Bulletin Daily Paper 09-13-15

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Serving Central Oregon since 1903$2

SUNDAY September13,2015

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TODAY’ S READERBOARD Ladnr shortage Alook at the reasons that jobs in Central Oregon can be tough

u en ro

Included in OSU-Cascades'enrollment estimates: University will need landoutside 10-acre plot within 5 years

to fill.E1

By Tyler Leeds

Rowdy wine tasting›

The Bulletin

OSU-Cascades plans to grow no bigger than 5,000

Howcan tour operators encourage customers to tone down their behavior without overdoing it?C1

students, but estimating how

quickly it may approach that limit is a mix of art and science.

With a new campus slated to open in fall 2016, the uni-

Steadyenrollmentgrowthprojected > For the first time, OSU-Cascadeswill be offering freshman courses this fall. In a year, the school plans to open anew campus on thecity's west side. As it becomes astand-alone, four-year university, OSU-Cascades has projected enrollment to grow by 263 percent by the 2025-26 school year. The projections are based on anumber of factors, including enrollment trends across the state andwhen newprograms will be launched in Bend.OSU-Cascadesadministrators say the campus population will be capped at5,000 students.

versity's internal projections

call for increasing growth through the 2017-18 academ-

After that, the university is

anticipating slower growth of

students, the school is projecting 549, or about 15 percent of

MOdel patientS? These

ic year, when it expects the

around 11 percent each year

the total, will be from out of

actors have a tough job: Hands-on subjects for training medical professionals.A3

student population to reach 1,550, an increase of about 50

through the 2025-26 school year, at which point it would

percentover this school year.

have 3,735 students. Of those

state. Beyond that point, projecting growth gets tricky. SeeCampus/A6

3,735 total

4,000 students---- im pregnn reSidentS 3,5OO im NnnreSldentS 3,000 2,500 2 000 ---.—.—.— .— .-

-

"

-

-

I,500 ---. — .— .— .— .- " 1,0005000 ~b

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Source: Oregon State University

q ~ ~% nb

nt; Pete Smith/The Bulletin

Trophyhunting The other side of the controversy: When it's banned, villagers can suffer.Al

STUDENT DEBT

GARY BONACKER

Soaring oans coud pose a risk to economy

And a Wed exclusive› How muchmathdoesacollege graduate need?Schools are rethinking the answer. bendbunetin.comlextras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

By Jim Puzzanghera

Hit on ref: an iso ated incident?

Los Angeles Times Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

He's a founder of the Cascade Cyding Classic, a Bend charity organizerand a cancerpatientwho says he suff’ ered dangerous seizures until he tried pot. 'This," he says, "is medicine."

WASHINGTON — Jorge

Villalba was a construction worker when the housing market began slowing in 2005, so the Glendale, California, resident changed jobs and decided to invest in his future by going to college. So far, the invest-

By David Montgomery New York Times News Service

Above, Gary Bonacker, at home in Bend, shows the marijuana tincture he uses to help with

ment hasn't paid off. Villalba, 34, owes

SAN ANTONIO — In a state where football rules the sports world, where Fri-

seizures resulting from his brain cancer. Since starting the tincture, he says, he hasnoticed

$158,000 in student loans

an improvement overall and a decrease in the number of seizures he has in a month.

for his four-year degree in multimedia, 3-D animation

day night lights blaze over hundreds of high school sta-

By Tare Bannow

and graphic design at ITT Technical Institute. He isn' t

diums at the start of every

The Bulletin

earning enough to keep up

autumn weekend, the John Jay Mustangs have seldom been on center stage. The San Antonio high

t

school that bears the name of the nation's first chief

estimates it happened four or five times a year — but

justice has not posted a re-

something felt different this time.

way," said Villalba, who is married with two young

It was the end of July, and Bonacker — nearly

children but can't afford to

t wasn't the first time

with the payments, so the

Gary Bonacker's hourplus-long seizure landed

amount keeps rising with interest. He figured he'd get a great job and pay off the loans.

him in the hospital — he

cord better than 4-6 in the

last five years. But a violent hit by two players on an unsuspecting referee has again made bad behavior as much a part of a football game as kickoffs and extra points, and is making people ponder whether there

"It hasn't happened that

move from their cramped one-bedroom apartment.

12 years into a battle with

brain cancer — said he felt ready to give up, to end the cycle of seizures and hospitalizations.

se

"I was to the point where,

22

'We can't just keep doing what we' re doing,'" he said. Bonacker recalls falling in and out of consciousness. At

is a broader lesson about

the dark side of high school sports here or just an isolated incidence of terrible

behavior. At John Jay, the are more critical. SeeRef /A5

parents — have racked up so much college debt since

23

the recession that it now

into a medically induced

Bonacker keeps track of the days he has a seizure on this calendar. He marked down several

threatens the nation's economic growth. The debt weighs down millions of Americans who might otherwise buy homes or start businesses. And the financial horror

coma, a practice that slows the brain activity that caus-

seizures in July; since he began using amarijuana tincture in early August, he recorded only one

stories of debt-saddled stu-

seizure for the month.

dents, combined with continued increases in tuition,

uv

28

one point, his wife, Susan, asked if he wanted to be put

view tends to be the latter. Elsewhere, some observers

Students around the country — and often their

es seizures and allows the

TODAY'S WEATHER ~r Sunshine High 81, Low42 Page B6

brain to rest. Doctors commonly did this for Bonacker

of that line — both of us

The coma was his best

were," Susan said. "To do

But getting to that point

chance of avoiding asphyxi-

that repeatedly is awful."

ation and death.

Almost a month later, Bonacker recounted those

inspired him to try one last thing his wife and others had encouraged, but which he nonetheless hesitated about. Something,he

They decided toholdoff subsided. But something had changed.

Business E1-6 Milestones C2 Calendar B2 Obituaries B4-5 Classified G1-6 Opinion Ft-6 Comm. Life C1-8 Puzzles C 6 Crossword C6,G2 Sports 01-6 Local/State B1-6 TV/Movies C7 The Bulletin

New York Times News Service

vol.113, No. 25e, 4e pages, 7 sections

Kim Suozzi died of cancer

Q I/I/e use recyclenewspri d nt

at age 23, it fell to her boyfriend, Josh Schisler, to follow

0

II Ill I

8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0

In the moments just before

through with the plan to freeze her brain.

As her pulse monitor sound7

moments over coffee. The 62-year-old Bend resident said they marked a low point

thought, that was worth at

least a shot, now that chemotherapy and radiation were

no longer options and, in his mind, even the anti-seizure medications didn't appear to

be doing much good. That thing was medical marijuana.

See Bonacker /A4

attending college and could produce a less-educated workforce.

"The impact on future (economic) growth could be quite significant," said Cristian deRitis, who analyzes consumer credit economics

for Moody's Analytics. SeeLoans/A6

Some hopesciencewill offer another chance at life By Amy Harmon

An Independent Newspaper

among years of battling seizures.

during his longer seizures.

on it. Eventually, the seizure

INDEX

coulddeter others from "I think he was at the end

ed its alarm and her breath

grew ragged, he fumbled for his phone. Fighting the emotion that threatened to

paralyze him, he alerted the cryonics team waiting nearby and called the hospice nurses to come pronounce her dead.

Any delay would jeopardize thechanceto maybe,someday, resurrect her mind.

It was impossible to know on

that cloudless Arizona morning in January 2013 which fragments of Kim's identity might survive, if any. Would she remember their first, fumbling kiss in his dorm room five years earlier? Their private jokes and dumb arguments? The seizure, the surgery, the

fancy neuroscience fellowship she had to turn down? More than memories, Josh,

brain could be preserved in subzero storage so that de-

then 24, wished for the crude

science advanced, her billions of interconnected neurons could be scanned, analyzed

procedure to salvage whatever synapses gave rise to her dry, generous humor and inspired her to write him poems. They knew how strange it sounded, the hope that Kim's

cades or centuries from now, if

and converted into computer

code that mimicked how they once worked.

SeeScience/A6


A2

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

HOW to reaCh US

FIREFIGHTERS INJURED IN CALIFORNIA

STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

JameS Blake — James Blake, the tennis player who wasdetained by NewYork City police in an apparent case of mistaken identity, called for the officer who manhandled him to be fired, and described changes he wanted made to the department's disciplinary process in an interview with The New York Times. "He shouldn’ thavea badge,"hesaid,"becauseinmy opinionwhat he's doing is tarnishing that badge." Healso is calling for officers to wear body cameras, better methods of supervision, a financial commitment to victims of police brutality and stronger punishments for officers who violate department policy.

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India eXplOSiOII A powerful explosion ripped through a shop in a town in India Saturday, causing the collapse of nearby buildings, including a restaurant, and killing at least 89 people, police andmedical officials said Saturday. Theexplosion occurred in a shop where explosives were kept in the town of Petlawad in the state of Madhya Pradesh, according to a police official, A.R. Khan. It was unclear what triggered the explosion. Many of the deadhadbeen having breakfast at the restaurant, police said. "Weare still rescuing the people from the debris," said Seema Alawa, apolice official for Jhabua District.

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Rich Pedronceiii 1 The Associated Press

A crew builds a containment line for a wildfire Saturday near SheepRanch, California. Thousands ofpeoplerushedtoescapea massive wildfire charging across the tinder-dry Sierra Nevada foothills and another out-of-control fire that broke out in Northern California on Saturday, sending four firefighters to the hospital with second-degree burns. The fire began in LakeCounty, about100 miles north of San Francisco, and grew toabout 15 square

miles in just a fewhours, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said. The firefighters, all members of ahelicopter crew, were airlifted to a hospital burn unit, where theywere listed in stable condition, department spokesman Daniel Berlant said. The fire forced theevacuation of two towns aswell as residents along a35-mile stretch of State Route 29. For a local fire update, seePageB1.

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No in ication inton's emai server was'wi e ' By Rosalind S. Helderman, Tom ver-based firm that has manHamburger and Carol Leonnig aged the system since 2013, apThe Washington Post parently did not happen. "Platte River has no knowlThe company that man› aged Hillary Clinton's private edge of theserverbeingw iped," email server said it has "no company spokesman Andy knowledge of the server being Boian told The Washington wiped," the strongest indica- Post. "All the information we tion to date that tens of thou-

sands of emails that Clinton has said were deleted could be

have is that the server wasn' t wiped. Clinton and her staff have

ly by the Clintons for his work on their private system. All the emails from Clinton's tenure at the State Department device was taken over in June 2013 by Platte River Networks, four months after Clinton left office.

Even if the emails could be restored, it's unclear whether

avoided directly answering anyone would have the authorClinton and her advisers whether the server was ever ity to do so. have said for months that she wiped. deleted her personal correIn a memorable exchange at spondence from her time as a campaign event in Las Vesecretary of state, creating the gas last month, Clinton turned impression that 31,000 emails aside a question about whethwere gone forever. er the server had been wiped There is a distinction be- with a joke: "Like what, with a tween emails being deleted and cloth?" she said, adding, "I don' t a server being wiped. If emails know how it works digitally at all.s

server, they appear to no longer exist on the device. But experts say, depending on the condition of the server, underlying data can remain on the device

Campaign spokesman Brian Fallon gave a similar answer

and the emails can often be

Yemen airStrikeS — Of the manyperils Yemen's civilians have faced during the last six months of war, nonehavebeenas deadly as the coalition airstrikes. What began as a Saudi-led aerial campaign against the Houthis, the rebel militia movement that forced Yemen's government from power, hasbecome so broad andvicious that critics accuse the coalition of collectively punishing people living in areas under Houthi control. Errant coalition strikes have ripped through markets, apartment buildings and refugeecamps. Other bombs have fallen so far from anymilitary target that human rights groups say such airstrikes amount to war crimes. Aid tO PakiStall — Critics accuse the U.S. Agency for International Development of taking on projects in Pakistan with little consideration for local priorities and being over-reliant on American contractors with little development experience. At the sametime, they say, much of the aid money goes toward administrative costs, and large amounts have beensiphoned off by Pakistani subcontractors who fail to complete work or return raw material. NadeemUl Haque, former deputy chairman of a government agency that oversees development projects, said USAIDhad become an"aid-outsourcing agency" and that funds largely flowed back to American contractors instead of to communities.

were on the server when the

recovered.

are deletedor moved from a

in the face of intense criticism from state-friendly media that reflects growing discontent but stops short of faulting President AbdelFattah el-Sissi, the former general who ledthe overthrow of an Islamist president two years ago.Theoffice of the president said heaccepted the resignation of Prime Minister Ibrahim Mehleband his Cabinet but that the ministers would continue to serve until a newbody is appointed. El-Sissi tasked Petroleum Minister Sherif Ismail with forming anew Cabinet within a week.Prior to handing in his resignation, Mehleb provided a report detailing the performance of thegovernment, which two officials from the president's office said el-Sissi found "unsatisfying."

COllege rankillgS — President BarackObamaon Saturday abandoned his two-year effort to have thegovernment create a system that explicitly rates the quality of the nation's colleges anduniversities, a plan that was bitterly opposed by presidents at many of those institutions. Instead, theWhite Houseunveiled awebsite — collegescorecard.ed.gov — that provides information about annual costs, graduation rates andsalaries after graduation. — Fromwirereports

this month, telling CNN: "I

don't know what wiped means. Literally the emails were deleted off ofthe server,that’strue."

restored. To make the information go away permanently, a server must be wiped — a process that includes overwriting the underlying data with gibberish, possibly several times. That process, according to

York, and was shared with her husband, former president Bill

Platte River Networks, the Den-

staffer who was paid personal-

The server Clinton used as

I e

'

-

e

• '

'

I

secretary of state was stored at

her home in Chappaqua, New Clinton, and his staff. The device was managed during that time by a State Department

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Britain's LabourParty takes a hardleft turn New York Times News Service LONDON — After three de-

unite his party. Several senior party figures, induding Emma

cades as a political outsider and Reynolds and Tristram Hunt, darion of the left, Jeremy Cor- have already announced that byn on Saturday won the lead- they will not be serving on Corership of Britain's opposition byn's team, though another, Labour Party with an emphatic Hilary Berm, promised to supvictory and a program that in- port him. cludesexpanding theeconomy, On Saturday there were juscrapping nuclear missiles, bilant scenes after the release and dismantling the centrist of results showing that Corpolicies of his predecessors, in- byn had won almost 60 perduding former Prime Minister cent of the vote, crushing his Tony Blair. opponents. Corbyn, 66, won the Labour

leadership o v erwhelmingly with the backing of thousands of newly recruited supporters, and in doing so delivered one of the biggest upsets in modern

,si i

"We don't have to be un-

equal, it doesn't have to be unfair, poverty isn't inevitable,"

Corbyn said in a short acceptance speech. Corbyn's perceived integrity British politics. and his willingness to speak His success underlines the his mind have struck a chord extent to which European po- in a party in which many suplitical structures have been de- porters were left disillusioned stabilized by the aftershocks of by the leadership of Blair, the financial crisis in 2008, with whose decision to join Presivoters increasingly attracted dent George W. Bush in invadaway from the political center ing Iraq poisoned his legacy. ground, either to the socialist Yet Blair is one of only a handleft or the nationalist right. ful of Labour leaders who has However, Corbyn's program, ever won a general election, which includes nationalizing and Corbyn's critics fear he will energyand railcompanies, has turn the Labour Party into a shallow support among fellow protest movement, rather than Labour lawmakers, a fact that

a realistic alternative to the

suggests he may struggle to

Conservative government.

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Sunday, Sept. 13, the 256th

day of 2015. Thereare109 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS ROSh HaShanah The Jewish NewYear begins at sunset.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1515, during the Italian Wars, the two-day Battle of Marignano began as forces led byFrancis I of France clashed with troops from the OldSwiss Confederacy. (The Frenchsucceeded in forcing the Swiss to abandon nearby Milan.) In1788,the Congress of the Confederation authorized the first national election, and declared NewYork City the temporary national capital. In1814,during the Warof 1812, British naval forces began bombarding Fort McHenry in Baltimore but were driven back by American defenders in a battle that lasted until the

following morning. In1923, Miguel Primo de Rivera, the captain general of Catalonia, seized power in Spain. In1948, Republican Margaret Chase Smith of Mainewas elected to the U.S.Senate; she becamethe first woman to serve in both housesof Congress. In1959,Elvis Presley first met his future wife, 14-year-old Priscilla Beaulieu, while stationed in WestGermanywith the U.S. Army. (Theymarried in 1967, but divorced in 1973.) In1965,the novel "Miss Macintosh, My Darling," by Marguerite Young, wasfirst published by Scribner's. In1971, a four-day inmates' rebellion at the Attica Correctional Facility in western NewYork ended as police andguards stormed the prison; the ordeal and final assault claimed the lives of 32 inmates and11 employees. In1989, Fay Vincent was elected commissioner of Major League Baseball, succeeding the late A. Bartlett Giamatti.

In1990, the combination police-courtroom drama "Law 8 Order" premiered onNBC. In1995,"The DrewCarey Show" premiered onABC. Ten years ago:President George W.Bushtook responsibility for the federal government's mistakes in dealing with Hurricane Katrina and suggested the calamity raised broader questions about the government's ability to handle both natural disasters and terror attacks. Five years ago:Cubaannounced it would cast off at least half a million state workers and reduce restrictions on private enterprise to help them find jobs. Japan freed14 crew members of aChinese fishing ship nearly a weekafter their vessel collided with two Japanese patrol boats near disputed southern islets. One year ago:Islamic State extremists released avideo showing the beheading of British aid worker David Haines, who had beenabducted in Syria the previous year; British Prime Minister David Cameron condemnedtheslayingas"an act of pure evil."

PICTURETHIS

America’s science

Oui neCOO iS O er S a SOmeW ele: Bn e S e BC Ol'S grade: C By Seth Borenstein

Meet the men and women who sign up for an unusual job: to be poked and prodded by medical

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON

professionals in training.

When put to the test, Americans rate a solid if unspec-

tacular C in science, a survey shows. In a basic quiz of a dozen random sciencequestions, Americans got eight cor-

By Drew Harwell The Washington Post s',p g.

NORFOLK, Va. — For her

next lesson, the teacher, a petite, dark-haired w o man

named Anna Sosa, shrugs off her red robe, kicks her striped

rect, according to an online i

survey of more than 3,200 adults by the Pew Research

/s.

socks into the footrests and

Center released last week.

steels herself for yet another potentially disastrous pelvic

The questions ranged from what kind of waves are used

in cellphones to interpreting a scatterplot graph. "This is one of those cas-

exam.

It's a sweat-soaked summer morning outside Eastern Virginia Medical School's Sentara

Rvsrr

es where you can look at it

mersive Learning, and inside

as a glass half-full or a glass half-empty," said Pew asso-

this mock hospital room, three

ciate director Cary Funk.

medical students in starched white lab coats stand word-

She found it more interesting which questions Americans aced (spoiler alert, if you want to take the test yourself) — the core is the

Center for Simulation and Im-

lessly between Sosa's feet.

The room feels microscopic, with fluorescent lights and functional carpet, its b eige

hottest part of Earth — and

walls sterile and sparse save

which ones they bombed:

for three mounted boxes of la-

water boils faster at higher altitudes.

tex gloves. Then there's Sosa, Jay Westcott /For The Washington Post who breaks the silence by Medical student Anastasia Samaras performs an exam with actor/trainee Jim Sandloop, a 69-year-old hoisting a pair of speculums retired salesman and Army veteran who specializes in a "guided tour of the male genital examination." like six-shooters into the frigid,

Rush Holt, chief executive officer of the American A ssociation for t h e A d -

vancement of Science, said

antisepti cair. These cliched "medieval tor-

s a id

while it's crucial to under-

later, "they' re going to be trying to stare a hole through the w all over here, because their

stand how the general public grasps science, he's not

ican College of Physicians con- world's about to end as they ference in the '90s, blocking know it." off space with a velvet curtain Many of the teaching asand asking passing doctors, sociates flake out, from stage "Would you like to refine your fright or spooked spouses or breast and pelvic examination the fear of nine genital exams skills?" a day. And GTAs are reluctant "Nobody even knew what to bare all the details about GTAs were," she said. "I got what they do after they clock one guy who looked me up in: One said it felt like being in and down and said, 'Sounds the closet. intriguing.'" But many also say the job The programs have grown can feel incredibly empowrapidly over the years, includ- ering. Temple West, a former ing at Eastern Virginia, con- GTA who started as a stansidered a pioneer. Its simula- dardized patient when s he tion center now employs 130 was 60 ona recommendation

in the survey give the full picture.

dents through some of its most

"standardized patients," the

delicate,dreaded exams. Ev› ery week, she lies back for doz- years ago, she forgot to reens of the next medical gener- lease the speculum during its ation's first pelvic and breast removal, leading the patient screenings, steering gloved to jolt with pain — and Starks fingers through the mysteries Hall to wake up on a stretcher, of her own anatomy and re- headed for the hospital, having laying the in-depth feedback fainted.

broader group of workers who called her first discovery of her fake medical ailments for edu- body's inner workings "just cation's sake. about the neatest thing I'd ever The school also routinely done." crowds its GTAs and male uroThat reaction is surprisingly logical teaching associates, or common. Students who have

graphic breakdown of the survey showed. Men in general got one

ture devices" are nothing to be afraid of, she says. In fact, this duck-billed tool, with all the

sleekness of a caulking gun, is a thing of wonder, she says: the guide to the gateway of all human creation, that staggeringly important part of the body most women will never see. "This may not be the first

time you capture the live cervix," Sosa says, smiling encouragingly, "but either way, we' re in this together. Go, team cervix!"

Sosa is a g y necological teaching associate, and she holds one of modern medi-

cine's most awkward jobs, using her body to guide med stu-

a former president of the Association of Standardized Patient

By thenumders 130:Number of "standardized patients" employed by Eastern Virginia Medical School's Sentara Center for Simulation and Immersive Learning 65:Number of medical schools that Eastern Virginia's standardized patients travel to for seminars and special teaching sessions 8-10:Number of sessions a gynecological teaching associate might work a month 9-12:Number of breast and pelvic exams aGTAfacilitates within a session

Educators, remembers trying to spread the word at an Amer-

first examination," he

from herJazzercise instructor,

they' ll need out in the wild. She is not, in the traditional

For anyone familiar with these tests' indignities — the

sense, a medical professional

snapping of a latex glove, the frosty surprise of a speculum, the barks to "bend over" what theseteachers do may

MUTAs, into vans and planes only read about the cervix in for sessions at 6 5 m e dical medical texts, teachers said, schools from North Carolina have been brought to tears or to New York. At a recent three- exdaimed, "It's so beautiful!" or "Oh my god!" As GTA Alexday seminar, teachers sat through 900 practice exams. andra Duncan wrote in an esIn New York and Los Ange- say on BuzzFeed, "At this point les, the simulated patients are in my life, my uterus has made

seem almost messianic, like a sacrifice for the betterment of

oftenactors;here,in eastern Virginia, they are part-time or

herself: A 31-year-old theater

actor, she has also worked recent jobs at a bakery and Barnes & Noble. Yet what she

lacks in faculty prestige, she and her compatriots — includ-

ing a squad of male urological teaching associates, who teach genital and prostate exams-

make upforin humor, candor and endurance. For nervous students, she is like an enthu-

siastic surgical dummy, awake through the operation and cheering them on. C hristina Starks H a ll,

a

36-year-old student on her last day of physician-assistant school, pulls a stool close and gently lifts the white drape

BIRTHDAYS

crumpled acrossSosa’swaist.

Actress Barbara Bain is 84. Actress EileenFulton ("As the World Turns" ) is 82. TV producer Fred Silverman is 78. Rock singer David Clayton-Thomas (Blood, Sweat 8 Tears) is 74. Actress Jacqueline Bisset is 71. Singer Peter Cetera is 71.Actress Jean Smart is 64. Singer Randy Jones (The Village People) is 63. Record producer DonWas is 63. Actor Isiah Whitlock Jr. is 61. Actress-comedian Geri Jewell is 59. Rock singer-musician DaveMustaine (Megadeth) is 54. Radio-TV personality Tavis Smiley is 51. Olympic gold medal runner Michael Johnson is48.Rock musician StevePerkins is 48. Actor Roger Howarth is 47. Actor Dominic Fumusa is46. Actress Louise Lombard is 45. Country musician JoeDon Rooney (Rascal Flatts) is 40. Singer FionaApple is 38. Actor Ben Savage is35.

hospital rotations before, but the speculum is still, as she

— From wire reports

SURVEY

Starks Hall has worked on says, "a complicated li'I piece of equipment," and this is still a stranger's anatomy she is about to explore. "You' re going to feel my hands on your tissue, and it' s going to be cold gel and lots of pressure," she tells Sosa, who

spectates via a small hand mirror with a cartoon girl on the back. Starks Hall aims the

speculum, saying, "I want you to take a deep breath ... and exhale." Sosa breathes out and

says, "Very appropriate verbalization and a safe, smooth insertion," and only then does

Starks Hall exhale, too. Sosa attempts to lighten the mood, telling the three stu-

dents not to "hold speculums gangster-style" but rather to, as some texts recommend,

"hold it like a cigar, which is a horrible reference." But it is a nerve-wracking

experience, nonetheless. In Starks Hall's first exam, two

-

the rest of us, taking hundreds former professors, baristas, refor the team. That doesn't nec- tail workers and house spousessarily make it any easier for es, all contract workers paid by the teachers and students in the session, and not extraordithese tense exam chambers, narily so. Gliva-McConvey, the w here questi ons seem to echo program direct or,said wages off the walls: Does this hurt'? were confidential but added, Am I doing this right? And the "All I can say is, we don't pay one the teachers hear the most: them enough." What kind of person does such Vocabulary becomes hugely a thing? important to avoiding clumsy wording. Teachers are taught Live practice to neutralize sexual language There is no true substitute — it's a "table," not a "bed"; a for the squishy grotesquerie "drape," not a "sheet" — and of the imperfect human form. cut back on awkward phrases: Blemished and unsculpted, it is Say "footrests" instead of the rife with surprises, each lump too-equestrian "stirrups"; "lots and bump like a tiny opportu- of pressure" instead of "this is nity for the learner to explore. going to hurt." Students aren' t But the live body is a recent supposed to "grab," "stick in" addition to the medical class- or "pull out" anything, though room, and its placement there in th e m o ment, i n structor is preceded by a dark and K elene Williams said w i t h awkward history. Some doc- a laugh, "sometimes neutral torstoday began theircareers doesn't come out." practicing pelvic exams on For all their pedantry over patients zonked on anesthet- word choice, the sessions can ics, many of whom were poor be surprisingly l aid-back. walk-ins to outpatient clinics, When Jim Sandloop leads neverasked to give consent.In what he calls a "guided tour of the late '60s, realizing passed- the male genital examination," out guinea pigs didn't offer the the 69-year-old retired salesbest critiques, medical schools man and Army veteran, who started recruiting untrained learned of the job 10 years and pelvic models, including pros- 1,000 exams ago from a friend titutes. Improvements to the in the Porsche Club of Amerprogram's ickiness and patient ica, is always ready to cut the feedback were negligible, at tension with a joke, even at the best. expense of his own nerves. The practice of training and Lying on his side before his paying gynecological teaching first prostate check of the day, associates, or GTAs, is only a he tells three students: "There' s few decades old, and for years no need for speed here. We it went unnoticed even at the

more people cry than I have."

Sosa’s class t h eir

coats and latex gloves are breathing a little bit easier, letting their shoulders sink and laughing a little. One of the students, 30-yearold physician-assistant hope-

ence between astronomy and astrology," said Holt, a former congressman who wasn't involved in the survey. "It is important to know that science is based on ev-

idence and that their daily decisions on daily life can also be based on evidence."

Holt said he found "very troubling" what the demo-

more right answer than did

women, while people with college degrees got two more correct answers than

did those with a high school education or less. Whites did better than blacks and

Hispanics. People between 30 and 49 scored the most

correct answers. Those over 65 scored the lowest. Westerners scored the

highest on average, while those in the South did the half a correct answer more than Democrats, but Funk said that may be more a

"Each and every time, I feel

racial and ethnic issue, because white Democrats and Republicans had nearly identical scores. Otherstudiesshow gen› der and racial gaps and scientists consider that a

like your comfort level adjusts,

serious problem, Holt said.

you breathe a little deeper, you say, 'OK, OK, I can do this.' You get greedy, almost. Like, can I do it again? Can I do it again?"

The gender difference is noticeable in physical sciences like chemistry and physics and not in biological sciences, Funk said.

ful Kirstin Grant, said later,

Sosa guides the other two

students through how to lead the test, pointing out features on a rubber uterine mold. The

drape is lifted and the exam begins again. The speculum goes in, the light turns on and, amazingly, there it is: the cervix, looking like a tiny ring. No one cries or faints, but

the students crowd inward for

Free pipeinstallation estimates

a better look, and Sosa grins

like a magician who just aced a trick.

4e o aa Microwave Hood

AMV1150VA W You haul

Pnced to sellr I 69

don't need to turbocharge our

highest levels of the medical way up to the umbilicus," or world. Gayle Gliva-McConvey, bellybutton. "If this is t heir

"It may not be important to know that the core of the Earth is hotter, but it is important to know the differ-

worst. Republicans scored

In this mock hospital room, the three students in

sure questions like those

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A4

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

Big jump innumber EPAsus en sceanu at10minesites of immigrantslosing

UPDATE COLORADO MINE SPILL AFTERMATH

By Matthew Brown and Dan Elliott

the EPA plans to keep the

work stoppage in place until emergency plans are drawn up

The Associated Press

BILLINGS, Mont. — Site

investigations and some cleanup work at 10 polluted mining complexesin four states were suspended because of condi-

to deal with any accident.

By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

The agency also wants to get the results of an Interior

The Associated Press

Department investigation into

change in government procedures has led to a big jump in people losing coverage under the Obama health care law because of immigration and

the Colorado accident before proceeding on most of the oth-

tions similar to those that led to

a massive wastewater blowout from an inactive Colorado gold

er sites. That's expected in late

October, department officials said.

mine, U.S. Environmental Pro-

tection Agency officials said. The sites include three in

King spill, the EPA and its con-

California, four in Colorado, two in Montana and one in

tractor, Environmental Restoration LLC of St. Louis, ap-

Prior to the Aug. 5 Gold

Missouri, according to details obtained by The Associated

Brennan Linsley /TheAssociated Pressfile photo

Pressfollowing repeated re› Water flows through a series of sediment retention ponds built quests for the information. to reduce heavy metal and chemical contaminants from the Gold They have the potential for King Mine wastewater accident, in the spillway about a quar› contaminated water to build ter-mile downstream from the mine, outside Silverton, Colorado. up inside mine workings, EPA Assistant Administrator

Mathy Stanislaus said. That

mines were abandoned de- ment Accountability O ff i ce would set the stage for a pos- cades ago and have grown said federal agencies identified sible spill such as last month's more unstable over time, rais- thousands of contaminated near Silverton, Colorado, ing the risk of an accident. mine sites in recent yearswhere an EPA team triggered The stop-work order was even as their attempts to asa 3 million gallon blowout of issued last month, but officials sess what harm is being done toxic sludge while doing ex- for weeks refused to disclose to people and the environment cavation work on the inactive specifics. have lagged. Gold King Mine. Cleanup efforts on some Further investigations were The accident fouled rivers of the mines have been go- needed to gauge the danger in three states and attracted ing on for years yet remain posed by the 10 mining comharsh criticism of the EPA for unfinished, underscoring the plexes under the suspension not being prepared despite pri- complexity of a long-running before work could safely reor warnings that such a spill attempt to address an estimat- sume, according to internal couldhappen. ed 500,000 abandoned mines EPA documents released by "We want t o t a k e e x tra across the U.S. Work on others the agency. caution before we initiate any was in the early stages. That includes categorizing work," Stanislaus said of the In a report to Congress de- their level of hazard. For those work suspensions. Some the livered Friday, the Govern- deemed a "probable hazard,"

health law coverage

peared to have only a cursory emergency response plan in the event of a spill, according to documentsreleased under public records requests. There was no cellphone coverage at the remote site in the San Juan Mountains, and the workers did not have a satel-

lite phone, according to EPA documents. As a result, they

had no way to immediately communicate with the outside world when the rust-colored

water loaded with heavy metals, including lead and arsenic, began rushing toward downstream communities

WASHINGTON

immigration issues during all of 2014.

-

A

citizenship issues. More than 400,000 had

President Barack Obama's health care law specifies that only citizens and legal U.S. residents are entitled to coverage through the new insurance markets that offer

subsidized policies. The administration says this year

their insurance canceled, the law provides just a 95-day nearly four times as many as window for resolving doculast year. mentation issues that involve The Obama administration citizenship and immigration. says it is following the letter There was no such clock in of the law, and this year that 2014 because it was the first means a shorter time frame year of HealthCare.gov's covfor resolving immigration erage expansion. and citizenship issues. But Last year, "we had the auadvocates say the adminis- thority to provide consumers tration's system for verifying more flexibility — we were eligibility is seriously flawed, not taking action on the strict and consumers who are legal- timeline," said Ben Wakana, ly entitled to benefits are pay- a spokesman for the Departing the price. ment of Health and Human "Same dog, different col- Services. "In 2015, we moved lar," said Jane Delgado, presi- to the timeline of about three dent of the National Alliance months, so consumers need for Hispanic Health, evoking to act quickly to submit supan old Spanish saying about porting documentation." situations that do not seem to change. "The bottom line is

Padilla said a shorter time

would pose a threat to peo-

The National Immigration

ments are needed. "If it was

ple or increase the potential

Law Center says it believes the overwhelming majority of the 423,000 people whose coveragewas terminated are

clearer what the consumer needed to do, we wouldn' t

The Aug. 12 stop-work order from EPA Administrator Gina

McCarthy did not apply to sites where halting operations for harm to the environment, according to i n t ernal E PA

documents.

window might not be so people got taken off health in- much of a problem if the adsurance when they applied in ministration would clearly good faith." communicate which docu›

have the numbers that we

have," he said. The administration says it is zenssnared in a complicated, continually making improveinefficient system for check- ments to help consumers. ing documents. Hispanics, the n ation's Angel Padilla, the center's most numerous ethnic group, health policy analyst, said have been among the biggest it defies common sense that beneficiaries of the Affordmany immigrants without le- able Care Act. The uninsured gal authorization to be in the rate for Latino adults ages country would risk alerting 18-64 dropped from nearly a federal agency by apply- 41 percent in 2013 to about ing for taxpayer-subsidized 28 percent in the first three benefits. months of this year, accord"Somebody who is trying ing to a government survey. to submit documents over But Hispanics are still more and over ... is someone who likely to be uninsured than believes they have an eligible people of other ethnic and raimmigration status," Padilla cial backgrounds. Signing up said. By comparison, a total of more Latinos is a priority for 109,000 people lost coverage the administration and the because of citizenship and law's supporters. legal U.S. residents and citi-

Bonacker Continued from A1

Done with the Eugene days Before getting into what happened next, Bonacker said

It's a di ff icult subject to a patch of grass on someone' s lawn if he's on his bike. Ev- study; the U.S. Drug Enery so often, though, there's a forcement Agency still conbig one that lands him in the siders marijuana a Schedhospital, where doctors usu- ule I controlled substance. ally put him into a temporary The DEA must inspect any

THC is what stopped his sei-

coma.

THC capsules in addition to the tincture. The idea, he said,

study sites and protocol, a

he wants to get something ’It’s amazing’ straight: He didn't do this to get high. Indeed, he doesn't come Bonacker first tried a medoff as your typical stoner. He ical marijuana tincture on the doesn't wear tie-dyed clothing, afternoon of Sunday, Aug.2.

process that can be expensive and time-consuming for researchers.

Meanwhile, the lack of evidence puts doctors in an awkand he said he stopped listenTim Fratto Jr.,a 38-year› ward position, especially as ing to the Grateful Dead years old Bend resident who makes countless stories like Bonackago, "even though they' re an medical marijuana oils, tinc- er's pile up from patients with

zures," Fratto said. A few weeks ago, Fratto

significantly increased the amount of THC he's giving Bonacker: He's now t aking is to build up immunity to the THC so that he can slowly in-

OK band."

tures and capsules — a busi-

conditions like cancer, multi-

In fact, the fear of reliving his wild younger years in Eugene — including visits to the farm owned by Ken Kesey, the

ness he calls Healing of the

ple sclerosis, epilepsy, arthri-

crease the dosage up to 300 milligrams within 90 days, he sard. Fratto said he is currently working with 12 cancer patients. One of them is 38-year-old

Nation — visited Bonacker's house on a q uiet street on Bend's northwest side to deliv-

tis and post-traumatic stress

B end resident William A n -

disorder. "I feel like if a drug came out well-known author and coun- er his first round of treatment. that a few people anecdotally terculture icon — held him Fratto showed Bonacker how said works great but hadn' t back from trying marijuana to use the tincture, which is been studied yet with placesooner, despite encourage- stored in a glass bottle and dis- bo-controlled trials, there is no ment from his wife to do so. pensed in a dropper: Just open way you'd put your kid on it for "It had been mentioned to your mouth and squirt it out epilepsy," Bell said. me before, but I had this kind near the back of your tongue, Bell said he's tried medical of weird thing where I flashed he said. marijuana under "desperate back to my Eugene days and Roughly six hours later, circumstances" for six or sevthinking, 'God, I don't know,'" Bonacker's wife, Susan, came en other patients with very sehe said. home from work. She watched vere epilepsy for which mediThe marijuana experiment Bonacker casually step over cations were not working. He comes during a long, pain- their dog's leash while carry- only saw mild improvements ful and tiring battle with a ing a plate of chicken toward in a few of those patients. Boslow-growing but incurable the backyard grill. That was nacker is the exception. form of brain tumor called an a big deal. Bonacker almost The problem, Bell said, is oligodendroglioma, diagnosed always tripped over the leash. that stories like Bonacker's "He did this little hop over are publicized and talked in 2003. It comes after 100 rounds of chemotherapy, ra- the dog leash to not trip," Su- about, but the public doesn' t diation and one round of brain san said. "I said, 'Wow, you' re learn about the many others surgery to remove half of the moving really well today.'" for whom marijuana didn' t tumor. It comes after years

B onacker couldn't

k now

work.

nunziata, who was diagnosed with stage 3 non-Hodgkin lymphoma at the end of May. Rather than undergoing chemotherapy and radiation treatments A n n unziata

said only seem to make people worse — he got started on

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Fratto's tincture and capsules

June 1. Since t h en,

A n n u nziata

said he's gotten off all of his pain medications. He's finally eating, sleeping and has energy to do normal activities. He has a doctor's appointment on Tuesday, and he said he' s hopeful his prognosis will have improved. "Not getting chemo, I should just be losing weight and getting worse healthwise," he said, "and I feel like I' ve maintained and gotten better since I

"You read some of the an- started everything." of mental fog that caused Bo- that Sunday what was in store nacker to search for words in for him that month. After hav- ecdotes published in the meconversation, forget appoint- ing 14 seizures in July, the fu- dia and on the Internet and it ’This ismedicine’ ments and lose his balance. ture was unclear. sounds like it works for everyB onacker, sitting o n h i s And it comes after countless He had only one seizure in body," he said. "And the reality back porch one morning last seizures, the scrapes on his August — a minor one. None is, for most of the patients I' ve week, pulled out the calendar knees remnants of the partic- so far in September. tried it in in desperate circum- he uses to mark his seizures. "It's amazing," Bonacker stances, it hasn't helped." ularly bad falls. Half of the boxes in July are Even before the diagnosis, said on a recent morning, his Bonacker said he wants covered with large "S"s or the Bonacker was something of excitement prompting wide to wean himself off of his word "seizure." The months medi c ations, before have slightly fewer a local celebrity. He started smiles as he talked, the de- anti-seizure out in Bend as the first em- meanor of a person with new- dilantin an d p h enobarbital, markings. Then, he flips to ployee of Sunnyside Sports, found hope. and use medical marijuana August, marked only with "start of tincture" on Aug. 2 a well-known west-side bike Bonacker's neurologist, Dr. exclusively. shop, in 1972. Since 1990, he' s Michael Bell with Bend NeuB ell said h e t h i nk s t h e and a large "S" on Aug. 20: been a partial owner of the rological Associates, said the medications have been "very the only seizure he had last shop. Bonacker bike raced improvement is "tremendous," helpful," and he recommends month. between 1969 and 1980, and but was cautious on the sub- gradually going off one at a He said the marijuana he was among the founders of the ject of medical marijuana. time rather than quitting both uses now doesn't bring on "In epilepsy, there are all at once, which he said could be the same buzz as the stuff he Cascade Cycling Classic, the longest-running stage race in these very intriguing anec- dangerous. smoked living in Eugene in the country. dotes of success stories like the late '60s and early '70s, The diagnosis didn't set- Gary's and like some of these ’Changing people’s lives’ back when he would "get tle Bonacker down, e ither. kids who have failed 10 or 12 You wouldn't know such loaded," listen to music and Following his brain surgery drugs — four drug combina- skepticism exists listening to occasionallysee members of shortly thereafter, he took to tions — and then they get on Fratto, who says plainly that the Grateful Dead at parties. supporting fellow cancer pa- pot and they' re seizure-free," he's witnessed his products He doesn't hide that history tients. He organized the first he said. "These success stories not only stop seizures, but from his daughter — who, Tour des Chutes in 2005, a are exciting and should not be cure cancer as well. thankfully, hates pot, he said "It's changing people's lives — but it made him cautious popular bike ride — and, since ignored." last year, a run — that's raised Aside from the reduction in for the better," he said. "It's giv- about jumping back into using roughly $800,000 for cancer seizures, Susan said her hus- ing them another chance." marijuana. band's mind is clearer and his He's glad he did. The reducsurvivors and patients. Fratto said the bottles of But since 2010, his seizures coordination is leagues better liquid Bonacker puts on his tion in seizures has allowed h ave gotten worse. I n r e - than it was before. tongue through a dropper are him to keep biking and work"There's s tuff al l o v er filled with a mixture that took ing at the shop, spend more cent years, they' ve taken on a strange cycle — becoming the Internet about m i racle him years to perfect. The tinc- quality time with family and more frequent one month and cures," she said. "I certain- ture is 48 percent tetrahydro- friends and helped him with less frequent the next. In a ly didn't expect that kind of cannabinol (THC), one of the the fogginess that had become bad month, Bonacker said he improvement." main cannabinoids, or chem- so pervasive. could have one almost every ical compounds, contained Bonacker isn't completely other day. In a good month, he Lots of stories, in marijuana, and 25 percent sure about everything Fratestimates he could go up to 14 little research cannabidiol (CBD), he said. to tells him, but, he said, "It' s days without one. The problem, Bell said, is When it comes to stopping worth a shot," and he's excited Many of the seizures are the lack of scientific evidence seizures, too much of the at- to see what happens. "This is medicine," he said. short, 10-minute bursts he just for how effective marijuana is tention, especially in the mehas to wait out and, hopefully, for epilepsy and what the side dia, is on CBDs, Fratto said. — Reporter: 541-383-0304, "The CBDs help, but the find a soft spot to fall on, like effects are. tbannow@bendbulletin.corn

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

Ref

be too harsh and unfairly penalize nonoffending football players, cheerleaders and fans.

Continued fromA1 The two players have been suspended from school for slamming into the referee, Robert Watts, at a

Among the students, par-

ents and faculty at John Jay, reactionswere varied. Several

S ept. 4

game in Marble Falls. An assistant coach who may have

students interviewed last week h

agreed that the two players had crossed a line, but some

k -'~

i+ 'll Ifilliillllii,

provoked the incident was also

suspended, and the episode is under investigation by the Uni-

also expressed frustration that

the racial slur allegations were being played down and asserted that John Jay was being unfairly painted with a broad

versity Interscholastic League,

which governs extracurricular activities in Texas schools.

brush for the actions of two

players.

Also under investigation are

the players' assertions that the refereeused racialslurs,an al›

Matthew Busch / The New York Times

legation that the referee's law-

The officiating crew prays together Friday before the start of John

yer denies. Video replays of the incident

Jay High School’s game against Del Rio High School, a week after two John Jay players intentionally hit a referee. The hit on the un›

suspecting referee has madepeople ponder whether the incident 9 million times on YouTube, is a broader lesson about the dark side of high school sports or drawing outrage from even just an isolated moment of terrible behavior. have been viewed more than

casual sports viewers and stir-

ring calls for harsh penalties, including criminal charges coach on John Jay's football and suspension of John Jay's team and a2004 graduate of football program, an option the school, allegedly made a that, for the moment, seems suggestion that could have unlikely. led to the incident. Adminis"I had to play it back a cou- trators, who have suspended ple of times just to believe what Breed pending an investigaI saw," said the Tarrant County tion, said the assistant had alsheriff, Dee Anderson, in Fort legedly commented that "this Worth, who has officiated high guy needs to pay for cheating schooland college games for us" before his two players more than three decades. "We made the hit on Watts. "I don't know of other inciall understand that you get hit out there, but this is so violent dents like this, which is why and so premeditated that I be- it's so shocking," said H.G. lieve it deserves some very Bissinger, the author of "Friday stern consequences." Night Lights," which chroniVerbal abuse and threats cled the Permian Panthers in from coaches, players and Odessa, Texas. "I think it's part fans toward game officials is and parcel of the intensity, the not uncommon in the United States. But U.S. sports are

fanaticism and the craziness

tame compared with the level of violence against game offi-

this country."

cials in other countries. Still,

of what sports has become in

A larger trend?

"There have been instances sports experts generally agree that the body slam against of inappropriate contact with Watts crossed a line. an official — generally that' s As captured on video, as been bumping into an official, a play began, one John Jay never something to this deplayer made a beeline run at gree," said Jamey Harrison, Watts, slamming into him the deputy director of the interfrom behind and knocking scholastic league. "Is it part of something him down. A second player followed, appearing to dive l arger? Of c ourse i t i s ," into the referee's back as he said Bissinger, whose book was on the ground. The play- spawned a movie and a televiers, who were suspended from sion series. "It's all about winthe school and team partici- ning, it's all about losing, it's all pation, have not been publicly about anger, it's all about feelidentified because they are ing cheated, and in the case of minors and an investigation is John Jay, now it's about retripending. bution, now it's about revenge. "It's gotten t o t h e p o i nt School officials have said Mack Breed, a n a s sistant where kids, and apparently the

Kalvin Martinez, a 17-yearold senior, said he had known

one of the two players since elementary school and described him as "a really good guy" who would not have taken that action unless provoked. "What he did wasn't right, but at the same time, I don't think

he would do it just for no reaassistant coach, they don't yell at the ref anymore," he added.

"They take a page out of the

son," he said. John Jay is the third-old-

A5

Nashvi e'smayor-eect finds p ath between iberasm, i business By Richard Fausset

retention that Barry m en-

New York Times News Service

tioned, particularly of young, tech-savvy employees. her acceptance speech ThursIt is a strategy that can day,Mayor-electMegan Bar› build its own political mory,a candidatecharacterized mentum, attracting newcomas a purveyor of "extreme" ers who can push a city's polileftist views in a bruising tics further left. runoff, men t i oned In a way, Barry, the various residents a C alifornia n a tive NASHVILLE, Tenn. — In

who would write the next chapter for this

fast-growing Southern city. In a notably nonextreme move, she Barry spoke first of the city' s

raised in the Midwest, is a product of that mo-

business community.

mentum, and of a new Nashville energized by, and sometimes polarized by, the flood of new residents.

schoolbook of soccer in Latin

Northside district. Of the near-

"They need a mayor who will help recruit and retain

America and Europe and try

ly 3,000 students, 84 percent

the talent so that Nashville

to pursue a master's degree in business administration from

to maim them." are Hispanic, about 8 percent But t h e i nt e r scholastic white and nearly 5 p ercent league chairman, Mike Moth- black, according to school diseral of Lubbock, while con- trict data. demning the attack, called it N early 67 percent of t h e "an isolated incident" and not- students are economically

can energize and reach our

Vanderbilt University in 1991.

full potential," she said. It is telling, in 21st-centu-

That same year, Nashville elected Phil Bredesen, the

ry Nashville, that many here find Barry's liberal reputation and pro-business rhetoric to be complementary rather

future Tennessee governor.

than contradictory. Barry, 51, earned that reputation during

set a socially liberal, pro-busi-

est of 15 high schools in the

ed that hundreds of other high disadvantaged. "Right behind that statisschool football games had taken place the same night with- tic," Robert Harris, the school out incident. principal, said, "we h ave "I would hope we don't jump great students that come from to too many conclusions," he great families and a great said. "I'm not going to be too community." quick to jump out there and

say what we' re seeing is an escalation in violence." His group took no action at a hearing last week but is continuing its investigation

Inside John Jay, which sits

on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mus-

tang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof and could make a decision at reaching skyward. Educators its next meeting, on Sept. 23. and students feel the incident Superintendent Brian Woods has wrested attention from the of the Northside Independent school's successes. John Jay School District, which includes serves as a science and engiJohn Jay, said that the "shame- neering magnet school, and ful" incident was being treated has been recognized by the as an assault on a school offi- state for academic distinction cial and that disciplinary op- in math, science, social studies tions could indude expulsion and English language arts. and assignment to a juvenile John Jay also has one of justice school. the largest high school ROTC programs in t h e c ountry, Punishment and its Silver Eagles armed Although The Dallas Morn-

drill team has won national

ing News has editorialized in competitions. "We' re about the business favor of firing the head coach and suspending the entire of educating children and eduteam forthe restoftheseason, cating students, and that has to athletic officials suggest that be our focus moving forward," they believe that option would Harris said.

eight years on the Metropolitan Council, where she was an outspoken advocate for abortion rights, samesex marriage and a minimum-wage increase. It was a reputation she did not retreat from over the past week as

Barry moved to Nashville

He was the first in a string of three — now four — mayors, none born in Tennessee, who ness tone that has come to define the city's politics.

Barry earned her degree. She also fell in l ove with Nashville and her future hus-

band, Bruce Barry, a Vanderbilt management professor and member of the American Civil Liberties Union's state

she handily defeated her de- board who shared her liberal cidedly more conservative social views. She found work rival, David Fox, 54, a former at Nortel, the telecommunihedge-fund manager. cations company, where she Barry's victory — she will developed and managed ethbe the first female mayor of icsprograms, beforeworking this city, chartered in 1806-

as an ethics and compliance

was made possible, in part, by the support of a significant segment of Nashville's business class. It is a dynamic

officerfor Premier Inc., a health care firm. Both companies are the types of businesses that are less flashy than Nashville's music industry but provide many of its white-collar jobs. "The social issues for me have always been about people," Barry said in an interview Friday. "Business plays a huge role in impacting people's lives. So for me the marrying of the progressive and

now common in many heart-

land and Southern states, where urban centers are often blue havens in vast seas of

Republican red. In many cities, large businesses have lent their support to socially liberal policies, on the theory that they might fight outsiders' perceptions of entrenched intolerance and make it eas- the business has always been ier to do the recruiting and the way forward."


A6

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

Loans Continued fromA1 The amount of outstanding

student loans has skyrocketed 76 percent to almost $1.2 trillion since 2009 as college costs have shot up and graduates have had difficulty finding good-paying jobs. Before the Great Recession, total outstanding student loans ranked well below mortgages, auto loans, credit cards and home equity lines of credit as sources of household debt.

Now it trails only mortgage debt, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

About 40 million consumers have at least one student loan, and the average debt

was $29,000 last year, according to credit reporting firm Experian. Worse for students, delinquencyrateson college loans are rising even as they decline for other types of household debt. The New York Fed found

that 11.5 percent of student loans were a t l e ast t h r ee months delinquent as of June

30 — more than 3 percentage points greater than any other

loan category. Unlike other debt, student loans can't be discharged in bankruptcy. So it's not surprising that when Gallup asked parents this year to name their biggest

financial worry, paying for loans are backed by the fedtheir children's college educa- eral government, a rash of tion topped the list. defaults would not trigger an"We' re essentially running a other financial crisis the way higher-educationsystem here the mortgage meltdown did, that is not sustainable," said deRitis said. Anthony Carnevale, director But taxpayers could take a of the Center on Education and hit, as would the economy. "This is something that' s the Workforce at Georgetown University. "It's kind of a run- going to unwind over time," he

Campus

number of students on a big-

public four-year colleges and universities were $9,139 in the

Continued fromA1

in Bend, that's what would allow for those benefits. I don't think it's feasible in the

Average tuition and fees at

latest school year, according to the College Board. That was up 66 percent from a decade earlier as governments hit hard by the recession cut back on college funding. Over the same period, tuiaway train." said, noting that the improv- tion and fees at private, nonThe b r oad r a m i fications ing economy has caused the profit colleges and universities for the economy and the high- growth of student loan debt to rose 49 percent on average to er-educationsystem have led ease. "It's going to be a long, $31,231 as the schools incurred some presidential candidates slow burn." major costs in upgrading dorto propose ways to make colLast year, researchers at mitories and building health lege more affordable and re- the Federal Reserve Bank clubs and other facilities to duce the debt burden, such as of Boston found that student compete for s t udents from through refinancing at lower debt lowered the likelihood of wealthy families. interestrates. homeownership for a group of Students seeking lower-cost "Think of th e m i llions of students who attended college alternatives increasingly have Americans being held back by in the 1990s. turned to community colleges, their student debt," former SecResearch this year by the where average tuition and fees retary of State Hillary Clinton New York Fed suggested that rose 53 percent during the last told the Democratic National "a substantial portion" of the decade. Committee's summer meeting increase in young people livThat trend risks spreading in August. "They cannot start ing with their parents "can be the student loan debt problem a business, they cannot buy a explained by increasing stu- to schools long seen as the only house, they cannot even get dent debt balances." affordable higher education m arried because of the loans To deal with the issue, Clin- option for l o w-income stuhanging over their heads." ton and Sen. Bernie Sanders, dents, said Cecilia Rios-AguiThe F i n ancial S t a bility I-Vt., a n other D e m ocratic lar, director of UCLA's Higher Oversight Council, a panel presidential candidate, have Education Research Institute. of top federal regulators that m ade large increases in fed› Meanwhile, wages have watches for emerging econom- eral funding the centerpieces stagnated in the wake of the ic threats, warned in its annual of their college affordability Great Recession. The average report this year that "high stu- plans. starting salary for a graduate dent-debt burdens could im"You can win votes by say- with a bachelor's degree was pact household consumption ing we' re going to put a degree $48,127 last year, down from and limit access to other forms in every pot," Georgetown's $49,224 in 2008, according to of credit, such as mortgages." Carnevale said, "but we' ve got the National Association of Because most s t udent to get down the cost." Colleges and Employers.

ger campus somewhere else

"Enrollment is really vari-

able and things change a lot from year to year," said Director of Enrollment Services Jane Reynolds. "The

economy comes into play, what programs we' re offering and when we' re able to launch new ones. Those two factors really have a big impact. We also have such a small number now, it makes it hard to project where we

current location." Reynolds said q uicker growth is dependent on funding, as the university needs to hire new faculty

and develop new programs to support more students. She also emphasized that

capping the university at 5,000 made sense, as it would maintain

"a

community

feel" while also being large will end up." Reynolds emphasized that enough to make providing the further out a projection

student services economical-

gets, the more uncertainty there is. Nonetheless, she

ly feasible.

said the numbers are based

"When we talk to families, one of our attractive points is

on when new programs are that we are smaller," Reynexpected to debut and the

demand for higher education across the state and locally. Growth wouldn't be possible without the new campus OSU-Cascades is building

olds said. "We don't have an aspiration to be a 25,000-stu-

dent campus like Oregon State in Corvallis." W hile the u n iversity i s

projecting growth, Central Oregon Community College off SW Century Drive. The is planning to see enrollment 10-acre site, however, isn' t decline, a trend that began in able to support more than about 1,900 students. Based

2011. Ron Paradis, COCC's

cades will need to have pur-

pected to decline by 7 percent

spokesman, said the number on the projections, OSU-Cas- of credits being taken is exchased more land by around this year and 5 percent the 2020. following year before flat" When w e

r e ac h t h a t

tening out. COCC's historical

year, we' ll be pretty close enrollment peaked in 2010-11 to capacity," Reynolds said. at 18,422 students, a number "That's five years from now,

that reflects all students who

so between now and then, enrolled in any number of we' ll have developed a plan courses throughout the acafor growth and better un- demic year. During the 2014derstand where we will be 15 academic year, enrollment and what our footprint will was 16,723. look like. Hopefully we' ll However, community colbe opening some additional lege students are often disbuildings before that year, tinct from four-year students, but there's a lot of communi- being traditionally older and ty and university-level plan- more frequently taking less ning we' ll be doing to get than a full course load. Cur-

Science Continued fromA1 But Kim's terminal prognosis came at the start of a

global push to understand the brain. And some of the tools

and techniquesemerging from neuroscience laboratories were beginningto bear some resemblance to those long envisioned in futurist fantasies. For one thing, neuroscien-

there."

rently, OSU-Cascades stu-

The university is exploring the possibility of expanding onto two properties adjacent to the 10-acre

dents, a majority of whom

campus. One is a 4 6-acre pumice mine that the uni-

transferred from COCC or

another community college, are older than at most other four-year schools.

tists were starting to map the connections between individ-

versity is confident it could

change as OSU-Cascades'

ual neuronsbelieved to encode

rehabilitate, while the other

inaugurates it s

many aspects of memory and identity.

is a 76-acre landfill owned and sophomore-level proby Deschutes County, a site grams this month. Before the school is just beginning this approaching school to evaluate. year, the university only ofOSU-Cascades' growth, fered junior and senior-level

The research, limited so far

to small bits of dead animal brain, had the usual goals of advancingknowledge and im› proving human health. Still, it was driving interest in what would be a critical first step to

Lauraegall S /The New York Times

ABOVE: Josh Schlsler and Klm Suozzl spent the last days of her life at an apartment In Scottsdale, Arizona, In 2013. Cancer claimed Suozzl at age 23, but she chose to have her brain preserved with the dream that neurosclence might one day revive her. BELOW: Alcor Life Extension Foundation In

however, hasn't been with-

Reynolds expects that to f r e shman

classes.

out controversy. A group of neighbors concerned about

"Our demographics will shift over time, but we' ll still

traffic and the feasibility of

be serving n ontraditional,

create any simulation of an in- Scottsdale specializes In cryogenic preservation. dividual mind: preserving that

locating a campus on the west side formed the group

COCC transfer students for a long time," Reynolds said.

pattern of connections in an

Truth in Site to oppose the lo-

"I see that population always

entire brain after death. "I can see within, say, 40

Founded in the 1970s, Alcor

cation. The group has mount- being a significant part of ed a legal challenge, but so OSU-Cascades. Yes, we ex-

is best known for storing the

years that we would have a frozen head of the baseball method to generate a digital great Ted Williams, along with replica of a person's mind," some 140 others who hoped to said Winfried Denk, a direc- one day be revived. The fountor at the Max Planck Institute

dation, a nonprofit, has about 1 ,000 members wh o h a v e

I

of Neurobiology in Germany, who has invented one of sev- made financial arrangements eral mapping techniques. "It' s to undergo its p reservation not my primary motivation, procedure upon death. but it is a logical outgrowth of The brain researcher Kenour work." neth Hayworth had formed the

Their life together

I

I

year at Truman State Univer-

that he would like to upload

Todd Heisler /The New York Times

introducethe prize. Perhaps ’We don’t live forever’ the only mainstream neurosciKim had had an interest in entist to openly acknowledge cryonics, but she knew that it was expensive and that the

sity at a meeting of the College his brain to a computer some- most common way to pay for Libertarians. There, in the fall day — and to argue that there it, taking out a life insurance of 2007, they bonded over a dis- would be broader social merits policy for the amount of the like for the USA Patriot Act. to the practice — he counted fee, was not an option for a At the start of their final se- himself a "skeptical member" previously uninsured 22-yearmester, Kim applied to a sum-

of Alcor at the time.

mer neuroscience fellowship In an indication of the preas a steppingstone to graduate vailing skepticism, Hayworth school. Josh was lining up a had been unable to garner a job as a legislative assistant substantial purse for his prize. to a Missouri state represenBut an anonymous donor tative, but promised to get a offered$100,000 after hear› job in politics wherever she ing Hayworth's pitch in a 2010 landed. Eventually they would speech at a c o n ference in have a child, Kim agreed after Cambridge, Massachusetts. some lobbying. Now Hayworth had enough The headaches started that to award a $25,000 prize for a winter. Then came the seizure. small mammal brain — a rabShe went to the hospital and bit or mouse — and reserve she and Josh spent the better $100,000 for a larger one, likely part of the following weeks at a pig. And he already had one Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. competitor, Shawn M i k u la, Louis. then apostdoctoralresearcher In mid-March 2011, Kim an-

nounced on Facebook that a seriesof MRI scans revealed

a tumor herdoctors believed would be benign. "Bad news: a tumor got into my BRAIN."

They learned a few weeks later that the tumor was glioblastoma, a virulent and incur-

able form of the disease.

A prize forbrain preservation In the spring of 2011, as Kim

began chemotherapy, an unusual letter appeared in Cryonics magazine. Titled "The Brain Preservation Technol-

ogy Prize: A challenge to cryonicists, a challenge to scientists," it argued that if a brain w as properly preserved,time would not be an issue. The magazine is published by the Alcor Life Extension

Foundation, the larger of two U.S. cryonics organizations.

at the Max Planck Institute. T he entries were t o b e

student population to grow, but COCC is an important

felt anytime soon if the cam-

of Hispanic students, a de-

partner for us."

pus will be as small as 3,735 mographic that is expected

shortly before Kim's diagnosis and had written the letter to

pect the traditional freshman

successful, though the state Court of Appeals is currently reviewing the case. Tracy Pfiffner, speaking on behalf of Truth in Site,

Another d e m ographic change OSU-Cascades is questioned whether the city- expecting, along with every wide economic benefits tout- other university in the state, ed by OSU-Cascades will be is an increase in the number

I

Brain Preservation Foundation

Josh, a political science major, fell in love with Kim, an agnostic science geek, shortly after encountering her freshman

far its efforts have not been

old with terminal brain cancer. She had hesitated to raise the

prospect of paying for it with her father, Rick Suozzi, a medi-

who signed over a $10,000 life insurance policy she held in Kim's name. As donations continued to

come in and their contacts at Alcor indicated that Kim

would almost certainly be fully funded, Josh sat her down to shoot a thank-you video.

Inevitable complications

students in 2026. Some of the benefits men-

to make up one-fourth of the

I think having at least that

tleeds@bendbulletin.corn

state's high school graduates tioned include new compa- by 2018. "It's something we' re nies growing or moving to Bend to take advantage of re- thinking about, as we' re cent graduates, particularly looking to hire people who those with science and tech- are bilingual and make sure nology degrees. our programs make sense "I think with 5,000 it starts for Hispanic students and becoming somewhat more their families," Reynolds realistic to bring those types said. of benefits," she said. "But — Reporter: 541-633-2160,

In early November 2012, Kim assigned her power of

cal device sales representative. attorney to Josh. She underEven some of her supportive stood, Josh later realized, betcircleof friends had seemed

ter than he had, how little time

unsure of what to say when she she had left. "I know that, Mom and Dad, sounded them out about it. "It freaks people out," she you probably would respect told Josh. my last wishes," she said to And when she finally did her phone camera. "But Josh talk to her father, his refusal

knows me best."

came as a rude awakening. "I can't help you with this," he said. "We don't live forever,

and water to hasten her death before the tumor consumed

Kim."

A last resort

Kim decided to refuse food more of her brain. Alcor's emergency medicine technician was prohibited from

If the $80,000 fee for neu- touching Kim before her death judged by other neuroscien- ropreservationseemed steep, was officially pronounced by a tists who would examine por- they learned that about a third medical professional. tions of the preserved brains of it pays for medicalperson› W hen Josh called to say she with an electron microscope. nel to be on call for death, was dying, the procedure itself To win, a description of the while another third is placed went mostly as planned. With technique would also need to in a trust for future revival. the help of two nurses embe accepted for publication The investment income from ployedby Alcor,thecompany’s in a peer-reviewed scientific the trust also pays for stor- emergency medical technijournal. age in liquid nitrogen, which cian, Aaron Drake, performed The challenge for the com- is so cold that it can prevent a seriesof steps designed to petitors was how to preserve a decay in biological tissue for keep the blood vessels in Kim's brain for scanning — by chem- millennia. brain from collapsing. icals or cold. When an A u gust M RI She was given medications The decades-old practice showed that a long-shot exper- t o prevent the b r ain f r o m of cryonics, in which human imental drug had failed to halt swelling and to break up blood brains and bodies are stored the growth of Kim's tumor, clots. Then she was lowered at somewhere below minus she and Josh shot and edited into an ice bath and carried to 300 degrees Fahrenheit, has a short video for her blog and the van for the short drive to since the late 1990s employed used the online forum Red- Alcor's facility. a thick, viscous antifreeze dit to request donations for When all t h a t r e mained to replace the blood and wa- cryomcs. was to continue the cooling ter in the brain in an effort to A group of longtime cryon- with liquid nitrogen gas, Josh preserve it before storing it. ics supporters, the Society for looked into her face for the This procedure is known as Venturism, pitched in, as did last time. They had done, he Kim's mother, Jane Suozzi, thought, the best they could. cryopreserv ation.

I

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

IN FOCUS:CONSERVATION EFFORT’S DOWNSIDE

untin an sa svi a e's ivei oo By Norimitsu OnishieNew York Times News Service

SANKUYO, Botswana — Lions have been coming out of the sur-

Bloomberg News

KHARTOUM — A l most

snatch goats and donkeys from the heart of this village on the edge of one of Africa's great inland deltas. Elephants, too, are becoming frequent, unwelcome visitors, gobbling up the beans, maize and watermelons that took farmers months to grow. Since Botswana banned trophy hunting two years ago, remote communities like Sankuyo have been at the mercy of growing numbers of wild animals that are hurting livelihoods and driving terrified villagers into their homes at dusk. The hunting ban has also meant a precipitous drop in

income. Over the years, villagers had used money from

animals as a source of reve› nue, experts say. But in most

places without trophy hunting, they are simply considered a nuisance or danger, and locals are more likely to hunt them for food or to kill them to defend

their homes and crops. Child, an expert on wildlife management in Africa, said trophy hunting had failed to benefit many communities because of mismanagement and

trophy hunters, mostly Americans, to install toilets and wa-

corruption. But in the countries where trophy hunting

ter pipes, build houses for the poorest, and give scholarships to the young and pensions to the old. Calls to curb trophy hunting across Africa have risen since a

had worked well — Botswana,

lion in Zimbabwe, named Cecil

by researchers tracking it, was killed in July by a U.S. dentist. Several airlines have stopped transporting trophies from hunts, and lawmakers in New Jersey have introduced legislation that would further restrict their import into the United States. But in Sankuyo and other ru-

until the ban; Namibia; and Zimbabwe, until its economy

Photos by Joao Silva/The New York Times

collapsed in the past decade-

ABOVE: Othusitse Ndozi does laundry outside her home in Sanyu›

it had accomplished the twin goals of generating income and protecting wild animals. "When hunting was introduced, we actually ended up killing less animals," Child said. "That's the irony." With hunting now banned, there are growing signs that more wild animals could be killed, experts say. Lions,

ko, a remote village close to the MoremiGame Reserve In Botswa›

which used to feast on the

meat of elephants left behind ral communities living near the by hunters, are increasingly wild animals, many are calling entering villages looking for for a return to hunting. African livestock. In the past two years governments have also con- here in Sankuyo, villagers have demned, some with increasing killed two lions that wandered anger, Western moves to ban into residential areas. trophy hunting. Botswana's swelling popu"Before, when there w as lation of elephants, accounting hunting, we wanted to pro- for a third of the total in Africa, tect those animals because we is clashing increasingly with knew we earned something a growing human population. out of them," said Jimmy Bait- Poaching rings trafficking in sholedi Ntema, a villager in ivory to East Asia have targethis 60s. "Now we don't benefit ed elephants elsewhere on the at all from the animals. The continent. According to the elephants and buffaloes leave International Union for Conafter destroying our plowing servation of Nature's Red List fields during the day. Then, at of ThreatenedSpecies,Afri› night, the lions come into our can elephants are classified as "vulnerable," below "endankraals." In early 2014, this sparse- gered" and "critically endanly populated nation became gered," and their population is one of a few African countries increasing. "We' re experiencing an exwith abundant wildlife to put an end to trophy hunting, the ponential increase in conflicts practice at the core of conserva- between animals and human tion efforts in southern Africa. beings," said Israel Khura Nato, President Seretse Khama Ian Khama of Botswana, a staunch

head of the Botswana Depart-

ties like Sankuyo to switch to

nationwide rose to 6,770 in 2014

na. Her husband earned about $100 a month as a tracker and driver

before a ban ontrophy hunting was enacted two years ago. TOP: An elephant lives on the gamereserve. Some remote com› munities also blame the hunting ban as they struggle to cope with

growing numbers of dangerous wild animals. acting director. In Sankuyo, William Moalosiisone ofdozensofpeoplethe hunting ban has left jobless. Many have left Sankuyo to

seek work in Maun. Moalosi, 40, worked for eight

climbed a tree to jump down into a kraal with goats; unable

to get out of the enclosure, the lioness posed a danger to the village, which gave the community the right to kill the animal. But sitting outside his house,

flanked by neighbors, Moalosi earning about $100 a month. denied he was the shooter. He He used some of the money to said he knew nothing about replace his old house, made of the circumstances of the anibranches and the mud from a mal's death, a statement that termite mound, with a moddrew knowing smiles from his ern structure. He lost his crops neighbors. ''We are hvlng m fear since of maize and watermelons to marauding elephants a few lions and leopards now come months ago. into our village," he said. "EleVillagers, including the chief, phants cross the village to go to identified Moalosi as the man the other side of the bush. The who had shot and killed a lion- dogs bark at them. We just run ess last month. The animal had into our houses and hide." years as a tracker and driver,

KFC andStarbucks ripofh thrive among the Sudanese elite By Bassem Abo Alabass Mohammed

rounding bush, prowling around homes and a small health clinic, to

according to a July 2014 report by Johannesburg, South Africa-based Standard Bank Group. By 2030, that's expect-

20 years of U.S. sanctions on ed to more than double to 1.9 Sudan aren't stopping Yasser million households, or about Moustafa from tucking into a quarter of the population. fried chicken from a red and A 2012 report by the McKwhite-decorated restaurant insey Global Institute ranked with a logo of a mustachioed Khartoum fifth in its worldsenior citizen. wide list of cities expected Stepping into Kafory Fried to see the highest growth in Chicken here in Sudan's cap- young entry-level consumers ital, the 43-year-old engineer between 2010 and 2025. The could choose anything from Nigerian city of Lagos came a crispy-chicken sandwich first and Tanzania's commerand Coke at 30 Sudanese cial capital, Dar es Salaam, pounds ($5.22) to a 15-piece second. bucket for seven times that Such estimates come even price. That's expensive for the as Sudan's $74 billion econcountry, blighted by decades omy feels the aftershocks of of armed rebellions, where South Sudan's secession in the average working person 2011, which deprived Kharearns $4.80 a day and the toum of three-quarters of the nearest African outlet of Ken- formerly united country's oil tucky Fried Chicken is in As- reserves and led the governwan, Egypt, about 590 miles ment to trim subsidies, sparkto the north. ing protests. The economy "I have a good customer grew 3.6 percent in 2014, drivbase and I'm looking into en by agriculture, services openingmore branches,"Atef and the mining industry, the Abdullah, th e r e staurant's government said in July. owner, said in an Aug. 16 inMimicking i n t ernational terview. He gestured at the companies can attract Sudacompany emblem of a grin- nesewho’ve traveled orlived ning, avuncular gentleman: outside the country as well "That's a picture of my broth- as "global teens" who've seen er, not Colonel Sanders." them in U.S. television shows Kafory is one of a growing or movies, according to Ilham number of fast-food options Mansour, an assistant profesin Sudan's capital, where eat- sor of marketing at the Unieries inspired by U.S. giants versity of Khartoum's School such as KFC and Starbucks of Management Studies. compete with franchises of Lookalike re s taurants South Africa-based Famous "may prove t hat S u dan's Brands' Debonairs Pizza and economy can accommodate Steers, which sells hamburg- investment o p p ortunities ers. While U.S. sanctions, in much like other countries place since 1997 for alleged and has the capacity to adapt sponsorship o f

te r r orism, to international investment

have kept the major brands trends," she said in an email. out, U.S.-style snacks have Kafory looks like a U.S. found a market with Khar- chain "and the chicken is toum's small number of tasty," said Moustafa, the enwealthy residents. gineer who's tried the more Sudan's middle dass has famous KFC in six countries, seen a "notable, and consis- as he joined the four-person tent" rise over the past decade queue at the cashier. "But and comprises more than it really needs the Ameri820,000 households, or 14 cans’secret recipe and better percent of the country's total, coleslaw."

ment of Wildlife's problem andefender of animal rights, stat- imal control unit in Maun, a ed that hunting was no longer town two hours from here. compatible with wildlife conAccording to the departservation and urged communi› ment, such confli cts recorded photographic tourism. The de- from 4,361 in 2012. Poaching dsion was cheered by animal incidents increased to 323 in 2014 from 309 in 2012. welfare groups in the West. But Botswana is an outliMore poisoned vultures have er. Government officials and been found in this area, posconservationists in most Afri- sibly killed by poachers seekcan countries staunchly sup- ing to conceal their hunts, said port trophy hunting, induding Lucas Rutina, an ecologist at Zambia, which is going back the University of Botswana's to hunting after a short-lived Okavango Research Institute suspension. near Maun. Residents of comSankuyo, a village of around munities that used to derive an 700 people, sits just east of the income from trophy hunting Okavango Delta in northern no longer attend conservation Botswana, which has one of the workshops at the institute, he richest concentrations of wild- said. "Now they are going back to life in Africa. In 1996, Sankuyo signed on to a c ommuni- hating animals," Rutina said. ty-based natural resources proGaleyo Kobamelo, 37, said he gram that focused on hunting had lost all 30 goats in the kraal and was supported by the U.S. just outside his family comgovernment. pound to lions and hyenas since In 2010, Sankuyo earned the hunting ban. Elephants had nearly $600,000 from the 120 destroyed his fields of sorghum animals — induding 22 ele- and maize. phants, 55 impalas and nine With the hunting ban, his buffaloes — that it was allowed family no longer receives the to offer to trophy hunters that free meat that hunters left beyear, said Brian Child, an as- hind. His mother, Gomolemo sociate professor at the Univer- Semalomba, 58, no longer resity of Florida, who is leading a ceives a pension, about $100 study on the impact of the ban. twice a year. "Now we don't eat meat anyBotswana's wildlife officials, who set the annual quotas, last more," she said, pointing to a allowed a lion to be hunted in table with plates of cabbage, Sankuyo in 2006. beansand maize meal. Moalosi, Sankuyo's chief, Among the benefits to the community, 20 households cho- said he hoped to bring back sen by lottery received outdoor some of the benefits after his toilets, all painted in pastel col- village made a successful tranors that stand out in a village sition to photographic tourism. turned brown in the dry seaBut experts say that sightseeson. Standpipes were installed ing tourists gravitate to prime in courtyards, connecting 40 areas with dense concentrafamilies to running water. tions of wildlife, like the Oka"That's what made people vango Delta's Moremi Game appreciate conservation," said Reserve west of here. They Gokgathang Timex Moalosi, rarely venture to peripheral ar55, Sankuyo's chief. "We told eas like Sankuyo, or even more them, 'That lion or elephant remote corners, which do, howhas paid for your toilet or your ever, draw hunters. "Photographic tourism is Where trophy hunting ben- not that viable in those areas," efits communities, locals are said Joseph Mbaiwa, the Okamore motivated to protect wild vango Research Institute's

standpip.e

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AS TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

asern uro e a sa ai ormi rans By Rick Lyman

ugee advocates believe violates

New York Times News Service

European Union due process

WARSAW, Poland — Even though the former communist countries of Central and East-

rules. But Hungary is not the only

ern Europe have been asked

line or seen anti-immigrant protests.

country that has taken a hard

to accept just a fraction of the

Anti-immigrant

refugees that Germany and other nations are taking, their

ma r c hes

have become a regular occurrence in Slovakia and some

fierceresistance now stands as

the main impediment to a unified European response to the

other nations. In Estonia, the northernmost Baltic nation that has a

Poland's new president, Andrzej Duda, has complained

population of just 1.3 million, an agreement to accept fewer than 200 refugees over the

about "dictates" from the Eu-

ropean Union to accept migrants flowing onto the conti-

next two years was enough

nent from the Middle East and

Africa. Slovakia's prime minister,

to set off protests. Right-wing bikers demonstrated outside the country's only refugee relocation facility in July, and

MFA r~ ~

g t

~

Robert Fico, says his coun-

this month it was burned to the

g~r

try will accept only Christian refugeesas itwould be "false

ground. Officials in Latvia said they

solidarity" to force Muslims to

Muhammed Muheisen /TheAssociated Press

settle in a country without a A Syrian woman changes her son's clothesnear amakeshift camp forasylum seekers, after crossing single mosque. Viktor Orban, the Serbian-Hungarian border near Roszke, southern Hungary, on Saturday. Hundreds of thousands Hungary's hard-line prime of Syrian refugees and others are still making their way slowly across Europe, seeking shelter where minister, calls the influx a "re- they can, taking a bus or a train where one is available, walking where lt isn’ t. bellion by illegal migrants" and vows a fresh crackdown this week. including open markets, transFew migrants, in fact, are Unlike countries in Western The discord has further un- parent government,respectfor particularly interested in set- Europe, which have long hissettled a union already shaky an independentmedia, open tling in Eastern Europe, pre- tories of accepting immigrants from struggles over the euro borders, c ultural d i v ersity, ferring to head to Germany from diversecultures,the for› and the Greek financial cri- protection of minorities and a or Scandinavia, where social mer communist states tend to sis and now facing a historic rejection of xenophobia. welfare benefits are higher, be highly homogeneous. Poinflux of people attracted by But the reality is that the employment o p portunities land, for instance, is 98 percent Europe's relative peace and former communist states have greater and immigrant com- white and 94 percent Catholic. "And the countries that have prosperity. proved sluggish in actually munities better established. When representatives of absorbing many of these val- In that sense, migrants are very little diversity are some the European Union nations ues and practicing them. Oli- aligned with leaders in Eastern of the most virulently against meet on Monday totake up garchs, cronyism and endemic and Central European capitals, refugees," said Andrew Stroea proposal for allocating ref- corruption remain a part of who frequently argue that the hlein, European media director ugees among them, Central daily life in many of the coun- 28-member bloc should focus for Human Rights Watch. and Eastern European nations tries, press freedom is in de- first on securing its borders In Hungary, Orban has taken are likely to be the most vocal cline while rising nationalism and figuring out a way to end a particularly uncompromising opponents. Their stance — re- and populist political move- the war in Syria before talking approach, demanding more flecting a mix of powerful far- ments have stirred anti-immi- about mandatory quotas for ac- help from Brussels in dealing right movements, nationalism, grant tensions. ceptingrefugees. with the tens of thousands who "People must remember that racial and religious prejudices But as often as not, the po- continue to enter his country as well as economic argu- Poland has been transitioning litical discourse in these coun- while insisting that Hungary is ments that they are less able to from communism for only 25 tries has quickly moved to- under no obligation to endanafford to take in outsiders than years," Lech Walesa, who led ward a wariness of accepting ger its traditional Christian valtheir wealthier neighbors — is that country's independence racial and religious diversity. ues by accepting large numbers "This refugee flow has out- of Muslims. the latest evidence of the stub- movement, said in an i nterborn cultural and political di- view."Our salariesand houses raged the right wing," said On ltresday, a new raft of vides that persist between East are still smaller than those in Kenneth Roth, executive direc- refugee laws go into effect that and West. the West.Many people here tor of Human Rights Watch. "If will allow the Hungarian govWhen joining th e E u r o- don't believe that they have you scratch the surface, why ernment to build new "transit pean Union — as the former anything to share with mi- are they so upset? It's not about zones" at the border where communist c ountries h a ve grants. Especially that they see jobs or the ability to manage arrivals would have their asydone since 2004 — nations that migrants are often well- them or social welfare. What it lum requests quickly reviewed are asked to pledge support dressed, sometimes b etter is really about is that they are — eight days, plus three more to a raft of European values, than many Poles." Muslim." for anappeal,a pace that ref›

would continue to resist mandatory requirements that they

accept a set number of refugees while the parties in the ruling coalition appear unable to agree on whether to require a parliamentary vote on the

issue. "It would be very wrong and sad if this matter threatened the government," said Presi-

dent Raimonds Vejonis. L ithuanian o ff icials

s a id

they were open to discussing the acceptance of more refugees, but only on a voluntary basis, and would continue to oppose a "permanent mechanism" that would allocate fu-

ture refugees. Bulgaria had agreed to accept 500 refugees, but, under

a new formula unveiled last week, it could be asked to take up to 2,000.

Talking by phone while driving from an economic conference in southern Poland,

Robert Biedron, the mayor of the city of Slupsk, said he was ashamed of the reaction of

many to the plight of the migrants. "There is always conflict around the world and people need help," Biedron said. "Perhaps, someday again, the Polish people might need help. Do we want to hear, 'Oh, Poles

are a danger to society, you are different, you are not of our culture.'"

Protests in support of refugees sprout throughoutEurope With the threat of heightened borderenforcement over the nextfew days, protesters flocked tostreets throughout Europeon Saturday to showsupport for thousands of migrants fleeing war-tom countries in the Middle East.

Thousandsjoined a protest in central London, some with signs that said "Reject the Politics of Fear," the Guardian reported. And hundreds alsocamefor a solidarity concert in Budapest, at a train station many migrants go through onthe way to Germany. In recent days,several countries in Europehave hardenedtheir stances against allowing migrants to pass through their borders openly. Thediscord has been so greatthat the European Unionhaspushedback a vote on aresettlement plan to distribute refugees throughout the coalition's 22 countries until the beginning of next month. In the meantime,Hungary's prime minister, Viktor Orban, hassuggested a solution: Havethe EUgive $3.4 billion to Turkey,Lebanon and Jordan tohelpimprove services for refugees who are placed incampsin those areas. In aninterview released onSaturday in Germany's Bild newspaper,Orban said, "Thesepeopledo not come toEuropebecause they are looking for security, but they want abetter life than in thecamps." "If Europeallows acompetition of cultures, then the

Christians will lose," Orban continued. Foreign ministers from the CzechRepublic, Slovakia, PolandandHungary issued ajoint statement on Friday calling for the EU to create a "morebalanced distribution of finances" and to play agreater role "contributing to theinternational efforts in resolving the ongoing crisis in Syria and Iraq." — The 5'ashington Post

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o’


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4-5 Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN

© www.bendbulletin.corn/local

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

isters o estiva a oontotown In its 20th year, festival draws 4,000 fans to Sistersandbooststhe local economy rwthF. Is

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

schedule across 10 venues

ence, but it's different because

in downtown Sisters and be-

people are out at FivePine

yond, including the two main stages at the Village Green

(and) at the same time, there' s nine other venues going on."

By Brian McElhiney

brief respite from running the

and Sisters Art Works and stages at Melvin's Market,

The Bulletin

festival late in the afternoon,

Angeline's Bakery, the Depot

4,000 people will pass through the town before the week-

SISTERS — Sisters Folk Festival Director Brad Tisdel

he grinned ear to ear, sweat dripping down his face. "I would say it's been a blast," Tisdel said. "You know, Friday night was as smooth as ever. As a festival director,

Cafe, the Belfry, the Open

end's over, split between the

looked exhausted halfway through the day Saturday, the second day of the 20th Sisters Folk Festival.

He had performed earlier in the day at FivePine but had

been going since opening day Friday, setting up stages, coordinating volunteers and mak-

ing sure performers were getting up on each of the festival's 10 stages on time. But during a

According to Tisdel, about

Door, FivePine, Sisters Coffee

3,200 tickets sold and the 800

Co. and Fir Street Park. Tem-

volunteers, vendors and musicians. The economic boost

the first evening kicks off, systems are in place. The music's

peratures in the high 80s kept festivalgoers sweating during the morning and afternoon as people young and old scurried from venue to venue on foot and bike, or hopped on the

been fantastic, people are in

shuttle to FivePine about a

greatspirits." The festival celebrates

half-mile away. "Everyone here has a differ-

by Dean Runyan Associates of Portland found that year' s festival pumped $1.2 million

its 20th anniversary this

ent experience," Tisdel said.

into the town's economy. SeeFestival /B2

you want to make sure that

weekend with an expanded

"It's a shared, common experi-

eachyear from thethree-day festival looms large. Last year, an economic impact study commissioned by the festival organization and conducted

1. County Line 2 Acres: 67,207 Containment: 97% Cause: Unknown

WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON›

Congress was back in session after Labor Day. U.S. HOUSEVOTE The House of Representatives on Tuesday passed the E-Warranty Act of 2015, which allows electronics manufacturers to meet labeling and warranty obligations by putting that information online. That bill will now go to President Obamafor final passage. I/I/alden (R)........................ Y Bonamici (D)... Did not vote Blumenauer(D) .......Did not vote DeFazio (D)...... Did not vote Schrader (D) ..................... Y

In addition, the House passed two resolutions about the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015. Oneof the resolutions was to approve a plan of action that would suspend the authority of President Obama to relieve Iran sanctions until Jan. 21,

2. Canyon Creek Complex Acres: 110,422 Containment: 88% Cause: Lightning 3. National Creek Complex Acres: 16,744 Containment: 70% Cause: Lightning

2017; the other was

a resolution finding the president had not complied with one of the sections of the act. According to The Hill, a law enacted earlier this year gives Congress 60 days to review the

BRIEFING

deal before the White

House is allowed to lift the sanctions. Both resolutions passed on party lines.

DA dismisses assault charges District Attorney John Hummel on Friday dismissed charges related to a fatal stabbing in La Pine. Hummel filed a motion with the Deschutes County Circuit Court to dismiss the case alleging Mark Fisher assaulted Albert Reisert, according to a release from his office. In mid-August, Albert Reisert killed JamesJoseph Drake, both of La Pine. Earlier this month, Hummel said Reisert stabbed Drake to protect his own life, and Reisert was not charged. Drake, along with Mark Fisher, first allegedly assaulted Reisert. Then Drakeassaulted Reisert, prior to the stabbing, according to Hummel's office. While preparing to present the caseto a Deschutes County grand jury, Hummel found there was insufficient evidence showing Fisher assaulted Reisert. Hummelsai d heand Deputy District Attorney Stacy Mealwere interviewing witnesses when he determined this. — Bulletin staff reports

PUBUCOFFICIALS STATE OF OREGON Gov.KateBrown, 0 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Web: http: //governor. oregon.gov SecretaryofStateJeanne Atkins, 0 136 StateCapitol Salem, OR97310 Phone: 503-986-1523 Email: oregon.sos@state. or.us Treasurer TedWheeler, 0 159 OregonState Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer© state. or.us Web: www.ost.state. or.us Attorney GeneralEllen Rosenblum, D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Web: www.doj.state.or.us Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 NEOregon St., Suite 1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Email: boll.mail@state. onus Web: www.oregon.govl boll

I/I/alden (R).................... Y, Y Bonamici (D)................ N, N Blumenauer(D) ...........N, N DeFazio (D)................... N, N Schrader(D) ................N, N

u

U.S. SENATEVOTE This week, the only piece of business that passed through the Senate was the confirmation of RoseannA. Ketchmark, of Missouri, as U.S. District Judge for the Western District of Missouri. The nomination passed 96-0 with four senators not voting. Merkley (D) ....................... Y I/I/yden (D)......................... Y — Shelia G. Miller, The Bulletin

Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

Yoga enthusiasts participate in a yoga class together as part of Yogis Unite Bend at Troy Field on Saturday.

Yogis Unite Bend takes over TroyField for philanthropic masspractice session By Kailey Fisicaro The Bulletin

More than 100 yogis gath-

link fence. Some smiled or stopped curiously to take pictures.

Cancer andBethlehem Inn. More than 20 vendors, many

over a microphone. "If you think about it, it' s

of them local yoga studios,

such a yogic song," she said.

lined the fences of the park.

"Row row row your boat'?

Brandy Berlin, co-coordinator for the event, stood in

Gently down the stream'?" "Boat" is a seated yoga position in which a person forms a "V" shape with their body by bending at the hips. The back is supposed to remain straight, as are legs,

the middle of the grass late

Saturday morning with people, and questions, coming to

Field on Saturday for a com-

For those who heard the soft drum beats and "oms"

munity, outdoor practice for

downtown Saturday and

charity. Tourists and locals alike gawked a little as they walked by downtown, seeing dozens of spandex-clad

were curious what was going

Berlin, a humanities teacher at Redmond Proficiency

on: It was Yogis Unite Bend.

Academy, emceed the event,

Once a year, yoga enthusiasts come together for a large, outdoor session. Tickets were sold for $12 ahead of time and $15 at the event.

along with Stephanie Lewis.

The crowd sang "Row Your Boat" in rounds for a couple

Both women are involved at

minutes, until Berlin and

Namaspa Yoga 8z Massage. "Anybody ever hear the

Proceeds are donated to CAN

lin asked the yogis Saturday

Lewis asked yogis to greet their neighbors with a "good morning" and embrace. See Yoga/B6

ered under the sun at Troy

bodies stretching themselves

on mats in the grass on the other side of the chain-

her from all directions.

song 'Row Your Boat?'" Ber-

extended.

Well shot! Reader photos

Send us your best outdoor photos at benfibullefin.cern/ readerphetes.Your entries will appear online, and we'choose ll the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Submission requirements. Include as muchdetail as possible — when andwhere you took a photo, any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and contact info. Photosselected for print must be highresolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot healtered.

YESTERYEAR

Newly formeddiving club retrievesjunk from river bottom in 1990 Compiled by Don Hoiness

property in the southeastern

tered interiors. Cellars will be

from archived copiesof

section of the city. The buyer

The Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.

is Frank Pival, who is connected with the construction

dug under some. The lots will be 60 feet by 114 feet in size.

of the Shevlin-Hixon plant.

100 YEARSAGO For the week ending Sept. 12, 1915

Pival has bigbuilding plan

According to Mr. Pival he will begin at once on the improvement of his property, erecting altogether some 50 houses. Ten or more will be finished this fall. The houses

The biggest real estate will all be of the bungalow transaction closed since the type, about 26 feet by 32 feet coming of the new sawmills in size containing from six in Bend has just been an- to eight rooms. They will be nounced by Hunter & Staats modern in every way with in thesale of 10 acres of their

stone foundations and plas-

Stone for foundations is to be hauled to the building

site at once from the site of the T.A. McCann residence which Mr. Pival is to build.

Mr. McCann will be the general superintendent of the Shevlin-Hixon plant. Lots

on Congress Street in the

tion began this morning. It is understood that a house costing upwards of $7,000 will be built.

a fine view of the river and

mountains. The E.M. Lara house, a short distance down river

Another costly residence is from the Brooks location, under contemplation for H.K. has been begun, the contract Brooks, of the Brooks-Scancalling for completion by lon Company, who arrived Nov. 1. Other new houses on on Friday with Mrs. Brooks the west side of the river are from Vancouver, British Co-

one for H.B. Ford, which is

lumbia. The location selected by Mr. Brooks is across the

nearly completed, the O'Donnell residence (the foundation of which is finished)

rear of the Dion residence,

river in the Boulevard addi-

formerly owned by R.M. Smith, have been selected

tion adjoining the Pinelyn Park. These lots are on the

for Mr. McCann's house and

river with street frontage

excavation for the founda-

on two sides and command

and the Dement and Wilson

houses, which are practically done. SeeYesteryear/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

E VENT TODAY LA PINECHAMBERGUNAND RECREATION SHOW:Featuring ATV PokerRun,a BBQ and salsacontest and more; 9 a.m.; Frontier Heritage Park, First and Huntington St., La Pine; 541-536-9771. THE POTTERYGAMES: Aneventof pottery bowl throwing, as aprecursor to the Empty Bowls Fundraiser benefiting Neighborlmpact's

ENDA R

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

Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents. corn or844-462-7342.

a small farm in rural Oregon for 30 years; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodSt., Sisters; www.paulinasprings.corn or 541-549-0866. BREWSANDBANDS:A tribute to Hank Williams, American singer songwriter and musician; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703. "AVENUE O,THEMUSICAL": A

TUESDAY LUNCH &LECTURE:CREATING BY HANDTHROUGH MEMORY: Join Vivian Adams, YakamaIndian and co-curator of By HandThrough

Memory, as she recounts thedesign

and intended messages of this exhibit; noon; $9 to $15; High Desert Emergency FoodAssistanceProgram; Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, 9 a.m.; Art Station, 313 SWShevlin Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org Hixon Drive, Bend;541-279-0343. or 541-382-4754. SISTERSFOLKFESTIVAL: A REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: three-day celebration of American Featuring food, drinks and more; roots music; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; $40 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of to $65 for today only; downtown SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Sisters, various locations, Sisters; Avenue, Redmond;541-550-0066. www.sistersfolkfestival.org or "DR. WHO3-D:DARK WATER/ 541-549-4979. DEATH INHEAVEN":In anticipation 26TH ANNUALGREATDUCKRACE: of the upcoming ninth season, relive Featuring music, food, activities and the two-part Season 8 finale of more, kids race atnoon, Duck race "Doctor Who"; 7:30 p.m.; $18; Regal at1:30 p.m.;11 a.m.; $5 perduck, Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 free for spectators; DrakePark, 777 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. NW Riverside Blvd., Bend;www. fathomevents. corn or844-462-7342. theduckrace.corn. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS WEDNESDAY SUNDAY JAM:All ageswelcome, listen and dance;1 p.m. free, BEND FARMERSMARKET: donations accepted; Powell Butte Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 Community Center, 8404 SWReif p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., Road, Powell Butte; 541-410-5146. Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.corn or 541-408-4998. SECONDSUNDAY:DENISE FAINBERG:Fainberg reads from LEWI LONGMIREAND ANITA her latest book, the account of a LEE ELLIOTT: TheAmericana› walking pilgrimage along theFrench rock ensemble performs; 7 p.m.; trails of Camino deSantiago; 2 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Downtown BendPublic Library, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. 601 NW Wall St., Bend;www. mcmenamins.c orn or541-382-5174. deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. "DR. WHO3-D:DARK WATER/ "AVENUE O, THEMUSICAL": A DEATH INHEAVEN":In anticipation modern musicalcomedyabouta of the upcoming ninth season, relive group of 20-somethings in the big the two-part Season 8 finale of "Doctor Who"; 7:30 p.m.; $18; Regal city, looking for love, jobs andtheir purpose in life; 3 p.m.; $27 to $38 plus Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 fees; TowerTheatre, 835 NWWall SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or fathomevents. corn or844-462-7342. 541-317-0700. JOE BUCK YOURSELF:The TAKEN BY CANADIANS: The Kentucky band performs, with Third California rock 'n' roll band performs, Seven; $5 plus fees in advance, with Cosmonautical; 9 p.m.; $5; $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. www volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. corn or 541-323-1881.

modern musicalcomedyabouta

Bulletin file photo

Diego Santamaria, 16, helps collect the ducks out of a canoeafter the 2014 Drake Park Duck Race. This year’s race takes place in Drake Park at1:30 p.m. today. Other festivities beganat 11 a.m. 3:45, 6:15 and8:45 p.m.; $7.50 for adults, $5 for children andseniors; Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SWOdem Medo Way,Redmond; 541-548-8777. DIRTY REVIVALCDRELEASE PARTY:The hip-hop and R&Bband from Portland performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. mcmenamins. corn or541-382-5174. "AVENUE Q,THE MUSICAL": A modern musicalcomedyabouta group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs andtheir purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27to $38 plus fees; TowerTheatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. JEREMIAHCOUGHLAN AND BEN HARKINS:Featuring a finalist in the 2015 Oregon's Funniest comic contest and asemifinalist in the 2014 and 2015Portland's Funniest Person Contest; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10at the door; TheSummit Saloon& Stage,125NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111. AMY LAVERE:Thesongwriter from Memphis performs, with Downhill Ryder; 8 p.m .;$5plusfeesinadvance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

FRIDAY

MONDAY

THURSDAY

"THE HIVE:NERDISTPRESENTS": A premiere of the newzombie-thriller; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill

"THE GOONIES" THROWBACK THURSDAY:Showings of the cultclassic film, set in Astoria, Oregon;

SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locall y madegoodsand more;2 p.m .; Barclay Park, Hood Street, between

Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. UNCORKEDSUNRIVER STYLE: Featuring more than adozen Oregon wineries, live music, a comedy show and more; 3 p.m.; $18, $23 two-day pass, $5 for nondrinking entry; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; www.bendticket.corn or 541-585-3147. BEND OKTOBERFEST: Featuring food, beer, live music, games, tricycle

and weinerdogracesand more;

5 p.m.; downtown Bend, Oregon Avenue, Bend; www.bendoktoberfest. corn or 541-788-3628. ANNUALMEETINGAND VOLUNTEERRECOGNITION: Honor volunteers at the High Desert Museum; 6 p.m.; free for members, $5 for nonmembers; High Desert Museum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or www.highdesertmuseum.org. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND: The bluegrass/Americana roots group from Portland performs; 6 p.m.; $5; Faith, Hope andCharity Vineyards, 70450 NW LowerValley Drive, Terrebonne; 541-350-5383. FOURTHANNUALTCBCCHILE FEST BENEFIT:Featuring a chili cook-off, a wing eating contest and more, to benefit, the American Cancer Society; 6p.m.; free, donations accepted; Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Court, Sisters; 541-549-1963. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Barbara

Drake presentshernewbook

"Morning Light," about living on

group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs and their purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27 to $38 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. "AN IDEALHUSBAND": A play about Sir Robert Chiltern, his wife, Gertrude, and Mrs. Cheveley; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE ADVENTURESOFROBIN HOOD":A1938 film starring Errol Flynn, Olivia DeHavilland, Basil Rathbone, and Claude Rains; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. MIKE LOVE:The Hawaiian rootsreggae artist performs; 9 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

SATURDAY POWELL BUTTECOMMUNITY CENTERFALLMINI-FEST: Featuring a community parking lot sale, an art show, a 4-H Robotics demonstration, live music, face painting, hayrides and more; 8:30 a.m.; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Road, Powell Butte; www.pb-center.corn or 541-504-8111. MADRASSATURDAYMARKET: Featuring food, drinks, live music

and more; 9a.m.; SahaleePark, 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778. 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. 20TH ANNUALFAMILYFUNDAY — MODEL RAILROADSHOW: Featuring an open housewith Eastern Cascades Model Railroad Club and Central Oregon Live Steamers; 10 a.m.; Eastern Cascades Model Train Club, 21520 Modoc Lane, Bend; 541-317-1545. UNCORKEDSUNRIVERSTYLE:

Featuring morethan adozen Oregon wineries, livemusic, acomedyshow and more;noon;$18, $23two-day pass, $5 for nondrinking entry; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; www.bendticket.corn or 541-585-3147. CURTIS SALGADO: Blues and R&B; noon; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and NWCrossing drives, Bend; www.nwxfarmersmarket.corn or 541-383-4360. BEND OKTOBERFEST: Featuring food, beer, live music, games, tricycle and weiner dog races and more; noon; downtown Bend, Oregon Avenue, Bend; www.bendoktoberfest.corn or 541-788-3628. AUTHOR DENISEFAINBERG: Fainberg reads from her latest book,

an account of a walking pilgrimage along the French trails of Camino de Santiago; 2 p.m.;Redmond Public Library, 827 SWDeschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-312-1032. PICKIN'& PADDLIN'.RENEGADE STRING BAND:Theswing, blues and bluegrass band performs, with Franchot Tone; 4 p.m.; Tumalo Creek Kayak and Canoe, 805 SWIndustrial Way, Bend; 541-317-9407. WORTHY HOPTOBERFEST: Featuring fresh hop andOktoberfest beers with commemorative bier steins and German inspired food, live music by Heidi Moore & KCFlynn andgBots& theJourneymen; 5 p.m.; W orthy Brewing Company,495 NE Bellevue Drive, Bend; 541-639-4776. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Barbara

Drake reads from her newbook "Morning Light," about living on a small farm in rural Oregon for 30

years; 6:30 p.m.;$5; PaulinaSprings Books, 422SW Sixth St.,Redmond; www.paulinasprings.corn or 541-526-1491.

0

!p Z~

Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

Folk fans listen to The Subdudes at Village Green Park In Sisters during the Sisters Folk Festivalon Saturday. The festival will draw some 4,000 people to Sisters for Its weekend run.

Festival Continued from B1 Julia Rickards, co-owner of the Open Door, has seen this firsthand. The venue has

only been a Sisters Folk Festival venue for the past three

years, including this year. But co-owners Dan and Julia Rickards were at the first fes-

tival 20 years ago — and have been at every festival since. "It's a huge economic boost

for the town. A lot of people — so before we had the wine bar, we just had the gallery, and we didn't see a huge pushfor salesthen, but it just

"Like our kids could volunteer (at the festival) for school, and (the festival will) give jobs toall those kids. So there's just a lot that it offers that isn't just about, 'Oh, I own a retail store

and therefore my sales are really high on that weekend.'" Julia Rick ards, co-owner of the Open Door

Justin Flener, 32, andJessica Flener, 33, of Seattle, have traveled to the festival just

in this production."

According to Tisdel, who has run the festival since

about every year since 2008, 2003 but was aperformer at except last year. They said the very first festival in 1995, therewere maybe five venues as the festival hasgrown, the at the festival the first year organization has grown to they attended. keepup. "It's an interesting balance "We like all the new staghelped ourwhole town," Julia Rickards said while serving es," Justin said. "We're dis- between, it was easier, but we festivalgoers during Ryan appointed Bronco Billy's isn't knew less," Tisdel said of the Montbleau's workshop peraround anymore." festival's early days. "It's not "They used to do ... real- as difficult, but it's actually formance at the Open Door early in th e a fternoon Sat- ly high-energy bands at the starting to lock in a whole lot urday. "Like our kids could bars all night, and that was more now that we have our volunteer (at the festival) for really fun," Jessica added. staff in place.The staffdoes a school, and (the festival will) The sense of community greatjob." He's hoping to s ee the givejobs to all those kids. So the festival creates is imthere's just a lot that it offers portant, too. Angeline Rhett, growth continue in the years that isn't just about, 'Oh, I owner of two other folk festi- to come. "We' re grateful f o r th e own a retail store and there- val venues —the Belfry and fore my sales are really high Angeline's Bakery — said support, we're proud of our on that weekend.'" the festival gives the town accomplishments and we're While the number of ven- a chance to show off the looking ahead to another 20 ues didn't increasefrom last strength of its community. (years),"Tisdel said. "(The festival) helps beThe Sisters Folk Festival year, the Fir Street Park and Sisters Coffee Co. stages will cause everybody is involved," concludes today. remainopen today,a day lon- she said. "I don't think any— Reporter: 541-617-7814, gerthan last year. body in Sisters isnot involved bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.corn

Get ready for the Bend Whitewater Park and be in the know before you go. Floaters Channel: For flatwater boats, paddleboards and

inflatables; bepreparedfor gentle turbulence. Whitewater Channel: For experiencedwhitewater usersonly; sorry, no tubes or non-whitewater specific equipment. Flows and conditions will vary in the Deschutes River.

Think safety first - plan your route, wearalife jacket and follow therules. • Be sure to wave as you floaton through with

that big grin onyour face. Visit bendParkSandreC.Org to learn abOutOPening, aCCeSSand USe.

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e.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

B3

RKGON

an o ensuni ue ie; e es rian- ien r i

0

The Associated Press PORTLAND —

P o r t land

has officially opened a new unique bridge, one that highlights green traits the city is famous for: its bike friendliness,

AROUND THE STATE Commentsought onproscridod durnproposal

The

Willamette National Forest is asking for public input on aproposal to use controlled fire to burn a large tract of forest in Mount Washington Wilderness. Prescribed fire would beused on upto1,725 acres as early as fall 2016. The area is northwest of Highway242. Officials said that portion of the forest is struck by lightning every summer. This year, lightning started one fire. Becausethe forest has a lot of vegetation, a small fire could convert into a large wildfire. Officials said the prescribed fire would have ashort-term impact on the character of the wilderness, but over the long run would strengthen the forest. It would be the first time prescribed fire is used in theWillamette National Forest's wilderness area.

and buses — but no private vehicles are allowed. It serves

DHS glitCh The Oregon Department of HumanServices accidentally sent payments of more than$500,000 because of a computer glitch. DHScommunications director Gene Evanssaid the glitch occurred earlier this week asthe agency switched computer operating systems. Themoney wassent from the child welfare program to 73 vendors, including foster parents. Thedepartment uses software that was written for WindowsXP,which Microsoft no longer supports. When thedepartment upgraded its computers, the billing system beganmalfunctioning in Windows 7.Thedepartment said the database is no longer issuing payments and is being fixed over the weekend.

TriMet's new MA X O r ange L ine from Portland to M i l -

Cherry crop decimation aftermath Umatila county fruit

popular transit system and ap-

peal to folks who like to walk. The Tilikum Crossing over the Willamette River, which

opened to the public Saturday, carries light rail and streetcar trains, bicycles, pedestrians

waukie, which also opened Saturday.

The 1,720-foot bridge, which cost $134.6 million to build, is Portland's 12th across the Wil-

lamette and the first bridge built in the Portland area in

more than 40 years. The bridge's name links to Oregon's indigenous heritage. In the Native American

language ofChinook Wawa, Tilikum means people, tribe

Timothy J. Gonzalez / The Associated Press

Runners and cyclists make their awayacross the newly opened Tilikum Crossing, a unique bridge, in Portland. The bridge, opened Saturday, is the first new bridge to open in Portland in 40years and has

growers are still hurting from a cold snapthat last year decimated cherry, prune andother orchards. Growers around Milton-Freewater, northeast of Pendleton, won't have acherry crop until 2017. Thereason: last November, temperatures plummeted bynearly 60 degrees in a matter of days, killing buds andtrees. Not a single cherry was harvested commercially in Milton-Freewater. Farmers also lost prunes and plums. Evensome appletrees werekilled all the way down to the roots. Umatilla County grows moreapples than anywhereelse in Oregon. Thearea grows about 650 acres of cherries, which typically bloom a month earlier than in other regions andfetch a premium price. The crop usually brings in about $4.5 million at the farm gate.

lights that change depending on the Willamette River’s conditions.

Man in priSOnafter aSSault

and relatives. The full name

of the bridge is Tilikum Cross- ing the inaugural Orange ing, Bridge of the People. The Line train with local officials name Tilikum w a s u n ani- on board over the bridge. The mously selected from among procession was followed by a 10,000 submissions b y a grand opening ceremony. bridge naming committee. One of Tilikum Crossing's On Saturday morning,a cool features is lights that procession of Native Amer- change colors depending on icans in full regalia walked changes in the river below over Tilikum Crossing, lead- — based on seasons, and the

height, speed and temperature the colors change and move of the water. A software pro-

gram translates U.S. Geological Survey data to control the LED lights that are displayed on the bridge's cables and towers. The watertemperature de›

acrossthe bridge, and the riv›

er's height determines a second color that moves vertical-

ly up and down the towers and cables. The 7.3-mile Orange Line connects downtown Portland

termines the base color; the

with neighborhoods on the

river’s speed controlsthe pace

east side of the river.

An Oregonmanhasbeen

sentenced to five years in prison for assaulting a pregnant woman. Bobby WayneMillard of White City entered aguilty plea Friday to two counts of fourth-degree assault, unlawful use of aweaponand coercion for the March assault. Authorities said the 30-year-old Millard beat the woman,whowas his girlfriend, with a wooden baton and furniture items. Theassault happened overmultiple days. Jackson County Deputy District Attorney Lacie Nelson said thewoman's baby has since beenborn. Defense attorney Jeni Feinberg said Millard has mental health issues and is nowreceiving treatment. He has been lodged in jail since March without bail. — From wire reports

Inteac eI s orta e, sc oosrecIuit roessionastoteac By Sean Hart

will learn the skills necessary

The East Oregonian

to teach.

"I can already sense some UMATILLA — A shortage of trained teachers is leaving improvement in my teaching school districts short-handed,

style from last week to this

so replacements without educa- week," she said. "As time passtional backgrounds are being es and I get more experience, recruitedfrom other profes› I' ll definitely get better." sions to fill the gap. Durfey, 43, worked as the This school year at Umatil- Umatilla County Weed Control la School District, two science supervisor forthelast10years, teachers are embarking on a with a total of 20 years of expenew career after years of re- rience in the profession. He said al-world experience in the sub- he was asked if he was interestject. Dan Durfey at the middle ed in becoming an educator. school and Amy Jewett at the high school are two of 50 in the

"I' ve done a lot of education

in the other (weed control) job state who have received three- with the Watershed Field Days year alternative route licenses and Earth Day," he said. "So it to teach while they complete was like I could just carry this master's degree programs in on over. And the opportunity education. Jewett worked i n

just presented itself, and I wantA r l ing- ed to be with my kids more so ton as a chemist for Chemical I thought, 'Why not?'" Both W aste Management of t h e teachers already had bacheNorthwest for eight years. She lor's degrees in science, which said her first two weeks man- were required to obtain the

aging a classroom have been three-year license. They also difficult, but she believes she were required to pass a teston

said. "If you go to school and laws and professional ethics, graduate, this is exactly what as well as a rigorous state test you will be doing in a job." required for the grade-level and Durfey, who is also a coach, subject-matter area. said he plans to start his mas"I had to study for it," Durfey ter’sprogram after football said of the science test. "It was season. He said the school dislike going back to school again. trict has been very supportive, It was pretty difficult. There helping him in the classroom was a lot of stuff in there that and with his own ongoing I did in college, so it wasn' t education. that bad. But a lot of the stuff I Superintendent Heidi Sipe, forgot." who also chairs the state licensDurfey said his first two ing commission, said the alterweeks as a teacher went fairly native route license requires a well. He is teaching two stan- dual application from both the dardlif e sciences classes and educator and the district "It's the school district five science, technology, engineeringand math-based sci› committing to help train this ence classes for seventh- and person," she said. "We undereighth-grade students. He said stand that they didn't come the STEM dasses allow him to through a traditional route, designthe curriculum, and he and we' re going to provide the plans to utilize his real-world supports needed to make this knowledge. successful." "I'm going to bring 20 years Sipe said the district must of experience in here from also complete dual applications everything I' ve seen that you for many of the other nontradon't see in the textbook," he ditional license types. She said national and state civil rights

the district can also help obtain

temporary emergency licenses for people who are missing a required component. Sipe said the different paths to licensure are not new, and

According to federal Title

II reports, 4,203 Oregon students were enrolled in teacher

preparation programs with 2,221 completing the program in 2008-09. The most recent re-

port from 2012-13 shows only age of nontraditional teachers 1,891 students enrolled with dramatically increased this 1,672 completing the program. year. However, she said that Oregon is not the only state funding has forced her to cut in which students are electing positions in six of the eight not to become teachers. Nationyears she has been an admin- al Title II reports show 719,081 istrator. If education funding students were enrolled in teachimproves and the district is able er prep programs in 2008-09 she did not believe the percent-

to re-establish those positions,

and only 499,800 were enrolled

Sipe said finding qualified peo- in2012-13. ple to fill them difficult. Sipe said more teachers will "When that happens, I'm re- likely be needed to fill the void, ally concerned about finding and she encouraged people to educatorsbecause a lotofpeo› consider the profession. "One of my jobs as an educaple left the profession altogether dueto the stress of budget toristo be sure people under› cuts," shesaid."We ’vehad few› stand what an amazing career er people entering education this is and how awesome it is to prep programs. Why are they impact students," she said. "Yes, going to enter a program from there are absolutely stresses in which people are being laid off this profession, but the benefits left and right?" far outweigh the stress."

maybe

History is alivefor fifth-generation Corvallis farmer hoping to passland to children By Bennett Hall

way, along with the couple's as Kiger Gorge. The couple youngest child. prospered in the new location "He showed up in the valley until the Bannock Indian War CORVALLIS — For Kenny Reynolds, history is never far with three kids and a widower," of 1878. The conflict briefly away. Reynolds said. "What he did is forced them to flee their homeIn his office at Reynolds he marriedthe daughter of one stead, and although the U.S. Farms, the walls are paneled of the other people on the wag- Cavalry quickly restored order, in recyded barn wood. A buck- on train." it had been a little too dose for board from his great-grandAlong with his new wife, comfort. father's livery s table l ooks Mary, Daniel Morgan homeThe couple sold their Kiger down from the loft, and a pair steaded a donation land daim Gorge holdings to cattle barof great-grandpa's chaps hang in 1849 and began the back- on Pete French and returned from a peg in the corner, along- breaking work of carving a to Benton County to buy more side his dad's Filson chore coat farm out of the wilderness. But land, induding a spread south and battered Stetson. by 1850 — a little over a year of Corvallis on what's now Growing up on the farm, after crossing the continent in known as Kiger Island. which runs along either side a covered wagon — Daniel, too, When Reuben Kiger died of Highway 20 a few miles was dead. around the turn of the century, northeast of the Corvallis city With a family to feed and he and Dollie still owned the limits, Reynolds was raised on faced with the prospect of los- original 1,100-acre donation a steady diet of family history ing the homestead, Mary Mor- land claim north of Corvallis served up by his grandmother gan found a new husband. plus several hundred acres on "Mary married John Sylves- Kiger Island. In his will, he diMinerva Kiger Reynolds. The tale has a lot of t w ists and ter, and they proved up on the vided the property among his turns, and hearing it today can claim," Reynolds said. "I' ve got two sons, Dick and John, and make a listener marvel that the the document — or a copy of his widow, who was still raising family still has any land left to the document — signed by Ul- their daughter, Minerva. farm. ysses S. Grant." According to Reynolds, his It's a story that goes back to Their daughter, Dollie Mor- great-undes Dick and John the mid-l800s, when Reynolds' gan Sylvester, married an en- may have played a little fast and great-great-grandfather Dan- terprising young man named loose with their inheritance. "John Kiger's ultimate downiel Morgan came west over the Reuben Kiger, who owned a Oregon Trail to build a new local livery stable. fall may have been gambling, life with his young family in In the 1870s, Kiger sold his which is reputed to have cost the Willamette Valley. Morgan livery businessand movedwith him the Kiger Island farm in arrived in what is now Benton his wife to southeastern Ore- the early 1900s. "John lost the place," ReynCounty in 1848, but he paid a gon, where they homesteaded a terrible price for the journey: canyon on the slopes of Steens olds said, "and the rumor is he His wife, Rebecca, died on the Mountain that became known lost it in a poker game." Corvallis Gazette-Times

That left the old homestead his veteran's loans to buy back Farms when it's time for him to along Highway 20, which at some of the land the family had retire. "We go back to 1849, which is that point was split between lost. Dick and Dollie. But Dick's fiBefore Ed died in 2008, the pretty good. It's a huge sense of nancial situation was precar- family farm passed to Kenny. pride," Reynolds said. "I'm proud of the fact that my ious, according to Reynolds, Today Reynolds and his wife, and he was in danger of losing Heidi, raise grass seed and granddad held onto the farm his share of the old home place grain, vegetables and meadow- through the Depression and when he died; it only stayed in foam on about 800 acres in the two world wars. the family after his widow got same stretch of Willamette Rivremarriedtoam an ofmeans. er bottomland that Daniel and Eventually the two proper- Mary Morgan homesteaded DIESE ties were united again under more than a century and a half Do youenjoylong the ownership of Reynolds' ago. They' ve also raised three walks? Diesel grandfather, Jay Reynolds, kids there. does too. He' ll who had met Minerva Kiger at All three of Reynolds' chillove learning new Oregon Agricultural College dren have grown up hearing things from yeu (the forerunner of Oregon State the old family stories he heard to keep his alert University). He graduated in from his grandmother, and he mind engaged. 1910,shein 1912. hopes he's been able to impart This 2-year-old Dutch Like so many other farm

some sense of the local histo-

families, t h e y st r uggled ry that is their legacy. He also throughtheGreat Depression. hopes at least one of them will But they hung on, and the fam-

ily's fortunes eventually improved. The couple's son, Ed, studied agriculture at Oregon State College after serving in the Navy during World War II. The farm prospered under his management, and he used

be ready to take over Reynolds

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

Yesteryear

BITUARIES

pulled Saturday morning

Continued from B1 On the east side of the river

the Pringle house on Greenwood Avenue is finished and

FEATURED OBITUARY

the Russell house is going

Formerporn star turned into feministfilmmaker By Sam Roberts

thinking, 'I wasn't good

New York Times News Service

enough formy own moth›

from Mirror Pond, the Central Oregon Divers Club could

50 YEARS AGO

ahead fast. In the Park addition. E.P. Brosterhous has be-

have held a garage sale. Twelve divers — carrying

For the week ending Sept. 12, 1965

as much as 80 pounds of air

Spacechampions calmly recount Gemini 5 flight

tanks, weight belts and other paraphernalia — worked

Space champions Gordon the quarter mile stretch from gun on a new house for W.C. Cooper and Charles Con- Galveston Avenue t o th e McCuiston. rad today calmly recounted Drake Park foot bridge in the for the world how they per- first activity for the recently Line may build to Prineville formed "at least part" of ev- formed club. It is learned here from ery experiment assigned to Out of the 60 degree water sources which have always them and watched the growth came tires, hubcaps, bottles, proven reliable, that the proj- of hurricane Betsy despite rusty cans, fishing lures, a ect of a railroad connecting mechanical problems that al- tricycle, a bullet shell, an an-

B5

Pond. Hackler also sees scuba

participation growing n ot only in Central Oregon, but across the nation.

"I'd compare it to how skiing was in 1960," she said. "We' re at the point where peo-

ple are beginning to show an interest."

Improvements in e quipment has made the sport safer and easier. It also looks better than the stuff Lloyd Bridg-

es used to wear in his "Sea Hunt" days.

"You can get it in any color you want," Hackler said. "It' s

Candida Royalle, a for- er to want to stick around,'" mer star of pornographic Royalle told Smashing Inmovies whobecame a self› terviews. She had recently

the main Deschutes lines with

most forced down the Gemini

tenna, a cassette tape, a base-

Prineville very probably will be taken up again,and im›

5 flight. Conrad proudly r eport-

styled feminist filmmaker,

d iscovered that her

birth

mediate action is expected,

ed that they watched Betsy,

spurning what she called a misogynistic "wham, barn, thank you,ma’am" genre to create erotica that would appealto modern women, died

mother had apparently left to escape an abusive husband and had died of ovarian cancer. She is survived by her

according to the information available, but simply that negotiations probably will be resumed with Prineville property owner shortly.

Monday ather home in Mat›

sister.

tituck, New York, on Long cancer, her friend and fellow actressand writerVeronica

Royalle graduated from the High School of Art and Design in New York and attended Parsons School of Design, now part of the

now aiming toward the Texas-Louisiana gulf coast, develop from a small tropical disturbance into a storm that cut short their eight-day voyage by one orbit. At the news conference

ball, a shovel, a shoe, a ring, a sexy. But once you are undergolf ball, a lock, a marble and water everyone is unisex. You can't tell if you are a man, a about 36 cents in change. "It didn't match the Cay- woman or the creature from man Islands, but it was an ad- the black lagoon." venture," said Rick Vecquery, Vicki Newell has been inwho has been diving for 32 volved in the sport for just a years. His wife, Patty, also month. She was at Juniper took part in Saturday's effort. Aquatic Center and saw divThe Powder House supplied ers training. "I walked up and said, 'Hey, free compressed air to the divers. take me.'" "I love the water, love being Nanci Hackler helped orga-

Vera said.

New SchooL She moved to

Royalle was 30 w hen she shifted from starring in movies to p r oducing and directing films for her own company, Femme Pro-

California after that and appeared in some two dozen pornographic films, with titles like "Kinky Tricks" and

Island. She was 64. The cause was ovarian

ductions. She defined her

work as f emale-oriented, sensuously explicit cinema as opposed to the formulaic hard-core pornographic films that she said degraded women for the pleasure of men. Royalle maintained that her niche foray into a

male-dominated industry gained a degree of dignity for performers and a belated recognition that women and couples could enjoy blue movies together. She also saw an untapped market. "Women w er e

"Hot & Saucy Pizza Girls."

"My parents, now deceased, were shocked when they first learned of my clandestine life as a porn star but ultimately declared their

she told Smashing I nter-

views magazine last year. "What has united Cand ida's w o rk , t he com -

c r i tics d i s-

trepreneurial career. "It was unthinkable that

an X-rated actress or model would go on to play such a cy Quan, author of the novel "Diary of a Manhattan Call Girl," said in an email. "Can-

dida changed all that."

Royal Air Force squad-

"The Gemini launch vehicle

rons opened the second year

is a real Cadillac," he said. Conrad reported he was more nervous facing news-

of war against Germany today by turning back several hundred Nazi war planes attempting to pierce British defenses in the southeast in three thrusts toward London.

men than when he was thun-

dering into space. "I think my heart rate's a lot higher here than it was at lift-

The air ministry said 23 German planes were shot

ond orbit. Problems with the

"Hitler tells of huge mass raids to come" "Fight to go on until one nation breaks" "Invasion of island still planned, says Nazi Fuehrer" "Hitler's fall is predicted by Churchill; Nazi bid for victory coming, he warns"

marketergonomic vibrators. She also gave lectures and in 2004 wrote a book, "How

tributors in Europe, helped in 1984 and its first videos,

involuntary pleasures — to

creasing claims minister" " Germans send b i g squadrons in final drive" "Largest raids of war

oxygen feed to the fuel cells providing electric power had begun. "I made the decision we should power down (reduce electric power)," Cooper said calmly. "We would use the fuel cell oxygen in as small amounts as possible."

Cooper and Conrad will get a few days off before they leave fortrips across the na›

tion and foreign countries

a t t ackers; m a ny

"German raiders claim

success; Berlin says 35 British planes shot down"

ranch for Mount Carmel's 150th anniversary c elebra-

tion are missing from the fattening pen here.

Fish-stealing owl makes thirdattack

John Hurlburt, a member of

The old owl of the Paulinas,

a bird that steals fish from anglers, was on the job again late yesterday for the third time this year. With Don H. Peoples and

the steering committee for the celebration, discovered they were missing. "The steers would be hard to get rid of," said Hurlburt.

"Perhaps if w e

headed back into the trees Divers retrieve sunken

w ith trout and part o f

the

Bend man's tackle.

junk

With the amount of junk

Deaths of note from around the world:

Jonathan Woods, 76: Longest-serving director of Ohio State University's marching

R occo Scotti, 95 :

Cleveland Indians games, has died. His death was confirmed

band. Died Saturday. His place Friday. of death was not reported.

i~

i~

iW

— From wire reports

P i

born on this day, Sept. 5, 68 years ago. Dan was a loving husband, father, brother, uncle and friend. Dan is truly missed by his wife Shirley Vogt, son Lee Vogt, sister Lynn Barclay, brother Rick Vogt, stepson Ron Suliman, many nieces and nephews and a long list of great friends. Dan's memory will be cherished and never forgotten.

Dan, We Love You!

Op-

era-trained singer who belted out the national anthem before

One of Bend's Brightest Lights went out on April 23, 2007. Dan was

))

Haroldoell IBue candlaal Jan. 8,1923- Sept. 7, 2015

,

was too great and the owl

DEATHs ELsEwHERE

i~

875 SE3RDSTREET, SUITE102, BEND, OR97702

www.natural-health-care.net

Buegler at first attempted

1 9 4 7 —APRIL 23 , 2 0 0 7 i~

Lynette offersaholistic approachof ComplementaryandAlternative Medicineusing energetictechniques,including: TotalBody Modification,NESHealth, miHealth,Trinfinity8, Sacro-CraniaQuantum l, Touch, Ionic FootDetox & Reiki, torebalanceyour energyfield, re-establish homeostasis,andpromoteself-healing.

to hold his trout and the ma- For the week ending rauding owl, but the struggle Sept. 12, 1990

w e r en' t

i~

Open:Monday -W ednesday -Friday 9:00 am -430 pm

made a trip to the LBJ ranch

I N LoYING M E M o R Y D AN V o G T i~

for an appointment

the sand. Then the big owl over the July 4 weekend and suddenly appeared, swooped bought the steers for about to the shore in a bomber dive $1,100. and grabbed the struggling fish. 25 YEARSAGO

and shame about sex, nei-

S EPT. 5 ,

Call 541-388-9275

"They have the LBJ brand

C.K. Norcott, George Buegler plastered on both sides of was fishing on the west shore their rumps and getting rid of of East Lake about sunset them would be like trying to and landed a fine big trout. get rid of the Hope diamond." Slowly, Buegler hauled his The celebration committee catch into shore and out on

"We wanted to do some-

thing as a group," diver Rob Pheil said. "It's a fun sport. It's a good way to drop $2,000 real fast."

A CCEPTI N G N EW PATIENT S

brand will be easy to spot

S ix steers b ought f r o m p resident J o h nson's L B J

have a good time.

Lynette C. Frieden, Natural Health Practitioner

States space effort.

times.corn in 2012 whether

was a jazz drummer. Her ther watching nor performmother, the former Marga- ing in these films would carret O'Bannon, left her and ry the weight it does," she reher sister, Cinthea, when she plied. "But then, perhaps we was 18 months old. She was wouldn't be so interested in raised by her stepmother, them, either. If the fruit were Helen Duffy. not forbidden, would anyone "You basically grow up care to take a bite'?"

)

But mostly, they want to

Hackler sees Central Oregon Divers (CODs) doing

"R.A.F. fl iers q u ick Missing steers with the LBj

was born on Oct. 15, 1950, in still so consumed with guilt Brooklyn. Her father, Louis,

sard.

to tell the story of the United

passion, seduction and even pornography still deserved romance. a bad rap. Candice Marion Vadala

there." Hackler said the group is and went t o w o r k f i n d ing planning a trip to Newport those in the area that share and she hopes to make the her passion for the sport. group available to individuals "I knew there were divers and organizations that could here, it was just a matter of use divers for recovery and getting them together," she investigation.

made on London" t o m eet downed"

in the water. It's cool down

came to Central Oregon last summer from the Bay Area

od

"Strength of Britain is in-

She teamed with Jandirk Groet, a Dutch designer, to

sion, a sex-positive orga- the performative mode of nization that opposes cen- the jam session — a quality sorship; created a support (akin to Astaire-Rogers) of groupforactresses in erotic bodies performing pleasurfilms who are exploited by ably for each other." their employers; insisted on Given her lofty aspirasafe sex in her films (when tions to elevate the art form, some distributors objected); Royalle was asked by nyand infused them with plots,

Cooper said.

nize the club and the dive. She

War headlines

be-

cy group Women Against "Femme" and "Urban Heat." Pornography, said in a 1992 In those films, Linda WilElle magazine interview liams wrote in "Hard Core: that there was no distinc- The Power, Pleasure and tion between Royalle's work the 'Frenzy of the Visible,'" and other pornography that "there is a d i s t inct s h ift "eroticizes women's inequal- from the confessional, voyity" and accused Royalle euristic mode of much feahad engaged in "prostitution ture-length narrative — a on paper or celluloid." quality of catching bodies Royalle was a founder of in the act of experiencing Feminists for Free Expres-

Britain turns back Nazis in year old war

was any doubt as the rocket soared into the heavens,"

In 1980, she returned to New York to pursue an en-

t he businesswoman I

agreed. Norma Ramos, gen- finance Femme Productions eral counsel of the advoca-

"Neither one of us felt there

Sept. 12, 1940

came," Royalle wrote on her web site.

my productioncompany and

mon thread throughout it to Tell a Naked Man What all," Angie Rowntree, a pro- to Do: Sex Advice From a ducer and publisher of por- Woman Who Knows." nography, said in an email, Mostly she wrote, direct" is a c o mmitment to t h e ed and produced movies, principle that women have originally with a partner, the right to explore, enjoy Lauren Niemi. Royalle's and celebrate their sexuali- husband, Per Sjosted (they ty, openly and proudly, with- later divorced), also proout taking any kind of met- d uced. Members of h i s aphorical back seat to men." family, who were film disS till, some

C ooper said the liftoff w a s "very smooth."

For the week ending

off," he said. Cooper reported he himself c ommunity s e r v ic e w o r k down in severe air b attles made the decision to abandon when possible, as well as goover the southeast and that 15 attempts to come close to a ing as a group to locations Britishcraft were destroyed. rendezvous evaluation p m ore exotic t h a n Mi r r o r Eight of t h e B r i tish p i lots (REP) ejected from the Gemwere safe. ini 5 spacecraft on its sec-

love for me, and respected what I created in terms of

c u r i ous strong executive role," Tra-

and wanted to see if there were some sexy movies they could enjoy with their partner, and t here w as nothing out there for that,"

75 YEARSAGO

'f

Bud Candland, 92, passed away at his home in Bend, OR. Born ia Salt Lake City, UT, to Shelby and Rozella Candland, he was a hardworking, honest, kind man, who touched the lives of many.

Growing up in the depression in So. California, as a member of the Naval Reserves, he was called to active duty during 1940 and served until the end of WW II in 1945. O n February 29,1944,in portland,OR he ma rried Margar et(peggy) Kennedy from New York City. Bud loved Bend. He first came in 1946, and although he lived in areas of Oregon, Washington 8c Utah, he always returned to Bend. Moving back in 1987 to stay. Bud was a "jack of all trades". Beginning as a Machinist Mate in the Navy, he later attended schools for gunsmithing, watchmaking, and engineering. His work focused on watch &, clock repair, and tool 8c die making. He also worked as a truck driver, gunsmith, and raised turkeys. In retirement, he was responsible for the maintenance of Rock Arbor Villa.'Ihen at age 85 he once again was employed as a machinist for Winward Performance.

His hobbies included hunting, fishing, reading, studying and working with airplanes(member of EAA) and inventing. Bud was a very diversified and creative thinker. He loved to learn. He loved and was proud of his family. He enjoyed being with them as often as possible. As a devout Christian and an active member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints he served ia several callings. His faith was very important to him.

He was preceded in death by his wife, parents, one brother, Shelby Candland, two sisters (June Candland and Marjorie Anderson), and a granddaughter (Mary Turpin). He is survived by his daughter, Kathy (Howard) Turpin (Woods Cross, Utah) and his son, Rich (Sandi) Candland (Madras, Oregon), grandchildren, George (Stacy) Candland, Christina (Jeremy) Jones, Tina (Ruston) Carter, Leah (TIMmas) Schiffer, Paul (Suzi) Turpin, Beth (Chad) Hutchings, Tim (Alisha) Turpin, Sam Candland, and Scott Turpin, and, 29 great-grandchildren. 'Ihere will be a viewing Friday, September 18, at the Church ofJesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1260 NE 'Ihompson Drive from 9:3010:30 AM. A service will follow at 11:00 AM with military honors. Interment will be at Willamette National Cemetery, Portland, OR. Arrangements are under the care of Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home. Please visit the online registry for the family at www. niswonger-reynolds.corn.


B6

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

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

I

i

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 81’

ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 90 55'

Low

75 40'

91' in 1 9 81 24' in 1914

PRECIPITATION

EAST:Mostly sunny today with a breezy afternoon; still quite warm, but not as hot as Saturday.

5

Seasid 66/55

Cannon 64/55

sunny andbecoming breezy today;not as hot as Saturday, but still on the warm side

67/52

High: 100’ Sep 21 Sep 27 O ct 4 O c t 12 at Medford Low: 39’ Tonight’s sky:Thepartial solar eclipse will at Meacham

only be visible insouthern Africa, Madagascar and Antarctica.

80/46

81/51

Roseburg Gra a

54 Medfo d

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty 68/56/0.00 68/53/pc 66/49/sh L a Grande 93/41/0.00 83/33/s 71/37/c La Pine Brookings 62/53/0.00 74/53/s 66/50/c Me d ford Gums 94/48/0.00 87/39/s 74/38/c Ne wport Eugene 91/58/0.00 82/45/s 69/44/c No r th Bend Klamath Fags 91/47/0.00 88/45/s 72/40/c O n tario Lakeview 93/45/0.00 88/45/pc 75/42/t Pe n dleton

Wee ds Ab s ent

Granitee 78/37

’Baker C 83/33

John eU Day 2/37 83 / 4 9

Ch ristmas alley

Silver Lake 82/3’7 84/49 Chiloquin

Nyssa

Burns Juntura 90/50 Jordan V Hey

Frenchglen

86/49

Burns Jun tion 91/54 Rome 94/53 McDermi

Paisley

’ 86/44

Klamath Fags

9 50

Valee 92/51

88/54

Lakeview

88/45

tario

88/45

90/56

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

Yesterday Today Monday

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 90/6 4/0.0076/54/pc 67/51/c 90 / 45/0.00 82/40/s 72/41/c Portland 91/40/0.00 80/41/s 70/37/c Prinevige 95/ 45/0.0084/46/s 70/38/c 100/ 6 3/0.00 92/54/s 78/50/c Redmond 94/ 45/0.0084/37/s 72/32/c 63/5 5 /0.00 64/48/pc 61/48/c Roseburg 94 / 62/0.00 85/52/s 72/47/c 64 / 57/0.00 67/51/pc 65/49/c Salem 90/57/0.00 79/51/s 67/48/c 95/50/0.00 92/50/s 78/51/pc Sisters 91/44/0.00 81/40/s 70/35/c 90/ 5 4/0.00 84/50/s 71/48/c The Dages 9 3 /56/0.00 81/52/s 70/46/c

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

~ 1 08 ~ g s

As of 7 a.m.yesterday

~ gs

~ t ee

Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 265 8 8 48% EXTREMES (for the Wickiup 23321 12% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 5 3 1 68 61% 48 contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 11995 27vo National high: 117 Prineville 54031 Sevo at Death Valley,CA River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low: 27 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 137 at West Yellowstone, Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1160 MT II 142 Precipitation: 3.17 Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1630 at Cross City, FL Little Deschutes near LaPine 122 * * C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 1 9 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 * * Reservoir C rane Prairie

210 87 6

FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver ~ Redmond/Madras~ Sisters Prinevige La Pine/Gilchrist ~v

SO/41

Riley 87/39 85/46

86/44

Beaver Marsh

Ver y high ~

v e ry~high ~

~Mode~rate High ery ~high ~

Source: USDA Forest Service

~ 20 8 ~ s g s ~ d e s ~ 5 0 s ~ G Os ~ 7 0 8 ~ a g s nni peg Tgloder uey

rc/ 3

eggs ~100s ~ t t es o

0 ’s

Amsterdam Athens

68/54/0.06 67/54/eh 65/52/eh 90n2/0.00 84/70/s 85/69/s SS/52 Auckland 54/45/0.00 60/48/pc 61/48/pc etroit Baghdad 111/82/0.00 112/80/pc 113/84/pc Che n Bangkok cone/o.or 86/77/t 90/78/t P ’ladelphie sa/5 Beijing 78/50/0.00 86/56/s 82/56/pc C iceg Beirut 90/81/0.00 88/80/pc 86/82/pc Omah oujs 6 /52 72/41 92/so Berlin 74/53/0.00 77/61/pc 76/55/1 teuton 74/ Bogota 70/45/0.00 70/44/pc 69/47/pc Etris v ss ltarr Kansas City isvige Budapest 70/59/0.00 74/55/s 80/61/pc 74/62 BuenosAires 63/36/0.00 69/49/s 74/61/pc Cherie Los Ae es 88/77/0.23 87/76/t srnzn Nash Cabo San Loess O 1 4 * 7/70 L’ Cairo 100/79/0.00 ernr/s 94n6/s Phoen oen Atbuque ue l d ehoma O 8 56 At ~horses Calgary 84/50/0.00 57/39/r 48/39/r • ++a ~ se e o oo/44 8 74/54 Cancun gone/o.oo coned 91/77/t uir inuhe usga neeu Sl Pa Dublin 59/52/0.29 58/50/eh 55/47/sh 74/ 3 . cd v.++' ae/6 ,’ 5 4744 4/6 Edinburgh 61/54/0.02 61/47/pc 57/46/sh en Geneva 75/55/0.35 74/57/1 65/49/sh /ee p,’0 Harare 80/55/0.00 82/48/s 74/40/pc Q 3/42 Hong Kong 88/78/0.00 88/78/s 88ne/pc Honolulu Chihuahua Istanbul 75/74/0.27 78/69/s 79/69/s 89/78 se/54 smi Jerusalem 93n6/0.00 88/70/pc 88no/pc Monte y 91/ru 83/de Johannesburg 71/49/0.02 73/49/s 72/50/pc Lima 71 /62/0.00 74/65/s 74/63/pc Lisbon 73/64/0.02 72/60/pc 73/59/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 68/59/0.01 62/52/eh 64/52/sh T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 84/66/0.00 79/57/pc 77/53/pc Manila 93/79/0.26 87/78/r 88m/t M ne

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

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 54/48/0.29 56/44/c 52/43/c 71/49/0.00 76/62/s 82/65/s 62/46/0.01 66/49/pc 74/56/s 105/78/0.00 95n6/pc 93n2/t 70/59/0.03 70/46/s 77/50/s 71/49/0.00 80/62/s 86/68/s 80/59/0.00 80/56/s 86/58/s 90n8/rr 87n0/pc 80/68/r 71/59/0.02 72/51/s 78/55/s 66/46/0.00 69/54/s 77/61/s 76/59/0.00 76/55/s 82/60/s 91/80/0.59 91n8/t eonen 63/50/0.00 69/54/s 77/61/s 69/47/0.00 73/60/s 79/64/s 75/61/0.00 73/50/s 80/55/s 85/73/0.00 80/66/s 83n2/s

79/69/Tr 77/59/sh 77/64/pc 79/66/0.02 77/57/sh 78/60/pc

88/71/0.83 75/62/1 76/59/s 82/57/0.00 84/66/s 89/66/s 71/45/0.00 78/63/s 83/67/s 89/75/0.23 84//2/t 89n4/t 98/83/0.00 103n8/pc95nr/pc 70/54/0.00 73/55/s 82/61/s 78/68/0.02 74/57/c 77/59/pc 107/83/0.00 102/80/1 95nr/t Pittsburgh 64/60/0.50 65/48/c 72/49/s Portland, ME 74/51/0.00 67/57/sh 71/56/sh Providence 77/58/0.00 77/57/sh 72/58/pc Raleigh 78/71/0.35 75/51/c 76/52/s Rapid City 82/43/0.00 91/54/s 92/57/s Reno 96/57/0.00 90/64/pc 81/58/1 Richmond 81/67/0.92 75/53/sh 78/52/s Rochester, NY 64/60/1.28 64/52/r 73/56/pc Sacramento 85/65/0.00 90/62/pc 80/61/pc St. Louis 70/54/0.00 74/58/s 80/63/s Salt Lake City 92/59/0.00 92/69/s 83/63/1 San Antonio 91/73/0.00 90/68/pc 92n1/s

OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix

San Diego sen6/0.00 85n5/pc 82n5/r San Francisco 71/57/0.00 72/61/pc 71/61/pc San Jose 73/60/0.00 81/61/pc 76/61/pc Santa re 87/54/0.00 87/55/pc 82/54/pc Savannah rrnr/0.07 81/58/pc 82/66/s Seattle 80/58/0.00 70/53/pc 63/51/sh Sioux Fags 70/39/0.00 76/61/s 81/66/s Spokane 89/56/0.00 80/50/s 67/46/c Springfield, MO 71/50/0.00 72/59/s 79/61/s Tampa 88/78/0.17 86n3/t 89n6/t Tucson 102/74/0.04 95/71/t 89/70/t Tulsa 77/51/0.00 80/64/s 86/65/s Washington, DC 75/67/0.16 74/56/pc 78/57/s Wichita 77/53/0.00 82/64/s 89/67/s Yakima 94/53/0.00 87/50/s 71/40/c Yuma 96/83/0.02 103/81/1 100n8/pc l

I

Mecca Mexico City

109/75/0.21 106/83/pc 105/80/1 73/57/0.10 70/55/1 70/55/1 Montreal 63/61/0. 24 68/54/sh 69/55/pc Moscow 57/49/0.00 59/40/c 60/47/c Nairobi 82/59/0.24 80/53/s 79/56/pc Nassau 91ns/0'.10 91/79/pc 89/79/pc New Delhi eenWO.O O 97n6/pc 99/77/pc Osaka 84/63/0.04 79/62/c 77/62/pc Oslo 57/46/0.04 57/53/pc 59/54/sh Ottawa 57/55/0.27 63/48/r 71/51/pc Paris 64/59/0.48 68/55/r 64/52/eh Rio de Janeiro 73/64/0.81 70/65/1 72/66/c Rome 79/57/0.00 80/68/pc 79/67/1 Santiago 73/39/0.00 75/51/pc 67/46/c Sao Paulo 59/57/0.14 61/55/c 66/58/c Sap poro 72/67/0.97 66/55/r 70/55/eh Seoul 73/57/0.00 77/63/s 80/62/s Shanghai 77/69/0.05 81nO/c 80/72/c Singapore 88/81/0.00 90/80/pc 89/79/t Stockholm 64/52/0.03 63/53/sh 64/53/pc Sydney 72/52/0.00 73/57/s 75/57/s Taipei 86/68/0.00 84/75/pc 86nrn Tel Aviv esm/0.00 91/80/s 90/80/pc Tokyo 84/72/0.02 81/67/sh 74/65/pc Toronto 61/54/0.41 62/49/pc 74/55/s Vancouver 68/59/0.00 64/49/c 61/49/c Vienna 75/54/0. 00 76/62/s 80/59/pc Warsaw 57/55/0.22 70/52/pc 74/61/pc

"I really enjoy how there are so many different teachers and styles."

Yoga Continued from B1 The yogis began with an opening chant of peace, then transitioned into

Yesterday Today Monday

City

i

2/

39o

Mostly cloudy andcool with Partly sunny and remaining a little rain cool

Oily Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 85/65/0.00 91/67/pc 92/66/s Akron 61/57/1.64 66/47/c 74/50/s Albany 77/56/1.01 71/55/r 72/56/pc Albuquerque 91/63/0.00 90/64/pc 86/62/pc Anchorage 52/45/0.38 56/47/s 55/48/r Atlanta 78/67/0.00 74/54/s 79/59/s Atlantic City 79/69/0.98 74/58/c 76/61/pc Austin 90/68/0.00 88/60/pc 90/65/s Baltimore 74/58/0.52 73/51/c 77/53/s Billings 93/51 /0.00 88/52/s 82/58/pc Birmingham 78/66/0.09 74/53/s 80/60/s Bismarck 85/43/0.00 92/51/s 81/55/pc Boise 93/59/0.00 90/58/s 78/54/pc Boston 71 /60/0.00 71/58/sh 74/61/pc Bridgeport, CT 79/63/0.09 78/59/sh 76/61/pc Buffalo 59/56/1.61 63/52/r 70/58/pc Burlington, YT 77/56/0.03 71/56/r 71/57/sh Caribou, ME 71 /55/0.00 68/56/c 63/52/r Charleston, SC 80n5/Tr 81/59/pc 82/63/s Charlotte 77/69/0.25 76/51/s 78/53/s Chattanooga 76/65/0.00 74/52/s 80/55/s Cheyenne 83/46/0.00 86/53/s 85/57/s Chicago 65/52/0.02 68/52/s 76/59/s Cincinnati 66/57/0.36 69/47/s 76/50/s Cleveland 63/58/2.48 64/50/c 73/53/s ColoradoSprings 86/46/0.00 88/55/s 87/56/s Columbia, MO 69/48/0.00 74/58/s 81/61/s Columbia, SC 80n2/Tr 80/55/pc 82/57/s Columbus,GA 77/71 /0.01 77/56/s 82/63/s Columbus,OH 67/56/0.55 66/47/pc 74/51/s Concord, NH 78/56/0.00 66/52/sh 69/53/eh Corpus Christi 88n4/Tr 90/69/pc eon z/s Dallas 86/66/0.00 86/68/s 91/68/s Dayton 66/53/0.10 68/47/pc 75/51/s Denver 86/51/0.00 92/56/s 90/58/s Des Moines 71/49/0.00 75/61/s 82/65/s Detroit 64/52/Tr 67/50/pc 75/55/s Duluth 67/38/0.00 71/57/s 76/60/pc El Paso 92/68/0.00 94/69/pc 94no/s Fairbanks 45/39/0.06 45/39/s 46/37/c Fargo 77/44/0.00 83/55/s 80/63/pc Flagstaff 79/45/0.00 75/47/1 66/48/t Grand Rapids 64/46/0.00 66/50/pc 75/58/s Green Bay 67/44/0.00 69/52/s 76/60/s Greensboro 78/70/Tr 74/50/pc 77/53/s Harrisburg 69/57/0.62 71/50/c 75/53/s Harfford, CT 80/58/0.02 74/53/sh 73/55/eh Helena 91/47/0.00 85/50/s 78/52/pc Honolulu 89/78/0.27 89/78/eh 88/78/pc Houston 88/72/0.01 83/62/s 85/68/s Huntsville 78/62/0.00 71/49/s 76/56/s Indianapolis 68/51/Tr 69/49/s 76/53/s Jackson, MS 81/64/Tr 81/52/s 85/56/s Jacksonville 78/73/0.53 82/60/pc 84/71/pc

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

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.

Ham ton

La pine

46o

63’

i

JosePh Grande 8 40 Union

4l

Fort Rock Greece t 83/46

e~64 Ashl nd 90/5

Yesterday Today Monday

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24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.19" in 1994 Month to date (normal) 0.0 8" (0.17") Year to date(normal) 6.64 " (6.93") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 9"

10 a.m. Noon

42o

TUESDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

High

LOW

Abundant sunshine; breezy this afternoon

If ’ I

MONDAY "’" 70’

Karen Bonner, 27, who hoped to meet other yogis at the event

k u n dalini

yoga, led by Santiago Casanueva of Juniper Swim & Fit-

the mat. Many could push

ness Center.

backbend that leaves you on all fours, belly button reaching for the sky. Karen Bonner, 27, looked to be one seasoned yogi. She said she's been practicing for five years now. When she re-

"Kundalini is th e n oisy yoga," Casanueva said, transitioning into singing, and then a long series of quick, short breaths out to work as an "ego eradicator." Following Cas a nueva, Breyn Hibbs, owner of Sol Alchemy, asked that yogis fold into child's pose. "Let your hips sink back to your heels," Hibbs said. Throughout the practice, teachers swapped in, taking turns leading different kinds of yoga. Each of the nine

themselves into full wheel, a

cently moved to Bend from

section was Corrie Bernard from Athletic Club of Bend,

first woman laid face down on the mat, lifting herself into a plank position — think ex-

tended push-up. The second woman took hold of the plank woman's ankles, resting her own feet over the woman' s

told her about the outdoor event.

ies were stacked on top of each other. It seemed most everyone, in

are so many different teachers

groups of three so there was a spotterfor each pair,was

"I really enjoy how there

and styles," she said of Yogis Unite. She thought the event might be a good place to meet fellow yogis. Perhaps the most challenging part of the practice was "acroyoga," toward the end. Acroyoga combines acrobatic moves with yoga poses, involving partners or groups of people. Saturday, Deven Sisler, an acroyoga expert, pushed yogis to try something new, without really pushing at

M~,’t’pr Wj,, 4

Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

Patrick Ramirez and Kathryn Funk, center, of Bend perform Warrior II in a yoga class during Yogis Unite Bend at Troy Field on Saturday.

guiding yogis through sun salutations. During the sun salutations,

it in front of the crowd. The

Eugene, she started going to Namaspa and the staff there shoulders, so that the two bod-

teachers led via microphone for about 10 to 15 minutes.

Following Hibbs' warm-up

all. She introduced a pose by showing two teachers perform

sun s alutations, K i m berly Richards of Bend Commu›

drums kept the rhythm for

nity Healing took her turn, marking the halfway point of of poses. Following Bernard's the practice.

the yogis to follow the pattern

"Enjoy the sun, it's hot," coming." Richards said. It was 82 deThe crowd laughed at the grees and the sun was beat- thought. ing down on the grass, with A lot of people at the event no cloud coverage."Winter' s Saturday looked at home on

willing to tackle the two-story

plank position. A final restoration section by Caitlin Holzhouser of

Sweat Happy Peoplecalmed the yogis down into a peaceful place. "Connectedness has been presented as our theme, but I'm going to use a different word: 'sutra,'" she said. "Thread." — Reporter: 541-383-0325, kfisicaro@bendbulletirLcom

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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/community

: ra.

Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin

Rising 65 feet from atop a slickrock bluff, the freestanding Delicate Arch is such a geological iconthat it appears on Utah state license plates. Lit by the final rays of sunset, this ancient fin of

Entrada sandstone may beseen at a distance from roadside viewing areas.

By John Gottberg Anderson

Arches

For the Bulletin

UTAH

National park

MOAB, Utah — It wasn't the

’ Ore.

Calif.

'u

Deal Horse

we sought. But we found a first-

State Park

Idaho

Wo

Nev. Utah p Col

first time that official maps had failed to give us the information

Moot.

Point I

M NTI-,'LA~$AL AT IT3 N A'L FORESTI,!

year ranger at Canyonlands ¹ tional Park who explained why we couldn't find directions to a site labeled False Kiva.

Canyonlanls National Park , :CD

The National Park Service maintains a

three-tiered system to protect native culturGreg Cross / The Bulletin

al sites. Class I parks are on all the maps, he

John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin

ABOVE: False Kiva, a remnant of a Native Amer› ican culture that thrived

said. Class II sites, like False Kiva, are not promoted on maps, but park officials can help you find them. "Class III, as far as you and I are concerned, doesn't exist," the ranger said. That was the start of an afternoon adven-

ture that led us down an unmarked wilderness trail, through a boulder field and along a razor-thin ledge above a frightening cliff face. My companion, photographer Barb Gonzalez, with her 25 pounds of camera

many centuries ago, is hidden in a small grotto on a cliff overlooking the Green River. RIGHT:

equipment, demurred on the final scramble,

Sago Canyonpictographs

which led up a steep slope of sliding shale fragments to a truck-sized rock. I squeezed my less-t han-slender body around this final obstacle to enter a natural grotto with a shallow circle of carefully

by the Barrier Canyon culture, more than 2,000

years old, depict giant beings with orb-like eyes,

antennae, longearrings and squiggly canesor

stacked rocks, about 8 feet in diameter, at its

snakes. The art of three

heart. From this perch, a panorama spread for

different cultures maybe

many miles to the south, across red-and-

seen on cliff walls in the isolated canyon.

white sandstone mesas falling 1,200 feet Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin

NORTHWESTTRAVEL rivers. In the near distance rose the isolated pinnacle of Candlestick Tower, for us a direc-

tional landmark as we made the unmarked trek assured of our path only by prior footprints and occasional rock cairns. Beside me in the grotto, albeit compromised by vandalism from more than a century of visitation by nonnative intruders,

were other indications of ancient residence — perhaps by the Puebloan (Anasazi) people, who disappeared from this region about 800 years ago. There were a couple of rectangular walls, seemingly dismantled by rock collectors, and a few pictographs, induding a pair of hands. Three holes in a raised clay platform at the rear of the grotto, perhaps

once a storage area for grain and corn, had been roped off by park officials.

to the canyons of the Green and Colorado

SeeUtah /C4

When wine tasting becomes apa By Ashley Southall New York Times News Service

About once a month since

the Napa Valley Wine Train began chugging through California's wine country in 1989,

locomotives, and a bickering couple after a verbal dispute became physical, he said. The man, he said, "probably

wine country be?

saw too many Westerns." As for the couple: "She wasn't hap-

Vicente Godfrey wrote in a

the sound of clinking stemware py with him and heendedup has been accompanied by the with a fork in his skin. That' s spectacle of passengers being probably one of the wildest storemoved from the train. ries I' ve heard over the years." Usually, the passengers are The process seemed to work intoxicated and have become

until last month, when 11 wom-

belligerent or unruly, said Anthony Giaccio, the company's

en in a book club were booted

president. In the most egre-

from the wine train for laughing too loud. Their treatment

gious cases, the company had to remove a drunken man who

led to a social media debate that focused on a single ques-

tried to dimb atop one of the

tion: How loud should a trip to

"If I can't be loud while im-

bibing wine with a group of friends, then what's the point?"

offered to have them return for

a trip in a private car, it also receivedhundreds ofnegative

J.,

reviews on Facebook and Yelp.

« .' I

/

The dub, many of whose memone-star review he left on the bers are black, has retained a Napa Valley Wine Train's Face- lawyer, Waukeen McCoy of book page amid a social media San Francisco, who said they firestorm over the incident. are considering legal options Josh Stewart, leaving a five- including a racial discriminastar review, took a different

tion lawsuit. He said his dients

view: "I don't think it's appropriate for anyone to be loud on

want the wine train's employ-

a wine train. If this was a liquor

sitivity training in hopes that standards for conduct will be applied fairly across racial and

train or a beer festival, I would understand."

Althoughthecompany has apologized to the women and

ees to receive diversity and sen-

ethnic lines.

SeeTasting/C2

f

'

ID„e s+

tI~L; Graham Roumieu/ New York Times News Service

Growing interest in wine tasting and the incidents that have result› ed, including a recent one on the Napa Valley Wine Train, have led

to questions on how topolice behavior on tours.


C2

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

M II ESTONr

s+ ~ L 7

For ms f o r e ngagementw, eddinga,nniversaryorbirthdayannouncementsareavailableatbendbulletincomimilestones F.ormsandphotos mus t be submitted within one month of the celebration. Questions: milestones@bendbulletin.corn, 541-633-2117.

COMMENTARY

ANNIVERSARIES

5ru es oronine atin By Erika Ettin Tribune News Service

For better or for worse, we all know t hat people often

judge a book by its cover. Just as there might be an inspiring novel hiding behind a lackluster cover, there might also be a great person hiding behind some

l es s -than-wonderful

photos. For that reason alone, it's important to know the five rules of thumb for your online

pie can see what you look like others for many reasons: they from the get-go. And smile! want to show that they' re social and have friends; they 2. Don’t overshare want to show that they spend Some online dating sites time with attractive people; allow six photos, some 12 and they want to showcase somesome a whopping 26! (I chal- one they believe is in their lenge you to figure out which "league." (You may laugh, but one allows 26.) While I'm sure it's true.) your last ski trip to Aspen was You' re already being comlovely, your online dating pro- pared to others on the site, so file is not the place to show the don’tgive someone the chance

ictures 5. Tell the truth It's better to have someone

meet you and think, "He/she is much better looking in person," not, "Wow — those photos were taken 15 years ago!"

I

Unfortunately, it happens all

too often that you' ll meet your date, and the person looks nothing like his or her photos had indicated. For that reason,

in addition to the first rule, I also recommend a full-body dating profile pictures. I have Facebook or Instagram! shot to give someone a sense Let's say I have nine photos people in your own profile. or of your physique in addition to written about this subject benot even figure out which perfore, but it's always good for a of myself on OkCupid. In four son you are in the photo! And your face. Basically, don't lie refresher course: of them, I look cute; in two, about your looks. enough said. I look just OK; and in the re- if you' re social, simply name If someone goes to the "on-

1.Get a nice head shot,and say cheese!

whole album. Leave that to

maining three, for one reason

or another, I just don't look as This point is the key. It's the good.Someone looking atmy

first — and often last — thing

profile may be attracted to the

people look at. If you don' t first several pictures, but by have at least one clear head the time he gets to the ninth, shot (in other words, not blur- he's already dismissed me, ry or too far away) as your thinking that those three memain profile picture, your pro- diocre pictures reflect what I file may suggest that you' re actually look like. either hiding something or couldn't find a friend to snap 3. It’s best to be alone a quick shot! Make sure peo-

People choose photos with

to compare you to the other

William and Susan McCampbell

McCampdell

Tribune News Service

line dating bookstore," make

4. Do something interesting

sure your cover is appealing

William and Susan Mc-

California, Idaho and Ore-

Campbell, of Bend, will cel-

gon and retired in 1997. He

Maybe youplay the piano. Maybe you' re the next great boxinglegend. Or maybe you have a thing for making wine. Whatever it is, showing someone a unique or interesting photo of you gives people the

and accurate. If someone still doesn't want to pick it up, per-

ebrate their 40th wedding

haps they' re simply looking for

anniversary with a trip to

another genre. In the end, at

Maui, Hawaii. The couple were married Sept. 28, 1975, in Anchor-

enjoys traveling, sports, golfing and hiking. Mrs. Mc Campbell was

"in" they needed to strike up a conversation.

ideas and agendas. yourself cry, because that is There are also changes the best way to get it out. Try-

T here has been a b i g change in your world, many things are now in question, and you are wondering what

that are not positive, like the

When big changes occur, even very positive ones, it can leave you full of questions and anxious about what' s

This is the time when you need to honor your feelings

next.

p light. It's important to r e -

loss of a loved one, which will throw you into the same type

o f tailspin, but w i t h m o r e i s to become of y ou r l i f e. emotional pain and stress. a nd talk to those who will

be understanding about your

Dealing with change is about the most difficult thing you can do after you' ve be-

member that not everyone is going to see and feel things as you do, so you have to be come settled in your lifestyle. careful about who you choose If your family is close, and to let your feelings out to. your eldest (or youngest) deWanting to cry at numercides to move out, it can be a ous moments throughout the shocker, and something you day is normal for someone will have to adjust to, even if going through any kind of your first thoughts may be big change and the stress that about renting out his or her goes along with it. Many peoroom. And if a child decides ple hold in t h eir emotional to marry, then you are not pain all day until they can get only losing a son or daugh- home and then cry or mask ter but taking on a bunch of in-laws who have their own

the pain with something. I

strongly suggest that you let

least you' ll know you put your best foot forward. — Eriha Et tin is the founder of A Little Nudge, where she thers navigate the often helps o intimidating world of online dating.

age, Alaska. They have

i.aM' as it makes its way through St. Helena, California. Members of a mostly black book club say they believe they were kicked off the train because of their race last month.

influx has forced wineries and

touroperatorsto seek ways to sales in the United States have balance the quality of a sam- increased every year since pling session with the appro- 1993, and shipments reached priate amount of fun. $37.6 billion last year, accordA decision to expel customers from a wine tour for

ing to the Wine Institute.

something as normal as loud laughter can be a public relations blunder in a highly competitive market. The number of

in wine is reflected in crowds

wineries in the United States increased to 8,287 in 2014 from

6,357 in 2009, and 47 percent are in California, according to Wines & Vines, a trade magazine. Together, they produced more than 835 million gallons of wine last year, according to the Wine Institute, an advoca-

cy and public policy association for California wine. On a practical level, removing people for laughing is also turning away the hottest customers: Americans who are drinking more wine and paying more for it. The United States has surpassed France as the largest wine market,

and Americans drank more than 893 million gallons of wine in 2014, according to the

association. That was roughly

Americans' growing interest

suited in the premature end of

a tour or the dismissal of a patron. Complaints are typically resolved quickly, in large part because employees are trained to handle problems before they escalate, and efforts are made in the preparation stages to keep large groups separate from smaller parties. Like many of its counter-

that see seasoned veterans who know the importance of etiquette like spitting alongside budding sommeliers who are trying to figure out what they parts, By the Bay trains drivlike — as well as parties who ersand staffmembers to read just want to drink and have a passengers and make calls on good time. what measures to take to mod"Unless they' re a church, ify undesirable behaviors. It is they' re going to be loud," said one of the rare companies that Debbie Luhrs, the special sets expectations for patrons event planner for By the Bay with written codes of conduct. Transportation, a company Those codes usually cover that conducts wine tours on the consumption of alcohol benorthern Michigan's Leelanau fore a tour and on vehicles and and Old Mission peninsulas. premises, as well as seeming"By the time they' ve spent four ly obvious behavioral no-nos, hours tasting w ine, they' re like vulgar or inappropriate all a group now. They' re all language, public urination and friends, so if one is having a lewd or salacious acts. Basicalgood time, they' re all having a ly, all of the things people do good time." when they have had too much The complaints arise when alcohol. not everyone is in on the fun. By the Bay's customers pay In interviews, winery staff $59 for a tour that includes members and tour operators severalstops. Luhrs said the

said that noise complaints were company has had to end tours pic-size swimming pools. Wine common, butthey rarely re› twice over the last four years

the equivalent of 1,353 Olym-

retired in

2 012. She also

served as treasurer for the Angeles, Eric of Carlsbad, Board ofDirectors ofAlas› California, and Leslie (and k a Title G u aranty C o m Brian) Detamore, of Eliza- pany from 1980 to 1984. bethtown, Kentucky. She enjoys Jazzercise, hikMr. McCampbell served ing, camping, golfing and in the U.S. Navy as a sonar- gardening. man aboard the USS Horace They have lived in Bend A. Bass during the Korean for 18 years.

three children, Jeff of Los

able to listen, but take your

afterlarge groups became rowdy. "Every once in a while, you get that group that's wearing a feather boa," she said, referring to particularly rambunctious bachelor and bachelorette parties. "It's becoming more of a party than a tasting, and we really rein that in because we don't want that to be other peo-

tors of the wine-tasting experience have increasingly grappled with, as an industry boom that stretches back more than 20 years draws large crowds to Eric Risberg/The Associated Press file photo long-established wine regions A couple take pictures at the back of the Napa Valley Wine Train as well as budding production centers in northern Michigan, Virginia and elsewhere. The

financial aid for COCC. She

to quiet your anxiety and be

time and don't give up. I have taught this technique to many people, and it almost always only thing you can count on works. Just breathe and feel in life is change, because ev- what's going on inside you. It erything does. Going with is actually a calming experithe flow is a great idea, if you ence and will give you more can, but most people resist insight into how to deal with the process, especially when what is ahead for you. the changes they encounter A big change may be just are uncomfortable. The real what youneeded, or it ma y truth is that the only choice disrupt your life in ways you you have is to do the best you never couldhave imagined. can with what is going on in Many people have taken negand around your life. ative experiences and turned These are times when get- them around, by taking the ting in touch with your inner- time to think about and promost thoughts and emotions cess the whats and whys of can be very helpful. Soon af- what is going on with them. ter a big change, it is wise to Just give it a try. engage in meditation or just — Dr. Barton Goldsmith, a sit quietly and listen to what psychotherapist in Westlahe your mind is telling you. This Village, California, is the author way, you can sort through all of "The Happy Couple: How to the feelings and see where Make Happiness a Habit One you really are. It can be hard Little Loving Thing at a Time."

out overdoing it. It is a conundrum that cura-

in California and New York,

assistant director of student

ing to cover it up or run from it never works. It has been said that the

Tasting Continued from C1 "They just don't want this to happen to anyone else," he sard. The incident cast a spotlight on arecurring challenge faced by wineries and tour operators: how to police noise levels with-

Conflict. He was a title insurance officer in A l aska,

some activities you like to do.

How to dealwith bigchanges,goodor bad By Barton Goldsmith

'g< IQ t'I I j

ple's experiences." Preventive training has be-

Chet and Betty (Weller) Ramsey

Ramsey

leagues in Oakridge and La Pine. He recently received Chet and Betty (Weller) his 45-year pin for particiRamsey, of La Pine, celebrat- pating in state bowling toured their 60th wedding anni- naments. He is a member of versary with their children the La Pine Moose Lodge on Aug. 22. and the La Pine Christmas The couple were married

Basket Association. He is an

Aug. 19, 1955, in Eugene. They have three children, Kathy (and Norm) Overlund, of Eugene, Debbie (and Dave) Wirtz, of Crescent, and Dan (and Tracy) of Bend; 11 grandchildren; and 12 great-grandchildren.

avid baseball fan and cheers for the Seattle Mariners. He

enjoys bowling, hunting and family gatherings. Mrs. Ramsey was postmaster in Gilchrist and re-

tired in 1999. She is a former member of the Oregon Wom-

en's Volleyball League and faller and retired in 1994. He the Oregon Women's Bowlplayed for and coached the ing League. She is a current McKenzie Redsides baseball member of the La Pine Comteam, coachedthe McKen› munity Church, La Pine SeMr. Ramsey was a timber

zie Redsides Little League nior Center, La Pine Christb aseball team a n d l a t er mas Basket Association and

coached for the Gilchrist/

La Pine Moose Lodge. She enjoys reading, traveling and ball teams. He played for family gatherings. the men's basketball league They have lived in La Pine in Eugene, and bowling for 47 years. Crescent Little League base-

come commonplace at win-

eries over the last 15 years, and more winemakers are charging for tastings they once gave free, said Corey Beck, the president and director of winemaking and general manager of the Francis Ford Coppola Winery in Sonoma, Califor-

Find Your Dream Home

ln Real EState

TOUCHMARK SINCE 1980

Th e Bulletin

nia, and a 20-year veteran of the wine industry. The win-

ery opened in 2010 offering tastings starting at $12. It has never expelled a tour group for being too loud, he said.

II

C

541-647-2956

The Bulletin MI LESTONES

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

C3

SAN FRANCISCO

en eroin useum:anei or oo in ers ecive — the drugs, gambling and prostitution — while also celebrating the outreach to the homeless by churches such as

By SamMcManis The Sacramento Bee

SAN FRANCISCO — Take a walk down Eddy Street. Resist the urge to walk fast with head

bie Hancock laid down album tracks at Wally Heider Recording Studio. In the post-World War II era and into the 1950s,

bars (not just dives) and restauny's and community groups rants also drew visitors, before Glide Memorial and St. Antho-

down. Take in the acute, sometimes acrid, sensory details of

that advocated for transgender

rights decades before Caitlyn Jenner emerged. How could you not be captivated by a museum that features exhibits with titles such as

these city blocks, the beating,

arrhythmic heart of the Tenderloin. Be vigilant and streetwise, but don't succumb to fear, for

there is much to see and experience in San Francisco's most notorious and misunderstood

neighborhood. A stoop-shouldered merchant sweeps the entryway

of the Superette 128 market, careful not to disturb a homeless man, and his dog, curled up sleeping nearby. Men linger

the Mitchell Brothers in the 1970s brought a different sort of crowd with their porn theaters.

Shaw has no illusions that the Tenderloin will be as trendy as the Marina or the Mission,

these: "Porn Is Born," "Scream-

nor does he want gussied up,

ing Queens," "Buying B-Girls," "Placing Bets" and "Caged Teens" ? Along the way, you' ll also learn about how activists

condo-laden streets (" We' ve

passed strict land use measures, so much of our housing is off the speculative market,"

he said), but he does pine for an the Tenderloin served as a cen- economic upturn. "There's a great bar scene ter for labor union organizing and how the neighborhood is up near O'Farrell and Geary the most culturally and ethni- (streets) with Bourbon and cally diverse in San Francisco. Branch and Swig," Shaw said, "but the museum's in the cenBut, c'mon, wouldn't you worked for tenants' rights, how

outside the Herald Hotel, jaw-

ing and guffawing and swigging from 40-ouncers.Kids frolic on the swings and jungle ratherhear about thetawdry? tral Tenderloin. That's harder gym at verdant Boeddeker To that end, there's a won- to attract new businesses and Park, the roar of their playful Sam McManis/ SacramentoBee via Tribune News Service derfully kitschy archival vid- people. But we' re trying." squeals only partially drowned The newly opened Tenderloin Museum in San FrancIsco chronicles the neIghborhood's gritty hIstory. eo, circa early 1960s, about the Walking back down Eddy out by honking taxis and conTenderloin that today comes off S treet, headed toward t h e struction jackhammers. The as almost a "Dragnet" parody. Powell Street BART station, marquee at the Tea Room The- porn and prostitution. Families just can't seem to get tourists company to do a survey to de- Flashing images of neon signs you see the neighborhood in atre ("All Male Entertainment" ) have long lived here, churches to come here and spend mon- termine whether there was a blaring "PUSSY CAT Theatre" a much more accepting light. is lit but not yet open, same for long thrived, its sense of com- ey. A museum is a way to bring demand or interest in a Ten- and "LIQUOR," the narrator The homeless man and his The Power Exchange (hint: not munity evident in its embrace people in from the outside and derloin Museum, and we found intones: "Every great city of the dog are still asleep, the cops no a public utility building) a few of all ethnicities, its tolerance build on our history." out that people who'd never world seems to have an area longer surround the sprawled doors down on Jones. Cops cir- shown by its acceptance of the In its first month, the muse- been to the Tenderloin were the given over to the fleshy needs man and the kids at Boeddecle aman sprawled at a cross› gay and transgender populace um has had a steady trickle of people most afraid and were of men. In San Francisco, this ker Park still burn off energy. walk, as a woman in a Marilyn long before the Castro became visitors, nothing on a par with least likely to come," he said. area is called The Tenderloin." An older man with a limp exits Monroe T-shirt pushing a baby LGBT ground zero. the long lines for the cable "That says to us that the negaFleshy needs aside, the Ten- an SRO hotel, the Fashionette, stroller tries not to look. Where the goal might fall cars orthe ferry to Alcatraz. tive perception will change if derloin once was an entertain- and waits with you at a stopWhat's needed to fully com- short — though it's too early Which is to be expected. Shaw we can just get people into the ment hub. The Blackh awk light. He asks you for the time. prehend this teeming stteet to tell — is Shaw's hope that counts on a strong word-of- neighborhood." Jazz Club drew the likes of You tell him. He smiles. "Man, scene, this mingling of the ordi- the museum will be a tourist mouth buildup over the next In a perfect world, the mu- Miles Davis and Thelonious 11 o'dock? I got me some good nary and the sketchy, is context draw, luring visitors away from few months, hoping that peo- seum should be a draw, most- Monk — you can listen to live sleep this time." You cross the — historical and sociological obvious haunts such as Fish- ple will stop bad-mouthing the ly because it's as funky as the audio recordings — and rock street together, then he limps perspective explaining such a erman's Wharf, Golden Gate Tenderloin and actually see for neighborhood itself. It's not groups such as the Grateful off down Jones Street. rich urban milieu. Park and Union Square and themselves. afraid to highlight the less-sa- Dead; Crosby, Stills, Nash Just another morning in the "We hired a professional vory aspects of the Tenderloin and Young; Mnce; and Her- Tenderloin. Context, conveniently, can over to The 'Loin. Shaw, author be found at the corner of Eddy of "The Tenderloin: Sex, Crime and Leavenworth, where the and Resistance in the Heart of newly opened Tenderloin Mu- San Francisco," knows what Decorative seum has got it all covered. you might be thinking — is this Vinyl Wall Art Oosses A labor ofboth love and, well, dude deluded'? But he believes WALL 5 TABLE labor by lawyer and Tenderloin the neighborhood can bring Decorative Spheres Categories listed Birdhouses activist Randy Shaw, the muse- in tourist dollars. At times, he DOES NOTINCLUDESEASON4L DFPARTMENT 8 Wind Chimes um is three years in the making sounds like a super-positive ReCeramic Decor Sale Hen’s Resin FEATURING TABLETOP DECOR, and $3.5 million in the building, altor talking about a ratty fixPIATES, SERVING DISHES, 8 Ceramic Decor er-upper having so much potenPITCHERS, CUPS, SALT 4 PEPPER with donations coming from WALL 5 TABLE AND OTHE’ CERANIC DECOR local business owners, grants tial. His zealotry is so palpable, DOES NOT fNCLUDE DECOMnVE DRAWER rotLS Clocks WALLS TABL E and philanthropists. At times so contagious, that you want to during the process, Shaw ad- believe him, regardless of eviPolyresin 8 Pottery + Mirrors WALL 5TABLE •Candles,Flameless LED Candles, Decor Sale mits he thought that, with all dence to the contrary. Fragrance Warmers 8 Diffusers FEATURING RNIALS, ITEA15 IWCED$499 4 UP the challenges the Tenderloin The museum idea was Lamps & Lampshades CANDLEHOLDERS, BOXES 5 BOWLS DOES NOT INCLUDE CANDIE FX™, INCLUDES FLORAL PlANTERS, VASES faces poverty,homelessness, spawned when Shaw led a sucTFAUGHTS. VonVES,VALUEPACKSOR AND OTHER POLYRESIN 4 FRAGRANCE WAX 4 OILS Pillows, Rugs 8 Throws POTTEILY DECOR crime — what good will a mu- cessful neighborhood effort in seum do? "Maybe we should 2007 to create a National HisITEMS LABELED FALL AND CHRISTMAS ARE NOT INCLUDED IN HONE ACCENTS SALE just open up another restau- toric District for the Tenderloin. rant," he said, laughing. "But Now that the buildings, indudFall Decor,Fall PartV, we kept at it. It was an ambi- ing the dozens of SRO hotels, Fall Crafts a Fall Floral tious goal, but we made it." were protectedfrom the gen› It is a goal mostly met, true. trification sweeping the rest of DOES NOT jNCLUDE INC, The museum is a handsome, San Francisco, thoughts turned NEEDLEART,GINDr, UGHT SETS, UcHr AccEssoNEs, glass-walled space tucked into to commerce. SCOTCH TAPEOR RORAL CUSTOM DESIGNS "We asked, 'How can we scoTcH Nooocrt the ground floor of the historic 1907 Cadillac Hotel, the first of revive this community'?"' said many SROs (single room occu- Shaw, who has dedicated his pancy residences) that define career in nonprofit advocacy to the neighborhood. With archi- helping the Tenderloin and its 6E Hlnl Ueht Set Chaser Ught Set Arrangements Bushes wreaths val photos, footage, recordings residents, though he does not 150 Coun' 16 Funalon 100 Coant •Garl ands •swass •stems >’-’ 4.SS and yellowed newspaper clip- live there. 12.$9 Picks Ribbon ALL ITEMS LABELED "What are our sttengths? We pings — augmented by artifacts Oulter L Shinale HAKE IT CHRISTMAS!, Nel Syle UgMs Clips 100Count 150 Count CHRISTMAS CRAF% ranging from a vintage pinball looked at this low-income comJESSE JAHES, 4.99 9.9$ ROBERT STANLEY+ machine to peep-show view- munity with a long downturn, DOES NOT INCLUDE CRAFT COLLECTIONS GE Idde Wrt Set 6E Ulht Sela CUSTOM DESIGNS 4 CHRISTMAS BY finders from famous fan danc- and we decided our sttength is 300 Count 25 CowL CW BEAD TREASURES er Sally Rand to ticket stubs our history," Shaw said. "When 12.91 9.9$ from the Blackhawk Jazz Club we were working on the (hisI loveTpis gee/I gg — it presents a history of the toric district bid), we ran across Floral cHoosEFkoM Most categories listed ei Arsste. Tenderloin as a section of the all this great history. In the last DOESNOTIMCWDE SEA SONAL MPARTNENr 2.66 OA ITBHSlA6BED "RORALACCENT" 3435ce Floss a Thteads city far richer than just a taw- chapter of my book on the Ten~g g INCWD ES COTlON ROSS 4 y i : := › dry hub of gambling, drug use, derloin, I mentioned that we a Cachet THEhMIIKED PSCE

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@ HO B BY LOBBY.CO M


C4

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 i

~ t tt t 8 t H I rrl o

s

Photos by Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin

Cafes and galleries cluster along Main Street (U.S. Highway 191) indowntown Moab, Utah, a town of5,000 that thrives on active recreation tourism. Its motels and restaurants, outfitters and equipment dealers thrive until the season winds down in late fall. Mountain bikes are always available for sale or rent in Moab, internationally famous as a hub for a variety of outdoor sports. A popular draw for bicyclists is the Sand Flats Recreation Area, whose 13-mile Slickrock Trail crosses terrain that is abrasive when dry, slippery when met.

Even on a hazy morning, the underside of Mesa Arch

picks up the warm glow of the dawn’ s first light. Located in the Island in the Sky District of

Canyonlands National Park, the arch frames the

canyons of the upper Col› orado River.

Utah Continued from C1 Puebloan villages typically featured a ceremonial circle

Arches is a mere 5 miles from Moab (Canyonlands' entrance gate is 32 miles), and the steep climb into the park is considerably enhanced with the use of

one of Abbey's "contraptions." merely imitated those larger But there's every reason structures; thus, the "false" to leave the vehicle parked at known as a kiva. T h i s one designation. Nonetheless, I

the old Wolfe Ranch, 13 miles

rain seeped into the cracks,

expandingand breaking them as it froze in winter. Wind fin-

ished the job. "This is Arches National Park's geologic story — probably," says the park A gnarled juniper tree accents the desert landscape of Arches National Park, looking eastward toward brochure. "The evidence is the La Sal Mountains, at left in distance. The park was the scene of writer Edward Abbey’s 1968 book "Desert Solitaire," still a best-seller among environmental advocates. largely circumstantial."

felt it would have been sac- above the entrance station rilegious to enter the circle, and visitor center, to make the so I sat beside it and briefly moderately strenuous, 1.5-mile meditated before signing a log hike across a barren slickrock book left by intrepid visitors dome to visit the Delicate Arch

Delicate Arch

and turning my attention back downhill.

Moab, two days' drive from

Thunder was beginning to rumble, and I glanced lightning beginning to flash across the canyons. Gonzalez was still awaiting my return beside a scrub juniper far below. Together we made the 1.3-mile hike back to the trailhead near

Upheaval Dome. The excursion took a good hour in each direction, and we barely beat the encroaching storm back to our car.

Geological wonders The irascible environmentalist Edward Abbey, whose classic 1968 book, "Desert Solitaire: A Season in the Wilderness" remains a best-sell-

er in bookstores throughout the American Southwest, no doubt helped to motivate this

foray. "You can't see anything from a car," he wrote. "You' ve

at sunset. There are more than 2,000 arches within the 120 square

The intense beauty of Delicate Arch is anything but circumstantial. Before we h ad

even begun the journey to

Bend, Gonzalez had made this unique geological feature No. miles of A r ches National 1 on her photographic hit list. Park, along with monumental And she had designated the monoliths, grand sandstone last hour of sunlight as her tarfins, pinnacles, spires and bal- get time to visit. anced rocks perched so preWe parked at Wolfe Ranch cariously on their pedestals about 90 minutes before suntheyappear ready to topple off down. The ranch is a thing of at any moment. the past — John Wesley Wolfe, Thirty-six miles of paved a disabled Civil War veteran, roads lead to "Park Avenue," settled here in the late 1800s above which loom rocks with to graze cattle and sheep on names like the O rgan, the the abundant grasses with his Three Gossips and the Court- son Fred — but its remnants house Towers; " The W i n survive as a reminder of the pidows," with their unforgettable oneering spirit of early visitors. Double Arch soaring over the A deeply weathered one-room landscape; and the Fiery Fur- log cabin, a root cellar and a nace,ahazardousmazeofred- primitive corral provided them rock terrain where unwary a home for two decades. visitors have s o f r equently The trail from Wolfe Ranch become lost, it's now recom- crosses a boggy, intermittent mended for hiking only on a wash. A short distance past the ranger-led walk.

footbridge, a signpost indicates adetourto apanelofrock carv› ings left by Ute hunters in the 18th or early 19th century. Bighorn sheep were the prey. But this trek

tion, rising 65 feet above the surrounding landscape, is all that remains of an ancient fin

of Entrada sandstone. Scores

of mostly respectful visitors, w a s a bout speaking in a babel of languag-

arches, not etchings. We began es, were seated upon the rocks our 480-foot ascent on a rocky of the natural amphitheater but well-marked trail, then that surrounds the monument, clambered across featureless hoping for a show of color at the "slickrock" — wind-polished moment of sunset. Skies that

sandstone typical of this region were mostly doudy seemed to — marked with

o ccasional stifle that expectation.

piles of rocks (cairns) to indicate our route. Getting lost was

Continued next page

not an issue: Dozens of others

were also making the pre-twilight climb.

personnlitV which will influence t uhat tVpe oF adult mt i t w i l l grata into. Zac is n super stueat

About a mile up the slick-

rock, the steep, barren slope mellowed and briefly leveled. We moved easily across a lightly wooded stretch to a ramplike ledge, polished by myriad

4 ond 0 hnlf month old short h aired k i t te n a t u a iting h i s purr-feet familV to adopt him.

HUMAN(SOC IEIVOF CENTRALORfGON/SPCA t't1170 S.E.27th St. BEND (541) 38R-3537

hikers' boots, for the final 200

yards before emerging upon a bluff top. And there stood the Delicate

Arch.The freestanding forma›

Znc There is nothing like the cuteness of n kitten, nnd with their ittV bitty size and hilariouslV plaVful personnlities, theV make t he perfect pet. each ot our kittens has a u n ique personolitV; a

Com p l e m e n t s

H o m e I n t er i or s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o r n

But if Arches has one icon,

it's the Delicate Arch, so re-

got to get out of the god- nowned that it a ppears on damned contraption and walk, Utah state license plates. better yet crawl, on hands and There are viewpoints along knees, over the sandstone and paved roads, certainly, but through the thornbush and nothing compares to a pilcactus. When traces of blood grimage to the foot of this geobegin to mark your trail you' ll logic wonder. see something, maybe. ProbaUnlike natural b r idges, bly not." which are eroded by the flow Abbey, who lived most of his of water, arches are created adult life in the oasis town of Moab, not far from Utah's bor-

with no stream present. In this

der with Colorado, got his first

thrust upward; vertical cracks

exposure to desert life in the 1950s in Arches National Park.

formed with faulting and other

park, ancient sandstone was earth movement; water from

DISCO VERTHEVERYBESTCENTRALOREGONHASTOOFFER.: : l 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, events and activities taking place throughout Central Oregon during the year.

Who needs good vision when you can hear so well? A jackrabbit,

one of the desert’s most commonly seen animals, perks upand listens closely to the sound of intruders. Mule deer, coyotes and foxes, along with bighorn sheep and mountain lions, are other desert denizens.

The Bulletin: www.bendbulletin.corn


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

Expensesfor two

from $169 (high season), $112 (low season) Gas (round trip from Bend), 1889 Kokopelli Lodge. 72 S.100 East; miles@$3/gallon: $26.68 www.kokopel lilodge.corn,435› Meals, en route (four lunches, 259-7615, 888-530-3134. Rates three dinners): $200 from $79 (high season), $39 Lodging, en route (with friends): (low season) $0 River CanyonLodge. 71W.200 Lodging, 3 nights, Silver Sage North; www.rivercanyonlodge. Inn, Moab: $289.50 corn, 435-259-8838, 866-4866738. Rates from $120(high Dinner, BluPig BBQ,Moab: season), $50 (low season) $58.47 Silver SageInn. 840 S.Main St.; Breakfast andsacklunch, Love www.silversageinn.corn, 435Muffin Cafe, Moab:$36.84 259-4420, 888-774-6622. Rates Admission, ArchesNational from $96.50 (high season), $45 Park: $10 (low season) Dinner, MoabGrill, Moab: Slickrock Campground. 1301N. $49.97 Hwy. 191; www.slickrockcampBreakfas tandsacklunch,W ake ground.corn, 435-259-7660, 8 Bake Cafe,Moab: $24.57 800-448-8873. Cabin rates from Admission, CanyonlandsNation- $59, RV sites from $26 al Park: $10 DINING Dinner, MoabBrewery, Moab: BluPig BBQ and BluesJoint. 811 $40.71 Breakfast, JailhouseCafe, Moab: S. Main St.; www.blupigbbq. corn, 435-259-3333. Lunchand $36.16 dinner every day.Moderate TOTAL: $982.90 Desert Bistro. 36 S.100West; www.desertbistro.corn, 435259-0756. DinnerWednesdayto (All addresses inMoab, Utah) Sunday. Moderatetoexpensive INFORMATION Jailhouse Cafe.101 N.Main Moab Information Center.Center St.; 435-259-3900. Breakfast and Main streets; www.discov- Wednesday to Monday.Budget ermoab.corn, 435-259-8825, to moderate 800-635-6622. Love Muffin Cafe.139 N.Main St.; www.lovemuffincafe.corn, LODGING 435-359-6833. Breakfast and The GonzoInn. 100W.200 South; www.gonzoinn.corn, 435- lunch every day.Budget 259-2515, 800-791-4044. Rates Moab Brewery. 686 S.Main

Ifyouio

St.; www.themoabbrewery. corn, 435-259-6333. Lunch and dinner everyday.Budget to moderate Moab Grill. 540 S.MainSt.; www.themoabgrill.corn, 435259-4848. Threemeals every day. Budget to moderate Sunset Grill. 900 N.Hwy. 191; www.sunsetgrillmoab.corn, 435259-7146. Dinner Mondayto Saturday. Moderate Wake Bak 8 eCafe.57S.Main St.; www.wakeandbakecafe.net, 435-259-2420. Breakfast and lunch every day.Budget RECREATION Arches National Park. U.S.Hwy. 191 N.; www.nps.gov/arch, 435719-2299

BureauofLandManagement. Moab Field Office, 82 E.Dogwood St.; www.birn.gov/ut/st/ en/fo/moab.html, 435-259-2100

Canyonlands National Park. 2282 SWResource Blvd.; www. nps.gov/cany, 435-719-2313 Dead HorsePoint State Park. State Route313, 31 miles northwest of Moab;www.utah.corn/ stateparks, 435-259-2614 Manti La SalNational Forest. La Sal MountainLoopRoad,20 miles southeast of Moab;www. fs.usda.gov/mantilasal, 435-2597155

Sand Flats Recreation Area. Sand Flats Road, 2miles east of Moab; www.sandflats.org, 435259-2444

onAas a's erries, cove arsno ongerma et etrip By Laura Coffey New York Times News Service

For decades, the ferries of the Alaska Marine

Highway System have been home to some of the most gloriously quirky bars in the 49th state.

As the ferries, 11 of them now, make their runs along Alaska's south c entral coast, the Aleutian Islands and the Inside Passage of southeast Alaska and British Columbia, they collect all manner of pas-

sengers, from fishermen, oil workers, military per-

Passengers sit in the bar aboard the Motor Vessel Columbia, a

elers to big fans of the ferries' communal watering

ferry in the Alaska Marine Highway System, in July 2013. In April, faced with a budget deficit, the state closed the last ferry bars.

holes. The bars came with

names like the Pitch 8 deliciously divey decor, as d ense forests f l oated i n t o on Motor Vessel Columbia: view through large picture shiny lame wallpaper, gold windows, Tengs served a Naugahyde booths and steady stream of Alaskan

argue that the bars pay for themselves, especially in the summer months when the ferries are packed. Regardless of the dueling spreadsheets, though, two

dimmer bulbs across the

things are certain: The bars

Roll aboard Motor Vessel Tustumena, and some had

ceiling. But the bars are no more. In April, faced with state officials shuttered the last of the bars on the six

a special surprise in store. As the sun began its final plunge to the western horizon, its rays

leapt from behind the clouds to shine a piercing beam of light upon the arch. As the solar orb sank from view, the arch seemed to burst into flame,

gleaming an almost incomprehensible red-orange in an unlikely contrast to the distant

13,000-foot summits of the La Sal Mountains.

Nature's art gallery If Delicate Arch is the pho-

arch. Gonzalez arose well be-

fore dawn and traveled to Mesa Arch in an attempt to capture

tic move. But bar culture

is hugely important in Alaska, and fans of the ferry bars are bemoan-

that spectacle, but cloudy skies

ing the end of an era that Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin

A giant pretzel above the landscape of Arches National Parks' "Windows Section," the Double Arch rises 104 feet with a central opening of 148 feet. In all, there are more than 2,000 natural arches within the park, the largest such concentration of this geological feature On Earth.

to Interstate 70, then turn east for 5 miles and exit at Thompson, which today is little more

than a highway junction. A one-lane strip of potholed asphalt leads through the remnants of a village, including an

des the lower basins. Another popular nearby viewpoint above the Colorado abandoned motel and cafe, to is at Dead Horse Point State Park, immediately east of Can-

yonlands' north entrance, overlooking a series of pronounced gooseneck loops in the Colorado. It takes its name from natu-

ral corrals once used to round up wild horses. Canyonlands National Park has several distinct sectors: It would be easy to spend a full week (or much more) exploring. By far the most heavily visited district is Island in the Sky,

the onenearesttoM oab,where we did our exploring. West of the Green River is The Maze,

accessible only by four-wheeldrive. Northwest of the main

park area is Horseshoe Canyon, whose brilliant rock drawings require hikes of 7 miles or more. The Needles district, dominated by colorful sandstone

lasted for more than a half-century. " When t h e world is driving you to drink, you need a place to d r i nk !"

said Tony Tengs, 61, the ferry system's most sen ior b a rtender. I n

yon, and like False Kiva, you ence of the Green and Colora- may have a hard time locating do rivers, a union that culmi- them on a Utah highway map. nates in the whitewater rafters' Starting from Moab, you' ll nightmare known as Cataract want to drive north a half hour

vehicles 1,500 feet below you, on the White Rim Road that cir-

; ateBeflrhmatel

In the lower 48, where

underside of this broad, low

er activity from here, but you' ll certainly see four-wheel-drive

1-. ’ ’-7S- -S67/4

the sun rises and sets at logical intervals, the ferry bar closings might not sound like such a dras-

the La Sais, it illuminates the

Canyon. You won't see the riv-

are no longer open for busian Clubs and Cokes to chum- ness, and no one is happy my patrons who chatted and about it. "It's just so un-Alaskan to swapped stories with ease. The mood in the bar was get rid of the bars," said Capt. intimate yet somber, not un- John Falvey, the general like a funeral or a wake. No manager of the Alaska Maone played the bar's piano or rine Highway System. "We' ve two guitars; a rollicking sing- taken a lot of heat for it, too. We' ve heard it all: 'Only in along didn't feel right. Officials say closing the state government can you ferry bars will save the state lose money with bars.'" more than $750,000 a year because of high labor costs. They say they must do so to www.AgateBeachMotel.corn preserve a ferry service covPrivate, viritage,oceanfront getaway, ering 3,500 rugged miles. ff' ewp o rt, OtR .

bustling with school-age children.

Canyonlands' Mesa Arch is its sunrise counterpart. As the first light of day pecks above

end-of-the-road views. Grand View Point is well-known for the fiery sunset panoramas thatextend beyond the conflu›

Brewing Icy Bay IPAs, Miller Genuine Drafts and Canadi-

cafeterias, which are often

m e cca,

blocked the rays of dawn. Still, this arch is worth viewing any time of day, framing the La Sais from a viewpoint just a quarter mile's walk from a parking area. For many Moab visitors, Canyonlands is all about the

everyone was so distraught." As pristine islands and

ferries that had them. During summer's high travel s eason, t r avelers wanting to wet their whistles on long journeys (some as long as four days) have had to make do by brown-bagging it in their staterooms — a luxury not enjoyed by the many ferry passengers who sleep in Longtime bartenders dispute tents, deck chairs or obser- that cost-saving figure and vation lounge seats to save money. The only other authorized option for alcohol consumption is to order single-serve boxed wines and bottles of beer in cordoned-off areas of ferry

Delicate Arch is spectacular. On this evening, nature had

tographer's s u nset

Matthew Ryan Williams/The New York Times file photo

sonnel and adventure trav-

a $3.5 billion budget deficit due to falling oil revenue,

From previous page Under any conditions, the

C5

the north.

tion center and a regional hos-

pital. The latter may not sound overly important to some, but for those who come to Moab to

challenge its renowned mountain-biking routes, it's a factor to consider. Moab was first settled in 1878 as an agricultural community at one of the few natu-

ral crossings of the Colorado. It was incorporated in 1902, but didn't really boom until

the 1950s, when the growth

One small sign, posted by the of America's nudear industry Bureau ofLand Management, — power as well as weapons is the only indication that you' re made the area’ s uranium on the right route. A packed- deposits a valuable commodidirt turnout on your left, about ty. A quarter-century later, as 3t/2miles north of Thompson, is the mines were closing, tourthe best place to park and walk ism was on the rise thanks to Moab's discovery by Hollyto see the rock art. Remarkably, three separate wood film producers. native cultures are representToday it is the ultimate desed here on adjacent walls. The ert tourist town, a hub of backmost recent, perhaps as few country activity for hikers and as 150 years old, were carved photographers, rafters and petroglyphs left by the resident kayakers, rock dimbers, BASE Ute tribe. Earlier pictographs, jumpers, slack liners, and espainted with durable natu- pecially mountain bikers and all-terrain vehicle enthusiasts. ral stains from minerals and plants, were the work of the All over town, outfitters offer Fremont culture (Anasazi con- organized trips and customtemporariesabout 1,000 years ized excursions, while bicyde ago) and the Barrier Canyon and Jeep-rental operations people (more than 2,000 years are legion. The tourist season ago) winds down by November and The oldest paintings were the hotel rates drop substantially

spires, is a popular destination most remarkable: depictions of for hiking and mountain bik- giant beings with orb-like eyes, ing. It covers the park's south- antennae and long earrings, eastern reaches and may be holding squiggly canes that reached via paved highways might have been snakes. — 32 miles south from Moab

on U.S. Highway 191, then 34 Nloab recreation

after that time.

A popular destination is the Sand Flats Recreation Area just east of town, where both

bikers and ATV riders can get a taste of the desert outdoors on the famous, 13-mile

Slickrock Trail. Petrified sand dunes — abrasive when dry, miles off Route 211, is one of the Colorado River and wedged be- very slippery when wet — are most concentrated collections tween red rock cliffs, is perfect- challenging to the inexperiof ancient petroglyphs in the ly positioned as a hub for explo- enced. "Graduates" can continSouthwest: On a cliff wall of ration of this region. Although ue to hundreds of miles of other about 200 square feet, Newspa- its population is only about trails in Canyonlands-area wilper Rock displays a variety of 5,000, it is the largest commu- derness and the Manti-La Sal symbols and depictions of hu- nity in southeastern Utah, and National Forest. man figures and animals. it offers nearly every possible — John Got tberg Anderson Our favorite rock panels, service — dozens of motels and can be reached however, were in Sego Can- restaurants, a good informaat jandersonibendbuiietin.corn. miles west on State Route 211. The town of Moab itself, its Along the entrance road, 19 green valley fringed by the

I

I s

l ate

March, aboard M o tor Vessel Malaspina, Tengs was on his final run. He

joked with a big laugh before sharing more sober

II

I

reflections.

"The real secret is that peopledon’tcome to a bar to drink," he said. "They come to connect. I remember after 9/11, when planes

weren't flying, everyone was piling onto the ferries. The bar was packed. I was sloshing the sauce all day long. It was so important;

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CARS • FOOD • NIUSIC FUN FOR THE WH O LE FAM ILY


C6

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

SU D O K U

~et FR ~ et ~ ~ Unscramble these six Jumbles one letter to each square,

co mpletegri the d so

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

TH A T SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L Hoyt and Jeff Knurak

to form six ordinary words.

How’s the weather down

PESOXE Omta ynhuneCntnee Agency, uC Alt Ridm Renewed.

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ue just took

By Kerri Westenberg

on the front of the card. Last time I picked up supSoon, U.S. overseas travel- plies at Target, I didn't swipe ers' frustrations with credit my card. Instead, I slid it into a cards could ease. Visa and chip reader, since my card has M aster Card h a v e iss u ed a chip. I consider my Target an October deadline for the checkout practice before headswitch from the swipe-and- ing overseas. Target recently

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(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

mmyhuok

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HI5 HOT AIR fjALLOON HAD JU5T BEEN 5TOLEhl THE POLICEMAfj TOLP HIM THAT —-

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Now arrange the circled letters

to form the surprise answer, as

suggested by the above cartoon. PRINT YOUR ANSWERIN THE CIRCLES BELOW

DIFFICULTYRATING: *** *

* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3

SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3

DAILY BRIDGECLUB

sign cards, the standard in the

announced that all of its stores

U.S., to a chip-reading system, are set up to accept chip credit which is used nearly every- cards. where else in the world. One reason for the move: New credit cards being Chip cards are much harder sent to consumers from Visa, to hack. Credit card fraud, inAmerican Express and other cluding the Target breach, will creditcard companies have be much more difficult to pull information embedded in a mi- off. That's good news for all crochip, instead of on a mag- U.S. consumers. netic strip. How do you know if The shift could also be your card has a chip? Just look great news to overseas travfor a gold or silver square box elers, many of whom faced

inconvenience when kiosks and businesses in far-flung places refused to accept their credit cards without chips. But one issue remains: Cards

issued with a chip in the United States still require a signature.In other words, they are a

chip-and-sign card. Overseas, the standard is chip-and-pin cards, which require verification with a personal identification number instead of a signature. Before heading to lands far and wide, check to see if your card can be used with a PIN.

And, as before, be sure to carry at least some cash in the event your credit card won' t work.

Sunday, September 13, 2015

The Tate gallery By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

"Didja hear about the family that joined the club?" Cy the Cynic asked me. "A family of bridge players?" "The Tates," Cy n odded, "and there are many of them. Mr. Dick Tate is always telling his partners what system to play. Miss Emmy Tate wants to play what everyone else is playing. Mrs. Ro Tate changes her system every week." "Are there any good players?" I asked solemnly. "It's hard to tell," the Cynic said. "Aunt Meddy Tate seems to be a thoughtful player, but her partner Uncle Veggie Tate doesn't have a clue. Mrs. Jess Tate is the worst: She takes nine months to finish a deal. "As for the obnoxious side of the clan," Cy went on, "Old Miss Irri Tate snaps her cards, and Mrs. Agi Tate is always stirring up trouble." "Are all of them so unpleasant?" "Of course not," the Cynic replied. "Miss Felici Tate is qmte charming, and her cousin Facili Tate is serving on the club board." When I w atched today's deal, declarer needed to cogitate a bit longer. He took the king of clubs and banged down the ace ofdiamonds. He would have been safe nine times out of 1 0 , b u t t h i s t i m e W e st discarded, and 3NT was no longer makable. To play safe, South leads the nine

New chip credit cards may not work while traveling quite yet

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of diamonds at Trick Two. East wins and returns a club, but South can win and reach dummy twice to finesse against East's d i amond h onors, winning five diamonds, two clubs, a heart and a spade. Take a tip from Mr. Hezzie Tate: Plan before you play. Allow for a bad break in your key suit. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

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As the mercury has risen this summer, Floridians have flocked to one of the many state parks where water in the crystal-clear springs stays right around

a refreshing 70 degrees. This tradition has been drawing visitors to the Sunshine State long before Walt Disney turned a swamp into a tourism behemoth.

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Rick Kilby, author of "Finding the Fountain of Youth: Ponce de Leon and Florida's

Magical Waters," says the glass-bottom boats, along w ith th e

m a r keting s k i l l s

of the former owner, helped p ropel Silver Springs to popularity. "The glass-bottom boat

Opening lead — A J (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Red Huber I Orlando Sentinel via TNS

Manatees find refuge in the warm waters of Blue Spring State Park ln Orange City, Florida.

makes it so you have that in-

credible view that you really aren't going to see anywhere try to lure in customers — as

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD

else, and I think that did contribute to some of the popularity, n Kilby said.

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Nature as a draw

Florida.

It was in the 1850s that she found the bones of a mastodon at the bottom of one of the

Weeki Wachee Springs in Hernando County shares a

it officially became a state

54

58

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69

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the "newest" state parks in

32

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Springs State Park, one of

shows. It reached its peak around 1959 and then in 2008

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©2015 Tribune Content Agency,LLC.

in to restore it and turn it into

The Old Spanish Sugar Mill Grill and Griddle House that it is today.

Kilby says one of the most appealing things about De Leon Springs is its rich history; the pancake restaurant plus a one-room museum at the state park serve as tribute to that. "There's a continuity of human inhabitance there that, most historic sites in Central

29

43

once again, a man named Peter Schwarze decided to step

to me, makes it one of the

with enchanting mermaid

39

both the Second Seminole War and the Civil War. I n 1961, as the mill w a s scheduled to b e d e stroyed

woman named Sarah Smith

park. A man named Newton 35

ago out of necessity. The Old Spanish Sugar Mill was built in the 1830s to crush sugar cane, but was destroyed in

stepped in and converted the to Wakulla Springs near oldest tourist trap into Silver Tallahassee.

in 2013 the local government

26

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It was around the 1930s

1950s the spring was one of the most popular tourist spots in the country. nHad it not been for the mermaid show, Weeki Wachee

that Silver Springs began at- would be a natural resource tracting the attention of Hollike any other spring ... but it lywood producers who used never would have been a roadthe natural wonder as scen- s ide attraction w ithout t h e ery in films such as "Tarzan," mermaids,n Kilby said. "Creature from the Black LaThe mer maids are still goon" and "Rebel Without a flipping their fins for daily Cause." crowds, plus the park also The big screen exposure hosts riverboat cruises and likely caused the attraction animal shows. to reach a fever pitch in the About a century before 1 960s when m ore t h a n 1 state springs had glass-botmillion people would visit tom boats and g orgeous annually. Popularity even- mermaids to draw visitors tually waned and pollution in, it was natural beauty and started to affect the area, so curiosity that attracted a

similar history. It's been attracting visitors since 1947

22 25

4e eWOW!n n

f7

Hollywood discovery

would a siren — but by the

spring's basins, and as news of that discovery spread during the years ecotourists made their way to the area to get a look at the local wildlife.

Prior to Wakulla Springs becoming a state park in 1986, the spring was primarilyowned by a man named

Perry stumbled upon Weeki Wachee in 1946 and although the spring was filled with old Ed Ball, who at one point was cars and refrigerators, he saw considered one of the most its potential and decided it'd powerful men in the state, acbe the perfectspot for a new cording to Kilby. uIt wasn't in the big league business venture. Perry cleaned out the litter with (other springs) partly

Florida," he said. Just like the other springs around the state, De Leon

added attractions and gimmicks to capitalize on tourism in the post- World War II

era, which included Queenie the water skiing elephant, a jungle cruise, circus performers and other features that made De Leon Springs almost like a contemporary

theme park. Most of those attractions are long gone, so it's the make-your-own pancakes at The Old Spanish Sugar Mill Grill and Griddle House that

have arguably the biggest appeal — and yes, they are delicious. "It's kind of a quirky thing from the water then used his because of its location, but Navy skills to develop under- also Ed Ball, because he had where you get to make your water breathing hoses that so much money, he didn’ t own pancakes, it's fun for the wouldn't require swimmers to need to make it into some- kids to do. it's a real kind of wear a tank. thing that was hugely popu- throwback activity that evPerry recruited beautiful lar,n Kilby said. erybody loves," Kilby said. young women and taught A lodge and some other "Last time I w ent it w a s a them to use the hoses under amenities were built, but in two-hour wait, but I waited." water and perform ballet the early days the spring reFloridians are lucky to live and other routines all while lied on Henry the Pole Vault- in a place where the natural sporting a mermaid tail and ing Fish and an 11-foot-long surroundings offer limitless a smile. alligator named Old Joe as opportunities for e ntertainHe built t h eater seating gimmicks. The park isn't as ment, exploration and eduinto the limestone so the audi- flashy as some of the others, cation, but Kilby drives home ence would be able to see the instead it relies on its vast the point that without consermermaids asthey performed underwater caves and other vation efforts these springs underwater, and by 1947 the natural wonders to bring vis- won't sparkle forever. attraction was ready to open.

itors in.

In the early days the young women had to sprint toward the road any time they heard

At De Leon Springs in Volusia County one of the main enduring attractions

a car coming so they could

is one that was built years

uIt'd be a real heartbreak

to lose these places," he said. "There's nothing like them anywhere else in the world, n there really isn' t.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

C7

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

a n oo

e o a re a

TV TOOAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

m a rria e

7 p.m. on10, "Bob’s Burgers"

—CanGene(voice of Eugene

TV SPOTLIGHT

point," Jeff Schaffer explained. and that's a great thing. I think "It was the idea that, like, we it's nice to get out of, sort of, don't want a shrew, we don' t constraints of what people exwant someone saying, 'You pect 60 minutes or 30 minutes can't do this,' or if you can' t, of entertainment to look like," there's a reason." Jackie Schaffer said of the But Jenny's neither a Cool trend in more sober half-hour Girl, the female archetype shows like "Girls," and in houridentified by Gillian Flynn who long programs like "Orange subsumes her own interests Is the New Black," that rely as and personality to please men, much on jokes as on drama for nor a pushover. She' ll let Kevin their appeal. "But I think for us, we just watch porn — if he does it on the treadmill. Her passion for want it, tonally, to feel like

"The League" Wednesdays 10 p.m., FXX

By Alyssa Rosenberg The Washington Post

" The Le a gue," FX' s long-runningcomedy about a group of friends who play fantasy football together, began its final season Wednesday night on partner network FXX with

a season that will touch on the NFL's Deflategate scandal,

football's ongoing concussion crisis and changes in the way people play fantasy, now that the hobby's become a massive business for sites such as Yahoo. But while I' ll miss the series'

bizarre ongoing jokes and its cockeyed look at America's last

remaining national religion, the thing I' ll regret most about the passing of "The League" is the departure from our screens of Jenny (Katie Aselton) and Kevin MacArthur (Stephen Rannazzisi), one of television's most happily un-fraught husband-and-wife teams. In putting a married couple at the center of the series,

"The League" anticipated both a new strain of TV romantic comedies that suggest that the

real drama is building a relationship, not finding one, and a group of shows, including FX's "Married" and HBO's

"Togetherness," which shares a star, Mark Duplass, with "The

football and her talent for fan-

what we intended to do," to be

tasy are absolutely genuinea consistently funny, relatively Jon Lajoie, from left, Katie Aselton and Stephen Rannazzisi partic› in fact, she's much more invest- light comedy about "the kinds ipate in "The League" panel at the FX Summer TCA Tour. Aselton ed than her husband. Jenny's of friends you would want tobe and Rsnnszzisi play Jenny snd Kevin MacArthur on the show while greatarc in the series isfrom around, people who are honest Lajoie plays Kevin’s brother Taco. the sidelines of the League to a and people who are naughty at member who competes just as times, and entertaining." hard as any of the men, and on And while that tone will re’There’s a really funny concept occasion, behaves just as badly. main in the final season, the League." "She lost all moral high Schaffers do want to move But unlike this latter group and let's work it through.'" of shows, which tend toward And at a time when many ground as the seasons have their charactersforward, in› a drab view of marriage, "The dramas tend to put women in gone on," Jeff Schaffer noted. cluding Pete (Duplass), who League" is decidedly more peril, "The League" takes a "I think when you pretend that began the series by getting optimistic. Jenny and Kevin' s decidedly different approach. you have cancer to get out of divorced, while exploring the marriage is the closest thing "We' re not saying, 'Oh, she has baking for your child's bake ways in which fantasy football the often-biting atmosphere to go through this this season,'" sale, you are right on par with has changed in the years since of "The League" has to a safe Jackie Schaffer, Jeff s wife and Ruxin (the conscience-less the series began. "You' ve got people that want space, rather than a source of co-creator, told me. "That's not lawyer played by Nick Kroll)," drama or pain. something that we' re interest- Jackie Schaffer chimed in. to be committed and people "They may fight or try to ed m. For all that Jenny and Kev- that don't want to be commitbeat each other and stuff, but Neither does "The League" in's relationship subtly defies ted on the show. And as we get you know that they' re a real- fall into one of the classic sit- convention, "The League" has to the last season, we' re going ly solid couple and they' re in com traps: making Jenny the persisted for so long in part to play with that. And also now love," "The League" co-creator death of fun in an ensemble full by sticking to formula and overlay what's going on in the Jeff Schaffer told me when of goofy dudes who often act as avoiding some of the other world of fantasy, which people we met to discuss the series in though they' re still teenagers. trends that have swept half- used to be very devoted to their "We had a mandate as we hour shows since the series leagues. Now, there are weekly August. "None of the stories, they' re not built that way. We were coming up with the char- premiered. fantasy leagues, which require don't build stories to create acters, very, very clear that "Not every half-hour show is no commitment at all," Jeff drama. We build stories about Jenny should always have a a comedy; it's really changed, Schaffer said. Richard Shotwell /The Associated Press

Unce uses ina ro riate an ua e

MOVIE TIMESTOOAY There may be an additional fee for 3-O and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change atter press ti me. t

Dear Abby:I was at my brotherin-law's house with my husband and our 4-year-old daughter. We were playing our weekly video game, and when my brother-inlaw won a round, he shouted a ra-

Dear Abby: I am a 24-year-old paring the food, preparing the yard waitress who needs advice on how and deaningup Iwound up with tohandleoldermen when they con› $700 chargedon my credit card.I

cial epithet. I asked him not to use it in front of my little

I feel sorry for their embarrassed

tinually flirt, touch and even ask for

have been out of work for the last

hugs while Iim serving them dinner. three months and can't afford this. I work in an upscale dinner house. I know tradition is that the father of the bride pays for the reception

wives and girlfriends girl because ifshe re› who witness this dispeats it at school, she gusting behavior. DFP,R could be suspended, Waitresses have to ABBY and we don't use that put up with this kind kind of language in of thing for tips. Is our family. there anything I can Now he claims I "disrespected do to prevent it and still receive a him" and I should apologize to him reasonable tip for good service? because it was his house and he can — Sick and Tired in California say what he wants. He doesn't have Dear Sick and Tired:Yes. Keep children of his own. your sense of humor. Smile a lot, Who is right here'? Is it OK to laugh when appropriate and stand say whatever you want because out of reach. Most of these men are it's your house, or is it better to use harmless. They are trying to be some censorship when there are friendly. Those who you find overtchildren around? ly offensive, you should turn over — Wondering in Wyoming to another server. If the requests for Dear Wondering: You did the hugs continue, talk to your manager right thing. Your brother-in-law for guidance in handling them. should watch his mouth when your Dear Abby:My fiancee's son is daughter is present. Because he' s gay andrecently married.He is 30 unwilling to do that, limit her expo- and his spouse is 24. They don' t

and the father of the groom pays for the drinks. In a gay wedding, is the

sure to him. And if she hears him do

the Book of Life and enjoy another

have much money, so I hosted their

new tradition that Mom's boyfriend

pays while both dads don't spend a cent? Both of them work. I'm con-

sidering sending them each a polite bill for $300. What do you suggest? — Modern Man in Pennsylvania

Dear ModernMan: I suggest that you andyour fiancee take care of the bill, and ask the grooms to pitch in what they can afford. I don' t

think it would be fair or appropriate to expect the new in-laws to pay for anything that wasn't clearly agreed upon before the wedding reception took place. To My Jewish Readers: Sundown starts Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. This is the be-

ginning of our time of solemn introspection. "Leshana tova tikatevu" — may each of us be inscribed in

it again, make sure to explain to her wedding reception in my backyard. good year. that the expression is one you do not In addition to all the work involved — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.corn want her to ever repeat. — getting the food and drinks, pre- or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 ANT-MAN(PG-13)12:15, 3,6:05, 9:20 • UNGALLO CON MUCHOS HUEVOS (PG-13)1:15,3:45, 6:35, 9:20 THE GIFT(R) 3:35, 6:20, 9:10 INSIDE OUT(PG)12:40 JURASSICWORLD(PG-13) 12:15, 9:45 JURASSICWORLD3-0 (PG-13)3:15,6:50 • MAD MAX:FURY ROAD IMAX3-D (R)1,4,7:30,l0:20 THE MANFROMIj.N.C.L.E. (PG-13) 1:05, 3:50, 6:35, 9:25 MINIONS(PG) 12:15, 2:35 MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROGUENATION(PG-13) 12:35, 3:40, 7:25, 10:30 NO ESCAPE (R) 12:50, 3:25, 7:35, 10:10 THE PERFECT Gijv (PG-13)12:30, 3:05, 7:15, 9:45 RICKI AND THEFLASH (PG-13) 6:25, 9:15 STRAIGHTOUTTACOMPTON(R) 12:05, 12:10, 3:15, 3:20, 6:30, 7:20, 9:50, 10:35 TRAINWRECK (R) I2:55, 3:55, 7:45,10:40 THE TRANSPORTER REFUELED(PG-13) 12:20, 2:45, 5:15, 8, 10:25 THE VISIT(PG-13)noon, 2:30, 7, 9:30 • A WALKIN THEWOODS (R)12:05,3:20,7:20,10:35 • WAR ROOM(PG)12:45,3:30,6:45,9:40 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

SEPT. 13, 2015:This yearyour penchant for detail will be heightened. You are entering the first year of a 12-year luck cycle, which is often the most fortunate one. Like a cat, you will land well no matter what. If you are single, your charisma draws others toward you. Hopefully, you will be able to separate the real thing from thefriv›

Btsrs show theklntt o ious attractions of ttsy you’0 hove yo u exPerience. If ** * * * D ynamic you are attached, ** * * p ositive yo u r significant ** * Average oth e r can't help ** Bo-so but respond to your magnetism. * Difficult Though you will experience a lot this year, remember to keep your significant other in the loop. LIBRA is always kind to you, but he or she wonders about

yourfussiness. ARIES (March21-April 19)

** * You might have stretched yourself too thin. Stop for a while, and do something just for you. A partner could be very upset or cold. If you can avoid digging in and finding out what is wrong immediately, you might be better off. Tonight: A late surge of energy and fun.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

consider becoming arecluse oncemore, as you could be having some difficulty luring in a certain person or creating the type of afternoon you are dreaming of. Tonight: Suddenly,alovedone responds.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * M ake your important calls in the morning. You could be getting into a Sunday routine of calling those whom you don't see often. You' ll find this ritual to be rewarding, especially as you care a lot about these people. Tonight: Honor the fact that tomorrow is a workday.

LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** * You might be a bit excessive in some area of your life. As a result, a roommate or family member could appear to be closing down or walking away from you. This person's actions are likely to trigger a strong reaction. Use a bit of self-discipline.

** * *

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 DOPE (R) 9 FANTASTICFOUR(PG-13) 6 SHAijN THESHEEPMOVIE (PG)11:30 a.m., 2:30 • Younger than 2t may attend aii screenings if accompanied byalegalguardian.

You can be a tough nut to crack

might decide to pull back and say little right now. Of course, you realize that doing this is likely to evoke quite a reaction from others. Is this the response you want? Think again. Tonight: All smiles.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * An older friend or relative seems to beevenmore demanding than usual. Reachoutto a loved onewhom you care a lot about, and ask him or her for some feedback on how to go about dealing with this person. Tonight: Dn call.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * * M ake plans that allow you to finally relax, as you have had a lot on your mind lately. Choose a movie or go off to a concert. Be sociable, but create the space you feel you might like to have at this point. Tonight: Stay mum about a

particular happening. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)

** * * Remain responsive to a loved one. You care a lot about this person, and ** * * You have a unique style and way you nearly always have a great time together. This individual might be unusually of handling others that comes out. You talkative at this point. Listen well, as he or rarely cross boundaries orstep onanysheneedsto sharesome news withyou. one's toes. However, you might want to TAURUS (April 20-May20) Be spontaneous! Tonight: Hang out. ** * * You might be getting the cold reachoutto someone who seems to be shoulder from a friend. Do you even know very closed down. Tonight: Play it cool. PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) for sure what offended this person or ** * * Others might seem unusually LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) where the attitude is coming from? Give ** * * Your sense of direction will be overconfident right now. You love being this person some time to chill out, and around your friends, but they could be very important, especially since you you' ll find warming up the connection to particularly demanding. This situation is might decide to take off alone on a hike be easier. Tonight: Leap out the door. only temporary; let it go. The New Moon or drive. You could end up somewhere GEMINI (May 21-June20) you never would have imaginedyou’d be. emphasizes the important people in your ** * Your way of handling others Don'tforgetyour GPS or a map. Tonight: life. Tonight: Go with the moment. doesn't seem to be working. You might Nap first, then decide. © King Features Syndicate

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

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9 p.m. on AMC, "Fear the Walking Dead" As the fall of Los Angeles continues, Travis

(Cliff Curtis) narrowly escapes a violent riot with his ex-wife, Liza (Elizabeth Rodriguez) and their son, Chris (Lorenzo James Henrie). Afterward, they take refuge with Ofelia Salazar (Mer-

cedes Mason)andher immigrant parents: Daniel (Ruben Blades), a barber, and Griselda (Patricia Reyes Spindola), a devout Catholic who sees the zombie

apocal ypseasGod’sjudgment on a sinful world. 10 p.m. on 6, "CSI: Cyber" A gem robbery and related murder in Detroit puts Avery (Patricia Arquette) and her team on the probe of a coinciding power outage in "Bit by Bit." As it turns out, the jewels weren't the real reason

for the heist. Gueststars include Tony Amendola —who's also been seenas Geppetto on "Once Upon aTime" — andLucas Kerr ("Daysof OurLives" ). 10:40 p.m. on HBO,"Doll 5 Em" — Real-life besties Dolly Wells and Emily Mortimer star as fictionalized versions of themselves in this sitcom, which devoted Season 1 to friction that

arose whenDolly camefrom

London to visit her movie-star friend in Hollywood and tried to work as her personal assistant. In Season 2, the sadder-but-wis-

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9 p.m. on 2 9, "The 2010 Miss America Competition" Chris Harrison (" The Bachelor" ) and Brooke Burke-Charvet host the competition — which stresses that it's about scholarship, though yes, there also are swimsuits — as it marks its 95th anniversary at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY,

Mirman) retain his love of music? That's a big question after he's ejected from the band he founded in "Itty Bitty Ditty Committee." Tina and Louise (voices of Dan Mintz and Kristen Schaal), two of those who still are in the group, try to make sure Gene doesn't give up his pursuit of all things melodic. Linda (voice of John Roberts) has a rash that no one else in the household wants to face — in every sense. Another episode follows.

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GB! Magazine

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Scoreboard, D2 ML B , D3 Golf, D5 Sports in brief, D2 College Tennis, D5 Motor sports, D2 f o o tball, D4-5 Preps, D6 THE BULLETIN

© www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

BOXING

PREP CROSS-COUNTRY

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Mayweather ties Marciano’s record

At the 1st meet of the season, there was

LAS VEGAS — Both

dominant anddefensive, Floyd MayweatherJr. used all the tricks learned in a19-year procareer Saturday night to take a lopsided 12-round decision overAndre Berto and retain hiswelterweight titles in whathe insists was his final fight. Mayweather ran his perfect record to 49-0, tying a mark set by the late heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano. By the late rounds, Mayweather was both talking to Berto (30-4) and taunting him, secure in the knowledge he was winning big against the 18-1 underdog. The ringside scorecards reflected Mayweather's dominance, with one judge scoring it 120-108, giving him every round. Theother scores were 118-110

,l see

IP

rer

Al Gcldis /The Associated Press

ne

Oregon’s Vernon Adams Jr., center, is brought

001

down by Michigan State’s Chris Frey (23) and

l.

Demetrius Cooper during the first quarter Saturday night in East Lansing, Michigan.

k-.

Ducks miss catch, get sacked, lose

.. and a water buffalo

and 117-111.

Mayweather earned another $32 million for the fight. — The Associated Pass

The Associated Press

EAST LANSING, Mich. — Vernon Adams threw

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

deep down the left sideline, and for a moment, it looked

as if Oregon might steal this game with a dramatic late rally. Instead, the pass sailed too long for Byron Marshall, who had beaten his defender.

PAC-12 No. 5 Michigan St. 31 No. 7 Oregon 28 No. 8 Southern Cal Idaho

"Wide openreceivers.I have to be better than that. I

have to make those throws,"

No. 13 UCLA UNLV

No. 22 Arizona Nevada

Adams said. "It was a

chancetowinthegame. That could have changed everything if I would have put it right on him."

20

Adams and the seventh-ranked Ducks fell just

Michigan Oregon St.

short at the end, losing 31-28 to No. 5 Michigan State on

as tngton

Sacramento St.

0

olorado M assachusetts

48

a shington St. Rutgers

Nextup

By Noah Trister

Saturday night. SeeDucks /D4

Georgia St. at No. 7 Oregon When:11 a.m. Sept.19 TV:Pac-12

Inside Oklahoma rallies on the road to stun Tennessee in double OT. Top25 roundup,D5

14 7 34

alifornia S an Diego St.

7

tanfor C entral Florida

1

7 Photos by Jce Kline /The Bulletin

Cal Poly

5 21

Ranch Stampede cross-country meet Saturday morning in Prineville. TOP RIGHT:Summit’s Shane Norton leads a pack through a mud pit. ABOVE: Mountain View’s Ciara Jones jumps over the bones of a water buffalo carcass while Crook

TOP 25 38 0

Hawaii

TOP LEFT: Mountain View’s Kennedy Thompson, center, runs through a water hazard at the Jere Breese Memorial

N o.2Ala ama 3 Middle Tennessee 10 No. 3 TCU

0

County’s Maggie Kasberger approaches.

A unique experiencein Prinevile greets runnersfor the season opener Bulletin staff report PRINEVILLE — Loping across

O O

See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: hendhnlletin.corn/sports/highschool

season) off with a good, strong win in a race is a big confidence-builder so that he can have 'his season.'" Bend High’s HunterGreene placed

Stephen F. Austin 7

the High Desert in temperatures

No. 4 Baylor Lamar

reaching into the 90s, Central Oregon cross-country teams kicked off the season in adventurous fashion Saturday. Runners trudged through swampy areas and hurdled the remains of a water buffalo along

•Mountain View boyscomebacktobeat Crescent Valley. Prep roundup,Dg seconds. For Hoffmann, who has

Crook County's Liam Pickhardt

the 5,000-metercourse atthe Jere

placed in the top five at the past two

Breese Memorial Ranch Stampede atBreeseRanch astheybegan their

Class 5A state championship meets, Saturday was a positive jump-start

and Sam Santiagowent 3-4,and Summit's Erik Ingman and Cole

quests toward conference and poten-

for the season ahead.

tially state championships. Bend High's Caleb Hoffmann

respectively. The Storm placed second as a

the whole season together," said

team with 57 points, followed by

Bend coach Lisa Nye, noting that Hoffmann has battled injuries each

Crook County (69), Mountain View (78), Madras (209) and La Pine (288). SeeX-Country/D6

31

Jacksonville St. 20 (OT) Virginia

27

Vanderbilt

14

No. 11 Florida St.

South Florida

14

paced the boys field in 17 minutes,

48.1 seconds to defeat runner up Adi Wolfenden of Mountain View by 32

Inside

fifth with a time of 19:07, while Maitiu Millar-Sanchez, Trevor Wilbur and Jacob Rowley rounded out the top 10 to help the Lava Bears top

the team standings with 33 points.

"I think it's going to help him put

of the past two seasons. "To start (the

Rene placed sixth and seventh,

10

No. 16 xas A8 Ball St. 0.

23 Is s l ssl pi

Fresno St.

21

oledo No. 18 Arkansas 12 No.19 Oklahoma 31 No. 23Tennessee24 (20T) BYU

N o. 20 Boise St. 2 4 Arkansas St.

Bulletin wire reports

20

-

Next up

The goal was to send the Big House into silence.

1

No. 25 Mississippi St.19 Tulane

Beavers' chances sail awaywith bad punt snap ANN ARBOR, Mich.

A ppalachian St. 1 0 No. 14 LSU

Tony Ding / The Associated Press

Oregon State quarterback Seth Collins is sacked byMichigan's Desmond Morgan inthe fourth quarter Saturday in Ann Arbor, Michi› gan. The Beavers lost 35-7.

Oregon State had the

MAjOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

100,000 or so Michigan fans quieted through much

Pitchingworkloadsconcernasplayoffs approach By Noah Trister

procedure has become more

The Associated Press

common, its aftermath is still

When it comes to all this fraught with anxiety — and talk about inning limits, Tom- the delicate challenge of manmy John is a skeptic. aging a pitcher's workload is "Nobody knows," he said. almost certain to affect this "What's too many'?" year's postseason. It was John, of course, The issue flared up again whose recovery from a recently when Matt Harvey groundbreaking elbow opindicated he had been aderation in 1974 set the stage vised by his doctor not to pitch for so many other pitchers more than 180 innings this to come back from similar season. injuries. But although the See Pitching/D6

with an impressive early touchdown drive and some tough defense. But the sec-

ond half was a little louder. A disastrous end to the

Pennantraces AMERICANLEAGUE Division W LLead Kansas City 84 57 10t/2 Toronto 82 60 4t/2 Houston 76 66 1t/t Wild card W L G D New York 77 64 +3 Texas 74 67 Minnesota 7 3 68 1 Los Angeles7 2 69 2 Cleveland 6 9 70 4

of the first half Saturday

NATIONALLEAGUE Division W L Lead S t. Louis 88 54 3 LosAngeles 81 60 Flt N ew York 81 61 9 / t

W ildcard W L G B Pittsburgh 85 56 +3 Chicago 82 59 San Fran. 74 68

8t/2

Washington 71 70 11

first half for the Beavers

dramatically turned momentum, andthe Wolver› ines took advantage.

Michigan dominated both sides of the ball in the second half and pulled away to hand Oregon State a 35-7 defeat in the much-anticipated home de-

but of Jim Harbaugh as the Wolverines' head coach.

SeeBeavers/D4

San Jose St. at Oregon St. When:5 p.m. Sept. 19 TV:Pac-12

Inside Washington State stuns Rutgers late. Pac-12 roundup,D4


D2

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKB DARD

TODAY SOCCER England, Sunderland vs. TottenhamHotspur Germany, 1899Hoffenheim vs. Werder Bremen England, Leicester City vs. Aston Villa Germany, Schalke04 vs.Mainz Men's college, Indiana atPennSt. NWSL, semifinal, Chicago vs. KansasCity Women's college, Arizona St. vs. TexasTech Women's college, Wisconsin at Kentucky Women's college, Pepperdine at Arizona MLS, NewEngland atToronto MLS, Sporting KansasCity at Orlando City Men's college, UCRiverside at UCLA NWSL, semifinal, Seattle vs. Washington

Time TV/Radio 5:30 a.m. NBCSN 6 :30 a.m.

FS 1

8 a.m. NBCSN 8 :30 a.m. F S 1 10 a.m. Big Ten 10:30 a.m. FS1 11 a.m. Pac-12 noon SEC 1:30 p.m. Pac-12 2 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. FS1 5 p.m. P a c-12 6 :30 p.m. F S 1

BASEBALL

10 a.m. 1 p.m. 5 p.m.

MLB, Toronto at N.Y.Yankees MLB, Colorado at Seattle MLB, KansasCity at Baltimore

TBS Roo t E S PN

FOOTBALL

NFL, KansasCity at Houston

1 0 a.m. CB S 10 a.m. Fox 1:25 p.m. CBS 5:20 p.m. NBC

NFL, Seattle at St. Louis

NFL, Tennessee atTampa Bay NFL, N.Y.Giants at Dallas GOLF

Web.corn Tour, Hotel Fitness Championship

noon

Golf

TENNIS

U.S. Open, men's final HORSE RACING Jockey ClubTour, Woodbine

1 p.m.

E S PN

1 :30 p.m. F S 1

MONDAY SOCCER England, West HamUnited vs. Newcastle United noon

N B CSN

FOOTBALL

NFL, Philadelphia at Atlanta NFL, Minnesota at SanFrancisco

3:55 p.m. ESPN 7:15 p.m. ESPN

BASEBALL

MLB, Houston atTexas

5 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB, L.A. Angels at Seattle

MLB Roo t

Listingsarethemost accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TYor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF CYCLING Aru takeS COmmand, eyeS vuelta viCtOry FabioAru of Italy got the help he neededfrom his Astana teammates to finally break Tom Dumoulin and take the lead of the Vuelta a Espanaon its penultimate stage Saturday. Barring an injury or incident during the traditional arrival to Madrid on the 21st and final stage today, Aru is set to win the three-week GrandTourafter turning a six-second deficit to Dumoulin into a commanding advantage. Spaniard Ruben Plaza brokeaway early and rode solo to win the 109.2-mile mountainous ride from San Lorenzo de ElEscorial to Cercedilla. Bend's lan Boswell, of TeamSky, finished 72nd Saturday and is 70th overall.

SOCCER SOuth AmeriCan Chief daCkS COPa Centenario in U.S.

— The host confederation for next year's Copa America Centenario in the United States still hopes the tournament can be played despite the indictment of nine soccer officials and five businessmen on corruption charges. CONCACAF said Saturday it is trying to work through issues that will allow the tournament to be played. The event is scheduled for June 3-26, 2016, with 10 nations from South America and six from CONCACAF,but no details have been announced since U.S. federal indictments were unsealed in May.

BASKETBALL Hornets’ Linsayssecurity didn’t delieve he wasplayer — New Charlotte Hornets playerJeremy Linsays hehadtrouble convincing a security guard that he is anNBAplayer whenheshowed upat the team's Charlotte arena.TheNBA's first American player of Chinese or Taiwanesedescent, Lin tweeted about the encounter Saturday afternoon: "Went to theHornets arena for 1st timeandtried convincing security im a player.Shesaid, 'what team?!?' ¹Iiterally" A Hornets spokesmansaidtheteam had nocomment.

TENNIS EX-tenniS Star Blake: Fire NYCOffiCer

Theformer tennis

star who wastackled during a mistaken arrest by aNewYork City police officer says the officer involved should lose his job. James Blake told TheAssociated Press on Saturday that Officer James Frascatore's history of excessive-force complaints means he shouldn' t "everhaveabadgeoragunagain."Frascatorehasbeennamed in several civil lawsuits over excessive force andhasbeenthe subject of multiple civilian complaints. — From wire reports

ON DECK

GOLF

Tuesday Boyssoccer:Ridgeview atTheDalles,4p.m.;Sum› mit at Liberty,4:30p.m.; McKayat Redmond, 4 p.m.; CentralLinnat LaPine,4:30p.m. Girls soccer:TheDalles atRidgeview,4p,mcBend JV at LaPine,4:BOp.m. Volleyball:BurnsatRidgeview,6:30 p.mcRedmond atTheDages,6p.mcCrookCountyatMadras,6 p.m.; Sisters atSutherlin, 6:30p.m.;Culverat Irrigon, 6:15p.m.;Central Christian atPaisley, 4p.m.; Gilchrist atChiloquin,5:15p.m. Girls water polo:Ridgeviewat Bend

LPGAT OLII’

Wednesday Boys soccer:LaPineatCrookCounty,4:30p.m. Cross-country: Ridgeview,Madras,CulveratSFOktoberfestInvitational inSilverFags,TBD Volleyball:SouthWascoCounty atTrinity Lutheran, 5 p.m. Thursday Boyssoccer:SandyatRidgeview,4;30p,mcRed› mond atBarlow, 7 p.mcTheDagesat Madras,4 p.m.; SistersatSweet Home,4:30p.m. Girls soccer:Ridgeviewat Sandy, 4:30p.m.;Summit at HoodRiverValley, 4:30 p.m.;Wilsonvige atBend, 430pm.;MadrasatTheBelles,4pm.;CrookCoun› tyatLaPine,3p.m.;SweetHomeatsisters,a:Bgp.m. Volleyball:Summitat Redmo nd, 6:30 p.m.; Bend at Ridgeview,6:30p.m.; MolagaatCrookCounty, 6p.m.;Corbettat Madras,6 p.m.; Sweet Homeat Sisters,6:30p.m.; Jeffersonat LaPine, 5:30 p.m.; Culverat Dufur,6:15p.m. Girls water polo:Ridgeviewat Madras Friday Football:Bendat EaglePoint, 7 p.mc Craterat MountainView,7 p.m.; Redmond at Baker, 7p.m.; Ridgeview at HoodRiverValey, 7 p.m.; Summit at Ashland,7p.m.;SistersatCrookCounty, 7p.m.;Madras atStaylon,7 p.m.;Lakeviewat LaPine, 7p.m.; Santiam atCulver,7p.m.;Powersat Gilchrist, 4p.m. Boys soccer: HoodRiverValley atSummit, 4p.m. Volleyball: TrinityLutheranat Central Christian,5 pm.

The EvianChamp ionship saturday Evian Res ort GoIf Club, Evian-las-Baina,Franca Yardage:6,47O;Par. 71 Third RouIIII a-amateo 66-67-70 —203 Mi HyangLee 66-72-66 —204 Lexi Thomso pn 69-69-67 —205 LydiaKo 69-65-7I —205 MorganPressel 72-66-BB —206 AmyYang BB-BB-70 —206 ShanshanFeng BB-67-7I —206 NicoleBrochLarsen Eun-Hee Ji 67-73-67 —207 7f-67-69—207 lheeLee Lee-Anne Pace 7f-72-65—20B BB-72-BB —20B MinjeeLee 67-75-BB —2fg GerinaPiler 70-70-70 —210 CharleyHull 7f-BB-7I —210 KarineIcher Pornanong Phatlum 67-71-72 —2fg PernillaLindberg 70-73-BB —2fI Mirim Lee 7f-71-69 —2fI JenniferSong 70-72-69 —21I Michege Wie 75-66-70 —21I InbeePark 72-69-70 —211 ThidapaSuwannapura 75-70-67 —212 Julilnkster 76-BB-BB —212 Emily K.Pedersen 7B-Tf-BB —212 Jin Young Ko 69-7S-70 —212 AlisonLee 70-70-72 —212 Xi Yu Lin 7f-BB-73 —212 Sei Young Kim BB-7)-73—212 I.K. Kim

ChegaChoi StacyLewis HyoJooKim CandieKung

7f-67-74—212 72-72-69 —213 73-70-70 —2)3 73-69-7I — 2)3 7f-7I-TI —2)3 70-69-74 —213 74-70-70 —214 BB-74-72 —2)4 73-74-BB —2)5 76-70-69 —2)5 73-72-70 —215 7f-74-70—215 70-70-75 —215 75-71-70 —216 74-72-70 —216 72-7S-Tf —216 70-74-72 —216 7f-7)-74 —216 73-74-70 —217 73-74-70 —217 73-73-7I — 217 72-73-72 —217 72-70-75 —2)7 72-75-7I — 2)B 75-7)-72 —2)B 74-72-72 —2fff 72-74-72 —2fff 75-70-73 —2)B 73-72-73 —2)B 72-73-73 —2)B 69-76-73 —21B 76-BB-74 —21B 72-72-74 —21B 75-BB-75 —21B BB-73-77—21B 75-72-72 —219 74-73-72 —219 70-77-73 —220 77-69-74 —220 73-73-74 —220 7f-75-74—220 72-73-75 —220 7f-74-75—220 74-73-74 —221 76-67-7B —221 73-73-76 —222 72-73-77 —222 75-72-76 —223 73-71-BO —224 77-70-79 —226

INJURY REPORT GREENSAY PACKERS atCHICAGO BEARS — PACKERS; QUESTIONABLE;LBSam Barrington (ankle), S MorganBurnett (calf). PROBABLE: WR Randall Cobb(shoulder). BEARS:OUT: LB Sam Acho (iffness),CBTracy Porter (hamstring). QUESTIONABLE: LBJonathan Bostic (ankle), WRAlshon

Jeffery(calf), WREddie Royal (hip), WRMarquess Wilson (hamstring).PROBABLE: TJermonBushrod (back), QB JimmyClausen(head), NTEddie Goldman(head).

KANSASCITY CHIEFS at HOUSTON TEXANS CHIEFS:QUE STIONABLE: G Jeff Allen (knee), TEricFisher(ankle). PROBABLE: WRJason Avant (hip), WR Chris Conley(knee), TEDemetrius

Harris (foot), TETravis Kelce(ankle), LBJoshMauga (Achiffes),DERakeemNunez-Roches(ankle), DT Dontari Poe(lowerback), WRDe'AnthonyThomas (calf), WR Albert Wilson(shoulder). TEXANS: OUT: SLonnieBaffentine (knee), RBArian Foster (groin), LB MikeMohamed (calf), G Xavier Su'a-Filo (calf), LB Car losThompson (concussion).PROBABLE:T DuaneBrown(hand), LBJadeveon Clowney (knee), DT ChristianCovington(shoulder), LBBenardrick McKinney (knee). CLEVELANDBROWNS atNEW YORK JETS BROWNS: OUT: RBRobert Turbin (ankle). QUE STIONAB LE: WRDwayneBowe(hamstring), CBJustin Gilbert(hipflexor), LBBarkevious Mingo(knee), LB NateOrchard(back), CBK'WaunWiliams (abdominal). PRO BABLE: CBPierre Desir (concussion), CB Joe Haden (hip), RBDukeJohnsonJr. (concussion), LB Christian Kirksey(groin), QBJohnnyManziel (right elbow),WRMarion Moore(rib), T Mitchell Schw arlz (thumb). JETS:OUT: QBGeno Smith (jaw). PRO BABLE: DEStephenBowen (knee), GJames Carpenter back), GWilie Colon(knee), CBAntonio Cromartie hip), LBErinHenderson(knee), TBen Ijalana(knee), RB ChrisIvory(knee),SJaiquawn Jarrett (shoulder), WRJerem y Kerley (concussion), LBLorenzoMauldin knee), WR Devin Smith (ribs), DELeonard Wiliams calf). INDIANAPOLISCOLTS atBUFFALO BILLS

America’s Line Home team inCAPS

Favorite Open Current OAI Underdog NFL Today Packers BH 7 49 TEXAN S I I 4f JETS Colts 3 2H 4 5H D olphins 3 H 3H 4 3 H Panthers 3 H 3 4I H Seahawks 3H 4 41H C ARDINALS 2H 2H 4 BH CHARG ERS 2H 3 46 B UCCA EE N RS 3 3 41 H Bengals S H 3 ASH BRONCOS 4H 4 H 4B COWBOYS 5H 6 5I H Monday Eagles 3 3 55H FALCONS V ikings ZH ZH 41 H 49ER S

MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup FederatedAuto Parts4OO Saturday At RichmondInternational Raceway Richmond,Va. Lap length: .75miles

(Start position inparentheses) f.(2) MattKenseth, Toyota, 400laps,I 49.7rating, 4B points,$262,451. 2.(4) KyleBosch,Toyota, 400,122.6,43, $203,716. 3. (I) JoeyLogano,Ford, 400, 1198, 42,Sf79,483. 4.(2I) AricAlmirola,Ford,400,94.1,40, S15B,236. 5. (29) DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,400,92.4, 39, S)30,950. 6. (25) DennyHamlin, Toyota, 400, 114.1, 39, S)16,915. 7.(23)JeffGordon,Chevrolet, 400,95.4,37,$13B,BOI. B.(3) Brad Keselowski, Ford,400,I07.6,36,$)35,331. 9. (9) JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 400, 104.2,35, $133,601. fg. (26)GlintBowyer Toyota,400,BI 2,34,$)2352a I f. (7) CarlEdwards,Toyota, 400,97.6, 33,SBB,840. 12. (If) KyleLarson,Chevrolet, tmt,931,32, $1)4,B9B. f3. (31) JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 399,B7.6, 31, SIIB,BOB . f4. (6) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 399, 92.5, 30, S)33,315. 15. (B)Kurt Busch,Chevrolet, 399,94, 29,$9B,465. f6. (19) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,399, 69.7, 2B, Sgt,2IBr 17. (5)DavidRagan,Toyota, 39B,772,27, $1IO,I29. IB. (20) KaseyKahne,Chevrolet,39B,74.4,26, $96,765. Ig. (I4)DanicaPatrick,Chevrolet, 397,Bf.f, 25,$90,44). 20. (13) RyanNewman, Chevrolet, 397, 70.7, 24, S)14,790. 21. (15) CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 397, 7a3, 23, $1 OB ,123. 2Z (IT) BrianScott, Chevrolet, 397,63,0, $102,B23. 23. (2B)TrevorBayne,Ford, 397,56.7, 21,$122,565. 24. (21) AJAgmendinger, Chevrolet, 397,66.3, 20, SI09,99B. 25. (1B) Justin Affgaier,Chevrolet, 397,59.2, 19, Sf 00,74B. 26. (22)PaulMenard, Chevrolet, 397,5SB,I B,SBB,IHO . 27. (12)Austin Dilon,Chevrolet, 397,70.5,I 7,$117,526. 2B.(32)SamHom i shJr., Ford,397,689,16, $)0669B. 29. (10) TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 396, 56.B, 15, $1 07,104. 30. (35) LandonCassill, Chevrolet, 396, 49.B,0, SB1,265. 31. (3B) GregBiff le,Ford,396,457,13,$tfg f73. 32. (16) MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, 394,54.6, 12, $1 02,BB Sr 33. (30)DavidGililand, Ford,393,427,11, S9391Z 34. (43)J.J.Yeicy,Toyota, 392,35.2, 0,S76,240. 35. (37)Brett Moffitt, Ford,391,34.B,9, $77,590. 36. (S3)MattDiBenedetto,Toyota,390,355, B,$75935. 3Z(36 )AlexBowman,Chevrolet,390,3Z3,7,$75,7BB. 3B. (34)ColeWhitt, Ford,3B9,35.3, 6,$70,777, 39. (4f) JebBurton,Toyota,3t7,2B.5,5, $66,705. 40. (42)JeffreyEarnhardt, Ford,3BT,26.3, 0,$62,705. 41. (40)ReedSorenson,Ford, 335,28.5, 3,S58,105. 42. (39)MichaelMcDowel, Ford,accident, 2B7,31.5, 2, $54,705. 43. (27) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet,accident, f45, 35.2, I, $5),205.

COLTS:OU T: RBVick Bagard (hamstring), CB GregToter(neck). QUESTIONABLE: LBRobert Mathis (Achilles), CB D'JounSmith (knee). PRO BABLE: LB NateIrving(knee),LBD'Dwell Jackson(toe), CB SheldonPrice(concussion), LBBjoernWerner (knee). BILLS:OUT : WRMarquise Goodwin (ribs), LBTony Steward(knee). PROBABLE: TE Charles Clay(knee), WR Percy Harvin (hip), WRChris Hogan(knee), RB LeSeanMcCoy (hamstring), WR Sammy Watkins (hamstring), DEMario Wiliams (calf), WRRobert Woods (hip). MIAMI DOLPHINS at WASHINGTON REDSKINS DOLPHINS:DOUBTFUL:T Jason Fox (concussion). PRO BABLE: T BrandenAlbert (knee),RBLaMichaelJames(shoulder), WRDeVante Parker(foot), CBJamar Taylor (thigh). REDSKINS: QUESTI ONABLE:TTom Compton(cal f),LBJackson Jeffcoat(thigh). PROBABLE:QBRobert Griffin III (concussion),DEFrankKearse(shoulder), CKoryLichtensteiger(finger). CAROLINAPANTHERS at JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS PANTHERS:OUT: TERichie Brockel (shoulder), T NateChandler (knee), DTStar Lotulelei (foot). PRO BABLE: CRyanKalil (knee),CBJoshNorman(concussion),CBTeddyWilliams (groin). JAG› UARS; OUT: DEAndreBranch (knee), DTSen'Derrick Marks(knee),TEJulius Thomas (hand). DOUBTFUL: WR MarqiseLee(hamstring). QUE STIONABLE: RB Toby Gerhart (abdom en). PROBABLE: DT Michael Beth Allen Bennett (ankle), S Johnathan Cyprien (finger), LB Boys SuzannPettersen LaRoyReyn olds (knee), WRBryan Walters (hamTeam scores Bend 33,SummitbrrCrook Hannah Burke string). Count6y9,MountainView 7B,Madras209,LaPine2BB. Jodi Ewart Shadof SEATTLESEAHAWKS atST.LOUIS RAMS Top 10 — I,CalebHofmann,Bend,I7:4B.I.2, SarahKemp SEAHA WKS:OUT:LBMikeMorgan(hamstring). Lizette Sal a s Q UESTI O NABLE: CBTharold Simon(toe). PROBAAdi Wolfenden,MountainView, ffk20.Z 3, LiamPickBLE: TE Cooper Helfet (knee), QBTarvaris Jackson hardt, Crook County, 1B:37.5. 4, SamSantiago, Crook JacquiConcolino County,19:05.B.5, HunterGreene, Bend, 19:07. 6, CatrionaMathew (ankle).RAMS;OUT:RBToddGurley(knee). QUESMinaHarigae TIONAB LE: LB Daren Bates (knee), RBTre Mason Erik Ingman, Summit, I 9:25.1. 7, ColeRene, Summit, Wei-Ling Hsu (thigh). 19:37.6. B,Maitiu Migar-Sanchez, Bend, 19:40.2. 9, NEW ORLEANSSAINTS at ARIZONA CARTrevorWilbur, Bend, 19:53.1.10,JacobRowley, Bend, DanielleKang ChristinaKim DINALS SAINTS:OU T: SJairus Byrd(knee), LB I 9:56.B. JulietaGranada DannegEfferbe(toe), CBKeenan Lewis(hip), RBC.J. Girls K elly W Sh on S piller (knee), LB D a vi s Tug (shoulder). PROBABLE: Teamscores — MountainView 27,Bend4B, KellyTan RB Tim Hightower(knee). CARDINALS:OUT: GMike Summi79. t lupati (knee).QUE STIONABLE: WRMichael Floyd Top 10 I, KelseySwenson, Mountain View, MoriyaJutanugarn 2D56.4 .2,SageHasseg,MountainView,21;15.3, (hand), TEJermaine Gresham(hamstring), TE Troy Niklas (ham s t r i n g). GracePerkins, Bend,2I:4B.9. 4, MadisonLeapaldt, BASKETBALL DETROITLIONS atSAN DIEGO CHARGERS Mount ai nView,22:ZB.Z 5,KennedyThompson,Moun› LIONS:OUT: DTCaraun Reid (ankle), GLarry tainView,22;58.4.6,AutumnLayden,Summit,23:04.7. WNBA Warford(ankle).DOUBTFUL: LBDeAndre Levy(hip). 7, DagnyDonohue, Bend, 24:f2.7. B, GraceScrocca, Q UEST IONABLE: TLaAdrianWaddle (elbow). PROBMountainView,24:19.3. 9, SophiaBurgess, Bend, WOMEN'S NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION ABLE:TEEric Ebron(ankle), LBTahir Whitehead (el24:23.1.fg, ClaireParton, Summit,24:36.4. AU TimesPDT RaceStatistics bow).CHAR GERS: OUT:GJohnnie Troutman(arm), LB Tourek Wiliams(foot). QUESTIONABLE: LBJerry Top 16 in Points: 1.J.Johnson,2,012;2. Ky.Busch, EasternConference 2,012; a M.Ke nselh, 2,012;4. J.Logano, 2,009; 5. SOCCER Attaochu (h am s t r i n g), TE L ad ari u s G r een (c oncu ss i o n), W L Pct GB KHarvick,2006;6.DEamhardt Jr., 2006; 7.KuBusCB Craig Mager (hamstring). z-NewYork 23 10 697 TENNESSEETITANSatTAMPA GAYBUCCAch, 2,006; B.C.Edwards, 2,006; 9. B.Keselowski, MLS x-Chicago 21 12 636 2 2003;10. M TruexJr.,2003;11. DHamlin,2003; f2. NEERS TITANS:OUT: NTSammie Hill (knee). x-Indiana I 9 14 576 4 MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER J.McMur ray,2,000;13.J.Gordon,2,000;I4.R.New› D OUBT F U L: CB Jason Mccourty (groi n ). QUE S x-Washi n gton 1B 15 545 5 AH TimesPDT TIONAB LE: RBAntonio Andrews(hamstring), CB man,2,000;15.PMenard,2,000;16.C.Bowyer,2,000. Atlanta f4 19 424 9 PerrishCox(hip). PROBABLE: CAndyGagik(igness). Connecticut f4 19 424 9 EasternConference BUCCA NEERS: OUT; DETJ. Fatinikun (shoulder). WesternConference TENNIS W L T P I R GF GA QUEST IONABLE: WRMike Evans (ham string), CB W L Pct GB Mike Jenkins(hamstring). PRO NewYork 13 7 6 4 5 46 30 BABLE: DE George 22 12 647 D .C. United 13 1 0 6 45 3 6 3 5 z-Minnesota Professional (igness). 20 13 606 I'/z Johnson C olumbus 12 9 B 44 4 7 4 B x-Phoenix CINCINNATIBENGALS at OAKLAND RAIDU.S. Open f7 16 5)5 O'I~ ERS BENGALS:OUT: DTMarcusH N ew England 1 1 9 7 40 3 B 3 6 x-Tulsa a rd is o n (knee ). Saturday atNewYork 14 20 412 B T oronto FC 11 1 1 4 37 4 5 4 4 x-LosAngeles Q UESTI O NA B LE : CB J o s h S h a w ( gr o i n ) . P R OB A B L E ; Women’s championship fo 23 303 If'/~ CB DarquezeDennard (groin), DE Carlos Dunlap Montreal 9 I I 5 3 2 3 4 3 7 Seattle Pennetta (26), Italy,def. Roberta Vinci, Italy, 7 26 2)2 14'/z illness), CB P hiladelphia B 15 6 30 3 6 4 7 SanAntonio LeonHall (back),DEMichaelJohnson 7-6Flavia x-clinched pl a yoff spot (4), 6-2. O rlando Cit y 7 13 B 29 3 3 5 0 knee), LBEmmanuel Lamur(hamstring), S Reggie conference N ew YorkCity FC 7 f 4 7 2 B 3 9 4 B z-clinched Nelson(groin), TAndrewWhitworth (back).RAID› Chicago 7 15 6 2 7 3 6 4 5 ERS: OUT:DEBenson Mayowa (knee). PRO BABLE; DEALS Today'sGames WesternConference WR Andre Holmes (hand), DEJustin Tuck(calf), TE W L T P t s GF GA ChicagoatConnecticut, 10a.m. Olive Wa l f ord (kne e ). Transactions Vancouver 1 5 10 3 4 B 4 0 2B AtlantaatWashington, I p.m. BALTIMORERAVENS atDENVER BRONCOS FC Dallas f 4 B 5 4 7 4 0 3 f PhoenixatTulsa, I:30 p.m. BASEBAL L RAVENS; OU T ; WR B r es had Perri m an (knee) , L os Angele s 1 3 B B 47 4 9 3 3 NewYorkat Indiana,2 p.m. Major LeagueBaseball RB LorenzoTaliaferro (knee).DOUBTFUL: DTTimmy Seattle 1 3 13 3 4 2 3 5 3 2 SanAntonioat Seattle, 6p.m. OFFICE OF TH E C OMMI S SI ONER OF BASEBALL Jernigan(knee),CBRashaan Melvin (thigh). PROBS porting KansasCity I I 7 B 4 1 4 0 35 Suspe ndedSt.LouisCCodyStanleyforBggames ABLE: DE Chris Canty(not injury related), LBDaryl Portland f f 9 B 41 2 9 3 2 posffivefor aperformance-enhancing subSmith(notinjury related).BRONCOS:OU T:DEKenny for testing FOOTBALL SanJose 1 1 11 6 3 9 3 4 3 2 Anunike(knee). QUESTIONABLE: LBLerenteeMccray stance inviolation of MajorLeagueBaseball's Joint Houston 9 I I B 35 36 37 D rug Preven tion andTreatment Program. (groin). PRO BABLE: S Omar Bolden(rib cage),WR NFL R eal Salt Lake 9 11 B 35 3 2 4 1 AmericanLeague AndreCaldwell (illness),TEMitchell Henry(finger), LB Colorado B fg f g 3 4 26 30 NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE NEWYORKYANKEES RecalledOFSladeHeath› Brandon Marshall (foot). AU TimesPDT cott and CGarySanchezfromScrantorVWilkes-Barre (IL). NEW YORKGIANTS atDALLAS COWBOYS Saturday'sGames GIANTS: OU T: LBJonBeason (knee), WRVictor National League Columbus 2, PhiladelphiaI Today'sGames ST. LOUISCARDINALS — Activated RHPMatt Cruz(calf), DEOwamagbe Odighizuwa (foot). PROBRealSalt Lake3, Houston I GreenBayat Chicago,I0 a.m. ABLE: LBJonathanCasilas (neck),DTCullenJenkins Belislefromthef5-day DL. FC Dallas 2, NewYorkCity FCI FOOTBAL L KansasCityat Houston, I0 a.m. hamst ring).COW BOYS:PROBABLE:WRDezBryant Colorado I, D.C.UnitedI, tie National Football League Seattle atSt.Louis, 10a.m. hamstrin JamesHanna (knee), LBAnthony ,)g), TE Los Angele0, s Montreal 0,tie BUFFALO BILLS—SignedDTAndreFluellen. Clevelandat N.Y.Jets, 10a.m. Hitchens(foot), GZackMartin (neck), SDannyMccray SanJosef, Seattle I, tie CHICAGO BEARS—Terminatedthecontract of LB Indianapoliat s Buffalo, IOa.m. (neck), T JordanMigs (foot), QBTonyRorno(back), Today'sGames Miami atWashington, fga.m. WR DevinStreet (ankle), QBBrandon Weeden(con- SamAcho.SignedLBLamin Barrowfromthe practice NewEnglandatTorontoFC,2p.m. squad. CarolinaatJacksonvile, IOa.m. cussion), J.J. S Wilcox (neck). SportingKansasCity atOrlandoCity, 4 p.m. CLEVEL AND BROWNS — Signed RB Shaun NewOrleansatArizona, I:05 p.m. PHILADELPHIAEAGLES atATLANTA FALCONS EAGLES: LIMITED:TEZach Erlz (groin), Draughn Detroit atSanDiego,1:05p.m. fromthepractice squad. NEW ENGLANDPATROITS Released LBEric CincinnatiatOakland,1:25p.m. LB Marcus Smith (hamstring). FAL CONS: DNP; WR NWSL playoffs BaltimoreatDenver, I:25 p.m. DevinHester(toe). FULL: LBJoplo B artu (quadriceps), Martin. NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE Tenne sseeatTampaBay,I:25p.m. RB DevontaFreeman (hamstring), T JakeMathews NEWORLEANSSAINTS WaivedRBTimHightow› AH TimesPDT N.Y.GiantsatDallas, 5:30p.m. back), LBBrooksReed (groin), SRobensonTherezie er andOLMike McGlynn. PlacedLBDavis Tugon inMonday'sGames groin),WRRoddyWhiteelbow). jured reserve.Activated WRSeantaviusJones, FBToben Samifinals PhiladelphiaatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. MINNESOTA VIKINIS at SAN FRANCISCO OpurumandODBDonJonesfromthepractice squad. Today'sGames Minnesota at SanFrancisco, 7:20p.m. 49ERS VIKINGS:FULL: TEChaseFord (shoulWASHINGTONREDSKINS SignedLBHouston KansasCityatChicago,I0;30 a.m. Thursday,Sap.17 der), RB ZachLine(knee), TEMycole Pruitt (ankle), Batesfromthepractice squad.Terminatedthecontract Washington at Seatle, 6:30p.m. DenveratKansas City,5:25 p.m. DT Sha marStephen(knee). 49ERS:NoDataReported. of DEFrankKearse.

HaruNomura AyakoUehara Min Lee Kim Kaufm an SunYoungYoo Saturday Boyssoccer:LebanonatMountainView,2 p.m.; MarinaAlex KarrieWebb Culverat Riverside,I p.m. MariajoUribe Girls soccer: MountainViewatLebanon,2 p.m. Volleyball: Summiat t Lakeridge, Ba.m.;Redmondat Ai Miyazato DallasTournament, Ba.m.; Bend, Mountain View, QBack CrookCountyat RogueValley Classic, TBD;Ma- RyannO'Toole M.Henderson dras, Sisters,Ridgeviewat Sisters Invitational, B Brooke andraGal a.m.; La PineatTagmanTournament inLakeview,9 S Davies am.; Culver atSt. PaulTournament, I 0amcCen- Laura Jutanugarn tral Christian atC.S.LewisTournament, ft a.m.; Ariya S su-Chi aCheng Prospect, TriadatGilchrist, noon o YeonRyu Cross-country: Bend, MountainView,Sisters, Crook S wladysNocera County,Madras, LaPineat ThreeCourseChallenge G Ernst in Seaside, TBD;Summit at OregonCity XCInvita- Austin Cristie Kerr tional,10:30a.m. MikaMiyazato AmyAnderson KlaraSpilkova PREPS CarlotaCiganda a-LeonaMaguire Cross-country JennyShin Jara BraaseMemorial RanchStampede a-Hannah O'Sullivan Saturday,GreaseRanch, PrineviHe AnnaNordqvist AlenaSharp 5,000 meters

MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR

Kenseth takes final victory; 16-driver playoff field set By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. — There was a stretch of Saturday

night's race when all four of Joe Gibbs' cars were leading the pack around Richmond

International Raceway. The team owner could barely stand to watch. "That is the most nervous

that I get," Gibbs said. "I saw

The Chase ofthe Championshipfield 1 Jimmy Johnson, 2,012 2 Kyle Busch, 2,012 3 Matt Kenseth, 2,012 4 Joey Logano, 2,009 5 Kevin Harvick, 2,006

9 Brad Keselowski, 2,003 10 Martin Truex Jr., 2,003 11 Denny Hamlin, 2,003 12 Jamie McMurray, 2,000

6 Dale Earnhardt, 2,006 7 Kurt Busch, 2,006

14 Ryan Newman,2,000

8 Carl Edwards, 2,006

16 Glint Bowyer, 2,000

13 Jeff Gordon, 2,000 15 Paul Menard, 2,000

the past six races, and JGR has won eight of the past 11. "Certainly right now, as a company, we' re on a roll," said Kenseth, who led 352 of the 400 laps.

The 16-driver Chase field was set in the regular-season finale, where only four spots were really up f or grabs. Jamie M cMurray clinched his berth as soon

them up there. I saw some

as he took the green flag, but

beating and banging there. I

Jeff Gordon, Ryan Newman, Paul Menard and Clint Bow-

think that's when I'm always nating season with an ext he m ost n e r vous, w h en hibition from its roster that you' ve got your cars up front ended with Matt Kenseth's and having a good night." fourth wi n o f t h e s eason. He should be used to it by The win put Kenseth in a now. tie with JGR teammate Kyle JGR continued its domi- Busch and six-time champi-

on Jimmie Johnson for the

top seeds in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. The 10-race playoff series begins next Sunday at Chicagoland. Kenseth has won three of

<FaAATEpivAzzxcz

yer all had to protect their positions.

r

m

pxvv.pe Qtl%ERAf. I

A4

JL

Gordon had to finish 17th

or better to guarantee his slot, and he finished a solid seventh.

Steve Helber I The Associated Press

Matt Kenseth does a burnout after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup auto race in Richmond, Virginia, on Saturday.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN D3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL cata ndings AMERICANLEAGUE East Division

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

LosAngeles Seattle Oakland

W L 82 60 77 64 69 72 68 73 67 74

CentralDivision W L

84 57 73 68 69 70 67 73 64 76

West Division W L

76 66 74 67 72 69 69 74 61 81

Giants 8, Padres0

MR. 500

AN TimesPDT

SAN FRANCISCO — Madison Bumgarner lost his bid for a perfect game on abase hit with two outs in the eighth inning, the only blemish for the SanFrancisco ace in a victory over SanDiego. Bumgarner (18-7) retired his first 23 batters before pinch-hitter Melvin Upton Jr. sent a cleansingle up the middle. Theleft-hander received a warmovation from the disappointed crowd of 41,564 and then went right back to work.

Pct GB

.577

.546 4'/t

.489 12'/r .482 13'/r .475 14'/r

Pct GB .596 .518 11

.496 14 .479 16'/r .457 19'/r

pg>0lilfg,

Pct GB

.535 525 U/r .511 3'/r .483 7'/r .430 15

Saturday’sGames Kansas City14, Baltimore6 Toronto9, N.Y.Yankees5,11 innings, 1stgame Toronto10,N.Y.Yankees7, 2ndgame Boston10,TampaBay4 Chicago WhiteSox8, Min nesota2 Detroit atCleveland,ppd.,rain Oakland 5,Texas3 L.A. Angel3, s Houston 2 Seattle 7, Colorado2 Today’sGam es Toronto(Dickey10-10)atN.Y.Yankees(Tanaka11-6), 10:05a.m. Boston(R.Hil 0-0)atTampa Bay (Smyly 2-2), 10:10 a.m. Detroit (Boyd 1-5) at Cleveland(Bauer 11-11), 10:10 a.m., 1stgame Minnesota(Gibson9-10) at Chicago White Sox(Sale 12-8), 11:10a.m. Oakland(Doubront 3-1) at Texas(Ch.Gonzalez 2-5), 12:05p.m. Houston(Fiers 2-1) at L.A. Angels(Heaney6-3), 12:35p.m. Colorado (K.Kendrick 5-12) at Seatle (Paxton3-3), 1:10 p.m. Detroit(Wolf0-3)atCleveland(Carrasco12-10),1:40 p.m.,2ndgame KansasCity (Cueto2-5) at Baltimore(W.chen 8-7), 5:05 p.m. Monday’sGames Bostonat Baltimore,4:05 p.m. Kansas CityatCleveland, 4:10p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat TampaBay,4:10 p.m. Houstonat Texas, 5:05p.m. Detroit atMinnesota, 5;10p.m. OaklandatChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. LA. AngelsatSeatle, 7:10p.m.

w

Chris O’Meara / The Associated Press

Boston’s David Ortiz, right, hugs Pablo Sandoval after Ortiz hit his 500th career home run off Tampa Bay starting pitcher Matt Moore during the fifth inning of Saturday’s game in St. Petersburg, Florida.

American Lea ue

Angels 3,Astros2

Blue Jays9, Yankees5 (11 inn.) 1st Game

NEW YORK — Toronto opened a season-high 4t/z-game lead in the tiebreaking homerun to lead off the AL East, sweeping adoubleheader eighth inning andthe LosAngeles Angels beat Houston to tighten the from the sagging NewYork Yankees. American LeagueWest race. ANAHEIM, Calif.— C.J. Cron hit a

Houston

LosAngeles

ab r hbi ab r hbi Springrrf 4 0 1 0 Calhonrf 4 0 0 0 A ltuve2b 4 0 2 0 Troutcf 3 0 1 0 Correa ss 3 1 1 1 Pujols dh 4 0 2 0 CGomzcf 3 0 0 0 DvMrplf 4 0 1 0 Lowrie3b 4 0 0 0 Cowgiglf 0 0 0 0 G attisdh 4 0 1 0 Cron1b 3 2 2 1 MGnzlz1b 4 0 0 0 ENavrr1b 0 0 0 0 Congerc 3 1 1 1 Aybarss 4 1 1 0 Mrsncklf 3 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 0 2 1 Cowart3b 0 0 0 0 C.Perezc 3 0 0 1 Fthrstn2b 4 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 2 6 2 Totals 3 33 9 3 Houston 0 00 001 100 2 LosAngeles 020 000 01x 3 E—Correa(9). DP—Houston 1. LOB —Houston 5, LosAngeles 9.28—Altuve(30), Trout(26), Pujols

Toronto

New York ab r hbi ab r hbi Reverelf 6 1 2 2 Egsurycf 5 1 0 0 D nldsn3b 5 0 0 1 Gardnrlf 4 1 2 1 Bautist rf 4 3 2 3 Beltran rf 5 0 1 0 Encrncdh 4 1 2 2 BMccnc 5 1 3 1 P ompypr 0 1 0 0 Noelpr 0 0 0 0 Smoakph-dh1 0 0 0 JMrphyc 0 0 0 0 Tlwtzkss 1 0 0 0 ARdrgz dh 3 1 1 2 Pnngtn2b-ss 3 1 1 0 Pirelapr-dh 0 0 0 0 Colaeff1b 4 1 1 0 Ackleyph-dh 1 0 0 0 DNavrrc 4 0 1 0 Headly3b 5 1 2 1 G oins2b-ss 4 0 1 0 Bird1b 5 0 1 0 RuMrtnph 0 0 0 1 Gregrsss 5 0 0 0 Kawskpr-2b 0 1 0 0 Drew2b 4 0 0 0 Totals 4 1 9 109 Totals 4 2 5 105 Toronto 000 1 30 010 04 9 New York 1 1 0 200 010 00 5 DP — Toronto 1, NewYork2. LOB —Toronto 7, NewYork8. 28—Bird (4). HR —Revere(1), Bautista 2 (35),Encarnacion(32), Gardner(14), A.Rodriguez

White Sox8, Twins2 CHICAGO Adam Eatonhad three hits, Carlos Sanchez hit a two-run double and the Chicago White Sox used aseven-run fourth inning to beat Minnesota. Trevor Plouffe had two hits and an RBI for the Twins, who began the day one gamebehind Texas in the race for the second ALwild card.

Pirates 10, Brewers 2 PITTSBURGH —Jeff Locke pitched

one-run ball into theseventh inning and Michael Morsehit a pinch-hit grand slam asPittsburgh routed Milwaukee.

Milwaukee Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi Segurass 4 1 1 0 GPolncrf 4 1 0 0 HPerez3b 4 0 0 0 JHrrsnlf-3b 4 2 4 0 Braunrf 4 1 2 1 Mcctchcf 5 1 1 1 LSchfrcf 0 0 0 0 Blantonp 0 0 0 0 K Davislf 3 0 0 0 Scahigp 0 0 0 0 Lind1b 3 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 3 1 2 2 DoSntncf-rf 3 0 1 0 SRdrgzlf 1 0 0 0 Sardins2b 2 0 0 1 NWalkr2b 2 2 0 0 CJimnzp 0 0 0 0 E.Diazph 1 0 0 0 Knebelp 0 0 0 0 Flormn2b 0 0 0 0 San Diego San Francisco Gennettph 1 0 1 0 Cervegic 4 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Ashleyc 4 0 0 0 Stewartc 1 0 0 0 Myerscf 3 0 0 0 Pagancf 5 1 2 1 ZDavisp 1 0 0 0 PAlvrz1b 2 1 1 0 Galeph 1 0 0 0 DeAzalf 5 1 2 0 Lohsep 1 0 1 0 Mercerss 3 1 1 1 DeNrrs1b 3 0 0 0 MDuffy3b 5 0 0 0 E Herrr2b 1 0 0 0 Lockep 2 0 0 0 Kemprf 3 0 0 0 Poseyc 2 1 0 0 Morseph 1 1 1 4 U ptonlf 3 0 0 0 Belt1b 3 3 1 2 31 2 6 2 Totals 3 3 10 11 9 G yorkoss-2b 3 0 0 0 Byrdrf 3 1 3 3 Totals M ilwaukee 0 0 0 0 0 0 110 2 Solarte3b 2 0 0 0 Tmlnsn2b 4 1 2 1 Pittsburgh 005 1 0 0 4 0x 10 Mateop 0 0 0 0 Adrianzss 3 0 1 1 E—Do.Santana (1). DP—Milwaukee 1, Pittsburgh Garces p 0 0 0 0 Bmgrn p 4 0 0 0 1. LOB —Milwaukee 6, Pittsburgh8. 28—Braun (27), UptnJr ph 1 0 1 0 D o.San tana(4), Gennelt (15),Lohse(1), J.Harrison(21), Totals 2 8 0 1 0 Totals 3 48 11 8 r.Ram irez2 (28). HR—Morse(5). ~eche. SF —SarS an Diego 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 A dines. 8 San Francisco 000 430 tgx IP H R E R BBSO E—Spangenberg (2). DP—San Diego 1. LOBMilwaukee San Diego1, SanFrancisco 7.28—Byrd (20). 3BZ.DaviesL,1-1 3 2 - 3 66 6 5 3 DeAz a (1), Tom l inson (3).HR —Pagan(2), Belt(18). 21-3 3 0 0 0 2 IP H R E R BBSO Lohse C.Jimenez 1 2 4 4 3 1 San Diego Knebel 1 0 0 0 0 0 KennedyL,8-14 4 2-3 7 7 7 3 2 11-3 2 0 0 0 2 Pittsburgh Mateo LockeW,8-10 6 1-3 3 1 1 2 7 Garces 1 1 1 1 2 1 J.Hughes 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Rzepczynski 1 1 0 0 0 0 Blanton 1 2 1 1 0 1 San Francisco 1 1 0 0 1 0 Bumgarner W,18-7 9 1 0 0 0 9 Scahig T—2:55. A—35,749(38,362). WP —Kennedy. T—2:35.A—41,564 (41,915).

Phillies 7, Cubs 5 PHILADELPHIA — Pinch-hitter

Cody Aschehit awalk-off, two-run homer in theninth inning to lead Philadelphia overthe ChicagoCubs. Chicago

Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Fowlercf 2 1 1 0 CHrndz2b 4 0 2 3

Mets 6, Braves 4

ATLANTA —Kelly Johnson drove in the tiebreaking run in the ninth inning, YoenisCespedeshomered for the eighth time in 11days and the NL East-leading NewYork Mets won their sixth straight with a victory over Atlanta.

NewYork Atlanta Schwrrlf 4 2 1 1 Galvisss 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Coghlnrf 4 1 1 2 OHerrrcf 4 0 1 0 Grndrsrf 4 0 1 0 Markksrf 31 0 0 H Rndnp 0 0 0 0 Francrlf 4 0 0 0 NATIONALLEAGUE Minnesota Chicago Cespdscf-If 5 1 1 2 Olivera3b 4 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 3 1 0 0 Altherrrf 3 1 0 0 East Division ab r hbi ab r hbi DnMrp 1b 5 2 2 0 Vizcain p 0 0 0 0 Bryant3b 4 0 1 1 ABlanc3b 4 1 1 0 W L Pct GB A .Hicks lf 4 1 0 0 Eatoncf 5 1 3 1 ss 0 0 0 0 McKrh p 0 0 0 0 M Mntrc 3 0 1 1 Ruf1b 2 0 0 0 Tejada NewYork 81 61 .570 Dozier 2b 4 0 0 0 Mecarr dh 4 1 2 1 DWrght 3b 4 1 1 1 Moylan p 0 0 0 0 J.Baezss-2b 4 0 1 0 Howard ph-1b 2 1 1 1 Washington 71 70 504 gi/2 Mauer1b 3 1 1 0 Abreu1b 5 0 0 0 T Woodp 1 0 0 0 Ruppc 2 0 0 0 Confort If 3 0 1 0 Mrksry p 0 0 0 0 Miami 61 81 .430 20 Sanodh 3 0 0 0 AvGarcrf 1 0 0 0 Cahillp 1 0 0 0 Bogsvcph 0 1 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 FFrmn1b 4 0 1 1 Atlanta 56 87 .392 25r/t P louffe3b 3 0 2 1 Shucklf 3 1 2 1 S tcastrph 1 0 0 0 Kratzc 0 1 0 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 Philadelphia 55 88 385 26r/t TrHntrrf 4 0 1 0 TrThmlf-rf 4 1 2 1 ARussl lss 1 0 0 0 Eickhffp 2 0 0 0 dArnadc 4 0 3 1 Swisherlf 4 0 0 0 Central Division EdEscrss 4 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 5 1 1 1 YongJrpr 0 1 0 0 JPetrsn2b 2 1 1 0 LaSteff 2b 3 0 0 0 Sweeny ph 0 1 0 1 W L Pct GB K Suzukc 3 0 0 0 Olt3b 4120 Grimmp 0 0 0 0LuGarcp 0 0 0 0 Plawckc 0 0 0 0 ASmnsss 3 0 0 0 St. Louis 88 54 .620 DaSntnph 1 0 0 0 Ge.Sotoc 3 1 1 0 KJhnsn2b 3 1 1 1 Bourncf 3 1 1 0 Rosscpp 0 0 0 0 JGomzp 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 85 56 .603 2r/r Buxtoncf 2 0 0 0 CSnchz2b 4 1 2 2 S trop p 0 0 0 0 Gilesp 0 0 0 0 WFlorsss 3 0 1 0 WPerezp 1 0 0 0 Chicago 82 59 .582 5r/r ERosarph 1 0 0 0 Dudaph-1b 0 0 0 0 Ciriacoph 1 0 0 0 AJcksn ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Ascheph 1 1 1 2 Milwaukee 62 80 .437 26 Totals 32 2 5 1 Totals 3 8 8 157 Totals 3 2 5 6 5 Totals 3 27 6 7 Syndrgp 3 0 0 0 R.Keffyp 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati 60 81 .426 27r/t (18),Aybar(25). HR —Correa(18), Conger(11),Cron M innesota 2 0 0 0 0 0 000 2 Lagarscf 0 0 0 0 EJcksnp 0 0 0 0 Chicago 001 OBB 040 5 West Division (12). CS —Altuve(12). Chicago 000 700 Otx 8 AdGarcph-3b1 1 1 3 edley (11).SB—Noel (1). P hiladelphia 00 0 000 502 7 W L Pct GB IP H R E R BBSO (31),Ha E — B oyer (2), Pl o uffe (10), Abreu (9). DPIP H R E R BBSO Totals 3 4 6 115 Totals 3 0 4 4 4 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. LosAngeles 81 60 .574 Houston Chicago 1. LOB — M inn es ota 8, Chicago 10. Toronto N ew York 000 2 0 1 0 12 6 E—Rizzo(5). LOB—Chicago7, Philadelphia3.28SanFrancisco 74 68 521 7r/t Mccugers 5 7 2 2 2 1 Estrada Shuck (7), Tr.Thompson (5), C.Sanchez(22). Coghl 5 6 4 4 1 2 2B — 1 00 000 030 4 an(23), Bryant (24), C.Hernandez (20), A.Blanco Atlanta Arizona 68 74 .479 13r/r Velasquez 1 0 0 0 0 0 Lowe A.Hicks(11), Shuck2 (7). S—Ge.Soto. SF1 0 0 0 0 1 SB — DP — A tl a nta 4. LO B — N e w Y ork 7, A tl a nta1. 2818), Howard(29). HR —Schwarber (16), Asche(8). SanDiego 67 76 .469 15 W.HarrisL,5-3 2 2 1 1 1 1 Aa.Sanche z 1 0 1 1 2 0 Me.cabrera. 8—Fowler(18). CS—O.H errera (8).SF—M.Montero. Dan.Murphy2 (33), d'Arnaud(13). HR—Cespedes Colorado 59 83 415 22r/r LosAngeles IP H R E R BBSO Cecil BS,3-8 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 arcia(8). S—Lagares. IP H R E R BBSO (16),Ad.G Santiago 7 5 2 2 2 3 Osuna 12-3 0 0 0 1 0 Minnesota IP H R E R BBSO Chicago Saturday’sGames J.SmithW,5-5 1 1 0 0 0 1 Loup 32- 3 8 7 4 2 3 TWood 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 MiloneL,8-5 New York 3 3 0 0 0 5 Cincinnati 5,St. Louis1 StreetS,35-39 1 0 0 0 0 2 HendriksW,5-0 1- 3 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 Cahill 2 0 0 0 0 Boy e r S yndergaard 7 2 1 1 1 8 3 0 0 0 0 3 Cincinnati4, St. Louis2,comp.ofsusp. game T—2:41. A—41,130(45,957). 1 2 0 0 0 0 GrimmBS,3-6 2 - 3 TeperaS,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 Duensing 3 1 1 1 5 0 3 2 ClippardW3-1BS,2-4 1 2 3 Philadelphia 7, ChicagoCubs5 Achter 1 1 0 0 0 1 New York 0 0 0 0 1 Rosscup 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 FamiliaS,40-45 1 Pittsburgh10,Milwaukee2 O' Rourke 1 2 1 1 0 1 Pineda 5 1-3 6 4 4 2 5 Atlanta Athletics 5, Rangers3 Strop 1 0 0 0 0 1 N.Y.Mets6, Atlanta4 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 H.RondonL,5-4 2- 3 Ju.Wilson 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 Graham 6 8 3 3 3 3 1 2 2 1 1 W.Perez Miami 2,Wa shington0 Betances 1132 1 1 0 2 Chicago R.Keffy 1 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia LA. Dodgers 9,Arizona5 ARLINGTON,Texas— Mark 4 2 1 3 5 Eickhoff A.Miger 2 0 0 0 0 4 QuintanaW,9-10 6 1 1 1 1 0 0 7 3 1 1 3 8 E.Jackson SanFrancisco8, San Diego0 MAlbers 1 0 0 0 0 1 M itchell L,0-2 1 3 0 3 3 2 1 Canha had a three-run homer and V izcaino L,2-1 1 3 2 2 2 1 0 a 0 2 3 3 1 0 Seattle 7, Colorado2 Da.Jennings 0 0 0 0 1 0 Lu.Garci Shreve 1-3 1 1 1 3 McKirahan 0 0 0 0 1 0 J .Gomez B S ,3-3 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 Today’sGam es Danny Valencia atwo-run shot in D.Webb 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 Goody 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11-3 0 0 0 1 3 Moylan St. Louis(Wacha15-5) at Cincinnati (R.lglesias3-7), the fifth inning, leading Oakland 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 GilesW,6-2 E strada pi t ched to 1 batter in the 6th. Aa.San c h ez Duke H, 2 4 Marksberry 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Lu.Garciapitchedto 3batters inthe8th. 10:10a.m. pitched to bat 2 ters in the8th. Hendriks pitchedto 2 Petricka 1 0 0 0 0 1 TWoodpitchedto1 batter inthe4th. McKirahanpitchedto 1batter inthe9th. overTexas. Washington (Scherzer11-11) atMiami(B.Hand4-5), batters in the 11th. HBP — by M itchel l (Penni n gton). Da Jenni n gs pi t ched to1 bat t er i n the 8t h . Moylan pi t ched to 1 ba t er i n the 9t h . H BP — by J.G om e z (R iz z o). 10:10a.m. WP — O'Rourke. PB—Ge.Soto. WP — Cecil. TM:32. A—0(49,638). WP—Syndergaard, W.Perez2. T—3:12.A—20,813 (43,651). ChicagoCubs(Undecided) at Philadelphia(Harang Oakland Texas T—3:29. A—26,065(40,615). T—2:57. A—27,380(49,586). 5-15), 10:35a.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi Milwaukee(Jungmann9-6) at Pitsburgh(Liriano 10- Semienss 4 1 1 0 DShldscf 4 1 1 0 Blue Jays10, Yankees 7 Reds 5, Cardinals1 7), 10:35a.m. C anhalf-1b 5 1 1 3 Choo rf 4 0 1 0 National League Marlins 2, Nationals0 (2ndGame) N.Y.Mets(Niese8-10) atAtlanta(Weber 0-1), 10:35 Reddckrf 4 1 3 0 Beltre3b 5 1 2 0 CINCINNATI — Skip Schumaker a.m. Valenci3b 5 1 1 2 Fielderdh 5 0 1 2 Dodgers 9,Diamondbacks5 Toronto NewYork MIAMI — JoseFernandez reSan Diego (Rea 2-2) at SanFrancisco (Leake9-8), Lawrie2b 4 0 1 0 Albertopr 0 0 0 0 hit a three-run homer and Cinab r hbi ab r hbi turned from the disabled list and 1:05 p.m. BButlerdh 4 0 0 0 Napoli1b 5 1 1 1 Reverelf 6 2 4 2 Egsurycf 5 0 0 0 PHOENIX —CoreySeager had cinnati won its second game of Colorado(K.Kendrick 5-12) at Seatle (Paxton3-3), Muncy1b 3 0 1 0 Andrusss 4 0 3 0 D nldsn3b 4 0 2 1 Gardnrlf 5 2 2 6 four hits, including his first cabecame only the third pitcher 1;10 p.m. Gentryph-If 1 0 0 0 Odor2b 2 0 0 0 the day, beating struggling St. B autistrf 4 1 2 2 Beltranrf 5 0 2 0 since 1914 to win his first 16 L.A. Dodgers (Greinke16-3) atArizona(Corbin 5-3), P heglyc 4 0 0 0 Rualf 3000 reer homer, as the Los Angel e s Pillarcf 0 0 0 0 BMccndh 4 0 1 0 Louis. 1:10 p.m. Fuldcf 3 1 2 0 Venaleph-If 1 0 0 0 Encrncdh 3 1 0 0 Headly3b 5 0 1 0 career decisions at homewhen Dodgers went deepfour times in Monday’sGames BWilsnc 2 0 0 0 Colaeffph-dh1 0 0 0 Ackley1b 4 1 1 0 Miami beat fading Washington. Washington at Philadelphia,4:05p.m. Strsrgrpr 0 0 0 0 a victory over Arizona. Joc PedSmoak1b 4 1 1 0 JMrphyc 5 0 2 0 St. Louis Cincinnati Miami atN.Y.Mets,4:10 p.m. Gimenzc 1 0 0 0 RuMrtnc 5 0 1 2 Gregrsss 4 2 2 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi erson, Adrian Gonzalez and Carl Washington Miami SanDiegoatArizona, 6:40 p.m. Totals 3 7 5 105 Totals 3 6 3 9 3 Carrercf-rf 5 2 2 0 B.Ryan2b 1 1 1 0 Mcrpnt3b 4 1 2 0 BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Coloradoat LA. Dodgers, 7:10p.m. Crawford also homered for the Oakland 000 050 000 5 Goinsss 5 1 1 1 CYoungph 1 0 0 0 Piscttylf 4 0 1 0 Schmkrlf 3 1 1 3 Cincinnatiat SanFrancisco, 7:15pm. Rendon3b 4 0 2 0 DGordn2b 4 0 1 0 Texas 0 10 000 002 3 Pnngtn2b 4 2 1 2 Drew2b 1 1 1 0 Dodgers. Seager, playing shortHeywrdcf 4 0 2 1 LaMarrlf 0 0 0 0 E—Odor (15), N.Martinez (4). DP—Texas 1. Totals Espinos2b 4 0 0 0 Yelichcf-If 4210 Totals 4 0 7 137 M rRynl1b-3b2 0 0 0 Votto1b 2 0 0 1 LOB —Oakland8,Texas11.28—Fuld(15), Choo(28), Toronto4 1 101410 Harperrf 4 0 1 0 Prado3b 3 0 2 0 060 000 400 10 stop with veteran Jimmy Rollins MAdmsph 1 0 0 0 Phillips 2b 4 0 0 0 Interleague W erthlf 3 0 0 0 Bour1b 4 0 1 1 Beltre(22),Fielder(26), Andrus3 (28). HR —Canha N ew York 000 0 3 1 030 7 only available for pinch-running Kozma2b 0 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 1 1 0 Dsmndss 3 0 0 0 Dietrchlf 3 0 0 0 (15),Valencia(14),Napoli (16).SB—Reddick(7). LOB —Toronto 9, NewYork 9. 28—Bautista(26), duty because of injured finger, had Moss rf-1b 4 0 0 0 Frazier3b 3 0 1 0 Mariners 7, Rockies2 WRamsc 3 0 0 0Gigespicf 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Ru.M adin (20),Carrera(6), G —PenningWong2b 2 0 0 0 Suarezss 3 1 1 0 regor ius( 19). HR M Taylrcf 3 0 0 0 Realmtc 4 0 1 1 Oakland three RBls, scored three times and ton (1), G a rd n e r 2 ( 1 6 ). S ~ e vere (5), D o n a d l s o n ( 6 ). G richkph 0 0 0 0 Brnhrtc 4 1 2 1 52-3 5 1 1 2 5 TMoore1b 3 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 4 0 3 0 SEATTLE —Robinson Cano, Nolin W,1-1 IP H R E R BBSO stole a base. He Cishekp 0 0 0 0 DeSclfnp 2 0 0 0 got help from a 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Toronto Roarkp 1 0 0 0 Rojasss 3 0 1 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Cingrnp 0 0 0 0 Jesus Montero, Franklin Gutierrez Pomeranz olisp 0 0 0 0 Frnndzp 1 0 1 0 Duff 2 1 0 0 1 3 StromanW,1-0 5 4 3 3 2 2 Diamondbacks fan whoreached Manessp 0 0 0 0 Boeschph 0 1 0 0 S Turnrph 0 0 0 0 Telisph 1 0 1 0 and Nelson Cruzall homered to Doolittle 1 3 2 2 0 1 SchultzH,4 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 over the padding down the leftJayph 1 0 0 0 Badnhpp 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 Brrclghp 0 0 0 0 Texas LoupH,Q 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Tcruzc 4 0 0 0 DJssJrph 1 0 0 0 J.Rossp lead Seattle to a win overColofield line in the fifth inning to take hrntnp 0 0 0 0 Lazop 0000 GallardoL,12-10 41-3 7 5 5 2 3 Francis 1 2-3 5 3 3 0 GGarciss 2 0 00 Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 T rado. Cano's deephomer to right dnDkkrph 1 0 0 0 McGehph 1 0 0 0 Ohlendorf 23 0 0 0 0 0 DelabarH,5 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 a seemingly catchable foul ball Lynnp 2000 Gracep 0 0 0 0 BMorrsp 0 000 NMartinez 2 3 1 0 0 1 2 in the second inning openedthe LoweS,1-4 1 0 0 0 0 1 away from David Peralta and 1000 Jake JhPerltph ARamsp 0 0 0 0 SFreeman 23 0 0 0 0 1 New York Phamrf 0 0 0 0 scoring and set a milestone. It Totals 2 9 0 3 0 Totals 3 22 122 LJackson 23 1 0 0 0 0 NovaL,6-8 Lamb, and Seagerthen homered 12-3 7 6 6 1 1 Totals 3 1 1 5 1 Totals 3 05 6 5 W ashington 00 0 0 0 0 000 0 Diekman 1 0 0 0 0 1 Rumbelow was the 50th extra-base hit of 11-3 1 0 0 1 0 to right in the same S t. Louis 100 0 0 0 000 1 Miami at-bat. 2 000 110 ggx S.Dyson 1 1 0 0 0 1 Capuano 32-3 4 4 4 1 3 6 C incinnati 000 0 3 0 t t x the season for Cano,who is one E—Desmond (24), Yelich (2). DP—Washington4, Pomeranz pitched to1 batter in the7th. Pinder 11-3 2 0 0 0 3 E—Wong (16), G.G arcia (3). DP—St. Louis 1, Miami Arizona 1. LOB —Washington 4, Miami8. 28—Renof five players to have atleast 50 HBP —byPomeranz (Odor). WP—Gallardo. Pazos 1 0 0 0 0 0 LosAngeles C incinnati 1. LO B — S t. Lo ui s 6, C i n ci n nati 8. 28 — M . ab r hbi ab r hbi don Yelich(22). SB—TTurner (2). CS—RealT—3:26. A—30,487(48,114). HBP —by Stroman (B.Mccann), by Nova(Encar- Crwfrdlf 3 1 1 1 Pollockcf 4 1 1 1 extra base hits in each of his first Carpenter(35), Bruce(33). HR—Schumaker (1). muto(12), (4). naci on,Smoak).WP Nova 2,Rumbelow.PB› SB — Votto (11), Frazier(12). SF—Votto. 11 seasons. Cruz's two-run homer Royals14, Orioles S chelerph-If 1 0 0 0 Inciartrf 5 0 2 1 IP H R E R BBSO Ru.Martin,J.Murphy.Balk—Stroman. IP H R E R BBSO Washington 6 VnSlykph-If 2 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 4 0 2 0 in the seventh was his 41st, tying T—3:31(Delay: 0:33). AM6,278(49,638). St. Louis U tley2b 6 1 1 0 DPerltlf 5 1 1 1 RoarkL,4-5 42-3 8 2 2 1 2 Lynn L,11-10 6 4 3 3 3 3 Solis Baltimore's Chris Davis for the AGnzlz1b 5 1 2 1 Wcastff c 3 1 1 0 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 BALTIMORE — Mike Moustakas Cishek 1 -3 0 1 0 2 0 Red Sox10, Rays4 JuTrnr3b 4 1 1 0 JaLam3b 4 1 1 0 J.Ross 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 major league lead. Healso had Siegrist 2 -3 1 1 1 0 1 hit two home runs, including a Ethierrf 5 1 2 1 Owings2b 3 1 1 0 Thornton 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Maness 1 1 0 0 1 2 a run-scoring single in the third grand slam, and finished with a CSeagrss 4 3 4 3 Ahmedss 2 0 0 1 Grace 1 0 0 0 0 0 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— David Cincinnati inning, finishing 2-for-4 with three franchise-record nine RBlsas Grandlc 3 0 0 0 RDLRsp 1 0 0 0 Miami DeSclafaniW9-10 6 4 1 1 1 10 Ortiz homered twice to become Pedrsncf 5 1 3 2 Chafinp 0 0 0 0 W,5-0 5 2 0 0 1 7 RBls. Seattle starter Roenis Elias Kansas City beat Baltimore. CingraniH,7 1 0 0 0 2 0 Fernandez Bolsngrp 1 0 0 0 Hesslerp 0 0 0 0 BarracloughH,4 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 the 27th player in major league B adenhop H,5 1 1 0 0 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 (5-8) gave uptwo unearned runs Howell p 0 0 0 0 O'Brienph 1 0 1 1 Ju.Diaz 1 0 0 0 0 2 LazoHr1 history to reach 500 homers, and Baltimore Heiseyph 1 0 0 0 Cllmntrp 0 0 0 0 B .Morris H,14 2 0 0 0 0 3 and one hit while striking out eight KansasCity Siegrist pi t ched to 1 ba tter i n the 8t h . Boston beat TampaBay. J iJhnsnp 0 0 0 0 Britoph 1 0 0 0 A.RamosS,27-33 1 1 0 0 0 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi WP —Cingrani. in 5/s innings. HBP —byRoark(Dietrich). Nicasiop 0 0 0 0 MtRynlp 0 0 0 0 A Gordnlf 4 2 1 0 Reimldlf 5 1 2 2 T—3:02.A—41,137(42,319). T — 2: 2 8. A — 20,235 (37 , 4 42). Rugginph 1 0 0 0 Gosselnph 1 0 0 0 Zobri st2b 5 1 2 0 MMchd3b 2 2 2 0 Boston TampaBay Colorado Seattle Avilanp 0 0 0 0 DHdsnp 0 0 0 0 L.caincf 5 2 1 1 C.Davis1b 2 1 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Hosmer1b 3 3 1 1 AJonescf 4 1 2 3 Reds 4, Cardinals2 B ettscf 4 3 2 1 Jasodh 4 1 1 2 YGarcip 0 0 0 0 History Adamsss 3 0 1 0 KMartess 5 0 1 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 K Morlsdh 3 3 1 0 GParrarf 4 0 1 1 Pedroia2b 4 1 2 3 Sizemrlf 4 0 1 0 LeMahi2b 4 0 1 1 KSeagr3b 4 2 2 0 Guerrr ph 1 0 1 1 Mostks3b 5 3 3 9 Wietersc 4 0 1 0 St. Louis Cincinnati This Date laBaseball Rutledgpr-2b 0 0 0 0 Longori3b 3 0 1 0 JRollnspr 0 0 0 0 Arenad3b 3 0 0 1 N.Cruzdh 4 1 2 3 S.Perezc 5 0 2 3 Schoop2b 5 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Sept. 13 Bogartsss 4 1 1 0 Shaffer3b 1 1 1 1 Y noa3b 0 0 0 0 Cano2b 3 1 1 1 Buterac 0 0 0 0 Paredsdh 5 0 1 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 Mcrpnt3b 5 0 1 0 BHmltncf 4 1 3 0 1930— TommyArmourbeatsGeneSarazen1up Marrerss 1 0 1 0 Forsyth2b 1 0 0 0 Totals 42 9 159 Totals 3 4 5 105 C Gnzlzrf 4 0 0 0 Gutirrzlf 4 1 1 1 Riosrf 5 0 3 0 JHardyss 4 1 1 0 Ortizdh 4 2 3 4 TBckh2b 1 0 0 0 P iscttylf 4 0 1 0 Bruce rf 4 0 0 0 to winthePG AChampionship. L os Angeles 20 5 0 1 0 001 9 H eywrdrf 4 0 2 0 Votto1b 1 0 0 0 WRosr1b 3 0 1 0 SRomrrf 0 0 0 0 AEscorss 5 0 0 0 1959 NealeFraser of Australia winsthemen's Craig pr-dh 1 1 0 0 Acarerss 2 0 0 0 Arizona CDckrsdh 4 0 1 0 Trumorf 3 0 0 0 Totals 4 0 141414 Totals 3 5 6 116 TShaw1b 4 1 1 2 Frnklnss 2 0 0 0 Bgg 801 100 5 JhPerltss 4 0 0 0 Phillips2b 4 0 2 1 singlestitle intheU.S. Openwithafour-setvictory over E — M a t. R e ynol d s (1). DP — Los Angel e s 1. KParkrlf 4 0 0 0 J.Jones pr-cf 0 0 0 0 Kansas City 0 1 0 0 0 5 503 14 Sandovl Kozmapr-ss 0 0 0 0 Frazier3b 4 0 0 0 A lex Olmedo.Brazil's MariaBuenowins the women's 3b 5 0 0 0 Loney 1b 3 0 0 0 LOB —Los Angeles 11, Arizona10.28—Ethier (18), TMrphc 3 1 0 0 JMontr1b 2 1 1 1 B altimore 103 0 0 0 020 6 Rcastlllf 5 0 1 0 JButlerrf 1 0 1 0 Molinac 4 0 2 0 Suarezss 4 1 1 0 title. BBarnscf 2 1 0 0 Morrsn1b 1 0 0 0 E—A.Escobar(11),A.Jones(3), M.Machado(18). Swihartc 5 0 1 0 SouzJrrf 2 0 0 0 C.Seager (5), Guerrero(8), Polock(33), Inciarte(25), M oss1b 2 1 0 0 Duvalllf 4 1 1 2 1964 RoyEmersonbeatsfellowAustralianFred OMagycf-If 4 1 1 0 DP — Kansas City 2, Baltimore1. LOB—Kansas City BrdlyJrrl 3 1 1 0 Navarf-1b 2 1 1 0 Goldschmid2 t (32). HR —C.crawford(4), A.Gonzalez GGarci 2b 4 1 2 1 Bourgs If 0 0 0 0 Stoge towinthemen's title in theU.S.Lawn Tennis J.Hicksc 3 0 0 1 4, Baltimore12.28—L.cain (31), K.Morales(41), (27), C.Sea ger (1), Pede rson (25), D.Peral t a (15). Jaycf 3 0 1 0 Rcarerc 4 1 1 1 A ssoci ationchampionships. Brazil's MariaBuenowins Kiermr cf 1 1 0 0 SB — C.Seager(2), Pollock(34). S—Bolsinger.SFTotals 3 0 2 4 2 Totals 3 37 9 7 Rios (17),J.Hardy(11). HR —Moustakas2 (18), RePhamph 1 0 0 0 Lornznp 2 0 1 0 the wom en'stitle. Maileph-c 2 0 1 1 C olorado 000 0 0 2 000 2 imold (5),A.Jones(26).SF—G.Parra. Pollock,Ahmed. Lackeyp 3 0 1 1 Finngnp 0 0 0 0 1970 Only 55of 126finish thefirst NewYork Totals 40 101310Totals 33 4 7 4 7 Seattle 011 210 20x IP H R E R BBSO Boston IP H R E R BBSO Broxtnp 0 0 0 0 Schmkrph 1 0 0 0 City Marathon,withGaryMuhrckewinning in 2hours, 302 210 200 10 E—Arenado(16), Elias(1). DP—Seattle1. LOBKansasCity MrRynlph 1 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 31 minutes,38.2seconds. Tampa Bay 0 0 0 0 2 0 110 4 LosAngeles Colorado 5, Seatle 6. 2B—W.Rosario (12), C.Dicker- VenturaW,11-8 5 2-3 8 4 4 3 5 E—A.cabrera (9). DP—Boston 1. LOB—Boston Bolsinger 32-3 7 3 3 4 1 Totals 3 5 2 102 Totals 3 3 4 9 4 1970 KenRosewagof Australia beatscountry0 0 0 0 1 7, Tampa 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 S t. Louis 010 1 0 0 000 2 manTonyRoche inthe men'ssingles final at theU.S. son (11),K.Seager(32). HR —N.cruz(41), Cano (16), MadsonH,16 1 - 3 Bay5. 28—Pedroia (17), BradleyJr. (14), HowellW,6-1 4 Gutierrez(12), J.Montero(3). SB—LeMahieu (22). M.Aimonte 1 1 0 0 0 2 Longoria(30), Maile(1). HR 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cincinnati 110 0 0 0 0 2x Open. —Betts (15), Pedroia Ji.Johnson S—J.Hicks. SF—Arenado. Hochevar 0 2 2 2 2 0 1 2 1 1 0 1 E—Molina 2 P), Suarez(14). DP—Cincinnati 1. 1981 TheAtlanta Falcons,trailing 17-0with13 (10), Ortiz 2(34), T.Shaw(10), Jaso(3), Shafer (3). Nicasio IP H R E R BBSO W.Davis 1 0 0 0 0 1 SB — Betts (18). CS—R.castigo (4), Sizemore (3). Avilan 2-3 1 1 1 1 1 LOB —St. Louis8, Cincinnati 8. 28—Jay(3), B.Hamilton minutesremaining inthegame,score31points to beat Colorado L.coleman 1 0 0 0 1 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 (8), Philips(14).HR—G.Garcia(2), Duvag(3),R.cabrera the Green IP H R E R BBSO YGarciaH,9 BayPackers31-17.TheFalconsscoretouchFlandeL,3-3 32- 3 6 4 4 2 3 Baltimore HatcherH,1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 (1). SB Boston —8Hamilton2(56),Voto2(10).CS—Kozm a (1). downsonapunt return, twobypasses, aninterception 5 1-3 4 4 4 2 3 Hale 3 3 3 3 1 3 Tillman PorceffoWB-12 7 5 3 3 3 8 Jansen 1 0 0 0 1 2 IP H R E R BBSO returnandafumble return. 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 MatuszL,1-4 BS,1-1 0 1 1981 JohnMcEnroedefeats BjornBorgto win Brothers 2 2 1 0 Hembree 1 1 1 1 0 1 Arizona St. Louis 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 M.Barnes M.castro 1 0 0 0 0 2 Roe 1 1 0 0 0 R.DeLaRosaL,12-8 2 9 6 6 0 1 Lackey 7 7 2 2 3 10 his thirdstraightmen'ssingles title intheU.S.Open. 1-3 4 5 5 1 0 TampaBay 1987 IvanLendlbeats MatsWilanderfor his Seattle McFarland Chafin 1 1 1 1 0 3 BroxtonL,2-5 1 2 2 2 0 0 51-3 1 2 0 3 8 Jas.Garcia 12-3 0 0 0 0 2 EliasW,5-8 M.MooreL,1-4 5 9 8 6 1 3 Hessler 1 0 0 0 1 1 Cincinnati third U.S.Opencrown,6-7, 6-0, 7-6,6-4. 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 SJohnson 1989 PatDaybreakstherecord for mostwinKensingH,7 1 3 3 3 1 0 Yates 1 0 0 0 1 0 Collmenter 2 2 1 1 0 1 Lorenzen 5 10 2 2 1 5 D.RoginsH,1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Matuszpitchedto2 batters inthe6th. Riefenhauser 1 3 2 2 0 0 Mat.Reynold s 2 1 0 0 2 5 Finnegan 2 0 0 0 0 2 ners inonedaywhenhescoredwith eightof his nine FarquharH,6 1 1 0 0 0 3 Hochevar pitchedto 4 batters inthe8th. Andriese 1 1 0 0 1 0 D.Hudson 1 2 1 1 1 0 HooverW,8-1 1 0 0 0 1 2 mountsat ArlingtonRacecoursein glinois. It wasthe —by Ventura(C.Davis, M.Machado), byM.AI- Begatti Ca.Smith 1 1 0 0 0 2 HBP 1 0 0 0 0 0 R.DeLaRosapitchedto 4batters inthe3rd. A.chapman S,30-32 1 0 0 0 0 3 best dayfor oneprogramin North American thorHBP —byYates(Betts). Beimel 1 1 0 0 0 1 monte(A.Jones). WP—Bolsinger. PB—W.castigo. WP—Hoover. oughbredracinghistory.In hisonlyloss, Dayfinishes T—2:56.A—20,698 (31,042). T—2:37.A—24,743(47,574). T—3:40. A—35,439(45,971). T—3:52. A—42,517(48,519). T—2:30.A—31,427(42,319). second.


D4

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

OLLEGE FooTBALL COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD Pac-12

FBS

AH TimesPDT

Saturday'sGames

EAST BostonCollege76, Howard 0 PennSt.27, Buffalo14 Syracuse 30, WakeForest17 California Connecticut22,Army17 Oregon 0 0 I I 8 9 7 3 WashingtonSt.37, Rutgers 34 Oregon St. 0 0 I I 3 3 4 2 WestVirginia41,Liberty17 Washington 0 0 I I 62 16 SOUTH Washington St 0 0 I I 5 4 58 Alabama 37,MiddleTennessee10 Stanford 0 0 I I 3 7 23 Auburn27,Jacksonville St. 20,OT SouthDivision BowlingGreen48, Maryland27 Conf Overall 41,Appalachian St.10 W L W L PF PA Clemson Duke55,N.C.Central 0 Arizona 0 0 2 0 86 52 Florida 31, East Carolina24 SouthernCal 0 0 2 0 114 15 FloridaSt.34, SouthFlorida14 Utah 0 0 2 0 48 31 Georgia31,Vanderbilt 14 UCLA 0 0 2 0 71 19 Colorado 0 0 I I 6 8 42 GeorgiaSouthern 43,W. Michigan17 ArizonaSt. 0 0 I I 5 2 59 GeorgiaTech65,Tulane10 Houston34, Louisville 31 Today'sGames Kentucky 26, SouthCarolina22 Michigan 35,Oregon St.7 Louisiana-Lafayette 44, Northwestern St. 17 Washington 49, Sacramento St.0 Louisiana-Monroe 47, Nicholls St.0 Colorado 48, Massachusets14 LSU21,MississippiSt. 19 Washington St. 37,Rutgers34 Mississippi73,FresnoSt.21 California 35,SanDiegoSt.7 N.C.State35,E.Kentucky0 Arizona 44, Nevada20 NorthCarolina53,NCA&T 14 Southern Cal59,Idaho9 NotreDam e34, Virginia 27 MichiganSt.31,Oregon28 Oklahoma 31,Tennessee24,20T Stanford 31, Central Florida7 Old Dominion 24, Norfolk St.10 UCLA37,UNL V3 SouthernMiss52,Austin Pea y6 ArizonaSt.35,CalPoly21 VirginiaTech42, Furman3 Friday’sGame MIDWEST NewMexicoatArizonaSt., 7p.m. Cent.Michigan31, Monmouth (N.J.) 10 Saturday,Sept.19 glinois 44,W.Illinois 0 GeorgiaSt.at Oregon,11 a.m. Indiana36,FIU22 UtahSt. atWashington, 2p.m. iowa31,iowaSt.17 Coloradoat ColoradoSt., 4p.m. KentSt. 45,DelawareSt.13 CaliforniaatTexas, 4:30p.m. Stanfordat Southern Cal, 5 p.m. Memphis55, Kansas23 SanJoseSt.at OregonSt., 5p.m. Michigan 35, OregonSt. 7 Wyominat gWashington St., 5:30p.m MichiganSt.31, Oregon28 Utah atFresnoSt., 7:30p.m. Nebraska 48,South Alabama9 BYUatUCLA, 7;30p.m. Northwestern 41,E.Illinois 0 N. ArizonaatArizona,8 p.m. Ohio21,Marshal(10 OhioSt.38,Hawaii 0 Saturday’sboxscores Pittsburgh24, Akron7 Purdue 38, IndianaSt. 14 Temple 34, Cincinnati 26 MichiganSt. 31, Oregon28 Wisconsin58,Miami (Ohio) 0 Oregon 7 0 7 14 28 SOUTHWE ST MichiganSt. 7 7 19 7 3 1 Ark. -PineBluff29,Morehouse27,OT First Quarter Baylor66,Lamer31 Ore —Freeman2run(Schneider kick),11:10. KansasSt. 30,UTSA3 MSU —Price 12 passfromCook(Geiger kick), Missouri27,ArkansasSt.20 10:02. Oklahoma St.32,Cent. Arkansas8 SecondQuarter SMU31,NorthTexas13 MSU —Burbridge17passfromCook(Geigerkick), TCU70, StephenF.Austin 7 13:45. Texas42,Rice28 ThirdQuarter ASM 56,BallSt.23 Ore —Addison 81 punt return(Schneiderkick), Texas TexasSt.63, PrairieView24 13:11. TexasTech69, UTEP20 MSU —Scott 6run(Geigerkick), 8:11. Toledo16,Arkansas12 MSU —FGGeiger 36,I:08. FARWEST FourthQuarter Arizona44, Nevada20 Ore —AdamsJr.2 run(Schneider kick), 12;20. BYU 35, Boi s e St. 24 MSU —Scott 38run(Geigerkick),10:51. Ore —Marshaff15passfromAdamsJr.(Schneider California35,SanDiegoSt. 7 Colorado48,Massachusetts 14 kick), 3:25. E.Michigan48,Wyoming29 A—76,526. GeorgiaSt.34, NewMexico St.32 Ore MSU Minnesota23,Colorado St.20,OT First downs 26 21 SouthernCal59, Idaho9 Rushes-yards 43-123 37-197 Tulsa40,NewMexico 21 Passing 3 09 1 9 2 Washington 49, SacramentoSt. 0 Comp-Att-Int 22-39-2 20-32-1 Air Force 37, SanJoseSt. 16 ReturnYards 123 30 Stanford31,Central Florida7 Punts-Avg. 3-30.7 5-51.4 UCLA37,UNLV3 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 0-0 ArizonaSt.35, CalPoly21 Penalties-Yards 9 -56 2 - 15 Timeof Possession 26;34 33:26

NorthDivision Conf Overall W L W L PF PA 0 0 2 0 108 21

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHINGOregon: Freem an 24-92, BrooksJames 3-20, AdamsJr.14-6, Nelson1-4, Benoit1-1. Michigan St.: London18-103,Scott11-76,Shelton

1-9, Kerridge1-3.

Washington St.scoreslate to beat Rutgers The Associated Press i ngton State

hit Ju Ju Smith-Schuster with

a few Tom Brady comeback two of his three touchdown drives," Falk said, contem- passes to lead Southern Caliplating the 90 yards awaiting fornia. Smith-Schuster set cahim. "That's why you play reer highs with 10 catches for the game, so I was pretty ex- 192 yards as USC (2-0) piled cited to go out there and play. up 738 total yards. I knew we had been moving No. 13 UCLA 37, UNLV 3: the ball pretty well all day. LAS VEGAS — Paul PerThe cards worked out in our kins ran for 151 yards and

didn't take much for Washc oach M i k e

Leach to rally his players after they watched Janarion Grant return a punt 55 yards and

give Rutgers a four-point lead with 1:31 to play on Saturday. "I pulled up the offense and said, 'This is pretty exciting favor." isn't it? This is real exciting. Grant tried to be the hero See how excited they are?'" for Rutgers, returning two Leach recalled. "I said 'If you kicks for touchdowns. After want this thing to be twice as his first, a 100-yard dash on exciting why don't go down a kickoff to give the Scarlett there and score? It will be Knights a 27-23 lead with twice as exciting,' and it was." 12:30 remaining, many exLeach put the ball in the pected Washington State to hands of quarterback Luke kick the ball away from him Falk, who led a 10-play, 90- clinging to a 30-27 advantage. "There's quite a lot of yard drive, finding River Cracraft with an eight-yard strike thought on that now," Leach

119 yards and Christian Pow-

ell had 105 yards to become the first Colorado running backs to eclipse 100 yards in the same game in nearly five years, and the Buffaloes (l-l) snapped a nine-game losing streak. California 35, San Diego State 7: BERKELEY, Calif.

two touchdowns, Josh Rosen

— Quarterback Jared Goff

threw for another score and

threw for two touchdowns in

a 21-second span and finished with 321 yards passing to lead No. 22 Arizona 44, Neva› the Golden Bears (2-0). da 20: RENO, Nev. — Nick Arizona St. 35, Cal Poly Wilson ran for 194 yards 21: TEMPE, Ariz. — Mike and three touchdowns and B ercovici threw two of h i s UCLA rolled to a victory over UNLV.

Anu Solomon passed for 264

three touchdown passes in

with 13 seconds left to lift Washington State past Rut-

said. "I don't know the exact

yards and two scores to lead the fourth quarter and ArizoArizona (2-0). na State overcame a second Washington49,Sacramen- straight shaky performance to State 0: SEATTLE — Myl- to beat Cal Poly. es Gaskin rushed for 146 Stanford 31, Central Flor›

call. I'm thinking we tried to

yards and three touchdowns,

gers, 37-34.

but just didn't hit it. But we shouldhave."

and Jake Browning passed — Kevin Hogan threw for a for 326 yards and two touch- career-high 341 yards and

It was part of a 47-of-66, 468-yard, fo u r -touchdown

day as Falk led the Cougars

(1-1). "I was thinking of the drive that John Elway had against

ida 7: STANFORD, Calif.

Also on Saturday: downs to lead the Huskies three touchdowns as StanNo. 8 Southern California (1-1). ford bounced back from a 59, Idaho 9: LOS ANGELES Colorado 48, Massachu› disappointing loss in its sea— Cody Kessler threw for a

setts 14: BOULDER, Colo. — Michael Adkins rushed for

career-high 410 yards and

son opener to beat Central Florida.

Oregon’s Byron Marshall, right,

comes down with

a pass for a touch› down

against

"cj'~ + (rr!v

Michigan State’ s

,xxf,rrltf<lilIliirir

I

Arjen Col› quhoun

P

dui’Ing the fourth

~ ~ ~ u~ X i

quarter

) /7

Saturday in East Lansing, Michigan. The Ducks lost 31-28.

BIG SKY

FRONTIER

Saturday'sGames MontanaWestern24,Colege ofIdaho20 Montana Tech19, Carroll 10 Rocky Mountain46,MontanaSt.-Nodhern0 S. Oregon38,E.Oregon35

iy

Al Goldis I The Associated Press

Ducks

atouchdown.

Cook threw for 192 yards and Scottran for 76.Madre London added 103 yards rushing for the Spartans. "It's a long season," Oregon's Bralon Addison said.

Continued from D1 The Spartans (2-0) led for most of the second half, and it was 31-21 before Adams

threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Marshall with 3:25

remaining. After a Michigan State punt, the Ducks (1-1) drove to the Spartans 33 before Adams overthrew Marshalb The Spartans then sacked

Adams for a loss of 10, and his pass on fourth-and-16 was incomplete. "I watch those 'Fast & Fu-

rious' movies sometimes and that's what t hat

r e minded

me of," Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio said. "Up and down. L.J. Scott ran for two touchdowns for M i chigan State,

sen made a curious decision by choosing to punt instead of going for it in a fourth-and-3 situation from the Michigan 39yard line while trailing 10-7.

Continued from D1 Harbaugh was a winner in his return to Michigan Stadium

"Never thought to not punt,

thanks in large part to De'Veon Smith’s 126yards rushing and three touchdowns. Michigan (1-1) looked much

quite frankly," Andersen said. Then, the long snap from midfield sailed high over Porebski's head and bounced

better as a team than it did in

last week's loss at Utah. The Wolverines also got

back to the Beavers 3.

"That happens once in a half century," Harbaugh said. "That was a heck of a good break for

some breaks in the pivotal sec-

us, but we' ll take it."

Smith scored his second touchdown with 12 seconds left Oregon State’s RommelMageo, top, sacks Michigan quarterback in the first half to put Michigan Jake Rudock, causing a fumble, in the first quarter Saturday in Ann up 17-7, and the Beavers never Arbor, Michigan. The Beavers lost 35-7. got back in the game. "We got it taken to us pretty TonyDing/The Associated Press

good there," Andersen said. game changed, too. Michigan's Jeremy Clark was called for roughing the kicker, setting off Harbaugh.

sheetsbehind him because he

ing a record the Ducks had Geiger missed a 28-yard field been sharing. Texas Tech had goal attempt later in the first a streak of 69 games from 2006-2011.

"In the second half we couldn' t

Michigan S t ate's

M i c hael bother him.

"After that, we just didn't exthird quarter, then got another chance to play early in the ecute and play like we should fourth. have." "We didn't lose heart," ColOnce the Wolverines were lins said. "We needed to capi- in control, the Beaver defense talize on mistakes." grew noticeably tired as the The Beavers showed no ear- second half wore on. "They just out-executed us ly nerves, stunning the Michigan crowd by driving 79 yards and we just didn't execute on for a touchdown on their first all cylinders," said Oregon possession. State cornerback Larry Scott. Chris Brown had a 26-yard After managing just 42 run, Victor Bolden ran for 21 yards on 16 rushing attempts yards, and Collins hit Jordan in the first half, Michigan esVillamin for 12 yards to move tablished the run in the secinto the red zone. ond half. The Beavers gave Collins then went to Hunter up 225 yards rushing to the Jarmon, who had a step on a Wolverines. "We ran into a very, very Michigandefender and made a nice grab in the back of the end physical run game, which zone for a 21-yard score. we knew they had the poten"We were executing real-

ly good," Villamin said. "We made a lot of plays that we

really get anything going on Porebski lost his protection as offense, couldn't really get any- needed to. The quarterbacks a punter after bobbling the ball thing going on defense." and running backs were doThe former Stanford and and zigzagging before kicking Oregon State's Seth Collins ing a good job. Quarterbacks San Francisco 49ers coach the ball. completed9 of 16 passes for were getting us the ball and we shouted at officials, flailed his A little later, first-year Ore- 79 yards. He was replaced by made catches and so we'd just arms and t h rew l a minated gon State coach Gary Ander- Marcus McMaryion late in the go down the field and score. thought Oregon State's Nick

quarter, and Adams threw an

interception. But Michigan State held on Michigan State took the at the end, avenging one of lead on Cook's 17-yard touchits two losses from 2014. The down pass to Burbridge ear"The teams that played in the Spartans lost only to Oregon ly in the second quarter, and national championship had and Ohio State, the two teams although Oregon drove all one loss. We can't let this af- who played for the national the way to the I-yard line, the fect us." title. Spartans held, stopping the It was tied at 14 after AddiOregon drove 75 yards in Ducks on fourth down. son returned a punt 81 yards 13 plays on the game's first Adams improvised imfor a touchdown early in the possession Saturday, taking pressively later in the second, third quarter, but Michigan the lead on a 2-yard touch- scrambling in third down and State took the lead again on down run by Royce Freeman. throwing with his left hand Scott's 6-yard touchdown The Spartans answered with to an open Addison for 25 run. A 38-yard scoring run by an even quicker TD. London yards. But his next pass was Scott made it 31-21 with 10:51 broke free for a 62-yard run intercepted. "They' re really good," Adremaining. on Michigan State's first ofAdams, whose h ealth fensive play, and Cook threw ams said. "I' ve got to take was a concern heading into a 12-yard scoring pass to Jo- care of the ball — no intercepthe game, nearly rallied the siah Price. tions, no fumbles." Ducks. His scoring pass to What looked like an offenAdams had tape on his Marshall marked the 70th sive showcase in the making right index finger after the consecutive game Oregon quickly simmered down. game, but he said it didn' t

and Aaron Burbridge caught eight passes for 101 yards and had thrown a TD pass, break-

Beavers

ond quarter against the Beavers (1-1). Defensively, Michigan put pressure on Oregon State' s quarterbacks and did not give up alotonthe ground much to the delight of fans who filled the Big House with hopes that the sagging program's new leader will make a difference. Harbaugh was quietly pacing the sideline for much of the first quarter and early in the second, rarely saying anything to players, coaches or officials. That changed when he saw a penalty he didn't like. The

the Cleveland Browns, and

PISCATAWAY, N.J. — It

FCS

Saturday'sGames Washington 49, SacramentoSt. 0 2-22, Cook 2-4,Terry1-(minus 4), Team3-(minus4). N.Iowa38,E.Washington35 PASSING — Oregon:Adams Jr.22-39-2-309. NorthDakotaSt. 41,Weber St. 14 NorthDakota21, Drake18 Michigan St.: Cook20-32-1-192. RECEIVINGOregon: Addison 7-138, Nelson PortlandSt.34, IdahoSt.14 7-79, Marshall 3-41, Freeman 3-34r Baylis 2-17. N. Arizona 31, N.M. Higlands3 Michigan St.:Burbridge8-101, Kings Jr. 6-48, S. DakotaSt.55,S. Utah10 Price2-23,Shelton2-(minus1), Lyles1-18,Lang1-3. N. Colorado 34, Houston Baptist 10 SouthDakota27,UCDavis 17 Arizona St. 35, CalPoly21 Michigan35, OregonSt. 7 Friday's Game 7 0 9 9 7 IdahoSt.at BoiseSt., 7:05p.m. OregonSt. Saturday,Sept.19 Michigan 3 14 3 16 36 NorthDakotaat N.DakotaSt.,12:30 p.m. First Quarter OrSt —Jarmon21passfromCollins (Owenskick), Montana St.atE.Washington, I p.m. Sacramento St, atWeber St., 5p.m. 13:01. Mich — FGAllen40, 8:20. MontanaatLiberty, 4p.m. SecondQuarter N. ColoradoatS.Utah,5 p.m. Mich — Smith I run(Allen kick), 4:03. N. IowaatCalPoly, 7;30 p.m. Mich — Smith 1run(Agenkick),:12. UC Davisat Hawai, 9p.m. Third Quarter N. Arizona atArizona, 8p.m. Mich — FGAllen29, 9:25. FourthQuarter Mich—Smith 8 run(Smith passfrom Rudock), Division II 14:18. G REATNORTHWEST Mich—Green2 run(Allen kick), 3:19. Thursday’sGame A—109,651. Dixie St.49,Cent.Washington 20 Saturday'sGames OrSt Mich W.Oregon31,SimonFraser 14 First downs 12 21 South Dakota Mi nes28, BlackHils St. 26 33-59 48-225 Rushes-yards t 62,AzusaPacific 41 Passing 79 18 0 HumboldSt. Comp-Att-Int 9-20-0 18-26-1 ReturnYards 3 14 Division Ill 7-38.9 3-42.3 Punts-Avg. 2-1 2-1 Fumbles-Lost NORTHWE ST 8-62 10-105 Penalties-Yards Saturday'sGames Time ofPossession 21:59 38:01 Whitworth47,Whittier 11 George Fox39,Redlands32 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Linfield52,Chapman14 RUSHING —Oregon Stu Brown7-33,Bolden4-30, Claremont-M-S 27, Lewis &Clark 7 Collins11-28,Barrs-Woods3-13,Sands3-13,McMary- Occidental46,Puget Sound41 ion 3-(minus 7),Team2-(minus51). Michigan:Smith Trinity (Tex as)35,Wilamette 6 23-126,Isaac6-35, Green8-35,Houma2-20, Chesson Cal Lutheran 30,Pacific Lutheran26 1-4,D.Johnson1-3,Taylor-Douglas1-3, Kerridge2-3, Butt 0-2,Tea m1-(minus1), Rudock3-(minus5). PASSINGOregon St.: Collins 9-16-0-79, NAIA McMaryion0-3-0-0, Bolden0-1-0-0. Michigan: Rudock18-26-1-180. RECEIVINGOregonSt.: Vilamin 3-26, Bolden 3-23,Jarmon1-21, Smith 1-9,Brown1-0. Mich› igan:Darboh4-50, Butt 4-25, Bunting2-33, Smith 2-24, Harris2-0,Wiliams 1-22,Chesson1-14, Isaac

PAC-12 ROUNDUP

tial possibility to do that, we

couldn't handle it," Andersen sard. "We had ahard time match›

ing their physicality, it looked like. That's a big, strong, physical football team, and they were able to run the power play. We weren't able to stop it."


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

TOP 25 ROUNDUP

D5

GOLF ROUNDUP

Lee keepsslim leadover Thompsonat Evian The Associated Press

Pressel (71), and they went

E VI A N - L E S - B A I N S ,

France — Mi Hyang Lee retained the lead i n

toe to toe until the par-4 18th hole, when the American dou-

d i f f icult ble-bogeyed after landing her second shot in water.

weather in the third round of the Evian Championship on Saturday, as teenager Lydia

Oklahoma’s Sterling Shepard, left, leaps over a Tennessee de› fender en route to score the winning touchdown in double over› time Saturday in Knoxville, Tennessee. Oklahoma won 31-24.

They played their f inal six holes in rain, wind, and Ko remained in contention to gloom. become the youngest player to Pressel shares third place win a major. w ith Ko, two shots off t h e Lee shot 1-under 70 for pace. The 18-year-old Ko shot a 10-under total of 203 and a 67 and is pursuing her last a one-shot lead over Lexi chance to become the youngThompson, who charged back est woman to clinch a major. with fine putting and a 5-un- If she wins on Sunday, Ko will der 66 card. surpass Pressel, who won the Chasing her first major, Kraft Nabisco Championship Lee was paired with Morgan at 18 years, 10 months, 9 days

oklahoma rallies, stuns

TENNls: U.s.oPEN

W ade Payne /The Associated Press

United States trails at Walker "Obviously, this is my last Cup: LYTHAM ST A N N ES, chance," said Ko, about five England — Jimmy Mullen and months younger. "I'm just Gavin Moynihaneach earned going to give myself a good two points to help Britain and chance tomorrow." Ireland take a 7-5 lead over the Meanwhile, to p -ranked United States in the Walker Inbee Park, seeking a career Cup matches Royal Lytham Grand Slam, made four bird- and St Annes. Beau Hossler ies but struggled on the back was undefeated for the United nine with three bogeys for a States. 70. She was on 2-under 211, Slattery, Cabrera-Bello tied eight shots off the pace, with at KLM: ZANDVOORT, NethMichelle Wie (70). erlands — England's Lee SlatWie sank a 25-foot putt on tery and Spain's Rafa Cabrethe par-5 9th for her first eagle ra-Bello each shot 7-under 63 of the tournament. to share the third-round lead in Also on Saturday: the KLM Open at Kennemer. back in 2007.

Tennesseein double OT The Associated Press

his right ankle in the third

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. Oklahoma continued its re-

quarter. Zaire will miss the

cent run of success against the Southeastern Conference with a dramatic over-

time victory that Sooners coach Bob Stoops won' t soon forget. Baker Mayfield threw an 18-yard touchdown pass to Sterling Shepard in double overtime and No. 19 Oklahoma rallied from a 17-point deficit in a

rest of the season.

No. 10 Georgia 31, Vander› bilt 14: NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Nick Chubb ran for 189

yards, Isaiah McKenzie returned a punt 77 yards for a touchdown, and Georgia beat Vanderbilt in the South-

eastern Conference opener

for both teams. No. 11 Florida State 34, South Florida 14: TALLA3 1-24 HASSEE, Fla. — Dalvin

victory Saturday over No. 23 Cook ran for 266 yards and Tennessee. three touchdowns on 30 "It’sone of the more spe›

carries to lead Florida State.

cial wins, maybe my favorite Cook had the second-highof all of them," Stoops said. est rushing total in school "A little Sooner magic came

history and the f i rst 200-

back out."

yard game since Sammie Smith had 212 yards against

Zack Sanchez clinched

Oklahoma's victory by pick- Tulane in 1988. ing off a Joshua Dobbs pass No. 12 Clemson 41, Ap› in Tennessee's second over- palachian State 10: CLEMtime possession, and yet SON, S.C.— Deshaun Watagain, the Volunteers had a son threw for 248 yards reason to be frustratedby and three touchdowns in Top 25 foes. Clemson's first game since Oklahoma beata South› all-ACC receiver Mike Wileastern Conference team for liams fractured a bone in his the third straight year af- neck. ter capping the 2013 season N o. 14 L S U 2 1 , N o . with a Sugar Bowl victory 25 Mississippi State 19: over Alabama and knocking S TARKVILLE, M i s s . off Tennessee last season. Leonard Fournette ran for The Sooners also won their 159 yards and three touchsixth straight nonconfer- downs to lead LSU. Missisence road game, a stretch sippi State failed a two-point that also includes wins at conversion with four minFlorida State in 2011 and at Notre Dame in 2013. Also on Saturday: No. 1 Ohio State 38, Ha› waii 0: COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ezekiel Elliott had three s hort touchdown r un s t o lead Ohio State.

WI

utes remaining, and Devon

Bell missed a 52-yard field goal with no time left that would have won the game. No. 15 Georgia Tech 65, Tulane 10:ATLANTA — Justin Thomas passed for two touchdowns and ran for an-

e

By David Waldstein New York Times News Service

~f

N EW YORK — Fo r t w o

weeks the glare of attention at the U.S. Open was focused

squarely on Serena Williams and her quest for a Grand Slam. W h e n t h a t fa i l e d, two Italian women were left

standing. On Saturday, Flavia Penn etta and Roberta Vinci -

both ranked outside the top 20 — took the court instead of

Williams, looking for the first U.S. Openchampionship by an Italian woman. So histo-

ry was made at Arthur Ashe Stadium, even if it was not

the history so many fans had been hoping to see. It was Pennetta, the 26th

seed, who won — beating her friend and countrywoman Vinci, 7-6 (4), 6-2, to become the oldest first-time winner of

a major tournament. After the match Pennetta

made a surprise announceDavidGoldman/The Associated Press ment on court, saying she Flavia Pennetta tosses her racket after beating fellow Italian Roberta Vinci during the women’s cham› was retiring at the end of the

year. She said it was a decision she made a month ago, when the idea of winning the U.S. Open was too far away to even contemplate. "I would like to say goodbye to tennis," she said, and added, "This was my last

pionship match of the U.S. Open on Saturday in New York. Pannetta announced after the match that she will be retiring at the end of the year.

the women's final sold out before the tournament, and

despite the disappointment of not having Williams participate, the stadium was mostly

No. 2Alabama 37,Middle other to lead Georgia Tech. Tennessee 10: TUSCALONo. 16 Texas A&M 56, Ball OSA, Ala. — Jake Coker State 23: COLLEGE STApassed for 214 yards in the TION, Texas — Kyle Allen

way."

first half, and Derrick Henry

Pennetta is a year older than minister, made the trip, and it

ran for three touchdowns to lead Alabama. No. 3 TCU 70, Stephen F.

threw for 126 y ards and three touchdowns in the first half to lead Texas A&M.

No. 17 Mississippi 73, Fres›

Austin 7: FORT WORTH,

no State 21: OXFORD, Miss.

Texas — Trevone Boykin

— Chad Kelly threw for 346

threw for 28 5 y ards and

yards and four touchdowns,

four touchdowns in a little

three to Quincy Adeboyejo, to lead Mississippi. Toledo 16, No. 18 Arkan›

more than ahalf,and Aaron Green ran for two scores to

lead TCU. sas 12: L I T T LE R O C K , No. 4 Baylor 66, Lamar Ark. — Former Alabama 31: WACO, Texas — Corey reserve quarterback Phillip Coleman had a Baylor-re- Ely threw for 237 yards for cord four touchdown catch- Toledo, and Arkansas quares, and the Bears had 785 to-

terback Brandon Allen mis-

tal yards for its 17th straight

fired on two passes from the Toledo 16-yard-line in the

home win.

No. 6 Auburn 27, Jackson› final 6 seconds, moments ville State 20: AU B URN, after hitting the crossbar Ala. — Melvin Ray caught a on a fourth-and-goal from touchdown in the final min- the Toledo 4 to kill another ute of regulation, and Pey- drive. ton Barber ran for a score BYU 35, No. 20 Boise State in overtime to help Auburn

s econds left t o l i f t N o t r e three touchdown passes as Dame. Kizer took over after Missouri extended its road starter Malik Z a ire broke winning streak to 11 games.

BIG SKY

Vikings win 2ndstraight POCATELLO, Idaho Alex Kuresa passed for one

touchdown and ran for an-

career rushing yards, ran for 113 yards on 18 carries for Portland State (2-0 overall,

1-0 Big Sky).

other and the Portland State Portland State's K a hlil defense forced four turn› Dawson returned a kickoff

overs to help the Vikings beat Idaho State 34-14 on Saturday.

At 33 years and 6 months,

filled, with only a few empty seats dotted around the upper deuce of the game. After hitbowl. ting a multitude of slices, she Matteo Renzi, Italy's prime whipped a crosscourt winner,

to win the set.

In the second set Pennetta broke early to take a 2-0 lead. The next game, on her serve, went to deuce, and Vinci hit a ball into the net. On the next point Pennetta hit a

ball short, but Vinci chased it down and hit a little back-

and on the next point Pennetta hit a backhand into the net,

hand across court at a sharp angle over the net. Pennetta

Vinci, whom she first met at

was reported that he brought

age 10, and three years older than Francesca Schiavone

along Fabio Fognini, who had defeated Rafael Nadal in an early round. Fognini had gone back to Italy after he

and they were even.

sprinted after it and, unlike

They held their serves and went into the tiebreaker play-

Williams the day before, was able to reach the drop shot and simply poke it back over

was eliminated but returned to watch Pennetta, his fian-

Serving at 3-4 in the tiebreaker, Vinci hit a forehand into

cee, win the final. On the last point, a fore-

the net, and the pressure on

was in 2011, when she won the French Open to become the first Italian woman to win

a major tournament and the then-oldest first-time winner.

Vinci — ranked No. 43 in the world and unseeded here — upset Williams and

hand winner, Pennetta threw

her racket high in the air, many tennis fans when she turned toward her box and won a tense semifinal Friday, gave Vinci a long, emotional but she could not reach that hug before running over to standard of play on a second her supporters in the stands consecutive day. In a f i r st, to embrace them.

ing even but careful tennis.

her mounted.Pennetta made the next mistake, but at 5-4 Vinci hit a f orehand return intothe net on a second serve by Pennetta.

Then, on her first set point,

the net into the empty court that Vinci had just vacated. The second set was much

easier for Pennetta, and because of her unexpected run in the tournament, the result

was easier for Vinci, too. "I lost in the final," Vinci said on court afterward. "I'm

really happy, and really hapfirst serve into the far corner py for Flavia." Pennetta unleashed a perfect

Federer'smoveto serve-and-volley puts himin final

24: PROVO, Utah — Fresh-

avoid an upset against FCS man Tanner Mangum threw Jacksonville State. a 35-yard touchdown to No. 9 Notre Dame 34, Mitchell Juergens with 45 Virginia 27: CHA R L O T- seconds left to give BYU anTESVILLE, Va. — Backup other last-second victory. quarterback DeShone Kizer No. 21 Missouri 27, Arkan› threw a 39-yard touchdown sas State 20: JONESBORO, pass to Will Fuller with 12 Ark. — Maty Mauk threw

The Associated Press

match inthe U.S. Open, and I couldn't think of a b etter

In the first set, Vinci was

down a break and running out of time to break back. But she finally did in the eighth game, with a rare flat backhand winner on the third

94 yards for a score. Jeremy Lutali had an interception and tied a career

David Jones, a senior who high with 11 tackles for the came into the game with 44 Vikings.

By Jacob Feldman The Washington Post

NEW YORK — No. 1 Novak Djokovic will enter Arthur

Ashe Stadium for today's U.S Open men's final looking for his third Grand Slam title of

the year. The man standing in his way will be Roger Federer. Yes, that Federer. The one

Djokovicvs. Federer atOpen Federer leads 3-2 2007, final, Federer, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (2), 6-4. 2008, semifinal, Federer, 6-3, 5-7, 7-5, 6-2.

year, Federer has embraced the serve-and-volley strategy that he ushered out of style a decadeago whilewinning are›

be something like a 7-6, 7-6, 6-7, 6-7, 6-7 all-timer), he would still have dropped fewer games than he did in his last three full

U.S. Open runs in 2007, 2008 In this U.S. Open, he has and 2009. "I'm just happy that the last, embracedthe attacking move more than all but five other I don't know, one-and-a-half men, and has been more suc- years I have been again very, cord 17Grand Slam events.

cessful that way than anyone

2009, semifinal, Federer, who turned pro during Bill else who tried it at least 20 7-6 (3), 7-5, 7-5. Clinton's presidency, who times. 2010, semifinal, Djokovic, It's all part of a plan to shortwon his first major during the 5-7, 6-1, 5-7, 6-2, 7-5. same summer LeBron James en points and lengthen his ca2011, semifinal, Djokovic, graduated from high school, reer. And it's working. 6-7 (7), 4-6, 6-3, 6-2, 7-5. and whose Wikipedia page inAt W i m b ledon, F ederer cludes a subhead, "2007: Holdreached the finals as Post coling off young rivals." umnist Sally Jenkins wrote He's still holding them off. continues to evolve after deal- that he was "perhaps hitting That same Swiss tennis ing with a back injury in 2013. the ball more purely than ever." "Clearly the back issue in player will be on the court toAnd Federer might be playday, now 34, seeking his first '13 gave me the opportunity to ing even better in New York. major since 2012 while main- look at the picture more in a He dropped one set in Lontaining a world No. 2 ranking. broader scale rather than just don through the semifinals But he might look different. think I need to get my back and has not yet done that in Federer's graceful backhand straight and then I' ll be fine F1ushing. Going more granuand signature headband will again and we' ll go back to sta- lar, Federer has lost 52 games be there, but he' ll be playing tus quo," Federer said. "No, it (including just two on his serve) with a bigger racket he adopt- was an opportunity to change in this year's tournament. Even ed at the beginning of 2014 and things around." if he were to lose the maxian aggressive style he has conAfter adding Stefan Edberg mum number of games in the tinually gone to this year as he to his coaching staff late that final (in what would have to

very consistent," Federer said.

'Tm playing the right way, and also in a way that's fun for me.

If I decide to have long rallies and stay back, I can do that. If I decide to move forward and step it up, I can do that, too."

He beat Djokovic in straight sets last month in the final in

Cincinnati, giving him a lifetime 21-20 edge over the world No. 1, and has continued to add entries to a record book that

has become something of a Federer book. But he understands that his

greatness will be evaluated in major events, and he said as

much after thinking for a second when asked if he was playing his best tennis ever.

"Yes," Federer said, "If I win the tournament here, yes."


D6 THE BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

Pitching

the season,a team can avoid the prospect of shutting a pitch-

Continued from D1 That put his availability for

er down toward the end — but

the NL East-leading New York Mets in doubt and brought

it's not that easy. What makes this issue so

PREP ROUNDUP

oun ain IeWFcl IeS 0 eel rescen a e in 0 SSOuer

as Harvey’ssituation proves,

back memories of when play- tricky is that the expanded off-bound Washington shut postseason can add a subdown star Stephen Strasburg

stantial number of innings to

under similar circumstances a pitcher's ledger if his team in 2012. reaches the World Series. By Harvey and Strasburg were the time the San Francisco Giboth coming off Tommy John ants won the championship surgery — the commonly used lastyear,Ma dison Bumgarner name fora procedure in which

Bulletin staff report

had made 39 starts and thrown

CORVALLIS — Whatever Mountain View coach Jerry Jimenez said to his team at

an elbow ligament is replaced 270 innings, postseason inwith a tendon harvested from cluded. Bumgarner was used elsewhere. John pitched all the to shouldering a significant way until 1989 after his oper- workload, but other pitchers ation — his final big league may not be able to handle it. "I think t here's all k i nds appearance came shortly after his 46th birthday — and of things you have to be conhe says the key was getting cerned with, especially with through the initial recovery young pitchers getting from phase. that 140-150 inning season to "The longer out you go, where even if you try to limit, the less chance you have of they' re going to be 190 innings, breaking down," John said in a 200 innings possibly if they' re phone interview this week. doing well," Los Angeles AnJohn says when he became gels manager Mike Scioscia a freeagent afterthe 1978 sea› said. "All it takes is six innings son, the Dodgers were hesitant

the half apparently lit a fire beneath Zach Emerson.

His team trailing by three goals at the half, Emerson scored three straight goals after the break to help the Cougars come back for a 4-3 nonconference boys soccer win at

Crescent Valley. Emerson's flurry of goals came in a four-minute stretch

midway through the second half, and Taylor Willman and

Angel Garcia each picked up an assist as Mountain View improved to 2-2.

to re-sign him for more than a 204 innings." couple years, concerned about The 26-year-old Harvey is how long his surgically re- now at 171/s innings after 'Ibespaired arm would hold up. He day night's start at Washington. The Mets are considering

and ended up pitching for another decade. The dilemma that has come up with Harvey and Strasburg involves what a pitcher should do in the very early stages of

a plan that could include his making two more starts in the regular season. As for the postseason, they will see.

ay

Megan Cornett each scored for Summit, Christina Edwards had two assists, and Camille Weaver had an assist.

three different teams on its

way to winning the Reedsport Les Schwab Invitational. The Bulldogs defeated St. Paul 25-21, 25-17 behind Lynze

Crescent Valley 4, Mountain View 0: Mia Morey had five Schonneker's six kills and Also on Saturday: saves for the Cougars (0-4) in three digs and Margie Beeler's three aces and 17 assists. a nonconference loss to the Boys soccer visiting Raiders of Corvallis. In Culver's 25-18, 25-13 win Bend 1, Corvailis 0: CORHenley 4, Sisters 0: KLAM- over Reedsport, Jenny Vega VALLIS — C h ance Flam- ATH FALLS — Sisters (0-3) had four kills, two digs and mang converted a penalt y was down 3-0 at halftime on two block kills, while KayLee

a startfor 34 starts and you’re

went to the Yankees instead

coach Mackenzie Groshong, Christianson had two aces noting that the Lava Bears and 35 digs to lead the Cowjunior played forward, outside girls to a 28-26, 19-25, 25-18, midfield and center midfield 25-12 win over Banks. Jenniduring the match. "She was fer Roth had 24 kills, and Jenvery versatile and dynamic nifer McCallister added 22. for us today." In the Cowgirls' 25-12, 25-17, Summit 4, North Medford 25-21 win over Henley, Roth 0: Summit’sMeghan D had 13 kills, while McCallisscored in the fourth minute ter and Kerigan Waible had from 18 yards out, jump-start- five kills apiece. Christianson ing Summit (4-0) to its fourth finished with 29 digs. straight shoutout. Anniston Buiidogs take tourney title: Ward, Piper Flannery and REEDSPORT — Culver beat

kick in the second half in

the road and suffered its third

Bend's nonleague road victo- straight loss. ry. Flammang was knocked Umatilia 6, Cuiver 0: CULover by the Corvallis keep- VER — B ulldogs keeper

"When we put this plan to-

gether last winter we really a pitcher's innings (or pitches) didn't put any specific plan toin his very first year back on gether with respect to the playoffs," Mets general manager the mound? "I think that may be valid," Sandy Alderson said Wednesday. "We thought conceptually John conceded. "Maybe." After sitting out the 1975 he' d be available but we haven' t season, John came back and really talked about how we' d his return. Is it prudent to limit

er in the 56th minute to earn

David Gutierrez stopped 29

Aldrich an d

0: PRINEVILLE —

Jackson Mestler placed first in 15:22.8. Summit was led by Alex Martin (fourth, 15:52.3),

followed by Thomas Schoderbek (fifth, 15:53.6), Scott Kink ade (seventh, 16:09.4), Jett B a llantyne (eighth, 16:10.8) and Benjamin Wasserman (ninth, 16:13.5). Redmond runs at invite: SALEM — Remington Williams tied for seventh to lead

the Redmond boys to a seventh-place finish out of eight teams at the Saxon Invitational. Williams finished the 5,000-meter course in 17:01.77. Central Catholic placed first

as a team, and West Salem's Ahmed Muhumed won the race in 15:57.92. The Red-

mond girls finished fourth, led by Andrea Broyles, who

I r m a R e tano tied for 11th in 21:49.62. South

onship 22-25, 25-20, 15-12 as

ons to the team victory with

Schonneker logged 12 kills and three digs. Beeler had

44 points. Knepp paces Buiidogs: TIL-

C r o ok 25-16, 25-11 and Chiloquin 25-

County (1-1-0) got its first

to easily defeat Camas, which was second with 75. Sheldon's

each had three kills. Culver Salem's Anna Chau won in beat Kennedy in the champi- 18:48.61 to lead the host Sax-

the penalty. "We limited them shots, 20 in the second half, to to very few chances, mostly highlight the Bulldogs (0-3-1), three aces and 26 assists. long shots that were easy to who missed a penalty kick in Saints second at tourney: handle," said Bend coach Nils the second half. KLAMATH FALLS — Trinity Eriksson. Eric Cullen stopped Crook County 1, Marshfieid Lutheran defeated Lost River a ricochet shot in the final two minutes to earn the shutout

The Storm boys had 33 points

LAMOOK — Emma Knepp placed 20th with a t ime of 24:21.5 in the g i rls I A - 4A

5,000-meter race, helping Culver finished 14th in the

6, 25-6, but the Saints of Bend 21-team standings with 320

for the Bears (3-1-1). win of the season. Audrey Summit 3, North Medford 3: Bernardscored her firstgoal MEDFORD — Summit came of the season, netting the back from a 2-0 halftime defi- game-winning goal with less cit for a road draw against 6A than six minutes to play. North Medford. Cole Abbott

settled for second at the Hosanna Christian Tournament

after falling to Hosanna 25-11, 25-22. Mariah Murphy had eight kills against Lost River and three kills in the champi-

Cross Country Invitational. Banks topped the team standings with 91 points, while Scappoose's Linnaea Karulich took individual honors in

had Tommy John surgery in It was a different era then. 2014. "It's a game of passion, so Johnexceeded 200 innings five you do absolutely get wrapped times before his operation, so up in what's going on this seahis 207 in 1976 was not close son right now, but every year to a career high. Nowadays, there is a championship seateams are hesitant to have their son. So I can definitely see both pitchers throw too many in- sides of the argument." nings too early in their careers. Moore had hi s o peration That is true whether they are early enough last year that coming off a major operation he has been able to return

scored on a pass from Mack Van Der Velde, Mateo Fluh-

onship. Kenzie Smith posted

20:56.18.

or not.

and pitch a bit this season, so

the tying goal in the 50th min-

matches with Roseburg and Clackamas in pool play, then defeated Sprague 25-21, 25-20 in the first round of bracket

Pittsburgh right-hander Gerrit Cole is skipping his next start. The 25-year-old has not had the major arm problems that Harvey and Strasburg have, but Cole has already

when he takes the mound in 2016, he will not be coming back from a whole year off like Harvey did. There is another crucial difference: After the

ute for Sisters. The Outlaws

competition. Summit fell to

threw 207 innings in 1976. He

practically implement that."

says he could have pitched Tampa B ay l eft-hander even more. M att Moore could see t h e "The only thing that affect-

ed my endurance was Walter Alston, our manager," John

predicament.

"I'm sure that's a tough situ-

ation to be in," said Moore, who

SBld.

swept Lake Oswego 25-23, 25-

Medford scored in the final seconds to salvage the draw. Sisiers 1, Henley 1: SISTERS — Sean Willitts scored

2011 season, Moore signed a

options.

Harvey is slated to make Louis is almost assured a spot only about $614,000 this seain the postseason. son before becoming eligible The Mets are considering for arbitration. whether to skip a start for A big payday presumably Jacob deGrom. awaits as he earns more ser"The topic in itself is a bigger vice time, but Harvey needs topic today than it's ever been to be healthy. So the Mets and in my time in baseball," Hous- their star right-hander, as they ton manager A.J. Hinch said. pursue a championship, must "We all try to be smart. You weigh the benefit of additional manage your own team, you innings this year against the manage your own players, ev- potential effects on his future ery guy is different." health.

the 12-team Central Catholic Tournament. The Storm split

It is murky territory with

be in that situation, especially playing in New York. They' ve only one start in 19 days. That been waiting for a squad like is one way to manage a pitch- this for a while," Moore said. er's workload. Teams can also "I think if everybody had the skip starts, pull pitchers early decision Matt Harvey has to from games or try a six-man make right now, they'd probrotation. ably walk the same line he' s By being creative earlier in walking."

«~’g

the La Pine JV Tournament,

urday, to place fourth at the

helping the Grizzlies win six sets and tie for third.

eight-team tourney at Chehalem Aquatic Center. Eden Vanderhoeck had four goals to Newberg 14-1 on Saturday,

Tayla Wheeler scored two

a 54-58 victory over Camas,

blocks in the Storm's 10-7 win

won the silver bracket at the

in the Storm's 14-9 win over

S ummit shines at

A s h Ashland. After Summit fell

Paige Miller had three goals cord time, leading Summit to and Gillian Fritz had seven

goals in the second half to North M arion Tournament lift unbeaten Bend to a non- after struggling slightly in league contest at 15th Street pool play. The Ravens, howField. The Spartans (3-1) ever, came out ready to play took a 1-0 lead in the seventh in their bracket. The Ravens minute, and Lacey Adye an- swept crosstown rival Redswered three minutes later mond in the first match of for the Lava Bears (4-0-1) on bracket play 25-22, 25-12, 25-

Washington, in the girls por- over Mountain View. Kacie tion of the 20-team Ash Creek Bohme, Jenna Wimmer, HaXC Festival. In the boys race, ley Joyner and Vanderhoek Summit placed five runners each scored in a 9-4 loss to in the top nine to win handily, Lincoln. For Mountain View,

an assist from Caroline Al-

59.3 seconds. Marissa Dob-

13. Ridgeview moved on to

For Madras, Tyler Anderson was 14th in the 120-run-

also over Camas. Brooks cov-

which went 1-3 at the tourney,

ered the 5,000-meter course Alyssa Cannon had six goals in a meet-record 17 minutes, against Summit and another six in a 10-9 win over Ash-

ry of St. Mary's was second land, during which the Couin 18:01.5. Other top-10 plac- gars' Maya Hatch scored the ers for the Storm girls were tie-breaking goal. Mountain Hannah Tobiason (seventh, View lost 12-1 to Newberg 19:13.2), Emma Stevenson and 15-5 to Lakeridge, and (eighth, 19:13.4) and Taylor Cannon scored three goals in Vandenborn (10th, 19:15.8). the finale.

we' re hoping to do is train a freshman who finished in through our first few races 20:56.4. Sage Hassell was sec- of the season as the heaviest

third in the 91-runner field, and

ond for the Cougars in 21:15,

seventh and n inth, respec-

ual winner Kelsey Swenson,

workouts of the week. Then

teammates Dagny Donohue and Sophia Burgess finished

while Madison Leapaldt and that will be something we can tively. For Summit, Autumn ner field, and Israel Tapia was Kennedy Thompson took build off of moving forward." Layden took sixth and Claire 15th. La Pine's Hunter Schaf- fourth and fifth, respectively. Mountain View was first as Parton was 10th. Maggie Kas"We told our kids going into a team with 27 points, followed berger placed 19th for Crook fer took 24th. In the girls race, Mountain this that this is a workout," by Bend with 48 and Summit County, La Pine's Skyler LesView placed four runners in Mountain View coach Mike with 79. terfinished 33rd,and Madras’ Bend's Grace Perkins was Maddie Molitor finished 60th. the top five, induding individ- Condon said. "Really what

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Maddie Bean played every point of all eight sets played at and Mountain View on Sat-

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Storm fourth in Newberg: NEWBERG — Summit went

Creek: MONMOUTH — Olivia Brooks won with a re-

Continued from D1

the minors last month during a stretch in which he made

Gilchrist ties for third: LA PINE — Cassie Blum and

Girls water polo

Cross-country

X-Country

"I definitely wouldn't want to

with four kills against Hosanna Christian.

(2-0-1) outshot Henley 17-7, Sunset, 25-20, 25-20, before including 10 shots on goal. beating Lake Oswego for fifth place. Girls soccer Ridgeview wins silver brackBend 3, Corvaliis 2: Bend's et: AURORA — Ridgeview

lers. Wheeler scored off a face LaGrande, which they cross from Adye in the 41st also swept 25-20, 25-11, 25-13 minute then added a g oal giving them the overall brackfour minutes later. Corval- et win. lis added a goal in the 53rd Crook County 3, Banks minute. "Tayla played a phe- 1; Crook County 3, Henley nomenal game,"said Bend 0: PRINEVILLE — A s pen

seemingly no easy solution.

with care, even sending him to

from Marcos Dossantos, and off a Jack Tyler assist. North

i n n i ngs t h i s five-year contract that guarseason. anteed him $14 million — and The NL Central-leading Car- it would be worth at least $37.5 dinals will need to decide how million over eight years if the hard to push Carlos Martinez Rays pick up additional team

The Astros have handled 21-year-old Lance McCullers

mann scored off an assist

Summit fifth at Central Cath- nine aces against Chiloquin, olic: PORTLAND — Summit and Emily Eidler finished

Kai Robinson gave the Storm 17 in the final game of brack(1-0-1) the lead after his goal et play to claim fifth place in

t hrown 1808

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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

THE BULLETIN

© www.bendbulletin.corn/business

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

Overhauled Apple TV future of television? Stay tuned

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Business uses clogs to control geese ByMegJones Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Andrea Chang

PEWAUKEE, Wis. — As

Los Angeles Times

a squadronofpestsflies overhead, Susan Kinney's three employees spring into

CUPERTINO, Calif. — It was overlooked amid a

slew of wide-ranging product announcements, but the revamped Apple TV could be key to transforming the television-viewing experience — and give consumers the most compelling reason yet to cut the cable

action.

Half a dozen honking Canada geese are coming in for a landing on a pond. Border collies Rocky, Gael and Meg shiver silently as they wait for Kinney's command. Kinney says, "Get in," and the dogs sprint to the water's edge. Rocky jumps in right away, while Gael waits a few seconds.

cord.

Apple Inc.'s diminutive digital streaming device has gotten a major overhaul, with Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook unveiling a more powerful version

AndyTullis I The Bulletin

"Now Gael has to test the water first," Kinney says.

could be considered comprehensive. The new Apple

"Meg is just sitting there looking pretty." Rocky and Gael begin swimming toward the geese, one dog automatically taking the right flank and the other taking the left, working together as they patiently herd the geese to one end of the pond. They do not bark or

TV takes what competitors

whine. Only their black and

do in a piecemeal way, brings it all together and

white heads can be seen

adds more functionality. "With the Apple TV, I think they hit that dead

periscopes drawing doser to their prey.

this week and declaring it "the future of television."

Industry analysts say it' s not quite the future, but it' s an important step. It's the first time a

company has turned out a set-top box and a home entertainment system that

Shop lead Terry Armstrong, right, uses a plasma cutter to cut sheet metal at Mountain View Heating Inc. in Bend. Jobs requiring special skills or experience are particularly hard to fill in Oregon.

en em o ers ave rou e

above the water, like furry Within minutes, the

on," said Angelo Zino, an analyst at S&P Capital IQ. "What they' re doing now is great in the form of them

making greater penetration into living rooms. I

Housing costs and lack of skiled applicants contribute to employeeshortage

think they nailed it."

At its core, the device is built around a belief that apps, not cable channels, will become instrumen-

By JosephDitzler The Bulletin

ountain View Heating Inc. employs 38 people, less than half its workforce

tal to how television is consumed and lays the

groundwork for a new age in big-screen at-home

during the housing boom, and it

conditioning systems, posts a standing "now hiring" link on its website. Even so, finding qualified t e chnicians to fill vacancies is a problem, she said. She's not alone. Of approximately 6,300 total job

entertainment. It contains

intends to keep it that way, said service manager

vacancies this spring in the 10 counties in the middle

better hardware, a new operating system called

Jolie Perkins.

of the state between California and Washington,

tvOS, an improved remote

control and the integration of a smarter Siri personal assistant that understands

The Bend company, which installs and maintains e m ployers had trouble filling more than half of them, residential and commercial heating and air

according to the Oregon Employment Department.

fairly complex voice commands.

"We need a new foundation for TV," Cook told the crowd during the com-

pany's hardware event in San Francisco. "We know this is what it takes."

Television has been the laggard when it comes to the Internet-fueled

modernization of screens: smartphones and tablets have changed the way people live, while TV has remained largely stagnant. An app-driven TV

platform will bring the viewing experience in line with what consumers are

used to on mobile devices: namely, the ability to choose what you want to

watch, when you want to watch it.

SeeApple TV/E5

geese decide to take flight. Mission accomplished. Until a larger gaggle of geese flies in to an adjacent pond a few minutes later. Rocky, Gael and Meg sprint toward the new geese and do the same routine with the same result.

As they runback to Kinney and dry off in the universal canine way, Kinney does not hand out treats. Instead, she compliments her pups and scratches their

ears. "The work is their reward," says Kinney, who owns the southern Wiscon-

sin Geese Police franchise with her husband and son.

Wisconsin has a growing Canada geese problem with an estimated 119,000

Deschutes County accounted dooI'.

An E mployment D epart-

Find ajob

ment senior economic analyst, cancies, said Regional Econo› 100 employers in the Bend area G ail Kru men auer, drawing TheOregon Employment mist Damon Runberg. to fill jobs in a variety of fields, on a 2014 survey of Oregon Department lists job openThe upside for workers: De- from food service to skilled employers, found 2,300 jobs ings in the state on its Jobs mand for labor has led to a tradespeople. The pendulum hard to fill in the 10-county re8 Careers page,www. slight increase in wages, he has swung in workers' favor, gion. Employers reported they qualityinfo.org/jc sard. Lundy said. could find no applicants at all "Wages are going up, but it' s "The pool has shrunk so for 621 of those jobs and no nothing to write home about," much," she said Friday. "Now qualified applicants for 598 of Runberg said W ednesday. we' re letting our dients know them, according to Krumenau- pie with a skill set," said Andy "The average wage this sum- that this is the market; it's an er's report released earlier this High, vice president of governmer (in Deschutes County) was employee-driven market." month. ment affairs at the Central Ore$24.91 an hour." Construction jobs serveasa Construction workers, gon Builders Association. "A lot of those people, a lot of For about the last three bellwether of a healthy Central among the occupations hard months, j ob applicants are Oregon labor marketbecause to fill, fit into both categories. that workforce has not come more frequently holding out for they constitute a large share Workers still feel the sting of back to the market. A lot of higher pay or better benefits, of middle-wage jobs, Runberg the housing bust in Central them retr ained;some aregoing said Madison Lundy, customer said. Many of those jobs went O regon andare reluctant to re› back to old jobs. Another conservice manager at Cardinal away after the housing crash, turn; some are busy on jobs in cern is that the construction Services Inc., an employment and the workers who filled the Willamette Valley and else- workforce is aging, especially service in Bend. In January, them have been slow to return. where, anyway. in the technical trades. Those "It's definitely tough right areas are struggling to fill that she said, her office could not Especially hard to find are keep up with the many job ap- skilled tradespeople, such as now from the standpoint of role and that need." plicants coming through the plumbers and electricians. getting qualified laborers, peoSeeJobs/E5 for more than half of those va-

Cardinal works with about

taking up residence in the state, according to Brad Koele, Wisconsin Depart-

ment of Natural Resources wildlife damage specialist. Leaving behind copious organic deposits, honking and creating a ruckus, the geese can overtake a

neighborhood. When businesses and homeowners have had

enough, they often call the Geese Police. The nati onalcompany was started in New Jersey in 1998 and now has 17 franchises in 13 states,

mostly on the East Coast and Midwest. Kinney purchased the franchise for

southern Wisconsin several years ago and buys Geese Police-trained dogs. SeeGeese Police/E2

ow tanoI niversi too ont e iantso economics By Neil Irwin

vard — but the shift is more

New York Times News Service

noticeable among top young

No. 2 behind Harvard for the biggest fundraising haul-

as how incomes differ across

with its proximity to many

ganize themselves.

economic thought in the United

economists. Of the 11 people who have won the John Bates

of the world's most dynamic

States has long been found along the 2 miles in Cam-

Clark Medal for best economist younger than 40 since 2000,

companies. Its battle with Eastern universities echoes fights

"Who wouldn't want to be where the future of the world is

bridge, Massachusetts, that run

four are at Stanford, more than at any other university. Two of them joined in the past few months: the inequality re-

in other industries in which

The center of gravity for

betweenHarvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. But there is new competition for that title,

and it is quite a bit farther west. Stanford University has

lured an all-star lineup of economists to Palo Alto, California,

searcher Raj Chetty, who came from Harvard, and Matthew Gentzkow, who left the Univer-

sity of Chicago. Stanford's success with

economists is part of a larger fended off Harvard's and MIT's campaign to stake a claim as in the last few years — and attempts to woo Stanford economists.

The newest Stanford professors include a Nobel laureate — Alvin Roth, formerly of Har-

the country's top university. Its

draw combinesastatusasthe nation's "it" university — now with the lowest undergraduate

acceptance rate and a narrow

society and how industries or-

being made?" said Tyler Cowen, an economist at George Mason University (and regular

rankings, conducted in 2013, and in calculations of which

department's scholars are most frequently cited in academic literature. That might change. In the past four years, Stanford

Idents and lead central banks.

The last 10 people to serve as chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers

have all had a Ph.D. from either

has increased the number of

Harvard or MIT (the last without one was Janet Yellen, who

contributor to The New York

seniorfaculty 25percent,and 11 scholars with millions in

left the job in 1999 and received hers from Yale). Among the

ers, are being challenged by Silicon Valley money and entrepreneurship. And it is a reflection of a

Times) who often blogs about

cumulative salary have either

Ph.D. economists who have

trends in academic economics.

exerted great influence on global economic policy in recent years, the former Federal

broader shift in the study of economics, in which the most

ment about it which Boston

been recruited from other top programs or resisted poaching attempts by those programs. That said, Stanford's reputation in the future may depend

established companies, whether hotels or automobile-mak-

cutting-edge work increasingly relies less on a big-brained, individual scholar, developing mathematical theories, and more on the ability to crunch

extensive sets of data to glean insights about topics as varied

Stanford’ seconomics depart› ment, he said, "has an excite-

and Cambridge can't touch." In economics, Stanford has less on a few big-name recruits frequently been ranked just be- than on its ability to train the hind Harvard, MIT, Princeton Ph.D.s whose scholarship is and the University of Chicago, widely cited and reshapes induding in the most recent important economic debates U.S. News & World Report or who become influential survey of graduate school policymakers who advisepres›

Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke; the European Central Bank president, Mario Draghi; the retiring International Monetary Fund chief economist, Olivier Blanchard; and the Fed

vice chairman, Stanley Fischer, all studied at MIT. SeeStanford /E2


E2

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

BUSINESS TUESDAY SCORE BusinessCounseling: Business counselors will conduct free one-on-one conferences for local entrepreneurs every Tuesdaynight; Free; 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-706-1639.

WEDNESDAY Laborand Employment Law Update: This presentation featuring speaker Katherine Tank, ofTank Law, will cover newOregonlabor and employment laws from the 2015 Oregon legislative sessions; $30 to $45 members, nonmembers; 7:30 a.m.; Shilo Inn, 3105 O.B.Riley Road, Bend; 541-408-4557 or www. hrcentraloregon.org.

THURSDAY Business Startup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour classand decide if running abusiness is for you; $29; 6 p.m.; La PinePublic Library, 16425 First St., La Pine;541-3837290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc.

FRIDAY Contractors CCB Test Prep Course: Two-day live class topreparefor the state-mandatedtest to becomea licensed contractor; $359; 8 a.m.; Central OregonCommunity College — Technology Education Center, 2030 SE College Loop,Redmond;541-383-

E ND

7290 or www.cocc.edu/ccb.

Sept. 22 SCORE Business Counseling: Business counselors will conduct free one-on-one conferences for local entrepreneurs every Tuesdaynight; Free; 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-706-1639 Mid Oregon Credit Union Insurance Workshop: Learn howinsurance rates are determinedandwhat you candoto affect those rates; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 NE Gushing Drive, Bend; 541-382-1795. Growing Your Business with QuickBooks: Learn thefundamentals of business accounting and QuickBooks operation in two threehour evening classes,and upto three hours of one-on-onedaytime advising; $199;6 p.m.;COCC Redmond Campus — Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop,Redmond;541-3837290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. Green Drinks: It's combined this month with the BendEnergy Challenge Week;presentations, food carts, music and beer; free; 6 p.m.; Bend AreaHabitat for Humanity ReStore, 224 NE Thurston Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908.

Sept. 23 What's Hot in Franchising!: Learn about the top trends, the best industries and "What's Hot" in franchising for 2015-16; two-hour workshop with optional 60-minute coaching session andQ&A;$29; 6

To submit an event, visit bendbulletirLcom/events and click "Add Event" at least 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: business@bendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0323.

p.m.; COCC ChandlerLab,1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend;541-383-7290 or www.cocc.edu.

Sept. 24 Supercharge Your Hiring Process: Two-part seminar for businesses focuses on thebest practices for recruiting new employeesandan overview of legal hiring practices; $50;7:30a.m.;Hampton Inn & Suites, 730 SWColumbia St., Bend; 541-382-3221. Lunch and Learn — Monthly Market Overviews: Jacob Fain, financial adviser, at the MorganStanley office, 705 SWBonnett Way, Suite 1200, Bend, Lunch provided. For more details, contact Jacob.fain© morganstanley.corn or 541-617-6013. Nonprofits Open Lab: Network and search Foundation Directory Online for potential grants with a trained professional on hand; intended for those already familiar with FDO;bring your own laptop or useoneof ours; free; noon; RedmondPublic Library, 827 SW DeschutesAve., Redmond; 54 I-617-7089. Central Oregon Pub Talk: Tenearlystage companies deliver 3-minute pitches for a chance to present at the BendVenture Conference in October; $25 Economic Development for Central Oregon members, $35, nonmembers; 5 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend;541-388-3236,ext. 3 or www.edcoinfo.corn/events/ september-pubtalk. Project Management Information Meeting: Information session to

learn more about gaining project management skills and whether you might benefit from certification. Registration recommended; free; 5:30 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College Chandler Lab, 1027NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.coco.edu. Protect Yourself Online Workshop: Hear how to protect your information, computer and yourself online; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 NE Gushing Drive, Bend; 541-382-1795.

Sept. 25 Build a Business Website with WordPress Beginning I: Learn the basics about domains, hosting, websites and blogs, andthe difference betweenWordPress.org and WordPress.corn. This class will give you the starter website needed to continue with Build your Business Website with WordPress, Beginning II. Requirements: Must havestrong computer and Internet skills; $99; 9 a.m.; Central OregonCommunity College Bend Campus,2600 NW College Way,Bend;541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu.

Sept. 26 QuickBooks Pro 2015 Beginning: Learn QuickBooks 2015andset up new customer andvendor accounts, create invoices, record sales and enter payments. Prerequisite: basic Windows experience. Coursefee includes textbook for the class; $89; 9 a.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600NW CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/

continuinged/software// 15th Annual Green Tour: This year, the tour, which features seven homes, is part of BendEnergy Challenge Week;learn ways to use less energy, andseethe latest trends in green building; free;10a.m.; www. bendenergychallenge.org/tour.

232, Bend,541-383-7270, www.cocc. edu/continuinged/systech.

Cisco CCNA: Intro to Networking: First of a four-course sequenceto prepare for theCiscoCertified Network Associate certification exam.Students may attend online through liveand recorded videoconference,through Dec.10; $499; 7 p.m.;COCOBend Campus, 2600NW CollegeWay,PIO

Oct. 13 SCORE Business Counseling: Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running abusiness is for you; free; 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-706-1639.

Paul D. Navarra to Richard N. and Amy E.Tyler, CanyonView Subdivision, Lot15, $274,000 Timothy R. andAlexa N.Gassner to Santiago P.Egoavil, Canyon View Subdivision, Lot 20, $287,500 Sally A. Fullhart to Kenneth B. and Rebecca J. Hard, CrookedRiver Ranch No. 2, Lot 17,Block 39, $285,500 Jacquelyn L. Vandecoevering to Jerry and Jane E.Gross, Crooked River Ranch, Phase 1,Lot10, Block 20, $290,000 William K. and Marlinda L. Romaine to Leland R. MooreJr., CrookedRiver Ranch No.12, Lot19, $197,500 Julianne M. andMareVirgin to Anthony J. andMegan A. Hansen, Beans First Addition, Lot 5, Block 2, $159,000 David E. andKimberly N. Chambers to Patrick N. and Tiffany A. Jinings, Township13, Range12, Section 22, $243,000 Paul S. Charles to Debbie Zawerucha, Township13, Range13, Section 31, $275,000 Robert D. Cole to Natalie J. Hubbard, Township13, Range12, Section 34, $156,500 Patrick N. and Tiffany A. Jinings, who acquired title as Tiffany A. Badeau, to Richard L.Beukelman, Township13, Range12, Section 27, $155,000 Billie L. Willis to Scott Danforth, Crooked River RanchNo. 10, Lot 33, $210,000 Dale A. andDeannaDavison to Thomas A. andSandra K.Ayres, Township13, Range13, Section 29, $780,000 Edward L. and Linda M. Tenney to lan C. andShylla M.Walsh, Steven R. and Kaibah B.Koski andMark GossageandCatherineMacLeod, Township12, Range11, Section 2, $315,000 Bonnie L. Holland to Jerry D. Rich and Linda Y.Dreher, CrookedRiver

Ranch No. 3, Lot 297,$221,000 Brian J. and Elise N. Stenberg to Lucas N.P.Jackson andJacklene R. Light, Morning Crest Estates, Phase5, Lot 259, $166,000 William M. and Priscilla K. Bigler to Vance M. Perry andFrances L Barton, Township 13, Range12, Section 34, $385,000 James F.Pinker to Samuel Hargraves, Wistful Vista, Lots 8-9, Block12, $162,375 Raymond C.Griffin to Arnold W. Ferreira andSarah H.Linfoot, Township 12, Range13, Section 30, $265,000 Harold R. Klann to Richard P.and Karen M. Affeldt, Madras Ranchos Subdivision No.1, Lot 3, Block 5, $230,000 Joseph I. Bates to Bailey M. Sisk, Morning Crest Estates, Phase 5,Lot 260, $167,500 Lawrence P.and Rosanne E.Mitchell to Paul A. andCatherine M. BrosnanTrepus, CrookedRiver Ranch No.3, Lot 118, $235,000 Richard L. and Linda L. Thomas, trustees of the ThomasJoint Revocable Living Trust, to Brian C. and Claudia H.McCarter, Metolius Meadows Fourth Addition, Lot 2, Block 3, $375,000 Larry A. Randall to Kenneth P.Berkey Jr., Township11, Range11, Section 35, $365,000 Curt Kallberg and Patricia Cordoni to Aaron Nartz, Township10, Range14, Section18, $316,000 John J. and PeggyE.Johnson to Kathleen L.Yerkes, Crooked River Ranch No. 3, Lot12, $170,000 Larry Harder to Gregory D. Boucher and Lisa D.NewbyBoucher, Crooked River RanchNo. 10, Lot 231, $174,000 Jim Adkins to GreenTree Servicing LLC, CrookedRiver RanchNo. 14, Lot 7, $259,534.94

Sept. 30

Central Oregon Occupational Safety and Health Conference: Featuring workshops to help your organization improve workplace safety and health performance.; $45 to Sept. 29 $180; 7:30 a.m.; TheRiverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, 3075 N.U.S. Central Oregon Occupational Safety and Health Conference: Two- Highway 97,Bend; 503-378-3272 or day event featuring workshops to help www.orosha.org. your organization improve workplace Oct. 6 safety and health performance; $45 to $180, depending onattendance; SCORE Business Counseling: 7 a.m.; TheRiverhouseHotel & Business counselors will conduct Convention Center, 3075 N.U.S. free one-on-one conferences for local Highway 97,Bend; 503-378-3272 or entrepreneurs every Tuesdaynight.; www.orosha.org. free; 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend SCORE BusinessCounseling: Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; Business counselors will conduct 541-706-1639. free one-on-one conferences for local entrepreneurs every Tuesdaynight; Oct. 7 free; 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; Business Startup Class: Do you 541-706-1639. have a great ideathat you think could be a successful business, but just Get The Best Car Deal Workshop: don't know how toget started? Cover Tom Collier, of Classic Motor CarCo., will talk about how to find what acar is the basics in this two-hour class and worth, the dealer's purchase price and decide if running a business is for you; $29; 11 a.m.; COCC Chandler Lab, determining how muchyou canafford; 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 5416 p.m.; Mid OregonCredit Union, 395 383-7290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. SE Fifth St., Madras; 541-382-1795.

DEEDS Deschutes County •RondalL.and MaureenBolesto Frederick L. andBeverly N. Endicott, Aspen CreekManufactured Home Subdivision, Lot 33, $154,000 •FannieMae,alsoknownasFederal National Mortgage Association, to Kenneth E. Fields and Michelle R. Butcher, Meadowview EstatesSecond Addition, Lot 7, Block 6, $225,000 Peter and Gail Shoemakerand Michael andSuzanne Fortuneand Fred ShoemakerandJohanne Hardy to Chester R. andAnnette Whinery, Tamarack Park, Portion of Lot 5, Block 1, $200,000 Carolyn R. Mayer to Brian M. and Brenda L. McCarthy, Revised Plat of Meadow Village, Lot 4, Block12, $370,000 Laurence J. Hayden and Valerie L. Mitchell, trustees of the HaydenFamily Trust, to Michael W.Marks andTaryn K. Burke, Star Bright Estates, Phase2, Lot 10, Block 2, $230,000 Edwin and Luanne Shackelford to Benjamin N. EisleyandBarbara E. Tandet Eisley, trustees of the Benjamin and Barbara Eisley RevocableTrust, The Bluffs at River Bend,Phase1, Lot 18, $329,000 Stonewater Development Inc. to Pahlisch HomesInc., Stonegate P.U.D., Lot115, $312,172.65 Sandra Peer to RobynG.and Leighton S. Tuttle, Empire Village, Phases 1-3, Lot 4, $286,900 Arbor Builders LLC to Donald C. Lect and Kathleen A.Gault, Riverside Addition, Lot 5, Block 5, $416,170.85 Peggy J. Fronabarger, trustee of the Fronabarger RevocableTrust, to Scott and Stephanie B.Maier, Carriage Addition No. 2, Lot 4, Block 6, $239,000 Thomas C. andBeverly J. Dunderdale to Vincent J. Tripolone III, Mountain Pines P.U.D.,Phases4-5, Lot 30, $479,000 Phillip H. and Louise E. Wilson to

Steven R. Hansenand Sharla M. Kunz, Oakview, Phase 4,Lot1, $265,000 •DonaldO.and ElizabethG.Nappen to Douglas N.andDeborah J. McCune, Summit Crest, Phase1, Lot 63, $284,650 Gary and Leola Reelto Gary A. Tepe andCatherine B. Donahue, First Addition to Whispering PinesEstates, Lot 31, Block 3, $199,500 •LanceP.andMichelle E.Boyceto Ron A. andBarbara B.Faunce, Ridge at Eagle Crest 57,Lot154, $245,900 James B. andLinda L. Beeler to David L. Rutledge, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Unit 8, Lots 6-7, Block 113, $225,000 Sheran R. Wright to Christopher G. Sepic and Janice M.Hughes, OldMill Estates, Lot 18, $240,000 Patrick and Kelly D. Ayres to Adam W. and Serena S.Dietrich, Choctaw Village, Lot 22, Block 4, $275,000 Anthony J. and Austin Fletcher to Helen L. Kimbrough, Choctaw Village, Lot 1, Block 5, $231,000 Steve Bleasdell to Angeline R. and Henry C. Rhett, Sisters, Lots11-12, Block 5, $219,000 •HaydenHomes LLC to KellyL.and Amber L. Shults, Westerly II, Lot 46, $313,076 Matthew S. andErin K. Ebbing to Richard C.and Molly J. Clark, Northwest Townsite Co.'s Second Addition, Lot 6, Block 44, $365,000 Jack Utterbackto Ross E. Howard, Second Addition to Woodland Park Homesites, Lot17, Block1, $185,000 •HaydenHomes LLC to David W. Robertson, Village Pointe, Phases 4-7, Lot 184, $208,756 Judith K. Fahlman to Eric and Kristen Kozowski, Township 17,Range13, Section 33, $529,000 Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Sarah Kamasz, LavaRidges, Phase 4,Lot 100, $320,000 •DavidM .Jacobsto DouglasM.and

Stanford

"I was very happy where I was in Chicago, but

Continued from E1 But the recentrecruiting success of Stanford shows some-

Virginia J. Nelson, StonegateP.U.D., Phase 1, Lot 11,$299,900 Robert P. Reuland to Sam and Crystal Sellers, PonderosaCascade, Lot 19, Block 5, $299,300 Douglas H. andEleanor P. Blair, trustees of the Blair Living Trust, to Amber L Barton andSeanA. Smith, Crossroads SecondAddition, Lot 84, $210,000 Richard Stone, trustees of the Richard and Mary StoneLiving Trust, to Marilyn J. Wilkins, NorthWest Crossing, Phases 7and 11, Lot 333, $500,000 Roberta J. Gantenbein to Kermit L. and Linda R.Hess, Mountain View Park, Phase1, Lot 39, $225,000 Carl E. and PeggyL. Story, trustees of the Carl E.Story and Peggy L.Story Revocable Living Trust, to John E. andStaceyR.Lyda,GlazeMeadow Homesite Section of Black Butte Ranch, Homesite No.49, $550,000 •Michael G.Johnsonand KathleenM. Johnson to Daryl and Kristina Tewalt, Sisters Industrial Park First Addition, Lot 6, Block 3, $330,000 Kathleen R. Hilis and DonnaD. Watson to DonBaxter, Ellinger's Addition to the Townsite of Redmond, South Half of Lots 8-10, Block10, $234,900 Jeffrey M. and Daniele J. Murphy to Todd M. andDorothy H.Grasle, Ridge at Eagle Crest 7,Lot 26, $210,000 Floyd L. and Shelley R. Johnson to James M.andGenelle F.Brunner, Summer Creek, Phase 1,Lot 48, $175,000 Kristi A. Otto, trustee of the Dorothy M. Brannon Trust, to Floyd L. and Shelley R. Johnson, SummerCreek, Phase 2, Lot 49, $210,000 Crook County Kathleen M. Yutzie to Bolt Sheffield, Miles Puddy Ranches, Portion of Lot 9, Block 1, $293,000 Mona C. Boyd to Cristina Merete, Ironhorse I, Phase 1,Lot13, $241,400

it felt like there is a sense of excitement and

really building something at Stanford." — Matthew Gentzkow, professor of economics at Stanford

thing broader about how the economics profession ischanging. The specialties of the new recruits vary, but they are all and really building something neodassical thought that emexamples of how the momen- at Stanford," Gentzkow said. phasizes the efficiency of martum in economics has shifted "Stanford as a universityis in a ketsand the ri sks of govern› away from theoretical mod- really strong position right now ment intervention. NIT's ecoeling and toward "empirical and has a lot of resources, and nomics department has a long microeconomics," the analysis seems very committed tousing record of economic thought in of how things work in the real those resources tobuild on the the Keynesian tradition, and world, often arranging com- frontierofeconomics." it producedseveral of the top plex experiments orexploiting Chetty, who left Harvard for policymakers who haveguided large sets of data. That kind of Stanford, saw benefits in the theworldeconomy through the w ork requires lots ofresearch concentration of research that tumultuouslast several years. "There is n't a S t a n f ord assistants, work across disci- uses Big Data, large sets of replines induding fields like so- search that are hard to compile school of thought," said B. ciology and computer science, and analyze. His work has ex- Douglas Bernheim, chairman and the use of advanced com- amined, for example, whether of the university's economics putational techniques unavail- the quality of a kindergarten department. "This isn't a doctriable a generation ago. teacher haslong-lasting effects naire place.Generally doctrine That trend is evident across on aperson's life and earnings. involves simplification, a n d leading economics depart- "Some of the attraction of increasingly we recognize that ments — the traditional power- the Bay Areais simply the fact thesesocial issueswe' re trying houses have plenty ofscholars that there are exciting oppor- to figure out are phenomenally doing work in the same vein, tunities with data and methods complicated. Theconsensus at including work by Esther Du- and machinelearning," he said. Stanford has focused around flo at MIT on how to test ways And that type of work requires the idea that you have to be to fight global poverty and by lab space that more closely re- open to a lot of approaches and Roland G. Fryer Jr. at Harvard semblesthat neededin the hard ways of thinking about things, on the roots of racial inequal- sciences— a factStanford has and to be rigorous, thorough ity. But the scholars who have exploited. and careful in bringing the newly signed on with Stanford Less clear is whether the higheststandard of craft to describeda university particu- agglomeration of ec o nom- bear on your research." larly well suited to researchin ic stars at Stanford will ever And in its recentrecruiting, that vein, with a combination of amount to thekind of coherent Stanford may have had a selabspace, strong budgetsfor re- school of thought that has been cret weapon, coming from the search support and proximity achieved atsome other great skies."Even the weather coopto engineering talent. universities. erated with us this year," Bern"I was very happy where I The Chicago School, under heim said. "Nine feet of snow in was in Chicago, butit felt like the intellectual imprint of Mil- Boston this past winter couldn' t there is a sense of excitement ton Friedman, was a leaderin have hurt."

John W. andMichelle Lester to Branden L. andBrandi L. Girves and Rachael R.Hurt, Deer Ridge Subdivision, Phase 3,Lot 64, $180,000 Trevor and DaleneMaykut to Mark R. and Charlotte E.Jackson, Mountain RidgeEstatesPU.D.,Lot22,$352,500 James H. andSharon A. Montgomery to Brian P.and Ann O' Connor, Partition Plat 2015-05, Parcel 1, $369,000 Darwin C. andRita A. Born, trustees of the Born Family Revocable Living Trust, to James H.and Sharon A. Montgomery, Ironhorse I, Phase1, Lot 119, $250,000 Marvin L. Harris to Natalie T. and James M. Good,Partition Plat 200727, Parcel 1, $450,000 Spencer Bros LLC to Timothy J. and Kay M. Fleskes, BrasadaRanch1, Lot 197, $695,500 Matthew L. Earll to David and Carolyn Ellertson, Township16, Range 16, Section 12, $225,000 Heather and RyonHockett to Susan M. and Larry D. Henninger, Northridge Subdivision, Phase 9,Lot199, $180,000 Bonnie and Dennis Hayesand Sharon Apperson to Julie andDavid Rockwood, Sunrise Acres, Lot17, Block 4, $279,000 Grover L. and Emma J. Wiliams to Jorene M.Booth and SadeA. Eller, Stone Ridge, Phase 3,Lot 36, $164,900 Jefferson County Wayne and Ida Sutton to Nationstar Mortgage LLC,doing business as Champion MortgageCo.,Crooked River Ranch No.16, Lot19, $155,015 ThomasO.andRoseM.Winfrey to Philip M. Brock, Township13, Range 12, Section 22, $360,000 Federal Home LoanMortgage Corp. to Craig andAmy Kappel, Crooked River Ranch No. 7,Lot 54, $160,000

Geese Police Continued from E1 Driving an SUV, Kinney

h

travels throughout the area

from March until pondsice up late in the year. She and her dogs are hired by the week and return as many as three times a day to locations for as long as it takes to safely

scare away geese. Painted on the side of her vehicle is "Got Geese'? Call us to ... Get the Flock Out."

Kinney's customersinclude schools, municipalities, cem-

eteries and homeowners sick of cleaningup after geese that produce as much as a pound and a half of excrementdaily.

Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel via Tribune News Service

The Hawks Nest Homeowners Association in Pewau-

Gael, top, and Rocky, take to the water to chase geese. Susan

kee,Wisconsin, a Milwaukee

to rid homes and businesses from geese. The dogs will chase

suburb, tried another business that used remote-controlled

thegeese offbyrunning around them and even swimming out

Kinney owns Geese Police, a business that uses border collles after them.

boats, but the geese always came back, said Tim Frank,

who is in charge ofgrounds Geese Police was started fee for two trained dogs, two for the association. Flocks in 1996in New Jersey by Da- weeks of training with their of 40 to 50 birds had taken vid Marcks, who franchised dogs in New Jersey and two up residence in the subdivi- his businesstwo years later weeks of training by Geese sion'stwo ponds, and it was as the demand for his dogs Police officials b ack in t h e difficult for residentsto walk skyrocketed. franchisees' home states. their dogs or allow their chilFranchisees such as KinBorder collies are used bedren to play outside without ney pay a fee for dogs and cause they are the only breed encountering birds that can training and the right to use that effectively scares away be aggressive when they are the Geese Police name. It can geese, Marckssaid. "Border col l i e s are nesting. cost $30,000 to $35,000 for a Then the association hired franchise plus 6 percent of the smartest dogs. Their Geese Police. grossprofits paid annually to chase behavior is based on "It really cleanedup our Geese Police, Marcks said. stalking," said Marcks. "Unstreets. I did not believe this All bo rder c ollies ar e like a lab or retriever, they would work, but I'm com- trained at Geese Police acad- don't need the gratification pletely shocked. It's pretty emiesin New Jersey. of grabbing the animal and impressive,"Frank said. Franchisees pay anupfront bringing itback to you."


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 T HE BULLETIN E 3

9 QUKsTION:How Is Mv cRKDIT scoRK cALcULATKD?

ANSWER: According to t h e A merican Bankers Association, about half of all consumers know what their credit score is. But how many of us know exactly how thismysterious score is actually calculated? Your credit score is calculated using information and data from your credit report. Your credit report contains a lot of information, but is essentially a file about you,

your accounts and your payment history. This includes a record of where you work and live, how you pay your bills (on time or late) and whether you' ve been sued, arrested or have filed for bankruptcy. Data from your credit report is divided into five major categories. The credit score scoring method weighs some of the five categories more heavily than other categories. Payment History —35%: This includes how ti mely you pay your bills and any delinquencies and public records Amounts Owed — 30%: This includes all debt — mortgage, auto, credit cards. This percentage of available credit you' re using on revolving accounts, like a credit card, is heavily weighed. Length of Credit History — 15%: This refers to how long you' ve opened the accounts and the time since account activity. The longer you have an account opened, the higher your score goes up. Types of Credit Used -10%: To get a perfect credit score, you' ll actually need a mix of types of credit, such as home, auto, student loans or credit cards. New Credit — 10%: This category includes how often you pursue new credit, including credit inquiries into your report and the number of recently opened accounts. Kathleen Bailey

~

g

Federal .

+.

Assi s tant Vice President, Bmal i Business Banking Officer

QUEsiioN: Why do I need to have General Liability, Professional LiabiTity, and Excess Liability coverage for my business? ANswER: Ge neral L i ab i l ity i nsu r ance, s ometimes referred to a s "slip and fall" coverage will cover you for common risks, including customer injuries on your premises as well as damage to others caused by your Nate emPloyees while working in the field. Chesbro Professional Liability insurance, sometimes called "Errors and Omissions" or "Malpractice" insurance, generally provides coverage in situations where you are sued for negligence or alleged negligence in the execution of professional duties. For example, if an architect makes a mistake on blueprints regarding construction of a building that other architects would not have done, his client might sue him. A professional/malpractice policy will pay his defense costs and any judgment or settlement. ProfessionaVmalpractice insurance is available for doctors, dentists, accountants, real estate agents, architects, and other professionals. Excess Liability or "Umbrella" policies protect against catastrophic liability claims. The policy acts as excess coverage over your primary liability policies. Its limits apply in addition to that provided by underlying coverage. These policies can sometimes extend over multiple underlying policies. A business with a General Liability policy limit of $1,000,000 per occurrence and an Excess Liability policy with a limit of $5,000,000would have a total per occurrence liability coverage limit

www.eascadelosare.corn INSURANCE CENTER

Retirement Age (NRA) depending on your birth year. For t h ose born in 1960 or later the NRA is now age 67. Take the benefits earlier than your NRA and your benefits are reduced. Each year beyond your NRA the government bumps up your benefit by 8%. lf you are still working at age 62 and earn over $15,480 ( in 2014), then you would want to wait taking your benefits. For every $2 over the $15,480 the government takes away $1 from your benefits. People who turn 66 this year do not lose any benefits if they make $41,400 or less before they reach that age. After reaching your NRA you are allowed to earn however Barbara

much you want without any reduction in benefits. lf you are married you have more choices to maximize your benefits as

long as the spouse is not CSRS (civil service employee hired prior to 1984) or if the spouse worked in a state such as California when they were allowed to opt out of contributing to social security in the past. There are 2 benefits called Restricted Application, and File and Suspend which can greatly help both of you receive the maximum dollars over your lifetimes. We have advanced calculators in our office to help clients decide when is

ANswER: Some things to consider: When a seller decides to ignore the current market t r ends a n d c u r rent m a r ket's Ik app r a i sal prices and actual Sold comps, they tend to sit on the market while others Diane continue to sell around them. Lozito The pattern is you will see these homes paying taxes and "holding costs" for years, on a home they wanted to get out of. Then they eventually drop their price years later and finally sell at Market Value. When you do the math, that's time wasted and a money loss to the seller. A better strategy is to go with the agent that shows you the facts, the true, current, market values and trust them to list your home correctly. Giving you a greater chance to have it sold. Put your ego aside and trust their experience and expertise. Call or email me at CentralOregonReaIEstate@earthlink.net to discuss this or any other questions you might have.

The biggest downside to a fixed indexed annuity is liquidity; there are significant surrender costs if the owner withdraws money during the surrender period which is typically 5 to7 years. However, someindexed annuities allow for periodic withdrawals without surrender charges. As with all investments time horizon, investment experience, and risk tolerance should be a consideration.

FARMERS

Be sure to visit the government website: www.socialsecurity.gov for the most up to date information.

CFPG

Cornerstone Financial PlanningGroupLLC www. CornerstoneFinancialBend.corn 5 4 1-388-17OS

C7

P ACI F I C RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE

Sr. Mortgage Banker 541-410-2808 judy.mcclurg'pacresmottgage.c orn

MORRIS REAL ESTATE

WWW.Central0regORHOmeSandLand.COm

MLO- 225972

Answer a local Financial Question. Reach 70,000 local readers with your Financial Answer. FOR MORE INFORMATION K AREN S T O W E

KR

541-771-0064

QUKsTION:Iam a single woman and want to purchase my first home? Is this unusual? ANswER: This is very common in today's housing industry. One-in-five homeowners are single females, making them the second-largest home buying demographic after m arried couples. According to the National Association of Realtors, single women are buying homes at nearly twice the Judy frequency as single men. Single women constitute McClurg 23 percent of first-time homebuyers and 16 percent 0 of all repeat buyers. Single men are 15/o of firsttime homebuyers and 8% of repeat homebuyers. Breadwinner roles are shifting as more women are becoming the primary earners in their households, according to a Pew Research Center study. Women also carry an average of 22% less credit card debt than men; helping their debt-to-income ratios when qualifying for a mortgage. Demographic changes and fair housing and credit legislation are helping to fuel the trend. As single women are carving out a prominent place in today's market, homebuyer education and home marketing are being tailored towards this growing clientele.

CALL OR EMAIL Diane Lozito/Broker, ABR,RSPS ~ Licensed in the State of Oregon 541-548-3598 primary, 306-9646mobile

www.farmersagent.corn/kbrannon

best to draw their benefits. How to decide when to take social security is probably the most important decision you will make.

P RO P E RT l E S

QUEsTIoN: I have a List Price in mind much higher than agents I spoke to want to list me at.

In a low interest rate environment another real concern is inflation risk; interest rates are currently less than the rate of inflation. This means that an interest only investment is actually losing money after being adjusted for inflation. Having all your money in only interest bearing investments could result in the owner out living their money.

I NSURA N C E

ANSwER: That depends on several things. What is your age, are you single or married, and are you still working? The earliest age you can elect to take those benefits is still age 62. If you are widowed you can actually take the benefits at age 60 if you were married for 10 years or longer. Age 65 is no longer the Normal

EAGLE CRKsT' sueOstfemarx. corn • 541-408-4204

541-382-7772

QUEs~ioN: When should I take Social Security?

QUESTioN: When listing my home for sale what aresome measures I can take to keep my home safe? ANswER: September is Realtor Safety Month and not only is it a reminder for Real Estate agents to be careful when dealing with Buyers and Sellers but it is also a reminder that we, as agents, have a responsibility to have a "safety survey" with our Sellers. When doing a walk-through with Sellers it is important to point out ways to keep your home safe during showings. Several important factors should be considered when showing your home: I) Remove or lock up your prescription drugs. These have street value. 2) Stow away your valuables. Or better yet, I advise my clients to take cash and jewelry with them if they are leaving the home during a showing! Your Real Estate agent can't be responsible for any theft as he/she probably won't be present at the showing. 3) Remove the family photos. We ask Sellers to do this for staging but you don't know who is walking through your home so it's especially important to remove the pictures of the kids. 4) Make a house safe for the Buyers. Sellers should make sure that there are no potential hazards in their home like loose carpet, steps and other things a Buyer might trip on or over. 5l Keep your home locked and consider extra monitoring. Your home is being presented to the public "For Sale" on signs and other advertisement and it's easy to attract intruders! 6) Beware of unexpected visitors. Because of the "For Sale" sign and advertising people may just come and knock on the door. Standard procedure for showings should be followed and only Real Estate agents using the lockbox and making an appointment should gain access to your home. Taking just a few precautionary steps can help avoid problems and, in the end, keeps everyone safer in the transaction.

ANswER: An annuity is a life insurance product so the first thing to consider is the fiscal health 4,g of the life insurance company. Annuities are not guaranteed by FDIC, so the company you select should have a good rating from A.M. Best or Moody's. This score reflects the fiscal health of the Karen Brannon company and the likelihood that they will be able to meet their long term obligations. In a fixed indexed annuity the owner receives a guaranteed interest rate while enjoying some of the gains when the index being used, like the SAP 500 performs well. The issuing life insurance company assumes all of the downside investment risk so the annuity owner doesn't have any exposure for market down turns.

of $6,000,000.

Pho n e: 541-312-7122

Email: kate.baileyowafd.corn joe ste ere ' Washington Federal NMLSR ¹ 410394

QUEsTToN: My parents just bought a fixed indexed annuity, how safe it this type of investment?

5 41 -383 - 0 3 0 1 kstowe©bendbulletin.corn


E4

TH E BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

WT Consolidated Stocks NYSEand Nasdaq For theweek en ding Friday, Sep tember11, 2015 WK YTD N AME

D I V LAST

CHG %CHG

AES Corp .40 11.13 +.10 -1 9.2 A FLAC 1 . 5 6 58.14 +1.75 -4.8 AK Steel 2.77 -.13 -53.4 AT&T Inc 1.88 32.72 (..1 6 -2.6 AbbottLab .96 43.41 +.34 -3.6 A bbVie 2 . 0 4 59.35 -.42 -9.3 A berFitc . 8 0 19.50 -.95 -31.9 Accenture 2.04e 97.35 +2.90 +9.0 Achillion 7.77 +.03 -36.6 ActivsBliz .23f 29.15 +1.05 +44.7 79.19 +2.30 +8.9 AdobeSy AMD 2.01 +.19 -24.7 AdvSemi .32e 5.48 +.72 -10.6 AerCap 42.21 e1.74 (.8.7 AEtern g h 8.06 -.02 -90.2 A etna 1. 1 6f 117.89 +4.42 +32.7 A gnico g . 3 2 22.15 -.66 -11.0 AkebiaTher 11.21 +4.07 -3.7 AlcatelLuc 3.47 +.22 -2.3 Alcoa .12 9.65 +.16 -38.9 Alibaba n 64.63 +.72 -37.8 AgscriptH 13.27 +.27 +3.9 A llstate 1 . 2 0 58.14 +1.10 -1 7.2 AgyFincl 20.87 +.29 -11.6 AlpAlerMLP1.18e 13.87 -.42 -20.8 AlteraCp If .72 50.55 +1.44 +36.8 A ltria 2.2 6 f 52.59 +.78 +6.7 Amazon 529.44 (.30.44 +70.6 AmbareHa 64.41 -8.83 +27.0 A mbev . 4 5 e 4.83 -.22 -21.7 AMovilL . 3 5e 17.51 -.04 -21.1 AmAirlines .40 42.15 +1.55 -21.4 ACapAgy 2.40 19.08 +.10 -1 2.6 AEagleOut .50 16.01 -.93 +1 5.3 AEP 2.12 53.78 +1.24 -11.4 Am Exp 1.16f 75.50 e1.42 -1 8.9 AmlntlGrp 1.12f 58.33 +.53 +4.1 AmTower 1.84f 089.26 +.24 -9.7 A mgen 3 . 1 6 153.21 +6.19 -3.8 Amicus Th 18.16 +2.63 +118.3 Anadarko 1.08 65.65 -2.69 -20.4 AnalogDev 1.60 56.35 e2.39 (.1.5 AnglogldA 7.38 -.22 -15.2 ABlnBev 3.43e 107.55 +1.65 -4.2 A nnaly 1 . 2 0 10.09 -.01 -6.7 Anthem 2 . 50 147.09 +5.67 +17.0 Apache 1 . 00 40.20 -2.30 -35.9 AppHReitn 1.20 19.25 +1.30 +6.9 Apple inc 2.08 114.21 +4.94 +3.5 A pldMatl . 4 0 15.50 (..t t -37.8 ArcelorMit .20 d7.16 -.06 -35.1 Archgoalrs 3.93 -1.48 -77.9 ArchDan 1.12 42.82 -.08 -17.7 ArenaPhm 2.86 +.12 -1 7.6 AriadP 7.90 -.07 +1 5.0 ArmHld . 3 4e 43.60 +1.02 -5.8 12.00 -.11 -4.5 AscenaRtl AsecntSol .29 +.08 -72.8 AstraZen s 1.40e 33.30 +1.60 -5.4 Atmel .16 8.26 +.53 -1.6 AtwoodOcn 1.00 N 5.61 -1.18 -44.5 Autodesk 46.30 +.93 -22.9 AutoData 1.96 78.31 e2.65 -6.1 AvagoTch 1.68f 131.08 +9.93 +30.3 Avon .24 93.48 -.94 -62.9 82gold g 1.19 -.09 -26.5 BB&T Cp 1.08 36.44 +.57 -6.3 BHP BigLt 2.48e 34.07 +1.56 -28.0 BP PLC 2.40 31.01 (..31 -1 8.7 Baidu 144.03 -1.97 -36.8 B akrHu .6 8 53.08 -.18 -5.3 BcoBrad s .45e d5.77 -.06 -48.2 BcoSantSA .61e d5.73 +.01 -31.2 B kofAm . 2 0 16.04 (..39 -1 0.3 BkNYMel .68 39.56 +1.07 -2.5 BarcGSOil 8.35 -.27 -33.4 B arclay . 4 1e 16.03 (..81 (.6.8 8 iPVixST 26.04 -3.28 -17.4 Barnesaob .60 (I12.49 -3.36 -17.9 BarrickG .08m d6.35 -.06 -40.9 BasicEnSv 4.11 -1.33 -41.4 B axalta n . 2 8 35.81 -.27 (.6.9 B axter s . 4 6 36.02 -.12 -8.4 BerkH 8 131.37 +1.73 -12.5 BestBuy .92a 38.01 e1.62 -2.5 BlackBerry 7.37 +.09 -32.9 Blackstone 2.63e 34.01 +.34 +.5 B lockHR . 8 0 36.15 (..85 (.7.3 B oeing 3 . 6 4 134.67 +4.91 +3.6 BonanzaCE 6.19 -1.33 -74.2 BorgWarn .52 43.17 +.61 -21.4 BostonSci 16.89 +.65 +27.5 BrMYSq 1.48 59.22 e1.92 e.3 Broadcom .56 53.08 +2.68 +22.5 BrcdeCm .18 10.33 +.26 -12.8 Brookdale 26.88 (..34 -26.7 C&J Engy 3.86 -1.10 -70.8 C A Inc 1 . 0 0 27.72 +.65 -9.0 CBREGrp 32.77 (..98 -4.3 CBS 8 .60 43.93 +1.16 -20.6 CME Grp 2.00a 94.48 e2.55 +6.6 CMS Eng 1.16 32.67 +.45 -6.0 .72 28.50 +1.65 -21.3 CSX CVS Health 1.40 101.52 +1.40 (.5.4 CblvsnNY .60 u27.80 +.36 +34.7 CabotO&G .08 23.15 +.37 -21.8 Cadence 20.65 (..36 (.8.9 CalifRes n .04 3.03 -.38 -45.0 CallonPet 8.58 -.47 +57.4 Calpine 15.19 +.09 -31.4 Cameron 64.47 -1.08 +29.1 CdnNRs gs .92 20.03 -.45 -35.1 CapOne 1.60 75.65 +.82 -8.4 Capnia h 2.45 +.43 +64.2 CardnlHlth 1.55 85.01 e4.46 (.5.3 Carnival 1.20f 51.38 +2.45 +1 3.3 Caterpillar 3.08f 72.63 -.47 -20.6 Celgene 123.97 e6.58 +1 0.8 C emex . 4 0 t 7.73 +.38 -21.1 Cemig pf .56e d1.88 -.05 -62.2 CenovusE .64m 13.32 -.27 -35.4 CenterPnt .99 17.69 +.08 -24.5 CentAI 5.70 (..37 -76.6 CntryLink 2.16 26.28 +.10 -33.6 62.52 +2.69 -3.3 Cerner Chemours n.12m 9.07 +.10 -56.5 CheniereEn d52.77 -3.33 -25.0 ChesEng 7.57 +.30 -61.3 Chevron 4.28 75.79 -.88 -32.4 CienaCorp 22.02 -.49 +13.4 Cisco .84 26.02 +.50 -5.8 C itigroup . 2 0 51.10 +.51 -5.6 Citigp wtB .01 -55.6 CitizFin n . 40 24.32 +.23 -2.2 CitrixSys 70.46 +2.57 +1 0.4 CliffsNRs 3.66 -.20 -48.7 C oach 1 . 3 5 29.44 +.28 -21.6

MutualFunds

For the weekending Friday, September11, 2015

FUND AMG

WK %RETURN NAV CHG 1YR 3YR

YacktmanSvc d 22.54 +.21 -6.0 +8.8 AGR M aFtStrl

11. 0 7 14 +16.5 +8.9

AmericanBeacon LgCpVHs 2 7 . 13 +.44 -5.8 +1 2.4 AmericanCentury I nvGrlnv 28. 9 0 +.80 +3.9 U ltralnv 36. 0 0 +.93 +6.4 American Funds AMCAPA m 26.74 +.41 0 .0 AmBalA m 23.86 +.28 -0.1 BondA m 1 2 . 71-.02 +2.0 CaplncBuA m 56.22 +.81 -3.9 CapWldBdA m 19.32 +.08 -4.5 CpWldGrlA m 44.27+1.02 -4.7 EurPacGrA m 46.64 +.86 -5.5 FnlnvA m 5 0 .02 +1.00 -0.8 GrthAmA m 43.34 +1.00 +2.4 H ilncA m 1 0 . 21+.03 -3.7 IncAmerA m 20.22 +.27 -4.0 IntBdAmA m 13.55 +1.6 InvCoAmA m 35.04 +.72 -2.7 MutualA m 34.51 +.53 -1.9 NewEconA m 37.54 +.59 +1.1 NewPerspA m 36.82 +.88 +1.1 NwWrldA m 49.24 +.53 -14.5 SmCpWldA m 47.25 +.93 +3.5 TaxEBdAmA m 12.93 -.03 +2.7 WAMutlnvA m 38.24 +.65 -3.3

Artisan

Intl d Intll d I ntlVal d M dCpVal Baird A ggrlnst C rPIBlnst

Blackaock

+15.5 +9.6 +1.6 +6.1 -1.0 +9.6 +7.2 +1 2.9 +15.3 +3.2 +7.5 +0.8 +12.8 +10.9 +17.3 +11.6 +1.4 +12.7 +3.1 +11.6

CobaltlEn

8.03 +.41 -9.7 38.13 -.06 -9.7 49.03 -.96 +10.9 d2.70 -.18 -47.2 62.79 +1.04 +19.2 61.92 +.46 -1 0.5 56.41 +.63 -2.8 57.15 e.37 -.7 42.05 e.13 -10.2 47.44 +12.21 -3.5 41.67 +.44 +14.9 27.59 -1.03 +47.6 47.36 e.16 -31.4 12.53 -.87 -62.9 28.31 -2.41 -26.2 17.67 +.43 -22.9 8.42 e.27 -57.7 10.86 -1.04 -77.8 6.13 -.29 -23.8

CocaCola 1.32 CocaCE 1.12 Coeur CognizTch ColgPalm 1.52 Comcast 1.00 Come spcl 1.00 Comerica .84 Con-Way .60 ConAgra 1.00 Conns ConocoPhil 2.96f ConsolEngy .04m ContlRes s C orning . 4 8 CSVLgNGrs CSVLgCrd rs CSVlnvNG

+2.6 +2.5

-3.2 -2.9 -3.7 -4.5 -3.5 -1.1 +0.2 +0.5

+8.7 +9.0 +5.3 +4.5 +5.5 +5.9 +3.2 +3.4

IntlVgns d 1 4.56 (..23 -8.1 (.6.9 Cohen &Steers Realty 66.66 +1.83 +3.6 +8.1 Columbia AcornlntZ 3 9 . 98 +1.02 -9.2 +6.2 A cornZ 30. 3 8 +.54 -0.6 +1 0.4 LgCpGrowZ 36.30 +1.04 +9.4 e1 5.8 Credit Suisse ComStrlnstl 5.09 +.03 -27.2 15.9 DFA 1YrFixlnl 10.31 -.01 +0.3 +0.3 2YrGlbFII 9 .94 . . . + 0 .6 +0.5 5YrGlbFII 11.03 -.01 +2.5 (.1.5 EmMKCrEql 16.06 +.26 -22.6 -2.9 EmMktVall 21.48 (..52 -26.7 -5.0

-17.5 -1 8.7 -13.0 +25.8 -3.0 -37.4 e1 8.5 -43.0 +7.3 -21.5 +9.2 -3.1 -11.5 -2.8 -28.8 -51.2 -20.2 -38.8

iShiBxHYB 4.60

86.50 +.54

iSR1 KVal 2.31 e 95.36 +1.44 iShR2K 1.66e 115.18 +2.31 iShREst 2.76e 70.09 +1.40 iShHmCnst .09e 28.31 +.78 iStar 12.76 +.57 Infinera 20.21 -1.20 Infosys s .71 e 17.69 +.77 IngerRd 1.16 55.00 +2.45 IntgDv 19.81 e.98 Intel .96 29.47 e.95 IBM 5.20 147.37 (.3.67 I ntPap 1 . 6 0 41.64 -.06 Interpublic .48 19.66 +.83 I ntuit 1.2 0 f 89.31 +4.18 Invesco 1.08 32.88 +.93 i Sh UK . 7 0 e 16.95 +.60 iShCorEM 1.09e 40.54 +1.74 ItauUnibH .41 e d6.76 -.09

-3.5 -8.7 -3.7 -8.8 +9.4 -6.5 +37.3 -43.8 -1 3.2 e1.1 -1 8.8 -8.1 -22.3 -5.3 -3.1 -16.8 -6.0 -13.8 -42.8

Micron T 16.80 -.02 -52.0 ProUShD30 22.40 -1.67 Microsoft 1.24 43.48 +.87 -6.4 PrUltPQQQ .03e 97.41 +8.70 MigenMda 1.74 +8.8 PUltSP500 s .15e 55.99 +3.33 Mobileye 46.03 -5.07 +13.5 PUVixSTrs 60.78 -17.64 Mondelez .68f 42.68 +.11 +17.5 PrUCrude rs 22.85 -1.35 -3.26 -22.6 Monsanto 2.16f 92.49 ProgixSTF 17.35 -2.17 MorgStan .60 33.99 +.80 -12.4 ProShtgix 49.38 +4.98 Mosaic 1.10 39.14 -.53 -1 4.3 ProctGam 2.65 68.42 -.34 MotrlaSolu 1.36 67.08 e1.11 ProgsvCp .69e 30.23 +.76 MurphO 1.40 d26.78 -1.86 -47.0 ProUShSP 22.44 -1.03 Mylan NV 48.65 +.60 -1 3.7 PUShtQQQ 34.78 -2.47 NCR Corp 27.24 +3.09 -6.5 PshtQQQ 23.94 -2.64 NRG Egy .58 d18.45 +.52 -31.5 PUB htspx 38.21 -2.73 NXP Semi 88.41 +3.98 +15.7 ProspctCap 1.00 7.94 +.10 Nabors .24 9.77 -.34 -24.7 Prudentl 2.32 78.99 +1.89 Nanosphrs 2.19 -.51 -72.1 P SEG 1. 5 6 39.32 +.96 NBGreece .72 +.08 -59.7 P ulteGrp . 3 2 20.95 +.71 NOilVarco 1.84 38.64 -1.34 -41.0 QEP Res .08 12.29 -.95 Navient .64 12.45 +.51 -42.4 Qihoo360 d43.47 -4.78

+8.9 S un Trst

-1 5.6 -51.7 -55.9 -17.3 -19.3 -24.9 +1 2.0 e1.8 -1 1.9 -1 9.8 +.4 -3.9 -12.7 -5.0 -2.4 -39.2 -24.1

62080 NE DeanSwiftRd Suite 180 Bend

Q fiI St COmmunity

541.382.7280

myfirstccu. Qrg

CSVLgNGs CSVLggrde CSVeHVST CSVixShrs CrwnCstle 3.28 Ctrip.corn CypSemi .44 CytoriTh h

1.62 1.07 25.27 13.26 78.63 68.86 10.04 .45

-.01 -59.3 -.12 -78.1 +2.52 -18.9 -3.72 -52.0 -2.41 -.1 +4.94 +51.3 e.13 -29.7 +.09 -9.0

I

DDR Corp .69 d15.20 e.40 -1 7.2 DR Horton .25 31.34 +.95 +23.9 Danaher .54 86.84 (.1.25 e1.3 DeanFoods .28 16.31 -.28 -1 5.8 Deere 2.40 79.25 +.03 -10.4 DelphiAuto 1.00 76.40 +4.39 +5.1 DeltaAir .541 46.92 +1.52 -4.6 DenburyR .25 92.89 -.67 -64.5 DBXEafeEq1.78e 26.83 +.53 -.6 DBXHvghiA 33.33 +3.22 -10.4 DevonE .96 38.84 -1.06 -36.5 -40.1 DiamOffsh .50 21.99 DrGMnBII rs.11e d7.35 -.32 -69.8 -.6 DirSPBear 20.47 -1.50 DxGldBug d2.71 -.14 -75.7 DrxFnBear 12.52 -.78 -1.2 DrxSCBear 11.55 -.77 -3.8 DirGMBear .95e 11.07 +.29 -29.5 DxFnBugs 26.38 +1.37 -1 7.0 DirDGldBr 30.99 +1.27 +25.7 DrxSC Bull .48e 69.08 +3.86 -1 4.6 DirxEnBug 28.18 -.66 -53.4 Discover 1.12 52.61 (.1.21 -1 9.7 DiscCmA 26.94 +.21 -21.8 Disney 1.321 104.48 +3.51 +10.9 DollarGen .88 70.36 -2.20 -.5 DogarTree 66.46 -1.63 -5.6 DomRescs 2.59 67.76 e.53 -1 1.9 DEmmett .84 29.05 +1.82 +2.3 DowChm 1.68 43.78 +1.70 -4.0 DryShips h d.23 -.22 -78.4 DuPont 1.52 48.44 -.16 -31.1 DukeEngy 3.3(H d68.34 +.08 -1 8.2 E-Trade 27.11 +1.74 +11.8 eBa s 26.32 -.16 +12.8 EMC Cp .46 24.60 +.93 -17.3 EOGRescs .67 77.15 +.26 -16.2 EP Energy 5.69 -1.05 -45.5 Eaton 2.20 55.72 +.67 -18.0 EldorGld g .02e d2.74 -.01 -54.9 ElectArts 68.91 +2.54 +46.6 EliLigy 2.00 81.80 +1.48 +18.6 EmersonEI 1.88 46.04 +.22 -25.4 EnCanag . 28 7 . 2 2 +.46 -47.9 EngyFocus u16.43 -9.34 +233.3 EgyTrEq s 1.061 25.82 -1.05 -10.0 EngyTsfr 4.141 45.98 -1.73 -29.3 .60 15.48 -.24 -48.3 ENSCO EntProdPt 1.521 26.25 -1.00 -27.3 Envivio u4.07 +2.21 +203.4 Ericsson .39e 9 . 87 +.32 -18.4 Exelixis 5.91 +.27 +310.4 Exelon 1.24 d29.70 -.02 -19.9 Express 19.32 -.90 +31.5 ExpScripts 84.49 +1.39 -.2 ExxonMbl 2.92 72.69 e.23 -21.4 FMC Tech 32.54 -.66 -30.5 Facebook 92.05 +3.79 +18.0 IntCorEql 11.40 +.25 -8.5 +7.3 IntSmCapl 19.16 +.54 -4.3 +1 2.6 IntlSCol 17.40 +.37 -4.6 +9.8 IntlValul 16.60 +.41 -12.2 e5.5 RelEstScl 30.22 +.73 e1.7 e7.3 TAUSCrE21 13.57 e.19 -2.0 (.t 4.1 USCorEqtl 17.16 e.25 -1.1 (.t 4.1 USCorEq21 16.60 +.23 -2.5 (.t 3.9 USLgCo 15.46 +.24 +0.1 +13.3 USLgyall 31.54 e,39 -5.5 (.t 4.7 USSmVall 32.56 e,27 -6.3 (.t 2.8 USSmagi 30.17 +.40 +0.3 +14.2 USTgtVallnst 21.12 +.21 -5.7 +13.7 Davis NYVentA m 32.91 e.71 +0.5 +13.1 Delaware Inv est17.09 +.27 Valuel -3.6 +13.7 Dodge &Cox Bal 97.05 +1.03 -3.0 +11.4 GlbStock 10.91 +.17 -11.4 +11.0

Income IntlStk

13.56 -.01 +0.7 +2.5 38.64 +.65 -15.3 +7.9 168.02 +2.70 -5.1 +14.6

Stock DoubleLine TotRetBdN b 10.91 -.01 e3.6 e3.3 Eaton Vance Fltg Rtl 8.79 . . . + 0. 9 + 3.0 FPA

28.41 +.58 -7.6 +7.9 B 33. 4 2 +.51 -5.0 +1 0.6 2 2 . 81+.24 -9.4 +9.4 10. 7 2 02 +2.6 11 . 03 01 +2.3

FairchldS 13.93 +.47 Fastenal 1.12 38.67 e1.17 FedExCp 1.00 151.08 +2.72 FiatChry n 14.57 +.97 FifthThird .52 19.77 (..55 Finisar 812.16 -2.97 Fire Eye 37.43 (..95 FMajSilv g d2.86 -.14 FT DWF5 .03e 23.64 +.71 FirstEngy 1.44 30.59 Fitbit n 32.40 +.52 Flextrn 10.83 +.54 FordM .60 13.71 (..1 5 ForestCA 20.71 -.01 FrankRes .60a 39.42 (..41 FrptMcM .20a 11.40 +1.69 FrontierCm . 42 5 . 3 2 +.04 FuelCegEh .94 +.03

INVESTMENT PRO>P’ERTY OWNERS

Cree d 32.36 +.36 -2.9 +8.4 Newlnc d 10.07 +0.8 +1.0 Fairholme Fu nds 34.99 -.20 Fairhome d -10.0 +10.5 Federated StrVall 5.63 +.08 -1.7 +9.2 ToRetls 10.84 -.01 +1.5 +2.1 Fidelity AstMgr50 16.69 +.16 -0.9 +6.4 Bal 22.20 +.21 +0.6 +9.6 Bal K 22.20 +.21 +0.7 +9.7 28.18 +.57 -7.9 +7.6 BIChGrow x 67.47 -1.54 +7.1 +18.2

EqDIYA m 2 3 .18 +.41 E qDivl 23.2 4 +.42 GlobAlcA m 19.35 +.23 GlobAlcC m 17.75 +.21 G lobAlcl 19. 4 5 +.22 H iYldBdls 7.6 9 +.02 StlnclnvA m 9.99 Strlnclns 9.9 9

Causeway

+12.5 +15.5

CAP

67.55 -1.57 36.42 +1.03 9.56 +.06 99.61 +2.59 99.60 +2.59 29.56 -1.92 35.10 +.72 35.06 +.72 53.05 +.57 12.21 +.14 12.70 +.25 8.93 +.17 9.53 +.02 13.17 +.15 13.81 +.18 14.37 +.21 14.59 +.26 14.98 +.29 15.02 +.30 15.42 +.30 14.85 +.19 12.68 +.18 15.48 +.28 11.55 -.07 136.81 (.3.86 28.32 +.40 136.73 (.3.87 39.07 e.92 7.76 -.01 48.47 -.85 48.51 -.82

e7.3 (.18.4 e3.2 (.15.5 e1.1 e7.2 e4.4 (.14.6 e4.5 (.14.7 -2.0 +12.6 -1.5 e9.3 -1.4 +9.5 -5.8 +9.8 -0.9 +5.5 -2.0 +8.2 -2.2 +8.3 +0.2 +2.5 -0.8 +5.6 -0.9 +6.1 -1.2 +7.2 -1.7 +7.6 -2.0 +8.3 -2.0 +8.4 -2.0 +8.6 -1.1 +6.0 -1.3 +7.0 -1.8 +7.5 +2.7 +1.6 e8.3 (.t 6.9 -3.4 (.t 2.3 +8.5 +17.0 -0.6 +9.0 +1.6 +1.7 +2.0 +14.4 e1.9 (.14.3

.92 32.34 -.07 GenElec . 9 2 2 4 . 95 +.95 GenGrPrp .72f 2 4.95 (..47 GenMigs 1.76 5 6.47 -.12 GenMotors 1.44f 30.15 e1.57 Gentex s .3 4 1 6 .10 +.37 G enworth . . . 5.1 0 +.08 G erdau .08e 1 . 7 2 +.16 G eronCp . . . 3.5 3 +.20 GileadSci 1.72 109.63 +7.57 GlaxoSKln 2.49e 40.26 +.57 GoldFLtd .02e d 2.75 -.13 Goldcrp g .24 d12.63 -.73 GoldmanS 2.60 185.27 e4.89 Goodyear .24 2 9 .58 +.36 GoPro ... d32.42 -4.41 G taasSci n ... d . 0 9 -.08 G roupon . . . 4.2 2 -.03 GrubHub . . . 27 . 60 +1.15 HCA Hldg . . . 8 4 . 69 -.72 HCP Inc 2.26 3 6 .09 +.41 HD Supply .. . 3 2 .28 +.11 HSBC 2 . 50e 3 9 .12 e1.44 Halcon Res ... .97 -.04 Hagibrtn . 7 2 3 7 . 20 (..35 Hanesbds s .40 29.97 +.40 HarleyD 1.24 5 4.78 (..31 H armonyG ... d . 6 9 -.08 HarffdFn .84f 4 5 .95+1.23 H eclaM . 01 e 1. 9 0 -.06 HelmPayne 2.75 d49.35 -2.90 Hertz ... 18.31 +.70 H ess 1.00 52 . 50 -3.85 HewlettP . 7 0 2 7 .15 (..1 6 Hilton .28 25.59 +.99 HogyFront 1.32 48.10 e1.68 Hologic ... 4 0.11 +1.58 HomeDp 2.36 115.44 e1.02 Honwglntl 2.07 9 9.62 +3.03 HostHotls .80a 1 7.74 (..54 H ovnanE .. . 2.0 3 +.26 HuntBncsh .24 1 0.81 +.26 Hunts mn .50 d15.00 -.04 I AMGld g . . . 1.4 7 -.10 I CICI Bk s .16e 8 . 28 +.03 ING .14e 15 . 08 (..54 i ShGold ... 10. 7 1 -.12 iSAstla 1.23e 1 8.33 (..79 iShBrazil 1.03e d22.90 -.20 iShCanada .60e 23.44 +.07 iShEMU .95e 3 5 .94 +1.11 iShGerm .51e 2 6.48 +.90 iSh HK . 4 9 e 1 9 .66+1.06 iShltaly . 3 7 e 1 4 .88 +.56 iShJapan .13e 11.74 +.25 iSh SKor .66e 4 8.58 +2.40 iSTaiwn . 29e 1 3.64 (..68 iShSilver . . 13 . 95 +.03 iShChinaLC .76e 36.34 +2.76 iSCorSP5004.23e 197.92 +4.26 -.21 iShUSAgBd2.67e 109.06 iShEMkts .84e 3 3.46 +1.32 iShiBoxlG 4.02 115.62 -.44 iSh ACWI 1.21e 55.42 e1.37 iSh20 yrT 3.15 121.39 -1.29 iS Eafe 1.70e 5 9.44 e1.83

Gap

+3.3 -0.2 +2.9 +6.3 +0.8 +0.9 -0.3 -21.9 +1.9 +0.1 -22.1 +1.8 +1.0 +1.5 -0.4 (.1.9

+2.6 +2.5 -3.1 +1.0 (.1.3

-23.2 -1.3 -11.3 +5.9 -1 3.6 -10.9 -40.0 -51.5 (.8.6

+1 6.3 -5.8 -39.3 -31.8 -4.4 +3.5 -48.7

-96.3

-48.9 -24.0 +1 5.4 -1 8.0 +9.5 -1 7.2 -45.5 -5.4 +7.4

-1 6.9 -63.5 +1 0.2 -31.9 -26.8 -26.6 -28.9 -32.3 -1.9 e28.3 +50.0 +1 0.0 -.3 -25.4 -50.8 +2.8 -34.2 -45.6 -28.3 e1 6.3 -6.4 -1 7.3 -37.4 -1 8.8 -1.1 -3.4 -4.3 +9.4 (.4.4

-1 2.1 -9.7 -7.4 -1 2.7 -4.3 -1.0 -1 4.8 -3.2 -5.3 -3.6 -2.3

JD.corn

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 T HE BULLETIN E 5

Jobs Continued from E1 The construction, mining

and logging sector in 2008 employed 8,330 in Deschutes County. This year, it employed 5,580inJuly,nearly 700 more than in July 2014. In the same period, education and health

services, a sector that continued to grow even during the recession, added 740 jobs for a

total of 11,580, according to the Employment Department. At Mt . B achelor Memory

Care, an assisted living facility in Bend, Executive Director Mallory DaCosta said she tries

to stay ahead of upcoming vacancies, but, even so, experienced applicants can be hard to find. Personal care assistants and registered nurses are m

demand in assisted living, both listed by the Employment Department as hard-to-fill jobs.

"This company is small; it' s privately owned, and it has a lot more focuson employee reten› tion than most health care com-

panies that I' ve worked for," DaCosta said.

In Oregon, employers in health care and social assistance reported th e

sectoralso faced a dearth of ation meeting, Jarvis said the applicants for jobs in Bend this driver shortage ranked high summer. At Worthy Brewing on the agenda she placed beCo., a lack of applicants meant forethe directors.A shortage of extra shifts and overtime for 30,000-40,000 drivers currently line cooks, hostesses and dish- nationwide is expected to reach washers in the brewpub on 500,000in severalyears,most› U.S. Highway 20, said Lindsay ly due to retirements, she said. "Young people, when you Landgraf, brewery spokeswoman. The cause appeared to ask them what they want to be, be a high demand for labor in you almost never hear, 'I'd like the many resorts, restaurants to be a truck driver,'" she said. and brewpubs in Central Ore- "We are suffering from a pergon, she said. ception problem.... As an in"We asked a lot of our staff dustry, we need to work harder this summer, and they pow- to promote it as a viable career ered through it in the best way," opportunity." Landgraf said. "The good part That means better marketis we hired some really good ing and advertising, as well as people this summer that stuck reaching out to high schools, with crazy schedules and long vocational schools and veterdays." ans, Jarvis said. Cheri Helt, the owner, with About 13 percent of hard-toher husband, Steve Helt, of fill vacancies last year could Zydeco Kitchen and Cocktails have been solved with some and Bistro 28, said a lack of form of training, according to housing apparently dissuaded the report. The Employment many who would otherwise Department on Wednesday seek summer jobs in Bend. received a $3 million grant to "The pool of applicants has help promote apprenticeships been very small," she said. "It' s and work-based learning pronot adequatefor the business grams, particularly for womthat Bend is doing. Tourism is en, minorities, veterans and booming in Bend, and this is low-income recipients of public a much better problem to have assistance.

l a r gest than we had in 2008."

I i

i

I i ’

DESIGN 4 BUILD I REMODEL PAINT

i

content to take on the likes of Netflix and Amazon. There is a major hardware

Continued from E1

possibility as well. "The growth potential is in

With a starting price of

Hard-to-fill jobs "absolute-

$149 — significantly pricier than rival set-top boxes but not outrageously expensive — the Apple TV is poised to be a hit among consumers during the all-important holiday season (the device will be released in late October).

ly" figured into the grant application, said Andrea Fogue, an Employment Department

spokeswoman. She said the department expects to work through community colleges and local industries when the

program gets on its feet.

TV, but it's not in set-top box-

es," Zino said."By all accounts next year they' ll roll out a TV streaming service and there-

after it becomes interesting. ... As they gain more traction, they can come out with a full-

blown product offering in the although the set-top device sense of a large-scale TV." helps diversify Apple's prod- The new Apple TV also has uct portfolio, Apple TV as enhanced capabilities for light a standalone product won' t gaming, and games are likely m ake much of a denton the to be a huge category of Apple bottom line. Zino estimated TV apps. "Unleashing Apple's huge that over the next 12 months, the device will account for ecosystem of developers to less than 1 percent of Apple's TVs should not be underesrevenue, "so it's not going to timated," said Al Hilwa, proBut analysts cautioned that

"Some partnerships are al-

ready in place," Fogue said. "Other partnerships will be developed." In one case, at least, the lesson of the boom era is to stay strong by staying lean. Perkins, of Mountain View

Heating, said experience is the key factor in that business.

During the building boom years, "anyone who could fog a mirror" found a job, she said. Today, the company is selective in its hiring. "A lot of people will say we' re not the cheapest," she said. "Our main goal is to provide se-

move the needle." What would make a sub-

gram director of software

ployees. Being the lowest dollar

development research at stantial difference, they say, IDC. "This is what most of us is if Apple uses Apple TV as thought Apple TV was going a launching pad to more am- to be three years ago." bitious television plans down In perhaps a sign of how the line. There are already important Apple considers some early hints that that is television to be, it gave Apwhat Apple intends to do; the ple TV it s ow n d edicated company has been holding hands-on demo section after

is not the way to do that."

early talks with executives

its event this week; all of its

curity and stability for our em-

in Hollywood that could lead other products were grouped to a push into original video together.

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, j ditzler@bendbulletin.corn

The U.S. Department of La-

number of vacancies overall, She credited a hardworking and the most hard-to-fill jobs, staff for seeing the two restauin 2014. DaCosta said turnover rants through a busy summer. in her business can exceed Overtime and extra shifts were 100 percent in some places; the order of the day, she said. she said Mt. Bachelor Memory She expects a similar situation Care averages about 30 percent next summer. There's little she annually. can do to prepare for the anticiProblems in hiring usually pated labor shortage. "It boils back down to affordamount to a lack of "soft skills," such as the right personality for able housing issues for Bend," dealing with elderly clients or Helt said. "If we' re going to conthe inability to pass a pre-em- tinue to have tourism growth, ployment drug test, DaCosta we' re going to need affordable said. Mt. Bachelor Memory housing to keep people in these Care provides training for per- jobs." sonal care assistants, a job that Truck drivers, too, are in doesn't require an advanced high demand, not only in Oredegree, she said. gon but across the nation, said The state survey found that Jana Jarvis, president of the nearly half of all job vacancies Oregon Trucking Association. in Oregon last year, 23,200, Reached at the annual associwere difficult-to-fill and paid an average of $16.37 an hour. According to the U.S. Bureau SuN Foe@sr of Labor Statistics, pay for perCoNSTRUCTION sonalcare assistants ranged from $8.33 to $17.20 an hour. Employers in the service

Apple TV

bor provided the grant, meant to address a loss of highly skilled manufacturing workers due to retirement.

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Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS COMPANY

T ICKER

FreeportM cMoRan F C X Incyte Corp INCY Alnylam Pharmaceutic ALNY Alkermes PLC ALKS Kroger Co KR PaloAlto Networks P A N W Linkedln Corp LNKD JetBIUeAirways Cp JBLU Avago Technologies AVGO MicrochipTech MCHP KLA-Tencor Corp KLAC Valero Energy VLO Gilead Sciences GILD Equinix Inc EQIX southern copper scco

FRIDAY C LOS E

11.40 131.01

15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

$CHG %CHG %CHG AW K 1W K 1MO

1.69

174

13.7

15 . 1 3 13 . 1

23.8

107.70

9.90

10.1

1.9

70.95

6.37

9.9

7.8

37.29

3.22

9.5

-2.8

177. 39 1 9 5 .6 0 25. 6 8 1 3 1.0 8 43 8 9 51. 2 1 6291 109 .6 3 289 .6 2

15.0 0 15. 1 7 1.96 9.93 3 25 3.67 4 45 7.57 19. 7 4

9.2 8.4 8.3 8.2 8.0 77 76 74 73

2.2 3.2 7.0 7.5 14 0.0 -76 -5.2 1.8

1.82

6.9

2.1

28.19

GlobalMarkets

% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y

TICKER

-65.0 Envivio Inc ENVI 143.9 Vitae Pharmaceutical VTA E 52.2 Straight Path Comm S TRP 57.8 MiratiTherapeutics M RTX 38.0 Akebia Therapeutics AKBA 79.6 PrimeEngy P NRG -16.4 Vivus Inc VVUS 106.5 Provectus Biopharma PVCT 4 6.3 Titan Machinery Inc T I T N -5.5 TRC Cos TRR -11.0 Omega Flex Inc OFLX 26.4 Premiere Glob Svcs PG I -0.5 Tiptree Financial TIPT 36.7 Flex Pharma Inc FLKS -9.7 EDAP TMS EDAP

FRIDAY C L OS E

4.07 14. 3 2 38. 2 5 43. 3 8 11. 2 1 76. 9 5 1.77 0.67 13.74 11.80 38. 2 1 13.74 6.95 14. 2 9 4.45

INDEX

$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR

Mobileye MV Spectra Energy Ptrs ContiResources Marathon Oil Plains All Am Pipe Williams Cos

M BLY

46. 0 3

-5.07

-9.9

-22.8

SEP

44.25

-3.80

-z9

-13.3

CLR

28.31

-2.41

15.0 9

-1.27

-zs -zs

-14.7

M RO PAA

32.34

-2.67

-z6

-9.8

WMB

42.97

-3.45

-74

-17.7

Hess Corp Cheniere Energy Concho Resources GoldcorpInc

HES

52.50

-3.85

-6.8

-11.1

LNG

52.77

-3.33

-5.9

-22.9

CXO GG

98.62

-5.85

-5.6

-10.5

12.63

-0.73

-5.5

-1 1.6

-12.2

- 19.7 Tetraphase Pharm -13.1 Dryshlps Inc -60.6 Cherokee Inc - 60.5 Energy Focus Inc -3a7 Zumlez Inc -19.0 Comstk Rsc -44.4 Zynerba Pharm -36.6 Peabody EnergyCorp -22.7 Basic Energy Svcs -47.4 Cloud Peak Energy

FRI. CHG WK MO QTR +0.45% L 0 85% L -0.62% 0 27% -1.04% T

118.5

1 2 3 .4

6.72 16.1 5 17.5 3 4.07 26.1 6 0.58 0.21 3.67 3.06 8.21 2.95 1.46 2.90 0.86

88.4

72. 9

0.0

73.1

61. 9

282.4

678

92.8

68.0

570

57.9

-55.6

5 1.5

42. 5

11.4 Buenos Aires Merval 1 0 887.94 -181.54 427 8 0.73 -107.78 -61.8 Mexico City Bolsa sao Paolo Bovespa 4 6 3 79.80 -108.95 -43.8 Toronto S&P/TSX 1 346 1.47 -108.42 2.3 /AFRICA 78.9 EUROPE

-1.64% T T

83.1 Amsterdam -12.8 Brussels Madrid -12.7 Zurich 0.0 Milan 203.6 Johannesburg Stockholm

I 37% -0 91'/ -1.25% -0.07% -0.63% -1.21% -0.40%

52. 6

46.8

57. 2

36.4

-3.2

35.0

19. 3

2Z4

16. 4

273

24.6

26.6

19. 0

25.5

-0.2

24.0

19. 9

10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS

LAST FRI. CHG 1961.05 +8.76 101 23.56 -86.88 6117.76 -38.05 21504.37 -58.13 -47.81 4548.72 18264.22 -35.40

2.21

48.7

103.0

s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225

T

+4.66%

A

+26.91 % -0.85%

SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA

430.23 -5.98 3434.17 -31.41 986.36 -1 2.49 8772.44 -6.32 21762.63 -138.82 48930.64 -597.49 -5.94 1488.41

-0.25% j -0.23% T

v v

v T

-0.80% V

V

V

v v v v

v v v T

v

T

v

T

-169%

T

T

+ 1.63 %

-1 06% X

T

V

-1.37% X -040% 4 +045% 4

V V ~

V V V

+0.07% 4

v

v

+1.35% 14.18% 5 42% 10.76% -1 07%

v L v

v

-7.25% -8.00%

+1.3 6 % +453% -538% -2.35% t 14 47%

ASIA

TTP H

8.69

-34.56

-79.9

-79.9

DRYS

0.23

-0.22

-48.5

-38.3

CHKE

14.82

-10.60

-41.7

-47.0

EFO I

16.43

-9.34

-36.2

-1 4.3

ZUMZ

14.63

-8.24

-36.0

-37.4

CRK

2.62

-1.06

-28.8

-4.7

ZYNE

20.80

-8.00

-27.8

-40.3

Seoul Composite SingaporeStraits Times 31.7 Sydney All Ordinaries 293.2 Taipei Taiex -25.2 Shanghai Composite -85.2 0.0

BTU

1.65

-0.63

-27.6

46.0

-87.1

BAS

4.11

-1.33

-24.4

-25.9

-78.7

CLD

3.00

-0.86

-22.3

-1.3

-77.1

-49.1

-0.19%

YTD -4.75% 3 24% -6.83% -8 90% +6.46%

-91.8

1941.37 2888.03 5096.31 8305.82 3200.23

-20.74 -40.15 -20.72 +37.14 +2.34

duoable

"Theoil market is even more oversupplied than we had expected and we now forecast this surplusto persist in 201 6." —Goldman Sachs analysts as they slashed their forecasts for the U.S. benchmarkprice of oil for next year

Note:Stocks classified by marketcapitalization, the product of thecurrent stock priceandtotal shares outstanding. Rangesare $100 milion to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8bilion (large).

Insider/&A

Views on volatility

David Joy Chief MarketStrategist, Ameri prise Financial

David Joy Is chiefmarket strategist for AmerlprIse Financial,a wealth management firm.He says long-term investors should stay calm Inthe face of wild swings In the stock market Inthe past month. But he also adviseskeeping an eye on corporate revenueand ChIna's economy.

Stocks have been volatile since early August. How should investors respond? If you have along enough investment horizon, I'm notsure you really need to do toomuch here. I think the Issues that are causIng thisIncreased volatility are transitionalissues. They're real, but they don't re presentany sort of systemic crisis for the markets.There are really two Issues here.One is, just how quickly is theglobal economygrowing? That Im pacts corporate earnings,whIch drives stock prices.

And ofcourse the second Issue Is the Federal ReserveIs getting closer to raising interest rates.Historically, that has caused volatility.

Cor porateprofits havedeclined compared with a year ago. Will that weigh on stock prices? They are a realis sue.W e did have aggregateearnings decline, year over year,Inthe second quarter, It was the first quarterlydecline in three years. They' re forecast to declineagain Inthe third and fourth quarters. But acouple of things I would pointout. First, the energy sector Is having anoutsized influence on those aggregatetotals. If you back out energy, which hasbeen really depressed because of thedrop In oil and gas prIces, earnings were positive.

It's alsoImportant to look at revenue growth, andrevenue growth Is also quite weak.Companies can manage their expensesto squeeze profitability to the bottom line. But they canonly do that for so long. Eventually, you need to see the top line growing. How will the stock market react when the Federal Reserve increases interest rates, possibly at their next meeting Sept. 17? I think we'll get some Increased volatility. The Fed has said they wantto get It done some timethis year, so I think some of ItIs priced In. [But] I'm not sure all of the volatility Is priced In yet. The markets are sayingthere's maybe a one-in-four, one-in-threechance that they move In September.That's enough uncertainty that

It tellsyou there Is probably some more volatility to come. It's important to rememberthat for the Fedto be considering raising Interest ratesIs a testament to the recovery from the financial crisis. Theywouldn't even be consIderlng Itunless we had come a long way. It shouldbe viewed on one level as goodnews.

Does China’s economic slowdown pose a major threatto U.S. investors? If ChInaexperIences a so-called hard landing, Itwill have a meaningful Impact on theglobal economy.In a relative sense, the U.S. might bebetter insulated than many other economies,but we will feel It. Interviewed by Christopher S. Rugaber. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Indexclosing and weekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, September 11, 2015

+

16,433.09

+330.71

NaSDaa ~ 1 3 8 42 4,822.34

s&P 500

+

1,961.05

3g 83

RUssELL2000 I,157.79

+

+21 62

WILSHIRE5000

+

20,691.66

387 5Q


E6

™E B U L LETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

UNDAY D Oi

s

OU

R

Dealing with ball joints, wheel bearings,pressure

ess wei

WI

By Warren Brown

I

I

Special to The Washington Post

II

It is a gamble, but one that might be worth the risk. In the

By Brad Bergholdt Tribune News Service

On my way home today, I noticed a pickup truck

future, it could say more about the future of Ford Motor Co.

than it says about any particular Ford product.

i

g

Indeed, there is something to

be said about a company willing to take big chances when everything seems to be going right. And Ford is risking something big here with its alum inum-alloy-bodied 201 5 F-150 pickup truck. The F-150 h as b een

wheel severely angled, as if something broke. It looked like the wheel was still at-

tached but like something was very wrong behind it Can you explain what might have caused this and how I

Q

This may be a dumb question, but how does

my car know when one of

my tires is — low? Ka t h leen Weber a similar situation someday'? Tire pressure monitor› Alex ing systems come in It's tough to say what two varieties: direct and indican be assured I will not be in

A

the

REVIEW best-selling vehide in the United States for 13 generations, more

than 30 years. Ford did not have to mess with it, certainly not in a way that many truck lovers

similar to mine on the side of the road with its front left

feel looseness or wobbling, that wheel bearing is like ly faulty. If you place yours hands at 9 o'dock and 3 o’clock and feellooseness or wobbling, you' re likely looking at worn steering parts usually a tie rod end

Ford/Submittedphoto

Ford messed with Its successful F-150, crowning the truck with a "military-grade aluminum" body.

might have happened rect. Direct systems employ without getting a firsthand a pressure sensor inside each look, but it sounds like the wheeVtire assembly, which pickup suffered a failure of when the car is moving report a ball joint or wheel bearing. by radio signals about once Ball joints connect a vehicle's

deem critical to its nature.

A

a minute pressure informa-

FordF-150XLT

er 2015 F-150 trucks lacked the to believe it, especially when

spindle — part of the suspen- tion to a control module, and sion system that carries the in turn, the vehicle's display

Base price: $37,630 Astested: $43,985 Type:Front-engine, compact pickup available with three cabsizesregular cab (124.4-!nch wheelbase), extended cab (SuperCab, 145 inches) and SuperCrew (156.8 inches). There are five trim levelsXL, XLT, Lariat, King Ranch and Platinum. Engine:There are four available engines — two turbocharged V-6 models, a 2.7-liter V-6 driven for this column and a3.5-liter V-6. There aretwo normally aspirated engines — a

support structures in the front-

hub for the wheel — to the

screen. Direct systems typ

crowning the truck with what the company calls a "military-grade aluminum" body. "Military grade" sounds tough. Certainly, Ford's marketing people love the term. It goes well with the traditional company truck marketing slogan of "Ford tough." But "military-grade aluminum" is a chancy, high-tech foray into the future — one that promises better fuel and hauling efficiency for all pickup trucks and deaner air for all communities and businesses that rely on pickups. And, possibly, it will yield longer-lasting pickup s. But the only thing now

wheel housing and earned a small and, for that reason, re lower crash rating. Ford, to its markably fuel-efficient 2.7-liter

control arms. Trucks and larger cars typically have an upper and lower ball joint on each side, while midsize and smaller cars employing

ically indicate which tire is low and what its pressure is

known for certain is that the

V-8. The 2.7-liter V-6 gets 325 horsepower and375 pound-feet of torque. All engines get a six-speedautomatic transmission. Mileage: 22 mpg highway

on the tire at the 12 o'dock

tive tec. hnologyEmail questions

But Ford messed with itd eliberately messed with i t ,

3.5-liter V-6 and a 5-liter

use of a "military-grade aluminum" body shaves an estimat-

ed 700 pounds from the F-150 pickup truck's weight. That is significant. Less vehicle weight generally means better fuel efficiency. If the vehicle is put together correctly, it also could

mean the ability to haul and pull more stuff, simply because the vehicle isn't pulling so much of its own body load. The naysayers already are forming a chorus, saying that Ford's aluminum-bodied truck,

same force, that not all crash damage, however received, is the same, and that not all re-

pair shops handle repairs and costs the same way. That means: We will have

credit, quickly corrected the

outfitted with the remarkably V-6

matter and now, as reported at Ride, acceleration and han this writing, installs those front- dling: It feels tighter, lighter and wheel housing structures in all of it F-150 pickup trucks.

just as tough as its steel-bodied

For my part, I think Ford is

Head-turning quotient: It re

to be congratulated. The com-

predecessor.

mains a square-faced conserpany did not wait until forced vative, which is the way most to do something about the of its traditional buyers want it

weight and fuel efficiency of its The new headlamps look good best-selling pickup truck. It is Capacities: Seating is for six taking a big chance on alumi- Maximum SuperCab payload num, one that very well might

the weight that can be carried

help the company cut the onboard, is 3,020 pounds. Maxweight and fuel consumption imum towing capacity is 12,100 of its other products ... without pounds. Fuel capacity is 26 galharming their safety. lons.Regulargradewo rksfine The F-150 remains "Ford Safety: Standard equipment tough," as evidenced by its includes front and rear ventilatexcellentbehavior and easy ed disc brakes; four-wheel antihandling in driving and haul- lock brake protection; traction ing in Northern Virginia. Con- and stability control; post-colstruction is body on frame lision safety system; rearview — aluminum-alloy body atop camera; reverse sensing sys high-strength lig h tweight tern; tire-pressure monitor; air steel-ladder frame. This one bags works and works well — even Recommended safety op with its smallest displacement tions: Get the full technology engine, a 2.7-liter gasoline, tur- package bocharged V-6 delivering 325 horsepower and 375 poundfeet of torque, getting 22 gallons on the highway using regular-grade fuel. I began this column by saying Ford was gambling on a new product strategy when it easilycould have coasted and

Battery powered versions will

requiresensor replacement about every seven to eight a MacPherson strut suspen- years sion have only a lower joint Indirect systems infer tire Some ball joints require peri- pressure using the anti-lock odic lubrication, while others braking system's wheel speed are permanently lubricated sensors. The assumption is a and sealed. With periodic in- low tire is of smaller diame spection, a worn or dry ball ter and rotates more quickly. joint can be identified before This lower-cost version re a failure occurs. A worn ball quire s periodic calibration joint often causes wander- and can't determine when all ing on uneven road surfaces four tires are simultaneously and a clicking, crunching or low. popping noise when turning, One drawback to both sys coming to a stop, or passing tems is that neither is required over bumps to report a problem until a It's also possible the pickup tire's pressure has decreased sufferedfrom a grossly failed by 25 percent or more. Don' t wheel bearing. This failure assume your tires are OK just may have been preceded by because the light hasn't come wandering, possibly a growl- on! Checking pressure periing or clicking noise, or even odically and staying dose to an illuminated anti-lock brak- the recommended inflation ing system warning light. If pressure is important you place your hands firmly Bergholdt teaches a-utomo and 6 o' clock positions and to und- er thehood@ea.rthli.nhnet

to wait for a longitudinal, real-world reading on the crash based on a few "tests" by the and repair experiences of Virginia-based Insurance In- the aluminum-bodied F-150 stitute for Highway Safety, pickup s. costs26 percent more to repair Ford might have given itself than a comparable steel-bodied a public relations black eye in done nothing.Let me rephrase pickup truck pummeled with a this matter by attempting to that: Ford is being the kind of sledgehammer or some similar game IIHS crash tests by plac- corporate leader I admire. object of deliberate violence. ing high-strength, lightweight Ford's engineers counter steel stanchions fore and aft of The bottom line that the IIHS tests are not re-

the F-150's front-wheel housing,

al-world — pointing out that earning the truck a coveted not all people use sledgeham- 5-star front-crash rating. mers the same way with the

IIHS officials noted that oth-

The 2015 F-150 extended

cab (SuperCab) remains "Ford tough," albeit 700 pounds lighter. You have to drive this one

Running OLlOf t gaSbad fOr Car By Paul Brand

online for under $20. The replacement key will also have I had my 5 - year-old er fuel, it's probably bad. to be properly programmed Saab towed after it ran Ironically, the emergency for your vehicle, which is typout of gas. I was told the car test to determine if the fuel ically done with a diagnostic now needs a new fuel pump, pump is bad is to pound on the tool at factory dealerships. which will cost $1,100, be- bottom of the fuel tank with The message for all of us it cause that's what happens to a rubber mallet while crank- to have at least one more set of the Saabs when they run out ing the engine. If the vibra- keys for a vehicle and keep a of gas! Sound crazy to you? tion from pounding starts the spare set at home, work or in GM offered $2,500 off a new pump and the engine fires up, the garage where you can find GM car. Suggestions' ? drive to the shop to have the it! The significant ques› pump replaced. (Minneapolis) Star Tribune

with a diagnostic tool. If the pump still doesn't run or deliv-

tion is this: Did the car

actually run out of gas or did the fuel pump fail'? Until this

I lost the keys to my 2005 Ford 500 sedan

t My wife's '97 Acura 2.2 crt ~~

n had the "SRS" dashboard warning light come on tt

and my dealer said the vehi- last winter when the battery itate to replace the pump — or cle was too old to get a fac- went dead. The local Acura the car, for that matter. tory-made replacement key. dealer says it will cost $180 to It's never a good thing to Can you give me options on turn it off (reset). This seems run out of gas. Besides the what I can do to get the au- a bit spendy. What's your issues of inconvenience, loca- tomobile to start? I do have opinion? tion, danger, frustration, etc., all the original paperwork Because the issue in› it's a bit hard on the vehicle with VIN numbers that came volves the air bags and mechanically. Modern fuel when I purchased the car their potential danger if acpumps are located inside the new. I don't even care if an cidentally deployed, I can' t fuel tank and are cooled by the option is so extreme that I argue with letting the dealer flow of fuel through them. Al- have to destroy parts of the handle it. They would scan lowing the pump to run emp- vehicle. for any DTC fault codes in ty can generate heat that can Hopefully the situation the supplemental restraint lead to shortened fuel pump is not that dire! First, system that may have triglife. check with other Ford dealgered the light, and if none Most fuel injection systems ers to see if a replacement are found they would rewill run the fuel pump for a key is available from Ford. set the SRS warning light couple of seconds when the I'm hard-pressed to believe through the resetconnector key is first turned on to make the car is "too old" to have a in the driver's footwell. sure the system is pressurized replacement key made by the I found several online DIY for a fast start. Listen for this. dealer. If Ford truly cannot guides for doing this but as I If, after adding fuel to the tank supply a replacement key, said earlier, because it's the the fuel pump doesn't deliver call a locksmith — they' re SRS system I can't recomfuel, have the shop confirm experienced with this issue. mend this. whether the pump is running They may be able to rekey — Brand is an automotive or not. They can also test fuel all the locks in the car with a troubleshooterand former race pressure and flow by discon- new key or cut a replacement car driver. Email questions to necting the fuel line under the key for the original lock cylpauibrandC start ribune. corn. hood andoperating the pump inder. I found uncut OE keys Includea daytime phone number.

i

i

question is answered, I'd hes-

A

A

UNITED BY MISSION.

0 Rl EN BY IMPA T. PO Box 5969 Bend, OR 97708 54 1 -389-6 507 www. l iveun itedco.org

United ~~~<

Way 4>

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special thanks toUnited Way mediasponsor The Bulletin


INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© www.bendbulletin.corn/opinion

THE BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

SUNDAY READER

DAVID

BROOKS

Missing Russia of old eople who came of age after the end of the Cold War may not

realize how powerfully Russia influenced Western culture for 150 years. For more than a century, intellectuals, writers, artists and activists

were partly defined by the stances they took toward certain things

Russian: Did they see the world like Tolstoy or like Dostoyevsky? Were they inspired by Lenin and/or Trotsky'? That was because Russian culture had an unmatched intensity. It was often said that Russian think-

ers addressed universal questions in their most extreme and illuminating forms.

In his classic book, "The Icon and the Axe," James H. Billington wrote that because of certain conditions of

Russian history, "the kind of debate

that is usually conducted between individuals in the West often rages even

"+ C'

more acutely within individuals in Russia."

Russian influence was especially strong in America. There were certain mirror image parallels. Both nations didn't quite know what to make

of the sophistication and polish of Western Europe. Both countries had

Eurocentric elites who copied Parisian manners, and populist masses who ridiculed them. Both nations had

mental landscapes defined by the epic size and wild beauty of their natural landscapes. But Russia stood for something that America has never been known for:

Petty Officer 2nd Class Zachary Painter / U S. Coast Guard via The New York Times file photo

The Royal Dutch Shell’s mobile drilling unit, Kulluk, runs aground near Kodiak Island, Alaska, on Jan. 3, 2012. Despite the melting ice, getting oil and gas out of the Arctic remains a daunting challenge.

By Steven Lee Myers and CliffordKrauss eNew York Times News Service

depth of soul. If America radiated a

certain vision of happiness onto the world, Russian heroes radiated a vision of total spiritual commitment.

TERIBERKA, Russia-

The Russian ethos was not bourgeois, economically minded and prag-

he warming Arctic should already have transformed this impoverished fishing village on the coast of the

matic. There were radicals who be-

Barents Sea.

lieved that everything should be seen in materialistic terms. But this was a reaction to the dominant national ten-

The Kremlin spent billions in the last decade in hopes of turning it into a northern hub of its energy

dency, whichsaw problems asprimar› ily spiritual rather than practical, and

powerhouse, Gazprom. It was once the most ambitious project planned in the Arctic Ocean, but now

put matters of the soul at center stage.

In the Middle Ages, Russian religious icons presented a faith that was more visualthan verbal,more mys›

terious than legalistic. Dostoyevsky put enormous faith in the power of

the artist to address social problems. The world's problems are shaped by pre-political roots: myths, morals and

there is little to show for it aside from a shuttered headquarters and an enormous gravel road carved out of the windblown coastline like a scar. "There are plans," said Viktor lbrchaninov, the village's mayor, "but the facts — the realities of life — suggest the

opposite."

Even as late as the 1990s, one could sit with Russian intellectuals, amid all

The dream of an Arctic Klondike, made possible by the rapid warming of once-icebound waters, has

ing dogged protests, harsh weather and an accident in July that gouged a hole in one

the political upheaval in those days,

been at the core of Russia's

uncharted shoal in the Aleu-

and they would talk intensely about the nature of the Russian soul.

national ambitions and those of the world's biggest energy

tian Islands.

the state of the individual conscience.

Beauty could save the world.

All of this spiritual ardor, all of this intense extremism, all of this romantic

utopianism, all of this tragic sensibility produced some really bad political

companies for more than a

decade. But even as Royal Dutch Shell began drilling an exploratory well this summer

of its ships after it struck an

Only seven years ago, Shell and other companies — ConocoPhillips, Statoil of Norway, Repsol of Spain and Eni of Italy — together paid $2.7

tural vibrancy that had an effect on

off the north coast of Alaska, Russia's experiences here

the world. While the rest of the world was

have become a cautionary tale, one that illustrates the

going through industrialization and commercialism and embracing the whole bourgeois style of life, there was this counterculture of intense Russian writers, musicians, dancers — roman-

challenges facing those imagining that a changing Arctic will produce oil and gas riches.

tics who offered a different vocabu-

energy economy, fierce oppo-

The world today is awash in

lary, a different way of thinking and living inside. And now it's gone. Russia is a more normal country

sition from environmentalists

oil and natural gas, largely because of the shale revolution

ideas. But it also produced a lot of cul-

than it used to be and a better place to live, at least for the young. But when

you think of Russia's cultural impact on the world today, you think of Putin

and the oligarchs. Now the country stands for grasping power and ill-gotten money.

There's something sad about the souvenir stands in St. Petersburg. They' re selling mementos of things Russiansare sort of embarrassed by. There used to be many countercultures to the dominant culture of

achievement and capitalism and prudent bourgeois manners. Some were bohemian, or religious or martial. But

one byone those countercultures are withering, and it is harder for people to see their situations from different

and grander vantage points. Russia offered one such counterculture, a different scale of values, but now it, too, is

mainly in the past. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

Tectonic shifts in the global

who oppose tampering with the ecologically fragile waters and formidable logistical obstacles havetempered en› thusiasm that only a few years ago seemedboundless.After years of planning and delays, Shell's drilling project in the stormy waters of the Chukchi

Sea is now being watched by the industry, officials, residents and critics as a make-

or-break test of the viability of production in the Arctic. "From an economic point

of view, I'm not sure going offshore Arctic is very rational," said Patrick Pouyanne, chief

executive and president of Total, the French oil company, which once also planned to

drill off Alaska's northern coast. Shell has already spent $7 billion and this summer has faced tribulations like those that marred an ill-fated explo-

ration three years ago, includ-

billion for leases for the fields

off Alaska. The price of oil at the time climbed to nearly $150 a barrel, and the accelerated reduction of ice that

oncechoked theArcti cOcean seemed to make exploration

easier. Then the market changed.

in the United States and the

advent of hydraulic fracturing, which has so increased production that the U.S. has

slashed imports. Saudi Arabia and other states around the Persian Gulf are producing at maximum levels. In the last year alone, the price of oil has plummeted to

less than $50 a barrel from more than $90. Across the Arctic, from

Russia to Norway to Canada, offshore projectshave already proved disappointing. After drilling eight exploratory wells off Greenland in 2011

• 'fs

and 2012, Cairn Energy, a Scottishcompany, abandoned them. Chevron shelved exploration in the Canadian waters

of the Beaufort Sea last December, followed in June by a consortium including ExxonMobil and BP. SeeArctic /F5

James Hill/The New York Times

An Orthodox cross in Teriberke, Russia, a poor village on the Barents Sea that the Kremlin had hoped would be a hub for the expended operations of its energy giant,

Gazprom.


F2

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ou've heard it before. Driving with your cellphone

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glued to your ear is dangerous business, and illegal to boot. So, too, is texting. Yet the practices are so widespread that Bend police cited 46 drivers recently for doing one or the other. Worse, they did so in the space of just three hours at two busy intersections. Will we never learn' ? The problem is not limited to drivers. Pedestrians, too, have taken to Moreover, the problem is growoffi~ m 0 n D ~ ent using their cellPhones as they walk, P of T~ o~ t on pffid & s ay that A study done at Ohio State Unithe number of crashes in which cellphones were involved has risen since 2009. At the same time, both ODOT just more than 1,500 American Peand local pphce say ceilphpne related destrians were treated in emergency crashes are under-reported for avariety pf reasons, including the stigma the number was a bitover pf having been caught talking pr tex before, 250. Jack Nasar, the lead researcher on the project, said the problem was The numbers tell a grim story. sobadhe'dnotbesurprisedtoseethe Nationwide, some 25 percent of ail n u mbers doubleby2015. crashes involve cellphones, as do 10 percent of fatalities. Cellphones are ationsinman ways. Theyaiiowusin ~ m 18 p ~ « f m j ~ a ~ - ers to maintain contact with others dents and in 16 percent of accidents m ways that were hardly imagined rn whrch Pohce are called accordrng just afewyears ago. But for too many to the National Highway Transporta- pf us th~ be c ome tppi tion Safety Administration. They' re heard at church, used while shopping Closerto home, a La pine man was sentenced to 28 months in prison andthepermanentlossofhisdriver's they' re used when we' re out for a license after he stmck and killed a stroll ordrivingacrosstown. teenagerwhiledrimgandtexting. Will we n ever learn?

m portant

Government punishment cannot be kept a secret

G

etting a ticket for allow- to prevent them from arresting,

ing children to vandalize a railing in a forest should be an embarrassment. It certainly doesn't reflect well on the adult's sense ofright and wrong or on his or her willingness to set limits on unacceptable behavior. It should be an embarrass› ment, but in the case of a man and two kids and the defacement of a railing at Tumalo Falls in the Deschutes National Forest, it might not have been. The U.S. Attorney's Office originally refused to release the name of the adult in the group, say just what the ticket he received was for or make public the amount of the fine he paid. Nor would the U.S. Forest Service initially say how much it will cost to repair the railing — a cost that restitution presumably covered. We' re baffled by the secrecy. The American justice system isn' t supposedtowork thatway, even for relatively minor offenses. There's good reason for that. If government agencies can charge and fine people in secret, what' s

charging and fining people who have committed no crime beyond being annoying? That's the kind of behavior that's supposed to go on in dictatorships, not in a nation that prides itself on its open government. Meanwhile, we were able to learn something about federal vandalism charges in general. Vandalism is considered a Class B misdemeanor, not the most serious misdemeanor, but also not the least serious one. A person charged with a Class B misdemeanor may be fined as much as $5,000 and could spend up to six months in jail. In this era of instant judgment via social media, it may be that officials were worried that the individuals involved in the incident hadn' t committed an offense so bad that they deserved what unofficial punishment might follow. We can understand that, though it misses the point. Americans' faith in the legal system is grounded in our ability to find out just what's going on. Take the latter away, and the former disappears.

IN MY VIEW

Cean ueswi e p rive Oregon to a etter uture By Wes Bolsen t Cool Planet, we harness the

By turning these trees

power of clean fuel technol-

ogy and see firsthand how these innovations benefit so many people. That's why we easily say that Oregon's clean fuels standard is a win all around — for the environment, forconsumer choice and for

our communities. As producers of high-octane renewable gasoline, jet and diesel, we see two major benefits for Oregon: First, products like ours will be blended with the current fuel supply, reducing the carbon pollution from the gas we use to get around — without sacrificing performance or increasing prices at the pump. Second, this law will spur direct investment in electric vehicles and alternative

fuel infrastructure — giving Oregonians more transportation options. We are also creating new markets

for materials that used to be called "waste." At Cool Planet, we produce

fuel and a valuable soil additive called CoolTerra from nongrain plant material and wood waste. We

use wood residue, including the waste materials such as rural Oregon's timber industries like tree tops,

into fuel, we can protect

communities from fire while helping to reverse the effects of climate change caused by the burning of fossil fuels.

we can turn beetle kill pine into fuels over the state back our clean air law and our CoolTerra soil amendment. by morethan 2 to 1:65percentsup› There are 42 million acres of dead port keeping the law as it is, while trees in the Northern Rockies alone only 29 percent oppose it. — an environmental disaster waiting Big oil companies are currently to happen should lightning strike or working on three ballot initiatives wind blow a nearby fire in the wrong to weaken or repeal Oregon's clean direction. We all know that we must fuels law. These flawed, poorly writclear these lands to reduce the risk of ten initiatives will inevitably be tied wildfire, a danger we know well in up in bureaucracy and legal battles, the West. By turning these trees into costing taxpayers millions in legal fuel, we can protect communities fees and red tape. This isn't progress from fire while helping to reverse the forOregon orforoureconomy. effects ofclim ate change caused by Rolling back dean fuels means the burning of fossil fuels. rolling back progress, pulling fosClean fuel technology is here and sil carbon out of the ground, falling commerciall y ready the renew› back on old technology when we able fuels we produce are carbon could be investing in new technolonegative from a lifecycle — and gy, new, affordable choices for drivthanks to the Oregon Clean Fuels ers and new ways to preserve the Program, we can be part of Oregon's Oregon landscape we love. Instead, movement to create a thriving, local, let's move on and move forward alternative energy infrastructure. toward a brighter, cleaner Oregon Oregon's neighbors to the north future.

for a growing share of the economic pie. This was the theme of Thomas Piketty's "Capital in the Twenty-First

Century." But although we usually think of "capitalists" as they were defined by Karl Marx — i.e., owners of corporations — we forget that land also is a form of capital, which means landlords (and homeowners) are capitalists, too. Furthermore, according to Matt Rognlie, an economics Ph.D. student at the Massachusetts Institute

of Technology, it is land, not corporate capital, that has been responsible for

— Wes Bolsenleads business development and public affairs for Cool Planet, whichis based in Greenwood Village, Colorado.

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

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

ital's share of income.

and that capital income accounts

fuels standard. The poll, conducted

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

the lion's share of the increase in cap- and consumers want to be close to the

There is growing concern that wealth inequality has skyrocketed,

That's why we were not surprised to read that a majority of Oregonians support clean fuels: A new poll of likely Oregon voters shows that nearly two-thirds support the clean

Letters policy

Bloomberg

world.

can have the same success here.

thinnings and branches. This creates a whole new revenue stream for a homegrown Oregon industry. We are also fighting the potential of a devastating wildfire: Cool Planet and south, British Columbia and was recently awarded a grant from California, already have clean air the USDA's National Institute of laws nearly identical to Oregon's Food and Agriculture to look at how Clean Fuels Program. These laws

By Noah Smith r all the alarm about the "rise of

consumers less than one-third of one penny per gallon. We believe we

by FM3 Research for Renew Oregon, showed that voters from all

Lan or sarea majort reatto t t he robots," or "so~ ea t i ng the world" or the peril of climate change, one of the most pressing economic dangers of the future is getting short shrift: Landlords are eating the

have cut air pollution while costing

stores. And people want to be close to

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 MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

e e conomy

ty. When it becomes more important,

italsobecomes more scarce,andw hen This increase is happening world- other people in general, so they and itbecomes more scarce,itputsabrake wide. A great report by the Economist their children can have friends, en- on growth, just as if oil became more showed that the share of residential joy culture and meet their romantic expensive. The Economist reports that property value as a percentage of partners. thisscarcity may have reduced U.S. gross domestic product has skyrockAs our economies become more GDP by more than 13 percent since the eted in European countries since 1950. complex, there are more kinds of 1960s. This is bad for the economy. To stores, more cultural activities and This is exacerbated by the fact that understand why, we have to look at more industries to cluster together. cities themselves are so remarkably the reasons land has value in the first Therefore, the value of location in- productive.When businesses and place. That's not easy, because for creases, which pushes up the value of people duster densely together, promost of human history, the value of land. It doesn't matter how much emp- ductivity increases for all of them. But land came mainly from the value of its ty land is out there — who wants to live ironically, the bigger the productivity natural productive power — the fertil- on the Kansas prairie'? What matters bonus that density provides, the bigity of the soil, or the minerals beneath for the value of modern land is the in- ger the loss from the scarcity of urban the earth. But in the modern age, land centive to locate dose to other people. locations. In economics jargon, this is has value for a very different reason, And unless we all start telecommuting an "externality" that means that land summed up by the real estate mantra: and living entirely online, location will ends up getting paid more than the location, location, location. become moreand more valuable as value it produces. In a city or suburb, land's value oureconomy becomes more complex. So the increasing importance of comes from location. People want to More stores, more industries and land is bad news for the global econbe closeto the companies where they more culture are good things. But it' s omy. Whatcan we do?One approach, work. Companies want to be close to a very bad thing that location has be- advocated by the 19th century econothe people they employ. Stores want to come so important to us, because loca- mist Henry George, is to tax the value be close to the consumers they serve, tion is an inherently scarce commodi- of locations. Essentially, a Land Value

Taxis a property levy with exemptions for development. This encourages construction and development, while re-

ducing the cost that businesses have to pay to locate close to one another. Pennsylvania has long used a version of this tax, sometimes called a "split rate" property tax, with encouraging results. Another approach to reducing

the cost of density involves reducing zoning and other building restrictions, essentially allowing developers to create more locations where people can live and gather. The problem, of course, is that these

solutions are politically difficult. Landlords are powerful in local politics, and they will naturally resist any policies that cut into their windfalls. As in so many situations, economists know what needs to be done to boost the

national economy, but special interests are almost certain to block those

policies. — Noah Smith is an assistant professor of finance at Stony Brook University.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

ome imesi isa o u very summer for many years now, my family has kept to our 'tual. All 20 of us — my siblings, my dad, our better halves, my nieces and nephews — find a beach house big enough to fit the whole unruly clan. We journey to it from our different states and time zones. We

tensely divvy up the bedrooms, trying to remember who fared poorly or well on the previous trip. And we fling ourselves at one another for seven days and seven nights. That's right: a solid week. It's that

part of the ritual that mystifies many of my friends, who endorse family closeness but think that there can be entirely too much of it. Wouldn't a long weekend suffice? And wouldn' t it ward off a few spats and simplify the planning? The answer to the second question

is yes, but to the first, an emphatic no. I used to think that shorter would be better, and in the past, I arrived for

these beach vacations a day late or fled two days early, telling myself that I had to when in truth I also wanted to

— because I crave my space and my quiet, and because I weary of marinatingin sunscreen and discovering sand in strange places. But in recent years, I' ve showed up at the start and stayed for the duration, and I' ve no-

ticed a difference. With a more expansive stretch, there's a better chance that I' ll be

around atthe predse, random mo› ment when one of my nephews drops his guard and solicits my advice

~-,)

FRANI(

BRUNI

uan i

brightest colors, or the darkest ones, is to be watching and waiting and ready for them. My family is lucky. We have the means to get away. But we' re also dedicated to it, and we' ve determined that Thanksgiving

him.Iknow because Ihappened tobe in the passenger seat of his car when such thoughts were on his mind and

College students have too much privacy a problem) to reach out to parents.

Los Angeles Times

Dan Caldwell, a political science professor at

Pepperdine University, says if he notices a student has missed a few classes, he will contact the stu-

few yearsago, an acquaintance received a stunning phone call from her daughter' s ormer college roommate. The conversation went something like this: "I thought you should know your daughter never graduated from college." "What? She claimed she was just skipping the ceremony."

dent. "But I can't let the parents know, nor can I let

them know their son or daughter may be getting a 'D.' It seems funny because if they are 17, I can."

Few would argue that parents should expect to have the same level of involvement or control when their kids move from high school to college. (This is not about helicoptering — demanding to know why your kid didn't start on the tennis team.) But many people who deal professionally with 20-somethings agree that FERPA treats college students as responsible adults too soon.

"Well, the truth is she didn't attend classes the

last two years." The parents were shellshocked, concerned and

ultimately furious at the school. "Why didn't they

tellus?"

The answer is FERPA.

FERPA affects rich and poor alike. "The univer-

Passed in 1974, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act is an unwieldy piece of legislation

sity considers students as adults, regardless of age or financial dependence," reads the law. Granted,

affecting all institutions that receive funding from

there's a special kind of pain associated with dis-

the Department of Education. Although it has been amended over the years, the law's bottom line re- ensuring that no outside parties could gain access mains: "Once a student reaches 18 years of age to their educational information. Even though prior attends a postsecondary institution, he or she vacy is still a precious, albeit threatened, asset, the becomes an 'eligible student' and all rights under question is why should parents, who are perhaps FERPA transfer from the parent to the student." financially supporting their children's continuing This essentially means that you have no right, as studies, be tossed into the same category as perfect a parent, to know what or how your children are strangers'? doing in school. School officials cannot even conduct a meeting For sons and daughters who move through col- with parents about their child's mental health or

covering that your kid took a gap year while still enrolled — if it so happens you' re coughing up

lege in four efficient years, the law has little conse-

diately alert or respond to families if a student is in crisis. Where's the harm in that?

academic performance unless the student signs a

FRIEDMAN

encounter to discuss all of that with

when, for whatever unforeseeable reason, he felt comfortable articulating them. about something private. Or when Day isn't ample, that Christmas Eve And I know what he appreciates one of my nieces will need someone passes too quiddy, and that if each and regrets most about his past beother than her parents to tell her that of us really means to be central in cause I was not only punctual for this she's smart and beautiful. Or when the others' lives, we must make an summer's vacation, but also traveled one of my siblings will flash back on investment, the biggest components there with him, to fatten our visit, and an incident from our childhood that of which are minutes, hours, days. As he was uncharacteristically ruminamakes us laugh uncontrollably, and soon as our beach week this summer tive on that flight. suddenly the cozy, happy chain of was done, we huddled over our calIt was over lunch at the beach our love is cinched that much tighter. endarsand traded scores ofemails to house one day that my oldest nephThere's simply no real substitute figure out which week next summer ew spoke with unusual candor, and for physical presence. we could all set aside. It wasn't easy. at unusual length, about his expecWe delude ourselves when we But it was essential. tations for college, his experiences say otherwise, when we invoke and Couples move in together not just in high school — stuff that I'd grilled venerate "quality time," a shopworn because it's economically prudent. him about previously, never harvestphrase with a debatable promise: that They understand, consciously or ing the generous answers that he volwe can plan instances of extraordi- instinctively, that sustained prox- unteered during that particular meal. nary candor, plot episodes of exqui- imity is the best route to the soul of It was on a run the next morning site tenderness, engineer intimacy in someone; that unscripted gestures at that my oldest niece described, as an appointed hour. unexpected junctures yield sweeter she’dnever done for me before,the W e can try.We can cordon offone rewards than scripted ones on date joys, frustrations and contours of her meal each day or two afternoons night; that the "I love you" that counts relationships with her parents, her each week and weed them of distrac- most isn't whispered with great cer- two sisters and her brother. Why this tions. We can choose a setting that emony on a hilltop in Tuscany. No, it information tumbled out of her then, encourages relaxation and uplift. We slips out casually, spontaneously, in with pelicans overheard and sweat can fill it with totems and fripperythe produce section or over the dish- slicking our foreheads, I can't tell you. a balloon for a child, sparkling wine es, amid the drudgery and detritus of But I can tell you that I'm even more for a spouse — that signal celebration their routines. That's also when the tightly bonded with her now, and and create a sense of the sacred. truestconfessions are made, when that's not because of some orchesBut people tend not to operate on hurt is at its rawest and tenderness at trated, contrived effort to plumb her cue. At least our moods and emo- its purest. emotions. It's because I was present. tions don' t. We reach out for help at I know how my 80-year-old father It's because I was there. odd points; we bloom at unpredict- feels about dying, religion and God — Frank Bruni is a columnist able ones. The surest way to see the not because I scheduled a discrete for The New York Times.

By Michele Willens

THOMAS

$60,000 a year. But taxpayers foot the bill when stu-

Nothing has prepBred us for current situation

A

fter Donald Trump proposed building a high wall all along the U.S.-Mexicoborder,Gov.

Scott Walker of Wisconsin, not to be out-trumped, basically said, I see your wall and raise you one, stating that it was "legitimate" to consider building a wall along the 5,525-mile U.S.-Canada

border as well. Well, I see both your walls — and raise you a dome. That's right. I think we shouldn' t

just put high walls on both borders, but also a retractable dome over the

whole country. I know, Walker's proposal is crazy. But, alas, the fears that he and Trump

are playing on with this wall theme arenot crazy: Some very big tecton› ic plates are moving, and people feel it under their feet. The world is being redivided into regions of "order" and "disorder," and for the first time in a

long time, we don't have an answer for all the people flocking to get out of the world of disorder and into the world of

order. But being surrounded by two oceans and friendly democracies in Mexico and Canada, the U.S. is actually less affected by this new era. It is why, when it comes to our bor-

ders, I favor only high walls with big gates — yes, control the borders but with more efficient gates that enhance investment, common standards, trade, tourism and economic opportunity

in all three countries. Nothing would make us more secure. When it comes to our neighbors, Trump and Walker are making Americans both afraid and dumb, purely for political gain. And this is just the beginning. That isbecause the three largestforces on the planet — Mother Nature (climate change, biodiversity loss and population growth in developing countries), Moore's law (the steady doubling in the power of microchips and, more

broadly, of technology) and the market (globalization tying the world ever more tightly together) — are all in simultaneous, rapid acceleration. Since World War II, U.S. foreign policy has focused on integrating more countries into a democratic,

dents of any socioeconomic stripe flunk out of, or extend, their college experiences. Some in Congress, notably Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo., are agitating to revise the law. But perhaps

free-market world community built on the rule of law while seeking to deter

it is time to throw it out altogether. Without FERPA, universities could send students' records directly to

howto do. But, argues Michael Mandelbaum,

their guardians and allow administrators to imme-

author of the forthcoming "Mission Failure: America and the World in the

quence. Unfortunately, even kids who never played form. hooky, told a lie or got less than a B in high school Though it's possible for parents to obtain a waivTransferring all power to the students is not fair can become socially and academically lost in a dis- er, it's a laborious process. Either the student must to them; they never asked for that responsibility. At traction-filled, unfamiliar setting. give specific written permission, or the parents a time when young people seem perfectly happy A recent report by the nonprofit Complete Col- must submit a slew of documentation, including to share every moment of their lives online, they' d lege America found that "only 50 of more than 580 recent tax forms, to prove that they still claim the probably not blink an eye if they were forced to public universities graduated a majority in four student as a dependent. Amendments to FERPA continue to share their educational records. Reyears." And according to the National Student over the last few years have also allowed schools scinding this law may improve the shameful colClearinghouse, roughly 45 percent of students who to alert parents if a student is violating campus pol- lege completion statistics. Most important, it will enter college each year — 2 million individualsicies, but that's limited to drug or alcohol use and, keep families connected and allow our children to will not graduate at all. more recently, sexual offenses. It is, therefore, up to remain young just a little bit longer. The Department of Education's original inten- concerned friends and roommates (who probably — MicheleWillens is afreelance writer tions were admirable: to protect students' privacy, don't want to fink and may not even know there is who writes frequently oneducation issues.

Trump phenomenon is nothing new in U.S. politics

those states that resist from destabilizing the rest. This is what we know

Post-Cold War Era": "There is nothing in ourexperience that has prepared

us for what is going on now: the meltdown of an increasing number of states all at the same time in a globalized world. And what if China starts

failing in a globalized world?" Historically, we' ve counted on em-

pires, like the Ottomans, colonial powers, like Britain and France, and autocratic strongmen, such as kings and colonels, to hold artificial states together and provide order in these regions. But we' re now in a post-imperial, post-colonial and, soon, I believe, post-authoritarian world, in which no one will be able to control these

disorderly regions with an iron fist while the world of order goes about its business as best it can with occasional

By Stephen MIhm

of immigrants had done — for not

reminders of the nasty disarray on its

Bloomberg View

"mixing wit h

D

and blending themselves with the manners and customs of the new

frontiers. Your heart aches for the Syrian ref-

Mexico, and elsewhere while simul-

This stand earned him the nick-

taneously acquiring stakes in major name "Live Oak George," a referonald Trump's eruption into railroads and canals. For a time, he ence to his firmness of purpose and the Republican presiden- w as the only magnate who could go the quality materials used to build tial race has been held up as toe-to-toe with Cornelius Vanderbilt. his steamships. As his fame grew, he evidenceof a new phenomenon in Law always operated on a grand began angling for the presidency in American politics. scale. After the discovery of gold anticipation of the 1856 election. But it's not. The real estate mo- in California, he made millions by It was a tumultuous time in U.S. gul has precedents, and there's one building or buying over a dozen politics, as the slavery question behistorical doppelganger in partic- ocean-going steamships to connect gan splintering the two-party sysular whose bid for the presidency the east and west coasts. He modest- tem of Democrats and Whigs. Powfollowed much the same trajectory. ly christened one of the largest ships erful third parties had already made Like Trump, he was a New York City the George Law. inroads on the federal and state levmagnate who built a business emHe also acquired a reputation el. The most powerful of these was pire on construction and real estate. for being a hothead. In 1852, one an anti-immigrant, a nti-Catholic He rode to prominence by baiting of the officers abroad his steamer, movement dubbed the "Know-Nothforeigners and immigrants, divided the Crescent City, attacked the gov- ing Party," though its promoters preone of the major political parties, ernment of Cuba in the press. In ferred to call it the "American Party." and briefly captivated the political response, the Spanish Captain GenThe Know-Nothings offered plenestablishment. eral of Cuba threatened armed retal- ty of opportunities for the aspiring His name was George Law. A iation if the Crescent City returned demagogue.They tapped the well› fawning article in the United States to the island with the officer aboard. spring of resentment caused by the Magazine in the election year of 1856 Law simply could have trans- huge influx of Irish immigrants, describedhim as a humble farmer’s ferred the officer to another line, but many penniless and poorly educatson, born in upstate New York, who instead he decided to send the ship to ed, who had fled a famine ravaging by dint of industry, hard work and Cuba in defiance of the threat. The their native country between 1845 unrelenting ambition rose to fame incident sparked a diplomatic imbro- and 1852. and fortune as the deep-pocketed glio, and President Millard Fillmore L aw t ried t o c a p ture t h e contractor "of some of the most im- accused Law of trying to "threaten Know-Nothing nomination by sellportant of our public works." war on his own account for the pur- ing his bona fides as a stalwart deLaw's empire built dams, aque- pose ofseeking redress for real or fender of the American Way. In an ducts, bridges, railroads, canals and imagined injuries." open letter published in 1855, he deother large-scale projects. He evenLaw shot back by suggesting Fill- cried the failure of these immigrants tually snapped up land in Columbia, more was a coward. to assimilate as earlier generations

A m erican citizens,

The only man who could stand in his way was his old nemesis, Fill-

ugees flocking to Europe. And Germany's generosity in absorbing so many is amazing. We have a special obligation to Libyan and Iraqi refugees. But,

more, who had left the Democrat-

with so many countries melting down,

ic Party for the Know-Nothings. Alarmed by Law's insurgent campaign, Fillmore's men lambasted Law in their papers, declaring that although it might be for Law "a prof-

just absorbing more and more refugees is not sustainable.

dispensation."

If we' re honest, we have only two

ways to halt this refugee flood, and we don't want to choose either: build a

itable speculation to be President, to

wall and isolate these regions of disor-

the people it would be ruinous." The two men's allies clashed at the

der, or occupy them with boots on the ground, crush the bad guys and build

nomination convention in Philadel-

a new order based on real citizenship,

phia. Fillmore won the day.

avast project that would take two generations. We fool ourselves that there is a sustainable, easy third way: just keep taking more refugees or create "no-fly zones" here or there.

But Law wasn't finished. Thirst-

ing for revenge against Fillmore, Law managed to lead a breaka way, anti-slavery faction of t h e

Know-Nothing Party to a separate convention that assembled as the "The North American Party." He and others ultimately steered these

defectors into the newly created Republican Party. The end result was the election of the Democrat James Buchanan, who is regularly rated as one of the worst three presidents, if not the worst. — Stephen Mihmis a columnist for Bloomberg.

Will the ends, will the means. And

right now no one wants to will the means, because all you win is a bill. So the world of disorder keeps spilling over into the world of order. And beware: The market, Mother Nature and Moore's law are just revving their

engines. You haven't seen this play before, which is why we have some hard new thinkingand hardchoicesahead. — Thomas Friedmanis a columnist for The New York Times.


THE BULLETIN

© www.bendbulletin.corn/books

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Sept. 6. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "The Girl in the Spider' s Web" by David Lagercrantz (Knopf, $27.95) 2. "X" by SueGrafton (Putnam/Wood, $28.95) 3. "Purity" by Jonathan Franzen (FSG,$28) 4. "Star Wars: Aftermath" by Chuck Wendig (DelRey/ LucasBooks, $28) 5. "Go Set aWatchman" by Harper Lee (Harper, $27.99) 6. "The SolomonCurse" by Clive Cussler andRussell Blake (Putnam, $28.95) 7. "Undercover" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte, $28) 8. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead, $26.95) 9. "Friction" by Sandra Brown (GrandCentral, $26) 10. "Dark Ghost" by Christine Feehan(Berkley, $26.95) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed,$16.99) 2. "Rising Strong" by Brene Brown (Random/Spiegel & Grau, $27) 3. "Exceptional" by Dick Cheney and LizCheney(S&S/ Threshold, $28) 4. "Plunder andDeceit" by Mark R. Levin (S8S/Threshold, $27) 5. "Between theWorld and Me" by Ta-Nehisi Coates (Random/Spiegel 8 Grau, $24) 6. "Metal GearSolid V" (Piggyback, $34.99) 7. "For the Love" by Jen Hatmaker (ThomasNelson, $22.99) 8. "Endzone" by John U.Bacon (St. Martin' s, $27.99) 9. "Magpie" by Holly Riccardi (Running Press, $27.50) 10. "Color Therapy" by Cindy Wilde, Laura-Kate Chapman and Richard Merritt (Running Press, $15)

rum

asn' c an e ,

sl

n so

By Michael Barbaro New York Times News Service

D onald J .

T r u mp , w h o

received draft deferments through much of the Vietnam War, told the author of a com-

The Associated Press NEW YORK — Poet Joy

Harjo, known for wedding socialconsciousness to her Muskogee Creek heritage

All there is to know about beer

ing biography that he nevertheless "always felt that I was in the military" because of his

education at a military-themed boarding school. Trump said his experience at the Ne w

Y or k M i l i tary

Academy, an expensive prep school where his parents had

sent him to correct poor behavior, gave him "more training militarily than a lot of the guys that go into the military." That claim may raise eye-

"The Beer Bible" by Jeff Alworth (Workrnan,656 pages, $19.95)

brows given that Trump, now

a Republican presidential candidate, never served in the military and mocked Sen. John

Travis Dovei The New York Times

The Seattle Times

portrays the candidate, who received draft deferments, as preoccupied bywinning and self-promotion

was created when an early

naval aviator, for his captivi-

ty of several years during the York City, expecting to lead the procession, they were dissaid in July. "He's a war hero mayed to find a group of Robecause he was captured. I like man Catholic girls arranged people that weren't captured." ahead of them. Trump anTrump described his educa- nounced that he would take tion, business life, marriages care of the problem. When he and childhood in e x tensive returned a few minutes later, interviews with Michael D'An- having negotiated a TrumpVietnam War. "He's not a war hero," Trump

tonio, a Pulitzer Prize-winning former reporterat Newsday.

D 'Antonio's biography o f Trump, "Never Enough: Donald Trump and the Pursuit of

Success," will be published Sept. 22. In the book, Trump emerges as a man largely unchanged from his childhood in the wealthy Queens neighborhood of Jamaica Estates, where an exacting father, Fred Trump, schooled him in self-promotion and encouraged a lifetime of fighting. The senior Trump, counseled his son to "be a killer" and told him, "You are a

king." Trump memorably t old D'Antonio that "when I look at

myself in the first grade and I look at myself now, I'm basically the same. The temperament is not that different."

He arrived at the military academy — where tuition now

played unexpected generosity.

reaches $31,000 a year — for eighth grade in 1959 and remained for high school. Like

feur had a baby, Trump sur-

When the wife of his chaufprised them with a car seat

delivered to the hospital. When a 10-year-old fan of "The ApCornwall-on-Hudson, he wore prentice" asked the developer a uniform, participated in to utter the catchphrase "you' re marching drills and was ex- fired" to him on the set of the like deal, the cadets were put at pected to conform to a hierar- show, Trump gave the boy a the front of the parade, Dobias chy imposed by instructors. check for several thousand sard. Despite sitting out the Viet- dollars and said, "Go have the Trump, he said, "just wanted nam War because ofdefer› time of your life." to be first, in everything, and ments followed by a high draft Trump is a veritable fache wanted people to know he lottery number of 356 out of tory of b o orish put-downs, was first." 366, Trump said he endured laugh-out-loud exaggerations St. Martin's Press provid- the rigors of real military life. and self-aggrandizing decla"My number was so incred- rations. But "Never Enough" ed an advance copy of the book to The New York Times, ible, and it was a very high unearths decades-old gems and D'Antonio provided ex- draft number. Anyway, so I that might otherwise be lost to cerpts from h i s i n t erviews never had to do that, but I felt history. with Trump. (The author inthat I was in the military in On his publicity seeking: terviewed Trump for more the true sense because I dealt "The show is 'Trump,' and it is than six hours. The sessions with those people," he told sold-outperformances every› abruptly ended, he wrote, after D'Antonio. where," he told Playboy. Trump learned that D'Antonio The author seemed taken On his feelings of superihad spoken with a longtime aback by this. Not many of ority: "For the most part, you Trump enemy.) the academy's alumni "would can't respect people because But as Trump seeks to be- compare military school with most people aren't worthy of come commander in c h ief, actual military service," he respect," he told D'Antonio. with a slogan promising to wrote. "But the assertion was Perhaps his most reveal"Make America Great Again," consistent with the self-image ing statement applies to the time-honored virtue of self-rehis statements about the mil- Trump often expressed." itary are likely to draw the During an interview for the flection. Trump is not in favor most attention.

all students at the campus in

book, Trump removed a shoe

of it.

Wallace Stevens Award for

"proven mastery," the Academy of American Poets announced Thursday. The academy praisedHarjo for her "visionary justice-seeking art" and for transform-

DeWitt's newnovelwinks at fairy tale conventions "Undermajordomo Minor:

the assistant) "of

Klara, a young

A Novel" by Patrick deWitt (Ecco, 336

one Baron Von Aux's estate in the remote wil-

woman from the

pages, $26.99) By David L. Ulin

eastern m o un-

Her books indude "How

Los Angeles Times

tain range." Such a setting

derness of the

"The Woman Who Fell from

On the acknowledgments page of his third novel, "Un-

the Sky." Previous winners of the

dermajordomo Minor," Patrick deWitt cites as inspiration

Stevens prize include W.S. Merwin and Adrienne Rich. "Book of Hours" the $25,000

a variety of writers, including Thomas Bernhard, Italo the author of Calvino, Roald Dahl, Shirley "The Castle" is Jackson and Jean Rhys. This not on deWitt's tells us something important list of influenc-

Lenore Marshall Poetry

about his intent. Like deWitt's

Prize for the year's best col-

last book, "The Sisters Broth-

lection and a $25,000 fellowship to poet Marie Howe.

ers," which was shortlisted for the 2011 Man Booker Prize,

Also Thursday, the academy awarded Kevin Young's

Kathyrn Nuernberg r' es

"The End of Pink" won a

$1,000 prize for the best second book of p oetry, and Blake N. Campbell received a $1,000 award for student poetry for his work

"Bioluminescence." The academy announced two t r anslation a w ards. Todd Portnowitz received a

$25,000 prize and five-week residency at the American

Academy in Rome for his work on Italian poet Pierlu-

igi Cappello's "Go Tell It to the Emperor." Roger Greenwald's English-language edition of the Swedish poet

Gunnar Harding's "Guarding the Air" brought him a $1,000 prize.

human left a damp bowl of grains forgotten in a corner. The grains fermented and mingled with naturally available yeast, a drinkable spirit was produced, and it beat the heck out of chewing on damp cattails after a hard day of foraging. It was called gruel-beer, and it was considered pretty good — for the time, which was around 10,000 B.C. T he S u m erians a n d

Egyptians took

t h i ngs

from there, as did Celtic inhabitants of S c otland,

people living on the banks of China's Yellow River,

and so on. Essentially, wherever there were abundant grains, there were

people; and once people found they could make beer,as well as bread from

those grains, they were off to the races, civilization-wise. Beer was easy to make and it made hard

work a little easier. Once brewers came to harness

the power of the simple recipe of malted grain, water and yeast, and the

ways to keep it stable so they could share it beyond humanity was awash in choice. For some, it might be too

much choice. The labels, the types and the flavors can be i n scrutable; you

wonder if it's appropriate to talk about a wort in public. You don't want to have

to join an Illuminati-like society t o u nd e r stand good beer. You' ll stick to

ing "bitterness to beauty" and "trauma to healing." We Became Human" and

It is thought that beer

the humble home brewery,

Trump's preoccupation with "When you start studying A ccording t o t h e b o o k , to show the author the cause of winning — at anything and ev- Trump attended the New York his medical deferment. "Heel yourself too deeply, you start erything, big or small — domi- Military Academy after years spurs," he said. "On both feet." seeing things that maybe you nated his youth. His mentor at of rowdy and rebellious behavAs for the Vietnam conflict, don't want to see," Trump once the New York Military Acad- ior at Kew-Forest, a more tradi- he called the war "a mistake." told Time. T rump's r e p utation fo r "And if there's a rhyme and emy, Theodore Dobias, called tional prep school in Queens. Trump "a conniver, even then." Trump once recalled giving a self-indulgence is well known reason," he continued, "people When Trump's high school teacherat Kew-Forest a black (the helicopters, the planes, the can figure you out, and once dassmates showed up for a eye "because I didn't think he penthouses). But at times, his they can figure you out,you’re Columbus Day parade in New knew anything about music." biographer found, he has dis- in big trouble."

and the Southwest Amer-

ica landscape, has won a $100,000 prize for lifetime achievement. Harjo, 64, received the

By Melissa Davis

A forthcoming biography of Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump, shown speaking at an Up› state Chamber Coalition event at the T.D. Convention Center in Greenville, South Carolina, in August,

McCain, R-Ariz., a decorated since childhood.

a major real estate developer,

Poet Harjo receives lifetime award

e irs

is as

M i t teleu-

ropean as anything in F r anz K afka, even i f

~

is supposed to go. Were this Baron's village, a standard bildungsroman, w ith whom h e Lucy would learn something has a passionate important from his confronaffair. tation with the Count, someThat

t

how, exactly, a novel like this

t hi s

t hing i ndelible that

w o u ld

causes compli- change both him and (not coc ations g o e s incidentally) the movement of without saying; the plot. "Undermajordomo Minor," Klara is involved with Adolphus, though, doesn't offer s u ch leader of a reb- easy satisfactions; deWitt raisel i n surrection es the stakes only to reduce

p/ gt,Cg DENIT[ T th at ~ ~as s w s ~ ~

f igh t s in the hills above

es. Neither, for the castle for that matter, is Jorge Luis Borg- reasons of its own. She is also

them, only to leave the tension unfulfilled. This I think is the

whole idea — to comment on the conventions of form while

es, although his fi ngerprints pursued by the Baron's friend subtly undermining them, emerge in places here as well. t h e Count, who recognizes Lu- winking at us all the while. "Undermajordomo Minor" is a It's not pastiche, however, cy's infatuation and jokingly It is as if he were saying: We work of fiction with its roots in that deWitt is afte r; maybe challenges the younger man to all know how this should go, literature, a response to other "reanimation" is a better word. a dueL but what if it went this way "He was merely making instead? books more than to any inter- What I mean is that , throughaction with the world. out the novel, he seeks to play s p o rt," deWitt writes, "and yet Such what-if games reside That's not a criticism, just against our expectations, to t h e re was an undercurrent of at the heart of fiction; as dean observation; deWitt is not take the moral lessons inher- true violence at play as well. Witt told an i nterviewer in interested in s t raight natuent in his chosen formandre- Y o u h a d but to look at t he 2013, "I understand the cliralism so much as in the me- wire them, give them addition- man to see he'd never in his ches, and it was fun to address chanics of a particular kind of al dimension and heft. life asked twice for anything them, but it was also fun to story, narrative as fairy tale. In Lucy may be inexperienced, he desired." That's a terrific make up a world that surely "The Sisters Brothers," it was with no real friends and only l i ne, a vivid expression of the never existed." He was talking the western, which he decon- minimal connection to hi s c o rrupting effect of privilege,there a bout "The S isters structed as neatly as Charles family — his mother puts his what happens when no wish Brothers," but a similar logic Portis and E.L. Doctorow did. room up for rent before he has has ever been denied. It leads applies to "UndermajordoThis time, it's the fable, as de- even moved out of the house as well to a key moment of mo Minor." Lucy, man/child, Witt tells the story of a young — but he is also r esourceful conflict, in which Lucy has no blurs the boundaries — he is a man, Lucien — also known and in his own wayseductive, choice but to defend Klara's na'if with experience. He both as Lucy — Minor, who travcharming in the ways of love. honor. knows the world and doesn' t els from his home village of Indeed, the central movement A nd y e t p a r t o f d eWitt's know the world, and he is preBury to become the Under- of "Undermajordomo Minor" p oint is to challenge even these pared to sacrifice everything majordomo (or assistant to involves his relationship with p reconceptions, our sense of for love.

the same porter you' ve been drinking since 1992, thank you, although you have no idea if there are any other kinds you might like, let alone explain why you drink it. Portlander Jeff Alworth

spent two years traveling and tasting, at more than 50 breweries, to produce "The Beer Bible." It's more

than history and chemistry. It's a comprehensive trip t h r ough t h e i n t er-

twined history and culture of beer and humans. Each

has influenced the other. Along with the necessary basics regarding how the major kinds of beers are made and why, Alworth shows readers how to deci-

pher a beer label, taste beer like an expert, pair beer with food and serve it in the

right glassware. The chapters on t he types of beer

ales,wheat

beers, lagers and tart/wild ales — unravel the mysteries behind pub menus,

so a reader can order with confidence among the pale ales, cask ales, India pale ales (IPA) or British IPAs. Alworth a l s o i n t r oduces readers to prominent

breweries of each type of beer and provides "The beers to know" of each. "Though there's a huge a mount yo u

can l earn

about beer, the principal experience should be pleasure," Alworth writes, and

his readers will raise a glass to that.


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 T HE BULLETIN F 5

R us ie's'Two Years' etst e innouto t e o t t e "Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights" by Salman Rushdie (Random House, 304 pages, $28)

"(Rushd) was a sort of anti-Scheherazade, Dunia told

of the jinn are so long that the

By Carolyn Kellogg

ties between the generations often erode ... Love is rare in the jinn world. (But sex is incessant). The jinn, we believe, are capable of the lower

Los Angeies Times

emotions —

ished because the box inevithe storyteller ... her stories tably found a new story inside saved her life, while his put each unfinished one, until it his life in danger." This is just seemed that digression was one of the book's many self- the true principle of the uniaware references — to both verse, that the only real subRushdie's real-life past and ject was the way the subject Scheherazade's tales, which kept changing." him, the exact opposite of

a n ger, resent-

ment, vindictiveness, possesRushdie lets the genie out siveness, lust (especially lust) of the bottle and puts her — and even, perhaps, some straight into the arms of a forms of affection ..." 12th-century p h i l osopher. These creatures lay siege to Their relationship kicks off a humanity in "Two Years Eight story that pits reason against Months and Twenty-Eight religion, imagination against Nights" for exactly that long order, and genies against — and the time tallies up to puny humans. 1,001, a reference to "The AraRushdie corrects "genie" bian Nights" and Scheherazato "jinn," the original Arabic de's many stories. Set prefor the fantastical creatures dominantly in the present day born of fire with the ability to with a few flashbacks, the stoshape-shift. Featuring in Is- ry is framed by anonymous lamic mythology and pre-Is- chroniclers a thousand years lamic folk tales, the jinn's hence recalling the events characteristics are as varied that transpired, giving them as the many c ultures that the glow of legend. recognize their intercessions We begin in the 12th cenin human a ff airs. Rushdie tury when Dunia, a jiniri builds his own cosmology (female jinn) takes the form around them: of a 16-year-old girl who, fasIn his new novel, Salman

"The jinn are not noted for

cinated by his humanist take

their family lives. (But they do have sex. They have it all the time.) There are jinn mothers or fathers, but the generations

on reason and religion, falls for the elderly philosopher

Arctic

High hopes in disrepair

t he novel mirrors w it h i t s stories-within-stories.

not incidental — the author' s father took the family sur-

name from the philosopher, known as a progenitor of Islamic secularism (in the West, he's often called Averroes). The fictional version of Rushd fathers a huge brood with Dunia. Sometimes, ex-

hausted by his youthful lover's ardor, he explains his ideas to her, philosophy as pillow talk. What is still controversial i n

s o m e c i r cles

today was, in his time, also tween Rushd and Rushdie is dangerous. Ibn Rushd. The similarity be-

Continued from F1 U.S. sanctions imposed after Russia's annexation of

a mbitions collided with t h e

projects have s talled, and

Crimea last year forced Exx-

harsh realities of the Arctic. It was a thriving fishing

Russia has shifted its focus onshore, especially following

village in Soviet times, with

U.S. sanctions that targeted

with the state-owned oil giant Rosneft, which has had to suspend its drilling plans there as it searches for new partners.

fish-processing factories and offshore Arctic projects. even a farm for harvesting the The Shtokman field, Pupelts of snow foxes, but it fell into decline in the 1970s with

tin has boasted, remains a

at Rice University.

flows into the sea.

nobody thinks about the next

prospect, but one for the next the advent of industrial fish- generation. "When we look at A r ctic "As soon as they speak of ing. The population dropped opportunities, they are al- from morethan 6,000,wood› the next generation, it means ways the opportunities that en piers crumbled, and fish- something is wrong," Chare 10 years away," said Ken- ing boats that once brought uprov, of Greenpeace Russia, neth Medlock III, director of back cod were scuttled in the said. "In this country — in Sothe Center for Energy Studies bay where the Teriberka River viet times, in czarist timesThe difficulties of getting oil and gas out of the Arctic a re daunting. W i nters a r e

long and dark, and the Arctic seas, despite reductions in

the permanentice pack, are still clogged with floes and icebergs, while intensifying stormshave threatened ships or oil rigs even during the summer.

Marshy tundra onshore complicates the construction of pipelines and support facilities. So do coastal erosion and melting permafrost. T here are fe w

r o ads or

airports, or people for that matter, near the areas to be drilled, requiring workers and equipment to be shipped long distances. Despite agreements by the Arctic Council,

Like people in Alaska and other places who look to the

changing Arctic for economic development and jobs, the village's residents welcomed Gazprom's plans to tap an enormous gas field, called the Shtokman, that was discovered in 1988 about 370 miles

offshore. Under the control of President Vladimir Putin of Rus-

sia,Gazprom emerged as an energy giant controlled by the state, and for much of the 2000s, the Shtokman was its

biggest prize, a project that Russia dangled before eager foreign investors.

ises to resume drilling — in 2014, then in 2016 or 2019residents in Teriberka have

become resigned about the boom that never was. The c ontractors who ar rived i n

car-nominated

bureaucrat who wants to seize

Total and Statoil, Gazprom began construction of t he

his beloved house on the bay. "They built the road," Igor

road in Teriberka where it

A banosimov said

hoped to build terminals for processing and shipping the States, Russia and six other gas in liquefied form — all at Arctic countries, few resourc- a cost estimated to rise to $20 es are availablefor search billion. After years of work, how-

oil in icy conditions. That, along with strict require-

w hen a

neighbor lamented that the project had changed little. Abanosimov owns a series

of floating cottages that he rents out, dreaming, perhaps improbably, of developing a yacht club and other ameni-

ever, Russia's plans for the project came under pressure ties that might attract tourists ments imposed by the Obama from e n o rmous t e c hnical instead of energy companies. administration, forced Shell challenges, the changing en- The Arctic, he said, has its to send a flotilla of more than ergy market and finally the own souL "Those it wants to accept, two dozen ships to the Chuk- global financial crisis in 2008 chi Sea this summer. and 2009. it accepts," he explained. "The entire c ost s t r u cRussia, as the world's larg- "Those it wants to banish, it ture up there is three to five est producer of natural gas, banishes." times more expensive than found itself struggling to onshore lower 48," said Scott

compete against alternative

Sheffield, chief executive of Pioneer Natural Resources, a Texas-based oil company. Two years ago, his company gave up on a field pro-

supplies to countries in Europe eager to reduce their dependence on Putin's government, even as prices dropped significantly.

The Obama administration has set strict limits on how Shell can operate. It prohibit-

Shell's many mishaps

In late August, a ferocious storm whipping through the Chukchi Sea forced Shell to suspend its drilling operations off Alaska only a month af"Monopolies do not h ave ter one of its two floating rigs jected to contain 100 million barrels of oil in the Beaufort strategic vision," said Vladi- drove a drill bit into the seaSea — drilled from a man- mir Chuprov, an energy ex- floor. The company resumed made island and connected pert for Greenpeace Russia operations after the weather by an 8-mile pipeline to Prud- who opposes offshore explo- cleared. hoe Bay, Alaska — in order ration in the Arctic. "The deIt was just the latest distracto invest more in Texas shale cisions are very political, and tion in Shell's long effort to tap fields. the economic background is one of the last remaining un"One-hundred-million- not a factor." touched giant oil reserves. barrel-type disc overies Statoil pulled out in 2012, Three years ago, the comwill not be economical in a writing off more than $335 pany came close to reaching $100-a-barrel oil e n viron- million in costs. Total wrote oil, but its plans for two exment, an d t h e y c e r t ainly off $350 million last year and, ploratory wells in the Chukchi won't be economical today," according to Russian news ac- and Beaufortseas died aftera Sheffield said. counts, returned its 25 percent seriesof bizarre accidents. Even optimistic projections share of the project to GazOne of the two drill ships, suggest the Arctic might not prom in June. the Noble Discoverer, nearprove to be as transformaThe Arctic is at the core ly ran aground on a sandy tive as once imagined. Ac- of the nationalist ambitions beach in the Aleutians. An cording to Rystad Energy, of Putin, who once said that A rctic c o ntainment d o m e a global consultancy based tappingthe region’s resourc› was crushed during a vital in Norway, production from es was as natural as hunting test. And a tow line on the offshorefields in or near the and harvesting berries and second drill ship, the Kulluk, Arctic could double between mushrooms. snapped, setting it adrift on 2015 and 2025 to 1.4 million Russiaalready operates the the high seas. barrels a day, which would first offshore production platTo environmentalists, the still be less than 2 percent of form above the Arctic Circle, accidents bolstered their arcurrent global production. called Prirazlomnoye, which guments that exploration in "When people say the Arc- began pumping the first com- the Arctic is simply too risky. tic is the next frontier and mercial shipments from the Shell did not give up, though. there is great resource po- Kara Sea in l ate 2013 and The company replaced its setential, of course there is the reached a modest 2 million nior Arctic leadership team risk that it is hype," said Jon barrels last year. The figures, and devised another plan to Marsh Duesund, a Rystad se- however, are a fraction of the overcome the natural and regnior project manager. m ore accessi blegasand oilre› ulatory hurdles.

"What if there's an oil spill?

What then?" Pakotak said. To be sure, there are those

ed the company from simul- who still believe in the Arctic's taneously drilling two wells, potential. They cite efforts to as planned. The U.S. Fish and drill there in the 1970s and Wildlife Service ruled that 1980s, as well as a study by marine wildlife protections the U.S. Geological Survey

that George Simenon was an absurdly prolific French noir writer, that only makes me

realize how much else there is — particularly in terms of religion — to discover. The writing isn't slowed by the plethora of references, which speed by faster than most will be able to catch. Rushdie, 68, may be the only

m ore bountiful than i n

the

vast Gulf of Mexico. "Alaska is a long-term play," he said. "That is the way you have to look at it. We can't be driven by today' s, tomorrow's,

or next year' s, or last year's oil price."

As a licensed acupuncturist, I need

aids for my moderate hearing loss so I can best hear my patients and

be present for them during their treatment visits. Bu t a i d s a r e s o much more than a work assistant,

"Leviathan,"

a bleak film that depicts one man's struggle against a venal

and know without being told

required a 15-mile buffer zone in 2008 that estimated that between simultaneous drill13 percent of the world's unings, while the company had tapped oil and 30 percent of its planned for a 9-mile buffer. natural gas lay in the Arctic. the Aleutians in July. With no Workers on Shell's ships also The N ational P e troleum adequate facilities in Alaska, have to keep watch and avoid Council, in a report commisthe Fennica had to go to Port- crossing the migratory paths sioned by the Department of land for repairs. of whales and other marine Energy and released this year, When the ship tried to head mammals. said the technology and ex"Most of the natives up here pertise already existed to exback north, protesters tried to block the vessel with kayaks in the north are concerned tract oil and natural gas safely and then suspended them- with the marine mammals," in icy conditions, replacing selvesfrom a bridge over the said James Pakotak, a resi- declining supplies on Alaska's Willamette River, obstructing dent of Barrow, Alaska, where North Slope. safe passage. A court then the airportserves asa hub for Ben van Beurden, Shell's threatened Greenpeacewith many of Shell's workers. The chief executive, said in a confines of $2,500 an hour if the storms that battered Shell's ference call last month that protesters did not clear the flotilla also hammered the the company's stake could way. town. ultimately be "multiple times"

droves have departed, and the enormous embankment where Gazprom built a gravel road, encroaching on the village's cemetery, comes to a dead end at a rocky cliff. Teriberka is better known now as the location of the Os-

After reaching deals with

an international organization that includes the United

and rescue or the cleanup of

generation." Despite Gazprom's prom-

The shift from one story

Nikolai Gogol's story "The Overcoat" and Luis Bunuel's film "Un Chien A n d alou"

to the next is lightning-fast, Some are grounded and only occasionally signaled physical, like the t ale of by something as formal as Geronimo Manezes, a New a chapter change or italics. York gardener past his prime The narrative is a speeding person with the multiculturwho misses the country he cacophony, each person's life al experiences to be able to left, India, as much as the wife story or heartbreak or mo- understand them all . B o rn he lost. Others are all about ment in time deftly rendered in Bombay (as it was then language: Blue Yasmeen, a then abandoned in a long k nown), educated in E n spoken-word artist, remem- fleet-footed riff. gland, world famous after bers her dead father and spins This is Rushdie's first book the Ayatollah Khomeini deon-stage stories with s t y le for adults since 2008, and he clared a fatwa against him and passion. Still othersseems to be having fun with for his 1988 novel "The Salike the centuries-old debate the adult content. He works tanic Verses" and now a New between Rushd and his deep- in jokes about the sexual ap- Yorker, Rushdie is a unique ly religious opponent, Ghaza- petites of his jinn, brings alive polymath. li — are making arguments dark corners of Manhattan, "Two Years Eight Months about God and reason, imag- explores misplaced love and and Twenty-Eight Nights" ination and science. creates a g ood-versus-evil is erudite without flaunting Geronimo comes into the battle that's firmly grounded it, an amusement park of a possession of a magic story- in philosophy. pulpy disaster novel that retelling box that serves as a He has packed the novel sists flying out of control by mirror for the book's struc- with allusions, and while I can being grounded by religion, ture. "(A)s each layer fell catch the veiled references to history, culture and love.

serves onshore, including the And still it has struggled. Teriberka, a village of 1,000 Yamal Peninsula in northern A private Finnish icebreakpeople on the Barents Sea, is Siberia 900 miles east. er it contracted, the Fennica, where Gazprom's offshore Plans for more offshore struck an uncharted shoal in

onMobil to withdraw from a joint venture in the Kara Sea

away a new voice told a new tale, none of the t ales fin-

they help me at home and on the phone, i n loud and quiet places. My previoushearing aids were elevenyears-old andI was becoming concerned about where Iwould get new ones andfrom whom. I had visited afew shops for service in Bend and Portland, and my experiences over the years were uncomfortable at best. I had not found a dispenser Ifelt I could trust to help me with a disability and an investment. Then, I met Michael and Denise. They were exactly the people I needed. They took the time to listen, be present, and then explain which aids were best for me and why. It took a little while to adjust to hearing more than I was used to hearing and novi/I' m fully comfortable with the new aids and how much they help me at work and home. I'm grateful to have found a reliable, trustworthy, and helpful hearing atd dispensers with Michael and Denise. In Health, Tanuj aGoulet Licensed Acupuncturist, Doctor of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, Tanuj aGoulet.corn e

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F6 THE BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015

Jong boldly de ing the sunset ofsexin’Fear of Dying’ By Alexandra Alter New York Times News Service

Two words have vexed Er-

ica Jong for the last 42 years. The first is "zipless," and the

second is not printable in this newspaper. The phrase, immortalized

in her 1973 best-selling novel, "Fear of Flying," which has sold more than 27 million copies,

entered the cultural lexicon as a shorthand for casual, consequence-free sex. It turned Jong

into a feminist heroine of sorts and avatar of female sexual liberation, and helped propel and define her career. It was also meant to be satir-

ical, Jong said, but was misconstrued asan endorsement of unbridled lust. "People so m i sinterpreted

'zipless,'" Jong, 73, said during

Flying" as one of her literary tempts to live out her fantasies influences. "'Fear of Flying' opened a by havingan affair,became a blockbuster and cultural touch- lot of doors and eyes and made stone. John Updike compared people look differently at that it to "The Catcher in the Rye," n ice woman sitting next to and Henry Miller praised it them on the train, and I think as a groundbreakingliterary 'Fear of Dying' is going to have achievement. the same effect," Weiner said. The book was translated into Jong also found a fan in one 40 languages and was credited of her comic heroes, Woody by second-wave feminists with Allen, who loved "Fear of Dypaving the way for women' s ing" and unexpectedly gave it self-expression. a blurb. "What was really distinctive "I was thinking of his faabout it at the time was the no- mous quote, 'I'm not afraid of tion that a woman could break dying; I just don't want to be out of the conventions of how there when it happens,' so I a woman writer should write, thought he should read this," and write with candor and Jong said. "The first thing he humor about topics that were said when we sent it was, 'I taboo for women," said Shelley never blurb anything.' Then he Fisher Fishkin, an English pro- relented." erma with her husband and at-

Forty-two

years after Eric Jong’s wildly

successful book"Fear of Flying"

challenged the taboo of

casual sex, Jong’s new novel,"Fear

of Dying," is challenging another. Jong ls pictured at

her home ln New York. Krista Schlueter I The New York Times

fessor at Stanford University.

Jong has since published three memoirs, five more volFlying' that it's a Platonic ideal umes of poetry and eight other and a fantasy, and I have nev- novels, induding historical ficer had one, but people seem to tion and a work about Sappho, overlook that." but nothing has matched the Now, decades later, she has popularity of "Fear of Flying." exhumed and rebranded the At times, she says, she has felt phrase in her new novel, "Fear oppressed by being so closely of Dying," which is being billed associated with her brash ficas the "spiritual" Fear tional alter ego Isadora. "Fear of Flying' follows me of Flying" and is being released 'Ibes day. everywhere," she said. While "Fear of F1ying" She has been struggling to shocked readers with its frank write "Fear of Dying" for a dean interview at her Manhattan apartment. "I say in 'Fear of

. US. Cellular.

seque l to "

depiction of the sexual appetite

cade. At first she tried to make

and independence of its protagonist, Isadora Wing, "Fear of Dying" takes on an another, more persistent taboo by depicting — in blunt, unvarnished

an older, wiser Isadora the heroine. But bringing back that character feltforced. "There was so much baggage around 'Fear of Flying,'" she said. "The weight of

detail — sex between older

adults. Jong's new character, those expectations was very a grandmother in her 60s, is frightening." lusty and vivacious and searchJong eventually sidelined ing for carnal satisfaction at a Isadora to a cameo role as a casual-sex site called zipless. worldly friend, and created corn. Vanessa, who shares some ob"I' ve always wanted to write vious traits with the author. She the books for w o men t hat used the book to explore the didn't yet exist, so I thought, wrenching process of watchI have to write about an older ing her parents' slow demise, woman who is sexual, attrac- her fear of losing her looks tive and wants to reach out for and vitality, the joys of being a life," Jong said. "That's not cele- grandmother andher relation› brated, sadly, and I would hope ship with her daughter, Molly that a lot of older women who Jong-Fast, who, like Vanessa, read this book realize that sex struggled with drug addiction. Jong's warm, chatty persodoesn't disappear; it just changna andher tendency to blurthe es forms." The story centers on Vanessa boundaries between her life Wonderman, a former actress and fiction often results in juicy terrified of aging and death. reading. She once wrote about She seeks escape from her sex- a one-night stand she had with less marriage to a much older Martha Stewart's then-husman with erectile dysfunction band, Andy Stewart, at the by searching for lovers online. Frankfurt Book Fair. The surreal encounters that folBut the autobiographical low — an email exchange with tropes can be trying for friends, a man who introduces himself family members, ex-husbands by sending lewd photos, an- and former lovers. (Her fourth other who wants her to wear marriage, to Ken Burrows, a a black rubber suit, an unsat- divorce lawyer, has lasted 26 isfying hotel tryst with an old years.) Her sister, Suzanna married flame — leave Vanes- Daou, confronted her publicsa reeling and worried that her ly ata 2008 conference about sex life might be over. (This be- "Fear of Flying," and has said ing an Erica Jong novel, it isn' t.) thatthe book embarrassed her Some of Jong's fans and and her husband by modeling peers are calling the novel a characters afterthem. Jong-Fast, who is also a writlong overdue corrective in a cultural landscape that deifies er, said she had not read "Fear youth and often ignores older of Dying" and did not plan to, women, or relegates them to noting that her having her time the roleofspinstersorcrones. "There is this giant void in

and cultural obstacles older

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in treatment rehashed in fiction

"would not have been my first the culture about women in choice." The scenes from a moththat age group as heroines, as romanticbeings, as sexual er-daughter trip to a rehabilitabeings and as creative beings, tion clinic appear to be barely fictionalized, and several paraand there's not that void for men," said Naomi Wolf, author graphs match an account of of "TheBeauty Myth." "Wom› the episode in Jong's most reen don't stop being all those cent memoir nearly verbatim, things as their lives continue with identical dialogue and descriptions. into those decades." "Fear of Dying" is landing "I don't read her books," in the middle of a long-fester- Jong-Fast said. "For my mental ing debate about the social health, it's probably better not women face. The comedian Amy Schumer has skewered the frequent sidelining of older actresses in a widely viewed skit built around the farcicalthough just barely — premise that an aging actress' desirability could dissipate in a single day. Sex therapists and gurus havepublished dozens ofman› uals and self-help books with titles like "Sex for Seniors" and

to beat

s $ G GalaXy S6

tO s

A few literary critics have taken aim atJong’s self-refer›

ential style and habit of recycling material. A caustic review o f her 2006 memoir in T he

Atlantic posited that Jong was doomed to "eternal self-imitation"afterthe success of "Fear

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of Flying," and skewered her "stunning self-absorption." In an advance review of

"Fear of Dying," a critic for K irkus R eviews s ai d

t h at

"spending almost 300 pages gag book "Sex After 60," which with Vanessa is like enduring a trans-Atlantic flight with a seat is blank inside. But the subject has not been mate who never stops talking widely explored in popular but doesn't have a whole lot to fiction. "Women were not al- say." Jong said she had a thicker lowed to have passion at 60," Jong writes in "Fear of Dying." skin than she did earlier in her "We were supposed to become career and is more philosophigrandmothers and retreat into cal about negative reviews. "We can't really control our serene sexlessness." Jong started out as a poet, image in the world," she said. and published two volumes of "But it still hurts if you spend verse before selling "Fear of a decade on a book and people Flying" to Aaron Asher, an ed- don't like it." She has many vocal supitor whose roster of writers induded Saul Bellow, Philip Roth porters, among them Susan "Sex Over 50." There is also the

and Arthur Miller. Asher told Jong to expect sales of 3,000

copies, she recalled. Instead, the novel, about a

young poet who travels to Vi-

Cheever; the historical novelist Ken Follett, who said the new

novel represented "Erica at her best"; and the novelist Jennifer

Weiner, who counts "Fear of

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Medicare Pa211 Big Hollywood 8 station tients Call Health Hot- Hot dog/ hambuger bun No w ! 1- warmer, $75; cement reloading press for line Children’s Items mixer, $100. antique rifle, pistol & shotgun 800-285-4609 (PNDC) futon, $125. Dollhouse Ryan's solid w/powder measure on 530-598-6004 heavy duty s t and. wood, 3 story, fully $685. 541-771-4857 249 541-410-3425 furn. with 2 doll famiHow to avoidscam Art, Jewelry lies. $100; Radio Flyer and fraud attempts COFFEE TABLE. CASH!! w agon with w o o d & Furs nice wood, $400 For Guns, Ammo & VBe aware of internabottom and remov805-720-3515 Reloading Supplies. able sides, exc. cond., Desperately Seeking tional fraud. Deal lo541-408-6900. $25 541-382-3900 cally whenever posMissing 1940s d iam ond ring sold a t sible. 212 German shepherd 260 282 266 Bend Pawn approx. Y Watch for buyers puppies, AKC, Antiques & who offer more than Sept.13-17, 2014 has Estate Sales Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend teens, adults, central diamond and 2 your asking price and Collectibles our bloodlines make little side stones, one who ask to have DO YOU HAVE Estate Sale. Furniture, HUGE 4 FAMILY & all the difference! money wired or SOMETHING TO is missing. Sz. 7.5. h ousewares, W / D , Salesman Sample ** FREE ** DINETTE -seats 6, 40's Gilfillan console windridgek9.corn 541-213-1221 Please handed back to them. SELL ref., ofc., CDs, DVDs, STREET SALE! good condition. $400 radio/record p layer. Garage Sale Kit Fake cashier checks FOR $500 OR keep trying! Will pay MORE! 1001 SE 15th, 100's of new samples: 805-720-3515 $30. 503-639-3355 Place an ad in The Labrador pups AKC, any reasonable price. and money orders LESS? ¹220, Fri.-Sat., 9-3 150+ garden planters, B ulletin fo r yo u r yellow, black, $300 Dining room set ebony German Hummel figuare common. Non-commercial mirrors, fans, heaters, sale and receive a -$400. 541-954-1727. g’Nevergive out per282 table has b e veled rines boy 95 girl 98 advertisers may 253 tools, housewares 8 G arage Sale K i t cover, 36" high, $100. 541-26'I -4622. sonal financial inforclothes. place an ad Sales Northwest Bend Maremma guard dog glass FREE! n TV, Stereo & Video widex57" long. The Bulletin reserves mation. with our 2393 NW Wyeth Place. pup, purebred, $350 x41 shelf under table for the right to publish all "QUICK CASH YTrust your instincts Sat. & Sun., 10-4. 541-546-6171 KIT INCLUDES: 9/13 only - Garage Sale DIRECTV Starting at storage o r kn i c kSPECIAL" and be wary of 8 a.m. at 1448 NW 4 Garage Sale from The Bulletin $19.99/mo. FREE Inknacks 4 upholstered ads someone using an Signs newspaper onto The 1 week3 lines 12 Quincy Ave in Bend. s tallation. FREE 3 stools. Almost new, oi’ escrow service or Tools, furniture, elec$2.00 Off Coupon Bulletin Internet webmonths of HBO 284 p aid $900 sell f o r ee eke ee! tronics, kitchen items, Sales Southwest Bend To Use Toward site. ~ P eople giving p e t s $450. 541-953-9256 S HOWTIME CIN - agent to pick up your Ad must merchandise. men's clothes, hard Your Next Ad away are advised to EMAX, STARZ. FREE include price of drives, drafting table, YARD S ALE! K i d' s 10 Tips For be selective about the The Bulletin HD/DVR U p grade! Serving central Oregon sincelglB Bulletin Sale new owners. For the ~e t e te ot gnnp 2015 NF L S u nday The sandblaster, air com- stuff, Serving Central Oregon since tgpg shelving, books, "Garage Success!" protection of the anipressor, foam board dresser, Wonderful ba s e ball or less, or multiple Ticket Included (Seworking mal, a personal visit to King comforter set laminator, band saw, dryer. Sat.-Sun. 8-6. card colle c tion! items whosetotal lect Packages) New the home is recomdoes not exceed PICK UP YOUR 1978-91. Topps, full planer, chain hoist. C ustomers Onl y . good quality $80 obo. 60029 Agate Road, GARAGE $500. mended. SALE KIT sets, + many other CALL 1-800-410-2572 541-280-0458 DRW in Bend. BAG LADIES at 1777 SW ChanFrigidaire- Gallery Se› sets, individual cards (PNDC) The Bulletin Call Classified at Yard sale. All table Oneida King C e dric dler Ave., Bend, OR SewingCentral Oregon sincetggg ries gl ass-top self of Mantel/Mays, Ar541-385-5809 items, 1 Dollar! All 97702 Dish Network - G et sterling silverware, 30 cleaning range, like ron + o t her s tars. bendbulletin.corn sidewalk HANGING 286 541-385-5809 Queensland Heelers $140 0 . $950. Call M ORE fo r LE S S ! p ieces. new $300. items 1/2 price. Standard & Mini, $150 Whirlpool refrigerator, 541-729-1677 or Starting $19.99/month 541-475-4618 Sales Northeast Bend Saturday, 9-3, The Bulletin & up. 541-280-1537 (for 12 months.) PLUS Servtng Central Oregon sincetggg cubed or crushed ice email GUN SHOW 1319 NW Union St. 9/11-12-13, 9-3. 1188 www.rig htwayranch.wor and water in the door, dbwassom@gmail.corn. Sat. Sep. Bundle & SAVE (Fast e..stria 19, 9am-5pm dpress.corn 27th St., ¹ 1 3 0. fo r $15 like new, $550 . In Sun. Sep. 20, 9am-3pm Internet Big Yard Sale! 9/12-13, NE 215 more/month.) CALL Antiques, old pictures, Madras, please call 8-3, 2374 NW Quinn furniture, guitar, misc. Garage Sale, Sat. & Douglas County Fair› R ehoming 2 yo u ng 54'I -419-8035 Coins & Stamps grounds 541-530-4570 Now 1-800-308-1563 Creek, antique bike, Sun., 9-3. 2863 NE parakeets w/oval cage (PNDC) Sdalia loop. furniture much more. $52. 541-389-8745 G ENERATE SOM E Private collector buying EXCITEMENT in your postage s t amp al bums & Beautiful Classical 255 Sandy Latham // Del Latham Shih-Tsu fern.born April Persian rug from neighborhood! Plan a collections world-wide Multi Family Yard Sale30, all shots, wormed, Computers ESTATE SALE/I/MOVING SALE Original Karastan F ri., Sat. & S u n . t raveling cage, 2 garage sale and don' t and U.S. 573-286-4343 3018 Cascade Vista Dr., Redmond (local, cell phone). collection, 9'x5.9", e arn-4pm 628 7 5 to advertise in of Advantage2. forget T HE B ULLETIN r e Fri. Sept 11 Sat. Sept 12 g Sun. Sept 13 S anta C ru z Av e , doses classified! exc condition $450. 541-350-7280 quires computer ad541-385-5809. A $2000 value, Say ngoodbuy" Howa 15 0 0 300 vertisers with multiple 9:00 am to 5:00 P.m. CROWD CONTROL Bend, 97701 selling for $1000 Win. Mag. New, never ad schedules or those N UMBERS at 8:00 a.m. Friday Yorkie AKC pups, 3M, to that unused 541-788-4229 Thomasville bedroom set; Henredon Dining room adorable, tiny, UDT fired. W o o d stock, selling multiple sysTURN THE PAGE 288 item by placing it in set w/china cabinet; Large suede cloth curved 7 shots, health guar., pics, stainless barrel and tems/ software, to disFor More Ads piece sectional sofa; Occasional chairs; Queen & Sales Southeast Bend $750/up.541-777-7743 The Bulletin Classifieds action. Great deer or close the name of the Reduce Your Past Tax The Bulletin doublesize beds; Brass King size headboard; elk gun , b a rgain business or the term Bill by as much as 75 210 Trundle Bed; Oak storage cabinet; Newer law- S at 9/12. 9-2 p m . priced-wife says sell "dealer" in their ads. Percent. Stop Levies, yers style bookcase; Store display units and 20768 SE Helen Ln Furniture & Appliances NEED TO CANCEL 541-385-5809 :-) $6 5 0 . Call Private party advertis- Liens and Wage Garshelving; Lots of fabric © $1/yard; Craft items; (by 15th & Reed mkt) YOUR AD? 541-389-3694, leave ers are defined as nishments. Call The Pictures & prints; Oriental-style sofa /entry table; Lots of n e w Home The Bulletin message. 240 those who sell one Tax DR Now to see if Kimono and other oriental items; Bronze Heron, Decor. 541-408-5532 Classifieds has an computer. you Qualify Crafts & Hobbies Quail, Ballerina and small Herons figurines; Two "After Hours"Line 1-800-791-2099. John Wayne comlass lighted curio cabinets; Man's Leather Call 541-383-2371 258 (PNDC) 290 memorative holster oach Jacket XL; Dresser; Mirrored dresser; Two 24 hrs. to cancel and gun belt set, older TVs; Shelving units; Over 1000 Hallmark Sales Redmond Area Travel/Tickets your ad! Sell you r s t r uctured Keepsake ornaments, new in box; 75+ LongabModel JW81, unit ¹ Pollshers Saws 3-piece hardwood wall 711 of only 3,000. erger baskets and pottery pieces; Holiday items (1) ticket for Foo Fight- settlement or annuity ESTATE SALE galore, 5 Christmas trees - lots of lights & ornaunit, 91nLx79 nH, glass New in box w/ all ers concert, Septem- payments for CASH 1880 NE 6th, RedRepair & Supplies NOW. You don't have ments, fiber-optic and other trees; Lots of towels; mond. shelves, $400 obo. orig. printed mateber 14th at the Moda to Fri. 11-3, pres wait for your future 541-526-1879 sheets; blankets; tablecloths; runners; pillows; view sale, not everyrial incl. certificate Center, $45. payments any longer! Ladies Clothing mostly Chico's and other nice thing marked by make signed by Michael 541-598-5620 Call 1-800-914-0942 brands-Med., size 8 shoes; Sets of china; Lots offer. Sat. 8 Sun. 9-3. Need help fixing stuff? Wayne. Perfect con241 (PNDC) of Glassware; Pampered Chef items; Elect. apCall A Service Professional dition. $ 695 . 260 Bicycles 8 pliances; Candles hundreds; small bistro set; Queen bed,Serta 541-420-5184 find the help you need. Misc. Items SOCIAL SE C URITY quilting & cook books; office supplies; plastic mattress, headboard, Accessories 292 www.bendbulletin.corn D ISABILITY B E N storage containers; shop vacuum; Little Giant very clean $1200. E FITS. U nable t o Buying Diamonds Ladder + several other ladders; Small gun safe; Sales Other Areas 805-720-3515 M an's orig. 1 0 s p d WANTED: Collector /Gold for Cash work? Denied benair compressor; 2-man Inflatable kayak; 3-man 7 piece be droom Schwinn exc. cond. seeks high quality fishinflatable raft; hydraulic lift for disabled person; Fri., Sat., Sun. 8 to 4. ing items 8 upscale fly Saxon's Fine Jewelers efits? We Can Help! set, $350. 1 roll top Twin Scaly pillow top $150. 541-923-2683 541-389-6655 Xtra long mattress, rods. 541-678-5753, or WIN or Pay Nothing! skis and boots; 5 gal. jeep cans; small shop 8402 SW C rescent desk 8 chair, $300. box springs, frame, Tour Easy recumbent 503-351-2746 Contact Bill Gordon & lights; table lamps; Few tools and misc. shop Place, CRR. Match- 1 hall tree, $200. 2 items.See you soon, Deedy, Norm, Ken, Jeanie. i ng couches 8 r e - leather chair reclinpristine cond., $200; b ike, s i z e med . Associates at BUYING Handled by cliner chair, oak bdrm e rs, $30 0 Want to buy 1-800-879-3312 to Lionel/American Flyer b o t h . M ini-fridge with t o p $ 2,500, f a iring & Deedy’s Estate Sales Co. 541-419-4742 set w/ adj. beds, oak 541-504-9945 freezer, exc. cond., mesh seat. quality bark collar! trains, accessories. start your application www.estatesales.net for pictures and info ent. cntr, lots of misc. 541-536-761 9 541-408-0014 541-408-2191. today! (PNDC) $40. 541-382-3900

washer and d ryer, never used, still in boxes. $1 000 for both. Antique wicker baby bassinet/buggy $100.

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G2 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809

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($39.95 a year).

55 Earlymanufacturer 105Ornament shape of homecomputers 106 "Oh wow!" 57 Court figure Williams 1072004 rom-corn in which a middle 60 Return date? schooler is 63 Ted with a guitar transformedintoa 65 Moving-day need grownup overnight 66 00/0, in a way 110Contiguous U.S. 67 Economic org. in D.C. states, colloquially 69 Italian religious 114Org. with figure conferences 70 Game that people 115At the back rarely agree to play 119 Bee, e.g. twice 120Cry of dismay 72 Zach's old flame in 122 Routine-bound "A Chorus Line" 124 Beau Brummell 74 First name in accessories Objectivism 125 Ra b b it 75 Historical topics 126Car-chase sounds 77 Make a point 127 Ability 78 Byproduct in 128 Morales of petroleum refining "NYPD Blue" 7$ Alejandro G. Inarritu 129 Hieroglyphic film with the tagline symbol "How much does life 130 L.P.G.A.garment weigh?" 81 Hunts, as a house cat DOWN might 1 "I'm it!" (hick's 83 Glass raiser's word nix) 84 " Arrives" (1967 2 Doozy soul album) 87 It 'teaches you when 3 Use a lance 4 1960s-'70s police to be silent," per drama Disraeli 5 Make anothermovie 88 Wee bit together, say 89 Growing businesses 6 Roadside assistance $2 Lively comedies OI’g. 95 Nomadic conqueror 7 Harder to fool 87 Dealer's customer 8 "Inside Da v i s " 98 Trust eroders (Coen brothers film) $$ Kid-lit's Eloise, e.g. 8 Adams, Monroe or Grant 102 Parts of many 10 The Company, in passwords: Abbr. govt. lingo 104 Imbecile

11 1960s buddy cop sitcom, informally 12Pop group? 13Pottery, e.g. 14 Israelite tribe progenitor 15 Slow movements 16 Simplecamera’s aperture 17 Square figures 1$ Pertaining to a sovereign 21 Rock or Pine 27 Broody rock genre 29Not working, say 31 Film-set assistants

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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

541-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

o r g o t o w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . cor n

Place 8photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

OVER '500 in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any oui-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the right io reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day ii appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260

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Heating & Stoves

Gardening Supplie 8 E q uipment

Lost & Found

Hay, Grain & Feed

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

The Bulletin Offers FreePrivate Party Ads 3 lines - 3 days Private Party Only Total of items advertised must equal $200 or Less FOR DETAILS or to PLACE AN AD, Call 541-385-5809 Fax 541-305-5002

NOTICE TO

ADVERTISER

Since September 29,

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. ar

1991, advertising for

Lost: Aug. 8 from Em- Wheat Straw for Sale pire near OB Riley Also, weaner pigs. peach-faced Lovebird, 541-546-6171 looks like small parrot, green body, answers Gei your to "Wednesday". 541-385-8367 business

Do you need help with light domestic duties, errands, misc...? Please call Carol at H orse T r ailer 1 6 ’ 541-480-0263 Gooseneck 1 9 8 9 Looking for someone to dual axle donated ro c lean m y ho u s e Equine Ou t r each. weekly, 1700 sq.fi., 4 12,000 GVW, 7X16, bdrm, 2 b ath. Call 23' overall length, 6 541-382-1144 1/2' tall, slider/swing rear door, tack shelf, DID Y O U KNO W mid-swing door, pad- Newspaper-generded walls with new PT a ted content is s o deck. 6$3,995 Call valuable it's taken and Gary 541-480-6130 repeated, condensed, broadcast, t weeted, discussed, p o s ted, Look at: copied, edited, and Ben dhomes.corn emailed co u ntless for Complete Listings of times throughout the Area Real Estate for Sale day by others? Discover the Power of Newspaper Adverrising in FIVE STATES with just one phone INi) « call. For free Pacific Northwest N ewspaper Association Network brochures call 916-288-6019 or email elizabeth © cnpa.corn (PNDC) t

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used woodsroves has been limited to mod541-385-5800 els which have been To place an ad, call certified by the Or541-385-5809 LOST RC AIRPLANE egon Department of or email White/Blue Near Miller e ROW I N G cleeeitied@bendbulletin.corn Environmental QualElem. 541-408-4949 ity (DEQ) and the fed- The Bulletin eral E n v ironmental with an ad in Protection A g e ncy The Bulletin's Just too many (EPA) as having met REMEMBER: If you "Call A Service collectibles' ? smoke emission stan- I SPECIALS 1 have lost an animal, dards. A cer t ified + Raised Bed Soil Professional" don't forget to check w oodstove may b e + Peat Mixes Sell them in Directory The Humane Society by its certifi+ Juniper Ties The Bulletin Classifieds identified Bend cation label, which is + Paver Discounts 541-382-3537 permanently attached + Sand + Gravel Looking for your Redmond 541-385-5809 ro the stove. The Bul+ Bark next employee? 541-923-0882 letin will not know- I Instantlandscaping.ctsmI Place a Bulletin Madras ingly accept advertishelp wanted ad 541-475-6889 263 ing for the sale of today and Prineville Tools uncertified reach over 541-447-7178 woodstoves. ~ ranna rowsom W 60,000 readers or Craft Cats Lincoln ar c w e l der, ( massive plants? 541-389-8420 each week. 200V AC/DC, lightly Need ro get an Get some locally Your classified ad used, ¹ 10 4 26-906 ( produced Worm ad in ASAP? will also $300. 541-318-0292 Castings. You can place it appear on [ Worm Castings are bendbulletin.corn the most potent online ar: which currently occurring www.bendbulletin.corn naturally fertilizer known to receives over man. Visit us, and 1.5 million page 541-385-5809 ( orderat: views every Jollyworms.corn month at no MARK V SHOP› 257 421 extra cost. SMITH Model 510 Fuel & Wood Bulletin Schools & Training bandsaw, scrollsaw, 325 270 Classifieds strip sander, thickHay, Grain & Feed IITR Truck School Get Results! ness planer, dust colLo s t & Found WHEN BUYING REDMOND CAMPUS Call 541-305-5809 lector, support table, FIREWOOD... First Quality green grass Our Grads Get Jobs! or place your ad FOUND: Set of keys hay, no rain, barn stored, lathe chisel set, ring1-686-438-2235 on-line at To avoid fraud, outside Bend library master, wall mount$250/ton. WWW.11TR.EDU The Bulletin on sidewalk on 9/6, ben dbulletin.corn ing brackets for storCall 541-549-3831 call to ID. Patterson Ranch, Sisters a ge, s et-up a n d recommends pay› 541-382-7292 operation m a nuals. ment for Firewood $2,500. 541-383-7124 only upon delivery c u t ting o rPeople Look for Information Second and inspection. chard grass mix, small A cord is 128 cu. ft. About Products and bales, $220/ton, no Good classified adstell 4' x 4' x 8' Services Every Daythrough rain. 5 4 1 -420-9736 the essential facts in an Receipts should The Bulletin Classifieds Madras, Oregon interesting Manner. Write include name, from the readers view nof phone, price and the seller' s. Convert the Equipment-Estate Auction kind of wood facts into benefits. Show Sawmill Power Tools Vehicles Backhoe purchased. the reader howthe item will Road Grader Hyster Forklift Collectibles Firewood ads Sat. Sept. 19th Powell Butte, OR help them insomeway. MUST include 10100am preview 8130am This species a cost per advertising tip cord to better serve Auctioneers Note: Offering a wide variety, In this position you will play a vital role brought to you by our customers. 50 year collection, NO BUYERS PREMIUM; on our Sports Staff! Directions: Just west of Powell Butte store, The Bulletin The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since teat turn north onto Reif Rd, then left onto Bozarth, serving Central O eyon sincesana The successful candidate will work watch for auction signs. weeknight and Saturday shifts. 265 All Year Dependable SAMPLE: 2008 model LT 40 Wood Mizer Building Materials Firewood: dry sawmill (sells subject to owner conformation); Lodgepole, split, del, ~TO UBI r: vehicles: 2002 Ford Explorer XLT; 1972 one Bend Habitat Proven interpersonal skills 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . owner ChevPU, 2000 Cadillac; 1985 Ford die› Professional-level writing ability and RESTORE Multi-cord discounts! sel; 1965 Tote Goat; Equipment: Hyster forkBuilding Supply Resale cash, check, Visa, MC lift (we will reserve the use of this on auction sports background a must 541-312-6709 Working knowledge of traditional high 541-420-3484, Bend day); 1978 Ford 4400 backhoe; 1948 Allis 224 NE Thurston Ave. school sports Chalmers grader; tandem axle trailer; 7000 Ponderosa pine fireProven computer and proofreading skills Open to the public. diesel generator; Honda compressor; Honda & Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadlinewood split, $160 or Powermate pressure washers; Powermate oriented environment trade. 541-419-1871 pump; Craftsman Shop Smith; 220 compresMust be able to successfully pass sor 3hp; CMT mig welder; good selection of 269 a pre-employment drug screen quality power tools & shop equipment; auto diGardening Supplies agnostic tools; Lincoln 225 gas welder; Grizzly If you are a sports-minded journalist and 3hp dust collector; machinist's tools; power & Equipment have a positive "Can Do" attitude and hand Yard Tools; Outdoor Items: several WE WANT TO TALK TO YOUI Deluxe LOG Cabin 12 amp 3-in-1 mower/ radio controlled airplanes a lots of parts; pork it i ncludes l o g edger, B D e d ger. table building; Lots ammo: factory & hand Please send your cover letter, resume, w alls, r oo f an d loads; Collectables: Blacksmith items; an$100. 541-350-7116 and a work sample attention: porch st r ucture, tique oak telephones, wood stove; horse sportsassistantObendbulletin.corn $9,950. P a ckage drawn planter. BarkTurfSoil.corn with windows, door Turmon Auction Service inc and roof materials, Ramona Hulick, Auctioneer No agencies or telephone callsplease 014,500. PROMPT DELIVERY (541) 815-6115 or (541) 280-4962 406-241-5339 541-389-9663 www.auctioneer-4u.net

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The Bulletin'8

"Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs. Call on one of the professionals today!

The BLIjetin s

PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT

a

NfAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN

Bright Wood Corporation, a 50+ year old wood remanufacturer located in Madras, Oregon is looking for a maintenance Electrician reporting ro the Maintenance Supervisor. The shift Electrician is a key member of the Maintenance team which is responsible for repairs and maintenance for all machinery and equipment such as conveyor systems, hydraulic components, machine control,and much more. These positions are for swing and grave shifts and may include weekends. RESPONSIBILITIES ro include repair, main› tain, and troubleshoot electrical and mechanical equipment such as AC motors, DC motors and servo motors, servo controllers, variable frequency drives, AC and DC control circuits, PLC communications networks, pneumatic components,hydrauli c components, conveyor systems, and o t her i nterrelated process equipment. Shall perform a variety of electrical/mechanical tests to determine exact cause of issue; Performs unscheduled maintenance to the equipment and machinery to repair or replace defective parts; Perform adjustments and calibration procedures on various forms of process equipment; Perform scheduled maintenance as instructed on all equipment/machinery/facility; Shall track labor, parts, and machine history in plant CMMS; Make necessary temporary or permanent electrical installations, repairs, or modifications in line with plant policies; Works with each department providing necessary support to ensure day-to-day maintenance issues are resolved. Maintain a written log of any highlights occurring during shift coverage in conjunction with proper CMMS entries. The position responsibilities outlined above are in no way to be construed as all encompassing. Other duties, responsibilities, and qualifications may be required and/or assigned as necessary. EDUCATION/EXPERIENCE AS SHOWN BELOW IS REQUIRED:

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Must have Oregon Electrician license, General Journeyman or Limited Manufacturing Plant Journeyman; At least 3 years Industrial Electrical experience or equivalent combination of education and experience; Allen-Bradley PLC and automation experience a plus; Proven experience and ability in mechanical, electrical and electronic troubleshooting and maintenance techniques; Must have the ability to demonstrate working knowledge of mech anical/electrical principles/concepts; Have the ability to read and comprehend instructions given via OEM or third party operation and/or technical/installation literature.

We offer a competitive compensation plan that includes medical, dental and vision benefits; profit sharing plan; Paid vacation and holidays; Life insurance; Disability Income Protection; Flexible Spending Accounts; Employee Assistance Program. If you meet the above qualifications please apply in person in the Personnel Dept. to: Bright Wood Corporation, 335 NW Hess St., Madras OR 97741. Pre-employment drug testing required.


THE BULLETIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809 476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

526

Employment Opportunities

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

Loans & Mortgages BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

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CAUTION: Sheet Metal Ads published in A local not-for-profit orWorkers "Employment O p ganization seeks an Apprenticeship portunities" include individual to provide Bend Park 6r employee and indeRecreation a dministrative s u p pendent positions. port to the Executive EMPLOYMENT 630 Is Accepting Ads fo r p o sitions Director and s taff. OPPORTUNITIES Applications For: LOCAL MONEY: We buy Rooms for Rent that require a fee or R equired skills i n IN secured trust deeds & upfront investment clude, o r ganization, Part-time: CENTRAL OREGON note, some hard money For rent: bedroom & must be stated. With excellent written and Lifeguard loans. Call Pat Kellev bath inmy home. No any independent job verbal c o mmunica- Swim Instructor Pick up application 541-382-3099 ext.13. smoking. Us e of opportunity, please tion, analyzing infor- Therapeutic Rec. packet at: kitchen & w/d. Call i nvestigate tho r mation, friendly pro- Specialist Cascade Heatinq, 573 541-788-1215 oughly. Use extra fessionalism, problem Customer Service 1507 NE1st St.O Business Opportunities c aution when a psolving, a dministra- Specialist Olney, Bend, OR plying for jobs ontive decision-making, Full-time: September 14-25, Find It in WARNING The Bulletin line and never procollaboration, and (Full-time Benefits) 2015 vide personal inforrecommends that you Electrician The Bulletin Classiffeds! from 9-4 weekdays team building, mani nvestigate ever y mation to any source 541-385-5809 aging calendars, co- Park Maintenance phase of investment you may not have For info, ordinating m e e ting Worker opportunities, esperesearched and 541-279-1543. minutes and agendas. T he D i s trict o ff e rs deemed to be repuMinorities & females c ially t h ose f r o m 632 Computer skills to in- medical, dental, viare urged to apply. out-of-state or offered AptiMultiplex General table. Use extreme clude Google apps, sion, retirement, vac aution when r e by a person doing Microsoft Office Suite, cation/ sick leave, and business out of a los ponding to A N Y Photo Shop, and so- o ther b enefits f o r Advertise your car! CHECK YOUR AD online employment cal motel or hotel. InAdd A Picture! cial media. Competi- t hose working 8 0 Reach of readers! vestment o ff e rings ad from out-of-state. tive salary and ben- hours/month or more Call thousands 541-385-5809 We suggest you call must be r egistered efits. 32-hours, Mon, in a part-time, regular The Bulletin Classiffeds with the Oregon Dethe State of Oregon through Thurs,. Email position. Consumer Hotline of Finance. r esume t o ma r y - For complete job Taxi Drivers Needed! partment We suggest you conat 1-503-378-4320 announcements helen@sacredartofFull time day s hift, on the first day it runs For Equal Opportuyour attorney or or to apply go to living.org by Septema pply at 1 919 N E sult to make sure it is corc all C O N S U M E R nity Laws contact ber 18. No walk-ins or bend parksandrec.org Second St., Bend rect. "Spellcheck" and Oregon Bureau of HOTLINE, Equal Opportunity phone calls, please. human errors do oc1-503-378-4320, Labor & I n dustry, Employer cur. If this happens to 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. Civil Rights Division, Delivery RR55jcc) your ad, please con971-673- 0764. What are you Earn Extra $! Just bought a new boat? tact us ASAP so that Book Delivery Sell our old one in the The Bulletin Phone corrections and any looking for? Carriers Wanted adjustments can be 541-385-5809 Routes available You' ll find it in Super Seller rates! made to your ad. throughout C e ntral 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds Oregon. Call Anthony The Bulletin Classified Add your web address ( 503) 358-4582 o r Take care of to your ad and readLinda (253)720-8444 Senior Apartment541-385-5809 ers on The Bulletin's 528 your investments Mon-Fri 8-3 (pst) to Independent Living web site, www.bendget started. Must be Loans & Mortgages with the help from ALL-INCLUSIVE bulletin.corn, will be 18 and have a valid with 3 meals daily able to click through The Bulletin's driver's license and WARNING 2 Bedrooms Available automatically to your Journeymen insurance. "Call A Service The Bulletin recomNOW. Check it out! website. mends you use cau- Professional" Directory Call 541-460-5323 Needed for New tion when you proLooking for your next vide personal I Construction. I employee? information to compaStart Place a Bulletin help nies offering loans or caution when purwanted ad today and immediately! credit, especially I chasing products orI reach over 60,000 those asking for adGood pay/ services from out of readers each week. vance loan fees or f the area. Sending benefits. Your classified ad companies from out of c ash, checks, o r Company Van. J will also appear on state. If you have / credit i n formation ben dbulletin.corn Call Gary at concerns or quesmay be subjected to which currently tions, we suggest you I FRAUD. Summit receives over 1.5 consult your attorney For more informa- I Plumbing million page views or call CONSUMER tion about an adverevery month at Circulation ~641-41 0-1 655g HOTLINE, f tiser, you may call no extra cost. 1-877-877-9392. the Oregon State Bulletin Classifieds This position will start at 24 hours per week. I Attorney General's Get Results! Office C o nsumer l Banking You will be responsible for handling all Call 385-5809 Protection hotline at l dock issues, including sorting, distribution or place I 1-877-877-9392. your ad on-line at and loading, all WesCom products to ben dbulletin.corn haulers and carriers. 0

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A W L A I L A S E E W E G R Y M R N O I T P H D S S E R E B O X 52 P I A S S S M T H A R O M P I T Y G D 13 E R 48 O H N B R E E S A

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Onlya fevv left! Two & Three Bdrms with Washer/Dryer and Patio or Deck. (One Bdrms also avail.) Mountain Glen Apts 541.383.9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. FIND IT! BTIY ITr SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds

Bul leting

Check out the classifieds online 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.corn Updated daily www.bendbulletin.corn

The Bulletin To Subscribe call

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General

* ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * I I / * Great Supplemental Income!! * /

I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I 8 day night shift and other shifts as needed. We8 currently have openings all nights of the week. / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo› sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and / other tasks.

/ / /

IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl / including life insurance, short-term & long-term/ disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time.

I~ Please submit a completed application . I ’

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attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred © bendbulletin.corn).

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No phone calls please. * No resumes will be accepted * *

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Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

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The Bulletin

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servingcentral oregon ance 1903

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Mid Oregon Credit Union offers a competitive salary package and provides excellent benefits. See our web site at www.midoregon.corn for more details including application form. Bend Branch — Dine Location Teller — (full-time) Loan Officer — (full-time) Contact Center Member Services Rep. (part-time) -

Please send resume, cover letter and application to: Mid Oregon FCU Attn: Human Resources P.O. Box6749, Bend, OR 97708

II IIS668llili Les Schwab Tire Centers is seeking an Enterprise Platforms Supervisor responsible for design and implementation of enterprise-wide, scalable technologies to support overall corporate IT operations and ensure the stability of

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Ideal candidates will have a Bachelor's degree in Computer Science, Information Systems, Engineering, or a related field and at least seven years' IT experience, with 2+ years' experience managing people. Please visit www.lesschwab.corn/careers to view a full job description and apply. This position is located at Les Schwab's Headquarters in beautiful Bend, Oregon.

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For more than 60 years, Les Schwab Tire Centers has taken Pride in Performance, providing superior customer value a nd building customers for life. People choose Les Schwab because they trust our service and our values. We don't just sell tires; we do the right thing.

Knowledge of packaging and distribution methods preferred Transportation and logistics experience

preferred

Inventory control experience a plus Proven customer service skills required Ability to lift 50 pounds required Available to work the night shift required Valid driver's license and insurability required.

W e' ve grown from one s tore and o n e employee — our founder, Les Schwab — to more than 450 stores and over 7,000 employees today. Our secret? Success is a two-way street. Our employees deliver World Class Customer Service. In return we provide them with generous compensation and benefit programs. Everyone wins.

If you are a results-oriented professional who enjoys working with people and providing a wide variety of assistance to others MIE WANT TO TALK TOYOU! For Consideration, please apply in person:

Les Schvvab is proud fo be an equal opportunity employer.

IIII-F, 8-5 at 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

or on-line: sending your resume and cover letter to mewing@bendbulletin.corn Western Communications, lnc. and their affiliated companies, is proud to be an equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-free workplace

Insurance/Sales AAA Oregon’s Bend Service Centerseeks a self-motivated and experienced Insurance Professional to join our Insurance sales team. Property and Casualty license a must. We write P&C Insurance for a number of the best carriers in the business. If you have had success in Insurance sales, apply those skills to a dynamic and growing organization. The base plus commission compensation plan offers you the opportunity to earn the salary you deserve. We offer a competitive benefit package that includes medical/dental, 401(K), continuing educationand much more. We also off er a $250 per m onth English-Spanish salary supplement.

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Please email your resumeto recruiterf@aaaoregon.corn Or fax (503) 222-6379. AAA Oregon/Idaho is proud to promote and maintain a drug-free workplace and preemployment drug testing is required. Criminal backgroundcheck. EOE. Please no calls.

The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal Payroll Specialist supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary Provide support with all phases of payroll prowith company vehicle provided. Strong cessing. Assist in bank reconciliations and customer service skills and management skills process account redistributions. File tax deare necessary. Computer experience is posits, quarterly reports and W2, plus record required. You must pass a drug screening w orkers comp assessment.Associates + 2-yrs and be able to be insured by company to drive exp. req. $3,119-$3,620/mo. Closes Sept. 25. vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o Financial Aid Advisor advancement within company is available to Provide financial guidance and support about funding resources to students. S u p port the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are student education efforts. Facilitate financial aid w o r kshops. B achelors r e q . energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please $3,195-$3,803/mo.Closes Sept.27. send your resume to: AdministrativeAssistant, The Bulletin CAP Center c/o Kurt Muller Serve as the primary reception and student PO Box 6020 contact for students & staff in the CAP Center. Bend, OR 97708-6020 Provide general office and budget support. or e-mail resume to: Associates + 2-yrs exp. req. kmuller@bendbulletin.corn $2,508-$2,987/mo.Closes Sept.25. No phone calls, please. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE Latino College Preparation Pre-employmenf drugscreen required. Program Coordinator Serve as coordinator for students preparing for post-secondary education. Establish goals and General objectives of the program. 30hr/wk. 11months per year, $19.32 - $23.00/hr. Open Until Filled. Jefferson Count Job 0 ortunities has o penings l i sted b e low. G o to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details 8 apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97703; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCO is an AA/EO employer.

Part-Time Instructor Positions Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.

Enterprise Platforms Supervisor

Mid Oregon Credit unionis a drug-free workplace

Home Delivery Advisor

Instructional Support TechnicianLarge Animal, Temporary Hourly, Part Time Prepare labs for instruction by assembling resources. Assist faculty with demos and observation of skills performance. Maintain records. Req. Associates + 2-yrs exp. in Veterinary field + Vet Tech License. Non-benefited, 8-10hr/wk. $18.00/hr. Open Until Filled.

S N O R E S

platforms. This is a new position requiring a highly motivated leader with robust infrastructure experience and demonstrated success at developing and leading a technical team, managing budgets, and delivering projects on time and on budget.

Credit Union

Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for three special people to join our dynamic, growing team. These positions require excellent customer sales an d s e rvice s kills, s ound decision-making, and the ability to understand and retain a variety of complex product and services information. Successful candidates will be able to work in a team environment and be PC-proficient.

N O O D G E

F O R M A T S

L AP S E D I T V A N A I G H T I O U M O L E U S E S N I L 15 I M F S S I E H A N E A L U D M I T E U S E R A S S 30 R S A L O O V E C H E S K O R T

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NIGHT DOCK ASSISTANT

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Administrative Supervisor› $2,905.06to $3,539.47 per month -DOQ District Attorney Office First Review Date September 16, 2015 For complete job description and application form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. JeffersonCounty isan Equal Employment Opportunity Employer

Do you LOVE your job? Most people don't. OUR INDEPENDENT SALES REPS DO! SO get eXCited, giVe Your NeighbOrhOOd PubliCatiOnS, LLC. a Call and start a prosperous career in sales today by promoting THE BULLETIN (the mOSt truSted media SOurCe in the regiOn).

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G4 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 2015 THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809 860

656

745

Houses for Rent SW Bend

Homes for Sale

Lots

870

880

881

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

870

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories 16'6 n

NOTICE

NorthWest STUNNING WIDGI All real estate adverCrossing CREEK HOME tised here in is subLots Available $3500/mo. ject to th e Federal Near Discovery Park Single-level AD A 3 F air Housing A c t , Call for Information B drm, 2 . 5 B ath + which makes it illegal Harcourts Harley Road K i ng Large Office. Great to advertise any prefThe Garner Classic 2003, 100th Room, Vaulted ceil- erence, limitation or Group Anniversary Edition, ings, fireplace, gour- discrimination based 541 383-4360 16,360 mi., reduced met kitchen, granite on race, color, relicorn T heoarne roro up . $9,999. 541-647-7078 counters, s p acious ion, sex, handicap, master w/ sitting room Iamilial status or naNeed help fixing stuff? & fireplace. Excep- tional origin, or intenCall A Service Professional tional quality through- tion to make any such find the help you need. o ut. P l e as e ca l l preferences, l i mitawww.bendbulletin.corn Broker 541-420-3400 tions or discrimination. Acr e ages We will not knowingly HONDA CB900 1980 accept any advertiscustom, 12k, pristine ing for real estate 5 Acres - Corner Lot c ondition. $11 9 5 . Kceij &i%Re Million Dollar View! which is in violation of 541-279-7092 op Sisters School Dist., this law. All persons [(p +gag $325,000. are hereby informed 541-389-9751 that all dwellings adveitised are available Price lowered: Cabin/ on an equal opportuacres in forest on nity basis. The Bulle- 638 trout stream, P R Itin Classified VATE hunt/fish/invest, Honda Trai l 110. 744 750 60 mi. from Bend, 1985, 1200 m i l es. $749K. Fo r D r o ne excellent c o ndition. Open Houses Redmond Homes Video Link, $2000. OBO 541-460-7215 J ack, 541-280-0514 Open Sun. 1-4pm I NVESTwest Re a l Looking for your next 333 NW 27th Street, Estate. emp/oyee? Redmond Place a Bulletin help 2004 Pahlisch Built Home. Neighborhood wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 with community pool, readers each week. playground. 3 bdrm, Your classified ad 2.5 baths, $212,000. will also appear on Moto Guzzi Breva MLS 201508138 List Your Home ben dbulletin.corn 1 100 2007, o n l y Diana Irvine, Broker, JandMHomes.corn which currently re11,600 miles. We Have Buyers Eagle Crest Properties ceives over $5,500. 541-815-0500 Get Top Dollar 1.5 million page 206-679-4745 Financing Available. views every month 745 541-546-5511 at no extra cost. Homes for Sale Bulletin Classifieds Find exactly what Get Results! FSBO Call 365-5809 or you are looking for in the One of a Kind place your ad on-line CLASSIFIEDS 3 bdrm, 2 bath at 1400 sq. ft. $195K bendbulletin.corn Not Firm & I!lotivated V-Max 2009 514-279-8763 Yamaha 762 Lots of factory Homes with Acreage extras: windshield, I saddlebags, back rest, rear cargo 25895 Ogles Rd. rack, bike cover, EVERY BUSINESS has Luxurious Custom motorcycle hoist, a story to tell! Get Home With alarm system, also your message out Many Amenities set of new tires. with California's PROn 22 Acres in $11,000 Media Release - the Alfalfa 850 541-508-1554 only Press Release Shelley Griffin, Snowmobiles Service operated by Broker the press to get press! 541-280-3804 For more info contact Theearnereroup.corn Elizabeth I 916-288-6019 or http: //prmediarelease. corn/california (PNDC) 4-place enclosed Inter- Yamaha V Star 1100 6330 NW Jackpine state snowmobile trailer Classic, year 2004, Ave. w/ RockyMountain pkg, - Many extras. 1 7 K 5.3 Acres miles. $4600. $7500. 541-379-3530 Near Redmond 541-548-2109 Meet singles right nowl 3-bdrm Manufac860 No paid o perators, 865 tured Home just real people like Motorcycles & Accessories 4 Acres COID ATVs Browse greetyou. Irrigation ings, exchange mes2014 Sport 150 Tao- yamaha 80 Badger, Sandy Garner, sages and connect Tao Scooter, Almost 1992 $400 yamaha' I Broker live. Try it free. Call New. 995 541-383-4360 Kodiak 400, 1 9 93, now: 8 77-955-5505. Theearnereroup.corn $1,500. 541-312-6879 (PNDC)

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2005 T racker Targa V16 boat. 60 HP 4-stroke Mercury motor & 8 HP 4-stroke motor, Minnkota fowl mounted, foot controlled motor, Lowranges fish finder, top & fold and close top. $17,500. Ask about extras. 541-632-2676.

J a F l i h t 26 4 B H 2011. like new, sleeps 9, self contained, 1/2 ton towable $13,900

Lexington 2006 283TS class B+motor coach, full GTS pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 burner range, half time oven, 3 slides w/awnings, Onan gen., King Dome satellite system, Ford V10 Triton, auto-leveling system, new tires, Falcon tow bar. Non-smoker, maintained in dry storage. Can email additional pictures.$55,000.

The Bulletin

Servrn Cenrrei Ore on since 1903

Call a Pro

870

16' Smoker C raft fishing boat, 50 HP Yamaha ou t board motor w/electric tilt 8 electric trolling motor w/remote control Allegro 32’ 2007, like mounted on bow, walk new, only 12,600 miles. through w i ndshield, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 exc. cond. $8,500. transmission, dual ex541-233-6223 haust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driyer door w/power window, cruise, exhaust brake, central 17' SunCraft, satellite sys. Re2 motors. $1,400. vac, duced price: $64,950. 541-593-7257 503-781-8812

I I I 2 003 S u n Cruiser - pontooni boat, fully equipped. ~ = -

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trailer 9.9 J ohnsoni a handful of times & Harley 2003, Dyna 0/B, plus amenities, has been in covered Ask ing wide glide, 100th An- exc. shape. $1250. i storage. n iversary mod e l . 541-549-8126 13,400 orig. mi., cus- 14' aluminum boat w/ tom paint, new bat- trailer. Trailer has 2 tery, lots of e xtras, brand new tires & show cond. Health wheels. Trailer in exc. Need to get an ad f orces s ale. W a s cond., guaranteed no $11,000 OBO, now leaks. 2 upholstered in ASAP? $8,000 firm. swivel seats, no mo541-633-7856 or tor. $2,900. 360-615-6677 Fax lt to 541-322-7253 541-410-4066

Allegro 32 ft. 2005. Must see to appreciate! Only 12,500 mi., less than 100 miles on new tires, always stored under cover, hydraulic leveling, 2 slide outs, 2 TV sets, 2 air c onditioners, rear camera, plus awnings! Call 541-447-8054 or

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that adbe licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Construction Contrac- Suds ~ Landscape ConstrucQua/re@ tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: European active license l anting, deck s , Za~< da means the contractor ences, arbors, Professional Full Service is bonded & insured. water-features, and inLandscape Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irPainter Management CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be RePaillt www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e contractor.corn Landscape ContracFire Protection Specialistl or call 503-378-4621. and Fuels Reduction tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin recomeTall Grass number is to be inOregon License mends checking with cluded in all adverLow Limbs „186147 LLC the CCB prior to contisements which indiBrush and Debris tracting with anyone. cate the business has 541-81 5-2888 Some other t rades Protect your home with a bond, insurance and also req u ire addi- defensible space workers c ompensational licenses and tion for their employPersonal Services certi fication s. ees. For your protecLandscape tion call 503-378-5909 Maintenance or use our website: Full or Partial Service www.lcb.state. or.us to Mowing eEdging Errands check license status Pruning eWeeding before contracting with & Handyman Sprinkler Adjustments the business. Persons doing lan d scape Notary Fertilizer included with maintenance do not I DO THAT! monthly program r equire an LCB l i s AtY~r cense. 4

Only $32,500! Call today!

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

661-644-0384.

541-647-1236

Clean-Ups

Handyman/Remodeli ng Residential/Commercial Small jobs io Eaiire Room Remodels Garage Organisation Home Inspection Repairs Quality, Honest Work

Dennis 541.317.9788 CCar393er33Boirdedrlnsirred

Weed Free Bark & Flower Beds Lawn Restoration

Experienced Commercial & Residential Free Estimates Senior Discounts 541-390-1466 SameDay Response

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Tick, Tock Tick, TOCk... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , one slide, low mileage, very clean, lots of storage, $28,500. 541-639-9411 19' Classic 1 990 Mastercraft ski boat. Pro-star 190 conventional in-board, custom trailer, exc. cond. $8,995. 541-389-6562

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Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 34,000 m iles. Wintered in h e ated shop. $78,995 obo. 541-447-6664 FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH SPA RV Resort Is your WINTER DESTINATION for Healing Mineral Waters, Five-Star Facilities, Activities, Entertainment, Fitness, Friends, and Youthful Fun! $9.95/Day For New Customers. Reservations: 1-888-800-0772 foyspa.corn

2 3 0 0, ’95, own with pride, always compliments, no salt, head never used, due for 5 year c ooling main t . , 2003 31' Class C $9500 firm. Extras. Itasca MH. Great cond., 31K W eekend only . miles, slider, $32,000. 541-678-3249 541-508-9700

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FUN & FISH!

2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and many extras. Stored inside $19,900 541-350-5425

S outhwind F o r d Fleetwood motor› home, 19 9 4, 32', gasoline, 82K miles, Good con d ition, $7,000 obo. 503-807-5490 Stow Master 5000 by Tow Master. $350. Generator exhaust system, Gen Turi, with case. $ 7 5 . 503-936-1776

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Beaver Contessa 40’› 2006, four slide diesel pusher. Loaded, 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, great condition. Warranty. Pictures/info at great shape, call for info. $68500. In Bend www.fourstarbend.corn

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Financing available.

MAJOR PRICE REDUCflON

$77S,000 P nrriit' Pro~gr, ~ ,

Broker

.....Iisg fsrnaag/arnVtra/trial'0 J'rrgfgrr

C7

541-420-6545

541-420-0626

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at

541-390-7179

881

Cougar 27.9 RKS 2015 5t h W h eel. Like new, loaded, automatic l eveling jacks, Polar package, everything you need to take on a trip, hitch included. $33,900 or best reasonable offer. 541-815-3076.

or refinance. Call

Travel Trailers

1/5 share in very nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 Cessna 150 with Lycoming 0-320 150 hp engine conversion, 4000 hours. TT airframe. Approx. 400 hours o n 0- t imed 0-320. Hangared in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One of very few C-150's that has never been a t rainer. $ 4500 w i l l consider trades for whatever. C all J im Frazee, 541-41 0-6007

Hangar for saleat Redmond Airport - not a T Hangar - $28,000.

slides, A/C, micro, DVD, CD p l ayer, conv. and i n vert. New batteries, tires and shocks. Quad carrier. Quad avail. $11,900 OBO.

Laredo 31’ 2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new hardly used. Must sell $20,000

541-268-3333

hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted $23 500 Tom, 541.768.5546

32 ft. 5th wheel, 2

=

$125,000

(located I Bend)

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T

Cameo LX1 2001,

2001 36' 2nd owner, 300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 80k miles. D r iver s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat screen TVs, refer, generator, inverter, King Dome, tow bar. Non-smoker, no pets, no c hildren. C lean, an d w e l l maintained, $43,000 541-390-1472.

541-447-5164.

Superhawk N7745G Owners’ Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen 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'x102n dry

freight van. S liding axles, leaf s prings, good tires, body & swing doors in exc. cond., has no dings, road ready! $7500 o bo. Sisters, O R . 541-719-1217

541-410-5649

925

Utility Trailers 8 I "c K

19' Ampex. 2011. Slide out and other extras. Tows well $12,500. 541.316.1367

)I e

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

541-548-5254

34’ Winnebago One 2013 30RE. $25,000.Two slides. Fully loaded. Full photos and info sent upon request. Family illness requires sale. 541-923-2593

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 885

Canopies & Campers

2 013 7

t L X18 f t .

Carry-On open car

hauler trailer. Used only three times to haul my 1967 Camaro, and looks like new. I had the front barrier made and installed and added the tool box. It also has a mounted new spare tire. $3995 obo . 541-676-5375 or' cell: 503-701-2256.

Lance Squire 4 000, 1996, 9' 6" extended cab, bathroom w/ toilet, queen bed, out- 2 heavy duty mobile side shower. $5,700. home axles w/springs, Call 541-382-4572 $160. 541-410-3425

i

I I

I

THURS-SUN 12 4 PM

Spectacular, unobstructed dry canyon views from the open kitchen and spacious living room, The open layout is a 1649 NW Cliffside Way, natural for entertaining. Redmond Well cared for with 3 DireCtiOnS:FrOm /VWMaple Aiig. 13 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, /sfyr 19th St. intersection, go north, 2361 sq. ft., triple car take the fi at right on /VVrNickermi garage, gated community. Jag, right on Nickernut Pl.

Hosted 6 Listed by BILL PANTON

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 882

Winnebago Journey

SUNDAY 1PM-4PM

Stunning custom home on 11th tee. Fabulous views ofthe course,lake and national forest. 3br, 3

MARA STEIN

& Service RVision C r ossover 2013, 19ft, exc. Well equipped, $ 1 1,500.

Fifth Wheels

Winnebago 22’ 2002 - $28,000 Chevy 360, heavy duty chassis, cab & roof A/C, tow hitch w/brake, 22k mi., more! 541-280-3251

4

Hosted 6 Listed byi

908

Aircraft, Parts

Unique R-Pod 2013 trailer-tent combo, f ully l oaded, e x tended service contract and bike rack. $16,000. 541-595-3972 or 503-780-4487

541-480-141 9 *** MUST SELL!***

The Bulletin Classifieds

Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Painting/Wall Covering

Redmond: 541-548-5254

Silver Streak Sabre 17' 1963 beautifully al restored, vertical grain aa fir cabinets, shower, Pace A rrow V i s ion toilet, kitchen s ink, stove 8 refrigerator. 1997, Ford 460 en2009 Skyline P a rk gine w/Banks, solar, Better built than an Model Beach Cottage, walk-around q ueen Airstream! $ 10,500. see Bend Craigslist, bed, 2 door fridge, mi- 541-350-4077 type 5204278937 in cro-convection oven, s earch bar o r c a l l WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, Benjamin needs work, (photo 541-390-9723 similar to actual rig) $9,500. 541-280-0797

12' Valco alum. on I Has only been used I

Call 54 I 3855809 tc prOmate yOurSerViCe• AdVertiSe fOr28 dayS Starting Ct 'la) Irha sreaolpackageisnoi availableonoor svebsiie)

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

ekL i

541-647-1918

I I 18’

Boats & Accessories i

0

1 i1I

r : - --v

Seeking info. pertaining to the affair between Richard Cloud, a di763 v orced man, & J i l l Sauter a mar r ied Recreational Homes w omen. Info. p r o& Property v ided will b e k e p t strictly c o nfidential.Price lowered: Cabin/ One's time & efforts acres in forest on will be compensated. 636 trout stream, P R IPlease respond to VATE hunt/fish/invest, truthandlight2014O 80 mi. from Bend, gmail.corn $749K. Fo r D r o ne Video Link, Thank you Jesus 541-480-7215 Jack, and St. Jude. I NVESTwest Re a l L.R.V. Estate.

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

The Bulletin

16’ Seaswirl Tahoe with trailer, 50 HP Evinrude, bimini top, excellent condition. $3,500

Northlander 1993 17’ camper,Polar 990, good shape, new fridge, A/C, queen bed, bathroom, indoor/outdoor shower, lots of storage, customized to fit newer pickups,$4500 obo. 541-419-9859.

OBO (541) 410-9017

Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges 16’ Lowe, ¹1 6 0 5 trimmed or a house built you' ll find deep water, four-man bass boat with dual professional help in Cannon down-riggers The Bulletin's "Call a for trolling to 100 feet. 541-520-3407 Excellent c o ndition Service Professional" with f as t 40 HP Directory Johnson o u t board 541-385-5809 with automatic oil injection. E a gle-Elite 875 fish finder and GPS to Watercraft locate the ebig ones". New trolling kick plate Monarch 31’ + Minn Kota electric Ads published in eWa Monaco 2 006, Ford V10 , trolling motor. New tercraft" include: Kay 28,900 miles, 2-way radio. Water- aks, rafts and motor proof cover, life-jack- Ized personal auto-level, 2 slides, queen b ed 8 Fo ets, bumpers, and ex- waterc rafts. hide-a-bed sofa, 4k "boats" please se tras. All tuned and gen, convection miready to go. $4,500. Class 670. Phone (541) 593 7774 541-385-5609 crowave, 2 TVs, tow - NW Bend. package. PRICE REDUCTION! Servrng Cenfrel Oregon since 1903 $59,000. 541-815-6319 880 s s Motorhomes

I

P IZEZHI

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-365-5809

885

Cano p ies & Campers

$408,000

5A DUKE

WARNER

Pahlisch Homes Model In NE Bend. Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel appliances 20802 NE Sierra Drive and all the quality Pahlisch DirectioriarNorth on Boyd Acres, Homes Is known for. Now rsjlhi on Sierra, OR north on 18ih selling Phase Two —stop by Pom Empire,le/I on Sierra. Lookfor for more information. signs.

Homes from the Hosted 6 Listed byi

RHIANNA KUNKLER ABR, SRS

541-506-0959

$240,000s


THE BULLETIN SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 13 2015 G5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809 925

933

935

935

975

975

Utility Trailers

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

EAGLE 7x14 flatbed, tandem, E - b rakes, exc. $1800 O B O. 541-306-0346. 929

Automotive Wanted DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day V acation, Tax D e ductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care O f. CALL 1-800-401-4106

Dodge Big H o rn Chevy Tahoe 1995 4x4 4 dr. auto, tow pkg, Ram 2500, 2005, 6 new brakes and rospeed manual. Extors, g r ea t ti r e s, tra tires and rims, leather, power, runs canopy goes with. g reat, v er y go o d Excellent condition, ond., $4800 . well mai n tained, c 541-385-4790 runs great. 160K miles. $2 8 ,500 541-620-1212

1977

F J40 Toyota Lande ruiser with winch, $21,000. 541-389-7113, Michelle

Hyundai Santa Fe GLS Scion TCcoupe 2007, 1000 2012, (exp. 9/30/1 5) Vin ¹198120 (exp. 9/30/2015) Legal Notices Vin ¹151185 Stock ¹44193B Stock ¹45917A $10,379 or $149/mo., LEGAL NOTICE $16,979 or $199/mo., $2800 down, 60 mo., INVITATION TO BID 4 .49% APR o n a p $2900 down, 84 mo., Fillmore Roof 4 .49% APR o n a p - proved credit. License Replacement and title included in proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

payment, plus dealer in›

payment, plus dealer installed options.

Harney Education Service Dis t r ict (HESD) is now accepting bids for roof replacement at the HESD Fill m ore building (formerly Fillmore School) located at 779 West Fillmore in Burns.

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices http: //www.deschutes.

org/rfp

HARNEY ESD

Regional Service Center PO Box 460 Burns, Oregon 97720

Sealed Pr o posals must be received by October 16, 2015 at 4 :00 PM, a t D e s chutes County Health Services, Attn: Lori Hill, 1128 NW Harriman Street, Bend, OR 97701. Proposals will not be accepted after deadline. No faxed or electronic (email) submissions will be accepted. Direct any questions regarding this solicitation to: Lori Hill, lor i .hill@deschutes.org (541) 322-7535.

(PNDC) OR delivered di' s u a A Ru ' s uSAUS Ra U O P S aau E H D .OtM rectly to 2 5 F a irGot an older car, boat stalled options. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. view Heights, Burns or RV? Do the hu877-266-3821 Oregon mane thing. Donate it Volvo XC60 2014, Ford Explorer Sport 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 to the Humane Soci2011, 6 cyl. auto., V IN ¹522043 877-266-3821 ety. Call 14WD, 3rd seat, $34,997 Dlr ¹0354 800-205-0599 (exp.9/30/1 5) Get your GRfC Denali Crew Cab $21,995. 541-598-5111 (PNDC) DLR ¹366 2010, 4WD. Kia Forte SX 2012 business V IN ¹120745 W ANTED! I b u y o l d hatchback, $15,800, SMOLICH Interested bidders Porsches 911, 356. $33,998 32,015 miles, still are encouraged to V Q L V Q (exp 9/30H/1 5) 1948-1973 only. Any under 60k warranty, Subaru impreza2013, visit and inspect the DLR ¹366 541-749-21 56 c ondition. To p $ $ exc. condition, see (exp. 9/30/1 5) site before submitsmolichvolvo.corn paid. Finders Fee. Vin ¹0271 74 craigslist for full deting a bid. ContracCall 707-965-9546 or tails. 541-948-7687 Stock ¹83205 t ors must b e l i 940 email porschedclasFord Explorer XLT $20,358 or $249/mo., censed and bonded. With an ad in sics I yahoo.corn 1991 r eliable w e l l Vans $2600 down, 84 mo., Please pro v ide 4 .49% APR o n a p - Contractor's (PNDC) cared for, clean, nonLiThe Bulletin's proved credit. License cense with bid along smoking, incl. 4 stud- Dodge Grand Caravan Have an item to 541-548-1448 932 and title included in ded winter tires, new 1999, heated leather Proof of Worker smolichmotors.corn "Call A Service sell quick? payment, plus dealer of Antique & H D b attery, 1 9 0 k seats, good c ond., Compensation and installed options. Ford F-150 4x4 1992 miles, 20k towed be- green, 159k m iles. Classic Autos If it's under Liability Insurance. Professional " 1 10k mi., ext. c ab hind moto r home Asking $2,500. Proof of $1,000,000 Kia Soul 2013, fi s u a A Ru General ’500 you can place it in $2800. 541-420-3734 $1500 obo Message 541-388-2049 or Liability. (exp. 9/30/2015) Directory text 541-647-8016 541-241-4896. The Bulletin 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Vin ¹768357 877-266-3821 Bids must include 975 Stock ¹45202A1 Classifieds for: Dlr ¹0354 removal and d i s$13,779 or $215/mo., Automobiles LEGAL NOTICE posal of e x isting $2000 down, 66 mo., ’10 - 3 lines, 7 days roof prep work and Project Name: Re4.49% APR on apCORVETTE 1979, repairs to decking vest for Proposal for ’16- 3 lines, 14 days p roved credit. L i a s needed. T h e n-Site P h a rmacy(Private Party ads only) glass top, 31k miles, (Photo for ittoetretion onlyl cense and title inFord F250 Crew Cab (photo for ittuetretion only) all original, silver & successful b i dder S ervices a t De s cluded in p ayment, maroon. $12,500. Super Duty2012, will supply all matechutes County Ford Focus2012, plus dealer installed 541-388-9802 (exp. 9/30/1 5) rials, equipment and Downtown Clinic SubaruLegacy VIN ¹367736 options. Vin ¹C52424 labor necessary to Project L o c ation: PUBLIC NOTICE LLBean 2006, $13,997 Acura TL 06, 3.2L V6, Stock ¹83414 s u a A Ru complete the job. All BEND, OR (exp. 9/30/1 5) (exp. 9/30/1 5) auto, F WD , b l a ck fi bids should include $33,999 or $449/mo., Project Owner: DEDLR ¹366 Vin ¹203053 color, A/C, 115,971 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. BOARD OF $2000 down, 84 mo., clean up and any SCHUTES COUNTY BPRD Stock ¹82770 miles, clean title and 877-266-3821 DIRECTORS 4 .49% APR c n ap SMQLICH fees necessary to HEALTH SERVICES $16,977 or $199/mo., carfax. Call or text Dlr ¹0354 MEETING proved credit. License RFP Date: SeptemV Q LV Q $2600 down, 84 mo. at the completion of 541-834-8469 CANCELATION and title i ncluded in 4 .49% APR o n a p - the project - i.e. inber 6, 2015 541-749-2156 NOTICE payment, plus dealer inproved credit. License spection. Ford Mustang Description: D E S› stalled options. smolichvolvo.corn and title included in Hard top 1965, CHUTES C O UNTY r’ T he Bend Park & payment, plus dealer Please submit bids 6-cylinder, auto trans, HEALTH SERVICES, Recreation D i s trict ' s u a A Ru Hyundai Santa Fe installed options. showing the costs power brakes, power BEHAVIORAL 2012, 4 cyl., 4 door, Board of D i rectors 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. GLS, 2WD, kayak carsteering, garaged, HEALTH DIVISION regularly scheduled fi s u a A Ru using: 877-266-3821 Lexus ES350 2010, well maintained, Asphalt composite rier, new tires, meeting for Septemengine runs strong. Dlr ¹0354 BMW Z3 Roadster Excellent Condition shingles D eschutes Cou n t y 51K mi., $15,500. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ber 15, 2 015 h as 74K mi., great condi1997, Call 32,000 miles, $20,000 Metal roofing maHealth Services De541-41 9-7960 877-266-3821 been canceled. The 541-548-0345 to see. 214-549-3627 tion.$12,500. (in terials Dlr¹0354 partment (DCHS), next regularly schedMust see! $4500 Bend) Behavioral Health DiToyota Avalon 2003, C ontractor meeting of the 541-598-7940 sha l l vision is releasing this uled Board is T u esday, People Lookfor Information 150K m i . , si n g le provide a warranty competitive solicitaowner, great cond., against defects in 6, 2015. For About Products and tion to secure on-site October more information call Services Every Daythrough new tires and battery, materials and closed pharmacy ser- 541-706-6151 or visit Ford F-350 Lariat 2005 maintenance records, The Bvlletin Classifieds for a v ices at t h e D e s - http: //www.bendparkone ton power stroke leather seats, moon- workmanship period of one (1) chutes County diesel, crew cab, Fire- I nfiniti F X3 5 AW D roof, full set of snow year. Downtown Clinic lo- sandrec.org/info/Abou stone air lifts, camper 2009 Sporty 3.5 V6, 7 Cadillac CTS 2010, t Us/board meetings/ tires on rims, $7000. cation Pharmacy serready. Factory tow spd auto, 40K miles, V 6 I n j ection, 6 541-548-6181 B ids will b e r e vices will be provided FORD TAURUS SHO pkg, Class V hitch, Bose sound sys, 20" Speed A utomatic. ceived through 4:00 t o clients o f D e s 1992show car, rare 5 69k miles. Immacu- alloy whls. Nav sys. Luxury series. Extep.m. October 2015. chutes County Health BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS s pd., l oaded, l o w late, always stored in- Dlx tour, premium and rior Black Raven, For ques t ions miles, second owner, side. Like new set of tow pkgs. Most op- Interior: Light TitaServices. Search the area's most Illlercedes 380SL please call have all receipts, only studded winter tires tions included. Alnium/ E b ony comprehensive listing of 1982 Roadster, 541-573-2122. Bids Proposals due $ 4,500.00. Cra i g on factory rim s in- ways maintained and 2 2,555 m i les. 4 classified advertising... black on black, soft must be sealed and 503-849-7571 4:00 pm, cluded. $2 1 ,000. g araged. Just d e - door. Excellent conreal estate to automotive, 8 hard top, exc. Toyota Corolla 1999 may be mailed to: October 16, 2015 tailed, non s moker. 541-480-9277 dition all a r ound. merchandise to sporting cond., always ga4 cyl. 5 spd, 200K mi., Midnight Mocha color, Has Arizona plates. raged. 155K miles, goods. Bulletin Classifieds new tires last spring. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! GMC Pickup 1983 w/ REQUEST FOR tan leather int. Exc. This is car is a great appear every day in the studs incl.!! A/C, cas$8,500. topper, 4 wheel drive, cond. in & out. Clean mix of luxury, comPROPOSAL 541-549-6407 print or on line. sette, headliner needs Door-to-door selling with I 'Uns good, goo d title. $2 6,950.OBO f ort, s t yle, an d help. Runs G reat!! Call 541-385-5809 winter truck. $1,500 541-647-2257 The Request for Profast results! It's the easiest workmanship. $1800 541.480.9327 obo. 907-310-1877 p osal may be o b - www.bendbulletin.corn Jeep CJ5 4x41967, $24,000.00 way in the world tc sell. tained from the Desfirst year of the orig. Call 541-408-3051 Bulletin c hutes Coun t y The serving central oregon si~ etc Dauntless V-6, last The Bulletin Classified website at: year of the "All metal" DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 541-385-5809 body! Engine over10 Americans or 158 hauled: new brakes, million U.S. A d ults Mercedes Benz E fuel pump, steering Class 2005, Jeep Grand Chero- read content f r om Toyota Corolla 2013, gear box, battery, alm e dia (exp. 9/30/1 5) Toyota Tacoma kee Overland 2012, n ewspaper (exp. 9/30/1 5) ternator, emergency Vin ¹688743 2006 crew cab 4x4 V-6, all options, each week? Discover Vin ¹053527 brake pads, gauges, 4 dr. 4x4 pickup, Stock ¹82316 running boards, front the Power of the PaStock ¹83072 warn hubs, dual ex130k hwy miles, guard, nav., air and cific Northwest News- $11,979 or $155/mo., $15,979 or $199 mo., haust, 5 wide traction runs excellent, new heated leather, cus- paper Advertising. For $2500 down, 72 mo., $2000 down, 84 mo., tires, 5 new spoke, tires, V-6, auto, TRD tom wheels and new a free brochure call 4 .49% APR o n a p - 4 .49% APR o n a p chrome wheels. NO 916-288-6019 or proved credit. License proved credit. License pkg $15,400. tires, only 49K miles, rust, garage stored. and title included in and title included in 928-581-9190 email $29,995 payment, plus dealer in- payment, plus dealer in$7,495 OBO! elizabeth Ocnpa.corn La Pine 541-408-7908 stalled options. stalled options. (775) 513-0822 (PNDC)

RRO WI I(I 6

'„- t'MgS&.

Time to declutter? Need someextra cash?

'

OI’

s u a A Ru '

s u a A Ru Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 At: www.bendbulletin.corn Mercedes 450 SL T oyota Taco m a 1979 Roadster, soft 2 006, r eg . c a b , & hard tops, always 4x4, 5 sp d s tangaraged, 122k mi., dard 4 cyl engine, new tires, shock and b reaks, $79 0 0 . 22+ mpg, one senior owner, 541-548-5648

Lincoln Nav i gator 2 003 A WD , or i g . owner, local vehicle,

always

And sell it locally.

gar a ged,

auto., navigation, sunroof, DV D p l ayer, heated & A/C seats, (photo for illustration only) Dodge Dart 2013, g r i ll , all non-smoke, well custom V IN ¹219365 records, new Michelin maintained, nearly t ires. $14,997 $10,0 0 0 . new tires, original 541-815-5000. (exp. 9/30/1 5) DLR ¹366 s pare near n e w,

Chevy El Camino 1973, RARE! Manual trans. 4 spd, Exc. Cond. $7500. 541-389-1086

runs exce l lent. $14,750. 541-633-9895

Mercedes-Benz SLK230 2003, exc. cond., auto, convertible retractable hard top. 54,250 miles, carfax available.$13,000.

SMOLICH >s

541-389-7571

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

Toyota Corolla S 2007, 93 k m i l es, automatic, s i l ver. N ew brakes a nd battery. Super clean, no smoking. Cruise control, CD player, c loth s eats, A C . Price: $6995. Call 541-480-2700

smolichvolvo.corn

Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our "Wheel Deal" ! for private party advertisers

view. NO PLEASE!

to T E XTS

Mercedes ML350 2004 3.7L V-6, auto trans., 4-wheel traction control, s unroof, white with java leather. One (photo for illustration only) o wner l o cal c a r . Toyota Tundra2013, Dbl cab, 4x4. 9 0,100 miles. E x c Ford Fusion SEL2012, (exp. 9/30/1 5) V IN ¹044780 condition. $ 1 0,500. (Photo for illustration only) Vin ¹117015 VW Beetle c lassic 541-593-2053 $32,998 Volvo S60 2004, Stock ¹44382A 1972, Exc. shape, no (expg/30Ryt 5) VIN ¹015498 $15,979 or $199/mo., rust, very clean, fully DLR ¹366 $7,997 $2400 down, 84 mo., restored, has had 2 (exp. 9/30/1 5) 4 .49% APR o n ap Want to impress the owners. $4, 0 0 0. DLR ¹366 proved credit. License 541-815-8147 relatives? Remodel and title i ncluded in SMOLICH payment, plus dealer in- your home with the 933 V Q LV Q stalled options. help of a professional Pickups Nissan Rogue 2014 541-749-2156 541-548-1448 from The Bulletin's VIN ¹799777 SUaARu smolichvolvo.corn smolichmotors.corn "Call A Service $21,997 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Professional" Directory CALL (exp. 9/30/1 5) 935 877-266-382'I Looking for your TODAY DLR ¹366 Dlr ¹0354 next employee? Chevy Pickup 1978, Sport Utility Vehicles SMOLICH Place a Bulletin help long bed, 4x4, frame wanted ad today and up restoration. 500 V OL V O Garage Sales reach over 60,000 Cadillac eng i ne, 541-749-2156 readers each week. fresh R4 transmisGarage Sales smolichvolvo.corn Your classified ad sion w/overdrive, low will also appear on Garage Sales mi., no rust, custom Nissan350Z bendbulletin.corn interior and carpet, Convertible 2005, which currently reFord Explorer 2007, Find them n ew wheels a n d VIN ¹752136 $15,988 Eddie Bauer Edition, ceives over 1.5 miltires, You must see (exp. 9/30/1 5) DLR ¹366 in lion page views 4x4. it! $25,000 invested. VIN ¹A97725 The Bulletin every month at $12,000 OBO. no extra cost. Bulle$12,998 541-536-3889 or Subaru Outback Classifieds tin Classifieds (exp9/30W1 5) 541-420-6215. Limited 2014, AWD Get Results! Call DLR ¹366 VIN ¹303724. $27,888. 541-385-5809 385-5809 or place (exp. 9/30/1 5) DLR ¹366 541-548-1448 your ad on-line at smolichmotors.corn bendbulletin.corn

I

L'"'" " "

', ((

I' e

J

'

anal

Chevy S-10 1988 4.3L V-6, sunroof, many custom features, super clean, always garaged. $3200 obo. 541-388-0811.

BMM/ X3 Si 2007, Low Miles - 68,500 mi., AWD, leather Interior, s u nroof, b luetooth, voi c e Chevy Sil v e rado command system, 2 500HD 2002, 4 x 4 and too much more Crew cab, canopy, to list here. $15,900. 85K original miles, Please call Dan at loaded. $17,500 OBO. 541-815-6611 541-647-0565

P RINT and ON -LIN E

at bendbulletin.corn

I The Bulletin recoml

541-548-1448

smolichmotors.corn

List one Item* in The Bulletin’s Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in

extra caution l I mends when p u r chasing ~ f products or servicesf from out of the area. f S ending c ash ,f checks, or credit in- q I formation may be I

541-548-1448

smolichmotors.corn

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, never been off road or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, very clean. $26,000. Call or text Jeff at 541-729-4552

Honda Accord 2005, V6, fully l o aded, Nissan Sentra 2012, Nav, Moon roof, CD, (exp. 9/30/2015) perfect leather inteVin ¹734544 rior, one owner, full Stock ¹44681C maintained, always toFRAUD. or $199/mo., [ subject garaged, never $11,979 For more informal› $2500 down, 72 mo., wrecked, 143K road f tion about an adver4 .49% APR o n a p miles, $8,899. Great proved credit. License tiser, you may call car ready to drive. and title included in I the Oregon State) Mike 541-499-5970 payment, plus dealer in- Attorney General's f

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stalled options.

HUNTER

SP E CIAL:

Jeep Cherokee, 1990,

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4x4, has 9 t ires on 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. wheels. $2000 obo. 877-266-3821 541-771-4732 Dlr ¹0354

I Office

C o nsumer I f Protection hotline atf 1-877-877-9392.

The Bulletin

serring Central oregon since1903

BSSl 1C S To receive your FREECLASSIFIEDAD, call 541-385-5809or visit

The Bulletinofficeat:1777SWChandler Ave. (onBend's west side) *Offer allowsfor 3 linesof text only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets,weapons, rentals andemploymentadvertising, andallcommercial accounts. Must beanindividual itemunder $200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincludedin thead. Askyour Bulletin Sales Representativeabout special pricing, longer runschedulesandadditional features. Limit t ad per itemper30 daysto besold.


G6 sUNDAY, sEPTEMBER 13, 2015 THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?

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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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