Bulletin Daily Paper 09-15-15

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TUESDAY September15,2015

Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1

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moveon romnu osses IN AT HOME:CREATIVITYWITHTOMATOES, BALEGARDENINGAND MORE,D1

bendbulletin.corn TODAY’ S READERBOARD

WHATEVER

Area would take on a big role in Cascadia relief efforts

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

HAPPENED TO ...

CampusWatch› Buildings are beginning to go up at theOSU-Cascades campus site.B1

THE ENVIRONMENT

W1

By Beau Eastes

Danger onthe drylands

The Bulletin

Why climate change is such a big deal to the desert.A4

REDMOND

PacifiCorp, Central Oregon Irrigation District movetoward a potential trial 20th year leadingthe

LaVa BearS Hebeganthe coaching job as ahobby, but Bend High soccer frontman Nils Eriksson is now a fixture forthe Lava Bears.C1

And a fantasy footdall fiXture The first fantasy football league is still going strong more than 50years later.C1

By Ted Shorack»The Bulletin

inside

thrown out before a civil trial begins in December. The Central Oregon Irrigation District filed the

that helps engineering startups get started.C6

And a Wed exclusive› A Texan declares his own brand of secession. bemfbulletin.cern/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

officer for

the Oregon Department of Geology and Mmeral

suit last year, alleging the power company polluted the former Cline Falls hy› droelectric plant west of

Industries, and Sgt. Nathan

Garibay, Deschutes County Sheriff Office’s emergency service manager, spoke to a crowd of more than 50

year lease agreement and failed to maintain the site.

When you open a packet of seeds, you probably don’ t

To be sure, others have

done the worrying for you. That’s because a seed com›

pany that fails to deliver what the package promises might hear from the U.S. Department of Agricul› ture’s Seed Testing and Regulatory Division. They

O

For ranchers, Photos by Andy Tullisl The Bulletin

A 12-person Deschutes

ABOVE: The Deschutes River flows past the old water intake buildings downstream from Cline Falls.

County jury will determine whether PacifiCorp is at fault, and if so, how much

it should pay in damages The motion filed by PacifiCorp attorneys fo› cuses on what the lease describes as "electric gen› erating machinery," which the company was entitled

,I

to take from the site after

ending operations. SeePlant /A6

rangeland By Gosia Wozniacka The Associated Press

PORTLAND For weeks, rancher Darrel

Holliday has rounded up frightened cows and calves off the smoldering hills of Range, a wil›

The buildings at the site of the former Cline Falls Power Plant were built in 1943 after a former power plant was replaced. Theplant was closed in 2006, and the property’s owner, Central Oregon Irrigation District, is suing to have PacifiCorp remove existing contaminants from the property on the Deschutes River, just west of Redmond. The allegations of contamination include: Soil contamination Old lubricants Sediment Oregon Department of

Envir onmental

Quality wants sediment tested

Diesel range organics, chryseneandfluoranthene PCB coolant contamination drained from powerhouse. And Aroclor1254 (in i n former electric amounts below federal and state concern levels) t ransformer yard. found under the turbine drainpipe underneath the powerhouse. +oodeitflurne . .

-

-

g

Site of original power plant has h/f/h /etrels 'ofhydrocarbons . '

e

"4

DA’s Agriculture Market›

office was just outside the

wildfires mean lost

the Strawberry Mountain

The legal fightovertheformerCline Falls PowerPlant

the nation’s small squad of "seedpolice"fortheUS-

since 2003. Before that, the

LEFT: The penstock pipe, left, used to direct Deschutes River water into this room, which housed a turbine that’ s now gone from the site of the former Cline Falls hydroelectric plant site west of Redmond.

II

don’t want that. Ernest Allen, the divi› sion’s new director, leads

ing Service. The Charlotte resident and his crew have been operating in Gastonia

SeeCascadia /A5

’1

the plant’s remnants.

worry whether the con› tents will actually produce

the plants you’ re intending to grow.

and resulting tsunami would wreak upon the state.

otherinfrastructure. The irrigation district is seeking millions of dollars in damages to clean up alleged environmental con›

to COID.

the havoc a 9.0 earthquake

two separate dams and

agriculture GASTONIA, N.C.

Monday night at the High› land Baptist Church about

Corp, the parent company of Pacific Power, filed a motion in May refuting and refusing any responsibility for removing old buildings,

’Seedpolice’ protect our The Charlotte Observer

disaster-minded residents

Attorneys for Pacifi›

tamination and to get rid of

By Karen Sullivan

in the state’ s

Quake recovery. r attles Ali R y an northwest Hansen, the Nevada, earth science B2 information

PacifiCorp is attempting to get part of a multimillion-dollar lawsuit filed against the company

Redmond, violated a 100›

Executive File Aplace

The Cas›

cadia earthquake is coming, two experts said Monday. And Oregon officials predict Central Oregon will play a key role

~,at

rt OegG

Original dam wasmadeof wood th might have contained contaminant .

ate Of lne F Power Plant "

=~:

uc ural problems

~ All wooden structures at the site also contain asbestos and lead-based paint.

Dam

derness area

Wildfire in Eastern Or› in Eastern egon of old› Oregon g r o wth forest grows,B1 and grass California where wild› life and cattle wildfire claims a roamed. Holliday’s iife fto forest grazing allotment of about 32,000

Highla

J

entire federal

acres 50 square miles burned last month as a wildfire ravaged the area. The land is now a smoke› filled expanse of blackened

E

Sources: Osprey Environmental; Cascade Earth Sciences; Holland & Knight

Pete Smith I The Bulletin

tree sticks and ash.

SeeRangeland/A6

nation’s capital, in Belts›

ville, Maryland. Based on the size of this Agriculture Marketing Service operation in a building roughly the size of a typical drug store you might underestimate the

Democratsseek to makebetter use of super PAQ

importance of the work its

By Nicholas Confessore

areas that Republicans have

14 botanists, physiologists, plant pathologists, lab tech›

New York Times News Service

used to raise hundreds of millions of dollars for the 2016 campaign through such groups. The plans, laid out by the party’s top election lawyers in an emergency request

nicians and investigators

Democrats are laying the groundwork for an ambi›

do. But seeds are a nearly $12 billion a year market in

tious reorganization of their

the United States. That val›

loopholes and legal gray

struggling network of super PACs that would exploit the

Inside Will a new star emerge in GOP debate? Orwill Donald Trump once again run the show?AS

creation of a host of new

lican presidential candidates

super PACs tailored to in› dividual House and Senate

this election cycle, helping prospective candidates es›

candidates.

tablish and raise money for

filed with the Federal Elec›

But the filing also suggests super PACs before they offi› that Democrats would, if cially declare their intention

tion Commission on Friday,

they are allowed, seek to use

would pave the way for the

tactics pioneered by Repub›

to run.

SeeSuper PACs/A5

ue puts America at the top of a $45 billion a year glob› al seed market, with China

and France in second and third place, according to the International Seed Federation. SeeSeed /A4

TODAY’S WEATHER Cloudy High 59, Low 35 Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX At Home Business Calendar

D1-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby 06 Obituaries C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope ˆ S B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

B5 C D6

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Q tyi/e userecycled newsprint

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Rogelio V. Solis/The Associated Press

Lsw enforcement walk across the Delta State University campus in pursuit of s suspect in connec› tion with the shooting of history professor Ethan Schmidt in his office in Cleveland, Mississippi, on

Monday.

00 in SuS e

a ereu i n

o i Ce

By Jeff Amy and Emily Wagster Pettus

information at a news confer› ence early today, adding that The Associated Press Lamb died from a gunshot A wound to the head. GREENVILLE, Miss. college instructor suspected in Cleveland Police C hief the fatal shootings of a woman Charles "Buster" Bingham he lived with on Mississippi’s said Lamb was returning from Gulf Coast and a professor Arkansas when a license plate at Delta State University 300 reader picked up his plate as miles away died Mon› he crossed a bridge over day of a n a pparent the Mississippi River. self-inflicted g unshot Greenville police fol› wound after trying to lowed Lamb but did flee police, authorities not try to apprehend Bald. him, Bingham said. S hannon Lamb had L a m b Lamb then pulled over earlier told authorities

that he was "not going to jail."

and took off o n

ea cally went through buildings, checking in closets, behind doors and under tables and desks. U niversity President W i l › liam LaForge told the AP late

Monday that the lockdown had been lifted. He said there would

be no classes Tuesday but stu› dents, faculty and staff are in›

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member who was killed. "We’ re r elieved that t h i s

tragedy is over," LaForge said.

who was found dead in the

heard a gunshot. When back› home she shared with Lamb in up arrived, they searched and Gautier; and 39-year-old Ethan found Lamb with a gunshot Schmidt, a history professor wound to the head. who was killed in his office on the Delta State University po› Lamb is suspected in the campus in Cleveland. lice, told The Associated Press. shooting deaths of two peo› Officers in the tw o c ities One of the victims was killed at ple in Mississippi including a said they had not uncovered a the university earlier Monday. woman he was living with and motive for either slaying. Police later heard one gun› a teacher at Delta State. The Lamb received a doctorate shot and then found Lamb, shooting sent the entire cam› in education from Delta State Buford said. They took him to pus into lockdown, which was University in the spring of a hospital in Greenville where lifted late Monday. 2015, according to his resume Lamb’s death brought to he was pronounced dead of posted on the university’s web› what appeared to be a self-in› an end a chaotic day that saw site. He started working there flicted gunshot wound, Buford terrified students and teachers in 2009 and taught geography said. hunkered down in classrooms and education classes, and Police in Cleveland, Mis› for hours. The Delta State volunteered with Habitat for sissippi, where Delta State is campus was put on lockdown H umanity, according to t h e located,confirmed Buford's as armed officers methodi› resume.

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All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Chechpayments may be convertedto anelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublisheddailybyWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsoradilustrations. They may not bereproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

Moves to bolster Russianmilitary force in Syria widen I(remlin’s Mideast role officials said. "There were New York Times News Service military supplies, they are on› W ASHINGTON R u s › going, and they will continue," sia has sent some of its most Sergey Lavrov, the Russian modern battle tanks to a new foreign minister, was quoted air base in Syria in what U.S. as saying by Russian news officials said Monday was agencies on Sunday. "They part of an escalating build› are inevitably accompanied up that could give Moscow by Russian specialists, who its most significant military help to adjust the equipment,

As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

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Endowment for International

Peace. He is a former Russia expert for the National Se› curity Council, the State De›

partment and the Pentagon. Indeed, efforts by the Unit› ed States to stop the flow of

to train Syrian personnel how

to use this weaponry." past week used an air corri› The Russians have not sent dor over Iraq and Iran to ferry attack planes to the airfield, military equipment and per› and the Kremlin has not said sonnel to the base, said U.S. whether they will. But the mil› military officials who agreed itary buildup by Russia, which to speak about confidential has been supporting Assad intelligence assessments on

government forces. "We have seen movement

with the United States. "I don’t b elieve Western

last week at the request of the United States. But Iraq did

or block the risky course the

armored personnel carriers, 200 marines and housing for as many as 1,500 personnel at the airfield near the Assad family’s ancestral home. And

more is on the way as Russia appears to be trying to in› crease its influence in Syria

— Fromwirereports

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the Russian flights with the

U.S. military specialists an› Russia had about half a dozen T-90 tanks, 15 howitzers, 35

DemOnStratiOnSin GaZa City Several hundred Palestinians demonstrated in central Gaza City, GazaStrip, on Mondayeveningover increasing powercuts, the latest in aseries of protests over the issue. The demonstrations, which beganSaturday in Rafah, asouthern city in the GazaStrip, have emerged asthe largest in years. Still, it is uncertain if the protesters cansustain their momentum, and it is unclear if they will pose achallenge to Gaza’s Hamasrulers. The latest shortages ap› pear to haveoccurred after deterioration in the power lines from Egypt, said NathanThrall, ananalyst with the International Crisis Group.

governments are prepared to not, even though U.S. diplo› do very much to slow down mats raised concerns about

of people and things that Russians are going on," said Iraqi government Sept. 5. would suggest the air base south of Latakia could be used as a forward air operat› ing base," Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said Monday. alyzing satellite photographs and other information said

Yemen hiimall IlglltS lllplllfp The United Nations human rights chief called Mondayfor an independent inquiry into violations in Yemen bythe Saudi-led coalition and bythe Houthi rebels the coalition is fighting. More than2,000 civilians havebeenkilled and 4,000 wounded intheYemenconflict, and the U.N.official, Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, told the Human Rights Council in Genevathat thefighting had left 21 million people, or 80percent of the population, in needof humanitarian aid. Al-Hussein’s statement opened amonthlong session of the council, which will hear reports on a number of crises.

transport planes have in the

a major hub that could be used throughout the 4 / s-year-old the condition of anonymity. to bring in military supplies Syrian civil war, adds a new Bulgaria closed its air› for the government of Presi› friction point in its relations space to the Russian flights alsoserve asa staging areafor airstrikes in support of Syrian

TheDepartment ofEducation

supplies have fallen short. At least 15 giant Russian Condor

decades. Pentagon officials said the Russian weapons and equip› ment that had arrived sug› gested that the Kremlin’s plan

dent Bashar Assad. It might

Oregon Lottery results

Andrew Weiss, vice president for studies at the Carnegie

foothold in the Middle East in

is to turn the airfield south of Latakia in western Syria into

TOuriStdeathS iiI Egypt Egypt’s Interior Ministry said in a statement Mondaythat amilitary helicopter openedfire on a group of lunching tourists Sundaybecausecrew members hadmistaken the group for a campof Islamist militants operating in thearea. At least a dozen people including at least two Mexicantourists were killed. Theerror killed moretourists than any terrorist attack in recent years, raising questions about both thecompetence of Egypt’s security forces andthe prevalence of themilitants they weretrying to hunt. The disaster also threatens to undermine a nascent recovery in Egypt’s vital tourist industry. announced aninitiative Monday designed to makethe cumbersome college financial aid application process start earlier and goeasier. The new plan, which takeseffect in fall 2016, allows families to begin the online FreeApplication for Federal Student Aid, better known asFAFSA, in October threemonths earlier to better align with the college application process. Inaddition, families candownloadtax information filed for the previous year tocomplete theapplication sooner. Education officials said theyexpect hundreds of collegesanduniversities to adjust their own financial aid calendars to align with thenewtax information process. Thecurrent FAFSAapplication process begins in January and can’t be completed until tax forms due April 15 can beretrieved from the Internal RevenueService.

Bingham said the police were of 41-year-old Amy Prentiss,

amid the civil strife there, the

Australia’sprimeminis›

ter-designate MalcolmTurnbull today assuredthecountry that his government remainedstrong despite an internal party revolt that made him the nation’s fourth leader in little more thantwo years andwill leave deep divisions in hisadministration’s ranks. Turnbull will be sworn inas Australia’s 29th prime minister todayafter asurprise ballot of his con› servative Liberal Party colleaguesvoted 54-to-44 on Monday night to replace PrimeMinister TonyAbbott only two years after hewaselect› ed. Turnbull’s elevation hascemented aculture of disposable leaders as the new norm inAustralian politics since the 11-year reign of the Prime Minister John Howardended in2007.

StudentlOanappliCatiOn

sippi, were following Lamb as he was driving when the sus› pect pulled over and jumped out of his car, Lynn Buford, chief of

By Eric Schmitt and Michael R. Gordon

New Australian prime minister

in the evening to honor the staff

One month: $17.50 (Print only:$t6.50)

By mail:One month: $25 E-Editisn only: One month: $13

KentuCky Clerk Kim Davisreturned to work Mondayfor the first time since shewasjailed for defying a federal court andannouncedthat she would nolonger block her deputies from issuing marriage licenses to same-sexcouples. Standing atthecourthouse door, the Kentucky county clerk readfrom ahandwritten statement andexplained in a quivering voice thatshehadbeenfaced with a "seemingly impossible choice" betweenfollowing her conscience andlosing herfreedom. So she agreed to an "emergency stopgap" concession, her lawyer later said: Shedid not stop herdeputy clerk from issuing licenses editedto remove hername,hertitle and herauthorization. But, shesaid, shehad "grave concerns" that the licenseswould beinvalid without her blessing.

vited to campus to attend a vigil

Investigators said Lamb, 45, f o ot. was a suspect in the slayings

Police in Greenville, Missis› waiting for backup when they

KentuCky trOOPer ShOOting A Kentucky state trooper who made a traffic stop wastrying to arrange for lodging for the vehicle’s occupants whenthe driver took off, starting a tragic chain of events that led to thedeaths of the lawmanandthe suspect, police said Mon› day. TrooperJosephCameron Ponder,31,wasshotbythesuspect a short time later during asecond stop late Sunday in arural areaof western Kentucky, saidTrooper JayThomas, astate police spokesman. Ponder, aNavyveteran, had beenonthe state police force less thana year. Thesuspect,25-year-oldJosephThomas Johnson-ShanksofFlorissant, Missouri, ran awayandwasfound hours later after a massive overnight manhunt in awooded areaabout 9 miles from theinitial stop and less than amile from wherethe trooper had beengunned down, Thomas said. Johnson-Shanksdrew aweapon at astate police trooper, ignoredcommands todrophisweaponandwasshot,Thomas said.He died later at ahospital.

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015 THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news

It’s Tuesday, Sept. 15, the 258th day of 2015. Thereare 107 days left in the year.

SCIENCE

Diplomacyandhoops at the White House›

HISTORY

STUDY

scarce nown rove o ossis people’ wh»ths

HAPPENINGS

PresidentBarack Obamais scheduled to meetwith King Felipe Vl andQueenLetizia of Spain and to honor the Univer› sity of Connecticut women’s basketball team, which won the NCAAtournament.

the things you needto know to start out your day

O erS im Se inO

O ne eraS skinfee so soft

Inside an iconic tower on the ~pus of University of California, Berkeley is a collection of some 300,000 fossils

relics of everything from short-faced cave bears to saber-toothed cats and giant sloths By Amina Khan

Highlight:In 1940, during the World War II Battle of Britain,

the tide turned asthe Royal Air Force inflicted heavy losses upon the Luftwaffe. In1789, the U.S.Department of Foreign Affairs was renamed the Department of State. In1857,William Howard Taft who served asPresident of the United States and asU.S. chief justice wasborn in Cincinnati, Ohio. In1935, the Nuremberg Laws deprived GermanJews of their citizenship. In1950, during the Korean conflict, United Nations forces landed at Incheon in the south and began their drive toward Seoul. In1955,the novel "Lolita," by Vladimir Nabokov, was first published in Paris. In1963,four black girls were killed when abombwent off during Sundayservices at the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. (Three Ku Klux Klansmenwereeven› tually convicted for their roles in the blast.) In1972, a federal grand jury in Washington indicted seven men in connection with the Watergate break-in. In1985, Nike beganselling its "Air Jordan1" sneaker. In1994, a tape recording of John Lennon singing with his teen-age band,TheQuar› rymen, in a Liverpool club on July 6, 1957,wassold at Sotheby’s for $122,500 (it was at this gig that Lennon first met Paul McCartney). In2000,the2000Summer Olympics openedinSydney, Australia, with a seemingly endless parade of athletes and coaches and aspectacular dis› play; Aborigine runner Cathy Freeman ignited anOlympic ring of fire. Tee years ego:President George W.Bush, addressing the nation from storm-ravaged New Orleans, acknowledged the government hadfailed to respond adequately to Hurricane Katrina and urged Congress to approve amas› sive reconstruction program. Hurricane Ophelia continued to lash the Outer Banks of North Carolina with rain and wind. Five years ego: A mortar attack by Palestinian militants and airstrikes by Israel provid› ed a grim backdrop as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Net› anyahu andPalestinian Pres› identMahmoud Abbas ended their latest round of peacetalks still divided on major issues. One year ego:U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, in Paris for an international meeting of diplomats, said hewouldn’ t shut the door on the possibility of working with Iran against a common enemy in the Islamic State militant group, but that the two nations would not coordinate on military action. Hurricane Odile blazed atrail of destruction through Mexico’s Baja California Peninsula that leveled everything from ram› shackle homes to luxury hotels and big-box stores.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Forrest Compton is 90. Comedian NormCrosby is 88. Baseball Hall of Famer Gaylord Perry is 77.Opera singer Jessye Norman is 70. Writer-director Ron Shelton is 70.ActorTommy LeeJonesis 69. Movie director Oliver Stone is 69. Football Hall of Famer Dan Marino is 54. Actor Tom Hardy is 38. Actress Marisa Ramirez (TV: "Blue Bloods") is 38. Pop-rock musician Zach Filkins (OneRepublic) is 37. Actress Amy Davidson is 36. Britain’s Prince Harry is 31. TV personality Heidi Montag is 29. Actress Kate Mansi is 28. — From wire reports

Los Angeles Times

By Amina Khan

Have you ever touched a

Los Angeles Times

loved one’s arm and mar› veled at the softness of his

Deep BERKELEY, Calif. in the heart of a bell tower,

or her skin? Turns out it’ s probably all in your head, a new study shows. Researchers from the University College London found that people rated others’ skin as softer than

Eric Holt leans over and pulls

open a wooden drawer filled with bones. The walls of this dimly lit room and those below

are lined with shelves upon shelves of fossils mammoth tusks, bison jaws, giant sloth limbs. Some drawers are neatly organized, tiny s pecimens nestled in clearly labeled pa› per trays. Others are a jumble of bones, gray and fuzzy to the touch. "This is a layer of about 80 years’ worth o f

theirs, regardless of wheth›

er it actually was. The findings, published in the journal Current Bi›

ology, reveal a sort of illu› sion that helps people form social bonds by making the act of offering this sim› ple tactile pleasure a re›

d u st," Holt

ward in itself.

"Social touch plays a powerful role in human life, with important physi› cal and mental health ben›

says. But then Holt, a University

of California, Berkeley gradu› ate student, picks up one small fuzzy fossil and flips it over. The bottom, shielded from

dust in the air, has a clean, smooth caramel-colored sur›

Don Bartletti/ Los AngelesTimes /TNS

In a modern archive vault at University of California, Berkeley, Dr. Robert Dundas holds an ancient tiger skull from the La Brea Tar Pits. It’s among thousands of fossils that gathered dust on open

face, with a burnished-bronze shelves for nearly 100 years in the Campanile bell tower until scientists and paleontology students glow. This is what many of began meticulously cleaning and cataloging the collection. the bones looked like nearly a century ago, when they were first pulled from the tar and at Holt’s watch only to real› ing and drying. Scientists are and interim associate dean cleaned. ize that they’d gotten locked in. trying to understand whether at Cal State Fresno, began "We had to call campus se› the disappearance of many digging into the Campani› Standing about 307 feet tall, the iconic Sather Tower bet› curity to come let us out," Holt of these animals was due to le’s hidden treasures as a UC ter known as the Campanile› said. climatechange, human en- Berkeley graduate student. He defines UC Berkeley’s skyline. croachment or a combination cataloged many of the fossils, Cal students crossing campus New potential of the two. helping to bring some order to regularly hear it ring on the in these old fossils Today, as the climate warms the neglected collection. hour, with a live concert featur› Bones from the La Brea and and the number of extinctions A s hi s f a scination w i t h ing the 61-bell carillon at noon. McKittrick deposits date back continues to rise, scientists be› the fossils grew, he began re› They may even take in the tens of thousands of years to lieve the lessons from the past searching how and why the view of the Golden Gate Bridge the late Pleistocene era, when may well illuminate the prob› Los Angeles fossils ended up from the observation deck, ice-age animals that roamed lems of the present. in Berkeley’s bell tower. some 200 feet up. But very few parts of California were vastly Holt, for one, studies the One of the first scientists have seen the trove of fossils different than they are today. jaws and skulls of gray wolves, to lead major excavations at that lies within or know how Giant ground sloths, Yester› dire wolves and coyotes, be› the La Brea Tar Pits was John day’s Camels, American lions cause the changes in their Merriam, an ambitious pale› on Earth they ended up there. The Campanile, celebrat› and dire wolves shared space shapes could reveal the dy› ontologist who sought to make ing its 100th anniversary this with more familiar creatures, namics among these compet› Berkeley’s nascent program year, is thought to house about including bison, coyotes and ing predators over time. Look› the best in the western United 300,000 fossils on five floors. deer. ing for these patterns requires States. "Merriam had a pretty big The collection boasts petrified The Campanile’s collection a lot of bones and there are wood from Yellowstone „ pales in comparison to the La plenty among the Campanile’s ego. He felt that he was really tional Park and bones from Brea Tar Pits and Museum, estimated 20 tons of fossils. the most prominent vertebrate "When I first got here, very paleontologist on the West short-faced cave bears, giant which houses about 5 million sloths and saber-toothed cats specimens and to which re› little research was being done Coast, and he probably was at from the McKittrick Tar Pits searchers are still adding, dig› on anything up here," Holroyd the time," Dundas says. near Bakersfield. But t h eir ging more bones out from the says. Now, "we’ re finding a lot Merriam sought to establish largest collection comes from natural asphalt that bubbles up of different and fun things that some control over the tar pits the La Brea Tar Pits in Los around the site. Seen as distant we can do with the fossils that excavation site, but ultimately Angeles. and superfluous compared are very different than what failed. G. Allan Hancock, who "This is just this amazing with the Hancock Park muse› the original scientists clearly owned the property that held time capsule," says UC Berke› um, and yet too numerous to imagined." the tar pits, ultimately gave ley senior museum scientist house with the well-curated the land to the County of Los Patricia Holroyd, carefully specimens in the University of How they found a home Angeles. looking through the draw› California Museum of Paleon› Less than a quarter of a mile Still, until Merriam and his ers with blue-gloved hands. tologyelsewhere on theBerke- away in the paleontology mu› team were shut out in 1913, Scraps of newspaper from the ley campus, the bell tower’s seum, Robert Dundas opens they dug up thousands upon early 1900s, with the bones’ or› contents were largely forgotten a metal cabinet in the vast cli› thousands of bones from the igins written on them in pencil, for decades. mate-controlled building and tar pits. He also expanded the have been placed in dear plas› But in r e cent years, re› pulls out a skull of an Ameri› young collection by trading tic bags. searchers have begun to find can lion. This larger relative of "duplicate" specimens from Afternoon offers the best new potential in these fossils, the African lion once prowled the tar pits for others from viewing, when the sunlight which could shed fresh light the Los Angeles Basin, proba› around the globe. can filter through two narrow on key periods in California’s bly hunting deer, camels and Soon, the paleontologists windows, one on each wall. evolutionary and environmen› other herbivores. had a problem: There were "These things aren’t light› The sonorant bells, a few lev› tal history. so many bones and they els above, don’t bother the re› The end of the late Pleisto› especially if they’ re still filled reeked of asphalt. searchers at all. cene was a period of environ› with tar," he said, gripping the The solution? Put them in "You can lose track of time mental upheaval. Humans had golden-brown skull with both the Campanile, which was in here," Holt says. moved into North A merica, hands. still being built. And there they Once, Holroyd glanced over and the climate was warm› Dundas, a paleontologist stayed.

NEED TO KNOW

efits in development and adulthood," the study au›

thors wrote. "Touch is cen› tral in building the founda› tions of social interaction,

attachment and cognition, and early, social touch has

unique, beneficial neuro› physiological and epigene› tic effects."

If you’ ve ever shaken hands or hugged a friend, then you, too, have used

touch as a social glue to connect with others. And scientists have long studied

the many physical and psy› chological benefits of being touched: Physical contact

with babies, for example, is key to their development. And yet, important as it is

to receive touch, relatively little is known about what d rives us to give it. A r e

there benefits to touching, not just to being touched? To find out, the research›

ers set up a series of exper› iments that would examine

what people felt when they touched another’s skin. They had them touch their own forearm and t ouch

another person’s forearm, and rate t h eir

s o ftness.

Sure enough, the partici› pants regularly rated each other’s skin as softer and smoother than their own. When they tested their skin against the texture of

other objects, they still rat› ed the other person’s skin as softer than theirs in rela›

tion to those objects.

Free pipeinstallation estimates

TOUCHMARK SINC6 1980

Yet another thingAshley Madison back exposed: ridiculouslybadpasswords hobbyists, known as Cyno› years. Sure Prime, so far suggest As a quick reminder, using When data from the mas› that many who were seeking super common passwords sive Ashley Madison hack first thrills on the infidelity-focused makes it much easier for bad leaked online, one tiny bright site had poor digital hygiene. guys to just guess their way spotwas thatresearchers said The top password uncov› into your accounts. And it’s a the company appeared to use ered so far: 123456, according bad idea to reuse passwords, a strong algorithm to encrypt to Ars Technica. The other too otherwise, a malicious users passwords. But now one passwords that made the top hacker might be able to lever› group says it already decoded five aren’t much better: 12345, age a password uncovered in more than ll m i llion pass› p assword, D EFAULT, a n d one breachtobreak into oneof words because programming 123456789. your other personal accounts. errors in how that encryption But those (awful) passwords Avid Life Media, Ashley was applied left the informa› shouldn’t be too surprising: Madison’s parent company, tion less secure than originally By some surveys, "123456" did not immediately respond thought. has been the most popular to a request for comment And the passwords un› password uncovered in data about how t h e p a sswords earthed by t h e d ecoding breaches duringthe past two were encrypted.

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A4

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

IN FOCUS:CLIMATE CHANGE

Why scientists areworried about drylands By Chris Mooney The Washington Post

Virtually every ecosystem of the world

from forests to

the oceans

raises concern

about the toll that a warming

climate will take. There’s one type of landscape, though, that doesn’t get talked about very much i n t h i s c ontext

so-called "drylands," a grouping that includes arid and semi-arid regions rang› ing from many deserts to grasslands. Drylands are one of the more important ecosystems in the world, comprising fully 40 percent of the Earth’s land

Todd Sumlln / Charlotte Observer / TNS

A botanist examines grass seed at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Seed Regulatory and Testing Division in Gastonia, North Carolina.

Seed

Utah. Human activity and climate change are a threat to biocrust, a combination of mosses and li› chens that provide structure to the landscape. "Things would blow away without biocrust," says Scott

Ferrenberg of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Southwest Biological Science Center.

those wants and specific

ing new study in the Proceed› ings of the National Academy of Sciencessays the impact of a warming climate on these

ecosystems could be much com›

parable to humans trampling the landscapes underfoot or driving off-road vehicles across them. "Contrary to our expecta›

Bill Bowman / University of Colorado via The Washington Post

Continuous biocrust appears in the foreground Needles District of Canyonlands National Park in

change and physical distur› pression the crust communi› bance had strikingly similar ty uses: ’Got dust? You need impacts," wrote the research› crust,’" he continues. "It’ s ers, led by Scott Ferrenberg of sort of a nerd joke in this the U.S. Geological Survey’s community." renberg conducted the work with two Geological Survey colleagues. Ferrenberg and his col› leagues ran a long-term ex› periment at Utah’s Upper Col› orado Plateau, a "cool desert" region that receives less than

10 inches of rain per year. Here, the ground is covered by a complex group of organisms collectively called "biocrust" a combination of mosses

A t th e

s ame t i me, t h e

growth of mosses and lichen, supported by the cyanobacte› ria, allows these landscapes to store a considerable amount of carbon which might oth› erwise wind up in the atmo› sphere. Overall, d r ylands store25 percent ofthe carbon

found in the planet’s soils. A desert landscape like the Upper Colorado Plateau,

however, is highly vulnera› ble to destruction if humans or livestock tread across it or

especially if vehicles tear it up. glued together by photosyn› And if that happens enough, and lichens that are in effect

thetic microorganisms called

then not only are dust storms

cyanobacteria, which provide more likely to blow up the structure to the landscape loose sand, but there will be through the c arbohydrate less storing of carbon and the molecules they secrete. ecosystem may be set up for T his structure, i n t u r n , what researchers call "succes› transition into a more allows th e m o r e c o mplex sion"

organisms like mosses and extreme des ertified state, lichens to grow and when without as many lichens or it’s all assembled, the biocrust mosses and with only cyano› then holds the soil in place bacteria hanging on. and prevents dust storms and So what d oes c l imate erosion. "Things would blow change add to this dynamic? away without biocrust," says To find out, the researchers Ferrenb erg. conducted a long-term exper› " There’s sort o f t h i s e x › iment in which plots of Col›

giving them a bit of extra heat subjected to either 10 years of would kill them, and it did." warmer temperatures or more The researchers proceed› rainfall, or 15 years of literal ed to observe that while you human trampling. can protect drylands from In the climate change sce› humans, vehicles, or livestock at least to an extent you nario, plots of ground were continually warmed by infra› can’t switch off global warm› red heaters several degrees ing. "The effects of warming Celsius above the tempera› described here are a great ture surrounding them. In cause for concern, as increas› the stomping scenario, by ing annual temperatures are a contrast, a team of volunteers near certainty across dryland walked heel to toe, twice, ecosystems," they wrote. across a plot of land once The experiment only looked per year for 15 years. at one dryland ecosystem, but The researchers found that according to the researchers, in all cases, the effect was biocrust is prevalent in dry› more orless the same — a lands across the globe. "We severe blow to the lichens think this heralds pretty bad and mosses of the commu› news for biocrusts on a global nity, leaving behind only the scale," Ferrenberg said. algae or "cyanobacteria," And if that’s right, then it which proceeded to show an doesn’t just mean drylands increasethat the researchers may not hold in as much car› called "dramatic." bon any more (which means For instance, while algae more of it goes to the atmo› made up 81 percent of the bi› sphere). It also means they ocrust community prior to may produce worse dust human trampling, afterward storms in the future. itmade up 99 percent.WarmSo, no, drylands and bio› er temperatures had a similar crusts don’t get a lot of atten› effect. tion.But maybe now you can "We were really surprised," see why, in their paper, the said Ferrenberg. "We know researchers use words li ke that walking on them or driv› "disconcerting" and "alarm› ing on them kills them. We ingly" to describe what could were really surprised that happen to them. orado Plateau biocrust were

Berlin airlift hassurprising newrole: refugeecamp By Laura King

Nore border controlsimposed

Los Ange(es Times

BERLIN

It was a onetime

Nazi showpiece, an indelible emblem of defiance during the Cold War’s Berlin airlift, and

more recently ,an unexpectedly beloved public space in this most postmodern of cities.

Now, the old airport at Tempelhof is about to find yet

is tt

Itj

I

another incarnation: shelter›

ing some among the massive surge of the migrants and ref› ugees flooding into Germany. Berlin’s mayor, Michael Muel› ler, told the RBB broadcaster over the weekend that one of

the airfield’s former hangars will be used to provide a roof a lofty one at that

over

Gordon Welters/The New York Times

As Germany opens itself to waves of migrants in dire need, Berlin leaders are pondering ways to shelter arrivals in the historic han›

gars of Tempelhof Airport.

the heads of about 800 asy› lum-seekers, as early as this week.

The need is great. Since

Tempelhof’s newfound place wide fame during the Ber› a t the intersection of a h u ›

lin airlift o f

1 948-49, when

manitarian crisis and hipster the city’s western sector was flux, the German capital has entertainments has its jarring blockaded by Soviet troops been receiving about 1,000 elements. This past weekend, during the inaugural days of newcomers a day. More than the facility hosted a European the Cold War. Allied planes 65,000 people have arrived in franchise of the Lollapalooza loaded with f ood an d f u el Germany this month, and the music festival even as plan› touched down at Tempelhof yearly tally may run to 1 mil› ners were working to ready the every few minutes, providing lion or more, officials now ac› hangar space for asylum-seek› a vital lifeline for the city’s cold knowledge. With winter fast ers, many of whom are disori› and hungry. approaching, housing is a cru› ented and exhaustedafter an The historic r esonance cial concern, with venues like arduousjourney. of Tempelhof is not unique a disused convention center To meet immediate housing among housing sites being and former military barracks needs, Mueller said a cavern› commandeered amid the spi› being pressed into service. ous hangar would be heated raling refugee and migrant The airport at Tempelhof and individual temporary ac› crisis. Asylum seekers are also was decommissioned in 2008 commodation and sanitation sheltering in former barracks and eventually turned into a units set up inside, with busing at Spandau, site of the noto› public park that sprawls over available to bathing facilities rious prison, and at another more than one square mile. at anearby pool complex. A barracks at the site of the Bu› Berliners who flock to the second hangar may be used chenwald concentration camp a turn of events that drew vast open space on weekends as well to build longer-term to jog and bicycle on the for› housing blocs, the local Ber› uneasy commentary in Israel. mer tarmac and send kites liner Morgenpost newspaper Berliners, though, are more skittering aloft where aviation reported. accustomed than most to the windsocks once flew took Tempelhof, moments from collision of past and present. "We should use whatever the news of the latest repur› the city center, mirrors nearly a posing in stride. century of Berlin’s tumultuous space is available to help these "Obviously, it’s a special history. Built in the late 1920s, people," said research psychol› situation," said Johanna Otte, the airport was refurbished ogist Fabian Leuschmer, en› whose 5-year-old daughter by the Nazis in the 1930s, with joying a family picnic at Tem› squirmed in her lap as in-line its immense, swooping termi› pelhof on an unseasonably skaters whizzed past. "If the nal intended as a projection of sunny autumn day. "I’m not at space is there, we should uti› both power and menace. all nervous. I’m sure Germany lize it, use it for the good." The airfield found world› can handle this." the start of th e current in›

The work that i s carried

needs of people from any› out at the Gastonia office is where, American busi› required by the Federal Seed

tions, experimental climate

Southwest Biological Science Center in Moab, Utah. Fer›

es in state laws.

Continued fromA1 Also, North Carolina’s lab That means the U.S. held does not do testing to deter› nearly 27 percent of the mine or verify seed variet› world’s competitive inter› ies. The federal labs can help national seed trade in 2011. with that. "People have different "If a seed was labeled wants," said Allen, a bot› one variety and it looks like anist and certified seed something else, we might analyst. "If b u sinesses, rely on the federal office to and specifically American provide growouts and tests," businesses, can provide Turner said.

surface. And now, an alarm›

worse than expected

cy keeps tabs on those nuanc›

BRUSSELS Even as three more countries followed Germany in in› troducing border checks to control a flood of migrants, the European Union on Monday failed to agree on amodest plan that would force individual countries to take in a share of some of the hundreds of thousands now seeking asylum in Europe. Gathering in Brussels for an emergency meeting, interior ministers from across Europe agreed to share 40,000 refugees sheltering in Greeceand It› aly, but only on a voluntary basis, a watered-down version of a plan an› nounced in May. But as the fractious meeting stretched into the evening, there seemed little prospect that minis› ters would endorse a new plan put forward last week by Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European Commission, for a pro› gram of resettlement for a further 120,000 asylum seekers that would be compulsory for member countries. Jean Asselborn, foreign affairs minister of Luxembourg, which holds the union’s rotating presidency, told a news conference late Monday that a majority of countries accepted "in principle" Juncker’s plan but added that the discussions had been "very difficult." Discussions will not resume until next month, a blow to Juncker, who last week pleaded for "immedi› ate action." — New YorkTimesNet/l/sService

nesses will do welL" The work that is carried

out at the Gastonia office is required by the Federal Seed Act. Enacted in 1939, the law calls for accurate labeling and purity stan› dards for seed traders or distributors.

Act. Enacted in 1939, the law

calls for accurate labeling and purity standards for seed traders or distributors. It also

prohibits trading and import› ing adulterated or misbrand› ed seeds.

Seed packages must pro› vide details about plant vari›

High-quality seeds are vital for meeting the needs of individuals as well as businesses that produce food, medicine, textiles

eties, their germination rates,

and many other products

Probably the worst fate a seed company can face is

that we use every day. Cropscan sufferifseeds

noxious weeds and about seed purity, which would in› clude insects and other possi› ble contents. to show up on the list of set›

tled Federal Seed Act cases, also can mount if weed which describes v iolations seeds find their way into and names violators. Seed the packages, or if seeds buyers might shy away from are mislabeled. Problems

are infested with insects

those companies, and com›

or diseases. The larger the scale of planting, as with commer› cial operations, the bigger

petitors might use the infor› mation to promote their own products. Most get a warning at least before showing up on problems c a n b e c ome. the list, Allen said. Growers, for e x ample, But more often violations spend about $5 billion a are the result of lack of edu› year in the U.S. trying to cation or confusion caused control weeds. by variations in seed laws "It’s an important ser› among the states. vice for all consumers of Allen says hi s a gency seed," said Danny Turn› can be a partner for educa› er, seed and fertilizer ad› tion and training, especially ministrator for the North

Carolina Department of Agriculture 8t Consumer Services.

for smaller companies that might have fewer resources

for testing as they develop new products.

"We want t o m ak e sure North Carolina is a "big seed-producing s t a te," that we serve as a resource Turner said, especially to the seed industry," he said. winter wheat and soy› "We have people here with beans. The agency’s ser› expertise in almost any seg› vices can be valuable for ment of the seed industry." seed companies that dis› tribute p r oducts a c ross state lines, he said. Each

state has seed laws to

+cava.

protect against n o xious weeds and other potential

Microwave Hood

hazards. The federal agen›

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015 THE BULLETIN

IN FOCUS: RACEFORTHE WHITE HOUSE

Cascadia

GOP debate:Another Trumpshow or will we see anew star emerge?

Continued from A1

Cascadia earthpuakeimpact zones

The Case adia Subduc› ~ T sunami: Extreme damage

tion Zone, a massive fault

line off the coast of Oregon stretching from Vancouver Island, British Columbia,

By David Lightman SIMI VALLEY, Calif.

Can

while he has strong, often controversial views on social issues, he’s tolerant and un›

MARCO RUBIO

Is his methodical campaign too patient? Rubio has quietly, steadily built his

anyone stop Donald Trump? derstanding of others. Or at least get tough with the JOHN KASICH Republican front-runner’? Will R epublicans w el› Wednesday’s Republican come his center-right views? debate is a crucial test for The g overnor the party’s would-be presi› of Ohio, one of d ents, w h o the last Repub› Rubio ANALYSIS have spent licans to enter the s u mmer

largely in the shadow of the outspoken, often polarizing real estate mogul.

Ben Carson, John Kasich and Carly Fiorina have inched out of t h e

p ack i n r e cent

the race, quick›

ly surged into Kasich sec o nd place in New Hampshire polls. Many voters appreci› ated his down-to-earth style and willingness to challenge conservative orthodoxy. Ri› vals will challenge him on

campaign, figur› ing that as voters

get more serious early next year, they’ ll see what

a smart, reason› able, t elegenic

iO

Care Act. How risky will it be to con› CARLY FIORINA front Trump? Can she continue to shine A lot of answers are like› on national security? The for›

ly as 11 Republicans gather

mer business ex› ecutive’s discus› sion of foreign policy at the Au› gust second-tier

Wednesday at 5 p.m. at the

Ronald Reagan Presidential Library for the campaign’s second debate. The others will

participate in an earlier debate from 3-4:45 p.m. Both will be Fiorina televised on CNN. H ere’s w ha t t h e mai n

debate won her

2012 but his son

seems to be do› i ng l i ttle w i t h it. Or with any› Paul

get him far. He badly needs to stand out this time. CHRIS CHRISTIE

stro n g n o tices. Can he get noticed? Hard This time she’ s to think the big, blustery gov› e rnor o f

event’s contenders need to do being insulted by Trump for her appearance. Will she take DONALD TRUMP

Can he expand his sup› p ort? Trump ha s wo n t h e

backing from a solid 30 percent

of Republicans in most polls, but huge blocs of other voters view him unfa› vorably. T h at’ s

Ne w

Jersey has been i nvisible, b u t

to stand out:

Tier One: The front-runner

thing else. Paul got aggressive in

the August debate, but it didn’ t

in center court, fresh from him on? Will she stand out?

h e seemed al l

Tier Three: Stuck

but forgotten in the last debate.

JEB BUSH

C hristie

Can he energize his cam› paign’? The former Florida g overnor w a s supposed to be most viable alternative

to

Trump, thanks to his family’ s pol iti c a l

The for m a t i s not hi s f r i end,

since Christie’s plainspoken tough-guy persona can’t break through when it’s only visible for minutes at a time. MIKE HUCKABEE Can he expand his constitu›

ency? The former governor of

n et›

Arkansas has as›

politically toxic, and Trump w ork and h i s needs to show he can ex› ability to raise big money. He

siduously courted social conserva› tives, appearing

pand his constituency. Watch whether he seems more intent

Bush

retains strong potential, but

so farhe has failed to break with K e n tucky on being presidential or being out of the pack. He needs to court derk Kim entertaining. Is he more ea› forget Trump show what he Huckabee D a v is, jailed after ger to offer policy details or stands for, and rally voters she refused to is› tweetable sound bites? looking for a s u bstantive sue marriage licenses to same›

Tier Two: Moving up BEN CARSON Can he come off as presi›

dential? He got good notices from conserva›

alternative. TED CRUZ

How does he separate him› self from Trump? No one has been h ur t as

They appreci› ated the retired Cruz

needs to show command of

front-runner, and c onfront›

ti-Washington candidate, but

month. The governor of Wis›

consin needs to establish him› self as a thoughtful would-be commander in chief.

describes like having a can› didate pretend to "test the wa› ters" of a candidacy for months

Court’s Citizens United deci›

unteers can help court donors

for independent super PACs even whether a candidate

could be the "special guest" at a super PAC "fundraiser" with as few as two donors. The

commission’s answer could have profound ramifications for the 2016 campaign, par› ticularly for Democrats who,

like Hillary Rodham Clinton, have beenreluctantto engage too closely with super PAC

fundraising. In seeking the commis› sion’s guidance on the tactics, Democrats contend that most of the activities their request

on end while raising money› appear to violate the law. But if

’m

iffledtord ’ Ka ; l m a al l s 1

Source: Oregon Department of Emergency Management

The Bulletin file map

Updateddisaster playdook Gov. Kate Brown is expected to present the latest version of the Cascadia Playbook, anemergency management tool for the expected Cascadia earthquake, today. Theplaybook will help co› ordinate various rescueand recovery efforts in the first 14 days of the expected natural disaster.

position to help," said Ryan H ansen, whose job is t o

analyze potential hazards in the state and how best to

"Start noW. HaVea mObile 72-hour kit and a two-week kit at home."

otherEastern Oregon com-

Sgt. Nathan Garibay, Deschutes County Sheriff Office’s

munities in the state will

emergency service manager

help with the recovery." Garibay said Central Or› egonians shouldplanahead cent of the state’s hospital beds for a disruption in the sup› will be eliminated immediate› ply of goods and services ly," he said. and expect a rush of evac› Hospitals in Eugene, Salem, uees from areas worst hit Corvallis and Portland could by the natural disaster, in› all be destroyed, he said, and cluding a good number who Medford’s hospitals could be need medical services. damaged. "All of our fuel comes "Bend and Klamath Falls f rom th e P or t o f P o r t › look to be the two shows in land, and there’s very little town ready to take a lot of peo› chance that facility sur› ple," Garibay said. vives," said Garibay, a for› The Redmond Airport and mer Redmond police officer the Deschutes County Fair & who has been the county’s

Expo Center

NS. Forest Service) Redmond Air Center and the Fair & Expo Center.

"You’ ve seen the firefighter campgrounds durmg wtld› fires?" he continued. "Cascadia will be a wildland fire camp› ground on steroids. Every pub› lic space in the tri-county area will be utilized." The best thing Central Ore›

gonians can do, Ryan Hansen and Garibay said, is to be pre› pared and not take aid away

from harder hit portions of the

the largest fair

emergency services manag› and expo center in the state, ac› er for two years. cording to Garibay are also "We had ga s s tations expected tobe critical players in run out gas in February the state’s disaster relief efforts. "The hub, that’s not only Red› 2014 when we had that big snowstorm," he said. mond’s logo, but FEMA (the "Imagine what will happen Federal Emergency Manage› when Cascadia destroys the ment Agency) and the state of coast." Oregon have designated us as St. Charles Health Sys› an incident supply base," said tem hospitals will likely Garibay, who added that state play a major role in the officials expect about 25,000 state’s recovery, Garibay fatalities from the quake. ’The added. airport is built on stable, rocky "We estimate that 65 per›

state. "We’ ve got a moral duty to

not take resources from other partsofOregon,"Garibay said. "And we need to be prepared to

take in friends and family from those other parts of the state. "Start now," Garibay told

the audience. "Have a mobile 72-hour kit and a two-week kit at home. You don’t have to put

everything together overnight, butyoucanoverthenextyear." — Reporter: 541-617-7829,

basalt, and it’s right next to the

beastes@bendbullet in.corn

T he m o s t T A S T E F V L w a y t o encR the s e a s o n

had three differ›

work at Per› are tailored to the candidate kins Coie, the marquee Demo› or group requesting them and cratic election firm, which also do not carry the force of reg› represents the party’s congres› ulation, they often act as legal sional campaign committees, guideposts for other candi› the presidential campaign of dates and groups. Clinton and a Democratic su› If the commission bans per PAC supporting her. Elias some or all of the activities, declined to comment beyond much of the Republican pres› the filing. idential field could face sig› The six-member FEC nificant legal risk. Approval, which by law can have no on the other hand, could lead more than three commission› to a major expansion of super ers from one party has not PACs in the Democratic Party, yet acted on an array of legal not only in House and Senate challenges and complaints races, but also in the presiden› filed by watchdog groups in re› tial campaign. "I’m somewhat skeptical of cent months over the activities of presidential campaigns and the Democratic Party’s mo› their super PACs. And while tives," said Lawrence Noble, independent groups are an a senior counsel of the Cam› ever-growing portion of elec› paign Legal Center, which has tion spending, the commission sought FEC sanctions against has been unable to come to a group of 2016 candidates for an agreement on comprehen› alleged campaign violations. sive new rules for the groups, "They’ re probably trying a which arose after the Supreme combination to embarrass

Continued from A1 Most strikingly, the lawyers are asking the FEC to clarify how declared candidates, their campaign staff, and their vol›

Burns

Co Bay I

play an important role in

a Redmond Patriots’ talk, which was open to the pub› lic. "This community and

en

I

1

perts agreed that the Bend and Redmond areas will

prepare for them. She and Garibay were speaking at

Onta ’o

Eu~e’

SCOTT WALKER Can he demonstrate some

so has Trump. Cruz has been ent positions on birthright cit› careful not to criticize the izenship in a single week last

the intricacies of national ing him would risk alienating security and economic is› his followers. But how does sues. He also must show that Cruz distinguish himself?

Super PACs

show moremainstream appeal?

depth? Walker’s had a rough s ummer. H i s ator from Texas Iowa poll lead by Trump’s rise. not only evapo› Cruz has fash› rated, but he fell ioned h i mself to 10th place in as the sharp› last week’s Quin› t ongued, a n › Walker nipiac poll. He

neurosurgeon’s qui e t style , deeply felt faith and ability to talk issues in some depth. Carson now C arson

sex couples. Can Huckabee

much as the sen›

t ives after t h e f irst deb a t e .

sr

the state’s recovery efforts. "Redmond will be in a

weeks, but can they demon› RAND PAUL strate the gravitas to become Where is he? Paul’s father serious players’? Can Jeb Bush, those views, notably his deci› rallied a devoted libertarian Rand Paul, Scott Walker and sion to support Medicaid ex› constituency other big names mired in po› pansion under the Affordable when he ran in litical quicksand climb out?

N ’I co

was 315 years ago. "A catastrophic earth› quake will absolutely hap› pen in Oregon," Ryan Han› sen said. While Central Oregon isn’t expected to experience nearlythe damage as the lamette Valley, the two ex›

+ Redmond airport could become a hubfor emergency workers as the state recovers. f

’I

’ +Mern

said. The last such quake

Oregon Coast and the Wil›

Redmond

Portlan .

sive earthquake every 300 to 400 years, Ryan Hansen

is similar to Bush’s break away from the Trump orbit and explain why he should be president.

Tier Four. Teetering

toria

’ 1n

to Northern California, has

candidate he is. His mission

V a l ley: Moderate damage ~ C entral and Eastern: Light damage

~ C oastal: Heavy damage

historically caused a mas› McClatchy Washington Bureau

BREWER’ G RE aLT G O L F

i

’i G R E A T

S E E R

A PMA N i

G R E AT

P O O D

Rachel Jacobs

sion in 2010. Democrats have generally federal regulators determine called for tighter restrictions on that such practices are legal, super PACs, seeking new rules the lawyers wrote, Democrat› legislatively and even going to ic candidates up and down the court to force the commission ballot are prepared to adopt to act. But the new request these tactics in the coming takes a very different tack: In months, a blunt admission that effect, the lawyers are argu› the party cannot compete ef› ing, the commission’s inaction fectively if it forgoes campaign threatens to put Democrats at a and fundraising tactics widely competitive disadvantage. "The PACs have serious used by Republicans. The legal questions at hand, doubts about the permissibil› accordingto the emergency ity of many of the activities," request, "are highly signifi› the lawyers w r ote. "Clear cant and time-sensitive." Dem› guidance from the FEC will ocratic groups, the lawyers provide legal assurance to the wrote, "cannot cede strategic PACs and help guide the PACs’ advantage to their political actions going forward." competitors." If the commissioners agree, The lawyers signing the they could issue what is known request Mark Elias, Ezra as an advisory opinion within Reese, Jonathan Berkon and 30 days. While such opinions

Plu s

som e c raf t

In this Chapman style format, your two-person team will

enjoy two rounds of competition, plus a practice round, on Broken Top’s championship golf course.

f C e n Cr a l Or e g o n 's b e s t b r e w s a l l 3 ckags! You’ ll enjoy three full› days of FREE beer tastings from Central Oregon’s finest craft breweries. Enjoy four specialty meals including a paired Brewer’ s dinner with Broken Top’s Culinary Team d’Elegance.

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the Republicans and also to

have an excuse for doing it themselves." Should t h e

co m m ission

deadlock on the request by re› fusing to act on it or splitting in a 3-3 vote, Noble said, "most of

the aggressive lawyers will say it gives them a green light" to engage in similar tactics. Republican super PACs have raised or committed hun› dreds of millions of dollars in the 2016 election cycle, in part by tightening their relation› ships with candidates, whose

personal ties to donors can pave the way for rapid fund› raising by the groups. All told, they have raised many times more money than Democratic

groups, though Republicans are also likely to burn through more super PAC cash during the nominating battles ahead.

A5

DESCHUTES BREWERY pgo ~an1988

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TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

Rangeland

Womandiesin Californiadlaze

Continued fromA1 "We’ re picking up cows that should have calves with no calves. We assume they might

Cooler weather and a clearing sky allowed firefighters to unleash new aerial attacks on Northern California’s two major fires Monday, but officials warned that the blazes that have killed at least one person andburned hundreds of homessince last week may bejust the beginning of California’s fire problems. "We don’t see anend to fire season for months to come," Cal Fire Director Ken Pimlott said Monday as the state marshaled an army of 11,000 firefighters to battle 12 major blazes

have died out there," said Hol›

liday, who is still missing 22 of his 180 cow-calf pairs. He’ s among dozens of ranchers similarly wrestling with the loss of animals and grazing land in a region where cattle

production is one of the lead› ing agricultural industries. .rl›

The vast majority of the 1.6

rus

million acres nearly 2,600 square miles that burned in Oregon, Idaho and Wash› ington this year are federally owned, data show, with large

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Old wooden headgates are located at the site of the Cline Falls concrete dam on the Deschutes River in Redmond.

Plant

PacifiCorp, told Miller during a hearing. PacifiCorp re›

Continued fromA1 The 1913 lease was origi› nally set up to allow for irriga› tion water to be delivered to a

moved what it believes to be

nearby 800-acre ranch while

yard," according to the motion filed by McGair.

allowing for a hydroelectric plant operated by W.C. Sivyer, PacifiCorp’s predecessor. In 1942, the lease was amended and new equipment and build›

The lawsuit against Pacifi›

Corp also highlights construc› tion of a concrete dam in 1955,

which COID alleges was never authorized or permitted. Attorneys for COID have ar› Following the new dam, gued that PacifiCorp breached w hich wa s c o nstructed i n the lease by leaving behind the front of the former wooden dams, headgate, flume, pen› dam, more water was used to stock, powerhouse and other generate electricity than what parts of the former plant. was allowed by the water The civil complaint filed in right, according to COID. "I believe it highly implausible July 2014 describes the struc› ings were constructed.

and dangerous."

ed permission to PacifiCorp to construct a dam or other facili›

"These installations served no purpose other than to gen› ties at the site if PacifiCorp had

erate electricity as part of a single electric generating system, and the lease did not contemplate such a system re›

revealed that the facility design required more water than al› lowed by the water right," Craig Horrell, COID’s district manag›

maining with the land at the conclusion of the lease," the

er, wrote in a court statement.

Complex alone, 125 of the 170

The jury will also have to

sort out whether PacifiCorp t h e s t ructures at is responsible for cleaning up Cline Falls are in very poor contaminants at the site. "All of

condition and should be re› Environmental testing has moved by PacifiCorp," Mat› shown hydrocarbons from thew Singer, an attorney for discharged oil and pentachlo› COID, said Monday. rophenol and polychlorinat› PacifiCorp attorneys told ed biphenyls, also known as Deschutes County C ircuit PCB, according to Singer. "There are i dentifiable Judge Walter Miller last week that the lease doesn’t require PCBs in the area of the former removal of the dams, build› t ransformer yard, w hich i s ings and what the compa› very common in electric trans› ny believes to be ancillary mission sites," Singer said. "Removing everything is

s omething COID

Miller is expected to make a

ruling on PacifiCorp’s motion

c a n’t r e › in the next few weeks. — Reporter: 541-617-7820,

quest," Kimberley Hanks Mc› Gair, an attorney defending

the mountainous terrain. But,

att Prescott of the Idaho Cattle Association. Those who can’ t

tsttorack@bendbulletin.corn

llSoy ONEr

Cehoeo~late Mierofiber Sefa

| I

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consumed more than700 square miles. The two latest the Butte Fire that broke out Wednesday and is burning in Amador andCalaveras counties, and theValley Fire that erupted Saturday in Lake County have destroyed hundreds of homes and killed at least one LakeCounty woman. "We only haveone confirmation," said Mark Ghilarducci, director of the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, "but we do havepeople who are unaccounted for." The woman confirmed killed in the fire wasan elderly, disabled resident of the Cobbarea whowas unable to get out of her home.

of their cows to produce the

best beef. Liquidating part of their herd is something they try to avoid at all costs," Prescott said.

His group is facilitating a confidential online p asture

exchange where farmers who have land out of production can lease it to those who lost

their grazing grounds. Idaho rancher Brenda Rich› ards, who runs about 500 cow›

calf pairs, lost 95 percent of her grazing allotment to the Soda Fire.

— The SacramentoBee

the severity of the wildfires.

Environmental groups say more grazing would have in› creasedsoilerosion and ripar-

ian damage, removed native grasses and increased fire risk. Federal officials stand in the middle: grazing, they say, may helpslow some fires'spread, but it won’t make a difference in extreme weather.

’When you have high winds, grazing won’t stop or slow that fire," said Jessica Gardetto with the Bureau of

Land Management.

LEATHER MATCH Power Recliner

AND ONLY

r

in the state that have

affordfeed,he said,are sending their animals to sale yards. "Producers spend genera› tions developing the genetics

"Ranching is the strength square miles burned were he said, the winds picked up grazing allotments, said Mal› and the fire exploded, so "we of these local communities, heur National Forest range› had to get ourselves out of that’s our tax base," Richards land management specialist there." said, adding that the fire has Nick Stiner. Some 4,000 cows In total, eight of his cows been devastating, but it also ranged on those allotments, he and four calves died and 20 brought out local ties. "It was said. are still unaccounted for a amazingtowatch peoplecome And in the Soda Fire in lossoftensofthousands ofdol- together." southwest Idaho, that state’ s lars. He’s also treating calves Cattle associations and pri› biggest fire this year,280 of the and cows with burnt feet, se› vate groups are now collecting 430 square miles burned were vere body burns and respirato› hay and distributing it to those federal grazing allotments and ry problems. who lost rangeland. "They’ re kind of like family another75 square miles were In Eastern Oregon, convoys privategrazing lands,accord- ... you care for them all their of trucks have hauled in about ing to the National Interagen› life, so you hate for anything to 600 tons of hay from donors cy Fire Center. happen to them," he said. inside and outside the state to a In addition to rangeland lost, Grumbach said he doesn’ t storagesetupbynewlyform ed ranchers and ranching groups have enough unburned private group Hay for John Day, a say hundreds of cows have land to feed his cattle; his cows town just northwest of t he perished and millions of dol› are now eating hay meant for Strawberry Mountain Range. lars’ worth of hay stacks and winter feed. And because of The historic fire season has barns has gone up in flames. the drought, he doesn’t have as also rekindled a long-running "We're hearing lots of re- much hay as usual, he said. debate. ports of displaced cattle and Many ranchers like Grum› Ranchers say the federal grazing grounds that are no bach aredesperately looking government should have al› longer usable," said Kayli Han› for pastures and hay, said Wy› lowed moregrazing to reduce

complaint states.

infrastructure.

ing groups they’ ve lost hundreds of cows and millions of dollars in hay stacks and barns to wildfires.

as rangeland for livestock grazmg. ley of the Oregon Cattlemen’s Many of H olliday’s re› Association, which says many covered animals have burnt ranchers are still assessing hooves or are lame from walk› damage and looking for lost ing on hot coals, he said. Miles cows. of fences have burned. And the In northern W ashington land, for which Holliday pays state, where the Okanogan a fee, will likely be dosed to Complex burned about 475 grazing for at least two years square miles and is considered while it recovers, he said. the largest wildfire in state his› That’s left him scrambling tory, rancher Doug Grumbach to figure out how to feed the found the burned carcasses of cows. several cows on a hill among "We’ ve been ranching here smoldering trees. all our lives," said Holliday, One ofthose cows became whose father started grazing wedged between two trees try› cattle in the area in 1942. "To ing to flee the flames. watch it totally destroyed, you When the fire started last get sick to your stomach every month, the fourth-generation day you go out there." rancher was on his way to In Oregon’s Canyon Creek move the cows dispersed in

and voltage transformation

that COID ... would have grant›

hay collection site in JohnDay this month. Ranchers and ranch›

swaths of that public land used

the electric generating equip› ment: "the turbine, generator

tures as "useless, hazardous

Angel Carpenter /The Blue Mountain Eagle via The Associated Press

Jeremy Whittaker, left, and Shane Smith, of Culver, work at the

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

' www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

rinevi e man ea snot ui inrecent roo eat rhahF. Ih

By Claire Withycombe

use of a weapon in Crook

The Bulletin

County Circuit Court. Crook County Chief Deputy District

A Prineville man pleaded not guilty to murder Monday in the death of James Scott,

a 39-year-old

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

Bork, according to court re› cords. The indictment states

late wife, Alicia Scott, was

Donovan attempted to use,

Deschutes County Circuit

Court’s Family Drug Court in 2008, after a lengthy struggle

By Tyler Leeds

with methamphetamines, ac›

The city of Bend is $80 million behind on road

off Southeast Davis Loop in Prineville, according to

carry or possess a .45 Hi Point gun with the intent to use it unlawfully against Bork. Donovan appeared in court Monday via video from the Jefferson County jail, where he is being held without bail. He is represented by Bend at›

the Crook County Sheriff’s

torney Thaddeus Betz and is

two months, according to the

task of a committee repre› senting a diverse range of

Office. The state also alleges Don›

due back in court for a status hearing next month.

Oregon State Police.

interests.

Attorney Aaron Brenneman

said he could not provide de› tails on the case Monday.

Christmas Val›

Scott was killed early in

ley man found dead Sept.3. Michael Cory

the morning Sept. 3, and his

Donovan, 25,

Donovnn

wa s indicted Friday on one counteach ofm urder,attempted murder and unlawful

body was found in a truck

ovan attempted to kill Kindr

Scott, along with his

among the first graduates of

cording to Bulletin archives. Alicia Scott, 35, was found

lenge of finding a way to

near Lake Ewauna on March 26 and had been missing for

close that gap is now the

— Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.corn

the state of city roads and finances. Final say on how

J

to tackle the problem rests

with the full City Council, but the committee has been charged with draft› ing two funding packag›

BUILDINGSTARTS TO TAKE

SHAPE ATOSU-CASCADES Nearly three months into con› struction, crews havebegun work on the academic building on the OSU-Cascades campus offSouthwest Century Drive in Bend. This week, forms are being cast with concrete to create the skeleton of the 44,000-square-foot building, complete with stairwells and anele› vator shaft, said SamStiers, project engineer with Portland-based For› tis Construction, the general con› tractor on the academic building. That work is expected to bedone by the end of the month. Plans for the 10-acre campus also include a residencehall and dining complex. On Monday, excavationcrews prepared to tap into awater line on Chandler Avenue.Flaggers will be directing traffic on Chandler Avenue through Friday, but the road is not expected to close. As construction continues, so do the legal challenges to stop it. Opponents argue thedevelopment does not adhere to the city’s devel› opmentcode,andthecaseisbefore the OregonCourt of Appeals.

Oregon:Eight Oregon home-schoolers are National Merit semifinalists,B3 Pnrtlnntl:Authorities

recover abodyfromthe Willamette River,B3

Pnrtlnntl:PSU receives $3.5M to study e-cigarettes,B3

es, one that focuses on draws on new revenue

s

from a gas tax, something voters would have to approve. Assistant City Manager Jon Skidmore began Mon› day’s meeting by saying the time is ripe for the city

to tackle road funding. "We spent a lot of the

last eight to 10 years fo› cusing on sewer and water infrastructure projects, but now is the time to focus Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

4 View from theground C onstruc› tion crews with Taylor Northwest prepare to connect a water line for the OSU-Cas› cades campu~ Monday.

Or SubmiSSiOn?

Contact us!

The Bulletin Call n reporter

cused on maintenance."

This aerial photo, taken before the site was chosen for an OSUcampus, shows the area as it was; we’ve superimposed OSU-Cascades’ site plan over it, representing the general design of

emphasized the commit›

Libby Barg, a meeting facilitator hired by the city,

r TS

. HASF. g-.~

Submissions Letters andopinions:

and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0367

School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneral interest to news@bendbulletin.corn. Email announcements ofteens’ academic achievements to youth@bendbulletin.corn. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletln.corn. Contact: 541-633-2117

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

Community events: Visit bettdbulletin.corn/events and click "AddEvent" at least10

days beforepublication. Details on the calendarpageinside Local andGO!Magazine. contact: 541-383-0351, communitylife@bendbulletin.corn

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

Sources: OSU-Cascades site plan, Bulletin reporting

tee’s role isn’t so much to find a perfect solution as to explore the available

options. "Reaching consensus isn’t the point for this

group," she said. "What the City Council wants to do is to understand the dif›

ferent options available." SeeCommittee/B5

Dry Gulch fire nears 20 square miles

Pumice mine site

.

talking about everything within the right of way, in› cluding for vehicles, bikes, (pedestrians) and transit, though we’ re primarily fo›

View from above

46 acres

Deschutes.............541-e17-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831

on transportation infra› structure," he said. "We’ re

Construction crews work on thebeginning phase of the academic building on the OSU-Cascades west-side campus Mondayafternoon. Thesite is off Southwest Century Drive at Chandler Avenue.

Have a story idea

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

shifting around existing revenue and another that

llll

I

Civic Calendarnotices:

At the group’s first meeting Monday, the

discussed their role and

STATE NEWS

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

maintenance.The chal-

dead in the Klamath River

members and two par› ticipating city councilors

Mottefire news, Af

Email: letters@bendbulletin.corn Mait My NickersWorth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-633-2117

The Bulletin

committee’s 12 appointed

1. Oven Acres: 1,100 Containment: 100% Cause: Human 2. County Line 2 Acres: 67,207 Containment: 97% Cause: Unknown 3. Canyon Creek Complex Acres: 110,422 Containment: 90% Cause: Lightning 4. National Creek Complex Acres: 16,744 Containment: 70% Cause: Lightning

Salem .................. 406-589-4347 Business............... 541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health ...................54t-383-0304 Public lands.......... 541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

New panel tackleshow to fund road fixes inBend

The Bulletin

The Associated Press BAKER CITY

Relationshipsblossomin sheriff’s office program Adult volunteers WOrk With kidSWho

there was a 12-year-old girl in need of a partnership. Schneider took her on.

How togetinvolved

COPY will offer a free orientation and training class Sept. 26 for "We clicked pretty quickly," volunteers interested in mentoring. Registration is required in ad› Schneider said, recalling meet› vance. For more information, call 541-388-6551 or email COPY' ing Alyssa Marshall, who now deschutes.org. is 18. Marshall signed up for the By Kniley Fisicaro program at her dad’s encour› The Bulletin can’t believe a year already agement when her mom was Over the past few years, Over more than 10 years, a sentenced to two years in went by,’" Moore said, adding Schneider saw Marshall tran› program that matches adult prison. there are ongoing relation› sition from an animal-loving "When my mom was in volunteers with children who ships between mentors and little girl into an artist and have incarcerated family prison, 1 didn’t really have a mentees that began as far back high school graduate. Mar› members has seen some last› female figure to look up to," as 2005. shall completed her senior ing relationships. Marshall said. The bonding sessions in› year at Summit High School That’s what the program is Julie Schneider, 45, is a psy› clude a range of activities. in June. chologist who lives in Bend. In meant to do, said Bob Moore, Schneider and Marshall be› With help from Schneider, COPY’s project coordinator. she’ ll begin taking classes at 2010, she enrolled in the De› gan by volunteering together schutes County Sheriff’s Office Mentors fill in for the caregiv› at the Central Oregon Hu› Central Oregon Community program Central Oregon Part› ers kids are missing. Signing mane Society or taking walks College this fall. "The stuff she talked about nerships for Youth, or COPY, up for the program is a one› in the woods together. During as it’s commonly known. She year commitment, but adults these times, Marshall began really shifted from, ’1 need help,’ to ’1 need to get a letter liked working with adoles› who volunteer get something openingup toherm entor. "For awhile, she talked a lot cents, which is something the out of it, too. At the anniver› of recommendation for this program needed. Schneider sary of each mentor'sstartat about stuff that was going on scholarshi p,'"Schneidersaid, got matched up with an ado› COPY, Moore makes time to at home," Schneider said, add› adding that it was a good lescent who quickly moved on. meet for coffee, to check in and ing that over time, Marshall feeling to be that person for "blossomed into this much But when a friend who also see if they’d like to re-enroll. Marshall. "Almost always it’s like, ’1 mentored in the program died, healthier person." SeeCOPY /B5

have incarcerated family members

An

Eastern Oregon wildfire has grown to nearly 20 square miles. The Dry Gulch fire is burning northwest of Richland. Crews are trying to stop it from spreading farther east into the rugged terrain near the Snake River. Gov. Kate Brown on

Monday mobilized fire crews fromother areas of

the state to protect homes and businesses in the fire’s path. No houses have burned, but evacuation notices is›

sued Sunday by the Baker County Sheriffs Office remain in effect. The Baker City Herald reports that 137

homes are under Level 3 evacuation, which means immediate evacuation is

recommended. Baker County Commis› sioner Mark Bennett said

county and American Red Crossofficialsareprepared to set up an emergency shel› ter, if it becomes necessary. Lighter winds and cooler temperatures helped fire› fighters Monday morning. Rain is possible Tuesday morning.


B2

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

E VENT TODAY LUNCH &LECTURE:CREATING BY HANDTHROUGH MEMORY: Join Vivian Adams, Yakama Indian and co-curator of By Hand Through Memory, as she recounts the design and intended messages of this exhibit; noon; $9-$15; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond;541-550-0066.

WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NW Brooks St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket. corn or 541-408-4998. AUTHOR &AGENT PRESENTATION: Learn tips and tricks from Linda Stirling; 6:30 p.m.; Aspen Ridge Retirement Community, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend; www. centraloregonwritersguild.corn or 541-548-4138. JOE BUCK YOURSELF: The Kentucky band performs, with Third Seven; $5plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY "AVENUE O,THEMUSICAL": A modernmusicalcomedy abouta group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs and their purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27- $38 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. AMY LAVERE: Thesongwriter from Memphis performs, with Downhill Ryder; 8 p.m.; $5 plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. JEREMIAHCOUGHLAN AND BEN HARKINS:Featuring a finalist in the 2015 Oregon’s Funniest comic contest and a semi-finalist in The 2014 and 2015 Portland’s Funniest

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.

Person Contest; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage, 125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www. bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111.

FRIDAY SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locall y made goodsand more;2 p.m.; Barclay Park, Hood Street, between Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. UNCORKEDSUNRIVER STYLE: Featuring more than a dozenOregon wineries, live music, a comedy show and more; 3 p.m.; $18, $23 two day pass, $5 for non-drinking entry; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; www.bendticket. corn or 541-585-3147. BEND OKTOBERFEST: Featuring

food, beer, livemusic, games, tricycle and weiner dog races and more; 5 p.m.; Downtown Bend, Oregon Avenue, Bend; www.bendoktoberfest.corn or 541-788-3628. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The

Submitted photo

Scratchdog Stringband, a bluegrass/Americana-roots band from Portland, will perform Friday at Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards.

bluegrass/Americana-roots group

purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27-$38 from Portland performs; 6 p.m.; $5; plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, org or 541-317-0700. Terrebonne; 541-350-5383. "AN IDEALHUSBAND":A play FOURTHANNUALTCBCCHILE about Sir Robert Chiltern; his wife, FEST BENEFIT:Featuring a chili cook-off, a wing-eating contest and Gertrude; and Mrs. Cheveley; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, more to benefit the American Cancer $13 for students; Cascades Society; 6 p.m.; free, donations Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., accepted; Three Creeks Brewing Bend; cascadestheatrical.org or Co., 721 Desperado Court, Sisters; 541-389-0803. 541-549-1963. MIKE LOVE:The Hawaiian roots› AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Barbara reggae artist performs; 9 p.m.; Drake presents her new book $8 plus fees inadvance, $10at "Morning Light," about living on the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, a small farm in rural Oregon for 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 30 years; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or Springs Books, 252 W. Hood St., Sisters; www.paulinasprings.corn or 541-323-1881. 541-549-0866. BREWS ANDBANDS:A tribute to SATURDAY Hank Williams, American singer MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: songwriter and musician; 7 p.m.; Featuring food, drinks, live music Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 and more; 9 a.m.; Sahalee Park, NW Pence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; 541-728-0703. 541-546-6778. "AVENUE O,THEMUSICAL": A NWX SATURDAYFARMER’S modernmusicalcomedy abouta MARKET:Featuring local organic group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs and their artisans in produce, meats, baked

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

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at 7:08 p.m.Aug. 28, in the 19700 block of Baneberry Avenue. Unauthorized use Avehicle was reported stolen at 9:24 p.m.Sept. 8, in the 20000 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:06 a.m. Sept. 9, in the2700 block of NE 27th Street. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 1:29 a.m. Sept. 10, in thearea of NW Riverside Boulevard andNW Broadway Street. DUII Steven JamesHarvath, 62, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:29a.m. Sept. 10, in the areaof NW Riverside Boulevard andNW Broadway Street. Burglary A burglary was reported at 3:18 a.m. Sept.10, in the 1200 block of NE Sixth Street. Burglary A burglary was reported at 5:26 a.m. Sept.10, in the 63300 block of Vogt Road. Burglary A burglary was reported at 7:31 p.m. Sept. 10, in the100block of SW TrumanAvenue. Theft A theft was reported at 9:51 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 500 block of SW Hillwood Court. DUII Josiah Demarcus Cooper, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:03 p.m. Sept. 10, in thearea ofSW Chamberlain Street and SW Cleveland Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at 7:20 a.m. Sept. 11, in the20600 block of Beaumont Drive. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 12:13 p.m. Sept. 11, in thearea of NE Purcell and NE Lotus Drive. Theft A theft was reported at1:02 p.m. Sept. 11, in the1700 block of SE Ironwood Court. Theft A theft was reported at10:58 a.m. Sept. 12, in the 1500block of NW Awbrey Road. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 3:56 p.m. Sept. 12, in thearea of NE Providence Drive and NE Barrington Court. DUII Brian Haley, 33, wasarrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:49 a.m. Sept. 11, in the area ofBearCreek Road andSkyline ViewDrive. Theft A theft was reported at 2:28 p.m. Sept. 11, in the20600 block of

Brinson Boulevard. DUII GayeHauk Lawson, 67,was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:51 p.m. Sept.11, intheareaof NE Division Street and NE Revere Avenue. Burglary A burglary was reported at 6:41 a.m. Sept.12, in the 900 block of NE Sixth Street. Theft A theft was reported at10:09 a.m. Sept. 12, in the 63400 block of U.S. Highway97. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at 2:45 p.m. Sept. 12, in the 1000 block of SWDonovan Avenue. DUII Matthew Steven Ayres, 31, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:21 p.m. Sept.9, inthe2500 block of NE TwinKnolls Drive. Theft A theft was reported at 7:47 p.m. Sept. 8, in the 21200block of U.S. Highway 20. Theft A theft was reported at 9:20 p.m. Sept. 11, in the21200 block of E. U.S. Highway20.

DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

20TH ANNUALFAMILYFUN DAY — MODELRAILROAD SHOW:Featurn ig an open house with 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. UNCORKEDSUNRIVER STYLE: Featuring more than a dozenOregon

wineries, live music, acomedy show 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 NW Crossing drives, Bend; www. nwxfarmersmarket.corn or 541-383-4360. BEND OKTOBERFEST: Featuring food, beer, live music, games,

JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF’8 OFFICE Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at9:22 p.m. Sept. 8, in the area of Highway 97near milepost110. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:45 p.m. Sept. 9, in the 600block of Mountain Ridge Drive. DUII Joseph Bobby Daugherty, 18, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:45 p.m. Sept. 9, in the 600block of Mountain Ridge Drive. Theft A theft was reported at 8:20 a.m. Sept. 10, in the 500block of E. D Street. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at 5:19 p.m.Sept. 10, in the area of Jefferson Avenueand Eighth Street. Burglary A burglary and theft were reported at 8:08 a.m.Sept.11, in the 300blockofNE MeadowlarkLane.

BEND FIRE RUNS

Thursday 12:42 p.m. Confined cooking fire, 20599 Chivas Place. Theft A theft was reported at 6:57 7:31 p.m. Smoke odor reported, a.m. Sept. 10, in the 6200 block of NW area of BakerRoad. Atkinson Avenue. 28 Medical aid calls. Theft A theft was reported at 8:59 Friday a.m. Sept. 10, in the 25300 block of 3:18a.m. Building fire, 19470 Lone Walker Road. Cow Drive. Theft A theft was reported at10:11 2:44 p.m. Brush or brush-and› a.m. Sept. 10, in the 25300 block of grass mixture fire, area of15th and Walker Road. Knott Road. Theft A theft was reported at11 7:02p.m. Unauthorized burning, a.m. Sept. 10, in the 16000 block of 66500 Gerking Market Road. Leona Lane. 12 Medical aid calls. Theft A theft was reported at 3:17 Saturday p.m. Sept. 10, in the51500 block of Ash Road. 7:41 p.m. Authorized controlled burning, 64055 Pioneer Loop. Theft A theft was reported at 4:45 p.m. Sept. 10, in the 8100block of11th 29 Medical aid calls. Street. Sunday DUII Robert Earl Carmichael, 73, 6:51 p.m. Smoke odor reported, was arrested on suspicion of driving area of Choctaw Road. under the influence of intoxicants at 10:47 p.m. Building fire, 19083 8:23 p.m. Sept. 10, in the14800 block Saddleback Lane. of Laurel Road. 26 Medical aid calls.

7:30 p.m.; $20,$16for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. BUSTIN’ JIEBER:The jazz-funk band from Eugene performs, with That Coyote; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; 541-323-1 881.

SUNDAY 20TH ANNUALFAMILYFUN DAY MODELRAILROAD SHOW:Featuri ng an open house with 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. DOWN SYNDROME CONNECTION OF CENTRALOREGON BUDDY WALK:Featuring a walk, activities and more to kick off the start of

Down Syndrome Awareness Month in October;10a.m.; $10, free for kids and VIP; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www. dscco.org or 541-678-2704. "AN IDEALHUSBAND": A play about Sir Robert Chiltern; his wife, Gertrude; and Mrs. Cheveley; 2

p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. FOURTHANNUALTCBCCHILE FEST BENEFIT:Featuring a chili cook-off, a wing-eating contest and more to benefit the American Cancer Society; 3 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Court, Sisters; 541-549-1963. BERN VOLCANICCONCERT FUNDRAISER:Live music from The Sweatband, Bravey Don and Bill Valenti, all ages welcome, to benefit Central Oregon for Sanders; 5:30p.m.;$5 suggested donation; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-749-0944.

4.7 magnitudeearthquakeshakes northwest Nevadafor 2ndtime in year By Sally Ho The Associated Press

Another 4.7magnitude earthquake hit northwest

event east of Fallon that hit in 1954 with two magnitude 7 earthquakes that came four minutes apart. Nevada is the third m ost seismically active state in the

borders.

i

since the thousands of earth›

country behind California and

of August, brought the total to

The quake hit the area

more than 5,600 earthquakes. about 6:55 a.m. Monday, Cassarsaid there’s noimmeaccording to the University

Alaska.

diate indication of what’s next

of Nevada’s Reno Nevada giventhe latest quake. "We don't have any concluSeismological Laboratory. At least five a ftershocks sions that are being drawn," he

of magnitude 2 or greater were recorded in the three

said."Nevada’s kind of known for these kindsof long-trend-

hours that followed.

1Ilg SWBXIIls.

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUCTION

Mickey Cassar, a techOfficials have said that a nician who tracks earth› swarm of thousands of little

DEsIGN 0 BUILD 0 REMQDEL

quakes at the lab, said there

earthquakes could eventually

haven’ tbeen reports of injuriesor damage.

leadto abig one.

803 sw Industrial way, Bend, oR

Three magnitude 7.0earth-

quakes each century and one was about 6 miles below magnitude6.0or larger each ground,which means most people wouldn't have felt The depth of the rupture

it. However, there were reports from residents in Fal›

lon and Gerlach in Nevada, as well as in the California communities of Redding, Fort Bidwell, Alturas and

Cedarville. There werealso reports in Adel, Lakeview

and Silver Lake, Oregon, according to the United States

Ge o logical S u r ›

vey’s Earthquake Hazards Program. The Nevada earthquake

marks the second4.7 magnitude earthquake in the

I

l .

Sheldon wildlife refuge's year- decade are expected in Neva› long swarm. One recorded da. The last "big one" was the Nov. 6 was the largest one to hit Dixie Valley/Fairview Peak

Nevada, tying the largest quakesstarted in July 2014. in a yearlongswarm reSeismologists have called corded at the Sheldon Na- the long-lasting swarm unusutional Wildlife Refugenear al. There was a flare-up that the Oregon and California startedin mid- July that had, as

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft A theft was reported at10:10 a.m. Sept. 11, in thearea of SELynn Boulevard. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:18 p.m. Sept. 11, in thearea of E.First Street. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at4:04 p.m. Sept.11, in the area of NWThird Street. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 9:32 a.m. Sept. 12, in thearea of NWNinth Street. Burglary A burglary and theft were reported at 5:53 p.m. Sept. 12, in the area of NESeventh Street.

"AN IDEALHUSBAND": A play about Sir Robert Chiltern; his wife, Gertrude; and Mrs. Cheveley;

WEST NEWS

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG

goods, skincare and more; 10 a.m.; NorthWest Crossing, NW Crossing Drive, Bend; www. nwxfarmersmarket.corn or 541-350-4217.

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, the account of a walking pilgrimage along the French trails of Camino de Santiago; 2 p.m .;Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-312-1032. PICKIN’ & PADDLIN’. RENEGADE STRING BAND: The swing, blues and bluegrass band performs, with Franchot Tone; 4 p.m.; Tumalo Creek Kayak and Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way, Bend; 541-317-9407. WORTHY HOPTOBERFEST: Featuring fresh hop and Oktoberfest beers with commemorative bier steins and German-inspired food, live music by Heidi Moore 8 KC Flynnand gBots & the Journeymen; 5 p.m.; Worthy Brewing Company, 495 NE Bellevue Drive, Bend; 541-639-4776. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Barbara Drake reads from her new book "Morning Light," about living on a small farm in rural Oregon for 30 years; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SWSixth St., Redmond; www.paulinasprings. corn or 541-526-1491. FOURTHANNUALTCBCCHILE FEST BENEFIT:Featuring a chili cook-off, a wing-eating contest and more to benefit the American Cancer Society; 6:30 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Court, Sisters; 541-549-1963. "ABBAQUEEN":Featuring the Portland Gay Men’s Chorus performing ABBA, presented by Human Dignity Coalition, PFLAG Central Oregon and GSA Clubs of Central Oregon; 7 p.m.; $15- $20, $10 for seniors and students, $20 for VIP; First Presbyterian Church Sanctuary, 230 NENinth St., Bend; www.bendticket.corn/go/ ABBAQueen or 541-385-3320. "AVENUE O,THEMUSICAL": A modernmusicalcomedy abouta group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs and their purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27-$38 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700.

I

»

Ii

PAINT


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015 THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

ome-sc oo ers amon

AROUND THE STATE MedfOrd jail releaSeS About half of the people arrested in police sweepsover the weekendare nolonger in custody as Med› ford’s jail deals with overcrowding. More than 30peoplewerear› rested in sweepsover the weekend, and 17were released after being turned over to a jail managed bytheJackson County Sheriff’s Office. Medford police Sgt. Geoff Kirkpatrick says his department has no control over sheriff’s office releases, calling it "the revolving door of the criminal justice system." Many frequent offenders werearrested. Kirkpatrick says those whohadfailed to attend prior court dates were booked, rescheduled to appearbefore ajudge andreleased in the hope they show upfor the new hearing. A $2.7 million project in 2014 brought capacity to 292 inmates.

a iona eri semi ina is s Students scoring in the top 1 percent of the PSAT qualify By Betsy Hammond The Associated Press

PORTLAND

I n a f i r st

f or Oregon, eight o f i t s top-scoring National Merit semifinalists in the class of 2016 are home-schoolers.

Students who score in the top 1 percent of students on the PSAT test are deemed

semifinalists, and there are 177 of them in Oregon’s se› nior class this year, including 28 at Westview High School in Beaverton and 16 at Lin›

coln High School in South› west Portland.

Eight of them, however, got their top-notch vocabularies,

math skills and reading abil› ities by staying home from school and studying with a parent or on their own, even in high school. N icole Mowery, 17, o f Eugene says being home› schooled by her mother all her life probably helped her do well on the test, because she could spend endless hours reading when she was little and because she had the flexibility in her sched› ule junior year that she could take practice tests to prepare for the PSAT whenever she

"l initially thought they would be in school after a year or two," she said. "Then I thought,

no, that doesn't seem like a good idea at this point. Plus, it's fun. You really do develop a

startedher firstyear of med-

ical school at Oregon Health & Science University. JoAnne M o w er y

d i d n’ t

march her children through demanding fast - paced lessons on m ath, v ocab› unique relationship with your children." ulary and g rammar. Her JoAnne Mowery, home-schooling style w as mother of National Merit Scholarship semifinalist Nicole Mowery just the opposite, she said. Until they reached high school, lessons were largely informal and the pace of the North Plains. They are Mat› her advanced-placement En› day was leisurely, with plenty thew Krishnan Myjak, So› glish made the difference of time for all four of her chil› phia Michael, Alyssa Sco› in helping her earn a top dren (Conner is now 14 and a field, Maryann Valerio and score. freshman) to read whatever Elise Yoder. Being home-schooled also they chose. They spent tons One, James Kennedy, lives has helped make her a re› of unstructured time outside, in Hood River and another, sponsible, independent learn› taking hikes, walking, enjoy› Rig Freyr, lives in coastal er and made her schooling ing nature and playing with War renton. year a heck of a lot of fun, neighbors, JoAnne Mowery Together, the 8 Valerio says. Hours of cre› sard. h ome-schoolers make up 5 ative play with her younger High school years were percent of this year’s Oregon sister when they were kids, more structured, she says, semifinalists. weaving made-up characters because she had to create No one knows for sure how through complex story lines a transcript for each child, many Oregon students are and invented societies, helped showing subjects mastered home schooled, but 20,000 them both become strong and grades earned each year. are officially registered with creative writers, she says. Nicole, who plays viola for the state as being educated JoAnne Mowery, who was the Eugene youth symphony, at home without the support

a computer scientist at Mic›

of a public online school such as Oregon Connections Academy.

rosoft in the 1980s and ear› with viola practice, she said. ly 1990s before she quit to JoAnne Mowery did not home-school the two eldest plan to home-school for two of her four children, thinks decades but rather a couple her daughter Nicole, her third years. But once she start› child, will be well-prepared ed, her children took so well for college, even though she to learning at home and will attend formal classes for zoomed so quickly beyond the first time ever when she grade-level expectations for gets there. their ages that she couldn’ t The Mowery family has imagine packing them off solid evidence that will be the to regular classes before case. college. "I initially thought they Nicole’s big brother and sister, Zane and Alia, both would be in school after a excelled at the University of year or two," she said. "Then I Oregon after their years of thought, no, that doesn’t seem learning at home with their like a good idea at this point. mom and siblings. Zane Plus, it’s fun. You really do Mowery is now at Yale Law develop a unique relationship School and Alia Mowery just with your children."

If that count is accurate,

h ome-schoolers make

up

a little less than 3 p ercent

of O r egon’s s chool-aged population. V alerio, who l i ves o n a small farm in North Plains,

wanted in the days leading up says she was pleasantly sur› to the exam. prised by her perfect score " I t h in k I wou l d h a v e on the reading section of the scored well regardless, but it PSAT. was probably advantageous She says t h e e x c ellent being a home-schooler," she teachers she has had while sard. learning at home her fa› Five of the other top-scor› ther, an Intel software engi› ing home-schooled students neer who taught her math live in the Portland area, in up through integral calculus,

Hillsboro, Beaverton and and an online teacher taught

GMO dah Josephine County won’t enforce a banongenetically modified crops until a related lawsuit is resolved. County voters passed aGMOban in May2014 andthe county originally told farmers growing GMO crops to provide a phase-out plan by Sept.4. County Legal Counsel Wally Hicks says theBoard of Commissioners decid› ed to suspend that deadline until a court rules on alawsuit brought against the county by Robert A. White Jr. andShelly White, who grew GMO sugar beets. TheWhites say astate law pre-empts the county’s ban. Hicks said the county suspendedenforcement of the banbe› cause the Whites’ attorney wasgoing to file a temporary restraining order and there are noknown GMOgrowers in the county now. BOdy fOund in river Authorities recovered a bodyfound floating in the Willamette River near Portland’s Morrison Bridge. The Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office says river patrol deputies were dispatched tothesceneSunday night.Theyfoundadeceasedman just north of the bridge, mid-channel. Thebody hasbeenturned over to a medical examiner. Theman’s identity won’t be released until his relatives are notified. COaSt Guard reSCue The U.S.Coast Guard rescued a man from the Willamette River after his boat overturned near theSt. Johns Bridge in Portland. Petty Officer Levi Readsays dispatchers alerted the CoastGuard onSunday night that a man was clinging to the hull of a sailboat. A responseboat arrived in six minutes, rescuing the man from the 53-degreewater. Hewaschecked for injuries and released. Therescuecrew returned to the capsizedboat andtowed it to a boat launch.

rises and starts her day early

Car ShOW hit-and-rull A man whodrew complaints for his behavior at a Woodburn auto showwas jailed after he hit someone while behind the wheel of awhite Mercedes, authorities say. The Marion County Sheriff’s Office says organizers of the car showgot complaints that Alejandro DelReal displayed poor showmanship and drove dangerously during Sunday’s event at theWoodburn Drag Strip. Witnesses told deputies that Del Reallater had words with a man. During the exchange, heallegedly floored the Mercedes and hit the man, briefly sending him onto the hoodandwindshield. The sher› iff’s office says the 23-year-old Del Realdrove awayand wasarrested at his Newberg home. He faces charges of attempted assault and hit› and-run. The victim’s injuries weredescribed asminor. Hiker death The Linn County Sheriff’s Office says a 61-year-old man fell 100 feet to his death while on acamping trip. Authorities say Stephen Maurice Bass ofToledo was hiking with his wife Sun› day when hefell from a cliff near Gordon Meadows, about 60 miles southeast of Albany in theCascades. Arescuer hiked down and con› firmed Bass hadtied. His body was recovered Monday. — From wire reports

Springfield father isusingbilboards to crusadeagainst texting while driving The Associated Press SPRINGFIELD

A

your ability to respond." Of those incidents, teens rep› Berg was inspired to cham› resented 10 percent of distract›

Springfield father is cam› pion the cause after he asked ed drivers. paigning to keep teenagers his daughter, a 2015 graduate off their phones while they of Springfield High, if she was are behind the wheel with a

taught about the dangers of

seriesofbillboards around the city. Bruce Berg, 61, began asking businesses to do› nate $500 per billboard three years ago, The Reg› ister-Guard reported. This year he persuaded the Lane

texting and driving in a man› datory seminar about drink› ing and driving. His daughter said they mostly glanced over

Transit District to display

RichPedroncelli /TheAssociated Press

Portland State University chemists have been granted federal funding to study e-cigarettes.

Portland StateUniversity secures53.5M to study health effects of e-cigarettes

his anti-texting posters for no charge. The longtime commer› cial photographer uses se› nior portraits of high school s tudents and t h e w o r ds "PLZ JOIN U S . D O N’ T TXT + D RV!" to r emind other students to wait to

send messages.

PORTLAND Chemists at Portland State University have

been granted $3.5 million in federal funding to study the po› tential dangers of e-cigarettes. The Oregonian reports PSU released a statement saying the five-year grant from the Na› tional Institutes of Health will

go toward a comprehensive ex›

shows that vaping devices can of e-cigarettes. deliver formaldehyde, a known PSU researchers have al› carcinogen. They have also ready conducted several stud› found that flavored devices ies on e-cigarettes, which allow can expose vapors to high con› nicotine users, and non-us› centrations of potentially toxic ers, to inhale vapor and have chemicals. become increasingly pop› The Food and Drug Admin› ular substitutes for t obacco istration, which regulates to› cigarettes. bacco, is providing funding for Their most recent study the grant. amination of the health effects

Man who filmed policesuesover arrest at Portland protest last fall The Associated Press

throwing a flash bang gre› nade in his direction and falsely arresting him for dis› half of a videographer who orderly conduct during a pro› says he was wrongly arrest› test over the Ferguson police ed while videotaping officers shooting. during a protest in Portland The Oregonian reports last fall. that West was one of 10 peo› PORTLAND A f ederal lawsuit has been filed on be›

The suit alleges Portland

ple arrested at a downtown

police violated Robert West’s intersection, and prosecutors First Amendment rights by ultimately dismissed the alle›

Federal data shows that in

2013 more than 3,100 people were killed in crashes involv› ing distracted drivers, which includes texting, talking on thephone,eating and reading.

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TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

EDj To

The Bulletin

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esearc s ou eo ene u on mari uana

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arijuana might be good medicine. But there is not

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enough research. Tara Bannow’s article in The Bulletin on Sunday about the success of some pa› tients with marijuana tinctures was intriguing. Other reports show similar benefits for epilepsy in children and more. What’s missing is research. The Office of National Drug Control Policy firmly states on its website that the federal government does not block medical research on marijuana. That’s technically correct. The federalgovernment, though, does not make research on marijuana

easy.

limit on how long it takes. And it turns out it can take years. There’ s also just one place to get the mar› ijuanaforresearch — a farm run by the University of Mississippi. Health care organizations from the American Academy of Pediatrics to the American Medical Association have called for federal policies to better enable research. There have been bills in Con› gress to move marijuana’s status to Schedule 2. That designation in› cludes morphine and opium, which are more widely used as medicine. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Portland, proposed earlier this year that a subcategorybe created in Schedule 1 for the purpose of making it easier to doresearch on marijuana. We don’t know which change is the best answer. But patients, doc› tors, researchers and the public de› servebetter.M arijuana doesn'tneed to be legalized nationwide for that to

Federal rules label marijuana as a Schedule1 drug. That's the same classification level as ecstasy or heroin. Schedule 1 means the sub› stances have no currently accepted medical use in the United States, a lack of accepted safety for use under medical supervision and a high po› tential for abuse. The Food and Drug Administra› tion, the Drug Enforcement Admin› istration and the National Institute on Drug Abuse all get involved in approving marijuana research. That’s duplicative. There’s no time happen.

Watering rulesshould be flexible in drought

B

end has rules about watering hoods, with or without homeowner

one’s lawn. So, too, do the 100 or so homeowner associ› ations in the city. The homeowner associationsshould show some flexibility in this dry year. The city’s goal is to ensure water is used judiciously. Thus, it limits ir› rigation to certain hours of the day and certain days of the week. It has the power to fine rule-breakers, but it’s a power that has gone largely un› used in recent years. Fining was relatively common before city wells assured water was available despite the drought. In the early 1950s, for example, limited reservoir capacity meant enforce› ment of watering rules to keep ade› quate water on hand. Homeowner associati ons operate with different goals in mind. They’ re put in place to keep subdi› visions attractive and, thus, prop› erty values up. They may limit the use of dotheslines, for example, or ban the parking of a motorhome in the driveway. And they want yards well tended lawns mowed, grass green. Yet Central Oregon is in the midst of a drought, and in Bend, folks from all sorts of neighbor›

associations, have tried to cut back their water use. Some homeowner associati ons have not taken well to the ad hoc conservation measures, unfortu› nately, and have reminded property owners that so far as they’ re con› cerned, green lawns are not option› al. Bulletin reporter Scott Hammers tracked down one homeowner fined $25 by her association. City councilors could, no doubt, respond to the associations’ ap› parent lack of concern about water conservation. They could,forexample, lobby the Legislature to bar the associations from fining homeown› ers who let their lawns go brown. Or they could bar the associations from punishing homeowners who replace grass with artificial turf. California had done both in the last couple of years. The better way is for homeown› er associat ions to reconsider hardand-fast rules governing lawns› to rewrite or interpret those rules with drought in mind. If water’ s plentiful, green might be fine. If not, well, brown is a color with a certain charm, too.

Stop i norin jim We

asa resi entia can i ate By Les Joslln

A

IN MY VIEW

s the pundits and the press

focus on myriad Republican and get the ship of state back on Party and fewer Democratic

Party presidential hopefuls, they overlook seemingly purposely ignore an outstanding candidate who packs the gear to provide lead› ership we can trust as president of the United States. That candidate is

former Sen. Jim Webb of Virginia. In spite of all he has to offer the American people, Webb is virtu› ally unmentioned by the pundits and the press. Indeed, he is being all but unelected by the neglect of pundits and press apparently more impressed with big bucks and poll popularity than by merit. Recently, for example, when col› umnist Victor Davis Hanson on Sept. 6 noted that Hillary "Clinton’s

serial meltdown may bring Vice President Joe Biden into the race," he identified Sen. Bernie Sanders

as "theonly other serious Democratic alternative to Clinton." What of Webb? He is a serious candidate

C

dorms this month, one of the most

unlikely is Abdisamad Adan, a 21-year-old beginning his freshman year at Harvard. Some of his 18 sib› lings are illiterate and never even went to first grade, and he was raised

NICHOLAS

KRISTOF How he came to Harvard is a trib› ute to his hard work and intellect, but

without electricity or indoor plumb› also to luck and a U.S. hedge-fund ty› ing by an illiterate grandmother in a coon who, bored by finance, moved country that doesn’t officially exist. to Somaliland and set up a school for Yet he excelled as he studied by can› brilliant kids who otherwise wouldn’ t dlelight, and he’s probably the only have a chance. person in Harvard Yard who knows The financier, Jonathan Starr, had how to milk a camel. an aunt who married a man from So› Abdisamad is the first undergradu› maliland, and he was charmed by sto› atethe Harvard admissions office re- ries about its deserts and nomads. So members from Somalia or its parts, at in 2008, after running his own hedge least in the last 30 years of institution› fund and burning out, Starr took a trip

al memory. He is from Somaliland, a breakaway republic that isn’t recog› nized by any other country (and so doesn’t have a U.S. Embassy to grant him a visa, but that’s another story).

to Somaliland. Starr founded an English-language boarding school for the brightest boys and girls from across Somaliland. Called the Abaarso School of Science

Yet Abdisamad brims with talent

and Technology, it uses U.S. teachers

and intelligence. He’s a reminder of the (paid a pittance) who are willing to fundamental aphorism of our age: Tal› work in a country the State Depart› ent is universal, but opportunity is not.

ment recommends avoiding for secu›

House and on the national and

international scene on behalf of term presidencies that add up to the American people. You’ ll know almost a quarter century of often that, despite the mainstream me› misguided and sometimes disas› dia’s focus on a Democratic Party trous drift. retread and Republican Party buf› A former senator from Virginia, foons and second-stringers, Webb Webb has earned respect for his is the person with the stature to views on national defense, foreign serve successfully as A m erica’ s policy, domestic affairs and eco› chief executive and as a world lead› nomic fairness. A graduate of the er. You’ ll know that, while seeking U.S. Naval Academy and a combat the Democratic Party nomination, U.S. Marine Corps officer retired Webb isyour candidate regardless for wounds sustained in Vietnam, of your party affiliation. he graduated from Georgetown Of course, you already know the University Law Center and went key to electing Webb the next pres› on theserve as a committee coun- ident of the United States is gaining sel in Congress, an assistant secre› him the Democratic Party nomina› tary of defense and secretary of the tion before our country might get Navy. He is also an award-winning stuck with an unthinkable Novem› journalist, filmmaker and the au› ber 2016 general election choice. thor of several works of fiction and Webb, again, is the candidate nonfiction. from either party we can trust None ofthe other declared can- most to lead our nation and the didates has served the nation world safely through the perils that as Webb has, and none of them will confront both in the coming has the capacity to serve us as he decade. It’s a matter of national se› course in the wake of three two›

and should be covered as such. As for Republican Party alterna› would. One of the other declared tives, a current and one hopes, candidates one he must defeat short-lived infatuation with a to gain the Democratic Party nom› bloviating billionaire obscures any ination he seeks once famously other possibly credible candidates asked, "What difference does it the GOP may have to offer. One make?" Webb knows the answer. wonders at the focus of the pundits Watch and listen to Webb on› and the press. line at jameswebb.corn. Read his A focus on Webb reveals a can› 2014 memoir, "I Heard My Country didate with the qualities and qual› Calling." Then you’ ll know the an› ifications needed to lead the nation swer, too. You’ ll know that, party

curity and world stability that tran›

scends partisan politics. Your support of his nomination

in the May 2016 primary and your vote for him in the November 2016

general election may well add up to the most important decision you will ever make in support of your country. — LesJoslinisa retired commander of the U.S.Navy. He lives in Bend.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

orna i an stu ent acce te int o AMBRIDGE, Mass. Of the millions of young men and women settling into college

affiliation notwithstanding, Webb is the person you want in the White

rity reasons. This campus is where er, and after three years won a schol› Abdisamad blossomed. arship to study at the Masters School, He says his parents divorced be› a college prep school, in Dobbs Ferry, fore he was born, so his grandmother New York. The year in Dobbs Ferry raised him. He spent an average of two was an adventure, but he thrived and hours a day fetching water and had decided to apply to Harvard. no one pushing him at home, but still His admission to Harvard was treat› performed superbly at a local primary ed as a national cause for celebration. school. Somaliland’s president invited him for The problem was that while pri› a meeting,and Abdisamad became a mary school tuition had been $1 a local hero. month, a good high school would be Abdisamad plans to return to So› at least $40 a month. His grandmother maliland and work with young peo› couldn’t afford that, and in any case ple, and then perhaps pursue a career she didn' t really see why he needed in politics; he hints that he’d like to be high school. No one in his family had president some day. What’s indisputable is that access ever graduated from high school. But then Abdisamad was accepted to a good school transformed Abdisa› at Abaarso, which is flexible about tu› mad’s life. Six of his brothers and sis› ition: If a promising student can’t pay, ters are getting no education at all, and Starr looks the other way. So Abdis› some of those migrants you’ ve been amad began ninth grade at Abaarso, seeing on television drowning in their struggling at first because classes desperate struggle to get to Europe are were in English, which he didn’t speak. from Somaliland. And Abdisamad’s grandmother was One reason Somalia and its former displeased that he was spending his partshave struggled for decades is time in the classroom rather than help› lack of education, particularly for girls: ing the family. Illiteracy correlates to huge families, to He quiddy learned English, howev› extremism, to violence and civil war›

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, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

a r var fare. World leaders will be gathering this month at the United Nations to re› view the status of development goals,

including one that by now all children would be able to complete primary school, and to approve new ones.

Starr's school — and Abdisamad's success should offer inspiration. And it’s not just Abdisamad. The

Abaarso School has an astonishing 26 other alumni at U.S. universities.

There aren’t many high schools in the world with 45 students in a grade that are so successful in getting alum›

ni into top colleges, let alone one where students speak English as a foreign language and often grew up in pov› erty. The Abaarso student at MIT,

Mubarik Mohamoud, a junior study› ing electrical engineering, grew up as a nomadic herder raising camels, goatsand sheep in an area with no schools; he began his education at a

madras a. "Being smart is universal," says Mubarik. "It’s just that resources are

not dispersed." — Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015 THE BULLETIN

B5

WEST NEWS

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Helen Ann Martin, of Redmond Oct. 12, 1930 - Sept. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals› REDMOND www.autumnfunerals.net 541-504-9485 Services: Celebration of Life: 11:00am Monday, Sept. 21, 2015 at Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Rd., Powell Butte, OR.

T ’ he SubjectWasRoses’ brought famefor Gilroy By Robert D. McFadden New York Times News Service

www.nlswonger-reynolds.corn

Services: Private services will be held later.

Wanda Joan

him to Hollywood, where he wrote for television west› erns including "The Rifle›

Frank D. Gilroy, whose 1964 Broadway debut, "The man" and "Have Gun Will Subject Was Roses," won the Travel," and movies, includ› ing "The Gallant Hours" theater’s triple crown a Pulitzer Prize, a Tony and a (1960), about Adm. William Drama Critics’ F. Halsey Jr. He also created

Paul D. Berhar, of Bend Sept. 23, 1950-Sept. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at

Feds: Sage grouse face dedine if wildfires can’t be stopped By Keith Ridler

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife

The Associated Press

If increas›

Service faces

ingly destructive wildfire s

a Sept. 30 deadline to decide whether sage

BOISE, Idaho

in the Great Basin can’t be

stopped, the sage grouse pop› ulation will be cut in half over the next three decades, scien› A report released Thursday by the U.S. Geological Survey

the homicide detective Amos

Service to

Burke (played by Gene Bar› ry) for the series "Burke’ s

note in his life

Law."

sage grouse need protection under the Endangered Species Act. Experts say such a listing coulddamage Western states' economies. "The sagebrush steppe and sagebrush ecosystem are in

in war and 15 years later

trouble," said Matt Brooks, a fire ecologist with the USGS

His death was announced finds him mired in seediness won an Obie (the award by his son Tony.

and oneofthereport'sauthors.

"Roses," the tale of a World created by Tallmer, then with War I I v e teran r eturning The Village Voice). home to the Bronx and the When Gilroy’s loosely "Roses" parents who vie for his love autobiographical

potential ways to avert sage grouse dedines by classify› ing areas for their resilience to disturbance and resistance to invasive species such as cheatgrass, and then applying

The study also identified

in an emotional cauldron,

opened two years later, with

was likened by some critics

Martin Sheen as the veter›

Oct. 12, 1946- Sept. 11, 2015

to masterworks by Eugene an and Jack Albertson and O’ Neill and Arthur Miller. It Irene Dailey as his parents, ran for two years, was adapt› advance sales were modest ed by Gilroy for a 1968 movie but the reviews were excel› and has been revived in New lent. Howard Taubman of

suitable strategies. Public land

York and around the country

managers, and especially fire managers, can use," said John

r

Wanda Joan Quinn went to be in the loving arms of o ur H e avenly F a t he r o n Friday, Se p t e mbe r 11, 2015. W anda g r a d uated h i g h school from M i n co, O k l a› homa in 1964. W anda wo r k ed f or Mountain View Hospital in Madras, Oregon, for many y ears a s a gr e e te r a n d medical records clerk.She l oved studying t h e B i b l e , hunting, f i s h ing , g a r d en›

The Times wrote, "With sim›

many times. plicity, humor and integrity, But for Gilroy, who wrote he has looked into the hearts more than 30 other plays, of three decent people and "Roses" was his only major discovered, by letting them theatrical success. And while discover, the feelings that di› he wrote th e s creenplays vide and join them." for 10 feature films (some of A udiences did n o t r e › which he also produced or spond, and the play almost directed); three novels; and closed, but borrowed money scores of adventures, west› kept it afloat for five weeks. erns and dramas in the gold› Ticket sales soared as the en age of television, none had awards piled up: the Outer the impact of his first and Circle for outstanding new only Broadway hit. playwright, the Drama Crit› Indeed, one would be hard›

pressed to find a review, magazine profile or news

ics’ Circle and the New York

Theater Club for best play,

the Tony, the Pulitzer Prize article over nearly a half-cen› for drama.

tury that did not identify him After his next three plays as the author of "Roses." failed, Gilroy returned to When the play was re› Hollywood and a d apted vived off Broadway in 1991, "Roses" for the screen. The with John Mahoney, Dana reviews were mediocre. G ilroy was born i n t h e i ng, and s pending t i me Ivey and Patrick Dempsey, with her grandchildren. Gilroy bemoaned his inex› Bronx on Oct. 13, 1925, the S he is s u r v ived b y h e r tinguishable escutcheon. only child of Frank B. Gilroy, husband, J o e Q u i n n o f Terrebonne, Oregon; sons, Ken and wi fe, Pam Bicart o f C a v e creek, A r i z o n a ; Kevin Bicart of Twin Falls, Idaho, K e i t h Bi c a r t o f R edmond, O r e gon ; s t e p › s on, Todd Q u in n o f E l k o Nevada; and stepdaughter, Colleen Quinn o f B e aver› ton, Oregon; grandchild ren, M e g ha n a n d h u s › band, Brian, Parker, Kolin, D anikka, A l e k k s is , a n d Austin; gr ea t - g randchil› dren, Ella and Hudson; sis› ters, Gloria an d h u sband, J ohnny V e rser o f M i n c o , Oklahoma, M ar i a an d husband, Terry B o m gard› ner o f Bu r l a s on, T e x a s, Ima Jo and husband, Don B artlett o f P r i n eville, O r › e gon; brother, St eve a n d w ife, Stephanie Mo r ri s o f Cascade L o c ks , O r e g on; nieces, L or i D e m e erteer, V erla a n d hu s b a nd , B o B ollinger, D e b bi e K o l a r , Angela and husband, Cody Ledbetter and Ashley Mor-

ris; nephews, Kelly Quinn, M arty a n d w if e , Tr a c y Q uinn, D a nn y a n d w i f e , Michelle Quinn, John an d w ife, T r i ci a Q u i nn , P a u l and wife, Jennifer Qu inn, J .W. a n d w i f e , Sh e l i a

V erser, Da n

a n d wi f e ,

Laura Verser, Logan Mor› r is, B r au n M o r r i s , D a l e and wi fe , K i m B o m g a r d› n er, Ti m a n d w i f e , S u z y B omgarder; a n d nu m e r › ous great nieces, nephews and great-great nieces and nephews. W anda w a s l o v e d b y many, and w il l b e g r eatly missed. She l o ved e v ery› one with he r w h ol e h eart and could light up a r o om with her sweet smile. Memorial services will be held Wednesday, September 16, 2015, 1:00 p.m., at the Church of C h r i st, 925 NW 7th St. Redmond, Or›

egon.

" I’d like to w al k

i nto a

a coffee broker, and the for› room sometime and be intro› mer Bettina Vasti. He was a duced as the author of some› lackluster student but liked thing other than that play," fiction. He graduated from he told The New York Times DeWitt Clinton High School shortly before the r evival in 1943, was drafted into the opened. "There’s always one wartime Army, served in Eu›

Streets and Operations

Director David Abbas empha› sized the city began falling behind when funding was cut during the recession. Once roads are allowed to deteri› orate, he noted, the cost of

repairs increases. Finding more money isn’ t a cakewalk, Abbas said, as

Bend’s budget is constrained by having one of the lowest

rope and was discharged in

Bend hasn’t increased since

1946. At Dartmouth College, he

1981, Abbas said, in large part

dex, a federal tool for assess› mute Options, the Central ing the overall health of a city’s roadways. Oregon Builders Association and the city’s accessibility ad› Today, Abbas said the city visory group. is somewhere between a 68 T he B end C h a mber o f and 69 out of 100, while $80 Commerce and Bend 2030, million spread over five years

tions and g raduated with

high honors in sociology in 1950. He attended Yale

first script, a sketch for Kate Smith, in 1952. He was soon writing for television. In 1954 he married Ruth

Theater." His versatility took

John, and five grandchildren.

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday,but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements sub› mitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmit› ted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact infor› mation in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541›

Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5p.m. Mon› day through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypub› lication, and by 9a.m. Mon› day for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.

61 7-7825.

Phone: 541-617-7825

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

property tax rates for a city its size in the state. In Bend, the

because ofstate laws passed in the 1990s that limit tax

hikes. A majority of the City Council has backed a gas tax, but a group of local fuel companies has organized to fight putting such a tax on the ballot. A Portland-based pub› lic opinion polling firm hired by the city, DHM Research, says voters would likely pass

the world:

Gary Richrath, 65: Former guitarist for the classic rock such as Led Zeppelin and band REO Speedwagon who Motley Criie. Died Friday in also co-wrote the group’s hit Las Vegas of complications song "Take It on the Run." from multiple system atrophy. Died Sunday. — From wire reports

could get the city to about 81.

committee.

12, with an optional meeting

The frequently cited $80 million figure doesn’t refer to all possible repairs the city

scheduled for Oct. 19.

And Marshall saw Schnei›

Marshall said. "It can be re›

ally important when you’ re missing a parent."

together, Schneider had two

And as for C OCC’s first

daughters. Marshall

required to earn the streets "a solid B-minus" rating after

aging the city’s growth, are The committee will meet helping organize and run the every Monday through Oct.

der make some transitions of her own. During their time

— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.corn

has a plan. She’ ll likely major in art. "I like to think I’ ve made some kin d o f di f f erence,"

Schneider said. "She’s hung in there with me for five or six years.... It’ s a relationship for both of us, I think." — Reporter: 541-383-0325, kfisicaro@bendbulletin.corn

day of classes being right reme mbers around the corner, Marshall

when Schneider revealed she

was pregnant with her first daughter; they were driving downtown to get tea. Mar›

shall remembers being really happy for Schneider and con› gratulating her. "It’s been really cool to see her raise her kids," Marshall

said, adding that her own mom was glad Schneider was

vaano mo Kerry Simon, 60: Former

a nonprofit focused on man›

was away. "I went through a rough Continued from B1 p atch," M a r shall sa i d . "She got a bunch of schol› "(Schneider) listened a lot; arships, actually," Schnei› I knew she was someone der said. Most were through I could go to to talk about Summit. things if I needed help." "She helpedme go and talk Marshall used her art as a to counselors to see what col› way of coping with missing lege would be like," Marshall her mom. "I feel like she’s taught me said. "I didn’t know anything about college at first." to deal with a lot of feelings,"

a friend and mentor while she

"Iron C hef" champ w ho served up dishes to rock bands

representatives from the Environmental Center, Com›

COPY

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Deathsof note from around

could perform, but instead how much money would be

That B-minus is based on the pavement condition in›

do their sons, Tony, Dan and

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

such a tax.

five years of work.

Studio One"and "Lux Video

Fax: 541-322-7254

spent soon on maintaining citystreets.

Environmental Center board member Jennifer Letz Bend City Councilor Sally Commute Options Executive Director Jeff Monson Russell Bend 2030 Executive Director Realtor industry representa› Erin Foots Marlowe tive Justin Livingston Deschutes Brewery CFO and Budget Committee member Bend Chamber representative Peter Werner Peter Skrbek Accessibility Advisory Com› General public representative mittee memberScott Beaird Doug Williams Local fuel retailer representa› Fuel-reliant small business tive Greg Vernon representative Bill Schumacher Central Oregon Builders As› Neighborhood Association sociation Vice President Andy representative JamesDorofi High Bend City Councilor Doug

Knight

committee members include

"Omnibus," "Westinghouse Gaydos. She survives him, as

Family has requested no flowers. Contributions can be made to Shriners Hos› p ital o r Th e A mer i c a n Heart Association.

worse if more money isn’ t

On thecommittee

is on the committee. Other

University’s drama school

Email: obits'bendbulletin.corn

Continued from B1 Much of the meeting was spent discussing how the city fell $80 million behind and why things could get much

while in Redmond, for com› parison, it’s $6.16. The rate in

characters in a room, the but dropped out because events often compressed into he needed to work. He was an afternoon or evening in a messenger in New York one or two acts reflected and rented out beach caban› the craftsmanship of his ear› as in Atlantic City but con› ly work in television. tinued to write, selling his United States Steel Hour," "Kraft Television Theater,"

Committee

Freemuth, a Boise State Uni› an invasive, fire-prone species versityprofessor and publi c that wipes out sagebrush eco› lands expert. He said the report systems with wildfire as its could factor into a sage grouse main weapon. "Managementofcheatgrass listing decision. "That’s an indication that in is definitely a key," Brooks said. the future (managers) will ap› The study that examined 30 ply resources more effectively years of data up to 2013 found to protect the habitat," he said. that burned areas near sage The report is also in line grouse breeding grounds nul› with an order by Interior Sec› lified population growth that retary Sally Jewell in Janu› would normally occur after ary calling for a new wild› years with high precipitation. fire-fighting strategy using a The study also looked ahead "science-based" approach to 30 years at projected wildfires protect wide swaths of the in› and recovery rates of burned termountain West sagebrush areasand predicted long-term country that supports cattle p opulation declines in t h e ranching and sage grouse. study area that included Neva› Looming through much of da, Utah, Idaho, Oregon and the USGS report is cheatgrass, California.

worth of assessed value,

architecture

In the 1950s, Gilroy wrote

doing that, but the USGS report could fine tune those efforts. "It adds to the science that

w jl

rate is $2.80 for every $1,000

wrote eight student produc›

for "Playhouse 90," "The

managers have already been

Jerret Raffety I The Rawlios DailyTimes file photovia The Associated Press

A member of the gas tax opposition, Greg Vernon, who works for American Energy,

thing in a career that has more impact than anything else. In my case, ’The Subject Was Roses’ was that thing." To Gilroy, playwriting was storytelling, and his spare style, dialogue and simple two or three

~

d e cide w hether

Quinn rr

Endangered Species Act.

l.

deredSept.30 deadline faced by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife

but proved to be the high

York. He was 89.

underthe

comes justahead of a court-or-

C ircle A w a rd

as a playwright Gilroy made an auspicious Gilroy and te l evision off-Broadway debut in New and Hollywood York in 1962. "Who’ ll Save dramatist, died Saturday at the Plowboy?" about a sol› his home in Monroe, New dier who rescues a comrade

grouse should be protected

tists say.

I I

18 years reverse mortgage experience, local, professional consultation

P~ willamettevsBer Bank HOME LOAN DIVISION 541-382-4189 121 NW Greenwood Ave, Ste 103, Bend, OR 97701

lerry.gilmour'wvbk.corn


B6 T H E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

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

i

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT i

HIGH 59’ I f ’

I

I

W EDN E SDAY

LOW 35’

55’ 42’

u

Mostly cloudy andcool

ALMANAC

FRIDAY

THU R SDAY

~

~

70’ 38’

5 9’ 34’

~

Timesofcloudsandsun

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

Long

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

ding *

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

High High

~Mode~rate High Mod~erato ~

Source: USDA Forest Service

x xxx x x

gy

Wv sick

~

74 ’

48 ’

Partly sunny andpleasant

i

Yesterday

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 93/68/0.00 Akron 75/48/0.00 Albany 72/56/0.01 Albuquerque 85/61/0.00 Anchorage 54/46/0.33 Atlanta 77/54/0.00 Atlantic City 75/58/0.00 Austin 89/58/0.00 Baltimore 78/51 /0.00 Billings 88/54/Tr Birmingham 78/55/0.00 Bismarck 78/53/0.00 Boise 74/55/Tr Boston 72/57/0.01 Bridgeport, CT 76/57/0.00 Buffalo 70/49/0.06 Burlington, VT 69/57/0.10 Caribou, ME 67/57/0.99 Charleston, SC 82/58/0.00 Charlotte 78/45/0.00 Chattanooga 79/49/0.00 Fort Rock Riley 61/36 YESTERDAY n’ Greece t 59/32 Cheyenne 86/55/0.00 60/36 57/30 Chicago 82/52/0.00 High: G2’ Bandon Roseburg Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 75/46/0.00 Jordan V gey Sep 21 Sep 27 O c t 4 O c t 12 at Rome 61/53 Beaver Silver 59/35 Frenchglen 67/50 Cleveland 74/48/0.00 Low: 33’ 63/44 Marsh Lake 62/44 ColoradoSprings 89/55/0.00 Tonight’s slty: Just aboveHercules is the 57/32 at Meacham 60/35 Gra Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 84/57/0.00 Paisley 9/ constellation of Dracothe Dragon. a Columbia, SC 81/51/0.00 66/46 Chile quin Columbus,GA 81 /52/0.00 Medfo d ’sess Gold ach Rome 0’ Columbus,OH 74/47/0.00 60/ 66/47 Klamath Concord, NH 72/54/0.44 Source: JimTodd,OMSI Ashl nd FaRS Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 88/68/0.00 Bro ings 65/ 61/51 58/35 57/37 66/46 Dallas 90/69/0.00 Dayton 75/48/0.00 Denver 91/53/0.00 10 a.m. Noon 2 p .m. 4 p .m. Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Dss Moines 84/60/0.00 2 1~ 4 ~ S I 2 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 78/47/0.00 The highertheAccuWsalher.rxrm liy Index number, Asturis 64/51/Tr 64/52/c 64/52/ah Ls Grande 70/48/0.00 63/42/c 64/46/c Portland 61/5 3/0.0367/52/c 63/55/ ah Duluth 79/56/0.00 the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin prctscgun.0-2 Low Baker City 64/44/0.02 64/36/c 63/36/c Ls Pine 63/33/0.00 56/31/c 52/41/r Prinevige 62/ 44/0.0062/37/c 52/44/r El Paso 95/68/0.00 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extrcme. Brookings 60/53/Tr 6 1/51/c 62/53/r Me d ford 73/5 4 /0.00 66/46/c 63/51/r Redmond 65/ 43/0.0061/34/c 58/40/r Fairbanks 46/39/0.50 Gums 60/38/0.03 61/36/c 60/35/sh N ewport 61/5 0/0.00 60/50/c 61/54/r Roseburg 71/ 5 5/0.0067/50/c 65/53/r Fargo 81 /53/0.00 Eugene 68/53/0.00 66/47/c 64/51/r No r th Bend 66 / 52/0.00 63/52/c 66/55/r Salem 64/53/0.00 66/50/c 63/53/r Flagstaff 71/49/0.02 Klsmsth Falls 68/49/Tr 58/35/c 54/37/r On t ario 72/54/Tr 71/46/c 68/47/pc Sisters 63/44/0.00 60/34/c 56/43/r Grand Rapids 78/48/0.00 G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Lskeview 63/50/0.10 57/37/sh53/40/sh Pendleton 66/50/0.00 65/45/c 66/51/c The Dagos 6 7 / 57/0.00 70/47/c 66/51/sh Green Bay 80/49/0.00 Greensboro 76/50/0.00 Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-tbunderstorms, r-rsin, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata ssof 5 p.m. yesterday Lo~w Ab s ent Harrisburg 77/54/0.00 Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577 Hsrffurd, CT 72/53/0.05 Helena 78/57/0.00 Honolulu 88/77/0.04 ~ gs ~ t g s ~ 2 0 9 ~ 3 0 8 ~ 4 0 6 ~ 5 0s ~ a ce ~ 7 0 9 ~ a ge ~ 9 0s ~ 100s ~ttcs Houston ~ tga ~g s 85/59/0.00 As uf 7 s.m. yesterday Huntsville 79/49/0.00 s Indianapolis 77/50/0.00 Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity NATIONAL d d d 5 d d d C Jackson, MS 85/52/0.00 EXTREMES d d 0 d,iyi y 1 / Q,yv,x C rane Prairie 266 3 0 v SS/52 4B% 53 Jacksonville 84/60/0.00 YESTERDAY(for the 57/52

~

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER

Shown is today’s weather.Temperatures aretoday’s highs and tonight’s lowe. EAST: Lowertem› na /5 peratures will again Umatiaa Seasid TEMPERATURE Hood 69/46 be the weather theme 62/54 Yesterday Normal Record RiVer Rufus ermiston today with clouds and Cannon /49 High 63 74 94’ i n 2002 lington 70/47 Portland Mesc am Losti ne 60/54 43’ 40’ 22’ in 1970 a passing shower Low /4 /49 W co 62/40 Enterprise or two. dl9t, n 59/3 he Daa ,61/se Tigamo PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: It will be andy 70/47 62/54 Mc Joseph /48 Gove nt He p pner Grande 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" quite cool acrossthe upi Condon 4 4 63 42 Record 0.32" in 191S area today.Mainly dry Lincoln Union 54/ Month to date (normal) O. OS" (0.20") weather is expected 60/53 Sale pray Granitee Year to date(normal) 6.64 " (6.96") with more clouds 66/5 45 ’Baker C Newpo 59/35 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 7 3" than sun. /49 60/50 Mitch II 64/36 camp sh WEST: It will be mostly orv ills SUN ANDMOON eu Yach 60/35 John cloudy with a passing 59/52 65/46 Prineville Day 2/37 Today Wed. tario shower or two today. 62/37 P a lina 6 2/4 0 Sunrise 6:44 a.m. 6 : 4 5 a.m. 7 46 o Rain will be more Floren e Eugene ’ Re d Brothers Sunset 7:16 p.m. 7: 1 5 p.m. widespread tomorrow. 61/53 Vates Su iVere 59/35 Moonrise 9: 0 0a.m. 9:5S a.m. 68/48 Nyssa e 57 / 1 Ham ton e Moonset S:2 9 p.m. S: 5 9 p.m. La pine Juntura Grove Oakridge Burns OREGON EXTREMES First Fu ll Last New 66/44 65/47 45

4B contiguousstates) National high: 107 at Death Valley,CA National low: 27 at West Yellowstone,

~

warmer

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

Wickiup 21B91 11% Crescent Lake 5 2 7 33 61% Ochoco Reservoir 11818 27vo Prineville 53146 36vo River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 137 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1130 132 Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1600 Little Deschutes near LaPine 120 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 1 9 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 C rooked R. below Prineville Res. 210 Crooked R. near Terrebonne S9 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 6

SATURDAY

n ras

erauus x HGPof/

ronto /57

Port 7 8

Today Wednesday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 91/69/s 92/71/pc 80/54/s 82/56/s 79/57/s 83/58/s 87/61/pc 87/60/pc 52/43/r 53/41/c 81/62/s 78/63/pc 80/63/s 82/63/s 90/71/pc 91/72/t 82/54/s 84/57/s 67/48/eh 61/45/sh 83/61/pc 83/65/pc 91/56/pc 76/55/c 68/51/sh 66/48/sh 81/63/s 80/64/s 82/63/s 82/65/s 75/57/s 80/60/s 80/59/s 83/61/s 75/56/s 78/60/s 83/66/pc 82/69/t 82/55/s 82/57/s 83/56/s 82/60/s 80/52/pc 80/48/t 82/59/s 81/63/s 81/53/s 83/55/s 79/57/s 81/58/s 85/53/pc 84/53/pc 84/62/s 85/69/s 85/60/s 84/65/pc 82/66/pc 83/68/pc 79/53/s 81/56/s 80/53/s 83/55/s 89/75/t 91/76/t 91/74/pc 93/75/pc 80/53/s 83/55/s 88/56/pc 86/54/pc 86/67/s 87/71/pc 79/56/s 81/58/s 79/65/pc 79/65/pc 93/72/s 94n2/s 47/38/sh 46/38/pc 88/62/pc 79/61/pc 66/48/t 65/44/1 80/56/s 80/60/s 82/61/s 80/65/pc 81/56/s 82/57/s 80/55/s 84/57/s 82/55/s 84/57/s 63/45/ah 57/39/r esne/s 88/77/s 84/72/t 87/72/t 81/58/s 81/60/s 81/55/s 82/58/s 89/63/pc 92/66/pc 84/71/t 83/70/t

Yesterday Today Wednesday

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegss Lexington Lincoln Litus Rock Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

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

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Rsno Richmond Rochester, NY

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 53/42/0.00 50/46/c 51/47/r 83/64/0.00 84/68/s 87n3/s 76/50/0.00 80/56/s 80/58/s

98/80/0.01 88no/t 75/45/0.00 82/53/s 84/60/0.00 87/69/s 87/56/0.00 88/64/s 84/71/0.00 80/67/r 77/50/0.00 83/57/s 80/53/0.00 80/62/s 82/56/0.00 85/65/s 91/79/0.02 89n8/t 81/52/0.00 80/62/s 83/58/0.00 82/68/s 80/49/0.00 84/57/s 86/61/0.00 84n4/t 77/59/0.00 84/66/s 78/56/0.00 84/63/s 76/61/0.00 80/63/s 90/64/0.18 89/69/s 85/63/0.00 85/70/s seno/0’.00 89f/5/t

87/65/pc 84/55/s 89n4/pc

87/55/0.00 77/56/0.00 98/76/0.32 74/49/0.00 73/57/0.41 71/56/0.00 78/48/0.00

85/68/s 86/63/s 94n4/pc

78/65/pc 84/60/s 81/66/s 88/68/pc

88n8/t 80/65/s 83n1/pc 85/60/s

86n4/t 86/69/s 87/66/s 80/65/s

90n1/pc 89/73/pc 87n4/t

gens/0.00 90n3/c 92/68/s

85/52/0.00

85/61/s 83/61/s 93f/6/t 79/54/s 79/58/s 82/60/s 81/55/s 90/54/pc 70/50/c 83/57/s 80/57/s 76/55/c 85/63/s 70/60/1 90ft6/pc

85/65/Tr 77/52/0.00 73/52/0.07 Sacramento 79/62/Tr St. Louis 83/60/0.00 Salt Lake City 80/70/0.31 Ssn Antonio 90/65/0.00 San Diego 83/74/0.00 81n3/r San Francisco 68/58/Tr 68/57/c San Joss 74/59/0.00 70/54/c Santa re 85/50/0.00 81/53/pc Savannah 83/56/0.00 83/69/pc Seattle 62/51/0.00 65/52/c Sioux Falls 84/61/0.00 83/69/1 Spokane 59/50/Tr 61/45/c Springfield, Mo 82/59/0.00 83/64/s Tampa 90/73/0.00 91n6/t Tucson 93/71/Tr 91/69/I Tulsa 82/64/0.02 86fto/s Washington, DC 80/55/0.00 82/62/s Wichita 89/68/0.00 88/69/s Yskims 65/55/Tr 67/42/pc Yuma 101/83/0.04 96f/7/t

slifsx 0/50

91/68/pc

83/55/s

80/58/s 83/61/s 82/59/s 82/50/1

66/46/pc 84/58/s 82/59/s 72/57/I’

85no/s 67/52/1

91n6/t

78/68/pc 70/59/sh

72/58/pc 82/51/pc 80/69/1 64/54/sh

84/69/pc 62/45/c 84/69/pc 88n4/t 93/68/pc 88/73/pc 85/62/s

91n3/s 67/47/c 95n2/s

i

Amsterdam Athens

63/55/0.32 59/51/sh Boston 86/66/0.00 86/70/s Mi u s it /53 Auckland 61/48/0.00 58/51/c e nsp City lnnespo ’ SO/6 w York Baghdad 11 3/84/0.00 112/83/s po/54 /57 <X’e Bangkok 90/77/0.20 85/77/t lls heyenne MT gsdelphis Beijing 81/60/0.00 81/57/s 0 52 ’Oes M ines C C ics ’~9 79/53 o 3/51 Beirut gone/0.00 88/80/s Precipitation: 0.96" an sncivcu% v. ssrr s y o 8 /59 en 4 57 Berlin 72/61/0.28 69/53/pc de/57 % % 70/60 ington at Caribou, ME ss/5 us lie 8 Las V ss Bogota 68/50/0.01 71/46/1 ssn Kansas City Si. u ’ 83/57 Budapest 79/55/0.00 83/62/pc 84/68 83/ Buenos Ai r es 77/45/0.00 75/49/pc " Chsrlo Los An les 88/74/0.64 91/75/t Csbo Ssn Loess 84/5 5 0/47 L’ Cairo 93/77/0.00 93/77/s Phoen Anchorage Albuque ue klshoma Ci At Calgary 45/39/0.28 50/37/eh 93/76 8 54 52/4 II 0 87/51 8 81/52 Cancun 90n9/0.13 gone/pc air inghs 8 /73 baca al pa Dublin 57/50/0.19 59/45/sh 91/7 n Edinburgh 55/45/0.52 60/44/eh so/ Geneva 68/55/0.17 66/56/pc nubhhh Harsrs 70/48/0.00 75/46/s rlesss Hong Kong 89/77/0.00 89/78/pc ~ ~ (hihushus Istanbul 77/70/0.01 79/69/s %%1/53 ’e’exxxxxwwwv. Il!IMne + Jerusalem 88n3/0.00 86/70/s Monte y i'e'e'eXXXXWWWv aexaav xt y 88/70 < ’e ’e ’e ’e X X X X W W’› Johannesburg 73/44/0.00 76/54/pc v v v ’+ ’+ ’v ’+ ’+ v v v Lima 69/62/0.00 72/63/pc Lisbon 73/61 /0.00 70/66/pc Shown are today’s noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 66/54/0.53 64/53/sh T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 77/59/0.00 73/61/pc Manila 86/79/0.08 89/77/t

O

’45Q," .

Mecca Mexico City

65/57/r

87no/s 60/52/c 109/82/s 87/78/t 83/59/s 88/81/s 74/62/pc 69/46/c 85/67/pc 62/44/pc

gonsn 93/77/s 50/31/c

eon wpc 57/47/c 60/48/c 76/59/1 81/50/s

cene/t

79/69/s 86/68/s 81/57/s

73/62/pc 72/58/sh 65/55/r

72/52/ah

egn7/I

105/84/0.38 105/82/s 73/56/0.30 72/57/1 Montreal 70/57/0.20 77/59/s Moscow 64/36/0.00 62/42/s Nairobi 77/57/0.00 76/55/c Nassau 90/82/0.25 91/79/pc New Delhi 99/81/0.00 98n8/pc Osaka 83/64/0.00 82/67/pc Oslo 59/54/0.63 57/49/r Ottawa 73/57/0.10 77/55/s Paris 64/59/0.14 66/57/sh Rio de Janeiro 70/63/0.02 80/67/pc Rome 77no/D.ot 81/70/s Santiago 70/52/0.00 60/45/pc Sau Paulo 68/55/0.00 78/65/pc Sap porc 70/52/0.68 70/55/s Seoul 81/57/0.00 81/58/pc Shanghai 80/65/0.00 78/69/c Singapore esne/0.04 87/80/1 Stockholm 64/55/0.00 63/49/r Sydney 75/56/0.00 86/55/s Taipei een5/0’.10 90/76/sh Tel Aviv cons/0.00 90/81/s Tokyo 79/68/0.00 75/64/pc Toronto 73/48/0.00 80/57/s Vancouver 59/50/0.00 62/50/sh Vienna 75/61/0.33 76/58/pc Warsaw 73/52/0.02 74/61/pc

107/81/s 70/54/1 81/59/s 64/49/pc 80/54/s 91/76/pc

97nr/pc

72/67/r 55/51/sh 80/55/pc 66/56/r 85/70/s 82/71/s 57/43/pc 85/69/pc 73/55/s 78/57/pc 81/68/pc 88/81/1 64/50/sh 69/55/pc 86/75/c 90/80/s 73/64/r 80/57/s 62/51/c 83/64/pc 79/65/pc

WEST NEWS

Sierra Nevadamountains snowpack hit a 500-year low in 2015,researcherssay By Monte Morin Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES

When

California Gov. Jerry Brown stood in a snowless Sierra „ vada meadow April 1 and or›

dered unprecedented drought restricti ons, it was the first time in 75 years that the area

sought to characterize the depth of California’s four-year drought and place it in a broad› er historic context. It joins a growing body of r esearch warning that global warming will reduce the amount of snow blanketing California moun› tains

a development that will

had lacked any sign of spring reduce the state’s available wa› snow. Now researchers say this

year’s record-low snowpack far more historic and ominous than previously realized. In a paper published Monday

maybe

ter, even as its population con›

tinues to grow. "This is probably the biggest water supply concern our state

is facing," said Mark Gold, as› sociate vice chancellor for en› vironment and sustainability

at the University of California, Change, scientists estimate Los Angeles who was not in› in the journal Nature Climate

that the amount of snow in the Sierra Nevada mountains was

volved in the new study. "On a SCale of One to 10, it’S ll.u

the lowest it had been in more

The issue, according to UC Davis hydrology expert Helen

than 500 years. uWe Were ezpeCting that

Dahlke, is that with climate

2015 would be extreme, but not change, there will be much less like this," said senior study au› snow and more rain. "That water will just be go› thor Valerie Trouet, a paleocli› matologist at the University of ing into the ocean unless we Arizona. can figure out a way to capture The report is the latest in some of that water quickly," a series of studies that have said Dahlke, who was not part

from the reporting stations as For lower mountain eleva› Benjamin Cook, a climate well as two tree-ring studies. tions,where temperatures are scientist at NASA Goddard In› The first used measurements warmer, the return period was stitute for Space Studies, said from 1,500 living and dead estimated to be 1,000 years. the study was "another piece blue oak trees to estimate rain› At higher elevations, where of the puzzle in an increas› state with one-third of its water. fall back to the year 1400. The temperaturesare much more ingly converging picture of a Another third is pumped from second induded tree-ring data likely to reach freezing and really exceptional California underground aquifers, and the from a different group of trees cause any precipitation to fall drought." rest comes from rivers and to model temperatures for the as snow, the return period was Other scientists said the pa› reservoirs. same period. just 95 years. per highlighted the precarious "What we know about snow Due to its importance as a The researchers noted that nature of snowpack as a key water source, officials began and how it varies from year to while California’s total precip› California resource. "We’ ve been very lucky to monitoring th e s n owpack year is that there are two im› itation in 2015 fell within the in the 1930s and have estab› portant climatic factors that bounds of natural variabili› have a natural system in place lished 108 measuring stations play a role," Trouet said. "One ty, winter temperatures were that’s worked very well for throughout the Sierra Nevada. of them is the amount of pre› among thehighesteverrecord- decades and decades," Gold This spring, researchers cipitation that falls and the ed. That means less snow and said. "But models show that found that the amount of wa› other is the temperature at the more rain, which the state is ill› snowpack is likely to be down ter contained in the snow on time that precipitation falls. equipped to collect and store. because ofincreased temperaApril 1 was only 5 percent of With higher temperatures, Although it’s been 500 years tures,and it'sa concern.Isour the average snow water equiv› your precipitation is going to since the snowpack was this system set up to manage this at alent since monitoring began. fall as rain." sparse, global warming threat› ~ pet In the case of the Phillips mea› When researchers put all the ens to make these conditions Lucas Silva, a soil and bio› suring station where Brown data into a chronology, they more frequent, according to the geochemistry researcher at UC ordered mandatory water-use saw just how exceptional the researchers. Davis who was not involved in "With anthropogenic warm› the study, said he was glad the reductions the snowpack 2015 snowfall was: The chance uSually reaChed a height of 5tt2 that a "snow drought" of this ing, those high temperatures topic was getting attention in a feet at that time of year. magnitude would affect the en› are going to be rising," Trouet major journal, even though he In order to reconstruct past tire Sierra Nevada more than said. "We can assume that the expressed doubt that tree-ring snow conditions, Trouet and once every 500 years was less return interval is going to get data could accurately pinpoint her colleagues analyzed data than 5percent,they concluded. shorter." past drought conditions. of Trouet’s study team.

Snowpack is a key factor in California’s water supply. In a normal year, melting Sier› ra Nevada snow provides the

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

THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

TRIATHLON

Thomas wins IronmanWales TENBY, Wales›

Bend’s JesseThomas bested a field of1,409 men to win the Ironman Wales triathlon Sunday. It was the 35-year-old pro triathlete’s debut at

the Ironman distance: a 2.4-mile swim, a112› mile bike leg and a26.2› mile run. Thomas placed first in 8 hours, 57 minutes, 33 seconds. Heout› lasted Croatia’s Andrej Vistica, the runner-up in 9:03:09.

Thomas, a Bendna› tive and Mountain View High School graduate who went on to become a Pac-10 champion stee› plechase runner at Stan› ford, was in third place after the swim andwas second behind Germa› ny’s Markus Thomschke by nearly three minutes after the bike leg. But Thomas, whose running talents were showcased in Maywhen he won the PolePedal Paddle multisport race, outlegged Thomschke and Vistica to the finish for the victory. Thom› schke finished third in

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Andersen:Beavs must learn frommistakes

Next up

By Kevin Hampton

and help us lose again. You’ ve

Georgia St. atNo.12Oregon When: 11 a.m. Saturday TV:Pac-12 Radio:

Corvallis Gazette-Times

got to get over it and move

KBND 1110-AM

Andersen does not want his

forward." Although the Beavers

Oregon State Beavers to put

lost, Andersen said it was an

CORVALLIS

Gary

Saturday’s 35-7 loss at Michi› gan behind it. The first-year coach wants the Beavers to learn from the

important experience for a young team with a true fresh› man quarterback.

"The ability to go into that

loss and move ahead. "My belief is anytime you lose you never forget it. You have to move on, that’s a big

things and do some bad things and then end up getting beat badly ... we can learn from

part of it," Andersen said

that and see what we can do

Monday. "You can’t let the Michigan loss turn around

good," Andersen said. SeeBeavers/C3

situation and do some good

Helfrich: No. 12Ducks’ loss was in the details By Anne M. Peterson

loss to the now-No. 4 Spartans

The Associated Press

on Saturday.

The Ducks (1-1) rallied late

In the wake of a loss at

San Jose St. at OregonSt. When: 5 p.m. Saturday TV:Pac-12 Radio: KICE 940-AM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM

Inside Portland State enters FCS poll. Sports in brief,C2

Michigan State, the Oregon Ducks are plowing ahead. "You learn from it, you take inventory of it, you write it down, you don’t turn the page yet, you read the page," Ducks coach Mark Helfrich said. "You digest it, you fix it and maybe you burn it. And you

with Vernon Adams’ 15-yard touchdown pass to Byron

Marshall with 3:25 remaining. Oregon drove to the Spartans’ 33-yard line on its next drive,

but Adams overthrew an open Marshall at the goal line, then

was sacked. His fourth-and-16 pass was incomplete. Helfrich said the difference was in the details. SeeDucks/C3

move forward."

Oregon dropped from No. 7 to No. 12 in the Associated

Press poll following the 31-28

PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK

NFL

1st fantasy league still going on strong

Nils Erikssonbegancoaching BendHighboyssoccerasahobby.20seasonslater

9:14.52. — Bulletin staff report

By Jon Wilner The Oahiand (Calif) Tribune

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

OAKLAND, Calif.

On a blazing eve› ning early last week members of the Greater Oakland Professional Pigskin Prognosticators League filed into the

Emersonchooses footdall, Ducks

After juggling soccer and football throughout his high school career, Mountain View’s Zach Emerson announced his intention to be play kickerforthe Oregon Ducks football team next season. "Up until a couple weeks ago, I was still talking to soccer schools," Emerson told The Bulletin. "I was keeping that door open as long as I could. I just kind of had achange of heart." Emerson said hehad been considering SMIJ, New Mexico, Seattle and Seattle Pacific as possible destinations to play soccer. In the end, however, hewasinvited bythe Duckstobea preferred walk-on kicker next season, andthe Mountain View senior jumped at the oppor› tunity. "It’s awesome," said Emerson, who was also considering Washington and Oregon State as football options before deciding on Or› egon. "It’s an amazing program. It’s close to home. I’ ll be close to family all the time. That was really important." Emerson, a two-time Class 5A first-team all› state boys soccer selec› tion, was a 5Ahonorable mention all-state kicker each of the past two seasons. — Bulletin staff report

back room of an old Ital› ian restaurant for their

annual fantasy football draft. This was not the

young, tablet-toting bunch so common in fantasy leagues across the country. "One thing that’s different about this league," said Stan

Heeb, the commissioner and a retired teacher, "is

Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

Bend High’s Nils Eriksson is entering his 20th season coaching the boys soccer team.

Which is fitting, be›

cause here is what else is different about this

league: GOPPPL, as it is known, is the granddad› dy of all fantasy football leagues. It was created by Bill Winkenbach, a former

minority owner of the Raiders and the driving force behind GOPPPL, which held its first draft

ils Eriksson had never coached soccer before. As a kid growing up in Stockholm, Sweden, he played pickup games with friends. As a student at the University of Wyoming, where he was on a skiing scholarship

GRANT ) J

., I

LUCAS

k

and helped the team win the 1985 NCAA championship, he played for club and intramural soccer teams.

in the summer of 1963. The men gathered here at Francesco’s Restaurant are his direct pigskin prognosticating descendants. For the next three hours, they immerse

But coaching? That did not

really cross Eriksson’s mind. He intended to enter the fi› nancial world, maybe get into some kind of management program with a bank.

help out an acquaintance,

skiing offseason. But a year passed.

Yet soon after moving to Bend in the late 1980s, after

Rocky Dillenburg, who was then head coach of the fledg› ling Bend High boys soccer program. The two had played soccerwithand againsteach other while at Wyoming, and Dillenburg asked Eriksson to

becoming a coach with the

coach the Lava Bears fresh›

from Sweden has ridden his

Mt. Bachelor Ski Education

man squad. Eriksson saw the coaching gig as a hobby, something to do for a few months during the

hobby, something that back in the day he had never really considered making a career of, into his 20th season as the

Foundation (now Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation),

NFL

we’ re pencil-and-paper guys." Some of the sil› ver-haired participants have been involved so long they are not sure when they joined.

Eriksson was persuaded to

Then two. Then six. Even›

tually he became the varsity head coach. Another year went by. Then two. Then 19.

That fresh-out-of-college kid

Bend High head coach dou› ble the tenure of the next-lon› gest active boys soccer coach in Central Oregon and a figure matched only by Crook Coun› ty volleyball coach Rosie Honl, who is also in her 20th season. "It kind of shocks me, ac› tually," says Eriksson, now 54. "Like, ’Really?’ Ten years’? Yeah, I can (believe) 10 years, yeah." SeeEriksson/C4

themselves in the same ritual as 30 million other fantasy football players across the country in the weeks leading to the NFL season.

Blue- and white-collar

workers, teenagers and

retirees, men and wom› en, high school dropouts and college graduates they all turn into gen›

eral managers, drafting teams in hopes of earn›

Falcons Eagles

ing bragging rights and, of course, cold, hard

24

cash.

TENNIS

Vikings

MLB

Mariners whip Angels Seattle scores six runs in the seventh inning en route to a10-1 victory over the LosAngeles Angels. MLB,C3

SeeFantasy/C4

Djokovic in GrandSlamdriver’s seat after win

Inside An onside kick to start overtime maynot beas dumb a move asyou think. NFL notebook,C4

By Howard Fendrich

major title of 2015 and 10th

The Associated Press

overall, there stood Djokovic, unable to unlock the car he had been using to drive himself

NEW YORK

Novak

ber of hisentourage accidentally grabbed the keys while gathering Djokovic’s bags. So

Djokovic could not find his Djokovic reluctantly accepted a keys. between the tournament site in ride from a U.S. Open courtesy Alone in a parking lot outside Queens and the hotel near Cen› car, which is how most players Arthur Ashe Stadium at about

2 a.m. Monday, just hours after beatingRoger Federerinthe U.S. Open final for his third

tral Park where he stayed with his wife and their 10-month-old

get around. It’s just that this

son the past two weeks.

be in the driver’s seat, an apt metaphor for his Grand Slam

’Itrrned out, he said, a mem›

28-year-ol d Serbian prefersto

status these days.

"It gives me a little bit of time for myself, to relax. Listening to music, going through my thoughts. I love driving here, because I don’t get a lot of chances to do that through›

out the year," Djokovic said Monday. SeeDjokovic/C2

NFL roundup,C4

Next up Seattle at Green Bay When:5:30 p.m. Sunday TV:NBC


C2

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREB DARD

TODAY SOCCER Time TV/Radio Europe, Champions League,Paris Saint-Germain (France) vs. Malmo (Sweden) 11:30 a.m. ESPN2 Europe, Champions League,Real Madrid (Spain) vs. Shakhtar Donetsk (Ukraine) 11:30 a.m. Root Europe, Champions League,PSVEindhoven (Netherlands) vs. Manchester United (England) 11:30 a.m. FS1 Europe, Champions League, Manchester City (England) vs. Juventus (Italy) 11:30 a.m. FS2 North America, Champions League, D.C. United (USA)vs. Arabe Unido (Panama) 5 p.m. FS2

ON DECK Today Boyssoccer:Ridgeview atTheDalles,4p.m.;Summit at Liberty,4:30p.m.; McKayat Redmond, 4 p.m.; CentralLinnat LaPine,4:30p.m. Girls soccer:TheDalles atRidgeview,4p.mcBend JV at LaPine,4:30p.m. Volleyball: BurnsatRidgeview,6:30 p.mcRedmond at TheDalles, 6 p.mcCrookCounty at Madras,6 p.m.; Sisters atSutherlin, 6:30p.m.;Culverat Irri› on, 6:15p.m.;Central Christian atPaisley, 4p.m.; ilchrist at Chiloquin,5:15p.m. Girls water polo:Ridgeviewat Bend

MLB, ChicagoCubsat Pittsburgh MLB, Houston atTexas MLB, L.A. Angels at Seattle BOXING

Sammy Vasquezvs. Jose Lopez

6 p.m.

FS1

WEDNESDAY SOCCER Europe, Champions League,Olympiakos (Greece) vs. Bayern Munich (Germany) 11:30a.m. ESPN2 Europe, Champions League, Chelsea (England) vs. MaccabiTelAviv (Israel) 11:30 a.m. Root Europe, Champions League, 1 1:30 a.m. F S 1 Roma (Italy) vs. Barcelona (Spain) Europe, Champions League, Dinamo Zagreb (Croatia) vs. Arsenal (England) 11:30 a.m. FS2 MLS, Toronto at NewYork City FC 4:30 p.m. ESPN2 BASEBALL

4 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB, ChicagoCubsat Pittsburgh MLB, L.A. Angels at Seattle

E S PN Roo t

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL POrtland State enterS FCSCOaCheSPOII

Portland Stateis

ranked for just the third time innineyearsandthe first time since 2011, entering theFCScoaches poll at No.20. Thepoll wasreleased Monday. The Vikings (2-0) arecoming off a34-14win over then-No. 23 Idaho State. In the first NAIApoll of the regular season,defending national champion SouthernOregon(1-1) fell to fourth after beginning the sea› son tied for first. TheRaiders lost 26-20 at Carroll to openthe season and beatEasternOregon38-35 at homeSaturday. TheMountaineers (0-3) droppedout of the poll after being ranked 13th inthe preseason.

COngreSSmanaSkSfOrfantaSy footdall Prode

Dn

Monday, U.S.Rep.Frank PalloneJr., D-N.J., called for acongressional hearing into the relationship betweenthe NFLandthe fantasy leagues that cloggedairwavesduring this season’s opening weekend.Pallone is asking for areview of theleagues’ legal status, in particular howthe leagues, which offer cashprizes to fans whopayto join, differ from sports betting, which is not legal inall states. Onlinesports betting and online gambling areprohibited under federal law, but theleaguesare taking advantage of a loophole that hasbecome knownasthe fantasy sports "carve out," according to Pallone. "Fans arecurrently allowed to risk money onthe performance of an individual player. Howisthat dif› ferent thanwagering money onthe outcome of agame?" Pallone said.

Thursday Boyssoccer:SandyatRidgeview,4:30p.mcRedmond at Barlow,7 p.mcTheDalles at Madras,4 p.m.; SistersatSweet Home,4:30p.m. Girls soccer: Ridgeview atSandy, 4:30 p.m.; Sum› mit at HoodRiver Valley, 4:30p.mc Wilsonvile atBend,4:30p.mcMadrasatTheDalles,4p.m.; CrookCountyat LaPine, 3 p.mcSweet Homeat Sisters,4:30p.mr Volleyball: Summiat t Redmond, 6:30p.m.; Bend at Ridgeview,6:30p.m.; Molala atCrookCounty, 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: Bend atEaglePoint, 7 p.m.; Craterat MountainView,7p.m.; Redmondat Baker, 7prm.; Ridgeview atHoodRiverValley, 7 p.m.; Summit at Ashland,7 p.m.; Sistersat CrookCounty,7 p.m.; Madrasat Stayton,7 p.m.; Lakeviewat La Pine,7 p.m.;SantiamatCulver, 7p.m.;Powersat Gilchrist, 4 p.m. Boys soccer:HoodRiverValley atSummit, 4p.m. Volleyball:TrinityLutheranatCentralChristian,5 p m.

MLS MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT

Wednesday’sGames

NewYorkatNewEngland,4:30 p.m. TorontoFCat NewYorkCity FC,4:30p.m. MontrealatSanJose, 7:30p.m.

Friday’s Game

BASKETBALL

FC Dallasat Sporting KansasCity,4 p.m.

MalOne died Of natural CauSeS Hall of Famebasketball

Saturday’sGames

player MosesMalone' sdeathwascaused bycardiovasculardisease, the Virginia medical examiner’s office said Monday. Malonewas found dead in aNorfolk hotel Sunday morning. Hewas 60. TheOffice of the Chief Medical Examiner said Malone died of natural causes.

Coloradoat TorontoFC,11a.m. ColumbusatD.C.United, 4 p.m. Seattle atVancouver,4 p.m. SanJoseatNewYorkCityFC,4p.m. NewEnglandatMontreal, 5 p.m. OrlandoCityatChicago, 6;30p.m. Los Angeleat s Real Salt Lake,7:30p.m.

OLYMPICS

NewYorkatPortland, 2p.m. HoustonatPhiladelphia, 4p.m.

OffiCial: TOrOntO Rot didding fOr 2024 GameS Toronto will not be bidding to host the 2024Summer Olympics. Anofficial with knowledge of thedecision said late Monday that Canada’s largest city won’t bid. Mayor JohnTory is due toannounce the decision at a news conference this morning. Other declared bidders for 2024areLos Angeles, Paris,Rome,Budapest,HungaryandHamburg,Germany. Toronto unsuccessfully bid for the 1996and2008 Olympics. — From staff an wire reports

what I’m doing ... I have a fair chance to win a couple

Continued from C1 more." "I actually was very much After watching Djokovic l ooking f o r ward

t o th a t

beat No. 2 Federer 6-4, 5-7,

champion’s drive from the tennis court to the hotel," he added with a laugh, "but it

6-4, 6-4 on Sunday night, Mats Wilander, who won three major tournaments in

view with Th e A ssociated

Djokovic can succeed on any surface, against any style of play and against any specific opponent.

wasn’t meant to be, I guess." D jokovic’s voice w a s scratchy and he coughed a few times during an inter›

1988, made the point that

Press as he made the rounds Federer offered a similar on the morning TV talk-show assessment. "He’s just really consis› circuit, where hosts fawned over his newest silver trophy. tent. Seems like there are not He is gaining on Federer’s many guys that can hang record of 17 Slam champi› with him.... He’s perfected onships. Djokovic won their his game on the hard courts, past three major final meet› no doubt about it. He was al› ings; reverse those results, ways a great clay-court play› and Federer’s lead would be er. And because he moves as 20-7. well as he does, he’s solid and As it is, Djokovic stands consistent now on the grass," tied for the seventh-most Federer said. "To say the major titles in history; Pete least, it’s very impressive." Sampras (14), Rafael Nadal Djokovic joined Federer (14), Roy Emerson (12), Bjorn (2004, 2006, 2007) and Laver Borg (11) and Rod Laver (11) (who won a true Grand Slam are the only others ahead of in 1969) as the only men in him. the Open era, which dates to "I would lie if I said that I 1968, to reach all four major am not aiming to maybe at finals in a year. least match or surpass some D jokovic w ent 2 7- 1 a t guys like Pete or Nadal, even Grand Slam tournaments if Nadal is still playing, obvi› this season, the lone loss ously, so he still has a chance against Stan Wawrinka in to increase his number," said the French Open final. "I really feel like every› Djokovic, who clinched the year-end No. 1 ranking for thing happens for a reason," the fourth time. "I want to Djokovic said. "If I won that keep on going, and hopefully match, God knows if I would have longevity in my career, be able to win Wimbledon. because if I continue doing Maybe I would be satisfied."

"We’ ll wait until CSI runs tests, but my gut feeling is that he was beaned in the head with some kind of hard, spherical object."

sunday’sGames

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All TimesPDT

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA I 0 0 1.000 31 10 I 0 0 1.000 27 14 I 0 0 1.000 28 21 I 0 0 1.000 17 10 South W L T Pct PF PA Tennesse e I 0 0 1.000 42 14 Jacksonvile 0 I 0 .000 9 20 Houston 0 I 0 .000 20 27 Indianapolis 0 I 0 .000 14 27 North W L T Pct PF PA I 0 0 1.000 33 13 0 I 0 .000 13 19 0 I 0 .000 21 28 0 I 0 .000 10 31 Weal W L T Pct PF PA Denver I 0 0 1.000 19 13 Kansas City I 0 0 1.000 27 20 SanDiego I 0 0 1.000 33 28 Oakland 0 I 0 .000 13 33 NATIONALCDNFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas I 0 0 1.000 27 26 Philadelphia 0 I 0 .000 24 26 Washington 0 I 0 .000 10 17 N.Y.Giants 0 I 0 .000 26 27 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta I 0 0 1.000 26 24 Carolina I 0 0 1.000 20 9 TampaBay 0 I 0 .000 14 42 NewOrleans 0 I 0 .000 19 31 North

St. Louis Arizona SanFrancisco Seattle

W I 0 0 0

L 0 I I I

T 0 0 0 0

Pct PF PA 1.000 31 23 .000 3 20 .000 28 33 .000 23 31

I I I 0

0 0 0 I

0 0 0 0

1.000 34 31 1.000 31 19 0.000 20 3 .000 31 34

West W L T Pct PF PA

Monday’sGames

Atlanta26, Philadelphia24

SanFrancisco20,Minnesota3 Thursday’sGame Denverat KansasCity,5:25p.m. Sunday’sGames TampaBayatNewOrleans,10a.m. Detroit atMinnesota,10 a.m. Arizonaat Chicago,10a.m. HoustonatCarolina,10 a.m. SanFranciscoat Pittsburgh,10 a.m. NewEnglandatBuffalo, 10a.m. SanDiegoatCincinnati, 10a.m. Tennes seeatCleveland,10a.m. Atlantaat NY Giants,10a m. St. LouisatWashington,10a.m. Baltimore atOakland,I:05 p.m. Miami atJacksonvile,1:05 p.m. Dallas atPhiladelphia,1:25p.m. SeattleatGreenBay, 5:30p.m. Monday,Bep.21 N.Y.JetsatIndianapolis, 5:30p.m.

LEADERS Bareback Riding 1, KayceeFeild, Span› ish Fork,Utah,$110,633. 2, EvanJayne, Marseile, France,$91,070.3, Austin Foss, Terrebonne,Ore., $89,9 48. 4, Bobby Mote, Stephenville, Texas, $88,486. 5,JakeBrown, Hilsboro, Texas, $83,766. 6, Will Lowe,Canyon, Texas, $80,131.7, Glint Can› non,Wailer,Texas,$79,533. 8, TimO’Connel, Zwin› le, iowa,$78,273.9, Glint Laye,Cadogan, Alberta, 77,971.10,SethHardwick, Laramie, Wyo., $77,844. 11, CalebBenne tt, Tremonton, Utah,$77,447. 12, TannerAus,Granite Falls, Minn.,$76,312.13,Winn Ratliff, Leesvile, La.,$74,552.14r StevenPeebles, Redmond,Ore.,$73,144. 15, Grin Larsen,Inglis, Manit oba,$72, 490.19,R.c.Landingham,Pendleton, Ore.,$59,805. Steer Wrestling I, Ty Erickson,Helena, Mont., $79,409. 2, ClaytonHass, Terrell, Texas, $77,645. 3, LukeBranquinho, LosAlamos,Calif., $76,191. 4, HunterCure,Holliday, Texas,$76,042. 5, Kyle Irwin, RobertsdaleAl , a., $72,787.6, Tyler Wagues pack,Gonzales,La.,$71,908.7,NickGuy, Sparta, Wis., $70,988. 8, TrevorKnowles, Mount Vernon ,Ore.,$69,473.9,Seth Brockman,Wheatland, Wyo., $69,459. 10, DakotaEldridge, Elko, Nev.,$66,232.11,Tanner Milan, Cochrane,Alberta, $64,835.12,K.C.Jones, Decatur, Texas, $64,631. 13, Baylor Roche,Tremonton, Utah,$62,502. 14,Blake Knowles,Heppner, Ore., $61,971.15,Olin Hannum, Malad,Idaho,$61,022. Team Roping (header) 1, ClayTryan, Bil› ings, Mont.,$115,591.2, ChadMasters, Cedar Hil, Tenn.,$91,416.3, Derrick Begay, SebaDalkai, Ariz., $86,925.4, Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas,$82,096.5, ColbyLovell, Madisonvile,Texas,$78,357. 6, Aaron Tsinigine,TubaCity, Ariz., $72,422.7, ErichRogers, RoundRock,Ariz., $71,991.8, JakeBarnes, Scotts› dale, Ariz., $70,916.9, Nick Sartain,Dover,Okla., $67,4 05.10,ClaySmith,BrokenBow,Okla.,$67,305. 11, Coleman Proctor, Pryor, Okla.,$67,194.12, JoJo LeMond,Andrews, Texas, $65,803. 13,JakeCooper, Monument ,N.M.,$65,692.14,LukeBrown,Stephenville, Texas, $64,633. 15,MattSherwood,Pima,Ariz., $64,099.

Team Roping(heeler) I, JadeCorkil, Fal›

Saturday Boyssoccer:LebanonatMountainView,2 p.m.; Culverat Riverside,1p.m. Monday’sboxscores Girls soccer: MountainViewatLebanon,2 p.m. Volleyball: Summiat t Lakeridge, 8a.m.;Redmondat DallasTournam ent, 8 a.m.; Bend,Mountain View, Falcons 26, Eagles24 CrookCountyat RogueValleyClassic, TBD;Ma› 0 8 14 7 24 dras, Sisters,Ridgeviewat Sisters Invitational, 8 P hiladelphia 3 17 0 6 26 a.m.; La PineatTallmanTournament inLakeview,9 Atlanta First Quarter a.m.; CulveratSt. PaulTournament, 10a.mcCen› Atl FG B ryan t 41, 10: 5 5. tral Christianat C.S.LewisTournament, 11a.m.; SecondQuarter Prospect, TriadatGilchrist, noon Atl Jones4passfromRyan(Bryant kick),10:44 Cross-country:Bend,MountainView,Sisters, Crook Phi F G P a rk ey 29, 7:18. County,Madras, LaPineat ThreeCourseChallenge Atl FGBryant39,1:05. in Seaside, TBD;Summit at OregonCity XCInvita› Atl Jones22passfromRyan(Bryantkick),:45. tional,10:30a.m. Third Quarter Phi Murray8run(Parkeykick), 13:13. Phi Murray5 passfrom Bradford (Parkeykick) MOTOR SPORTS 3:39. Feurlh Quarter Atl FG Bryant44, 10:49. NAesCAR Sprint Cup Phi MathewsI run(Parkey kick), 8:37. Points leaders Atl FGBryant47, 6:27. I (tie), JimmiJo ehnson, KyleBusch, Matt Kenseth, A 70,516. 2,012. 4,JoeyLogano,2,009. 5 (tie), KevinHarvick, DaleEarnhardtJr., KurtBusch,2,006, Carl Edwards, Phi Atl 2,006. 9(tie), BradKeselowski, MartinTruexJr., Den› First downs 23 21 ny Hamlin,2,003.12(tie), JamieMcMurray, Jeff Gor› TotalNetYards 3 99 39 5 don, RyanNewman,PaulMenard,GlintBowyer,2,000. Rushes-yards 16-63 35-105 Chaseschedule Passing 3 36 29 0 First round(16drivers) Sept. 20,Chicago› PuntReturns 3 -25 2 - 18 land;Sept.27,NewHampshire; Oct. 4, Dover. KickoffReturns 0 -0 3 - 59 Second round(12 drivers) Oct.10,Char› InterceptionsRet. 2-23 2-3 lotte;Oct.18, Kansas; Oct. 25,Talladega. Comp-Att-Int 36-52-2 23-34-2 Third round (8 drivers) Nov. I, Martinsvile; Sacked-YardsLost 0-0 1-8 Nov. 8,Texas; Nov.15, Phoenix. Punts 5-45.2 4-57.8 Final (4 drivers) Nov.22, Homestead-Miami Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 10-88 7 - 57 Timeof Possession 24:33 35:27

SOCCER

RODEO Professional

e/1 5 In the Bleachers 0 2015 steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.corn/inthebleachers

Wednesday Boyssoccer:LaPineatCrookCounty,4:30p.m. Cross-country:Ridgeview,Madras,Culver atSFOk› toberfestInvitational inSilverFalls, TBD Volleyball: SouthWasco County atTrinity Lutheran, 5 p.m.

BASEBALL

Djokovic

IN THE BLEACHERS

len, Nev.,$115,591.2, ClayO’Brien Cooper, Gard› nerville, Nev.,$88,045.3, Travis Graves,Jay, Okla., $84,0 23.4,PatrickSmith,Lipan,Texas,$82,096.5, America’s Line Kory Koontz,Stephenvile, Texas,$77,994. 6, Travis Favorite Open Current D/U Underdog Woodard,Stockton,Calif., $74,470. 7, Paul Eaves, NFL Lonede ll,Mo.,$73,596.8,Gory Petska,Marana, Thursday Ariz., $73,350.9, Junior Nogueira,Scottsdale,Ariz., 3 3 41’ / z CHIEFS $70,338.10,RichSkelton, Llano,Texas,$67,405. 11, Sunday Jake Long,Coff eyville,Kan.,$65,409.12,RyanMotes, 3 3 40r/ z Tex ans Weatherford, Texas,$64,591. 13, Kollin VonAhn, PANTHE RS SAINTS 10 1 0 4 P/ z Bucs Blanchard,Okla.,$64,447.14, QuinnKesler, Holden, STEELE RS 49ers Utah,$63,933.15, Russell Cardoza,Terrebonne,Ore., VIKINGS Lions Patriots I I 45 BILLS $62,398. Saddle Bronc Riding 1, CodyDeMoss, Cards p/2 p/ 2 4 4/ 2 BEA RS Heftin, La., $119,397. 2, Rusty Wright, Milford, BROW NS 2 r/2 2 41 r/ z Tita ns Utah,$113,502.3,IsaacDiaz,Desdemona,Texas, BENGA LS 3 3 45r/ z C h arne rs Rams 33 41’ /z WASHING TON $96,450. 4,JacobsCrawley, Boerne, Texas, $94,184. TaosMuncy,Corona, N.M., $91,732. 6, Wade GIANTS Falcons 5, Coleman,Okla., $86,934. 7, JakeWright, Ravens RAIDER S Sundell, M ilford, Utah,$84,531.8, CertScheer, Elsmere, Neb., 6 6 41 ’ A JA GUARS 03.9,ChuckSchmidt,Keldron,S.D.,$81,604. Cowboys $82,2 SpencerWright, Milford, Utah,$67,643.11, Heith PACKE RS 3 3 48 Sea hawks10, DeMoss, Heftin, La.,$66,964.12, ZekeThurston, Big Monday,Sept. 21 Valley,Alberta,$66,161. 13,BradleyHarter, Loranger, COLTS 7 7 47 La., $62,866.14,ChadFerley,Oelrichs,S.D.,$57,223. 15, CoBurnBradshaw, Beaver, Utah,$56,351.1 College Tie-dewn Roping 1,Tuf Cooper,Decatur, Thursday Clemson 5 6 LOUISVILLE Texas, $122,915. 2, TimberMoore,Aubrey,Tex› as, $104,742. 3,Marty Yates,Stephenvile, Texas, Friday 8’Iz 8’Iz FloridaSt BOSTON COLL $94,716. 4,HunterHerrin, Apache,Okla., $93,497. ,RyanJarrett,Comanche,Okla.,$82,492.6,Marcos ARIZONA ST 2 8 2 8 NewMexico 5 Costa,Childress,Texas,$79,493. 7, Trevor Brazile, Saturday Wake Forest 3 3 ARMY Decatur,Texas,$79,455. 8, CalebSmidt, Bellville, Temple 1 2 11 UMASS Texas,$79,353.9, Gory Solomon,Prairie View,Texas, 10,MontyLewis, Hereford, Texas,$77,431. MICHIGAN Univ $77,473. Matt Shiozawa,Chubbuck,Idaho, $76,317. 12, Ball St 6 6 EMICHIG AN 11, adeSwor,Winnie,Texas,$70,279.13,TysonDurfey, MID TENN ST 18’/z 19 Charlotte C avann ah,Mo.,$68, 522.14,GlintRobinson,Spanish MINNES OTA 23 23 KentSt S Fork, $66,373.15, MichaelOtero, Lowndesboro, FLAATLANTIC Buffalo Ala., Utah, $63,641. Troy WISCON SIN 35’/z 35 Steer Roping I, Vin FisherJr., Andrews, INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS NCARO LINA 8 10 illinois ST 32’/z 30’/z No illinois Texas, $61,490. 2, MikeChase,McAlester, Okla., RUSHINGPhiladelphia: Sproles5-50, Mur› OHIO ray 8-9, Mathews3-4. Atlanta: Coleman20-80, Nc State 1 6 1 8’/z OLDDOMINION $61 089.3 TrevorBrazile Decatur Texas $58722.4 OKLAHO MA 32 30’/z Tulsa JessTierney,Hermosa, S.D., $53,100.5, Rocky Pat› Freeman10-18,Ryan5-7. S YRAC U SE 5’lz 6’lz CMichigan terson,Pratt,Kan.,$52,384.6, Scott Snedecor, Freder› PASSING Philadelphia: Bradford 36-52-2› Texas,$51,231.7, CodyLee,Gatesvile, Tex› DUKE 3 3 Northwestern icksburg, 336. Atlanta: Ryan 23-34-2-298. TEXAS A&M 32’/z 33’/z Nevada as,$46,710.8,NeatWood,Needville,Texas,$46,662. RECEIVINGPhiladelphia: Matthews10-102, 9, Chet Herren, Pawhuska, Okla., $42,517.10, JoJo N 47 46 GeorgiaSt Sproles7-76,Murray4-11, Ertz3-46, Cooper3-25, OREGO NTEXAS LeMond,Andrews,Texas, $40,355. 11,ShayGood, Mathews 3-24, Austin 2-22,Huff2-19, Celek1-6,Ag› Rice ST 11 9’/z La Tech Midland,Texas,$39,273. 12,TroyTilard, Douglas, holor 1-5.Atlanta: Jones9-141,White4-84, Free› KANSAS man 3-29,Tamm e 3-19, Hankerson 2-16, Wiliams GEORG IA 17 17 SCarolina Wyo.,$37,789.13,BrodiePoppino,BigCabin, Okla., 3’A 3’A NAVY ECarolina $34,602.14, ChanceKelton, Mayer,Ariz., $33,271. 1-5, Toilolo1-4. 7 7 Auburn 15, JasonEvans, Huntsvile, Texas,$33,163. MISSEDFIELDGOALS Philadelphia: Par› LSU Bull Riding I,SageKimzey,StrongCity,Okla., ALABAMA IPA IPA Mississippi key 44 (WR). 5’A 6 Va Tech PURDUE $148,992.2, ParkerBreding,Edgar, Mont., $116,679. 3, BrennonEldred, Sulphur, Okla., $110,041. 4, OKLAHOM AST 23r/2 24 Utsa 49ers 20, Vikings 3 MIAMI-FLA 4 3 ’/z Nebraska WesleySilcox, Santaquin, Utah,$105,778. 5, Chan› 1r/z 2r/z Ga Tech NOTRE DAME dler Bownds,Lubbock,Texas, $88,270.6, JoeFrost, 0 0 0 3 8 Minnesota WASHINGTON5’Iz 6 UtahSt Randlett, Utah, $79,342. 7, CodyTeel, Kountze, B anFrancisco 0 7 3 10 2 0 TEXAS 2’Iz 3 ST So Miss Texas,$76,147. 8, ShaneProctor, GrandCoulee, SecondQuarter Cincinnati 19 19 MIAMI-OHIO Wash.,$73,186.9, Brett Stall, Detroit Lakes,Minn., SF Hyde10run(Dawson kick),:47. TOLEDO 7V~ iowaSt $70,889.10,ClaytonFoltyn,Winnie, Texas, $64,348. Third Quarter ARKANS AS 9’Iz I t’/2 TexasTech 11, TyWallace,Collbran,Colo., $61,610.12,Aaron SF FGDawson30,4;32. xas, $61,584. 13,CalebSanderson, Memphis 3 3 BOWLGREEN Pass,Dallas,Te Feurlh Quarter d-Colorado 3 4 ColoradoSt Hallettsville,Texas,$61,504.14, KodyDeShon, Hel› Min FGWalsh37,14:43. MARYLAN D 8’/r 7 SFlorida ena,Mont.,$59,586.15, ReidBarker,Comfort, Texas, SF Hyde17run(Dawson kick), 9:30. MISSOU RI 22’/r 21’/r Connecticut $59,067. SF FGDawson25,6;08. Barrel Racing 1, Gallic Duperier,Boerne, Florida 3 3 KENTUC KY A 70,499. INDIANA 3 2 WKentucky Texas, $155,125. 2, Lisa Lockhart,Oelrichs, S.D., 7 6 ’ /r California TEKAS $151, 527.3,SarahRoseMcDonald,Brunswick,Ga., Min SF OREGO NST 9 8 SanJoseSt $123,160.4, MaryWalker, Ennis, Texas, $105,421.5, First downs 17 25 S herry Cervi MaranaAriz. $102854.6 NancyHunt› TCU 37 37 Smu TotalNetYards 2 48 39 5 Utep 4 2 ’lz NMEXICO ST er, NeolaUt , ah,$96,692.7, Falon Taylor, Collinsvile, Rushes-yards 17-71 39-230 PENN ST 8’lz 10 Rutgers Texas,$86,828.8, CarleyRichardson,Pampa, Texas, Passing 1 77 16 5 SANDIEG OST 15 17 SAlabam a $76,976. 9,CassidyKruse,Gilette, Wyo.,$72,647. 2-9 2-0 PuntReturns USC 9 10 Stanford 10, TaylorJacob,Carmine,Texas,$71,579. 11, Mi› KickoffReturns 1-21 0-0 IOWA 4 5 ’/z Pittsburgh chele McLeod,Whitesboro,Texas,$67,797.12,Jackie 0 -0 1 - 2 6 MICHIGAN Interceptions Ret. ST 2 7 2 7 Air Force Ganter,Abilene,Texas, $61,232.13, Vickie Carter, Comp-Att-Int 23-32-1 17-26-0 WASH ST Wyoming Richfield,Utah,$59,691.14, Jill Welsh,Parker,Ariz., Sacked-YardsLost 5-54 1-0 UCLA 16 16 Byu $59,4 44.15,LaynaKight,Ocala,Fla.,$53,938. Punts 4-37.5 3- 46.7 utah FRESNO ST 0-0 1-1 Fumbles-Lost DEALS Penalties-Yards 5 -25 8 - 57 BASKETBALL Time ofPossession 26:58 33:02 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS WNBA playoffs RUSHINGMinnesota: Peterson 10-31, NATIONALBASKEIBALLASSOCIATION McKinnon 3-20, Bridgew ater 3-16, Asiata1-4. San WOMEN'S All TimesPDT Francisco: Hyde26-168, Kaepernick 7-41, Hayne 4-13, Bush 2-8. CONFERENCESEMIFINALS PASSINGMinnesota: Bridgewater 23-32-1› (Best-ef-3;x-if necessary) 231. BanFrancisco: Kaepernick17-26-0-165. Thursday’sGames RECEIVINGMinnesota: Wallace6-63, Ru› Indiana at Ch icago,5 p.m. dolph5-53,Peterson3-21,Asiata2-28,C.Johnson 2-27, McKinnon 2-8, Wright1-27, Ellison1-3,Patter› Tulsa atPhoenix, 7 p.m. Friday’sGames son1-1.SanFrancisco: Boldin4-36,VDavis 3-47, wYork, 4p.m. Celek 3-40,Hyde2-14, Ellington2-5, Smith 1-11, Washingtonat Ne L os An g e l e s a t Mi nnesota,6p.m. Hayne1-7,McDonald1-5. Saturday’sGames MISSEDFIELDGOALS Minnesota: Walsh Chicagoat Indiana,4 p.m. 44 (WR). BanFrancisco: Da wson28 (BK). PhoenixatTulsa,6 p.m.

College Pac-12 All Times PDT

California OregonSt.

Oregon Stanford WashingtonSt Washington Arizona SouthernCal UCLA Utah Ariz. St. Colorado

North Conf Overall W L W L P F PA 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0

2 1 1 1 I 1

0 1 1 1 I 1

1 0 82 1 33 42 89 73 37 2 3 54 58 62 16

0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0

2 2 2 2 I 1

0 0 0 0 I 1

86 52 1 1 41 5 7 1 19 48 3 1 52 59 68 42

South Conf Overall W L W L P F PA

Friday’s Game NewMexicoat ArizonaSt., 7 p.m. Saturday’sGames GeorgiaSt.atOregon,11a.m. UtahSt.atWashington, 2 p.m. Coloradovs.ColoradoSt., 4p.m. CaliforniaatTexas, 4:30p.m. SanJoseSt.atOregonSt., 5 p.m. StanfordatSouthern Cal, 5p.m. WyomingatWashingtonSt., 5:30p.m. BYUat UCLA,7:30 p.m. Utah atFresnoSt., 7:30 p.m. N. Arizona at Arizona,8p.m. Wilson, Ariz Freeman,O regon Perkins,UCL A AdkinsIl,colo Richard,ArizSt

Rushing leaders G Car yds Tds Avg 2 2 2 2 2

4 3 291 4 5 272 3 2 210 4 1 209 4 1 194

3 145.5 4 136.0 2 105.0 3 104.5 2 97.0

Transactions BASEBA LL National League

SANDIEG OPADRES Recalled LHPRobbie Erlin

and RHP Casey Kely fromEl Paso(PCL). Selectedthe contractsof RH PJayJacksonandINFCodyDecker from ElPaso.PlacedINFYonderAlonsoonthe60-dayDL, retroactivetoSept.2. BASKET BALL National Basketball Association LOSANGELESLAKERS— SignedCRobertUpshaw to a multiyear contract. MILWAUKEE BUCKS — Signedgeneralmanager John Ham mond to a contract extensionthroughthe 2016-17 season. HOCKE Y sunday’sGames National Hockey League New Yorkat Washington,10am. CALGAR YFLAMES SignedDRasmusAndersson. Minnes otaatLosAngeles,noon FOOTBA LL Monday,Sept. 21 National Football League x-IndianaatChicago,5p.m. NFL SuspendedWashington CBChris Guliver x-Tul saatPhoeni x,7p.m. onegam eforviolating theNFLPersonal Conduct Policy. Tuesday,Sept. 22 CHICAGO BEARS— SignedLBSam Acho.Placed x-WashingtonatNewYork, TBD DL CorneliusWashingtononinjuredreserve. x-Los AngelesatMinnesota,TBD CLEVELAND BROWNS — SignedDLKelcyQuarles to the practicesquad. DALLAS COWBOYS WaivedOTJordanMills. TENNIS DETROIT LIONS Released WRGregSalas from reserve/injured. WTA Tour MIAMIDOLPHINS — Rel eased RB-KR LaMike James.SignedTEJake Stoneburnerfrom the practice CoupeBanqueNatronale squad .Re-signedC-G JacquesMcclendon.Wai vedC Monday atQuebecCity SamBrennerand RBJonasGray. First Round WASHINGTON R E D S KI N S — R e l e a s e d P K K a ForJelenaOstapenko, Latvia, def. MonaBarthel (3), bathandLBHoustonBates. SignedPKDustin Hoi pkins Germany, 7-6(6), 4-6,6-4. FrankKearse. Andrea Hlavackova,CzechRepublic,def.Shelby and DE COLLEGE Rogers,UnitedStates, 7-6(8), 6-0. S AINT JOSEPI-I'S— NamedJohnHamptonwomen' s Sesil Karatantcheva, Bulgaria, def. Barbora assistantba sketball coach. Krejcikova, CzechRepublic, 6-3, 7-5. WAGNE R Promoted mens’ assistant basketbal NaomiBready,Britain, def.AllaKudryavtseva,Rus› coach, MikeBabul, to men’sassociate headbasketbal sia, 6-3,7-6(7). coach. LouisaChirico,UnitedStates, def. Julia Boserup, UnitedStates,7-5, 4-6,6-1. AnnikaBeck(5), Germany, def. SharonFichman, FISH COUNT Canada, 6-0,6-1. TamiraPaszek,Austria, def. KaterynaKozlova, Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack Ukraine, 6-1, 6-1. chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCo› lumbia Riverdamslast updated Monday. JapanWomen’sOpen Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Monday atTokyo B onneville 28,088 2,723 2,233 6 5 7 First Round The Dalles 20,731 2,722 5,768 1,875 Madison Brengle(3),UnitedStates,def.Anna-Lena JohnDay Friedsam, Germany, 6-3, 6-1. Mc Nary 16,687 2,462 5,510 1,555 Christina McHale(6), UnitedStates, def. Yulia Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, Putintseva, Kazakhstan,6-3, 7-5. jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected Ajla Tomljanovic(7), Croatia, def.TimeaBabos, ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedMonday. Hungary,3-6,6-4, 7-6(2). Chnk Jchnk Btlhd Wstlhd KimikoDate-Krumm,Japan, def. Misaki Doi, Ja› Bonneville 944,598 73,504 226,920 85,238 pan, 6-4,6-2. TheDalles 628,432 62,672 135,829 51,311 Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium, def.Katerina Siniako› John Day 491,996 41,910 90,214 33,157 va, Czech Republic, 6-4, 6-3. Mc Nary 418,097 30,714 75,743 28,349


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015 THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

American League

All TimesPDT

Mariners10, Angels1

AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

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

W L 82 61 79 64 70 73 69 74 68 75

Pct GB .573 .552 3 .490 12 .483 13 .476 14

W L 84 59 75 68 71 71 68 74 65 78

Pct GB .587 .524 9

77 67 76 67 72 71 70 75 61 83

.535 .531 ’I~

Central Division

West Division W L

.500 12’/2 .479 15’/2

.455 19

Pct GB

503 41/2 .483 7’/2

.424 16

Monday’sGames

Baltimore 2, Boston0 Cleveland 8, KansasCity 3 N.Y.Yankees4, TampaBay1 Texas 5, Houston 3 Minnesota 7, Detroit 1 Chicago WhiteSox8, Oakland7, 14innings Seattle10,L.A.Angels 1

Today’sGames Boston(J.Kegy10-6) at Baltimore(U.Jimenez 11-9), 4:05 p.m. Kansas City (Medlen3-1) at Cleveland(Tomlin 5-1), 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Warren 6-6) at Tamp a Bay (Odorizzi 7-8), 4:10 p.m. Toronto(Buehrle 14-7)atAtlanta(Teheran10-7), 4:10 p.m. Houston(McHugh16-7) atTexas(M.Perez2-5), 5:05 p.m. Detroit (Simon12-9) at Minnesota(PHughes 10-8), 5:10 p.m. Oakland(Brooks1-3) at ChicagoWhite Sox (Sa› mardzija9-12),5:10p.m. L.A. Angels(Tropeano 1-2) atSeatle (F.Hernandez 17-8), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday’sGames Bostonat Baltimore,4:05 p.m. Kansas CityatCleveland, 4:10p.m. N.Y.YankeesatTampaBay,4:10 p.m. TorontoatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. Houstonat Texas, 5:05p.m. Detroit atMinnesota,5:10p.m. OaklandatChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. LA. AngelsatSeatle, 7:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB NewYork 83 61 .576 Washington 73 70 .510 9H Miami 61 83 .424 22 Atlanta 56 88 .389 27 Philadelphia 56 89 .386 271/2 CentralDivision W L Pct GB St. Louis 89 54 .622 Pittsburgh 86 56 .606 2’/2 Chicago 82 60 .577 6’/2 Milwaukee 62 81 .434 27 Cincinnati 60 83 .420 29 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 83 60 .580 SanFrancisco 76 68 .528 7’/2 Arizona 68 76 ,472 15’/2 SanDiego 68 77 .469 16 Colorado 60 84 417 231/2

Monday’sGames Washington 8, Philadelphia7, 11innings N.Y.Mets4, Miami3 SanDiego10,Arizona3 LA. Dodgers 4, Colorado1 San Francisco 5, Cincinnati 3 Today’sGam es Chicago Cubs (Hammel8-6)at Pittsburgh(G.cole16› 8), 10:35a.m.,1stgame Chicago Cubs(Lester 9-10) atPittsburgh(Happ5-1), 4:05 p.m., 2ndgame Washington(Strasburg8-7) at Philadelphia(D.Bu› chanan2-8), 4:05p.m. Miami (Koehle9-13) r at N.Y.Mets(deGrom 13-7), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Buehrle14-7) at Atlanta(Teheran10-7), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (C.Martinez13-7) at Milwaukee(A.Pena 1-0), 5:10 p.m. San Diego (TRoss10-10) at Arizona(Chacin 0-1), 6:40 p.m. Colorado(Rusin5-8) at L.A. Dodg ers (B.Anderson 9-8), 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Jo.Lamb 1-3) at SanFrancisco (Heston 11-10),7:15p.m. Wednesday’sGames Chicago Cubsat Pitsburgh, 4:05p.m. Washington at Philadelphia,4:05p.m. Miami atN.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m. TorontoatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. St. LouisatMilwaukee,5:10p.m. SanDiegoatArizona, 6:40 p.m. Coloradoat L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m. Cincinnatiat SanFrancisco, 7:15p.m.

Leaders AMERICANLEAGUE PITCHINGKeuchel, Houston, 17-7; FHernan› dez, Seattle, 17-8; McHugh,Houston, 16-7; Price, Toronto,15-5; Lewis,Texas, 15-8. ERA Keuchel, Houston,2.22; Price, Toronto,

2.46; Price,Toronto,2.46;SGray, Oakland,2.56; Ka› zmir, Houston,2.63; Kazmir, Houston,2.63; Archer, Tampa Bay, 2.95. STRIKEO UTS Sale,Chicago,250;Archer,Tampa Bay,236;Kluber,Cleveland, 219;Price,Toronto, 203. SAVESStreet, LosAngeles,35; Boxberger, Tam› pa Bay,34;AMiler, NewYork, 33; Britton, Baltimore, 33; ShToeg son,Texas,32; Perkins, Minnesota, 32. NATIONALLEAGUE PITCHINGArrieta, Chicago,19-6; Bumg arner, SanFrancisco,18-7;Greinke,LosAngeles,17-3; Wa› cha, St.Louis,16-5;Gcole,Pittsburgh,16-8. ERA Greinke,LosAngeles,1.61; Arrieta,Chica› go, 1.99;Kershaw,LosAngeles, 2.12; deGrom, New York, 2.40;Gcole,Pittsburgh,2.54; SMiler, Atlanta, 2.86; Harvey, NewYork, 2.88. STRIKEO UTS Kershaw, Los Angeles, 264; Scherzer, Washington, 231;Bumgarner, SanFrancisco, 212;Arrieta,Chicago, 204;Shields, SanDiego, 200. SAVESMelancon, Pitsburgh,45; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 43;Familia, NewYork, 41;Kimbrel, SanDiego, 36; FrRodriguez, Milwaukee,34;Casila, SanFrancis› co, 33;Jansen,LosAngeles,31.

Ducks Continued from C1 "That’s obviously the dif› ficult part of playing a game like that on the road and in that environment," Helfrich

said Sunday. "Every single excruciating detail in your mind is the difference in the game." There were lingering ques› tions following the game about Adams’ index finger, which was apparently injured in the season opener against Eastern Washington. Oregon does not discuss injuries as a policy. Adams, who threw in Sat›

urday’s game with gloves on, examined the finger at times during the game, and after› ward it was taped when he

spoketoreporters.Hefinished with 309 yards passing. "Anything we say of that na› ture is an excuse and we don’ t really get i nto t hat r ealm,"

SEATTLE Seth Smith homered for Seattle, and LosAngeles fell four games back in the ALwild card race. Smith’s two-run homer keyed a three-run second asthe Mariners erased a1-0 deficit.

MAKE IT 8

White Snx 8, Athletics 7 (14inn.) CHICAGO Melky Cabrera drove in Geovany Soto with two outs in

PHILADELPHIA Jayson Werth hit two homers anddrove in five runs, and YunelEscobar hadthe game-winning RBI in the11th inning to lift Washington.

the 14th inning to lift Chicago. Da›

vid Robertson allowed four runs in the ninth, the last on apassed ball, to allow Oakland to tie. Oakland

Natinnals 8, Phillies 7 (11inn.)

Washington Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Rendon2b 6 1 4 1 OHerrrcf 5 0 1 0 YEscor3b 6 1 2 1 Galvisss 5 1 2 2 Harperrf 5 2 2 1 Bogsvcrf 5 1 1 0 W erthlf 6 2 2 5 Altherrlf 4 1 1 0 Fisterp 0 0 0 0 LuGarcp 0 0 0 0 CRonsn 1b 4 0 2 0 Loewen p 0 0 0 0 Dsmndss 5 0 1 0 Howard1b 3 1 1 1 W Ramsc 3 0 1 0 Ruf1b 2000 1Turnrpr 0 0 0 0 Sweeny2b 3 1 1 1 Loatonc 1 0 0 0 JGomzp 0 0 0 0 MTaylrcf 5 0 0 0 Hinojosp 0 0 0 0 Zmrmnp 3 1 1 0 Francrph-If 1 0 0 0 Thrntnp 0 0 0 0 Asche3b 5 1 1 3 R aMrtnp 0 0 0 0 Ruppc 4 1 1 0 T reinenp 0 0 0 0 Nolap 0000 dnDkkrph 1 0 0 0 CdArndph 1 0 0 0 Janssn p 0 0 0 0 DeFrts p 0 0 0 0 Rivero p 0 0 0 0 Kratz ph 1 0 0 0 P apelnp 0 0 0 0 Nerisp 0 0 0 0 Espinosph 0 1 0 0 JWgmsp 0 0 0 0 TMoorelf 0 00 0 ABlanc2b 2 0 0 0 Totals 45 8 158 Totals 4 1 7 9 7 8 Washington 101 040 000 11 7 Philadelphia 611 004 000 10 E Desmond (25). DP Philadelphia 3. LOB › Washington8,Philadelphia7.28 Bogus evic (2).HR › Rendon(5), Harper (37), Weith 2(9), Galvis (7), Howard (23),Asche(9). CS TTurner (1). S Galvis, Hola. IP H R E R BBSO Washington Zimmerm ann 6 7 6 6 1 8 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Thornton 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Ra.Martin Treinen 1 0 0 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Janssen 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Rivero PapelbonW4-28S,1-241 1 1 1 0 1 FisterS,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 2 Philadelphia Nota 5 9 6 6 1 8 De Fratus 1 0 0 0 0 2 Neris 1 1 0 0 1 1 Je,Wigiams 1 0 0 0 1 1 J.Gomez 1 1 0 0 0 1 Hinojosa 1 3 1 1 0 2 Lu.GarciaL,3-5 0 1 1 0 1 0 Loewen 1 0 0 0 0 0 Lu.Garciapitchedto 3battersinthe 11th.

Chicago

ab r h bi ab r hbi S emienss 6 0 0 0 Eatoncf 6 1 2 0 LosAngeles Seattle Canha1b 6 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 6121 ab r hbi ab r hbi Lawrie2b 6 2 2 1 Abreu1b 6 1 3 4 Calhonrf 3 0 0 0 KMartess 4 0 1 1 Valenci3b 5 1 0 0 Mecarrlf 8 1 4 1 Kubitza2b 1 0 0 0 KSeagr3b 5 1 1 0 BButlerdh 5 0 0 0 AvGarcdh 5 0 1 0 Troutcf 3 0 2 0 Rsmssnp 0 0 0 0 Reddckrf 5 2 1 1 LeGarcpr-dh 0 0 0 0 Bandyc 1 0 0 0 N.cruzdh 3 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 GBckhph-dh 2 0 0 0 Pujolsdh 3 0 0 0 J.Jonesdh-cf 1 1 1 0 Pheglyc Crispph 0 1 0 1 TrThmrf 4 1 1 2 Cowgigph 1 0 1 0 Cano2b 3 1 2 2 B lairc 1 0 0 0 Shuckrf 2 0 0 0 DvMrplf 3 1 1 0 SRomrpr-If 1 1 0 0 S mlnsklf 6 1 1 1 Olt3b 6000 Cowart3b 1 0 0 0 S.Smithrf 5 1 2 3 Gentr ycf 2 0 0 0 MJhnsn2b 4 1 0 0 C ron1b 3 0 1 0 Trumolf 4 1 2 1 3 1 2 0 Aybarss 3 0 0 0 BMillerpr-2b 1 1 0 0 Fuldph-cf 3 0 1 2 Flowrsc Brantlyph-c 1 0 0 0 RJcksnss 0 0 0 0 Morrsn1b 2 1 0 0 Saladm ph 1 0 0 0 Freese3b 2 0 0 0 OMallycf-3b 4 1 2 1 Ge.Sotoc 1 1 1 0 ENavrrlf 0 0 0 0 J.Hicksc 4 0 0 0 Totals 48 7 6 6 Totals 5 5 8 168 C.Perezc 2 0 0 0 7 Oakland 001 100 104 000 00 DeJess ph-cf 1 0 0 0 8 Chicago 064 366 BOO 000 61 Fthrstn2b 2 0 0 0 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. Joyceph-rf 1 0 0 0 E Flowers (4). DP Oakland 1, Chicago 1. Totals 3 0 1 5 0 Totals 3 710128 LOB Oakland 7, Chicago18.28 Lawrie (26), Me. LosAngeles 010 000 000 1 C abrera(32),Flowers(11).HR Lawrie(16), Reddick Seattle 030 010 60x 10 (17), Smolmski(4), Abreu(28), TrThompson (4). E K.Marte (4). DP Seattle 2. LOB LosAnge› SB Fuld(9). S Eaton. Kathy Wcrene/The Associated Press les 3, Seatle 8.28 KMarte(10), Cano (34),SSmith IP H R E R BBSO The New York Mete’ Yoenis Cespedes, left, celebrates with team› (30), Trumbo (11). HR S.Smith (11). Oakland IP H R E R BBSO S.Gray 3 8 7 7 4 4 mate Kirk Nieuwenhuis after theMets defeated Miami 4-3 in New LosAngeles Fe.Rodriguez 2 0 0 0 1 4 RichardsL,13-11 5 5 4 4 4 6 Otero 2 1 0 0 0 2 York on Monday. It was the Mete’ eighth straight victory. WWright 13 0 0 0 0 0 Venditte 1 1 0 0 1 2 Morin 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Dull 1 1 0 0 2 Cor.Rasmus 2 3- 4 5 5 1 2 Pomeranz 2 1 0 0 0 3 2 2 0 0 1 2 Twins 7, Tigers1 C.Ramos 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 Abad Nets 4, Marlins3 2-3 2 1 1 1 1 Bedrosian 1 1 0 0 0 2 A.LeonL,0-2 Chicago Seattle — Eduardo EsNEW YORK David Wright had 7 3 3 3 3 6 M INNEAPOLIS TWalkerW,11-8 7 4 1 1 0 7 Joh.Danks 1 0 0 0 0 2 cobar homered anddrove in two ago-aheaddoubleintheseventh Farquhar 1 0 0 0 0 0 M.Albers 2 4 2 1 3 runs and Tyler Duffey struck out Rasmusse n 1 1 0 0 0 0 Dav.Robertson 1 inning, YoenisCespedeshomered 2 -3 1 0 0 1 1 N.Jones HBP by TWalker (Freese). WP Richards, C.Ra› 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 seven to lead Minnesota. Duke again and New York wonits eighth mos. 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 Petricka T 2:59. A 13,681(47,574). straight. Cespedes connected for Da.JenningsW2-3 2 0 0 0 0 3 Detroit Minnesota S.Graypitchedto 5baters inthe 4th. the ninth time in13 games. ab r hbi ab r hbi Yankees 4, Rays1 HBP by Pomeranz (Eaton). WP Dav.Robertson. Gosecf 4 0 2 0 A.Hicks lf-rf 5 1 2 0 PB Flowers. Miami New York Kinsler2b 5 0 0 0 Dozier2b 3 1 0 0 T 5:09.A 12,221(40,615). Micarr1b 2 0 0 0 Mauer1b 5 2 3 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ST. PETERSBURG,Fla. Alex JMrtnzrf 4 0 2 0 Sanodh 3 1 1 1 DGordn2b 4 1 2 0 Lagarscf 3 0 1 0 Rodriguez had a tying, two-out VMrtnzdh 4 0 1 0 Plouffe3b 3 1 1 2 Yelichcf-If 4 0 0 0 Confortph-If 1 0 0 0 HBP byPapelbon(Altherr),byZimmermann(O.Her› Indians 8,Royals3 RBI double in the ninth andSlade C stgns3b 4 0 1 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 2 1 Prado3b 3 1 0 0 DWrght3b 4 0 2 1 rera). WPZimmermann,Neris. PB Rupp. Moya If 4 0 0 0 SRonsn If 0 0 0 0 Bour1b 4 0 0 0 Cespdslf-cf 3 1 1 1 T 3:54. A 15,402(43,651). Heathcott followed with a three› CLEVELAND Carlos Carrasco JMccn c 4 1 1 0 EdEscrss 4 1 2 2 D ietrchlf 4 1 2 1 Uribe2b 4 1 1 0 run homer to lift NewYork. AnRmnss 4 0 1 1 KSuzukc 4 0 1 1 Ellngtnp 0 0 0 0 A)Reed p 0 0 0 0 overcame ahome run on his first Padres10, Diamondbacks3 Buxtoncf 4 0 1 0 Realmtc 4 0 2 1 Niwnhsrf 0 0 0 0 pitch of the game to strike out Totals 35 1 8 1 Totals 3 5 7 137 ISuzukirf 3 0 0 0 TdArndc 4 1 2 2 New York TampaBay nine in six innings, and Lonnie Detroit 0 00 000 100 1 Rojasss 4 0 0 1 Cuddyrrf 4 0 0 0 PHOENIX Wil Myers hit a ab r hbi ab r hbi 4 2 0 1 0 0 ggx 7 N icolinp 2 0 0 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 E llsurycf 4 0 0 0 Guyerlf 4 0 0 0 Chisenhall had three RBls to lead Minnesota leadoff homer andhadfour RBls E Plouffe (11). DP Detroit 2, Minnesota 1. Telisph 0 0 0 0 Duda1b 4 0 0 0 Gardnrlf 2 1 0 0 Mahtokrf 4 1 1 0 Cleveland. LOB Detroit 10, Minnesota 8. 28 Castellanos Gillespi pr 0 0 0 0 WFlorsss 1 0 0 0 to lead SanDiego. It was Myers’ ARdrgzdh 3 0 1 1 Longori3b 4 0 0 0 (26), An.Rom ine(5), Mauer (28), Plouffe(31).38 J. Brrclghp 0 0 0 0 YongJrpr 0 1 0 0 CYoungpr-dhg 1 0 0 Forsyth2b 4 0 1 1 second career leadoff homer. McCann (5). HR Edu.Escobar(11). Ozunacf 0 0 0 0 Tejadass 0 0 0 0 BMccnc 3 1 0 0 Acarerss 4 0 1 0 KansasCity Cleveland IP H R E R BBSO V errettp 1 0 0 0 Beltranrf 3 0 1 0 SouzJrdh 4 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Detroit Campgph 1 0 0 0 San Diegoab r hbi Arizona ab r hbi Noel pr 0 0 0 0 Shafferfb 2 0 0 0 AGordnlf 5 1 4 2 Kipnisdh 5 1 1 1 LobsteinL,3-8 1 1 - 3 76 6 2 2 Glmrt np 0 0 0 0 Myers1b-cf 4 1 2 4 Pollockcf 3 1 1 0 Hethcttrf 1 1 1 3 Kiermrcf 3 0 2 0 Zobrist2b 3 0 1 1 Lindorss 3 2 1 1 42-3 4 1 1 2 3 K.Ryan Robics p 0 0 0 0 Bird1b 3 0 0 0 JButlerph 1 0 0 0 L.caincf 5 0 2 0 Brantlylf 5 1 3 0 4 1 2 0 O’Brienlf 1 0 0 0 Ferreg 1 1 0 0 0 0 Grndrsph 0 0 0 0 Solarte3b Headly3b 4 0 0 0 Arenciic 3 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 3 0 0 0 CSantn1b 3 1 1 0 K emprf 3 2 1 0 Inciartrf 2 0 0 0 B.Rondon 1 1 0 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 4 0 0 0 Chsnhllrf 3 1 3 3 KJhnsn 2b 0 0 0 0 Gregrs ss 3 0 0 0 Minnesota Mostks3b 4 0 10 YGomsc 4 0 1 2 Totals 3 2 3 6 3 Totals 3 04 7 4 Wallac1b 1 0 0 0 OHrndzc 2 0 1 0 B.Ryan2b 2 0 0 0 uptonlf 4 2 0 0 Gldsch1b 3 0 1 1 DuffeyW3-1 61 - 3 71 1 2 7 Miami 006 012 000 3 Ackleyph 1 0 1 0 S)Perezc 4 1 2 0 AAlmntcf 4 0 0 0 Gyorkoss 3 1 2 1 Schugelp 0 0 0 0 12-3 0 0 0 1 3 N ew York Riosrf 4 1 1 0 Urshela3b 4 1 1 1 Fien 001 0 0 2 1 0x 4 Drew2b 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Ahmedph 1 0 0 0 Cotts 1 1 0 0 0 1 DP Miami 1, NewYork 1. LOB Miami 5, New Amarstss T otals 2 9 4 4 4 Totals 3 31 6 1 AEscorss 4 0 0 0 JRmrz2b 3 1 1 0 4 2 2 3 DHrndzp 0 0 0 0 Duffey. Balk Lobstein. York 6. 28 D.Wright 2 (3), uribe(17). HR Ces› Spngnr2b N ewYork 0 0 0 0 0 004 4 Totals 36 3 113 Totals 3 4 8 128 WP 2 1 1 1 Sltlmchph 1 0 0 0 City 1 0 0 0 0 0 200 3 T 2:56. A 17,833(39,021). pedes (17), Td’Arnaud(12). SB D.Gordon (51), DeNrrsc T ampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 0 010 1 K ansas H edgesc 1 0 0 0 DPerltlf 1 0 1 0 101 1 1 0 3 1x 8 Young Jr. (4). E B.Ryan 2 (5), Hea dley (21). DP New York Cleveland C Deckrph 1 0 0 0 Britocf 2 0 1 0 DP Cleveland1. LOB KansasCity 9, Cleveland IP H R E R BBSO 1, TampaBay 2. LOB NewYork 3, Tampa Bay 7. National League Galec 0 0 0 0 Wcastllc 2 0 0 0 8. 28 Brantley (44), Chisenhag(17), YGomes (15), Miami 28 A.Rodriguez(20), Forsythe(30). HR Heathcott Jo.Ramirez(11). 38 Lindor (3)1 HR A.Gordon Nicolino 6 6 3 3 1 2 Jnkwskcf-rf 4 0 1 0 Tomasrf 2 0 0 0 (2). SB Gardner(19), Noel(2), Mahtook(1). 4120 BarracloughL,2-1 1 1 1 1 3 2 Shieldsp 4 0 0 0 JaLam3b-1b IP H R E R BBSO 12), Kipnis((8),,Urshela((6).) SB Lindor (8). CS L. Giants 5, Reds 3 2b 4 1 1 1 ain (5),Jo.Ramirez(4). SF Chisenhag. Ellington 1 0 0 0 0 0 Vincent p 0 0 0 0 Gosseln New York JJcksn p 0 0 0 0 Hllcksn p 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO NewYork Sabathia 62-3 3 0 0 2 6 SAN FRANCISCO Matt Duffy Verrett 5 3 1 1 1 3 Mateop 0 0 0 0 Westerp 1 0 0 0 JuWilson 1 3 1 1 0 2 KansasCity Romakph 1 0 0 0 7 4 4 3 4 doubled twice and drove in two Gilmartin 1 3 2 2 1 0 GothamW,1-0 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 VolquezL,13-8 5 S titesp 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 R obics W4-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 A.Miller S,33-34 1 0 0 0 0 3 C.Young runs as SanFrancisco remained C hafinp 0 0 0 0 K.Herrera 1 3 3 3 A.ReedH,11 1 0 0 0 0 1 TampaBay Drury3b 2 0 1 1 F.Morales 1 2 1 1 0 2 7'Ia games behindLosAngeles FamiliaS,41-46 1 0 0 0 0 1 E.Ramirez 72-3 1 0 0 2 6 Owingsss 4 0 0 0 HBP byRubies(Telis). Colome 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Cleveland i n the NL West with 18 games re› Totals 36 10 11 9 Totals 36 3 9 3 C arrasco W ,13-10 6 5 1 1 2 9 T 2:50.A 27,320 (41,922). BoxberoerL,4-10Bs,6-40 2-3 3 4 4 2 0 San Diego 5 0 0 0 5 0 000 10 cAllisterH,10 2- 3 2 2 2 0 0 maining including four against Riefenhauser 1 3- 0 0 0 1 0 M Arizona 1 00 000 002 3 B.ShawH,22 1 - 3 2 0 0 0 0 the Dodgers. T 3:08. A 11,940(31,042). E H e l i c kson (2), Ja.Lamb (7), Gossel i n (3). Dodgers 4, Rockies1 Crockett 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 DP Arizona1. LOB San Diego6,Arizona 9.28› Manship 11-3 1 0 0 1 2 Cincinnati San Francisco Myers(12), Spangenberg (15), Pollock(34), Gold› Rangers 5, Astros 3 WP B.Shaw. LOS ANGELES — Cl ayt on Ker T 3:21.A 10,356(36,856). ab r hbi ab r hbi schmidt(33), Ja.Lamb(15), Drury(1). HR Myers BHmltncf 2 0 0 0 Pagancf 4 1 2 0 shaw won his ninth straight deci› (7). SBSpangenberg(9), De.Norris (4). CS Jan› ARLINGTON,Texas Texas LaMarrcf 1 0 0 0 DeAzalf 4 1 0 0 kowski(1). S Spangenberg. SF Gyorko. sion, Justin Turner hit a tiebreak› Orioles 2, Red Sox 0 Brnhrtph 1 0 0 0 MDufly3b 4 2 2 2 moved within a half-game of AL IP H R E R BBSO i n g double and Los Angeles won Bruce rf 5 1 1 2 Posey c 3 0 0 0 San Diego West leading Houston after Prince BALTIMORE Kevin Gausman V otto 1b 2 0 0 1 Belt 1b 3 1 2 2 S hields W, 1 2-6 7 4 1 1 2 6 for the 16th time in 20games. Fielder hit a tiebreaking, two-run P hillips 2b 4 0 0 0 Byrd rf 4 0 1 1 Vincent 1 1 0 0 1 0 pitched six innings of two-hit Frazier3b 3 0 0 0 Tmlnsn2b 3 0 0 0 2-3 4 2 2 0 1 J.Jackson homer in the eighth inning. Colorado LosAngeles Boeschlf 4 0 0 0 Adrianzss 2 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 ball to earn his first victory in six Mateo ab r hbi ab r hbi Suarezss 4 0 1 0 THudsnp 1 0 0 0 Arizona weeks, and Baltimore earned its Reyesss 4 0 0 0 Pedrsncf 4 0 1 0 Houston Texas Rcarerc 4 1 4 0 Lopezp 0 0 0 0 HellicksonL,9-9 1 3 5 3 2 1 LeMahi2b 3 1 0 0 utley2b 3 1 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi fifth win in six games. Lornznpr 0 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 Webster 3 3 0 0 1 0 Arenad3b 4 0 1 0 AGnzlz1b 4 0 1 0 Springr rf 4 0 0 1 DShlds cf 4 0 1 0 Sampsnp 1 0 0 0 Strcklnp 0 0 0 0 Stites 0 2 3 3 1 0 CGnzlzrf 4 0 2 1 JuTrnr3b 4 0 1 1 A ltuve2b 5 1 2 1 Choorf 3 0 0 0 V illarrlp 0 0 0 0 Osichp 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 2 1 2 Boston Baltimore W Rosr1b 4 0 0 0 Ethierrf 2 1 1 0 Chafin C orreass 5 1 2 0 Venalerf 0 0 0 0 Bourgsph 1 1 1 0 J.Perezph 1 0 0 0 Schugel 3 1 0 0 0 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi CDckrslf 4 0 1 0 VnSlykph-rf 1 0 0 0 D.Hernandez Lowrie3b 1 0 0 0 Beltre3b 4 1 1 0 Balestrp 0 0 0 0 Rome p 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Bettscf 3 0 0 0 Reimlddh 4 1 1 0 TMrphc 3 0 0 0 CSeagrss 3 1 2 0 Vigarph-3b 2 0 0 0 Fielderdh 4 3 2 2 Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 Casillap 0 0 0 0 pitchedto 3battersin the5th. Rutl edg2b 2 0 0 0 MMchd3b 3 0 0 0 Duvagph 1 0 0 0 B Barnscf 3 0 1 0 Grandlc 3 0 2 1 Stites C IRsmslf 5 0 2 1 Napolilf 3 0 1 0 W P W e bs te r. B.Holt ph-2b 1 0 1 0 C.Davis1b 4 1 1 0 J.Grayp 1 0 0 0 Schelerlf 3 1 1 2 Gattisdh 4 0 1 0 Stubbslf 1 0 0 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 T 3:29. A 15,951(48,519). Bogartsss 4 0 1 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 1 2 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Kershwp 2 0 0 0 Congerc 4 0 0 0 Morlnd1b 4 1 2 2 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 O rtizdh 3 0 0 0 Pearcelf 3 0 0 0 BBrwn p 0 0 0 0 Aygan p 0 0 0 0 Valuen1b 3 0 0 0 Andrusss 4 0 0 0 Schmkrph 1 0 0 0 TShaw1b 3 0 0 0 Schoop2b 4 0 1 0 M rsnckcf 3 1 1 0 Odor2b 3 0 1 1 Totals 3 4 3 7 3 Totals 2 95 7 5 Fridrch p 0 0 0 0 Nicasio p 0 0 0 0 History Sandovl 3b 4 0 1 0 Joseph c 4 0 3 0 C incinnati 000 0 1 0 200 3 Adamsph 1 0 0 0 Guerrrph 1 0 0 0 Gimenzc 2 0 0 0 Rcastlllf 4 0 0 0 JHardyss 3 0 1 0 THIS DATE IN BASEBALL 5 San Francisco 202 000 01x Mcastrp 0 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 3 8 3 Totals 3 2 5 8 5 S wihartc 4 0 0 0 DrAlvrrf 2 0 1 0 E Suarez 2 (17). DP Cincinnati 1. LOB› Totals 3 1 1 5 1 Totals 3 04 9 4 Houston 1 00 010 100 3 BrdlyJrrf 2 0 0 0 GParraph-rf 2 0 0 0 Cincinnati 8,SanFrancisco 4. 28 R.cabrera(1), Colorado Sept. 15 6 1 00 000 000 1 Texas 010 002 02x 1938 BrothersLloydandPaul Waner hit back› E Kazmir(6), Lowrie(2), Napoli (8),Odor(16). Totals 30 0 3 0 Totals 3 3 2 9 2 M.Duffy2 (26), Byrd(21). 38 Belt (5). HR Bruce Los Angeles 01 0 010 02x 4 t o -back hom er s for the PittsburghPiratesoffCliff Melton Boston 0 00 000 000 0 DP LosAngeles1. LOB Colorado5, LosAnge› DP Texas 2. LOB Houston 11, Texas5. 28› (21). S THudson. SF Belt. 100 0 0 0 1 0x 2 IP H R E R BBSO les 8. 28 Arenado(36), Ju.Turner (24), C.Seager(6). of theNewYorkGiants. Thiswastheonly timebrothers Marisnick(13), Moreland(24), Odor(21). HR Al› Baltimore E Rutledge(4). DP Boston1. LOB Boston8, Cincinnati homerunsinamajor league game. Itwas HR Schebler (3). CS Pederson(7). S Kershaw. hit successive tuve(12),Fielder(19), M oreland (20).SB Marisnick Baltimore Lloyd’slasthomer. 10.28 AJones(25), Joseph(16). SampsonL,2-5 3 5 4 3 2 0 SF Grandal. (19). 1946 — T heBrooklynDodgersbeattheChicago IP H R E R BBSO Vigarreal 1 1 0 0 0 2 IP H R E R BBSO IP H R E R BBSO Boston Cubs2-0in fiveinningswhenthegamewas calledbe› Balester 1 0 0 0 0 0 Colorado Houston E.RodriguezL,9-6 51-3 5 1 1 3 9 Ju.Diaz ofgnats. 1 1 0 0 0 1 J.GrayL,0-1 42- 3 6 2 2 2 8 cause Kazmir 7 5 3 2 1 4 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 M.Parra 1963 AgthreeAloubrothers Felipe, Matty and 1 0 0 0 0 0 Brothers 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 M.Barnes O.Perez Layne 0 1 1 1 0 0 Badenhop 1 0 1 0 0 0 Jesus playedin theoutfield atthesametimefor the 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 B.Brown W.HarrisL,5-4 1 - 3 2 2 2 0 1 Machi 11-3 2 0 0 0 3 San Francisco 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 SanFranciscoGiantsina13-5victory over thePittsburgh Friedrich Sipp 13 1 0 0 0 0 Baltimore THudson 4 1-3 3 1 1 3 1 M.castro 1 2 2 2 0 2 Pirates. Texas 1969 St. Louisleft-handerSteveCarlton struck GausmanW,3-6 6 2 0 0 4 7 Lopez 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 LosAngeles Hamels 7 7 3 3 1 4 Brach H,10 1 0 0 0 0 1 K ontos W3-2 1 1 3 0 0 0 0 1 out 19Metsforanine-inninggamerecord.NewYorkwon 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 K ershaw W ,14-6 7 3 1 1 2 5 Diekman 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 StricklandH,17 2- 3 1 1 1 0 2 AvilanH,17 sbyRonSwoboda. 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 thegame4-3ontwo,two-runhomer 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 O’DayH,15 KelaW,7-5 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 OsichH,7 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 2002 Arizona’sCurt Schilling struckout eightto H,2 NicasioH,13 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Sh.Togeson S,32-34 1 1 0 0 0 1 Matusz R orno H 3 , 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 300fortheseason,joining RandyJohnsonasthe HBP byKazmir(Choo), byHamels(Lowrie,Valbue› BrittonS,33-36 1 HatcherS,3-5 1 1 0 0 0 0 reach Casilla BS,6-38 1 2 0 0 0 2 HBP byJ.Gray(C.Seager). Laynepitchedto1 batter inthe7th. first team matesin baseball historyto eachstrikeout 300 na). Balk Hamels. W P E .R odr i g uez. Bal k E .R odr i g uez. W P S am ps on. i n t h e sameseason.TheDiamondbacksbeatMilwaukee T 3: 0 2. A 43,7 3 1 (56, 0 00). T 3:03. A 27,772(48,114). T 2:56.A 19,666 (45,971). T 2:52. A 41,025(41,915). 6-5 in13innings.

Helfrich said. "All I can say for who was named the Pac-12’s him is that he’s gutting it out special teams player of the just like a lot of guys are gut› week on Monday, pointedto ting other things out." last season’s title game. "It’s early, really early. Two Oregon has shown in the re› cent past that one loss will not teams that played in the na› make or break its season. The tional championship last year Ducks were ranked No. 2 last both had one loss so you know season when unranked Ari› it’s a long season. You know zona swept into Eugene and teams are going to fight still," scored four second-half touch› Addison said. "Of course, we’ re not proud of this loss, but downs for a 31-24 upset. Oregonregrouped afterthat there are a lot of things that we loss which also dropped the can learn from this game." Ducks to No. 12 in the rank› Ducks r e ceiver C h a rles ings and marched on to vic› Nelson was already moving tories in the next nine games, on to Saturday’s home game including the 59-20 Rose Bowl against Georgia State. "A lot of things we can work victory over Florida State in college football’s first playoffs. on in practice. That’s what "There’s a bunch of guys practice is for, we’ re going to that were in the same lock› get back at it on Monday," he er room and we just talked said following the Michigan about how that galvanized us State game. "I feel like we last year, and there’s absolute› came outand didw hatwe had ly zero reason why that can’ t to do, but (we had) a couple er› happen again," Helfrich said. rors here and there. We can fix Receiver Bralon Addison,

that."

Beavers

teams." Andersen said the coach›

Continued from C1 "Especially at the quarter› back position, is his ability to grow knowing that it really

ing staff is still evaluating the players and scheme to

won’t get harder than that."

put the best combination on the field. "It’s not broke," Andersen

Andersen said the Beavers said. "What we do is right, had 22missed tackles. the way we do it is the right "We did not have the abil› way. It’s a process and we ity to move the football and k new that w e’d r u n i n t o our defense was basically on some adversity along the the field, and once they got way. So we’ ve run into some off the field they didn’t have adversity and we’ ll keep do› very long to get a drink and ing what we do and we’ ll get they were right back on the prepared to play again." field again, and that’s hard," Storm Barrs-Woods sat Andersen said. out the first half of Satur› "That’s where Michigan day’s game after letting the

shape or form about his abil› ity to go out there and per› form at a high level, I credit a kid for saying that. I don’ t look at him and say, ’What are you doing? Why would you say that? You’ ve got to

go play.’ That’s not us," An› dersen said. "Then it gets flipped around to, ’Was he this’? Was he that?’ No, he

wasn’ t. Storm will be ready to play, I expect him to play. We wanted him to play (and) carry the ball 20, 30 times in that game.

"Second half it was very

clear that Storm was excit› ed toplay. He came out and

said, ’Coach, I feel a lot bet› ter. I’m good to go.’ We put Andersen said he expect› him in the game and gave ed to have the senior running him some opportunities. "We need him, but I want back for the whole game and was planning to give him h im healthy. I w a n t h i m of took place throughout the plenty of carries. prepared. I want him to go "When a young man has in and have the year that he game, so it was a team loss: offense,defense and special any concern in any way, wants to be able to have." wants you to be. They want

coaches know he did not feel

to pound you, pound you, pound you, score a touch› down or get a stop and they get right back on the field so you can’t recover. That kind

ready to go.


C4 T H E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Anonsi e ic to start OTma not eas um asitseems Bulletin wire reports

NOTEBOOK

yards. The receiving team would start near midfield and

Heisman Trophy winners.

attempt, the highest of the first

to start this weekend in the

week. home opener against Tennes› start overtime in Seattle’s and-1 from the Rams 42. need at least one first down Mariota said exceeded his Oregon coach Mark Hel› see because fel low quarter"It’s a good play for us, a to get in field-goal range. But own expectations. opener at St. Louis left people frich didn’t get to see his for› back Josh McCown suffered wondering if Pete Carroll had good concept for us and all if you have a strong defense The rookie also sent peo› mer quarterback’s NFL debut a concussion Sunday in a sea› like Seattle it might be lost his mind. that," Carroll said. "It’s been ple scrambling for the record but noticed on the "little ticker son-opening 31-10 loss to the Risky? Yes. But not crazy. really successful for us for a worth the risk. books with hi s f our t ouch› thing" on television that Mari› New York Jets. Under the rules adopted in long time, so we went with it down passes. His NFL records ota had been busy. Washington Redskins "That’s pretty much par wide receiver DeSean Jack› 2012, an onside kick to begin with a real base thought and Mariota back at work include: overtime can make sense. they played it better than we after record-setting debut The first rookie with two for the course in his world son could miss three to four If the Seahawks had recov› drd. Marcus Mariota’s NFL de› TD passes in the first quar› of breaking records in game weeks after straining his left eredthe kick and scored just Kicker Steven Hauschka but had a college feel to it. ter in the opening week of a one," Helfrich said. "So that’ s hamstring early in the team’s a field goal, the game would s aid he wanted to kick the After a flawless perfor- season. pretty cool, and obviously season-opening 17-10 loss to have ended, because receiving ball further down the field but mance, his team blowing out The first rookie to throw very happy for him. At the Miami. a kickoff is an opportunity to short of the end zone. Carroll its opponent, Mariota as four touchdowns in one half. same time, I’d like to say (I’m) Arizona Cardinals run› possess the balL wanted the ball to land around he often did at Oregon› Tied Fran Tarkenton for not surprised." ning back Andre Ellington The Rams recovered at Se› the 15 or 20, away from re› watched from the sidelines as most TDs thrown by a quar› has a sprained right knee, an attle’s 49 and ended up kick› turner Isaiah Pead, to possibly his Tennessee Titans team› terback in his f irst game. Injury updates injury that is less serious than ing a field goal. So, the Sea› forcea scramble forit. mates wrapped up a rout. Tarkenton threw four TDs for Baltimore coach John Har› initially feared. Coach Bruce hawks still had a chance to tie Despite Carroll’s intention Mariota not o nl y p o sted Minnesota on Sept. 17, 1961. baugh said the top candidates Arians wouldn’t rule Elling› with a field goal or win it with and the result, other coach› the NFL’s top possible rating The first player since at to replace injured six-time Pro ton out for Sunday’s game at a touchdown. es might want to consider an for quarterbacks, his mark least 1933 to post a perfect Bowler Terrell Duggs, who Chicago. "That is not what was sup› onside kick to start overtime of 158.3 stood Monday as the passer rating in his first game tore his Achilles heel Sunday Dallas Cowboys wide re› posed to happen," Carroll said, because they would win the league’s best for the opening with a minimum of 10 pass in a loss at Denver, are rook› ceiver Dez Bryant underwent ie Za’Darius Smith, 10-year surgery Monday e vening explaining he didn’t call for an game with any score and still weekend. attempts. onside kick. "We were kicking have a chance to score if the The rookie, who sat o ut If that wasn’t enough, Mar› veteran Elvis Dumervil and to repair the fractured fifth the ball to a certain area of the otherteam recoversand getsa the fourth quarter, also set iota also tied New England’ s fourth-year player Courtney metatarsal in his right foot field and we didn’t hit it right." field goal. a handful of NFL records in Brady for the most TD passes Upshaw. he suffered in Sunday night’ s They lost when Marshawn The trade-off for failing to beating Jameis Winston and for the opening week while The C leveland Browns 27-26 win over the New York Lynch was stuffed on fourth› recover the kick is about 30 Tampa Bay 42-14 in a battle of averaging 13.1 yards per pass will prepare Johnny Manziel Giants. A surprise onside kick to

Fantasy

Winkenbach’s house in East would call the papers directly. Oakland. He was sometimes mistaken Continued from C1 There were eight teams in for a bookie and hung up on. GOPPPL bragging rights what wasdubbed the Greater To tally results from the Sun› c urrently belong t o F r ed Oakland Professional Pigskin day games, Mousalimas would Thomsen, 91, who won $300 Prognosticators League. Ron leave his bar at 2:15 a.m., head last year thanks to the exploits Wolf, a Raiders scout who downtown to the Tribune and of Seattle running back Mar› would become a Hall of Fame wait for the first edition to roll shawn Lynch. general manager for the Green offthe presses at3 a.m. Sports "We still draft the same way Bay Packers, was an origi› section in hand, he headed we did 40 years ago," Thomsen nal member. Stirling asked a home andworked untildawn. said. "And the scoring system friend, alocal entrepreneur The "boards" (Le., standings) is the same. named Andy Mousalimas, to had to bereadyfortheM onday "I remember Winkenbach join him. The decision would lunch crowd. said this would never catch on." later change the course of fan› Soon, public demand ex› The origins of fantasy sports tasy sports history. ceeded the supply of teams at are subject to debate and The first pick of the first the King’s X, and Mousalimas interpretation. draft (by Mousalimas) was created a waiting list. He be› Documents uncovered by the Houston Oilers’ George gan fielding calls from bars the Library of Congress and Blanda (who later played with across the country and Ha› asking for details on published by sports historian the Raiders), who could earn waii John Thorn indicate a Virginia points as both a quarterback the rules. teenager named Tommy Wil› and a kicker. The second pick By this point, Winkenbach son dabbled in baseball statis› was a Cleveland running back and the GOPPPL players had tics in the early 1870s. Wilson, named Jim Brown. developed a version of fanta› "We knew it was something sy basebalL Exactly how the who kept records for his "Light Foot Base Ball Club," would lat› special," said Mousalimas, 90, sports made the jump to the er become famous worldwide one of the few surviving mem› sports-crazed cities of the East for accomplishments using his bers of the original league. Coast is lost to history. So were "We couldn’t wait for t he the origins of the games, at middle name, Woodrow. Rick Wolf, of the Fantasy games. We’d go and root for least initially. Sports Trade Association, sug› the opposition, and fans would In an episodeof "30 for 30" gested the invention of Strat-0› look at us and say, ’What the that aired in 2010, ESPN at› Matic, a simulation game de› hell are you doing rooting for tributed the origins to a group veloped in 1961 by a Bucknell that guy?’" of New Yorkers who congre› University math student, could The GOPPPL has r o lled gated at La Rotisserie Fran› be considered the birth of fan› through the decades with lit› caise (hence the name rotis› tasy baseball. tle fanfare and its simple scor› serie baseball). Other media But those steeped in the his› ing system. But everything o utlets, including th e W a l l tory of fantasy football have changed in 1968 when Mou› Street Journal, did the same. "ESPN had a big miss with little doubt about the creation salimas opened the King’s X of their game. The Big Bang bar on Piedmont Avenue and that," said Wolf, of the Fantasy occurred on a rainy weekend t ook fantasy football to t he Sports Trade Association. "Bill in 1962, in a New York hotel masses. Winkenbach created fantasy room. He created six divisions and sports. "I couldn’t believe it," said While killing time before implemented a scoring sys› the finale of the Raiders’ three› tem that got him booted out Mousalimas. "Of course, ev› game eastern swing, Winken› of GOPPPL. Mousalimas, it erything starts in New York." bach sat down with Raiders seems, had the gall to create a He dug up a copy of the 1963 staffer Bill Tunnell and Oak› component for yardage. draft the GOPPPL Drafting "O.J. Simpson could run Score Card and sent it to land Tribune sports w r iter Scotty Stirling and sketched wild," Mousalimas explained, ESPN. Halfway down the col› out the rules for a game that "but he couldn’t score if he was umn marked "Mousalimas," would involve drafting players on a bad team." clear as can be, is one word: and tracking touchdowns. This was back before the Blanda. "Thank God I squirreled Upon returning to Oakland, Internet, before ESPN, before they enlisted the help of Tri› the ubiquity of games on tele› that away," Mousalimas said. bunesportseditorGeorgeRoss vision. Research and data col› That year, ESPN made the and finalized the rules. The lection were largely based on pilgrimage to Oakland to set following summer, the first scouring the out-of-town news› the record straight. draft in fantasy sports history papers at a local newsstand. Wolf was inducted into the took place in the basement of Occasionally, M o u salimasFantasy Sports Trade Associ›

Eriksson Continued from C1 Eriksson, now the alpine director with M BSEF, start›

ed coaching soccer in 1990 as a way to help out his college buddy, as "just something fun to do." What ignited such a long tenure could arguably be traced, he says, to the 1994 World Cup, held in the Unit›

the games. "I enjoyedthe game more (after the World Cup experi› ence)," he adds. "I developed more of a passion for the sport. A little bit after that, I

started taking some coaching classes. That gave me way more understanding and in› sight to the game." Soon after that World Cup, Eriksson was named the Bend

High head coach. He would guide the Lava Bears to 165 Hamel, at the time the head wins (a .567 winning percent› coach at Bend High, to Pas› age) over the next 19 years, adena, California, to catch to five Intermountain Confer› some of the World Cup ac› ence titles and 17 trips to the tion. Then Eriksson and his postseason. His teams would wife, Becky, went to Detroit to advance to the state quarter› watch more of the Cup. And it finals, semifinals or champi› was then that his affection for onship match for five straight the sportof soccer really be- years, during which time the gan to bloom. Bears went 74-10-3 overall "It just gave me tenfold the and 33-1-2 in IMC play. "I think it’s just Nils’ con› appreciation of the game," Eriks son says. "I’ ve never sistency, for the most part," been part of that before. Just says Shane Knapp, Eriks› seeing the excitement and in› son’s coaching assistant for 20 volvement of people that went years. "He doesn’t change up to the games and the people too much about how he goes that were coming from abroad about running practices or that had teams and countries running the program.... Nils that weren’t even in the tour› does a great job of, ’Whatever nament. They were still there talent we get, that’s what we’ re and just super excited about going to work with.’ There’ s ed States. It was then that

Eriksson traveled with Gary

It was a debut that even

ation Hall of Fame in 2011, the

same year Winkenbach en› tered the hall posthumously. As he sees it, the transfor›

mation of fantasy sports into a cultural phenomenon has a handful of seminal moments,

not the least of which were de› cisions by the NFL and Major League Baseball, at the turn of the century, to embrace the movement. The GOPPPL draft is min›

utes away, and Heeb, the c ommissioner, explains

to

the group that one longtime member is ailing and cannot participate.

"We’ re going to miss Bob," he said. "He was always at the bottom of the standings."

Laughs all around, then it turns serious. Lynch is the first off the board, then Minnesota

Vikings running back Adrian Peterson, then Indianapolis Colts quarterback A n drew Luck. The GOPPPL has 10 teams,

each with a primary owner, and the scoring system is es› sentially unchanged from the league’s inception: Points are

awarded only for scoring. "We still don’t have yard›

age," H e e b exp l ained. "That makes it easier for us old-timers." In the eighth round, San

Francisco 49ers tight end Ver› non Davis is selected, prompt›

ing a heated debate about the team’s fortunes for the upcom› ing season. (The consensus: Not encouraging.) Then dinner arrives, and

the group breaks to chow and strategize. Jeff Sandoval, a cabinet sup› plier who joined in 30 years ago, surveys the low-key scene, free of the pomp and circum› stance one might expect from

a league that traces its histo› ry to the beginning of fantasy sports.

"I guess it’s because we’ re all used to it, but it feels good," Sandoval said.

"You can’ t

make too many daims to fame in life. I think I speak for all of us: We’ re a little bit proud of it."

been years where we’ ve been Eriksson took over the Bend down, and there’s been years program, he says, was not as when we’ ve been at the top. deep as it is today. Exposure But we’ ve consistently been to the game (such as addition› competitive. The players real› al cable networks and video ly want to play and compete games) has dramatically in› and try to get to that next lev› el. I think that’s credit to Nils."

Brynn Anderson / The Associated Press

Atlanta’s Julio Jones, left, scores a touchdown against Phila› delphia’s Byron Maxwell during the first half Monday in Atlanta. Jones had two TD catches in the Falcons’ 26-24 victory.

Eaglescomeback, take lead, thenloseto Falcons The Associated Press

ROUNDUP

ATLANTA Jordan Mat› thews fell to his knees and

"I’ ve just got to make a dutched his helmet, the ball play," Matthews said. "Noth› having slipped through his ing more, nothing less." hands to snuff out Philadel› Julio Jones hauled in nine phia’s final chance. passes for 141 yards, includ› This t i me, t h e E a g les ing a pair of touchdowns, and couldn’t come all the way led the Falcons to a 20-3 half› back from a big hole in the time lead. season opener. Also on Monday night: Rallying from a 17-point 49ers 20, Vikings 3: SAN› Car› halftime deficit, Philadelphia TA CLARA, Calif. grabbed the lead for the first los Hyde ran for a 10-yard time midway through the touchdown late in the first fourth quarter. But the At› half by spinning away from lanta Falcons bounced back a defender and diving into for a 26-24 victory Monday the end zone untouched on a night, holding on when the rare nice play in a game full of Eagles squandered a couple ugly ones, and added another of opportunities in the closing 17-yard TD run as San Fran› minutes. cisco won in coach Jim Tom› Cody Parkey missed a 44› sula’s debut. Adrian Peterson yard field goal with 2~A min› carried10times for 31 yards utes remaining. The Eagles playing his first game in more got one more chance, but than a year following paid Sam Bradford’s pass over the leave and then a suspension middle to Matthews slipped last year in the fallout from a through the receiver’s hands child-abuse case against him. and was intercepted by Ri› Colin Kaepernick threw for cardo Allen, sealing Atlanta’s 165 yards, and Hyde finished victory in the coaching debut with 168 yards on 26 rushes in for Dan Quinn. his first career start.

Modesty. Knapp details

think that’s the biggest com›

Eriks son’s c o ntributions, pliment to Nils. That’s why a from helping out with park district programs to running clinics for coaches. Knapp

lot of them come." Going on 20 years, Eriksson has led the Lava Bears to con›

sistent soccer success. He does not measure his contributions Bend High coach introduced in wins or league champion› his players to a different style ships, but in r elationships. of play a more technical, That is not to say that falling detail-oriented style that de› just short of a state title, as his viated from what Knapp de› runner-upteam did in 2006, scribes as the conventional does not eat at him. Because style of American soccer. of course it does. "He’s definitely the face of "I’d love to get back and get Bend soccer, for sure," Knapp a chance at it," Eriksson says. "You don’t get the chance very says. "The 20 years speaks for it› often to be in that situation. self," he adds. "Kids love him. We’ re at the top of 5A.... You Parents love him. The know› get some chances every now how of what he knows ... he’ s and then, and you better take always trying to go out and them when you can, because get better as a coach. He just you never know when you’ ll has that love for the game." get the chance again." His laid-back coaching style Perhaps soon, E r i k sson

was a freshman on Eriksson’s creased over the years, he ob› team in 1990, when the new

serves, allowing Central Or› None of that, however, is egon teenagersto learn more how Eriksson gauges his in› about the international side fluence on Lava Bears soccer. of soccer. More and more kids "The biggest gratification favor teams like Manchester I get is probably from players United in England or idolize calling me up when they’ re players such as Argentina and in college or later on and say, Barcelona star Lionel Messi. ’Hey, Nils, what are you do› Soccer has obviously grown ing? You want to go to lunch’ ? in popularity in Central Ore› You want to catch up?’" says gon since the mid-1990s. The Eriksson, whose team is 3-1-1 so far in his 20th season. "Or

level of talent at local high

them coming out in the sum› mers, ’Hey do you mind if I come out? I’ ve got to get ready for the college season. You

what wit h

schools has clearly elevated, C entral O regon

boys and girls soccer teams combining for 18 state final

appearances and nine state mind if I come out for the sum› titles over the last nine years.

mer workouts? Can I help you Eriksson, whose son Tyler out in some way?’ That, to me, is a freshman player at Bend is probably the biggest thing, and whose oldest son Niklas more so than the results and just graduated (and played for all that. Sure, be competitive. his father), continues to credit You want to do well. Don’ t his predecessors, Dillenburg get me wrong. Every time you and Hamel, for laying the lose, it hurts. But you look at foundation ofsoccer success. it, ’How can I improve?’ That’ s He praises their contributions the big deal." and says, "I just kind of con› The soccer talent pool when tinued that."

has been as consistent as his

will have another shot at the

program’s success and that, alongside his passion for the game, hasbecome a lure of sorts for players. "Nils is a great guy," says Knapp, noting that Eriksson has been a mentor to Knapp and fellow longtime Bend

elusive blue first-place state trophy. Perhaps he will exit the Bend High program as a champion. For now, he will

High assistant Charlie Rowles.

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

"Kids want to play for him.... I

continue his chase. He will

sustain his hobby one he never envisioned taking on more than 25 years ago.


C5 THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

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DOW 16,370.96 -62.13

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S&P 800 1,95 3 .03 -8.02

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Today Eye on manufacturing

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HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. 16450.86 16331.87 16370.96 -62.13 DOW Trans. 8056.78 8000.99 8015.66 -35.96 DOW Util. 554.49 549.33 551.21 + 1 . 75 NYSE Comp. 10026.55 9964.52 9988.59 -51.63 NASDAQ 4832.00 4791.08 4805.76 -1 6.58 S&P 500 1963.06 1948.27 1953.03 -8.02 -6.54 S&P 400 141 4.88 1406.16 1407.93 Wilshire 5000 20707.79 20563.97 20606.20 -85.46 Russell 2000 1153.49 1153.49 1153.49 +1 7.32

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

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Cantel Medical

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Close.$53.66%4.21or 8.5% Close:$50.86 V-0.15 or -0.3% The insurance claims software com› The medical and surgical products pany is being acquired by private company is buying medical device equity firm Vista Equity Partners for company Medical Innovations about $3.74 billion. Group for $79.5 million in cash. $60 $60 50

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Alibaba

BABA Close:$62.60 V-2.03 or -3.1% Barron’s reported the Chinese e-commerce company is facing in› creasing competition and uncertain› ty in the Chinese economy. $90

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V A +4 1 .3 +66.0 87 31 0.60 358.DD ~ 52-week range $120.00 $8.54~ $ 17.08 the organic and specialty foods Costco Wholesale CO ST 117.03 ~ 1 56.8 5 141.15 + .10 +0.1 A V A -0.4 +1 7.2 1110 27 1 . 6 0 Vol.:26.7m (1.7x avg.) P E : 3. 7 Vol.:1.6m (0.3x avg.) P E: .. . distributor will report that its fiscal cc Craft Brew Alliance BREW 7.00 ~ 17.89 8.19 +. 0 7 +0.9 A X T -38.6 -36.7 2 3 Mkt. Cap:$156.22 b Yield : ... Mkt. Cap:$18.41 b Yield: ... fourth-quarter earnings and FLIR Systems F LIR 26.34 ~ 34.46 2 8. 2 1 -.21 -0.7 V T V -12.7 - 14.1 404 1 8 0 . 44 revenue improved from a year Apple AAPL Raptor Pharma. RPTP Hewlett Packard HPQ 24 . 85 ~ 41.10 2 7. 8 4 -.11 -0.4 V V V -32.6 -24.3 12801 11 0 .70 earlier. United Natural Foods is Intel Corp INTO 24.87 ~ 37.90 2 9. 3 9 -.08 -0.3 V X V -19.0 -13.1 23669 12 0.96 Close:$115.30 %1.09 or 1.0% Close:$7.52 Y-4.51 or -37.5% coming off a disappointing third The drug developer’s potential liver KEY 11.55 ~ 15.70 13 . 6 0 + . 0 9 +0.7 A V V -2.2 -0.4 6995 13 0 .30 The iPhone maker said preorders Keycorp quarter. In June, the company for its latest models are strong and disease drug failed to meet key Kroger Co K R 2 5 .42 ~ 39.43 37 . 4 2 +. 1 3 +0.3 A Y A +16. 6 +4 4 .4 8 460 20 0 .42f it expects to sell more than 10 mil› goals in a pivotal study and it could reduced its annual profit and -.05 -1.2 V A V lion in the first weekend. end development. Lattice Semi LSCC 3.25 ~ 7.76 4.09 -40.6 - 46.1 590 d d revenue estimates. $140 $20 LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.64 1 6.4 6 -.08 -0.5 V V V - 0.6 +18.1 7 1 5 d d 15 MDU Resources MDU 1 6 .15 o 29. 5 0 1 6 .4 7 + . 04 +0.2 A V V -29.9 - 44.3 537 d d 0 . 73 120 V +13. 4 +1 5 .0 7 6 8 1 9 0. 2 2 Mentor Graphics MENT 18.25 ~ 27. 38 24.85 -.30 -1.2 V V 10 ca$$47 MicrosoftCorp M SFT 3 9 .72 ~ 50.05 43. 0 4 -.44 -1.0 V V V -7.3 -4.9 23126 29 1 .24 O55r 00 J A S A S J J J Nike Inc 8 NKE 79.27 ~ 117. 7 2 11 1.89 + . 07 +0.1 X V X +16. 4 +3 8 .0 3 393 30 1 . 1 2 52-week range 52-week range V V - 7.8 + 8 . 8 8 4 9 2 0 1 . 4 8 Nordstrom Inc J WN 66.08 ~ 83.16 73 . 1 8 -.42 -0.6 V $03.00~ $134.54 $6.83 ~ $16.28 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 42.00 ~ 52.57 43. 1 4 +. 0 1 ... V A -13.5 + 0 . 3 51 23 1.8 6 Vol.:57.8m (1.0x avg.) P E : 13.3 Vol.:20.0m (14.3x avg.) PE: . . . Paccar Inc PCAR 53.45 ~ 71.1 5 5 7. 8 6 -.41 -0.7 T V T -16.1 -2.1 1321 13 0 .96f Mkt. Cap:$657.52 b Yi e ld: 1.8% Mkt. Cap:$605.21 m Yield : ... Planar Syslms PLNR 3.02 ~ 9.17 5.67 +. 0 5 + 0.9 A T A -32.3 +17.3 96 19 4 J4$$08 Collegium Pharma. C OLI Qualcomm QCOM -3,1 1128 35 1 , 76 Plum Creek PC L 36,95 0 45,2 6 3 7. 3 6 -.13 -0,3 V V V -12.7 Close: $18.76%6.31 or 39.5% Close: $54.32 V-0.34 or -0.6% fi 0 -4.8 -4.9 1666 19 0 . 12 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 249. 1 2 22 9.28 -.52 -0.2 V V + The drug developer’s abuse-resis› The digital communications compa› Schnitzer Steel SCHN 15.06 0 26.0 6 15 . 83 -.34 -2.1 V V V -29.8 -35.4 431 d d 0 . 75 tant pain drug was recommended ny is buying medical data manage› Sherwin Wms SHW 202.01 ~ 294. 3 5 25 1.95 -3.71 -1.5 V V V - 4.2 +18.4 8 2 0 2 6 2 . 68 for approval by a Food and Drug ment companyCapsule Technologie for an undisclosed amount. Stancorp Fncl SFG 60.17 ~ 114. 8 7 11 4.56 + . 02 ... ~ A X + 64 .0 + 7 9.0 1 1 8 2 0 1 . 30f Administration advisory panel. $25 $70 Starbucks Cp SBUX 35.38 ~ 59.3 2 5 6. 2 9 -.24 -0.4 V V E +37. 2 +5 0 .2 5 4 05 2 6 0. 6 4 Going shopping 20 UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 8.9 2 16.54 -.04 -0.2 V V V -2.8 - 2.5 85 1 1 7 0 . 60 60 Consumers have kicked up 15 US Bancorp US B 38.10 ~ 46.26 4 0. 9 2 -.14 -0.3 V V V -9.0 -0.1 8768 13 1.02f spending on everything from cars to WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.2 5 22.44 +.23 +1.0 A V V +1. 3 +4 .8 415 14 0.52 M J J A S J J A S building supplies this summer. -3.7 + 4 . 8 15421 13 1 . 50 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 ~ 5 8.7 7 52.77 +.15+0.3 A V V 52-week range 52-week range That pushed U.S. retail sales up Weyerhaeuser WY 2 6.84 o 37. 0 4 2 7 . 18 -.14 -0.5 V V V -24.3 -15.4 3000 26 1.24f $13DD~ $34 88 $53.53~ $ 78.53 0.6 percent in July after a flat Dividend Footnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, but arecct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declared cr paid inlast 12months. f - Current Vol.:2.6m (22.1x avg.) P E : . . Vol.:9.6m (0.7x avg.) PE :1 4 . 9 reading in June. That suggests that annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i Sum cf dividends paidafter stock split, ro regular rate. I Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$388.11 m Yield : .. Mkt. Cap:$88.51 b Yie l d: 3.5% wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared cr paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend the combination of solid hiring and dividend announcement. p Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r Declared cr paid ic preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP cheaper gasoline is helping to lift value cn ex-distribution date. PE Footnotes: q Stock is a closed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc P/Eexceeds99. dd - Loss ic last 12 months. consumer spending after a muted start to 2015. Did the trend continue InterestRates NET 1YR last month? Find out today, when TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO the Commerce Department reports Apple says preorders for its latest The iPhone is still Apple’s most 3-month T-bill . 0 4 .0 3 + 0 .01 A V A .01 August retail sales figures. iPhone are so strong that it expects to important product. Sales of the iconic 6-month T-bill .26 .23 +0.03 A A A .04 surpass last year’s record of selling smartphone contributed more than Retail sales 52-wk T-bill .38 .36 +0 . 0 2 A A A .08 more than 10 million phones during a two-thirds of the company’s $107 billion Monthly percent change 2-year T-note . 7 3 .71 + 0 .02 A A A .56 first weekend of sales. in revenue during the first half of 2015. The yield on the 5 -year T-note 1.51 1.5 1 ... X T T 1.82 10-year Trea› Apple began taking preorders for the Researchers at IDC, an industry 1.5 10-year T-note 2.18 2.19 -0.01 A A V 2.61 iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus on data provider, say that iPhone sales are sury declined to 2.18 percent on 1.2 3 0-year T-bond 2.95 2.95 ... A A V 3.35 Saturday. The new models,w hich go growing faster than those of rival Monday. Yields on saleSept.25,have more memory Android phones. It expects iPhone affect rates on 0.9 NET 1YR and faster processors, along with a new shipments to grow by 16 percent this mortgages and BONDS TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO 12 mega-pixel camera. year and Android by 10 percent. 0.6 other consumer est. Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.78 2.78 . . . A A V 3.18 loans. * 0.3% 5-yr Total return 1-y r 3-yr Monday’s close: $115.31 Apple (AAPL) 0.3 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.46 4.46 . . . A A 4.45 AAPL 15.4% 7.5 26.4 Flat 52-WEEK RANGE Barclays USAggregate 2.40 2.43 -0.03 V V 2.36 Price-earnings ratio: 13 PRIME FED Barclays US $92 $135 (Basedonpast12-monthresults) Div .yield:1.8% Divi d end:$2.08 High Yield 7.13 7.13 .. . V A A 5.67 M A M J J A RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.04 4.13 -0.09 V L V 4.12 *annualized AP Source: FactSet TEST3.25 .13 Source: FactSet Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.45 1.45 ... A V V 2.08 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.45 3.48 -0.03 V A 3.05 1 YR AGO3.25 .13 &md FOCtgS Selected Mutualpunds 4

’:;;;""Apple expects to shatter record

AP

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Neuberger Berman Guardian’s FAMILY longtime manager will retire in Feb. 2016, but his team will step American Funds aside next month; the fund’s analyst rating has been placed under review.

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities Marhetsummary Am8alA m 23 . 80 -.86 -2.7 +0.1 +8.9+10.6 A A A Most Active CaplncBuA m 56.82 -.20 -4.4 -3.8 +5.6 +7.2 8 8 A The price of oil CpwldGrlA m 44.81 -.26 -3.3 -4.9 +8.6 +8.2 C C C fell Monday on NAME VOL (ggs) LAST CHG EurPacGrA m 46.38 -.26 -1.6 -6.0 +6.0 +5.2 C 8 C weakness in the Apple Inc 553915 115.31 +1.10 FnlnvA m 49. 8 0 - .22 -2.7 -0.8 +11.8+12.5 C C C gasoline market BkofAm 497711 15.96 -.08 GrthAmA m 43.11 -.23 +1.0 +2.6 +14.0+13.8 0 8 C brought on by Petrobras 426716 4.64 +.08 Neubsrger Bermsn Guardian Inv. (NGUAX) IncAmerA m 20.17 -.85 -5.1 -3.8 +7.0 +9.0 E C 8 high fuel Ambev 327997 4.90 +.07 InvCoAmA m 34.86 -.18 -4.6 -2.5 +11.9+12.4 D C D supplies and VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH Alcoa 305754 9.38 -.27 NewPerspA m 36.63 -.19 +1.0 +0.9 +10.5+10.5 A 8 A the end of the Solera 299990 53.66 +4.21 o› WAMutlnvA m38.88 -.16 -6.2 -3.2 +10.8+12.9 8 C A summer driving ChesEng 280317 7.92 +.35 03 FrptMcM 279767 11.16 -.24 Dodge &Cox Income 1 3.56 . . . -0.2 +0.8 +2.5+3.9 E A 8 Do season. Gold FordM 259293 13.78 +.07 Dc IntlStk 38.43 -.21 -8.7 -15.5 + 6.5 +5.4 E A 8 Gen Elec 259044 24.77 -.18 Stock 167.18 -.84 -6.1 -5.4 +13.4+14.1 D A A rose, but silver o› Fidelity Contra 99.28 - . 3 3 +2.3 + 4 .7 +13.5+14.5 8 C C and copper fell. Gainers 03 ContraK 99.2 7 - . 33 +2.4 + 4 .8 +13.6+14.7 8 8 8 CD NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 48.29 -.22 -0.3 +1 .6 +13.3+14.3 A 8 A Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg 69.14 -.28-3.7 +0.4 +12.3+14.1 8 8 A Medgen wt 3.10 +.98 + 4 6.2 Collegium n 18.76 +5.31 + 3 9.5 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 18 . . . -7.2 -10.2 +3.1 +6.0 E D 8 AxionP h rs 2.95 +.62 + 2 6.6 03 IncomeA m 2. 1 6 . .. -6.5 -9.5 +3.8 +6.6 E C A AplONA wt 2.50 +.50 + 2 5.0 FrankTemp-TempletonGIBondAdv 11 .49 +.82 -5.4 - 7.5 +0.8 +2.9 D 8 8 ArchCoal rs 4.85 +.92 + 2 3.4 DO Oakmark Intl I 22.37 -.20 -4.2 -7.7 +8.1 +7.3 C A A TownSprts 3.00 +.54 + 2 2.0 MorningstarOwnershipZone Oppenheimer RisDivA m 18 . 81 -.10 -5.5 1.3 +9.6+11.6 C E D Shiloh 10.26 +1.64 + 1 9.0 RisDivB m 16 . 60 -.88 -6.0 2.0 +8.6+10.6 D E E CPS Tech 3.05 +.48 + 1 8.7 OeFund target represents weighted Asterias8io 5.51 +.86 + 1 8.5 RisDivC m 16.47 -.89 -6.0 2.1 +8.7+10.7 D E E average of stock holdings Foreign Cemtrex rs 4.35 +.64 + 1 7.3 SmMidValA m45.40 -.19 -6.6 2 .9 +13.1+10.9 C 8 E Represents 75% of fund’s stock holdings Exchange SmMidValB m38.87 -.16 -7.1 3.7 +12.2+10.0 C C E Losers T Rowe Price BIChpGr 70.6 6 - . 43 +5.0 + 8 .8 +16.5+17.7 A A A The dollar CATEGORY:Large Growth NAME L AST C H G %C H G GrowStk 55. 2 3 - .29 +6.3 +10.0 +16.2+17.1 A A A gained against HealthSci 7 9 . 2 6 -.30 +16.6 +29.0 +32.1+31.1 A A Athe yen, but fell -4.51 -37.5 NORNING STAR RaptorPhm 7.52 Newlncome 9. 4 6 +.81+0.5 + 2 .0 + 1.7 +3.1 C C D Timkn Steel 12.55 -3.05 -19.6 RATINBm **<<< versus the -2.54 -14.6 DaqoNEn 14.80 Vanguard 500Adml 181.81 74 -3.7 +0.4 +12.4+14.1 8 8 A ASSETS $1,035 million euro. The ICE SibanyeG 5.10 -.76 -13.0 -3.8 500lnv 180.98 73 +0.3 +12.2+14.0 8 8 8 EXPRATIO .88% U.S. Dollar -2.90 -12.6 MagHR pfD 20.06 -0.8 CapOp 52.32 22 +4.3 +19.9+16.7 C A A MIH. INIT.INVEST. $1,000 -5.9 -2.8 +10.6+13.5 8 C A index, which Eqlnc 28.98 11 PERCEN TLOAD N/L Foreign Markets compares the IntlStkldxAdm 24.47 10 -4.6 11.8 +2.9 NA E E HISTORICAL RETURNS StratgcEq 31.70 89 -1.5 +1.7 +16.8+17.5 A A A value of the NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2020 27.84 86 -2.2 -1.0 +6.7 +8.3 8 A A dollar to a Return/Rank -30.57 -.67 Paris 4,518.15 TgtRe2025 16.12 84 -2.5 -1.4 +7.3 +8.8 8 8 8 basket of key London 6,084.59 -33.17 -.54 YEAR-TO-DATE -7.6 Tot8dAdml 10.74 +0.5 +2.7 +1.7 +3.0 A C D currencies, Frankfurt 10,131.74 +8.18 + . 08 1-YEAR -4.0/E 86 -4.7 11.8 +2.8 +3.0 E E E edaed hiaher. Totlntl 14.63 Hong Kong21,561.90 + 57.53 + . 27 3-YEAR +11.2/D TotStlAdm 49.39 19 -3.4 +0.3 +12.6+14.3 8 8 A Mexico 42,827.36 +46.62 + . 11 5-YEAR +12.5/D Milan 21,553.80 -208.83 -.96 TotStldx 49.36 20 -3.5 +0.2 +12.4+14.2 8 8 A Tokyo 17,965.70 -298.52 -1.63 3and5-yearrets$ssaressnsaiized. USGro 30.94 14 +3.4 +9.2 +16.0+16.6 A A A Stockholm 1,467.73 -20.68 -1.39 Rank: Fund’s letter gradecomparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption Sydney 5,120.47 + 24.16 + A 7 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Zurich 8,686.17 -86.27 -.98 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Morninastar.

h58 88

FUELS

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

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

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 44.00 44.63 -1.41 -1 7.4 -6.7 1.52 1.49 +0.27 1.50 1.55 -3.00 -18.6 -4.5 2.76 2.69 +2.41 1.30 1.37 -4.79 -9.1

CLOSE PVS. 1107.90 1103.50 14.36 14.49 955.40 964.90 2.41 2.46 587.35 590.50

%CH. %YTD -6.4 +0.40 -0.92 -7.8 -0.98 -21.0 -1.95 -1 5.0 -0.53 -26.4

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.41 1.41 +0.62 -1 4.6 Coffee (Ib) 1.17 1.13 +3.22 -29.8 -4.5 Corn (bu) 3.79 3.75 +1.20 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.64 - 0.90 + 5 . 4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 246.30 247.50 -0.48 -25.6 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.24 1.24 -0.36 -1 1.8 Soybeans (bu) 8.83 8.88 -0.56 -13.4 Wheat(bu) 4.86 4.76 +2.16 -17.6 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5430 +.0002 +.01% 1.6254 Canadian Dollar 1.3 2 59 -.0002 -.02% 1.1095 USD per Euro 1.1314 -.0023 -.20% 1.2948 -.58 -.48% 107.32 JapaneseYen 120.02 Mexican Peso 16. 7805 -.0363 -.22% 13.2455 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8838 +.0196 +.50% 3.6271 Norwegian Krone 8 . 1945 +.0407 +.50% 6.3712 South African Rand 13.5071 -.0666 -.49% 11.0090 Swedish Krona 8.2 5 17 + .0150 +.18% 7.1362 Swiss Franc .9685 -.0006 -.06% . 9340 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.4009 -.0107 -.76% 1.1057 Chinese Yuan 6.3682 .0083 -.13% 6.1340 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7501 -.0000 -.00% 7.7508 Indian Rupee 66.330 +.034 +.05% 60.808 Singapore Dollar 1.4066 -.0068 -.48% 1.2630 South KoreanWon 1183.29 +1.14 +.10% 1038.13 -.00 -.00% 30.03 Taiwan Dollar 32.50


' www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

BRIEFING Pacific Power to cut rates Pacific Power cus› tomers will likely see an average drop in their monthly utility bills of $4.22 starting Oct. 1, the utility announced Monday. Through the Residen› tial Exchange Program, the power company passes on to consumers the costs or savings that result when the Bonne› ville Power Administra› tion adjusts the rates it charges to provide utilities with power. Pa› cific Power has a$43.6 million credit to pass on to ratepayers, according

EXECUTIVE FILE What: E::SpaceLabs LLC What it does: Provides space, tools, classes and mentoring for me› chanical and electrical engineering groups Pictured: Co-founders W David Robson, right, and Rick Silver Where: 48 Bridgeford Blvd., Suite 180, Bend Employees: Two Phone: 541-390-6570 Wehsite: www.es› pacelabs.corn/

I I::sIAcE Labs "g jj pototyplng ""

IIC i0,5

see a total credit of 77

cents per kilowatt hour. The new credit levels, if approved, will be effective until the end of 2017, according to Pacific Power. — Bulletin staff report

DEEDS Deschutes County

Robert J. Fincham Sr.and Nedra J. Fincham toFred A. and Cathy M.Cholick, Awbrey GlennHomesites, Phase 1, Lot 25, $740,000 Estrella Enterprises to Randall McGill, Circle Four Ranch Condominium, Phase 1, Unit 2, $252,500 David E. andRebekah J. Steffen to Jeffrey R. Recce andCarolyn S. Ruminski-Recce, East Meadow Homesite Section of Black Butte Ranch, Lot 3, $795,000 Mark A. and Kathlene S. Brown to Joan M.and Dirk D. Zeller, trustees of the Joan M. Zeller Revocable Trust, BrokenTop, Phase 1E, Lot 73, $518,000 Stonewater Development Inc. to Pahlisch Homes Inc., Stonegate P.U.D., Phase 3, Lot134, $205,766 Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Jamie andStephanie Hemstead, Stonegate P.U.D., Phase 3,Lot134, $265,000 Rivendell Reach LLC to Randy W.andJill P. Wild, Bend, Lot 4, Block 26, $400,000 Mary L. Leeson to Robert D. andMargaret A. Thibodeau, trustees of the Robert D. Thibodeauand Margaret A. Thibodeau Trust, Hollow Pines Estates, Phase 6,Lot 133, $379,000 Bradley W. Hunter to Stephen L. andKathleen 0. Bennett, Township 18, Range12, Section 7, $180,000 Chris and RobbenJones to Steven A.andMichele L Sheppard, Township 18, Range12, Section 25, $530,000 Lynn P. andDiane D. Meiners to ClaudineF. Nadeau, Forest Meadow, Phase 2, Lot 2, $309,900 Dutch Pacific Properties LP to Swordfish Consulting LLC, Partition Plat 2015› 10, Parcel 2, $205,000 Dennis L. and Victoria B. Thompson, trustees of the Dennis L. ThompsonTrust, to Dwight A. Gaudetand LindaL.Goble,Township 16, Range11, Sections 22› 23, $1,145,000 Wood Hill Homes Inc. to Rodney K.andPatricia A. Clark, ReedPointe, Phase 1, Lot 17, $261,000 •ShaunP.McRaetoKim R.andAnnetteJ.Montee, Westside Meadows II, Lot 17, $326,000

increase ra es By Peter Envis

markets last month, prompted

New York Times News Service

by concerns about China,

The moment that Wall

Street has long been dreading could happen this week. The Federal Reserve on

Thursday might increase in› terestratesfor the firsttime in more than nine years. A rise

would be the beginning of the end of a monetary stimulus policy that lifted stock and Joe Kline/The Bulletin

bond markets to new heights and brought the good times back to Wall Street after the

to its filing with the

Oregon Public Utility Commission. The rate adjustments occur every few years, according to Pacific Power. The utility ex› pects approval of the pass-through by the PUC when it hears the request Sept. 22. Eligible customers in Oregon, which means most ratepayers, will see an overall average decrease of 3.1percent due to adjustments this year, said TomGauntt, Pacific Power spokes› man. Residential cus› tomers using 900 kilo› watt hours per month should see the$4.22 credit. Eligible small ag› ricultural customers will

e mi

crash of 2008. History, however, shows

or now- ow When David Robson moved from the San Francisco Bay Area to Bend three years ago, he found the makings of a miniature Silicon Valley in his new home. But while Bend has no shortage of software companies, Robson said, there’s one noticeable hole in the profile of businesses in town. "I realized that there wasn’ t

the lab and the tools, many of

enough hardware businesses here," Robson said. "There should be more, because thetalenthere

which are too expensive for start› ups or hobbyists to buy outright.

is fantastic, and the idea to make

oscilloscopes, a device that mea› sures the frequency of an electri› cal signal over time, a soldering station and a desk for comput› er-aided design. He added that a

a mini-Silicon Valley certainly needs devices." Robson and his partner, Rick

Silver, believe they can address this knowledge gap through a laboratory located in The Bridge, a co-working space on SE Bridg› eford Boulevard. The business, known as E::Space Labs, opened in June and is taking applications from hobbyists and early-stage companies that are focused on

building high-tech electronic devices. The company has three work stations set up at the moment but will be expanding to five. Silver said prices vary depending on the length of commitment and whether the applicant is a hob›

byist, a startup or a full-fledged company. Robson said the focus is on startups or hobbyists that have a

prototype or an idea for a product but may lack the engineering or business know-how to run a com› pany successfully.

Robson said the lab features five

3-D printer is also on the way.

"The purpose of the lab is to provide equipment, far more than the typical startup could afford,"

Robson said. Education plays a role as well. Silver said E::Space Labs will be offering classes on topics ranging from computer-aided design to detailed soldering to help fill in the knowledge base for startups and hobbyists. Some classes are

free, but most range from $40 to $150. E::Space Labs will also be offering mentoring sessions for companies. Robson said the com› pany is collaborating with groups like Economic Development for Central Oregon and the Small Business Development Center

at Central Oregon Community College to provide mentors for everything from engineering to "Most engineers are like me," scalability. Ultimately, the goal Robson said. "They never studied is to grow the electronic device business and never had any inter› industry in the region. "If companies are going to est in it. They designed this thing, and they know it’s fantastic, but move into Central Oregon that they don’t know how to sell it." are of this type, there’s got to be a Silver said the lab is similar to pool of human talent in the area," a co-working space or a maker Silver said. mill, with startups or hobbyists —Reporter: 541-617-7818, paying a monthly fee to access shamway@bendbulleti n.corn

Fairway Properties LLC to Jeffrey M. andKristi R. Hammond, MeganPark, Phase 1, Lot 5, $295,950 Brian and Valerie Britton to Scott and Coni E.Engle, Crosswater, Phases1-2, Lot 27, $1,590,000 Jed A. and Charmion M. Freifeld to Brandon D.Kelly, Riverrim P.U.D., Lot199, $715,000 Sean A. andKaren B. Kelly to Lawrence J.and Martha D. Stuker, AspenHouses Homesite Section, Lot13, $335,000 Earl G. andDonna S. Kindley, trustees of the Kindley Family Trust, to Jonathan R.Starr and Susan L. Schneider, trustees of the Starr Schneider Revocable Trust, Renaissanceat Shevlin Park, Lot 9, $590,000 Michael J. Gresham, trustee of the Michael J. Gresham Trust, and Loretta Gresham, trustee of the Loretta R. GreshamTrust, toJamesW. and Kathleen Clarke, trustees of the James andKathleenClarke Revocable Living Trust, Awbrey GlenHomesites, Lot 151, $733,443.75 Patrick J. and JanetF.

O’ Malley, trustees of the Patrick and Janet O’Malley Revocable Trust, to Randall L. and Janet F.Smith, Glaze Meadow Homesite Second Addition, No. 138, $375,000 Karoma Properties LLC to Terrence R.and Michele S. Frandsen, Ni-Lah-Sha, Phases 2-3, Lot118, $201,722 Jane A. Shaffer to Richard C. and Shari D.Dowling, Lava Ridges, Phase 3,Lot 60, $441,500 HSBC BankUSAN.A., trustee for SEMT 2007-2, to Todd A. Debonis, trustee of the Debonis Family Trust, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top, Phases7-8, Lot141, $505,000 Neal L. Walden to Douglas B. and Jennifer M. Malone and Carolyn E.Malone, Northwest Crossing, Phases 9-10, Lot 492, $447,400 Paul P. Jacobellis to Sean and Terrie Corcoran, Ski House II Condominium Section Mt. Bachelor Village, Unit 234, $222,800 Heritage HomesHCH LLC to Jennifer L. Major and Walter W.Major III, Northwest Crossing, Phases 20-22, Lot 838, $574,000 Grover C. andCarla R.

Reynolds to Amy E.Balkins, Canyon View, Lot 5, Block 5, $179,500 •PWD Associa tes LLC to Francine G.Lauth, Points West, Lot 48, $483,000 Richard J. and GlendaS. Matusewicz to Nannette L. and James M.Roy,Partition Plat1993-34, Parcel1, $650,000 Caroline W. Hollister, trustee of the Hoiiister Living Trust, to Douglas D. MacFarland andBrittaney 0. MacFarland, Marken Heights, Lot17, $525,000 Steven P. and Shannon L. Munson to Robert andJulia Zipper, Parks at BrokenTop, Phase 4, Lot 157,$625,000 Hector E Perez, Hector G. PerezSr. andGraciela P. Perez toSteven P.and Shannon L Munson, Chukar Ridge, Lot1, Block1, $230,000 Helena G. andRichard J. Verrow to Eric andKatie McDonald, Century Estates, Lot 13, $159,900 Wendy M. McCulloch to Joshua R.andAlisha R. Clawson, South Point, Lot 15, $310,000 KLNR LLC to Gordon Watt, Pines at Pilot Butte, Phase5, Lot 52, $313,500

How is the lab different from DIYcave or other maker mills in town? Qaviri Rnhsnn: DIY, they don’ t do any electronics, with the exception of the 3-D printer. And we don’t do anything except for electron› ics. So we’ re aper› fect complement." How did you decide what equipment should be

Q

A

happen at the Fed’s December

meeting. But an increase in rates, whenever it comes, could still

roil markets, make it harder for many firms to raise money and expose new frailties in

the system that post-crisis regulations have not properly addressed. In theory, a small increase in interest rates

the Fed is

that booms financed with

expected to raise them by only a quarter of a percentage point

cheap money often leave the financial system weaker, not

this year should not be enough to wreak havoc. If the

stronger. And the fault lines

realeconomy isreasonably

only start to become obvious

healthy, and corporate earn›

when the Fed starts to tighten

ings continue to grow steadily, which seems possible, then

monetary policy. This time around, most analysts aren’t expecting 2008-style instability, unless,

By Stephen Hamwaye The Bulletin

traders are now betting that the big day is more likely to

stock and bond prices should

not be vulnerable. Still, some analysts have

say, China’s economic prob› lems worsen sharply. The

a darker view of the links

Obama administration’s over›

stimulus, Wall Street and the

haul of Wall Street appears to

wider economy. They say

have made the largest banks more resilient to the sort of

that financial markets have

stress that can follow an in› crease in interest rates. "I believe that Wall Street is

better prepared foram arket event than it was in 2008, par›

tially as a result of regulation but, more importantly, as a resultofexperience,"said Arthur Levitt Jr., a former chair›

man of the Securities and Exchange Commission. A liftoff in rates may not happen this week. After a vio› lent downturn in global stock

between the Fed’s $3.5 trillion

played a central role in fun› neling trillions of dollars into investments that will prove

unsustainable when interest rates go up. "The Fed is supposed to remove the punch bowl just as the party gets going," said Albert Edwards, a strategist with Societe Generale, in an

email exchange. "It is already well past midnight, but the guests will keep partying until they drop if you ply them with even more alcohol."

Millej Cooj s toclosefirst

Q!!~~ ~! Genuine Draft brewery in the lab?

Rick Silver: We’ re still gathering input. It’ s not static in anyway, shape or form.

By Greg Trotter Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO

Miller Coors

announced Monday that it would close a longtime facil›

Saint Archer Brewery, making it the latest large beer company to expand its craft beer offerings through acquisition. Volume sales of

ity in Eden, North Carolina, the first to brew Miller Gen› uine Draft, because of a pro›

domestic mainstream beers have steadily declined in re›

longed sales decline and the plant’s relative proximity to

beers have surged.

another MillerCoors location

seven years ago, a joint ven› ture of Molson Coors and

invirginia. The plant’s closing in September 2016 will mean

about 520 people are laid off, according to MillerCoors spokesman Marty Maloney. The company would help employees with "workforce training and job search assis› tance," he said. The news comes less than a week after Chicago-based MillerCoors announced its ac› quisition of San Diego-based

cent years as craft and import Since MillerCoors formed SABMiller, volume has de› clined almost 10 million bar›

rels, according to a company news release, which attribut› ed that loss to "economic chal›

lenges, an explosion of choice and fragmentation within the

beer business, and a dramatic change in the way consumers engage with brands." The Eden brewery is the first announced closing since the joint venture.

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY •Laborand Employment Law Update: A presentation covering newOregon labor and employment laws from the2015 Oregon legislative sessions; $30 for members of theHuman Resource Association of Central Oregon, $45 nonmembers; 7:30 a.m.; Shiio inn, 3105O.B.Riley Road, Bend,541-408-4557,www. hrcentraioregon.org. THURSDAY Business Startup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running abusiness isforyou; $29;6 p.m.; LaPine Public Library, 16425 First St., La Pine, 541-383-7290, www.cocc. edu/sbdc. Introduction to 30 CAD:Class designed toexplore andfamiliarize participants with 3DCAD,starting Thursday with weekly meetings through Oct. 22; $150; 6p.m.; E::SpaceLabs, 48 SEBridgeford Blvd., Bend,www.espacelabs. corn/autodesk-fusion-360.html. FRIDAY Contractors CCB Test Prep Course: Two-day live class to prepare for the state-mandated test to become alicensed contractor; $359; 8 a.m.;Central Oregon Community College›

Technology Education Center, 2030 SECollege Loop,Redmond, 541-383-7290; www.cocc.edui ccb. TUESDAY •SCORE BusinessCounseling: Business counselors conduct free one-on-one conferences for local entrepreneurs. 5:30 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend, 541-706-1639. Mid Oregon Credit Union Insurance Workshop: Learnhow insurance ratesaredetermined and what youcandoto affect those rates; 6 p.m.; MidOregon Credit Union, 1386 NE Gushing Drive, Bend,541-382-1795. Growing Your Business with IlttickBooks: Learn the fundamentals of business accountin gandQuickBooks operation in two three-hour evening classesand upto three hours of one-on-onedaytime advisi ng;$199;6p.m.;COCC RedmondCampus Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond,541-383-7290, www.cocc.edu/sbdc. Green Drinks: It’s combined this month with the BendEnergy ChallengeWeek; presentations, food carts, music andbeer;

free; 6 p.m.; BendArea Habitat for Humanity ReStore, 224 NE Thurston Ave.,Bend, 541-385-6908. SEPT. 23 What’s Hot in Franchising: Learn about the toptrends, the best industries and"What’s Hot" in franchising for 2015-16; two-hour workshop with optional 60-minute coachingsessionand Q&A;$29;6 p.m.;COCCChandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend, 541-383-7290, www.cocc.edu. SEPT. 24 Supercharge YourHiring Process: Two-part seminar for businesse sfocuses onthebest practices for recruiting new employees andan overview of legal hiring practices; $50; 7:30 a.m.; Hampton Inn tt Suites, 730 SWColumbiaSt.,Bend, 54 I-382-3221. Lunch and Learn Monthly Market Overviews: JacobFain, financial adviser at theMorgan Stanley office, 705 SWBonnett Way, Suite1200, Bend,Lunch provided; for moredetails, contact Jacob. fain'morganstanley.corn or 541-617-6013. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday’sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.corn/bizcal


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5

THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/athome

o ae or not to ae

I

By Liz Douvillo For The Bulletin

In a gardener’s vernacular the words "brag" and "share" are almost synonymous. At least, I think they are

«’

closely associated: brag is to speak boastfully and share is to have, use or experience jointly with others.

««"; 1

A garden friend did some boasting and in his next breath did some sharing of his recent success GARDEN wi th straw bale gardening. Thegardeningtechnique has been on my list to investi› gate for several years but I nev›

er got "round-to-it." Having him talk about it piqued my interest again, and using his recom› mendations from Washington

. r-’«

State University I started re›

It’s been an amazing summer

searching to share with you. To quote my friend, "Doesn’t every die-hard gar› dener wish for more space in their garden to grow more

for tomatoes, and they continue to tumble out of

our gardens in a colorful and juicy array of shapes

«

«: I

stuff?" While we want more

and sizes.

space we don’t necessarily want the extra work and extra

Jan Roberts-Dominguez i For The Bulletin

cost of building a new raised bed or of tearing out sod and conditioning native soil. When assessing a new proj› ect it is always wise to look at the advantages and the disad›

«

vantages and then make the

decision to proceed or not.

Advantages Bales are generally about 2 feet high, which helps with gardeners who have back problems. You can garden on an as› phalt driveway or concrete driveway or on a patio. The considerations would be that the site is close to a water source and that it will receive

the proper amount of sun to produce a crop. Straw-bale gardening is economical. Straw bales not hay are available at farm and garden centers locally, or if you’ re lucky, from a local farm. The bale should be tight

It’s been a long tomato season. Herearesomeideas to makethe most of your harvest.

and held together with two to

By Jan Robeits-DominguezeFor The Bulletin

three strands of baling twine and placed on the ground so

«I

that the baling twine is paral›

M

y true love affair with the magic of a bacon, lettuce and tomato sandwich began after a 12-hour

lel to the ground to avoid their hastened decomposition.

nonstop drive from Oregon to California with my two young nephews. I

Their grandmother wel› comed us with open arms and

freshly made BLTs. Lee had toasted the whole-grain bread to perfection and slathered on

a silky layer of mayonnaise. She added thin, tender sheets of lettuce, crisp ribbons of

smoky bacon and thick slices of juicy tomato still warm from the sun.

At the moment she thrust this miracle into my hands, a BLT

season.So the creative side of

mind. And yet, with the first bite, it turned out to be exactly

upon the tomato sandwich

my brain is in overdrive: What was the furthest thing from my other fabulous ways can I build concept? How many times can I serve tomato bruschetta to

the right tonic to revive a very weary road warrior. I relish the my dinner guests? The creative pleasure of devouring it to this side spars with the brain’s prac› very day. tical side: So many tomatoes, so This year, we’ ve been blessed little time! Where are my can› with an unusually long tomato ning jars? Let’s make sauce!

Always one to compromise, I

think this is the year I’ ll be able to satisfy both sides. No prob› lem. Thanks to a string of glori› ous summer days OK, a little too hot, but still, consider the alternatives

we’ ll be heading

ect, measure the width of your wall-mounted tissue

Storing extra rolls of toi›

let tissue can be a problem, particularly in a small guest

cessible extra roll in style. Choose home decor fab›

What you’ ll need:

someone is in need?

A clever tissue caddy is

rics to coordinate with your

bath’s color scheme one for the outer and a second for the lining. Home decor fabrics have more body than standard cotton fabrics, but

lighter weight options can be used if desired simply add interfacing for more body. Before you begin the proj›

Straw bales are a multipur›

pose resource, (words from my friend). He will use them

I

II

I

as winter wind protection for his bee colonies and then in

the spring as compost materi› al and bedding mulch.

SeeTomatoes/D2

SeeBale /D4

TODAY’S RECIPES Don’t forget aboutdill: Creamy Dill Potatoes, Dill SoupandLemon and Dill Chicken,D3

are standard size, however,

the solution to that dilemma because it holds an easily ac›

the tissue runs out when

I

holder between the side sup› ports. Most tissue holders if needed, alter the project rectangle sizes to fit your mounting. This project is so easy to make,you can change it up seasonally or for special occasions.

bathroom with limited space. And what if, heaven forbid,

I

our chins.

tares are ins ewit t isca For The Buiietin

I «

into September with smiles on our faces and tomato juice on

HOME

By Linda Turner Griopontrog

Ground-dwelling insects such as cutworms will be less of a problem in straw bale gar› densbecausethebaleelevates the plant above ground level.

« I

Flex yourmusselmastery: Theshellfish is easier to whip up for a weeknight meal than youmight think, D3

/

0+ y

0’

/3 yard outer fabric (cut crosswise, or ’/4 yard if the

fabric pattern is a one-way design that necessitates cut›

ting lengthwise) /3 yard lining fabric /4 yard fusible interfac›

ing (24 inches wide) Basic sewing supplies SeeCaddy/D5

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

This toilet paper caddy is a solution for a small guest bathroom with limited space.


D2 THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

FOOD Roasted Summer Tomatoes Makes about2~ /~ cups smooth sauce, 4 cups chunky sauce Roasting fresh tomatoes until they’ re soft on the inside andbeau› tifully browned ontheoutside con› centrates their flavor. They come out of the oven gloriously golden and wrinkled and are wonderful gems to have on hand in the re› frigerator and freezer for simple sauces and stocks over the days and months tocome.

Tomatoes Continued from 01

How many times can I serve tomato bruschetta to my dinner guests? The creative

side spars with the brain's practical side: So So I hope that this list, as many tomatoes, so little time! Where are my

well as the recipes that fol›

low, incite your own imagi› nation into overdrive.

Thesliced tomatoes on a platter approach

canningjars? Let' s make sauce! Always one to compromise, I think this is the year I' ll be able to satisfy both sides.

Crumble soft blue cheese sprinkle with a bit of balsamic over the slices, then drizzle vinegar, chopped green onion

on some balsamic vinegar, and a drizzling of extra-virgin salt, pepper and a bit of a olive oil. good-quality extra-virgin ol› Combine equal portions About 2 Ibs tomatoes, peeled if ive oil. of whippedcream and maydesired (see note), cored and Sprinkle on some grat› onnaise, add some finely halved, quartered, or cut into ed Asiago cheese, scatter chopped red onion and drop 1-inch cubes (to measure with fresh tom basil and a little dollops onto the tomato tablespoon of pine nuts that slices. 4C) 1 Ig Walla Walla Sweet onion, you’ ve toasted in a pan with a Arrange a platter of toma› peeled and cut into 1-inch drizzling of olive oil and one toes alternately with avocado chunks minced clove of garlic. slices, then drizzle on a sim› /2 C coarsely chopped basil Arrange a platter of toma› ple vinaigrette, or simply lime 8 or10 cloves of garlic, peeled to slices and fresh mozzarella juice, salt, green onions and About /4 C olive oil slices, then drizzle on a bit of extra-virgin olive oil. About / tsp salt pesto that you’ ve thinned with For an extra oomph, cre› About /4 tsp freshly ground some additional extra-virgin ate the previous platter, add› black pepper olive oil. ing a bit of fried and crumbled Over a platter of tomato bacon. Prepare the tomatoes as de› slices, spread on a bit of tape› Take the previous platter sired. If using cherry tomatoes, nade or chopped olives, then "up a notch" by crumbling on simply removethe stemsand halve each one. Place the tomatoes in a large roasting pan, jelly-roll pan, or Chicken Salad with Fiesh Dill any baking sheet with sides. Add the onion, basil and garlic. You This is a very elegant and subtle offering. Consider adding a fewslices of can crowd the vegetables together, garden-ripened tomatoes alongside the salad. but don’t go beyond a single layer. Drizzle on abit of olive oil, and then 1 whole poached chicken About 1 tsp fresh snipped dill sprinkle with salt and pepper to Salt and freshly ground black Equal amounts of sour cream taste. Roast in a preheated 375- to pepper and mayonnaise 450-degree F oven (the hotter the About /4 to ’/ C chopped green Fresh salad greens tossed with oven, the shorter the roasting time) onion vinaigrette until the tomatoes are turning a deep golden brown on their skins. Depending on your oven tempera› To poach the chicken, add the whole, uncooked chicken to a pot, filled ture, this will take anywhere from halfway with water. Throw in somesalt and pepper. Bring to a boil, cover, 20 minutes to about 90 minutes. and simmer about 30 to 40minutes, or until the chicken is done. This may When done, they will have col› be done 1 to 2days ahead. lapsed and look quite wrinkled. Around dinnertime, and long after the poached chicken has cooled its Alternatively, consider roasting heels in the fridge, pull enough white and dark meat from the bird to feed the vegetables over indirect heat two to four people, and cut it into bite-sized chunks. Season the chicken on your grill, with the lid on. I have lightly with a little salt and pepper,added somefinely minced green onion, a wood pellet-fed grill (it’s called a and snipped fresh dill into it, along with enough sour cream andmayon› Traeger and is built in Mount An› naise to barely hold the mixture together. Youdon’t want to drown out the gel), which provides a wonderful pure flavor of the chicken or dill. In another bowl I tossed together some smoke flavor to thevegetables. baby lettuce with a simple vinaigrette. Divided the salad between plates, Remove the roasting pan from then cozy aserving of the chicken salad up against the greens. the oven or grill and let the vege› tables cool. With a metal spatula or wide, flat-sided woodenspatula, Walla Walla Salsa Salsa stir and scrape the cooled toma› toes to dissolve all of the cooked› I created this recipe one summer when the famous Walla Walla Sweet on bits of food. onion was in season. But any sweet will work. Every few years I share it At this point, consider your op› with readers because it’s one of myfavorites. tions for freezing. My friend Chris Peterson’s 4 Ig or 7 med Anaheim chilies, cucumber skinned variation (which is my roasted and peeled (see note /2 C extra-virgin olive oil favorite approach now): After on roasting below) /4 C white wine vinegar roasting, pluck all of the skin off the 1 Ig Walla Walla Sweet onion (or 2 cloves garlic, peeled and tomato flesh (it comes off easily). any sweet onion), diced minced Place it in a blender or food pro› 2 (2/2 oz) cans sliced olives, /2 to 1 tsp salt cessor along with a healthy glug drained Freshly ground black pepper of the liquid from the roasting pan. 5 Ig tomatoes (or 7 Roma-style) /s C toasted pine nuts Blend on HIGH until the skin is a 1 to 2 C peeled and diced puree. Stir this mixture back into the vegetables before refrigerating Remove stems, seeds, and inner membrane from the roasted chiles, or freezing. then chop. In a medium-sized bowl, combine the choppedchiles with the Note sn peeling tomatoes:If sweet onion, olives, tomatoes, cucumbers, olive oil, vinegar, garlic, salt you want to remove the tomato and pepper. Mix well, then adjust seasonings, adding additional salt and skins before roasting, bring a large pepper to taste. Refrigerate for at least 1 hour, but may be prepared up pot of water to a boil. Cut ashallow to 6 hours ahead. When ready to serve, stir in the pine nuts. Serve with "x" in the bottom of each tomato. tortilla chips. Yields about 7 cups of salsa. Blanch them in the boiling water Te roast Anaheimchilies: Poke each chili once with a sharp knife to for about 30 seconds (just until the avoid explosions. Roast the chilies over coals or on a gasgrill or under a skin begins to peelaway), them re› broiler, turning as theskin blisters and blackens. Removeand let cool and move with a slotted spoon and run scrape awaythe charred skin. under cold water to cool. Peel the skins off the tomatoes, then core and cut into halves, quarters, or Tomato, Mozzarella and Pesto Sandwich 1-inch chunks and proceed with recipe. Slice a baguette open lengthwise and brush the cut side of the breadwith To freeze:Ladle the sauce into olive oil. Broil or grill until lightly toasted. freezer containers or resealable Spread the inside of the baguette with pesto, then layer sliced tomatoes, plastic freezer bags, leaving about sliced fresh mozzarella, mixed greens or arugula, and salt and pepper to 1-inchhead space.Letcoolcom- taste. pletely, then close andfreeze. — Recipe from '7heFoster'sMarketCookbook,"bySara Foster

some blue cheese. Alternate slices of toma›

toes and hard-cooked eggs, then sprinkle with chopped sweet onion, cloves of roasted garlic, a sprinkling of salt and freshly ground black pepper, and a sprinkling of freshly shredded Parmesan cheese. Add a drizzling of olive oil if you want. Thin several spoonfuls of

feta or goat cheese with some olive oil. Add a drizzling of rice vinegar and a small bit of gratedParmesan, and drizzle the mixture over your sliced

For a heartier tomato sandwich concept

tomatoes.

that you’ ve slathered with

Alternate sliced tomatoes and thinly sliced sweet onion rings and top with chopped fresh basil, salt, pepper and extra-virgin olive oil (or a sim› ple vinaigrette).

mayonnaise. Add some thin slices of

Make tea sandwiches Slice tomatoes paper-thin

and place on thinly sliced crustless bread buttered with softened butter (unsalted if

you’ ve got it) and mayonnaise; add watercress, top with an› other slice of bread and cut

into dainty shapes.

S lice t om a toes v er y

thick and place on an slices of toasted whole-grain bread

sweet onion and top with an›

other slice of toasted bread that you’ ve coated with more

mayonnaise. Cut into quarters on the diagonal. — Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a Corvallis food writer, artist, and author of "Oregon Hazelnut Country, the Food, the Drink, the Spirit" and fourothercookbooks. Readerscan contact herbyemail at j anrdI proaxis.corn, or obtain additional recipes and food tips on her blog at www janrd.corn.

Pesto Green Beans with Three Vypes ofTomatoes This summer salad is great for buffets, picnics, potlucks andtailgates. It’s easy, too. 2 Rome-style tomatoes,

cored and quartered (or your favorite locally grown heritage tomato) 1 C halved yellow pear tomatoes

~/2 C red cherry tomatoes ’/4 C olive oil

1 C grated Parmesan cheese Salt and freshly ground black

3 garlic cloves, minced

pepper to taste

1 /2 Ibs green beans, stem ends

removed 1 C pesto

/4 C pine nuts, toasted ~/z C additional grated Parmesan

cheese to garnish

Preheat oven to 400degrees. Toss the three different varieties of tomatoes with the olive oil and garlic in a roasting pan. Roast for 20 to 25 minutes, until the tomatoes start to release their juices and begin to shrivel (NOTE: adelicious alternative is to roast the tomatoes over indirect heat on your grill with the cover on). Setaside to cool. Meanwhile, bring a large saucepan of water to a boil, add the beans, and cook about 2 minutes, or until the beans are just crisp-tender and still a bright green. Drain the beansand immediately plunge them into a large bowl of water filled with ice cubes to stop the cook› ing process andset the color. When chilled, removethe beansfrom the water andset aside to drain thoroughly. Toss the beanswith the pesto, Parmesan, and salt and pepper in alarge bowl. Whenready to serve, place the beans on a large platter, top with the roasted tomatoes and garnish with the toasted pine nuts and additional Parmesan andserve immediately. Makes 6 to 8servings. Variations:As already noted, any types of tomato can be used. Dr if tomatoes are not in season, eliminate them entirely and substitute roasted or sauteed red or yellow sweet bell peppers. This is great with the addition of grilled chicken. — Recipe from 'lee Foster'sMarketCookbook,"by SaraFoster

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

RECIPE FINDER The Recipe Finder feature will return. If you are looking for a hard-to-find recipe or can answer a request, write Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder'gmail corn. Names mustaccompanyrecipes for them to bepublished.

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Cooking with friends(without a fight) By Sam Sifton The New York Times News Service

many recipes don’ t Q Too take into c onsideration

soften."

do the potatoes, and Gunther Regardless, use your judg› there will knock out that salad ment. If you saute something he always makes. Dinner is over low heat, you’ re probably served. Of course, it is not al›

di f f erences b e t w een just softening it or, in the lan› stoves. When a recipe tells you guage of cooking, "sweating to saute something over "me› it." If you’ re sauteing over high dium" or "medium-high" heat, heat, you’ re probably pan-fry› what does that really mean? ing it and will want the ingredi› It means to saute over ents to jump around in the pan. medium or medium-high If you’ re sauteing over medium heat, butIhearyou.Stovesare or medium-high heat, you’ re instruments. Recipes are sheet doing a little of both, cooking music. Words like "medium" or purposefully, making it good. "medium-high" are not precise. Can men cook togeth› They are better understood er on equal footing? Or as analogues of the dynamic does there have to be a clear markings used in musical no› hierarchy, like on a boat or the

A

Q

ways so simple. Control freak› iness is endemic to kitchens in general and male-dominated ones in particular. Some cooks, both male and female, prefer to work alone or in ways that

allow the accrual of success to flow mostly, if not entirely, to themselves.

"medium" is essential›

a movie set’? I get that chef

ly music’s mezzo, a composer’s instruction, to be interpreted by the artist playing the piece. The best recipes accompany their instructions with explanations:

A

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015 THE BULLETIN

F OO D

D3

yf L

By Daniel Neman • st. Louis post-Dispatch 4

To my mind, dill is the forgotten herb. I mean that literally. Whenever we plant it in the garden, I "

forget all about it until it bolts and has to be cut down. I don’t know why this is. I like dill. That’s why we plant it. I like its unique, sharp, unmistakable taste. I like the way it goes with salmon. I like what it does to lemon, and what lemon does to it. I like the way Eastern Europeans sprinkle it over basically Photos by Cristina M. Fletes / St. Louis Post-Dispatch via TNS

all their soups.

Lemon and Dill Chicken is a delicious way to make use of the sometimes forgotten herb.

And yet, I can go weeks without once thinking of dill.

cream is better. First, you boil baby potatoes Months, maybe. or small red potatoes until they So to remind myself of what are fully cooked. As they are it is about dill that makes it simmering away, you saute a so alluring, I decided to use sweet onion in a lot of butter it in an assortment of dishes. and then you add some cream. There’s one of those Eastern Good, thick,heavy cream. You European soups, though in could use light cream or half› this one dill actually compris› and-half if you wanted to, I es the main flavor. Another is suppose, but why bother? The a chicken dish, because I don’ t whole dish is made by the way usually think about dill going the heavy cream decadentl y with chicken (when I think blends with the onions. about dill at all which, as we The dill that is added only have seen, is rare). makes thefl avors pop even And the third is potatoes. more. And when this sauce And cream. And dill. coats the potatoes, it is superb. We’ ve probably all had pota› For my chicken dish, I chose to salad with dill; as the potato a recipe for lemon and dill luxuriates in the creamy may› chicken from EatingWell mag› onnaise, the dill asserts itself azine. The dish employs what as a fragrant culinary coun› I like to think of as a culinary terpoint. It’s good stuff, but it syllogism. can’t compare to creamy dill Chicken goes well with lem› potatoes. on. Lemon goes well with dill. Creamy dill potatoes (I took Therefore, chicken goes well the liberty of changing the with lemon and dilL I’m not certain that method name from "comforting dill potato recipe") transcend the of thinking is completely ac› ordinary pleasures of a dill-fla› curate for all situations (cinna›

Chickengoes well with lemon. Lemongoes well with dill. Therefore, chicken goes well with lemon and dill. con?). But it certainly works in en), and this is the only dish in

this particular case. which the dill gets a chance to The secret is the sauce. On› shine by itself. But what really

ion and garlic are sauteed makes this soup sing are the in the same pan you used to batter dumplings. sear the chicken breasts. Add You simply whip together an chicken broth thickened a egg, some flour and some salt bit with flour, and stir in the

and drizzle it into the simmer›

dill and lemon juice. Contin› ue cooking the chicken in the sauce, garnish with more dill (of course) and you have a de› licious dinner. Finally, I made a zupa ko› perkowa, a dill soup from Po› land. This is a flavorful but thin soup made richer by sour cream and embellished with batter dumplings. The soup is awfully good by itself (I made it with a mixture

ing soup. In one minute, you have delicious dumplings that are remarkably easy to make. Creamy Dill Potatoes. The soup can also be made with potatoes or hard-boiled

eggs. I added a couple of baby potatoes left over from making

Creamy Dill Potatoes

Makes 5 servings they were great. I’m sure the egg would be equally delicious. 2 Ibs new baby potatoes or 1 med sweet onion, chopped But make the dumplings. small red potatoes, the t/sC whipping cream ’/ tsp black pepper They are so good, and they are largest ones cut in half t/a C(or 3/4-oz package) dill so perfect with the soup, that 2t/4 tsp salt, divided of veal and chicken stocks, but you will find yourself remem› 3 TBS butter fronds,chopped the next time I’ ll just use chick› bering always to use dill. Put potatoes in a large saucepanand just cover with water. Add 2 tea› vored potato salad because mon goes well with toast, toast spoons of the salt, and stir. Over high heat, bring to a simmer. Reduce of one basic, indisputable goes well with bacon, therefore heat to low, stir, and partially cover the pot. Simmer potatoes until they Dill Soup With Dumplings (Zupa Koperkowa) fact: mayonnaise is good, but cinnamon goes well with ba› are fork-tender, 5 to 10minutes. Makes 4 servings Meanwhile, melt butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the Note: Along with the dumplings, this soup canalso beserved with boiled onion and cook, stirring occasionally, until translucent, about 3 to 5 min› potatoes or hard-boiled eggs cut into wedges. utes. Stir in the creamandthe remaining ’/4 teaspoon of salt and the pep› Lemon And Dill Chicken per. Bring the cream to aboil, stirring constantly. t/s C cold water Makes 4 servings 2 TBS butter, divided Remove from the heat and add the dill. Drain the potatoes and add s/4C finely chopped dill, divided 1lgegg them to the skillet, turning them over in the creamsauce until covered. 4 boneless,skinless chicken 2 cloves garlic, crushed 6 C of stock: chicken, veal, beef ’8 tsp salt Per serving: 280 calories; 16 gfat; 10 g saturated fat; 51 mg cholester› breasts (1 to 1t/s Ibs total) 1 C chicken broth or vegetable 1 egg yolk ol; 4 g protein; 32 g carbohydrate; 4 g sugar; 4 g fiber; 277 mg sodium; 6t/a TBS all-purpose flour, Salt and pepper, to taste 2 tsp all-purpose flour t/s C sour cream 43 mg calcium. 1 TBS extra-virgin olive oil or

canola oil t/a C finely chopped onion

3 TBS chopped fresh dill, divided 2 TBS lemon juice

Season chicken breasts on both sides with salt and pepper.Heatoil in a large, heavy skillet over medium-high heat. Addthe chicken andsear until well-browned onboth sides, about 3 minutes per side. Transfer chicken to a plate and tent with foil. Do not clean skillet. Reduce heat to medium. Add onion and garlic and cook, stirring for 1 minute. In a separate bowl, whisk together broth, flour, 2 tablespoons of the dill and lemon juice and add to pan. Cook, whisking, until slightly thickened, about 3 minutes. Return the chicken andany accumulated juices to the pan; reduce heat to low and simmer until the chicken is cooked through, about 4 minutes. Transfer the chicken to a warmed platter. Removethe garlic cloves. Sea› son sauce with salt and pepperandspoon over the chicken. Garnish with the remaining 1 tablespoon choppeddill. Per serving: 172 calories; 6 g fat; 1 g saturated fat; 63 mg cholesterol; 24 g protein; 4 g carbohydrate; 1 g sugar; no fiber; 288 mg sodium; 22 mg calcium.

divided

the creamy dill potatoes, and

Salt and pepper to taste

Melt 1 tablespoon butter in a skillet, add ’/4 cup dill and saute gently over low heat for 1 to 2 minutes. In a large pot, heat stock to boiling and add the dill and butter mixture. Dissolve 3 tablespoons of the flour in the cold water andadd to the stock. Bring the stock back to asimmer. To make the dumplings, combine the egg, the remaining3t/2table› spoons of flour and the salt, and beat with a whisk or fork for 2 minutes until smooth. Drizzle batter slowly into simmering stock from a spoon or fork and cook for 1 minute. Keep the soup at a simmer to avoid disinte› grating the dumplings. Melt the remaining 1 tablespoon of butter, place in a small bowl and beat in the eggyolk. Gradually add 1 cup of the boiling stock and stir well. Stir in the sour cream until the mixture is smooth. Return this mixture to the soup pot and simmer for 1 to 2 minutes, but do not boil. Turn off the heat, add the remainingt/2 cup dill, stir, cover and let stand for 2 to 3 minutes. Addsalt and pepper to taste. Per serving: 305 calories; 17 gfat; 8 g saturated fat; 131 mg cholester› ol; 13 g protein; 24 g carbohydrate; 7 g sugar; no fiber; 629 mg sodium; 58 mg calcium. Dill Soup (Zupa Koperkowa).

Where Buyers

An excus eto ex ourmusse maste By Ellie Krieger

that has been seasoned with

Special To The Washington Post

herbs and aromatics, cover and let them steam until they

It is perplexing to me that

with nutrients such as protein, vitamin B12, iron, selenium

mussels, drizzled with sauce,

and omega-3 fats; they are

e c

ClassI coe ds

option for

weekday dinners than

icans’ dinner tables. The suc› not opened, and serve with

the flavorful liquid that accu› mulates in the pot. The whole

1000’s Of Ads Every Day

Mussels are an easier

mussels aren’t on more Amer› open. Discard any that have culent shellfish have every› thing going for them. They are lip-smackingly tasty and fun to eat; they are inexpensive, widely available and packed

And Sellers Meet

you’d think. Dixie D. Vereen for The Washington

process takes maybe 15 min› utes total.

*

Post

Serve the steaming bowl of

) [ *

CENTRAL OREGON RNYOI.ITE

with some good, crusty bread to sop it all up.

a

one of the most sustainable

seafood options; and they are kid-friendly.

Mussels With White Wine Dijon Mustard Sauce

Yes, you read that last rea› Makes 2 servings son right. We tend to see a Serve with good crusty bread. bowl of mussels as sophisti› cated fare, but I have found

2 Ibs shell-on mussels

that, given the chance, chil› 2 TBS olive oil dren relish the hands-on plea› 2 to 4 med shallots, finely

sliced 1 tsp chopped fresh thyme (may substitutet/s tsp dried

1 TBS Dijon-style mustard 1 TBS unsalted butter

2 TBS chopped fresh parsley

t/4 tsp ground black pepper chopped (aboutt/s C) thyme) France, mussels are served as 2 cloves garlic, very thinly s/4C dry white wine children’s meals in some chain r estaurants, complete w i t h Rinse the mussels in cold water. Use aparing knife to remove any hairy clumps (beards). Scrub the shells well sure of eating out of a shell. In

with a vegetable brush. Discard anymussels that are openandwon’t close tightly when tapped. tube ofapplesauce fordessert. Heat the oil in a largepot with a tight-fitting lid over medium heat. Oncethe oil shimmers, add the shallots and Mussels are quick and easy cook, stirring occasionally, until softened, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the garlic and thyme; cook for 1 minute, stirring, to cook. Those sold today typ› until fragrant. Add the wine; increase theheat to high andbring to a boil. ically are cultivated, so you Add the mussels, cover andcook for 3 to 5 minutes or until the mussels haveopened. Use aslotted spoon to don’t need to worry about grit. transfer them to individual serving bowls, discarding any that havenot opened, leaving the cooking liquid in the Just scrub the shells lightly pot. and discard their threadlike Reduce the heat to medium; whisk the mustard and butter into the pot to form an emulsified sauce, then stir clumps, called beards. Then in the parsley andthe pepper. put the mussels in a big pot Pour the sauceevenly over eachportion of mussels and serve right away. with some simmering liquid

j

a sideof fries and a squeeze

$

g


D4

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

HOME ck A R DEN

BIYl S OS

i meo r

Saving Formicawall may Blf LlS BI’~ not be worth the effort O Il IlBWS 8 B S By Alan J. Heavens

were in vogue. These essays suggest that when it comes to pres›

The Philadelphia Inquirer

•I have Formica on my

kitchen walls in an arched doorway, on both of

ervation, we pick our bat› tles, and that this might be

the doorway walls. However, one of these has curved from buckling,

one that you should not be fighting. As someone who spent a and I’m afraid to take it off considerable period of my the wall and try to get it to life trying to preserve what l ay flat a gain w i t hout i t I could of older houses that cracking. I owned, I am uneasy about They do not make this suggesting that there comes p attern o f F o r m ica a n y › a time when you should more, and it’s the same consider doing something pattern that is also on my other than trying to rescue

ter

kitchen countertop, so you

what isn’t worth saving.

see why I’m desperate to try

For example, given a choice of preserving a plas› Is there anything I can do ter ceiling or replacing it to save this piece of Formi› with drywall, I chose to pre› to save it.

Ballard Designs I Submitted photo

A new lampshade might be all you need to wake up a lamp

or room

that seems to have lost its luster.

ca’? It measures 75 inches

serve or, when that was im›

tall by 13 inches wide.

possible, to replace it with new plaster.

A seen online involves repairing Formica counter› Everything I

have

tops, and you can Google it yourself to see the variety of

By Elaine Markoutsas and Cindy Dampier

The fact that the Internet

is offering us access to so much information (be care›

ful how and what you use recommendations. of that information, though) At ww w. F ormica.corn, a nd that I ca n n o t f i n d

Chicago Tribune

If you find yourself wish› ing your tired lamps and chandeliers could stay a bit more in the shadows, perhaps

the accessory that sets Play around with patterns, textures and sizes when choosing a new lampshade. your style statement. Mod›

you can observe the installa› anything that directly ad› tion of Formica walls, which dresses your situation like› might give you an idea of ly means that preserving 50- or 60-year-old Formica how yours were done. I have also read a num› walls just isn’t being done. ber of essays on the Internet Could I be wrong? Sure. about preservation, and it O n the o t her h a nd , I seems the consensus is that know what people want Formica walls date from a when they buy a house, and period of home building› Formica walls aren’t high

ern lamps can put an instant,

post World War II until the

it’s time to replace them. The

shades, that is. Lamps are often described as the jewelry of the room

contemporary spin on more traditional furniture, glamor› ous lamps add a dressed-up element to casual rooms, and vintage pieces can contribute everything from industrial edge to sweet ’70s style. But the shade is the detail that lets your lamp find its voice: It determines whether the lamp fits the space, the

Submitted photos

The shade is the detail that lets your lamp find its voice: It determines whether the lamp fits the

space, the purpose, and the style you have in mind.

purpose, and the style you have in mind. Thus, a quick (and usually M easuring y ou r la m p inexpensive) change of shade ahead of time can help you can completely transform the choose the size you need, same old lamps into f resh (www.shadesof light.corn style for your same old room. has a good online guide to A few things to consider lampshade size and measure› when switching shades: ments), but your best bet is to bring your lamp to a store Get the proportions right and try on shades. Pairing the right size and A lighting store that sells shape shade with a lamp is shades can offer expertise key, and there are a few rules and more options, but bring› that help you get it right. ing your lamp along to a big Most importantly, hardware

the lamp to go into and how ambient light in a room. much room there is for a shade. If you’ re bumping the Try on everything lampshade every time you Once you' ve gotyourlamp put your keys down on the in the store, be open to differ› hall table, the shade will end

ent shade shapes, sizes and

up bent, and you’ ll end up colors. annoyed. Like trying on c l othes, Will a l a rger shade fit sometimes the u n expected underneath those shelves choice is actually the one a bove’? Will i t o b s t ruct a that makes the look come view? Will th e shape com› plement the table it sits on?

together.

And a perfect shade can All questions to consider, elevate any lamp, from that and worth time spent with splurge-worthy favorite to a your tape measure to be sure. garage sale find. Check websites for exact di›

early 1960s

on the list. If at all.

when they

Editor’s note: Martha Stewart’s column will return. Questions of general interest can beemailed to msiletters'marthastewart. corn. For more information on this column, visit www.mar› thastewart.corn.

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate TheB u l letin

mensions of the shade you’ re

considering buying.

4

4

Allow for light

S

Color and opaqueness vary greatly from shade to shade, so remember to choose yours

not only for the color you’ d like to see in your room

box store isn’t out of the ques› but also for the amount of

should be covered by the tion, either. In the end, when light you’ ll need the lamp to shade, which means you may you see the right look, you’ ll produce. need to replace the harp that

the shade stands on as well, to lower the new shade over the switch and socket.

Bale Continued from 01

Disadvantages You will have weeds, but

they are easy to pull.

know.

Consider size carefully Know the space you want

Straw-dale gardening: aguide http:cru.cahe.wsu.edu/ CEPublications/FS109E/ FS109E.p(jf

Tall plants should be avoid›

Tole shades and some dark,

lined shades allow light to be cast only vertically, while lighter shades allow for more

hose on timers. Since I have neither, I would consider the

suggestion from WSU to use a 2-liter soda bottle or a gal› lon milk container. Poke drip

holes in the lid of the contain› er and then fill the container with water and place it upside

ed. Sometimes the bale can’ t hold the weight of a tall tomato. could lead to runoff and leach› Aesthetics might be a con› ing of the nitrogen out of the sideration. Will the neigh› bale. bors be OK with the view of a On day 10, stop adding

down about 1 inch away from the target plant. The water will drip out slowly over the next

day or two depending on the size of the drip holes and the

fertilizer. A half cup of urea

temperature. Monitoring the nutrient sup› ply will be important. Nitrogen bale for heat. If still hot, check deficiency is very common in every day until the bale cools straw bale beds because the down to about 99 Fahrenheit or microbes are using much of lower, still keeping bales moist the available nitrogen to break by watering when needed. down the bale, and nutrients Eventually all t h e c ondi› are also lost from leaching. tions are just right and plant› If the oldest leaves begin to ing can begin. There are two turn yellow before their phys› ways of planting either in a iological maturity, this is a pocket or hole or creating a sign that nitrogen may be lim› flat-bed on top of the bale by iting. Purpling is a symptom spreading growing medium of phosphorus deficiency, and on the top of each bale. brown leaf edges are a symp› Pockets or holes 3 to 4 inch› tom of potassium deficiency. es deep are created by loos› Organic fertilizers release ening and removing a small nutrients slowly, so they are a mount of t h e s t ra w a n d most beneficial when applied filling each hole with grow› at planting. Inorganic fertil› ing medium. The number of izers provide nutrients at a pockets vary depending on fasterrate and are more usethe crops you decide and the ful for providing nutrients spacing needed for produc› quickly when plants are ex› tion. The WSU factsheet gives hibiting symptoms of nutrient you a planting guide. deficiencies. For the flat-bed method, a My friend told me he "pur› /4 inch-deep layer of growing chased hisbales from a local medium works well. Once the rancher, conditioned them per growing medium is in place, the article and planted them

(46-0-0) can also be used.

moisten the medium and the

straw-bale garden next to your

Rolls-Royce? Lastly, the bales are heavy when wet. Make sure y ou

have a plan for placement be› fore you start conditioning the bale.

The technique According to the Washing› ton State University Extension Fact Sheet FS109E, the bales have to be conditioned over

a period of approximately 11 days. The first three days you keep the bales thoroughly wet. Keeping the bales moist is very important. Once the

bales have been watered, they will be very heavy, so be sure they are where you want them

to be. As the inside of the bales begin to decompose they will start to warm up. This is part

of the conditioning process. On days four, five and six, sprinkle the top of each bale

with 1 cup of ammonium sul› fate (21-0-0) or a high nitrogen

fertilizer, but keep the bales moist. On day 11, feel the top of the

bales. application. This speeds the Watering will be a crucial decomposition process. consideration in bale gar› On days seven, eight and dening due to how quickly Water the fertilizer after each

i n zucchini, butternut a n d

~

e

e

pa pa

delicate squash with terrific results." The perfect ending to anoth›

the water moves through the

er successful gardening story in Central Oregon.

izer per bale in half. Take care straw. The ideal would be to not to water excessively, which use drip irrigation or a soaker

— Reporter: douville@ bendbroadband.corn

nine, cut the amount of fertil›

I

E a ’ jbbend.corn

J QH N s Q N A

P P

B R QTHERs

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»


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015 THE BULLETIN

D5

osee e u ureo ur an ar enin, oo u By Adrian Higgins The Washington Post

redden. The curious garden› er may find this varietal re›

City gardeners who want to grow edibles typically face

straint too limiting I would have grown a different toma›

two big obstacles: too little

to in each box but in terms of yield, it seemed a good strategy. "Between yesterday and to›

land and not enough sunlight. Buildings and trees rob out›

door areas of light, which is good for humans wanting to

day," Farber said, "we harvest›

ed 124 pounds of tomatoes." Each container holds three vines, trained espalier-like

get out of the sun but a huge

impediment to raising veggies and herbs. You may read in magazines and books that you can eke out a crop in darker corners by growing such things as parsley, carrots or lettuce and by painting fences and walls white for

onto the metal grid fences that

surround the roof. The foliage looks unusually healthy and clean for so late in the sea›

son, a product in part of the near-constant breeze up here.

For the gardener, this phe› nomenon mitigates the heat of

i n creased reflec›

tive light. This is nonsense, in my experience. Veggie gar› dens need open and sunny locations to be successful and productive. The value of planting things in a container is that you can position your vegetative ves›

the sun and also chases away

"

mosquitoes and gnats. There has been a bit of bird pecking

’j s. rs I

but none of the banes of terres›

trial gardens rats, squirrels, chipmunks or voles. Pests and diseases have been largely ab› sent, no doubt thanks in part to its being a fresh garden

r,"

sel in that one sunny corner

of the patio, or on a south- or west-facing balcony or, best of all, on the roof. Roof gardens have their own requirements,

where the nasties have yet to

buildup.

T he trade-off is i n

for sure. You need a strong, flat roof with access to water,

and its edges have to be safe for everyone from 2-year-olds to 22-year-olds in training for Oktoberfest.

P

Whatever the location, the

best advice is this: Forget a Photos by Addan Pgggins/The Washington Post million little pots and spring Okra plants line the edge of the rooftop container garden at the University of the District of Columbia. "I’m getting people to eat raw okra for the largest freeze-proof now I never thought I would get to try okra," says Che Asum, director of UDC’s Center for Urban Agriculture and Gardening Education. planting box you can afford. This will give your plants the critical mass of soil they need University of I saw the rooftop garden to avoid constant stress. the District in June but decided to check This principle has been tak› of Columbia back to see how its first sum› en to glorious extremes this sophomore mer had gone. The answer? Nicholas Toney waters contain›

tion at the top of the University of the District of Columbia’s

College of Agriculture, Urban Sustainability and Environ› Ness campus in Washington. In July, the college officially opened a 20,000-square-foot

I

ii oIIttiijh

green roof and, at its perime› ter, dozens of large containers where garden manager Sandy Farber has overseen the plant› ing and care of vegetables, herbs and flowers. Each container is six feet

, tih

long, two feet wide and 18 inches high, although the soil layer extends down to about

thought the wind would be

mus and volcanic rock.

ing people in food deserts

matoes, for example, contains

A hundred feet or so above the street, the containers are

to affordable and nutritious

containers. Admittedly, this assemblage is on a grand vegetables. But from a simple scale. There are 117 containers part of a loftier mission to de› gardening perspective, the that by my tally offer a grow› velop an urban agriculture boxes prove, too, that there is ing area of more than 1,400 program aimed at connect› a lot of stuff you can grow in square feet.

just Cherokee Purple. The 20 try okra. Sliced and sprinkled containers of peppers have a with a little sea salt," Axum sweet-fruited hybrid n amed said. Proving that you can Vanguard, loaded with blocky takeyour container gardening green peppers waiting to to a higher plane.

Caddy

How o ten s ou ou c can air ucts? ’

,

.

,’iW<,g: +’,P’’:~4›

Angie's List

Many homeowners who’ve hired a reputable air duct

Duct cleaning should be

to prove that vent cleaning

performed at least every five years, depending on your circum› stances.

has a direct and significant benefit, experts agree there's

Eldon Lindsay I Angie’s List

cleaning contractor are often

pleased with the results. While there’s no scientific evidence

some benefit to h aving air

ductcleaning performed, particularly if you hire a skilled professional. Air

scorch, as she had feared. "We

Far better than the gardeners

LIVING SMART

T he N ational

surprised that the plants didn’ t

er program coordinator. The high temperatures," he said. harvest has been distributed In future seasons, he hopes to to food banks. try varieties specifically devel› The spicy bush basil, now oped for container gardening, pulled, yielded 100 pounds. In along with those with high 17 boxes where Farber and her nutrient density, such as pro› team grew cucumber vines tein-rich okra. behind rows of Swiss chard, In late summer, boxes along she harvested 800 pounds of the roof’s northern edge are cukes. full of tall, purple-podded okra Only a dozen veggie types and the pretty yellow flowers have been grown. The sec› that herald them. "I’m getting tion of boxes devoted to to› people to eat raw okra now I

sists of a greenhouse, a central

By Paul Pogue

of the soil, the abundance of sunlight and the care of the gardeners. She was pleasantly

also the city’s Master Garden› crops that would withstand

garden in the sky that con›

half that depth. (The rest is taken up with weight-saving polystyrene.) Weight is an is› sue, and the plants are grow› ing in a purpose-made light mixture of sand, compost, hu›

yields down to th e f ertility

stronger and would be a prob› lem, but it really hasn’t been," imagined. she said. "I thought maybe we would The varieties were select› er-grown eda› have 1,000 pounds of produce. ed by CheAxum, directorof mame in the We aren’t done yet, and we the school’s Center for Urban university’s have already exceeded 3,000 Agriculture and Gardening roof garden. pounds," said Farber, who is Education."I was looking for

summer with the transforma›

mental Sciences at the Van

extra

care, especially w atering. Even with the drip irrigation that cycles through the con› tainers each day, watering is needed. "Things dry out con› siderably more up here," Far› ber said. She puts the unexpected

Du c t

Cleaners Association recom› mends getting your air ducts cleaned every three to five years. Ed Mack, owner of Air sign your system is excessively the debris loose, and the neg› D uct Professionals in L a k e soiled," he says. ative air machine vacuums it Elsinore, California, says Most experts, induding the away." homeowners should consid› EPA, have not endorsed air NADCA says homeowners er doing it every two to five duct deaning as a remedy for should clean air ducts under years, depending on their health issues, but cleaners say thesecircumstances: they’ ve amassed a growing Every three to five years. Be circumstances. "How often you need it will body of anecdotal evidence that wary of a contractor who sug› depend on what part of the it does provide some benefit. gestsmore frequentdeanings. •W hen youmove into a new country you’ re in, how often Mack says a proper air duct you use your system, and if cleaning will help with the home, unless you know the pre› anyone in your home has aller› biggest causes of respiratory vioushomeowner serviced the gies or asthma," Mack says. problems. "If you have asthma, air ducts within the last three T he E nvironmental P r o › your number one enemy is dust years. After building a new home. tection Agency recommends mites," he says. "And for people cleaning air ducts when: with allergies, pollen and dan› It’s likely the ducts have built up You suspect that mold ex› der are a big problem. These debris from drywall dust and ists in the air ducts. are microscopic elements you other materials used during the You notice a vermin infes› can’t see with the naked eye, construction phase. After completing a home tation somewhere in the home, and they’ re commonly found in or you see insects or rodents en› air ducts. A good cleaning will remodeling project. Construc› tering or exiting ductwork. remove a lot of them." tion projects spread sawdust You see a visible "poof" of H owever, N A DC A s t a n › throughout the home, and un› dust released from the supply dards caution that these ele› less you go to lengths to protect registers when air is exiting the ments will only be removed the ducts, the dust will extend vents. by a thorough cleaning that into the ductwork. If you have pets in the home Mack recommends tak› addresses every part of the sys› ing a look inside your air vent tem that air moves across, not thatshed fur and dander.Duct register. just the air ducts. deaning and effective home "If you notice black debris "A good deaner is going to cleaning practices can help around the outside, that’s pol› use anegativeairmachine and to prevent it from spreading lutants that have been recy› a rotary brush cabling system," throughout the home. ded through the system over Mack says. "The brush goes Professionals warn home› and over again, and that’s a through the ducts and knocks owners to avoid air duct dean›

side for turning. Trim corner seam allowances diagonally. 7. Turn the caddy right side out through the opening. Press under the seam allowances

Continued from D1

Cutting: 1. From the outer fabric,

of same size outerfabric

the previous stitching line on

rectangle.

each end to create a stitched box, catching the ties in the stitching. 10. Tie a knot in each end of both ties.

Use a /4 seam allowance,

"You don’t want to go with

the '$49bandits,'" M ack says. "These are less reputable con› tractors who will use the very,

very low price to get into your house and then keep piling on the extra charges."

Keep these points in mind when hiring an air duct dean› ing company: A good duct deaning costs between $400 and $1,000 and

at the opening and topstitch

cut one rectangle, 8 by 23 the rectangle /s inch from all inches and two strips, 1 by edges. 30 inches. Note: The strips 8. Lining sides together, can be cut crosswise, even match the short rectangle edg› on a one-way print, as es and pin. Fold one tie in half they’ re very narrow and lengthwise and insert the fold the patterning won’t show. between the rectangle layers /4 2. From the lining fabric, inch deep and /4 inch in from cut one rectangle, 8 by 23 the long edges. Repeat for the inches. second tie. Pin in place. 3. From the fusible inter› 9. Topstitch the upper caddy facing, cut one rectangle, 8 edge on the previous stitching by 23 inches. Fuse the in› line and stitch again 1 inch terfacing to the wrong side below the topstitching; follow

Making the caddy: ing seams and stay away from excessively cheap specials that seem too good tobe true.

never thought I would get to

unless otherwise noted. 4. On each tie, fold the

11. Insert a roll of toilet pa›

long edges to the center and per in the caddy opening and fold one short end in /4 inch; tie the caddy to the side sup› fold lengthwise a second ports of the holder. time to make a tie /4 inch

— Reporter: gwizdesigns@aol.corn

wide. Press firmly. 5. Edgestitch each folded tie length. 6. With right sides to› gether, stitch the lining rectangle to the outer rect› angle, leaving a 3 -inch opening along one short

BarhTurfSoil.corn I

and central s ystem. Good

cleaners will use negative air machines with HEPA filters. It should take a few hours.

An air duct cleaner who’s in and out in less than an hour probably didn’t do a good job. Many quality ductwork deaners use truck-mounted, outside vacuum systems that

contain dust and debris outside the house. — Angie Hicks is the founder of Angie's List, which offers consumer reviews on everything from home repairto health care.

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D6

TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Ne ix ivescancee ’Lon mire’new i e TV SPOTLIGHT

the novels are all written as first-person tales from Long›

"Longmire" Netflix

mire’s perspective. Phillips is pleased the series makers were able to expand on

By Rick Bentley

supporting players like the one he’s playing. "Season 3 was sort of an epiphany for me because they were taking Henry Standing

The Fresno Bee

LOS ANGELES

F a ns

of "Longmire" were stunned when A&E canceled the drama

after three seasons. To make matters worse, the final episode

Bear into places that I don’ t

think Craig would have inves› tigated in his novels," Phillips says. "We’ re very, very true to those characters. We’ re very

in the third season featured

several big cliffha nger. The shock and frustration wore off quiddy when Netflix opted to order a fourth season

true to the soul of his writing.

But they have expanded the universe to include the sup›

that is available now. Executive producer H unt

porting cast, to let us know about their lives that are not

Baldwin says the cliffhanger wasn’t written as a way of forc› ing the cable network to keep

ever really investigated in the novels.

producing the show, which is based on the novels by best-sell› ing author Craig Johnson. "Obviously, when we wrote that, we had a lot of story left to tell, had every intention of

"So there were times when I had to wrap my head around Henry not being a zen war› rior and maybe being a little overly caffeinated at times and

Lewis Jacobs / Nefflix viaTNS

Robert Taylor, Lou Diamond Phillips, Katee Sackhoff and Adam Bartley in "Longmire."

dealing with some emotional

telling that. And we were sur› murder of his wife. Walt gives of sort of a purgatory last sea› in to his darker impulses and son when we didn’t think we takes off in pursuit of the killer were going to get to finish. So, with revenge on his mind. needless to say, we are thrilled Meanwhile, Branch Connal› that we got to move to Netflix ly (Bailey Chase), the deputy and finish telling that story," fired for violent behavior, be› Baldwin says. "We threw a lot lieves he has already figured of knives in the air at the end of out who the real culprit is. But Season3,and a big partofthe during his confrontation with story we’ re telling in Season 4 this suspected killer, a gun goes is what happens when those off. knives fall." Taylor didn’t believe it when "Longmire" picks up with he got the message that A&E Walt Longmire (Robert Taylor) had pulled the plug after three finding out who is behind the seasons. prised that there was a period

"I thought it was a joke. I didn’t believe it. I got a text

saying they canceled it, and I thought, ’Oh, that’s great I had an interview that I didn’ t

have to do,"’ Taylor says. "I was skiing in Australia, so it was cold. It took me a week or so and I reconciled myself to not

doing it again, but I always be› lieved we weren’t finished." The reason the show got

canceled by A&E was that the audienceskewed olderthan the cable channel bosses wanted.

Netflix has no such concerns.

baggage that is not really intro› There will be one big dif› duced in the novels." ference in Season 4: Because The theme of Season 4› Netflix is a streaming service decided upon before the A&E and not under the tight con› decision is second chances. fines of commercial television, Cast and crew of the drama the producers will be able to agree that’s a perfect way to make each episode as long as describe what happened when needed. Netflix came along to save That extra time will be used "Longmire" from the TV trash to focus on the stories dealing pile. with Longmire and Henry The 10-episode fourth season Standing Bear,the character stars Taylor and Phillips along played by Lou Diamond Phil› with Katee Sackhoff, Chase, lips. It’s taken some work in Cassidy Freeman and Adam the writing room to expand Bartley. Gerald McRaney and supporting players because Ally Walker guest star.

Distant us an s owsnosupport

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0 and IMAX movies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. f

anymore. Am I being a hormonal, paranoid wreck, or is something bad going on here?

wife. I don’t want to be seen with

young son together. For the last — Emotional Mess in Ohio couple of months, I have had se› Dear Emotional Mess:You need vere morning sickness, and my to confront your husband with

would rather cut all ties with them.

Dear Abby: I’m a few months

pregnant and married to a man I love with all my heart. We have a

husband seems to resent me for it. He complains that I

"don’t do anything anymore," but I have been so iII that some days it’s all I can do

DFP,R

that question. His behavior is the

— Grouchy Texan

ive. Whether it is be› cause he is immature

Dear Texan:I am glad you asked, because it appears you and your

or because he is see› ing someone else is to get to work in the anybody’s guess. But morning. I try to help a change of behavior out as much as I can, but it doesn’ t this drastic on so many levels is seem to be enough. certainlycause for concern — and Lately he has shown no interest pretending you don’t notice won’ t in meorthepregnancy.Hewo n'tgo fix whatever is going on. with me to doctors’ appointments, Dear Abby:My wife has children no longer asks me about them, and two grandchildren from a pre› and refuses even to discuss possi› vious marriage. Her granddaugh› ble names for our new baby. I have ter, "Jasmine," is 19. We were nev› been to the emergency room twice er closeto her or her mother, but once for dehydration and another we tried to heal old wounds a few time for a car accident. He showed years ago. up only after I begged him to come Once Jasmine turned 17 she because I was scared. When my started getting tattoos. She now has mom showed up, he couldn’t get out them all over her body thighs, of there fast enough. chest, stomach. She has a full sleeve He has been very secretive with on one arm and a half-sleeve on the his phone lately and has been other. She has piercings in her ear working longer and later hours lobes and has pierced her nipples. At this point, I don’t want her

in my house and neither does my

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUES› DAY, SEPT. 15, 2015:This year luck seems to follow you. Even if you feel you havemade a bad decision,youw ill

*** Average

major purchase

** So-so * Difficult

that easily could changeyourlives. You often are surprised by your significant other, as he or she hasan unpredictable side. LIBRA has great mon› eymaking ideas.

ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You don’t need to ask for feed› back.The peoplewith whom youaredealing can’t help but give you information based on their varying biases. Do your own fact-checking. A friend or loved one is likely to express his or her caring and gratitude. Tonight: Curb sarcasm.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * Maintain your pace despite others

running in andout your door. Someone might want to express his or her caring at an odd moment. You’ ll gain an insight into a key person in your life. Say little, and observemore.You mightbe pleased by a revelation. Tonight: Take awalk.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * * Y our playfulness emerges because of your sense of humor in what seems to be an impossible situation. Your

wife have forgotten that under›

neath those tattoos and piercings is a GRANDCHILD. I understand

her body "art" may be off-putting, but I’m disappointed that nowhere in your letter did you express what

kind of person Jasmine is. I’m sure that like most people, she has more to offer than what’ s

on the surface. She may be a sen› sitive, loving, caring, talented and intelligent individual who would love a relationship with you and her grandmother, and be deeply hurt by the sentiments you have

expressed. That said, unless you can look deeper and get to know and love Jasmine for the person she is, it would be better for her to avoid such shallow individuals as the two

of you. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabbycom or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

change youropinions givensometime. You will experience at least one new beginning in your life. If you are single, you have quite a few choices of potential sweeties. Knowing what type of relation› ship you want will 8tars showthokind be instrumental. If of day yoo’I hatro yo u are attached, ** * * * D ynamic the two of you ** * * p ositive might make a

My wife agrees. I don’t see us changing our minds. Your opinion, Abby?

opposite of support›

ABBY

than usual. I don’t know what to do. I’m scared that he doesn’t want me

her in public, and because her mother allowed her to do this, I

friends could act in a startling manner. Your energy soars when dealing with a child. Choose your words with care. To› night: Find a friend for some fun.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * Just because you wake up with a great idea doesn’t mean it is one. You will see what occurs when you test it out

on sev eralpeoplewhoseopinionsyou respect. You’ ll better understand an older person or relative during the process. Tonight: Stay close to home.

LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * Know that you are headed in the right direction. Your smile exudes self-confidence. You might gain unusual information about an associate. One-on› one relating is likely to take you down a new path, as long as you are willing to go. Tonight: Go for what you want.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * Be aware that someone could be sending mixed messages. Find out whatis going on behindthescenes,and become more of an observer. Verbalizing your thoughts and feelings will be more successful than you might realize. To› night: Join a friend for munchies.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * Your smile wins others over. You might not even realize the power of your charm.You have away ofdrawing people toward you. Among your friends, there could be a secret admirer. Look around. You might prefer to keep this a "secret," too! Tonight: Where the action is.

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Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ANT-MAN (PG-13)12:l5, 3, 6:05, 9:20 • DOCTOR WHO 3-0: DARK W ATER/DEATH INHEAVEN (No MPAArating) 7:30 • UN GALLOCON 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 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13l 12:15, 9:45 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-0 (PG-13)3:15,6:50 • MAD MAX: URY F ROAD IMAX3-0 (R)1,4,7:30,10:20 • THE MANFROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13l1: 05,3:50,6:35, 9:25 • MINIONS (PG) 12:15, 2:35 • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROGUENATION(PG-13l 12:35, 3:40, 7:25, I 0:30 • NOESCAPE(R) 12:50,3:25,7:35, 10:10 • THE PERFECT GUY(PG-13) 12:30, 3:05, 7:15, 9:45 • RICKI AND THE FLASH (PG-13) 6:25, 9:15 • STRAIGHT OUTTACOMPTON(R) 12:05, 12:10, 3:15, 3:20, 6:30, 7:20, 9:50, 10:35 • TRAINWRECK (R) 12:55, 3:55, 7:45, 1 0:40 • THE TRANSPORTER REFUELED(PG-13l 12:20, 2:45, 5:15, 8, 10:25 • THE VISIT(PG-13j noon, 2:30,7,9:30 • A WALKINTHEW OODS (Rj12:05,3: 20,7:20,10:35 • WAR ROOM (PG)12:45,3:30,6:45,9:40 Accessibility devices areavailable for somemovies.

• DOPE (R) 9 • FANTASTIC FOUR(PG-l3) 6 Younger than 21 mayattend aiiscreeningsifaccompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THE END OFTHETOUR(R)6 • MERU (R) 8:30

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) *** * You recognizethe importance

• INSIDE OUT (PG)3:45 • THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13l8:15 • NO ESCAPE (R) 4,6:15, 8:30 • SHAUN THESHEEP MOVIE(PGj6 • STRAIGHTOUTTA COMPTON (R)5:15,8:30 • THE TRANSPORTER REFUELED(PG-13l 3:30, 5:45, 8

CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * * See right through someone else’s ruse. You know what is going on, but you might decide to see where this person’s game will go. You might opt not to know what is really happening. This information could be useful, but at what cost? Tonight: Expect the unexpected!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * * You might opt to move forward on an important project that means a lot to you. A friend supports your efforts by en› couraging your creativity. The unexpected might point to a quick change of activities

and plans.Maintainyoursenseof humor. Tonight: The only answer is "yes."

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Your inventiveness comes out despite what is going on around you. You have the support of a key individual in making a money decision. You could feel a little awkward acknowledging the impor› tance of this person in your plans. Tonight: Catch some zzz’s. ' King Features Syndicate

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9 p.m. onSYFY, "Face Off"› Asthe field of competitors con› tinues to shrink, the skills of the nine remaining artists are tested to their limits in a grueling set of three increasingly difficult chal› lenges that take place in anew episode called, fittingly enough, "The Gauntlet." 10 p.m. onFX, "The BastardEx› ecutioner" In the long-running "Sons of Anarchy," series creator Kurt Sutter took Shakespeare’s "Hamlet" and transposed its basic story to contemporary America. In this new series, however, Sutter takes viewers back to 14th-cen› tury Wales for this original saga of Wilkin Brattle (newcomer Lee Jones), a former warrior knight

struggling invainto findsome

peace. Other series regulars include Katey Sagal ("Sons of Anarchy" ), Stephen Moyer (" True Blood" and ) DarrenEvans

("Galavant"). 10:30 p.m. onCON, "Drunk

History" Thenewepisode "New Orleans" offers a typically tipsy account of how the cele› brated pirate JeanLafitte helps Andrew Jackson defeat the British during the War of1812. Also: U.S. businessman SamZemurray becomes a bananakingpin, and Louis Armstrong becomes ajazz legend through the influence of several different figures and

experiences.

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8p.m. on7, "In Their Own Words" With a new "Mup› pets" series about to debut, the timing is appropriate for this program to conclude with a pro› file of the manwho created such enduring characters as Kermit and MissPiggy:Jim Henson. Those creations spannedseveral decades, but they got a special boost when Henson aligned with Children’s Television Workshop to generate one of the milestones in public-television history, "Sesame Street." He also madesuch fanta› sy films as "The DarkCrystal."

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** * * You might want to rethink a decision that revolves around a personal matter. Reach out to someone you trust, so you can test out your ideas on him or her. Know that you might not be seeing all sides of the situation. Slow down some. Tonight: Get some extra R andR.

of a group effort, especially in situations where you can'tseem to push an idea through by yourself. Many people need to have a consensus and are not free thinkers like you. You know how to play it both ways. Tonight: Around people.

8 p.m.on5,8,"Am erica'sGot Talent" Here’s the penultimate episodeoftheseason,andthe one on which everything rides for the remaining contestants: the "Finale Performance." The last acts standing each offer their best shot at NewYork’s Radio City Music Hall, and Wednesday’s conclusion will reveal which of them will get the $1 million grand prize. Judges Mel 6, Heidi Klum, Howie Mandel andHoward Stern may have their toughest decisions yet to make. Nick Cannon is the host.

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THE BULLETIN

TUESDAY, SEP 15, 2015

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015

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B u I l e t i n :

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa’s Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children’s Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

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Furniture & Appliances

Antiques & Collectibles

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Computers

Building Materials

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet web› DINETTE -seats 6, good condition. $400 site.

GUN SHOW Sat. Sep. 19, 9am-5pm Sun. Sep. 20, 9am-3pm Douglas County Fair› grounds 541-530-4570

T HE B U LLETIN

re› quires computer ad› vertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple sys› tems/ software, to dis› close the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertis› ers are defined as those who sell one computer.

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves Deluxe LOG Cabin 267- Fuel and Wood k it i ncludes l o g 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 805-720-3515 w alls, r oo f an d The Bulletin 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment Dining room set, ebony Serving Central Oregon sincetgtg porch st r u cture, 270- Lost and Found $9,950. P a ckage table ha s b e veledWonderful ba s e ball with windows, door card coll e ction! GARAGESALES glass n cover, 36" high, and roof materials, x41 widex57" long. 1978-91. Topps, full Howa 15 0 0 30 0 275 - Auction Sales $14,500. shelf under table for sets, + many other Win. Mag. New, never 260 280 - Estate Sales 406-241-5339 storage o r kn i c k› sets, individual cards fired. W o o d stock, 281 - Fundraiser Sales Misc. Items knacks 4 upholstered of Mantel/Mays, Ar› stainless barrel and 282- Sales NorthwestBend stools. Almost new, ron + o t her stars. action. Great deer or Buytng Dfamonds Sisters Habitat ReStore 284- Sales Southwest Bend Call elk gun , p aid $900 sell f o r $950. b a rgain /Gold for Cash Building Supply Resale 286- Sales Northeast Bend $450. 541-953-9256 541-729-1677 or priced-wife says sell Quality items. Fine Jewelers email 288- Sales Southeast Bend :-) $6 5 0 . Call Saxon’s 541-389-6655 LOW PRICES! dbwassom ' gmail.corn. 541-389-3694, leave 290- Sales RedmondArea 150 N. Fir. message. BUYING 292 - Sales Other Areas 541-549-1621 215 Lionel/American Flyer Open to the public. FARM MARKET Coins & Stamps trains, accessories. John Wayne com› 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 541-408-2191. memorative holster Private collector buying and gun belt set, 316- Irrigation Equipment Find exactly what Frigidaire- Gallery Se› postage BUYING & SE LLING stamp albums & Model JW81, unit „ 325- Hay, Grain and Feed ries gl ass-t op self collections, All gold jewelry, silver you are looking for in the world-wide 711 of only 3,000. cleaning range, like and U.S. 573-286-4343 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies and gold coins, bars, CLASSIFIEDS New in box w/ all new $300. rounds, wedding sets, 341 - Horses andEquipment (local, cell phone). orig. printed mate› Whirlpool refrigerator, class rings, sterling sil› 345-Livestockand Equipment rial incl. certificate cubed or crushed ice 241 ver, coin collect, vin› 266 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals signed by Michael tage watches, dental and water in the door, Bicycles & Heating & Stoves 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers Wayne. Perfect con› gold. Bill Fl e ming, like new, $550 . In Accessories dition. $ 695 . 541-382-9419. 358- Farmer’s Column Madras, please call NOTICE TO 541-420-5184 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 541-419-8035 ADVERTISER Hot dog/ hambuger bun Raleigh 26" womens 383- Produce andFood warmer, $75; cement Since September 29, mtn bike, $75. exc,

+ Peat Mixes + Juniper Ties + Paver Discounts + Sand + Gravel + Bark

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541-389-9663

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270

Lost & Found

FOUND at W endy’s

North on Sept. 7th, a ring w/ 1 small stone. Call to iden t ify. 541-771-2345

FOUND: One rosary, outside Michelle’s on American Ln. Call to ID. 541-383-9056 FOUND: Set of keys outside Bend library on sidewalk on 9/6, call to ID. 541-382-7292

Lost: Aug. 8 from Em› pire near OB Riley peach-faced Lovebird, looks like small parrot, Para Ord P-14-45 w/3 mixer, $100. antique 1991, advertising for green body, answers USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! cond. 541-385-8049 to "Wednesday". clips, $700. AMT 45 futon, $125. used woodstoves has 541-385-8367 Door-to-door selling with Tour Easy recumbent Stainless, $500. Colt 530-598-6004 208 206 been limited to mod› naconda 44 M a g fast results! It’s the easiest b ike, s i z e med . A which have been Pets & Supplies P ets & Supplies King C e dric els Check out the $ 2,500, f a inng 8 Stainless, $2200. Colt Oneida certified by the Or› way in the world to sell. sterling silverware, 30 Woodman Match Tar› classifieds online mesh seat. egon Department of 2 nice canaries w/cage, Yorkie AKC pups, 3M, et 3rd Series 22 LR, p ieces. $1400 . Environmental Qual› wuNtt.bendbulletin.corn 541-536-7619 The Bulletin Classified $350 value, sell for adorable, tiny, UDT 400. Uberti 4 5 LC 541-475-4618 ity (DEQ) and the fed› Updated daily $95. 541-420-2220 shots, health guar., pica, 541-385-5809 245 Single Action, $250. eral E n v ironmental $750/up. 541-777-7743 S8W 357 Mag, mod AKC Doberman Pup› Golf Equipment Protection A g e ncyLOST RC AIRPLANE G ENERATE S O M E 28-2, $250. InterArms pies. Blue f e male, (EPA) as having met White/Blue Near Miller 210 EXCITEMENT in your Virginian Dragoon 44 Fawn Male. Ready to CHECK YOUR AD smoke emission stan› Elem. 541-408-4949 neighborhood! Plan a Mag stainless, $300. 0 9/20 $7 0 0 Furniture & Appliances garage sale and don’ t dards. A cer t ified go Colt 1911 45 "Spirit of 202 541-383-4552 w oodstove may b e forget to advertise in America" Special Edi› identified by its certifi› Want to Buy or Rent Beautiful Classical classified! tion by America Re› cation label, which is Persian rug from 541-385-5809. REMEMBER: If you members, issued for permanently attached Cash dressers, table 8 Original Karastan have lost an animal, Sept. 11 Terrorist At› Jenn-Aire glasstop slide chairs, dead washers. to the stove. The Bul› ’.4., collection, 9’x5.9", don’t forget to check the first day it runs t ack „ 10 7 o f 91 1 541-420-5640 range/self clean oven, on letin will not know› exc. condition. to make sure it is cor› m ade, The Humane Society $3200 . $50. 541-389-0936. ingly accept advertis› A $2000 value, Bend rect. eSpellcheckn and 541-389-6024 ing for the sale of Wanted: $Cash paid for Dachshundsminilong- 3-piece hardwood wall selling for $1000 541-382-3537 human errors do oc› vintage costume jew› haired AKC. $500 & up unit, 91 nLx79nH, glass WANTED: Collector uncertified 541-788-4229 Redmond cur. If this happens to seeks high quality fish› woodstoves. elry. Top dollar paid for shelves, $400 obo. 541-598-7417 541-923-0882 your ad, please con› Gold/Silver. I buy by the 541-526-1879 ing items & upscale fly Madras tact us ASAP so that rods. 541-678-5753, or 261 Estate, Honest Artist Deere Chihuahua/Pom 267 541-475-6889 corrections and any mix, wellness exam + 503-351-2746 Medical Equipment Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Prineville adjustments can be Fuel & Wood f irst s h ots, $ 3 5 0. 7 piece be droom 541-447-71 78 made to your ad. Want to buy 541-550-0933 set, $350. 1 roll top Pronto Sure-Step elec› 205 Queen bed,Serta 541-385-5809 or Craft Cats quality bark collar! desk & chair, $300. tric scooter, Irg, w/ mattress, headboard, The Bulletin Classified 541-389-8420 541-408-0014 WHEN BUYING Items for Free Deposit c a n s/bottles 1 hall tree, $200. 2 fold up car carrier. very clean $1200. needed for local all leather chair reclin› FIREWOOD... "LIKE NEW" Adam’ s Winchester „100 semi $300. 541-548-5238 805-720-3515 266 FREE glass tabletops: volunteer, non-profit e re, $300 b o t h. 308 cal., $350. To avoid fraud, Idea Combo irons. (1) 48" round, 3/8" cat rescue. Donate: 541-504-9945 Sales Northeast Bend 300 Savage „99 lever Twin Scaly pillow top 3 -4-5 H . B . 6-P W The Bulletin Call a Pro thick, (1) 30" round, Jake’s Diner, Hwy 20 Xtra long mattress, GRPH S R sh a fts, with 3x9x40, $350. recommends pay› 3/8" thick, (1) 27nX17", Bend; Petco, Red› box springs, frame, $360 obo. Coast 12 ga. pump, Whether you need a ment for Firewood 3/8" t hick. Yo u mond; Smith S ign, ** FREE ** fence fixed, hedges pristine cond., $200; 95’I -454-2561 $150. only upon delivery pick-up. Call 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; Mini-fridge with t op Call 541-977-3091, Jim. and inspection. Garage Sale Kit trimmed or a house 541-382-3340. CRAFT in T u malo. 246 freezer, exc. cond., A cord is 128 cu. ft. Place an ad in The Winchester 70XTR 338 built, you’ ll find C an pick u p Ig . 4’ x 4’ x 8’ $40. 541-382-3900 B ulletin fo r yo u r Guns, Hunting Win Mag w/sling & amounts. professional help in Receipts should sale and receive a Notice to our & Fishing scope, $700. Win› 541-389-8420. WHIRLPOOL CABRIO include name, G arage Sale K i t chester 19 0 - 22LR The Bulletin’s "Call a valued readers! www.craftcats.org washer and d ryer, Beautiful designer FREE! phone, price and sectional never used, still in Big Hollywood 8 station semi w/scope, $130. Service Professional" kind of wood Double doodle p Remington Mod 8 25 upa reloading press for boxes. $1000 for both. For newspaper Excellent condition Directory purchased. KIT INCLUDES: available, creams and delivery questions, Antique wicker baby rifle, pistol & shotgun Cal, $1000. R uger $650 Firewood ads 4 Garage Sale 541-385-5809 white. $1000. 503-781-5265 bassinet/buggy, $100. w/powder measure on M77 stainless 7 MM please call the MUST include Signs 509-305-9085 sco p e , Circulation Dept. Call 541-408-9813, or heavy duty s t and. w /sling 8 $2.00 Off Coupon species 8 cost per 263 $685. 541-410-3425 $500. Mossberg 500 706-851-7881 at 541-365-5800 German Shepherd pup› cord to better serve To Use Toward 12 gauge, $250. Win› Tools pies, AKC, 2 Females, Your Next Ad CASH!! our customers. chester Ranger 120 To place an ad, call 10 Tips For $850 ea. Cute! TheBulletin For Guns, Ammo 8 12 g a uge, $ 1 5 0. 541-385-5809 Lincoln ar c w e l der, The Bulletin 541-771-4857 recommends extra ’ Reloading Supplies. "Garage Sale 541-389-6024 200V AC/DC, lightly or email serving Central Oregonsince tgtg 541-408-6900. i caution when pur› Success!" classified Obend› used, „ 10 4 26-906 chasing products or c 247 bulletin.corn $300. 541-318-0292 services from out of I PICK UP YOUR Sporting Goods Beautiful Oval Table All Year Dependable the area. Sending fI GARAGE SALE KIT The Bulletin Misc. Solid walnut, hand› Firewood: dry Serving Central Oregon since f9t8 checks, or ’ at 1777 SW Chan› crafted by an Amish i cash, Lodgepole, split, del, dler Ave., Bend, OR credit i n f o rmation DO YOU HAVE artisan for Schanz 1970 Pool table, like 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . may be subjected to 97702 SOMETHING TO German shepherd Furniture Co. Exc. condi› i FRAUD. For more new. Balls and 4 cue Multi-cord discounts! 206 541-385-5809 SELL puppies, AKC, tion w/lovely patina. 27" sticks included. Slate cash, check, Visa, MC information about an c Pets & Supplies FOR $500 OR teens, adults, H, top 30’ L and 20" top, felt is in new 541-420-3484, Bend The Bulletin advertiser, you may i MARK V SHOP› LESS? Serving Central Oregon since rggt wide. Graceful curved our bloodlines make condition. $750. e l call t h e Ore g on l SMITH Model 510 Non-commercial all the difference! legs with 2-1/2 541-388-6910 The Bulletin recom› ’ State Atto r ney ’ bandsaw, scrollsaw, Ponderosa pine fire› hand-turned center advertisers may win dridgek9.corn mends extra caution Deer or Elk cart, exc. strip sander, thick› wood split, $160 or i General’s O f f i ce support. Orig. $649; place an ad when purc h as› Labrador pupa AKC, design and cond. $65. ness planer, dust col› trade. 541-419-1871 Consumer ProtecGarageSales with our sell $150 ing products or ser› yellow, black, $300 541-382-8973 tion h o t line a t I lector, support table, 541-365-4790 "QUICK CASH vices from out of the 269 -$400. 541-954-1727. i 1-877-877-9392. lathe chisel set, ring› SPECIAL" 249 area. Sending cash, master, wall mount› Gardening Supplies checks, or credit in› Maremma guard dog People Look for Information I The Bulletin I 1 week 3OI’lines 12 Art, Jewelry ing brackets for stor› About Products and Servrng Central Oregon since tgtg & Equipment pup, pure6red, $350 f ormation may be a ge, s et-up a n d ~eweeka ate & Furs 541-546-6171 Services EveryDaythrough subjected to fraud. operation m a nuals. Ad must For more informa› Queens/and Heelers TheBulletin Cfassileds 211 include price of Desperately Seeking $2,500. 541-383-7124 For newspaper tion about an adver› Standard Children’s Items a~ in le item of gene Missing 1940s dia› & Mini, $150 delivery, call the 265 tiser, you may call Find them in or less, or multiple m ond ring sold a t Circulation Dept. at & up. 541-280-1537 the O r egon State www.rightwayranch.wor Building Materials Dollhouse Ryan’s solid items whosetotal Bend Pawn approx. 541-385-5800 The Bulletin Attorney General’ s Sept.13-17, 2014 has wood, 3 story, fully does not exceed To place an ad, call dpress.corn Office C o n sumer central diamond and 2 Bend Habitat furn. with 2 doll fami› $500. 541-385-5809 Classifieds! Protection hotline at Shih-Tsu fern.born April RESTORE lies. $100; Radio Flyer little side stones, one or email 1-877-877-9392. 30, all shots, wormed, is missing. Sz. 7.5. Building Supply Resale claggified@bendbulletin.corn w agon with w o o d Call Classified at t raveling c a ge , 2 541-385-5809 541-213-1221 Please 541-312-6709 COFFEE TABLE. bottom and remov› The Bulletin The Bulletin doses of Advantage2. nice wood, $400 able sides, exc. cond., bendbulletin.corn keep trying! Will pay 224 NE Thurston Ave. Serving Central On gon sincetggg Serving Central Oregon sincefggg 805-720-3515 any reasonable price. Open to the public. $450. 541-350-7280 $25 541-382-3900

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GarageSales

GarageSales

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E2 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015 THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.corn

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

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Can be found on these pages:

General

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions

***** * ** * * ** * I 5:00 pm Fri I*** I I .Noon Mon. I * Great Supplemental Income!! * I Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I Noon Tues. I The day night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week.

Monday Tuesday. Wednesday Thursday

must work Saturday night. Shifts Noon Wed. I Everyone start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and / between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m .Allpo- I Friday. Noon Thurs. I end we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. I sitions Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts’ Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. 8I minimum are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of inserting machines or stitcher, stack› Saturday . 3:00 pm Fri. I loading ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup andI

476

Employment Opportunities

Journeymen

PRIVATE PARTY RATES *UNDER '500in total merchandise 7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00 *Illlust state prices in ad

Garage Sale Special 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 325

476

Hay, Grain & Feed

Employment Opportunities

S econd cu t t ing o r › chard grass mix, small bales, $220/ton, no rain. 5 4 1-420-9736 Madras, Oregon Wheat Straw for Sale. Also, weaner pigs. 325 541-546-6171 Hay, Grain & Feed Look at: First Quality green grass Bendhomes.corn hay, no rain, barn stored, for Complete Listings of $250/ton. Area Real Estate for Sale Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters 341 Horses & Equipment

421

Schools & Training IITR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235

www.HTR.EDU

Add your web address to your ad and read› ers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bend› bulletin.corn, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.corn

470

Domestic & In-Home Positions

Seeking info. pertaining to the affair between Do you need help with Richard Cloud, a di› light domestic duties, v orced man, & J i l l errands, misc...? Sauter a ma r riedH orse T r ailer 1 6 ’ Please call Carol at w omen. Info. p r o › Gooseneck 1 9 8 9 541-480-0263 vided will b e k e pt dual axle donated to 476 strictly c o nfidential. Equine Out r each. One’s time & efforts 12,000 GVW, 7X16, Employment will be compensated. 23’ overall length, 6 Opportunities Please respond to 1/2’ tall, slider/swing truthandlight201 4@

GUTTER INSTALLER

EXPERIENCED ONLY NEED APPLY. Are you great at what you do? Want to be proud of your work? If this is you, ~ wants to talk to you. Work with the best and hone your skills. Good pay and group insurance. 541-480-7823.

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* No resumes will be accepted *

. . I Drug test is required prior to employment. .

Fire Protection and Fuels Reduction Tall Grass Low Limbs Brush and Debris

Protect your home with defensible space

Landscape Maintenance

Full or Partial Service Mowing oEdging Pruning .Weeding Sprinkler Adjustments Fertilizer included with

monthly program Clean-Ups

Its not to late to have a Beautiful Landscape Weed Free Bark & FlowerBeds

Lawn Restoration

Experienced Commercial & Residential Free Estimates Senior Discounts 541-390-1466 Same Day Response

caution when pur›

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Taxi Drivers Needed! LTh Bullet Full time day s hift, a pply at 1 919 N E Second St., Bend Looking for your next employee? CallThe Bulletin At Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 541 385 5809 readers each week. PlaceYourAdOr E-Mail Your classified ad also appear on At: www.bendbulletin.corn will 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 a ea your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn

L +**** * * * * * * * * * * Ay

The Bulletin JANITOR Night Shift, Facilities

At your Service Errands8 Notary I stand in line so you don’t need to. errandsandnotary

' gmail.corn

541-815-4731

FINO YOUR FUTURE HOME IN THE BULLETIN Your future isjust apage away.Whetheryou’re looking for a hat or aplaceto hangit, The BulletinClassifiedis your bestsource. Every daythousands of buyersandsellers ofgoods and servicesdobusinessin these pages.They know you can’tbeatTheBulletin ClassifiedSectionfor selectionandconvenience - every item is just aphone call away. The ClassifiedSectionis easy touse.Everyitem is categorizedandevery caitegoiy is indexed on the section’s frontpage. Whetheryouarelooking for a homeor needaservice, your future is inthepagesof The BulletinClassified.

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregonsince rga

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Reach thousandsofreaders!

The Bulletin Classifieds

No agencies or telephoneca//s please

TOlooelgn Knowledge of packaging and distribution

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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. W e’ ve grown from one s tore and o ne employee our founder, Les Schwab to more than 450 stores and over 7,000 employ› ees today. Our secret? Success is a two-way street. Our employees deliver World Class Customer Service. In return we provide them with generous compensation and benefit programs. Everyone wins. Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.

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If you are a results-oriented professional who enjoys working with people and providing a wide variety of assistance to others yrE WANT TO TALK TOYOU!

For Consideration, please apply in person: M-F, 8-5 at 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702 or on-line: sending your resume and cover letter to mewingtNbendbulletin.corn Western Communications, inc. and their affiliated companies,is proud to be an equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-free workplace

The Bulletin Classifieds

MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN

Bright Wood Corporation, a 50+ year old wood remanufacturer located in Madras, Oregon is looking for a maintenance Electrician report› ing to the Maintenance Supervisor. The shift Electrician is a key member of the Mainte› nance team which is responsible for repairs and maintenance for all machinery and equip› ment such as conveyor systems, hydraulic components, machine control,and much more. These positions are for swing and grave shifts and may include weekends. RESPONSIBILITIES to include repair, main› tain, and troubleshoot electrical and mechani› cal 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/mechani› cal 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 proce› dures on various forms of process equipment; Perform scheduled maintenance as in› structed on all equipment/machinery/facility; Shall track labor, parts, and machine history in plant CMMS; Make necessary temporary or permanent electrical installations, repairs, or modifica› tions in line with plant policies; Works with each department providing nec› essary support to ensure day-to-day mainte› nance issues are resolved. Maintain a written log of any highlights occur› ring during shift coverage in conjunction with proper CMMS entries.

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Circulation

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.

Fax it to 541-322-7253

c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmullertNbendbulletin.corn No phone calls, please. The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE Pre-employment drug screenrequired.

The Bulletm

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.

in ASAP?

The Bulletin

The BulJetin

This position will start at 24 hours per week. You will be responsible for handling all dock issues, including sorting, distribution and loading, all WesCom products to haulers and carriers.

LOCAL MONEyrWe buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext. 1 8.

The Bulletin Circuration 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 supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. Strong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. Computer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we b elieve in p r omoting from w i thin, s o advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:

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For immediate consideration please apply in person at THE BULLETIN,1777 SW Chandler Avenue, Bend, Oregon

plafforms. This is a new position requiring a highly motivated leader with robust infrastruc› ture experience and demonstrated success at developing and leading a technical team, managing budgets, and delivering projects on time and on budget.

the company’s mission critical technology

DOWN? Private party will loan on real es› tate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mort› gage 541-388-4200.

Home Delivery Advisor

If you are an energetic self-motivated, dependable individual with a proven history of success at your previous jobs yrE WANT TO TALK TOYOU!

NIGHT DOCK ASSISTANT

1-877-877-9392.

BANK TURNED YOU

Add A Picture!

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Les Schwab Tire Centers is seeking an Enter› prise Plafforms Supervisor responsible for design and implementation of enterprise-wide, scalable technologies to support overall corpo› rate IT operations and ensure the stability of

WARNING The Bulletin recom› mends you use cau› tion when you pro› vide personal information to compa› nies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for ad› vance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or ques› tions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,

Advertiseyourcar!

In this full-time, position you will be responsible for all janitorial services at our Headquarters building.

preferred. Must be able to work 40 hours per week Sunday thru Thursday Hours 10:00 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. Ability to lift 35 pounds Pre-employment drug testing is required

528

Loans & Mortgages

Need to get an ad

PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT

Landscape Management

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rear door, tack shelf, mid-swing door, pad› CAUTION: ded walls with new PT Ads published in "Employment Opdeck. $$3,995 Ca ll and St. Jude. Gary 541-480-6130 portunities" include L.R.V. employee and inde› pendent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please PLACE’ Call 54 I -385-5809 i nvestigate th o r › to r o m ot e o u r service oughly. Use extra caution when ap› MY PLACE HOTEL In this position you will play a vital role Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care plying for jobs on› BEND, OREGON on our Sports Staff! line and never pro› NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land› vide personal infor› Now accepting applica› law requires anyone scape Contractors Law mation to any source The successful candidate will work tions. Full & Part-time who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all you may not have weeknight and Saturday shifts. positions construction work to businesses that ad› researched and be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form deemed to be repu› Front Desk Construction Contrac› Landscape Construc› table. Use extreme TOlooelga Representatives tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: c aution when r e › Night Auditors Proven interpersonal skills active license p lanting, deck s , s ponding to A N Y Professional-level writing ability and Room Attendants means the contractor fences, arbors, online employment Maintenance sports background a must is bonded & insured. water-features, and in› ad from out-of-state. Working knowledge of traditional high Verify the contractor’s stallation, repair of ir› We suggest you call We offer competitive school sports COB l i c ense at rigation systems to be the State of Oregon Proven computer and proofreading skills wages and vacation www.hirealicensed› l icensed w it h th e Hotline benefits. Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadline› contractor.corn Landscape Contrac› Consumer at 1-503-378-4320 oriented environment or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit For Equal Opportu› A pplications can b e Must be able to successfully pass The Bulletin recom› number is to be in› nity Laws contact a pre-employment drug screen mailed, picked up, or mends checking with cluded in all adver› Oregon Bureau of the CCB prior to con› tisements which indi› Labor & I n dustry, emailed: If you are a sports-minded journalist and tracting with anyone. cate the business has Civil Rights Division, BEND My Place Hotel have a positive "Can Do" attitude Some other t rades a bond, insurance and 971-673- 0764. Attn: Tara WE WANT TO TALK TO You! also req u ire addi› workers c ompensa› 550 SW Bond Street tional licenses and tion for their employ› The Bulletin Bend, Oregon 97701 Please send your cover letter, resume, cert ifications. ees. For your protec› Serving Central Oregonsrnce rgla ot’ and a work sample attention: tion call 503-378-5909 541-385-5809 bend@legacymgmt.org sportsassistant@bendbulletin.corn Handyman or use our website: www.lcb.state. or.us to M Y P LACE Hotel is an check license status TURN THE PAGE I DO THAT! Equal OP Portunity No agencies or telephone ca//s please For More Ads before contracting with Home/Rental repairs EmPloyer the business. Persons ghe guuiieuin Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape Honest, guaranteed maintenance do not work. CCB„151 573 r equire an LC B l i › Enterprise PfafformsSupervisor Dennis 541-317-9768 cense. LandscapingNard Care Personal Services

gmail.corn Thank you Jesus

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chasing products or I for New I services from out of 5:00 pm Fri IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsI I Needed Construction. I I the area. SendingI c ash, checks, o r I including life insurance, short-term 8 long-termI Start I credit i n f ormationI disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. immediately! may be subjected to Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad II Please submit a completed application . I I FRAUD. I Good pay/ foronly$15.00par week. For more informa- I benefits. attention Kevin Eldred. I about an adverOVER '500 in total merchandise Applications are available at The Bulletin Company Van. I I tion tiser, you may callI front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or 4 days.................................................. $18.50 Call Gary at the Oregon State an electronic application may be obtained 7 days.................................................. $24.00 I Attorney General’sI Summit upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via C o n sumer s 14 days .................................................$33.50 I Plumbing I I Office emai l keldred'bendbulletin.corn). I I Protection hotline at l 28 days .................................................$61.50 I I 541-410-1655g I 1-877-877-9392. I (call for commercial line ad rates) I No pho ne calls please. .

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FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

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The position responsibilities outlined above are in no way to be construed as all encompass› ing. Other duties, responsibilities, and qualifi› cations may be required and/or assigned as necessary. EDUCATION/EXPERIENCE As SHOWN BELOW IS REQUIRED:

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Must have Oregon Electrician license, Gen› eral Journeyman or Limited Manufacturing Plant Journeyman; At least 3 years Industrial Electrical experi› ence or equivalent combination of education and experience; Allen-Bradley PLC and automation experi› ence 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 in› structions given via OEM or third party opera› tion 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 As› sistance Program. If you meet the above qualifications please ap› ply in person in the Personnel Dept. to: Bright Wood Corporation, 335 NW Hess St., Madras OR 97741. Pre-employment drug testing required.


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TH E BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEP 15, 2015

DAILY B R I D G E

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sbprtz

C L U B Tuesday,Septem ber15,2015

Trials and errors

6 Goo-goo-eyed, old-style 10"Shoo-be-doo› be-doo-wop," e.g. 14Fancy tie 1SOnes steeped in tradition in England? 16" be in England" (Browning line) 17Frequent Bart Simpson antic 19Chicken condo? 20 Critique scathingly 21 Lowly worker 22 Chili con 23 Ask the boss for more vacation time after getting a raise, perhaps 26 Befitting 290rg. for "King James" 30 "Finding Nemo" setting 31 Biblical kingdom or its Utah namesake

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "Your honor," the district attorney announced, "we will prove that West committed a felony in that he let South make a hopeless notrump game." "State your case," th e j u dge instructed. "West led the five of spades," the DA said. "East covered dummy’s six with the seven, and declarer won with the eight and led the king of clubs. West took his ace and shifted to a heart. South won that, forced out the ace of diamonds and had 11 tricks. "Clearly, West must lead the king of spades when he takes the ace of clubs. His only real chance is that South started with the doubleton

he bids two diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: Y our p a rtner h as "reversed" and suggests substantial extra strength at least 17 points, p erhaps m or e de p ending o n partnership style. Bid three clubs, showing your support and expecting p artner to b i d a g ain. I n s o m e partnerships, you would be obliged to rebid two spades to show the long suit. South dealer E-W vulnerable NORTH 4A106 9765 ( ) KQ 4 3

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WEST EAST 48 K J954 45732 " Objection," ro a re d We s t ’ s 9 1093 Q QJ 8 2 counsel. "My client was not at fault." C A7 0 1 086 5 How would you ride? ogo43 ogoA86 I’d be inclined to ]et West off and charge East. West might have found SOUTH the winning defense, but East made a 4h Q8 clear error that misled his partner. At QAK4 Trick One, E ast s hould s ignal 0 J92 "count" by playing the deuce of ogoK J1075 spades,suggesting three cards in the s uit. T o p l a y t h e s e ven w i l l S outh W e s t Nor t h Eas t accomplish nothing. 1 4 Pass 1O Pass 1 NT Pas s 2 NT Pass 3 NT A ll P ass DAILY QUESTION

34 Scold a person 41 Millionaire’s vessel 421 Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter! product 43 [Oh, I can’t go on!] 46 Frat guy 47 Camden Yards team 50 Landmark with the year 1620 inscribed on it 53 Depart from the prepared text 54 River to the Ubangi 55 Message spelled out with coconuts, maybe 5$Where the tibia IS

59 Messy sandwich filler ... or a hint to this puzzle’s circled letters 62 Hand: Sp. 63 Color printer purchases

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE A P S E S

CM EE A N ST EA L R UB I SL C EO A RC S K

E P N L DW E H A S I D P S I K S E E S M D I I RT T EE F AC E S E XAM S N EWS Y

Youhold: 4IK J 9 5 4 9 10 9 3 Open i nglead 455 () A7 4 A 8 6 . Your partner opens one club, you respond one spade and (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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

64 " Well, ! "

32 Birds flying in a V formation

ACROSS 1 Butchers’ cuts

H E D G E

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1 Reindeer herder 2 Sweatshop regulator, for short 3 iPad screen feature 4 Vote in France 5 Meet a challenge, say 6 Classic beer once brewed in Detroit 7 Ogre 8 Fleming who created 007 9 "For shame!" 10San Diego setting, informally 11 "How does it feel ...," in Dylan’s "Like a Rolling Stone" 12ln a New York minute 13 Kansas city 18 Mexican money 22 Unrefined 23 N’awlins sandwich 24 Prime draft classification 25 Modern alternative to a taxi

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PUZZLE BY JAY KASKEL AND DANIEL KANTOA

26 Bit of band equipment 27 Roast pig side dish 28 Oversaw 32 Word cried before "on it" or

3$Tide competitor -LoGreen, 39 former coach on "The Voice" 40 Sends to the canvas, for short 43 Sudden contractions "lost" 44 So yesterday 33 iPad reading 35 "Nattering" sort 45 Writer’s credit in a Spiro Agnew 47 Open-ended speech threat 36 Off-white shade 48 Part of 37 Opportunity Hollywood?

49 Stranded during the winter, say 51 North Dakota city with a nearby Air Force base 52 Some inveterate users of steroids 55 Go it alone 56 Balls -Ball 57 59 A.T.M. requirement 60 " momento" 61 Mahmoud Abbas’s grp.

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.corn/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.corn/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.corn/studentcrosswords.

DENNIS THE MENACE

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THE BULLETIN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809

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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

.00 632

Apt./Multiplex General CHECK YOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it is cor› rect. "Spellcheck" and human errors do oc› cur. If this happens to

your ad, please con›

tact us ASAP so that

corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 TheBulletin Classified Senior Apartment› Independent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily 2 Bedrooms Available NOW. Check it out! Call 541-460-5323 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Only a Iew 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 8 Stevens, Inc.

Where buyers meet sellers You know what they say about "one man’s trash". There’s a whole pile of "treasure" here!

Classif leds Thousandsofadsdaily in print andonline.

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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

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Boats & Accessories

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

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12’ Alund fishing boat, EZ-Loader tra i ler, Johnson 9.6 HP mo› I ~ , = tor, Minn Kota trolling m otor, ne w H u m › mingbird Fish Finder, seats, battery & more! 18’ 2 003 S u n All safety equipment. I Cruiser - pontoon $2500. 541-504-3366 boat, fully equipped. 12’ Valco alum. on I Has only been used ~ trailer 9.9 J ohnson a handful of times & 0/B, plus amenities, has been in covered ~ exc. shape. $1250. [ storage. A s k i ng

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2009 Skyline P ark Model Beach Cottage, see Bend Craigslist, type 5204276937 in search bar o r c a ll Benjamin 541-390-9723

Lexington 2006 283TS class B+ mo› tor coach, full GTS pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 burner range, half time oven, 3 slides w/awnings, Onan gen., King Dome sat› ellite system, Ford V10 Triton, auto-lev› eling system, new tires, Falcon tow bar. Non-smoker, main› tained in dry storage. Can email additional pictures. $55,000.

Stow Master 5000 by Tow Master. $350. Generator exhaust system, Gen Turi, w ith case. $ 7 5 . 503-936-1778

Winnebago 22’ 14’ aluminum boat w/ 2002 - $28,000 Chevy 360, trailer. Trailer has 2 heavy duty chassis, brand new tires & cab & roof A/C, wheels. Trailer in exc. tow hitch w/brake, cond., guaranteed no Allegro 32’ 2007, like 22k mi., more! leaks. 2 upholstered new, only 12,600 miles. 860 541-260-3251 swivel seats, no mo› Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Motorcycles & Accessories tor. 541-520-3407 $2,900. transmission, dual ex› 541-410-4066 19’ Bayliner 1998, I/O, haust. Loaded! Auto-lev› 2014 Sport 150 Tao› Winnebago system, 5kw gen, Tao Scooter, Almost 16’6" 2005 T racker great shape, call for eling Journey $68500. In Bend power mirrors w/defrost, New. $995. Targa V16 boat. 60 info. 2 slide-outs with aw› 2001 36’ 2nd owner, HP 4-stroke Mercury 661-644-0364. 541-546-0345 nings, rear c a mera, 300 Cummins Turbo motor & 8 HP 4-stroke trailer hitch, driver door diesel, Allison 5 spd, motor, Minnkota fowl w/power window, cruise, 60k miles. D r iver mounted, foot con› Monaco Monarch 31 ’ exhaust brake, central s ide s l ide, g a s trolled motor, Low› 2 006, Ford V10 , vac, satellite sys. Re› stove, oven, 2 flat ranges fish finder, top miles, 28,900 duced price: $64,950. TVs, refer, & fold and close top. auto-level, 2 slides, screen 503-781-8812 generator, inverter, $17,500. Ask about 19’ queen b e d & Classic 1 9 90 Harley 2003, Dyna King Dome, tow bar. hide-a-bed sofa, 4k Non-smoker, no wide glide, 100th An› extras. 541-632-2676. Mastercraft ski boat. Pro-star 190 conven› gen, convection mi› pets, no c hildren. n iversary mod e l . crowave, 2 TVs, tow C lean, and w e l l tional in-board, cus› 13,400 orig. mi., cus› tom trailer, exc. cond. tom paint, new bat› package. maintained, $43,000 $8,995. 541-389-6562 PRICE REDUCTION! 541-390-1472. tery, lots of e xtras, 648 show cond. Health $59,000. 541-815-6319 a. P f orces s ale. W a s Allegro 32 ft. 2005. Houses for FUN & FISH! 881 16’ Lowe, „ t 6 05 Must see to appreci› $11,000 OBO, now Rent General Travel Trailers ate! Only 12,500 mi., ~a ~ h firm. deep water, four-man $8,000 541-633-7656 or bass boat with dual less than 100 miles PUBLISHER’ S 360-615-6677 on new tires, always Cannon down-riggers NOTICE for trolling to 100 feet. stored under cover, 3 All real estate adver› hydraulic leveling, 2 Excellent c o ndition QPFX tising in this newspa› with f as t 40 HP slide outs, 2 TV sets, Smokercraft A rrow V i sion per is subject to the 2 air c onditioners, Pace Johnson o u t board 2006 1997, Ford 460 en› F air H o using A c t Sunchaser 820 with automatic oil in› model rear camera, plus boat gine w/Banks, solar, 19’ Ampex. 2011. Slide which makes it illegal awnings! Call jection. E a gle-Elite 75HPpontoon walk-around q ueen out and other extras. to a d vertise "any Ho m es for Sale Mercury and fish finder and GPS to 541-447-6054 or Harley Road K i ng electric trolling mo› bed, 2 door fridge, mi› Tows well $12,500. preference, limitation 541-480-1419 locate the "big ones". Classic 2003, 100th New trolling kick plate cro-convection oven, 541.316.1367 or disc r imination tor, full canvas and *** *** NOTICE MUST SELL! many extras. WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, based on race, color, All real estate adver› Anniversary Edition, + Minn Kota electric Only $32,500! needs work, (photo religion, sex, handi› tised here in is sub› 16,360 mi., reduced trolling motor. New Stored inside Call today! similar to actual rig) cap, familial status, ject to th e F ederal $9,999. 541-647-7076 2-way radio. Water› $1 9,900 marital status or na› Fair Housing A ct, 541-350-5425 $9,500. 541-260-0797 The Bulletin proof cover, life-jack› tional origin, or an in› which makes it illegal ets, bumpers, and ex› To Subscribe call tention to make any to advertise any pref› RV tras. All tuned and such pre f erence, erence, limitation or 541-365-5800 or go to CONSIGNMENTS ready to go. $4,500. limitation or discrimi› discrimination based www.bendbulletin.corn WANTED 34’ Winnebago One Phone (541) 593 7774 nation." Familial sta› on race, color, reli› HONDA CB900 1960 - NW Bend. We Do The Work ... 2013 30RE. tus includes children gion, sex, handicap, You Keep The Cash! $25 000. Two slides. 12k, pristine under the age of 16 familial status or na› custom, Beaver Contessa 40’› On-site credit Fully loaded. $11 9 5 . living with parents or tional origin, or inten› c ondition. 2006, four slide die› approval team, Full photos and info 2 3’10" S R 2 3 00, legal cus t odians, tion to make any such 541-279-7092 sel pusher. Loaded, web site presence. sent upon request. ’95, own with pride, pregnant women, and preferences, l i mita› great condition. War› We Take Trade-Ins! Family illness always compliments, people securing cus› tions or discrimination. ranty. Pictures/info at requires sale. tody of children under We will not knowingly no salt, head never www.fourstarbend.corn BIG COUNTRY RV 541-923-2593 16. This newspaper accept any advertis› used, due for 5 year 541-647-1236 Bend: 541-330-2495 16’ Seaswirl Tahoe will not knowingly ac› ing for r eal e state c ooling main t . , Redmond: with trailer, 50 HP cept any advertising which is in violation of $9500 firm. Extras. B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ’ , 541-548-5254 Evinrude, bimini top, Find It in for real estate which is this law. All persons Honda Trai l 110. excellent condition. W eekend only . one slide, low mile› The Bulletin Classigedsi 541-678-3249 in violation of the law. are hereby informed 1985, 1200 m i les. $3,500 age, very clean, lots 541-385-5809 O ur r e aders a r e that all dwellings ad› excellent c o ndition. 541-647-1916 of storage, $26,500. hereby informed that vertised are available $2000. OBO 541-639-9411 Ads published in the all dwellings adver› on an equal opportu› 541-260-0514 "Boats" classification tised in this newspa› nity basis. The Bulle› include: Speed, fish› per are available on tin Classified ing, drift, canoe, an equal opportunity house and sail boats. S outhwind F o r d basis. To complain of 750 For all other types of Fleetwood motor› d iscrimination ca l l Redmond Homes watercraft, please go home, 1 994, 32’, Ja Fli ht 264 BH HUD t o l l-free at 16’ Smoker C raft to Class 875. gasoline, 82K miles, 2011. like new, sleeps 1-600-877-0246. The Fleetwood D i scovery 541-365-5609 fishing boat, 50 HP con d ition, 9, self contained, 1/2 toll f ree t e lephone Looking for your next 40’ 2003, diesel, w/all Good Moto Guzzi Breva Yamaha ou t board obo. ton towable $13,900 number for the hear› emp/oyee? options - 3 slide outs, $7,000 1 100 2 007, o n l y 503-607-5490 motor w/electric tilt 8 OBO (541) 410-9017 ing im p aired is Place a Bulletin help Serv>n Central Ore on since 1903 miles. satellite, 2 TV’s, W/D, 11,600 electric trolling motor 1-600-927-9275. wanted ad today and $5,500. etc., 34,000 m iles. w/remote control RV 875 reach over 60,000 206-679-4745 Wintered in h e ated Have an item to mounted on bow, walk CONSIGNMENTS readers each week. shop. $78,995 obo. Watercraft through w indshield, sell quick? WANTED FIND YOUR FUTURE Your classified ad 541-447-6664 exc. cond. $8,500. We Do The Work ... will also appear on HOME INTHE BULLETIN Ads published in "Wa If it’s under 541-233-6223 You Keep The Cash! bendbulletin.corn tercraft" include: Kay Itasca 2003 31’ Class C On-site credit Your future is just apage which currently re› MH. Great cond., 31K ’500 you can place it in aks, rafts and motor approval team, away. Whetheryou’re looking ceives over Ized personal miles, slider, $32,000. The Bulletin for a hat or aplace to hangit, web site presence. 1.5 million page 541-506-9700 waterc rafts. Fo Classifieds for: We Take Trade-Ins! The Bulletin Classified is views every month "boats" please se your best source. V-Max 2009 at no extra cost. Class 670. FIND IT! ’10 - 3 lines, 7 days BIG COUNTRY RV Bulletin Classifieds Yamaha 541-385-5609 BVYIy'I Every daythousandsof Bend: 541-330-2495 17’ SunCraft, Get Results! Lots of factory e16-3 lines, 14 days buyers andsellers ofgoods SELL IT! Redmond: Call 385-5809 or extras: windshield, 2 motors. $1,400. and services dobusinessin 541-548-5254 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 The Bulletin Classifieds (Private Party ads only) place your ad on-line saddlebags, back 541-593-7257 these pages.They know at rest, rear cargo you can’t beatTheBulletin ben dbulletin.corn rack, bike cover, Classified Sectionfor motorcycle hoist, selection sndconvenience alarm system, also - every item isjust a phone set of new tires. call away. $11,000 The Classified Section is 541-506-1554 easy to use.Everyitem is categorizedandevery List your Home cariegory is indexedon the JandMHomes.corn section’s front page. We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Whether youarelooking for Financing Available. a home orneeda service, 541-548-5511 your future is inthepagesof The Bulletin Classified. Just bought a new boat? Yamaha V Star 1100 Classic, year 2004, Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our - Many extras. 1 7 K The Bulletin SemngCentrel Oregon since 19|8 miles. $4800 . Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 541-546-21 09 4-place enclosed Inter› state snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $7500. 541-379-3530

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E6 TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 15 2015 THE BULLETIN I

I

BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

9 ~

RVision C r ossover 2013, 19ft, exc. Well equipped, $11,500. 541-604-5387

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 926 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 936 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 976 - Automobiles 932 o

906

Aircraft, Parts

& Service

ewer

Silver Streak Sabre 17’ 1963 beautifully restored, vertical grain fir cabinets, shower, toilet, kitchen sink, stove & refrigerator. Better built than an Airstream! $ 10,500. 541-350-4077

1/3interest in

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$125,000

(located O Bend) 541-266-3333

935

935

975

975

975

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

I

661

Travel Trailers

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809 933

Antique & Classic Autos

Chevy S-10 1966 4.3L V-6, sunroof, many custom features, su› per clean, always ga› raged. $3200 obo. 541-366-0611.

command system, and too much more to list here. $15,900. Please call Dan at 541-615-6611

People Lookfor Information About Products and Chevy Silv e rado 2 500HD 2002, 4 x 4 Services Every Daythrough Crew cab, canopy, The BnBetinClnssryfeds 65K original miles, loaded. $17,500 OBO. 541-647-0565

Ford Mustang Hard top 1965, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condi› tion.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

BMIN X3 Si 2007, Mercedes ML350 2004 3.7L V-6, auto trans., Low Miles - 66,500 4-wheel traction con› mi., AWD, leather Interior, su nroof, trol, s unroof, white with java leather. One b luetooth, voi c e

Dodge Big Horn Ram 2500, 2005, 6 speed manual. Ex› tra tires and rims, canopy goes with. Excellent condition, well mai n tained, runs great. 160K miles. $2 8,500

Lexus ES350 2010, Excellent Condition 32,000 miles, $20,000 214-549-3627 (in Bend)

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

541-620-1212

Ford Explorer Sport 2011, 6 cyl. auto., 4WD 3rd seat $2600. 541-420-3734 $21 gg5 ’541 5ge 5111

Toyota Corolla S 2007, 93 k m i l es, automatic, s i l v er. N ew brakes a n d battery. Super clean, no smoking. Cruise control, CD player, c loth seats, A C . Price: $6500. Call 541-460-2700 to view. NO T E XTS PLEASE! pattym51'q.corn

Check out the o wner l o ca l ca r . 9 0,100 miles. E x c classifieds online condition. $ 1 0 ,500.www.bendbulletin.corn 541-593-2053 Updated daily

Chevy Tahoe 1995 4x4 4 dr. auto, tow pkg, 541-729-4552 new brakes and ro› tors, g r ea t ti r e s, Find exactly what leather, power, runs you are looking for in the g reat, v er y go o d CLASSIFIEDS cond., $4800 . 541-365-4790

› Ford F-150 4 x4 1 9 92 1 10k mi., ext. c a b

BMW Z3 Roadster 1997, Call 541-548-0345 to see. $4500

Kia Forte SX 2012 hatchback, $15,600, 32,015 miles, still under 60k warranty, exc. condition, see craigslist for full de› tails. 541-946-7687

1977

FJ40 Toyota Lan dcruiser with winch, $21,000. 541-369-7113, Michelle

Where can youfind a helping hand? From contractors to yard care it’s all here

Buick LaCrosse 2006 Very Clean, mid-size 6 c y l , au t omatic, $5850 obo - trade? 541-419-5060 Mercedes 380SL 1962 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, exc. cond., always ga› raged. 155K miles, $8,500. 541-549-6407

in The Bulletin’s

"Call A Service Professional" Directory

Cadillac CTS 2010, V 6 I n j ection, 6 Speed A utomatic. Luxury series. Exte› Need to get an rior Black Raven, Interior: Light Tita› ad in ASAP? nium/ E b o ny You can place it 2 2,555 m i les. 4 online at: door. Excellent con› dition all a r ound. www.bendbulletin.corn Has Arizona plates. This is car is a great 541 -385-5809 mix of luxury, com› f ort, s t y le , an d workmanship. $24,000.00 Call 541-406-3051

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on ben dbulletin.corn which currently re› ceives over 1.5 mil› lion page views every month at no extra cost. Bulle› tin Classifieds Get Results! Call 365-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn

FORD TAURUS SHO 1992 show car, rare 5 940 s pd., l oaded, l o w Vans miles, second owner, all receipts, only Ford F-350 Lariat2005 e ROW I N G 1/5 share in very nice have Mercedes-Benz 4,500.00. Crai g one ton power stroke F ord Explorer X LT Dodge Grand Caravan 150 HP Cessna 150; $ diesel, crew cab, Fire› 1 991 reliable w e l l 1999, heated leather SLK230 2003, 503-649-7571 1973 Cessna 150 with with an ad in stone air lifts, camper cared for, clean, non› seats, good c ond., exc. cond., auto, I The Bulletin recoml Lycoming 0-320 150 ready. Factory tow smoking, incl. 4 stud› green, 159k m i les. mends extra caution I convertible retract› The Bulletin’s hp engine conversion, $2, 5 00. when p u r chasing pkg, Class V hitch, ded winter tires, new Asking able hard top. "Call A Service Honda Accord 2005, 4000 hours. TT air› 69k miles. Immacu› H D b a ttery, 1 9 0 k 541-388-2049 or 54,250 miles, carfax f products or services V6, f ully l o aded, frame. Approx. 400 text 541-647-6016 Professional" from out of the area. late, always stored in› miles, 20k towed be› available.$13,000. Nav, Moon roof, CD, hours o n 0- t imed side. Like new set of hind mot o rhome f S ending c ash , 541-389-7571 Directory 975 perfect leather inte› 0-320. Hangared in checks, or credit in- s studded winter tires $1500 obo Message Automobiles rior, one owner, full nice (electric door) Jeep CJ5 4x41967, on factory rims in› 541-241-4896. formation may be I maintained, always city-owned hangar at first year of the orig. cluded. $2 1 ,000. [ subject toFRAUD. never Hyundai Santa Fe garaged, the Bend Airport. One Dauntless V-6, last 541-460-9277 For more informal› 2012, 4 cyl., 4 door, wrecked, 143K road of very few C-150’s year of the "All metal" f tion about an adver› miles, $8,899. Great GLS, 2WD, kayak car› that has never been a body! Engine over› GMC Pickup 1983 w/ tiser, you may call rier, new tires, car ready to drive. t rainer. $ 4500 w i l l hauled: new brakes, topper, 4 wheel drive, I the Oregon State( Mike 541-499-5970 consider trades for fuel pump, steering r uns good, go o d 51K mi., $15,500. Toyota Corolla 1999 s Attorney General’s s Unique R-Pod 2013 541-419-7960 whatever. C all J im gear box, battery, al› winter truck. $1,500 4 cyl. 5 spd, 200K mi., > Office C onsumer I trailer-tent combo, Acura TL 06, 3.2L V6, Frazee, 541-410-6007 ternator, emergency obo. 907-310-1677 S P E CIAL new tires last spring. f Protection hotline at f ully l oaded, e x › auto, F WD , b l a ck HUNTER incl.!! A/C, cas› 1-677-677-9392. brake pads, gauges, tended service con› HANGAR FOR SALE. color, A/C, 115,971 Jeep Cherokee, 1990, studs sette, headliner needs warn hubs, dual ex› tract and bike rack. 30x40 end unit T miles, clean title and 4x4, has 9 tires on haust, 5 wide traction $2000 obo. help. Runs G reat!! sera'ng central oregonsince 1ˆr hanger in Prineville. carfax. Call or t e xt wheels. $16,000. 541-771-4732 $1800 541.460.9327 541-595-3972 or Dry walled, insulated, tires, 5 new spoke, 541-634-6469 and painted. $23,500. chrome wheels. NO 503-760-4467 rust, garage stored. Tom, 541.766.5546 I nfiniti F X3 5 AW D $7,495 OBOI 2009 Sporty 3.5 V6, 7 ee2 Toyota Tacoma Hangar for saleat (775) 513-0622 spd auto, 40K miles, Fifth Wheels Redmond Airport - not 2006 crew cab Bose sound sys, 20" 4 dr. 4x4 pickup, a T Hangar - $26,000. alloy whls. Nav sys. 130k hwy miles, 541-420-0626 Dlx tour, premium and Cameo LX1 2001, runs excellent, new tow pkgs. Most op› 32 ft. 5th wheel, 2 tires, V-6, auto, TRD t ions included. A l › slides, A/C, micro, pkg $15,400. ways maintained and DVD, CD p l ayer, 926-561-9190 g araged. Just d e › conv. and i n vert. La Pine 1000 1000 1000 1000 Mercedes 450 SL tailed, non smoker. New batteries, tires 1979 Roadster, soft Midnight Mocha color, Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices and shocks. Quad 8 hard tops, always tan leather int. Exc. Save money. Learn carrier. Quad avail. form and have proof NOTICE TO DEFEN› (541) 923-7756. garaged, 122k mi., cond. in & out. Clean $11,900 OBO. to fly or build hours NOTICE of service on the DANTS: READ new tires, shock and title. $2 6 ,950. OBO INLEGAL with your own air› 541-390-7179 TH E C I RCUIT plaintiff’s a t torney T HESE PAP E RS Interested persons $79 0 0 . 541-647-2257 c raft. 1968 A e r o b reaks, COURT FOR THE or, if t h e p l aintiff CAREFULLY! A law› are encouraged to 541-546-5646 Commander, 4 seat, CHECK yOURAD S TATE O F OR › does not have an suit has been started appear at the public 150 HP, low time, EGON IN AND FOR attorney, proof of a gainst you i n t h e hearing, or submit full panel. $21,000 T oyota Taco m a THE COUNTY OF service on the plain› above-entitled court written comments to obo. Contact Paul at 2 006, r eg . c a b , DESCHUTES. tiff.lf you have any by Federal National t he City o f R e d› 541-447-5164. 4x4, 5 sp d s tan› PENNYMAC LOAN questions, you Mortgage Association mond Planning Divi› SERVICES, LLC, its dard 4 cyl engine, should see an attor› ("FNMA"), p l aintiff. sion, 716 SW Ever› successors in inter› Jeep Grand Chero› 22+ mpg, one se› ney immediately. If Plaintiff’s claims are green Ave n ue, on the first day it runs Overland 2012, est and/or assigns, you need help in stated in the written Redmond, Oregon to make sure it is cor› nior owner, kee 4x4 V-6, all options, Plaintiff, v. DANIEL finding an attorney, complaint, a copy of 97756, on or before rect. "Spellcheck" and Chevy El Camino 1973, n on-smoker, w e l l running boards, front HUSTED; KELLY L. you may contact the which was filed with September 22, human errors do oc› RARE! Manual trans. maintained, nearly guard, nav., air and MORRIS; AND Oregon State Bar’s the abo v e-entitled 2015, at 5:00 PM. cur. If this happens to 4 spd, Exc. Cond. new tires, original heated leather, cus› O CCUPANTS O F Lawyer R e f erral Court. You must "ap› Anyone needing ac› your ad, please con› Superhawk N7745G $7500. 541-369-1066 spare near n e w, tom wheels and new THE P R E MISES, S ervice online a t pear" in this case or commodation to tact us ASAP so that Owners’ Group LLC runs exce l lent. tires, only 49K miles, Defendants. Case www.oregonstate› the other side will win p articipate in t h e corrections and any Cessna 172/180 hp, No. 1 4 CV0903FC $29,995 $14,750. bar.org or by calling automatically. To meeting must notify adjustments can be full IFR, new avionics, 541-408-7906 SUMMONS BY 541-633-9895 "appear" you must file the ADA Coordina› made to your ad. (503) 664-3763 (in GTN 750, touch› PUBLICATION. TO 541-385-5809 the Portland metro› with the court a legal tor, 46 hours in ad› screen center stack, T HE DEFEN › p olitan area) o r document called a vance of the meet› The Bulletin Classified exceptionally clean. FIND YOUR FUTURE DANTS: KELLY L. toll-free elsewhere "motion" or "answer." ing at Healthy engine Just bought a new boat? HOME IN THE BULLETIN M ORRIS: I n th e The "motion" or "an› in Oregon at (600) 541-504-3032. reserve fund. VW Beetle c lassic Sell your old one in the name of the State of 452-7636. This swer" (or "reply" ) must classifieds! Ask about our Hangared at KBDN. 1972, Exc. shape, no Your future is just apage O regon, you a r e summons is issued be given to the court Publish: Septem› One share Super Seller rates! rust, very clean, fully away. Whetheryou’re looking required to available. pursuant to ORCP clerk or administrator ber 15, 2015- The for a hat or aplace to hangit, Lincoln Na v i gator hereby 541-385-5809 restored, has had 2 and answer Call 541-815-2144 7. RC O L E G AL, within 30 days of the Bend Bulletin 2 003 A WD , or i g . appear o wners. $4,0 0 0. The Bulletin Classified is complaint filed P.C. Randall Szabo, date of first publica› owner, local vehicle, the 541-615-6147 your best source. you in the O SB „ 1153 0 4 tion specified herein The City of R e d› always gar a ged, against 916 above-entitled Court Every daythousandsof rszabo@rcolegal.corn a long with the r e › mond does not dis› auto., navigation, sun› a nd cause on o r 933 Trucks & buyers andsellers ofgoods Attorneys for Plain› q uired filing fee. I t criminate on the ba› roof, DV D p l a yer, before the expira› and services do busi n ess i n Pickups tiff. 511 SW 1 0 th Heavy Equipment must be i n p r oper sis o f dis a bility heated & A/C seats, tion of 30 days from these pages.They know A ve., S t e . 40 0 , form and have proof status in the admis› custom g r i ll , all the date of the first you can’t beat TheBulletin Cougar 27.9 RKS 1997 Utility 53’x102" dry Portland, OR 97205 o f service o n t h e sion or access to, or records, new Michelin publication of t h is Classified Sectionfor 2015 5t h W h eel. freight van. S liding C A L L W P: (503) 977-7640 plaintiff’s attorney or, treatment, or e m› t ires. $10,0 0 0 . selection andconvenience summons. The date Like new, loaded, TODAY 5 F: (503) 977-7963 if the plaintiff does not ployment in, its pro› axles, leaf springs, 541-615-5000. - every item isjust a phone of first publication in automatic l eveling Chevy Pickup 1978, have a n a t t orney, grams or activities. good tires, body & this matter is Sep› LEGAL NOTICE call away. jacks, Polar pack› proof of service on the swing doors in exc. long bed, 4x4, frame BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS tember 6, 2015. If IN T H E CI R CUIT LEGAL NOTICE age, everything you plaintiff. If you have cond., has no dings, up restoration. 500 The Classified Section is Search the area’s most you fail timely to ap› C OURT FOR T H E any questions, you need to take on a eng i ne, NOTICE TO road ready! $7500 Cadillac easy to use. Every i t em comprehensive listing of pear and answer, STATE OF OREGON, should see an attor› trip, hitch included. INTERESTED o bo. S isters, O R . fresh R4 transmis› i s categorized and every classified advertising... IN AND FOR THE will apply to $33,900 or best rea› 541-719-1217 sion w/overdrive, low PERSONS ney immediately. If cartegory is indexedonthe real estate to automotive, plaintiff the a b ove-entitled COUNTY OF D E S› y ou need help i n offer. Estate of sonable mi., no rust, custom section’s front page. merchandise to sporting CHUTES. FEDERAL court for the relief 541-615-3076. Good classified adstell interior and carpet, Nancy I. Wood finding an a ttorney, goods. Bulletin Classifieds p rayed for i n i t s NATIONAL M O RT› n ew wheels a n d Whether youarelooking for the essential facts in an you may contact the appear every day in the complaint. This is a GAGE ASS O C IA- Oregon State Bar’s Notice is h e reby a home orneeda service, tires, You must see interesting Manner.Write print or on line. judicial foreclosure TION ("FNMA"), its Laredo 31’ 2006, your future is in the pages of it! $25,000 invested. Lawyer Referral Ser› given that Sandra from the readers view -not Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified. of a deed of trust in successors in interest vice 5th wheel, fully S/C Dougherty has been $12,000 OBO. onl i n e at the seller’ s. Convert the www.bendbulletin.corn which the p l aintiff and/or assigns, Plain› www.oregonstatebar. 541-536-3669 or a ppointed as t h e one slide-out. facts into benefits. Show r equests that t h e FRANK org or by calling (503) Personal R e pre› tiff, v. 541-420-6215. Awning. Like new, The Bulletin the reader howthe item will Serving CentralOregonsince 19S The Bulletin plaintiff be allowed CENIGA; AND OC› 684-3763 ( in t h e sentative of the es› hardly used. Serving Central Oregonsince 5N help them in someway. to foreclose your CUPANTS OF T HE Portland metropolitan t ate of N ancy I . Must sell $20,000 This interest in the fol› PREMISES, D efen› area) or toll-free else› Wood, deceased, by or refinance. Call advertising tip lowing d e s cribed d ants. C as e No . where in Oregon at the Desc h utes 541-410-5649 brought to you by real property: LOT 15CV0298FC. SUM› (800) 452-7636. This County, O r e gon, 71 OF O BSIDIAN MONS BY PUBLICA› summons is issued Circuit Court No. The Bulletin MEADOWS, CITY TION. TO THE DE› pursuant to ORCP 7. Sen ’ng Cent al O~n since 1903 15PB03664 on Au› RV OF RED MOND, FENDANTS: FRANK RCO LEGAL, P.C., gust 10, 2015. All CONSIGNMENTS DESCHUTES CENIGA: In the name Randall Szabo, OSB p ersons 925 hav i ng WANTED of the State of Or› „115304, COUNTY, OR› claims against said Utility Trailers We Do the Work, EGON. Commonly egon, you are hereby rszabo@rcolegal.corn estate are hereby You Keep the Cash! k nown as : 3 4 1 5 required to a ppear Attorneys for Plaintiff, required to present On-site credit Southwest Lava Av› and answer the com› 511 SW 10th Ave., t he s a me , wi t h approval team, enue, R e dmond, plaint filed against you Ste. 400, P ortland, proper v o uchers, web site presence. Oregon 97756. NO› in the above-entitled OR 97205, P: (503) within four months We Take Trade-Ins! TICE TO DEFEN› Court and cause on or 977-7640 F : ( 5 0 3) after the date of first DANTS: REA D before the expiration 977-7963. publication of t h is BIG COUNTRY RV THESE P A P ERS of 30 days from the notice, as s t ated 2 013 7 f t . X18 f t . Bend: 541-330-2495 C AREFULLY! A date of the first publi› LEGAL NOTICE below, to the under› Carry-On open car Redmond: lawsuit has b een cation of this sum› NOTICE OF PUBLIC signed P e r sonal hauler trailer. Used 541-546-5254 started against you mons. The date of HEARING R epresentative a t Add a PhOtO to yOur Bulletin ClaSSified ad fOr juSt only three times to in th e a b ove-en› first publication in this the Law Offices of haul my 1967 Ca› titled court by Pen› matter is September Notice i s h e r eby Anne C . S t einer, 665 $15 per week. maro, and looks like nyMac Loan Ser› 1, 2015. I f you fail given that a public A ttorney fo r t h e Canopies 8 Campers new. I had the front vices, LLC, plaintiff. timely to appear and hearing before the Personal R e p re› barrier made and in› Plaintiff’s claims are answer, plaintiff will Redmond City sentative, 2720 NE Lance Squire 4 000, stalled and added stated in the wntten apply to the Council has been 33rd Avenue, Port› 1996, 9’ 6" extended the tool box. It also complaint, a copy of above-entitled court scheduled for Tues› land, OR 97212, or cab, bathroom w/ toi› has a mounted new which was filed with for the relief prayed day, September 22, they may be barred. let, queen bed, out› spare tire. $3995 for in its complaint. at 7:00 p.m. in the the a bove-entitled All persons whose side shower. $5,700. obo . 541-876-5375 C ourt. You m u s t This is a judicial fore› Redmond City rights may be af› Call 541-382-4572 All adS aPPear irl bOth Print arid Online. or cell: "appear" in this case closure of a deed of Council Chambers, fected by proceed› 503-701-2256. or the other side will t rust i n w h ich t h e 777 SW Deschutes Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before ings in this estate win a utomatically. plaintiff requests that Avenue. may obtain addi› your ad appears in print and online. "appear" you To t he plaintiff be a l › tional i n f ormation 932 must file with the lowed to f o reclose The purpose of the from the Court, the Antique & court a legal docu› your interest in the hearing is to con› Personal R e p re› Classic Autos ment called a "mo› following d e scribed sider: A text sentative, or the at› tion" or "answer." real property: LOTS amendment to the torney for the Per› Northlander 1993 The "motion" or "an› ONE (1), TWO (2), Redmond Develop› 17’ camper, Polar sonal "reply" ) swer" (or THREE (3), FOUR (4) ment Code, adding Representative. 990, good shape, A ND FI V E must be given to the 6.0 1 86, www.bendbulletin.corn (5), Section new fridge, A/C, court clerk or ad› BLOCK providing f o r a PUBLIC NOTICE queen bed, bath› ministrator within 30 EIGHTY-SEVEN (67), Large Lot Industrial Notice of a b andon/ room, indoor/out› To place your photo ad,visit Us online at days of the date of HILLMAN, DES› Zone. sale on Sept. 26. 466 door shower, lots of CORVETTE 1979, www.bendbulletIn.corn Dr call with questions, first pub l ication CHUTES C OUNTY SW 26th St., Red› storage, custom› glass top, 31k miles, s pecified her e i n O REGON . Com - Staff Conta c t: mond. E r ic/Melanic ized to fit newer all original, silver & along with the re› monly known as: 1077 Heather Richards, Troup. Ol d c h airs/ pickups, $4500 obo. maroon. $12,500. quired filing fee. It C Avenue, Terreb› Community Devel› desk/dishes/clothes. 541-419-9859. 541-366-9602 opment Director at Call 541.420.2950. must be in proper onne, Oregon 97760.

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