon signs, dated as of 2005-84, M o rtgage You are hereby re› at t h e ra t e of November 3, 2006 default o c curred), t ogether with t h e Pass-Through Certifi› quired to appear and 5.37500% per annum and recorded on costs, Trustee’s or cates, Series defend the action filed from December 20, November 9, 2006 attorney’s fees and 2005-84, Plaintiff/s, v. a gainst you i n t h e 2009 until paid; plus as Instrument No. Sonya K . G r u m; above-entitled cause a ll a c c rued la t e 2006-74653 and the curing any o t her default complained C ountrywide B a n k, within 30 days from charges thereon; and beneficial i n terest of in the Notice of N.A.; Mortgage Elec› the date of service of all Trustee’s fees, was assigned to Default by tender› tronic Re g istration this Summons upon foreclosure costs and BAC HOME LOANS Systems, Inc.; State you; and if you fail to any sums advanced SERVICING, LP ing t h e per f or› of Oregon; Depart› appear and defend, by th e B e neficiary FKA C O U NTRY› mance required un› ment of Human Re- for want thereof, the pursuant to the terms WIDE HOME der the obligation or souces; and Persons Plaintiff will apply to of said Trust Deed. LOANS S E RVIC› Trust Deed, at any or Parties Unknown the court for the relief Wherefore, notice is ING LP, C/0 BAC time prior to f i ve days before the date claiming any r i ght, demanded t h e rein. hereby given that, the H OME LOAN S title, lien, or interest in Dated: SERVICING, LP last set fo r s ale. 9/9 / 201 5. undersigned Trustee Without limiting the t he p r operty d e › A LDRIDGE PIT E , will on December 17, and recorded Janu› scribed in the com› L LP. By: Sarah M . 2015 at the hour of Trustee’s disclaimer ary 12, 2010 as In› of r epresentations plaint herein, Defen› Mathenia, OSB „1206 11:00 AM, Standard strument N u mber or warranties, Or› dant/s. Case N o .: 81, (858) 750-7600, of Time, as estab› 2010-01562 and the egon law requires 1 4CV0946FC. N O › (858) 412-2639 (Fac› lished b y Se c t ion beneficial i n terest TICE OF SALE UN› simile) 187.110, Oregon Re› was assigned to the Trustee to state in this notice that DER WRIT OF EX› smath e nia@a› vised Statues, at the MORTGAGE ECUTION › REAL l dridge p.corn A l d › front entrance of the ELECTRONIC some r e s idential property sold at a PROPERTY. Notice is ridge Pite, LLP 621 C ourthouse, 11 6 4 REGISTRATION hereby given that the SW Morrison Street, N.W. Bond S t reet, S YSTEMS, I N C . Trustee’s sale may ("MERS") SOLELY have been used in Deschutes C o u nty Suite 425, Portland, Bend, OR County of Sheriff’s Office will, on OR 97205, Of Attor› D eschutes, sell a t AS NOMINEE FOR manufacturing methamphetamines, Thursday, October 15, neys for Plaintiff. NO› public auction to the NORTHWEST 2015 at 10:00 AM, in TICE T O D E FEN› h ighest bidder f o r MORTGAGE the chemical com› ponents of w hich the main lobby of the DANT/DEFENDANTS cash the interest in GROUP, INC. ITS READ THESE P A› a re known to b e Deschutes C o unty the said d escribed SUCCESSORS toxic. P rospective Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 PERS CAREFULLY. real property which AND ASSIGNS and W. Highway 20, Bend, You must "appear" in the Grantor had or recorded November purchasers of resi› dential pro p erty Oregon, sell, at public this case or the other had power to convey 9, 2006 as Instru› Numb e r should be aware of o ral auction to t he side will win automati› at the time of the ex› m ent this potential dan› h ighest bidder, f o r c ally. T o "appear" ecution by him of the 2006-74653 and the cash o r ca s hier’ s you must file with the said Trust Deed, to› beneficial i n terest ger before deciding to place a bid for check, the real prop› court a legal paper gether with any inter› was assigned to est which the Grantor EVERBANK and re› this property at the erty commonly known called a "motion" or Trustee’s sale. In as 20296 Silver Sage "answer". The "mo› or his successors in corded September Street, Bend, Oregon tion" or "answer" must interest acquired after 10, 2013 as Instru› construing this no› tice, the masculine 97702. Conditions of be given to the court the execution of said m ent Numb e r Sale: Potential bid› clerk or administrator Trust Deed, to satisfy 2013-38628 and the Need help fixing stuff? ders must arrive 15 within 30 days (or 60 the foregoing obliga› beneficial i n terest Call A Service Professional minutes prior to the days for Defendant tions thereby secured was assigned to find the help you need. auction to allow the United States or State and the costs and ex› GREEN TREE Deschutes C o unty of Oregon Depart› penses of sale, in› S ERVICING L L C www.bendbulletin.corn

ender includes the e minine and t h e neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "Grantor" in› cludes any succes› sor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Trust Deed, the words "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" in› cludes their respec› tive successors in i nterest, i f any . Dated: First Ameri› can Title Company By: Authorized Sig› natory First Ameri› can Title Company c /o TRUS T E E CORPS 17’ I 00 Gillette Ave, Irvine, CA 92614 949-252-8300 FOR SALE I N FORMA› T ION PLEA S E CALL: In S o urce Logic at 702-659-7766 Web› site for T r ustee’s Sale I n f ormation: www.insourcelogic.c o m. O r de r No . OR1 5-000077-1, Pub Dates 09/02/2015, 09/09/2015, 09/1 6/2015, 09/23/2015

LEGAL NOTICE U.S. Bank National Association, as

became

due Monthly P a yment $1819.15 Monthly Late Charge $76.78 By this reason of s aid d efault t h e Beneficiary has de› clared al l o b liga› tions secured by s aid Trust D e ed i mmediately d u e and payable, said sums being the fol› lowing, to-wit: The sum of $363,294.1 t together with inter› est thereon at the rate of 4 . 00000% per annum from Au› gust 1, 2014 until paid; plus all ac› crued late charges t hereon; an d a l l Trusteels fees, fore› closure costs and any s u m s ad› vanced by the Ben› eficiary pursuant to the terms of said Trust Deed. Wherefore, notice is hereby given that, the un d ersigned Trustee will on De› cember 28, 2015 at the hour of 1 1:00 AM, Standard of Time, a s es t a b› lished by S ection LEGAL NOTICE 187.110, O r e gon TS No. Revised Statues, at OR09000009-15-1› the Bond Street en› FT AP N 1 3 0876/ trance steps to the 151130C001100 TO Deschutes County No 8570207 Courthouse, 1164 T RUSTEE’S N O › NW Bond St, Bend, T ICE O F SAL E OR 97701 County of Reference is made Deschutes, sell at to that certain Trust public auction to the D eed made b y , highest bidder for M URL C HOL M cash the interest in AND MARY F the said described H OLM, AS T E N › real property which ANTS BY THE EN› the Grantor had or TIRETY as Grantor had power to con› to NO R THWEST vey at the time of TITLE AGE N CY the execution by INC as Trustee, in him of the said Trust f avor o f MO R T › Deed, together with G AGE ELEC › any interest which TRONIC R E G IS› the Grantor or his TRATION successors in inter› S YSTEMS, IN C . est acquired after ("MERS"), as desig› t he e xecution o f nated nominee for said Trust Deed, to TAYLOR, BEAN & satisfy the forego› WHITAKER ing obli g ations MORTGAGE thereby secured and CORP., Beneficiary the costs and ex› of the security in› penses of sale, in› strument, its s uc› cluding a reason› able charge by the c essors and a s › signs, dated as of Trustee. Notice is January 12, 2009 further given t hat and recorded on any person named in Section 86.753 of January 26, 2009 as Instrument No. Oregon R e v ised 2009-03420 of offi› S tatutes has t h e cial records in the right to have t he f oreclosure pro › Office of the Re› c order o f Des › ceeding dismissed chutes County, Or› and the Trust Deed egon to-wit: APN: reinstated by pay› ment to the Benefi› 130876/ 151130C001100 A ciary of the entire TRACT OF LAND a mount then d u e IN TH E S O UTH› (other than s u ch WEST Q UARTER portion of said prin› (SW-1/4) OF SEC› cipal as would not TION THIRTY (30), then be due had no T OWNSHIP FI F› default o c curred), t ogether with t h e TEEN (15) SOUTH, RANGE E L E VEN costs, Trustee’s or attorney’s fees and (11), EAST OF THE WILLAMETTE ME› curing any o t her RIDIAN, DES› default complained CHUTES COUNTY, of in the Notice of OREGON, DE› Default by tender› SCRIBED AS FOL› ing t h e per f or› LOWS: BE G IN› mance required un› NING A T THE der the obligation or Trust Deed, at any WEST QUARTER (W-1/4) CORNER time prior to f i ve OF SAID SECTION days before the date 30; THENCE last set for sale. S OUTH 89’ 3 4 ’ Without limiting the EAST ALONG THE Trustee’s disclaimer N ORTH LINE O F of r epresentations T HE S W-1/4 O F or warranties, Or› SAID SECTION 30, egon law requires 1 511.96 FEET ; the Trustee to state THENCE S O UTH in this notice that 0’13’ WEST PAR› some r e s idential ALLEL WITH THE property sold at a EAST LINE OF THE Trustee’s sale may S W-1/4 OF S A I D have been used in SECTION 30, manufacturing 1 610.0 FEET T O methamphetamines, THE TRUE POINT the chemical com› OF BE G INNING; ponents of w hich THENCE S O UTH a re known to be 89’34’ EAST PAR› toxic. P r ospective ALLEL WITH THE purchasers of resi› N ORTH LINE O F dential pro p erty T HE S W-1/4 O F should be aware of SAID SECTION 30, this potential dan› 520.0 FEET; ger before deciding THENCE S O UTH to place a bid for 0’13’ WEST PAR› this property at the ALLEL WITH THE T rustee’s sale. I n EAST LINE OF THE construing this no› S W-1/4 OF S A I D tice, the masculine SECTION 30, gender includes the 6 20.51 FEET T O f eminine and t h e THE NORTHERLY neuter, the singular R IGHT OF W A Y includes plural, the LINE O F S T A TE word "Grantor" in› HIGHWAY 20; cludes any succes› THENCE N O RTH sor in interest to the 53’26 1/2’ W E ST Grantor as well as ALONG THE any other persons NORTHERLY owing an obligation, R IGHT OF W A Y the performance of LINE O F S T A TE which is secured by HIGHWAY 20, said Trust Deed, the 645.63 FEET; words "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" in› THENCE N O RTH 0’13’ EAST PAR› cludes their respec› ALLEL WITH THE tive successors in EAST LINE OF THE i nterest, i f any . S W-1/4 OF S A I D Dated: First Ameri› SECTION 30, can Title Insurance 2 39.70 FEET T O Company By: Au› THE TRUE POINT thorized Signatory OF BE G INNING. First American Title I nsurance C o m› Commonly known as: 67216 HWY 20, pany c/o TRUSTEE C ORPS 1710 0 BEND, OR 97701 Both th e B e n efi› Gillette Ave, Irvine, CA 92614 ciary a n d the Trustee have 949-252-8300 FOR elected to sell the SALE I N FORMA› said real property to T ION PLE A S E CALL: I n S o urce satisfy the obliga› tions secured by Logic at said Trust Deed and 702-659-7766 Web› notice has been re› site for Trustee’s Sale I n f ormation: corded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of www.insourcelogic.c Oregon R e v ised o m. O r de r No . Statutes. Th e de› OR15-000076-1, fault for which the Pub Dates foreclosure is made 09/02/2015, is the Grantor’s fail› 09/09/2015, ure to pay: failed to 09/1 6/2015, 09/23/2015 pay payments which

LEGAL NOTICE Washington Federal, fka Washington Fed› Trustee, successor eral Savings, in interest to Bank of P laintiff/s, v . D o e s America, National 1-2, being the occu› Association as suc› pants of or parties in cessor by merger to possession or claim› LaSalle Bank NA as ing any right to pos› Trustee for Wash› session of the Real ington Mutual Mort› Property c ommonly known as 16368 Lava gage Pass-Through Certificates WMALT Drive, La Pine, OR Series 2006-5, its 97739; Does 3-4, be› successors in inter› ing the unknown heirs est and/or assigns, and devisees of Tho› Plaintiff/s, v. B rett mas H. Stackhouse Donald M o relock and Marie E. Stack› aka Brett Morelock; house and also all Kimberly J. C ole; other persons or par› JPMorgan C h ase ties unknown claim› Bank successor in ing any right, title, lien, interest to W a sh› o r interest i n t h e ington Mutual Bank; property described in U nited States o f the Complaint herein; America; T i l licum The Marie E v elyn Village Homeown› Stackhouse L i v i ng ers As s ociation, Trust; and Anthony Inc.; Occupants of Anderson, Trustee of the Premises; and the M a rie E v elyn the Real Property Stackhouse L i v i ng located at 6 1 333 Trust, D e fendant/s. Yakwahtin C o u rt, Case No.: B end, Ore g o n 1 4CV0125FC. N O › 97702, Defendant/s. TICE OF SALE UN› Case No.: DER WRIT OF EX› 12CV0973. NO› ECUTION › REAL T ICE O F SA L E PROPERTY. Notice is UNDER WRIT OF hereby given that the EXECUTION Deschutes C o unty REAL PROPERTY. Sheriff’s Office will, on Notice is h e reby Thursday, October 1, given that the Des› 2015 at 10:00 AM, in c hutes Cou n t y the main lob Sheriff’s Office will, on Thursday, Octo› b er 22, 2 0 1 5 a t 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff’s Offi c e, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the high› est bidder, for cash or cashier’s check, the real p roperty commonly known as 61333 Y a kwahtin C ourt, Bend, O r › egon 97702. Condi› tions of Sale: Po› tential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Des› c hutes Cou n t y Sheriff’s Office to review bid d er’s f unds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier’s c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office will be accepted. Pay› ment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: http: //or› egonsheriffssales.or g/ LEGAL NOTICE Wachovia Mortgage Loan Trust, Mortgage Pass-Through Certifi› cates, Series 2005-B, U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee, b y PNC Bank, National Asso›

ciation as Service r

with delegated au› t hority u n de r th e t ransaction doc u › ments, Plaintiff/s, v. The Estate of R ay Keith Johnson; the Unknown Heirs and assigns of Ray Keith J ohnson; th e U n › known Devisees of Ray Keith Johnson. and all other Persons or Parties unknown claiming any r ight, title, lien, or interest in the R ea l P r operty commonly known as 56125 Snow Goose R oad, B end, O R 97707, Defendant/s. Case No.: 1 4CV0863FC. N O › TICE OF SALE UN› DER WRIT OF EX› ECUTION › REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff’s Office will, on Tuesday, November 3, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier’ s check, the real prop› erty commonly known a s 5 6 12 5 Sn o w Goose Rd., Bend, Or› egon 97707. Condi› tions of Sale: Poten› t ial b i dders m u s t arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office to re› view bidder’s funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier’ s checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: http: //oregonsheriff› ssale.org/

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List one Item" in The Bulletin’s Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.corn

The Bulletin

To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend’s west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.


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