Bulletin Daily Paper 10-26-14

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.5Q

SUNDAY October 26,2014

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IN COUPONS INSIDE

SPORTS • D1

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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

VACATION RENTALS

Home on the range —lf

Properties may run afoul of lenders

you've dreamed of owning a cattle ranch, now's your chance.E1

~K By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

Plus: Pot syrup — Awashington entrepreneur takes abig risk to get her foot in the door of the fledgling industry.E3

Electionupdate — Canvassers are armedwith technology — and plenty of data about you.A4

Redraudiug —If your company is called ISIS, youhave little choice in the matter.A6

As California continues to deal with a dev-

astating drought, some may be questioning the availability of water in Central Oregon, specifically groundwater often used in places outside of city limits and at desti-

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

An unknown number of

people operating vacation home rentals in Bend may

be defrauding their lender — but repercussions appear unlikely. A review of deed and mortgage documents for 77

nation resorts.

But even though the region has seen declines in groundwater since the early 1990s — with climate as a key factor

homes in Bend's west side

and Old Town neighborhoods found 11 instances in which the purchaser

according to the U.S.

Geological Surveystate officials do not

signed off on a second home rider, an amendment to the mortgage agreement that restricts the buyer's right to rent out the house.

foreseefuture restric-

Kurdish oil —Thekeyto independence?A6

tions for water-well drilling in the region. "The volume of

And a Web exclusiveCan a phonecall from apower company encouragepeople to use less energy. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras

The standard second

groundwater that passes through Central Oregon is enormous," said Kyle Gorman, the regionmanager forthe Oregon Water Resources Department, said last

home rider language reads as follows:

"Borrower shall occupy, and shall only use, the Property as Borrower's

second home. Borrower shall keep the Property

week. "The amount of

EDITOR'SCHOICE

Law lets IRS seize accounts on suspicion By Shaila Dewan New Yorh Times News Service

ARNOLDS PARK, Iowa

— For almost 40 years, Carole Hinders has dished out Mexican specialties

athermodest,cash-only restaurant. For just as long, she deposited the earnings at a small bank branch a block away — until last year, when two tax agents

available for Borrower's

exclusive use and enjoy-

ii

water that is pumped

ment at all times, and shall not subject the property to

from the system is relatively small from that amount." The department monitors water wells

any timesharing or other shared ownership arrange-

I„

ment or to any rental pool

,:wE'"?

or agreement that requires

throughout the Upper

Borrower to either rent the

Property or give a management firm or any other person any control over

Deschutes Basin and

collects data quarterly

hp,,

for the state. "There's no indication

the occupancy or use of the

of over-pumping from domestic use so severe

Property." See Properties/A7

that we would have to restrict that," said

4'-

Gorman. The U.S. Geological Survey released a report last year about Central Oregon groundwater levels. The study monitored groundwa-

'-

WiVt"» ".

t

)

II

'sttt)'t ii g')/IIti ";'.)h'q~ +y)/)»/ @j t// t)/, trttif/I/)+ p~~/

ter in the region from

1997 to 2008 and found that declines in some

areas were larger than expected. SeeGroundwater/A6

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Fan fiction hits literary mainstream

Employees of Cascade Pump &Irrigation Services construct a new pumpfor a water well in an unincorporated area west of Redmondlast week. Officials say that such pumping removes a relatively

By Jessica Contrera

small amount of the groundwater that passes through Central Oregon.

The Washington Post

knocked on her door and

It starts with a familiar

informed her that they had seizedher funds, almost

name, but then takes a

$33,000.

Jay Gatsby actually faked his death, and is

The Internal Revenue

Service agents did not accuse Hinders of money laundering or cheating on

turn.

Picking a college?'Big data'has advice

her taxes. In fact, she has

not been charged with any

By Anne Flaherty

crime. Instead, the money

The Associated Press

was seized solelybecause she had deposited less than $10,000 at a time, which

they viewed as an attempt to avoid triggering a required government report. "How can this happen'?" Hinders said in a recent interview. "Who takes your

money before they prove that you've done anything wrong with it?"

The federal government does. Using a law designed to help catch drug traffickers, racketeers and terrorists by tracking their cash, the government has gone after run-of-the-mill business owners and wage earners without so much as an allegation that they have committed serious crimes. The

governmentcan takethe moneywithouteverfiling a criminal complaint, and the owners are left to prove that they are innocent.

Many simply give up and settle the case for a portion of their money. SeeSeizure/A6

which has some education experts excited and other rolling their eyes. "For many families and students, theadmissions process is very opaque," said Matthew

WASHINGTON — For

many high school seniors, fall means deciding where to apply for college and maybe visiting a guidance counselor. Data crunchers hope to help. The popularity of social vast amounts of data we put online give members of the class of 2015 more tools than ever to help chart their next step, even if finding the right college isn't an exact science. The professional networking site LinkedIn has just come out with its "University

Finder," which identifies which colleges are popular with which companies. Parchment.com pools student data to predict an individu-

al's college admission prospects. There's even a dating

education technology giant

found in the universe of fan

Blackboard and chief exec-

fiction, where authors borrow from another writer's

cy" to the process.

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

E1-6 Community Life C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B 4 - 5 Sports G1-6 Local/State B 1-6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies

C6 D1-6 C8

world, taking characters, places and even real people and putting them in stories all their own. Despite fan fiction's reputation among

Lloyd Thacker, head of the "Youcan'tassess whethersomeone's going togetin based on Education Conservancy and a numbers," Northwestern University freshman Halle Lukasiewicz, critic of college rankings, has 18, says. "It's not lust luck, but everyone's different. There are very, another take: These sites are very capable students whodon't get into top colleges, and no one one more way to profit from really knows why. It just happens." senior-year angst and encourage group-think. "Technology has no inner service-like site for higher piercings and whether applilogic," he said. "Just because it's there, doesn't mean we education: Admitted.ly pairs cants go to church. students with colleges based These sites are joining the should use it." on such as factors as body game of college rankings, SeeCollege/A6

y) i4g

Some showers High 50, Low32 Page B6

readers swoon. These are plot twists

Charles Rex Art)ogast/The AssociatedPress

TODAY'S WEATHER

"Scandal's" Olivia Pope is somehow working on Robert Kennedy's presidential campaign. And a member ofthe boy band One Direction is falling in love on a college campus — making roughly 250 million online

Pittinsky, co-founder of the

utive officer of Parchment. "And what's happing now is that they (students) are beginning to share data with each other ... to bring transparen-

media sites and advancements in the ability to analyze the

now reunited with Daisy.

AnIndependent Newspaper

vol. 112, No. 299,

4e pages, 7 sections 0

old-school publishers for being nothing more than Harry Potter erotica, the online communities have

grown to attract all kinds of stories. And now, that online

popularity is shaking up the divide between fan fiction and traditional book

publishing. SeeFan fiction/A7

Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt

IIIIIIIIIII I 88267 0233 0

7


A2

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NATION Ee ORLD

c oo s oo er I I1 e usua ro te New York TimesNewsService MARYSVILLE, Wash. — If the bullet-scarred American

psyche has an archetype for a school gunman, it looks very little like Jaylen Ray Fryberg. He was not a loner or a known misanthrope — far from it. He

was a football player with a million-dollar smile, popular enough to be elected homecom-

ingprince ofhis freshman dass at Marysville-Pilchuck High School. Just a week ago, he presided over homecoming festivities in a red shirt with black bow

tie, suspenders and Converse sneakers. His close friends were there, too.

When Fryberg pulled out a handgun in the school cafeteria

CalifOrnia COp killer —Federalauthorities say aman suspected of killing two deputies during a shooting rampage in Northern California was deported twice and has adrug conviction. A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman said Saturday fingerprints of the suspected shooter confirm he was first deported to Mexico in1997 after being convicted in Arizona for drug possession. He wasarrested and repatriated to Mexico again in 2001. Sacramento County sheriff's authorities said the suspect identified himself as 34-year-old Marcelo Marquez of Salt Lake City. However, federal officials say his fingerprints match the biometric records for a Luis Enrique Monroy-Bracamonte.

before killing himself. board of directors. Family members identified Josh Iukes, 14, also a tribal two of the wounded victims as Nate Hatch, 14, and Andrew

Latina candidates —TheDemocratic lieutenant governor

member, said he had known

Fryberg since preschool, and Fryberg, 15, and said they were said Fryberg loved to play footJaylen's cousins. They were be- ball, wrestle and hunt. "There were guns around ingtreated at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. Officials the house," Iukes said. "They at Providence Regional Medi- were mostly rifles. He would cal Center Everett on Saturday go hunting with his dad most identified two 14-year-old girls of the time. They were pretty — Shaylee Chuddenaskit and dose. He and his dad had a reGia Soriano — who were be- ally good relationship, and his ing treated there for gunshot brother and his mom all did, wounds. The two girls and An- too." drew Fryberg remained in critFryberg's brother Julian, 13, ical condition, while Hatch was is in eighth grade, Iukes said. in serious condition. The gun used during the Neither officials nor relatives shooting, however, was a pishad publidy identified the fe- tol, said Iukes, who was in the male classmate who was killed. cafeteria at the time. "I have no Jaylen Fryberg, 14, whose idea where he got the pistol," he Facebook friends — there were said. "It didn't even look like an

on Friday, accordingto witnesses, he did not randomly target more than 2,000 — called him fellow students, nor did he point

Jay, came from a prominent

it toward authority figures. Instead, he fired at those very friends, killing one student and seriously wounding four others

family on the Tulalip Indian Reservation, where

candidates from Florida, Texasand Nevadaall have colorful biographies: a Colombian-born business executive; a pharmacist-turned-veteran lawmaker; and ajuvenile delinquent-turned-lawyer. And all balk at the umpteenth "How does it feel to be the first Latina?" question. "I'd like to get to a place where that's no longer of interest," said Annette TaddeoGoldstein, the running mate of former Florida Gov.Charlie Crist, the Republican-turned-Democrat seeking to recapture his old job. Her sentiment is echoed byTexas state Sen.LeticiaVandePutteand NevadaAssemblyRep.Lucy Flores. All three are the first competitive Latinas to run for the post in their states. N.H. Senate raCe —Since he became the Republican Senate candidate in NewHampshire, Scott Brown, a former U.S. senator from Massachusetts, has gained traction by lashing the Democraticincumbent,JeanneShaheen,to PresidentBarackObama,even claiming that Shaheen voted with the President "over100 percent of the time." Although Obamawon New Hampshire twice, his job approval ratings there are lower than ever: 37 percent approve while 60 percent disapprove, according to a poll released Thursday by the University of Massachusetts Lowell. And Brown, 55, is now tied with Shaheen, 67, in the polls although she is the state's former governor.

American pistol. It was really

small." (The police have said they recovered a .40 caliber

s everal pistol, the suspected weapon

generations of Frybergs serve used in the rampage, from the in positions as high as the scene.)

IIISUF8hCS d8t8 —With health insurance marketplaces about to open for 2015 enrollment, the Obamaadministration has delayed requirements for insurance companies to disclose data on the number of people enrolled, the number of claims denied and the costs to consumers for specific services. Insurers had been asking whether they had to comply with sections of the Affordable Care Act that require "transparency in coverage." But in a bulletin sent to insurers last week, the administration said, "We do not intend to enforce the transparency requirements until we provide further guidance." More time is needed to collect and analyze the data, officials said.

Dtseuiese

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Afghan rape —A mullah who raped a10-year-old girl in his mosque in the remote province of Kunduz, Afghanistan, was sentenced to 20 years in prison after a dramatic trial in Kabul on Saturday. Women's activists attending the packed proceedings hailed the sentence as avictory because the mullah was successfully prosecuted under a 2009 law meant to fight violence against women in a country where rape had long been treated as adultery, implicitly placing partial blame on the victim. The judge in this case, however, dismissed the mullah's Shariah law defense along with his accusation that the girl had seduced him.

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Erardo peres/The Associated prese

An electoral worker assembles avoting station at a school in Brasilia on Saturday. Brazilian voters electing a newpresident today are being asked to decide what scares them least: the incumbent's warnings about the "ghosts of the past," or her challenger's charges about the "monsters of the present." The latest polls either gave left-leaning incumbent

Dilma Rousseff a slight edge or saw adead heat for the runoff election to choose the leader of the world's fifth-largest nation. For that reason, few are counting out center-right challenger Aecio Nevesafter a topsy-turvy campaign that has been the most competitive, divisive and dramatic since Brazil's return to democracy in

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Iraq says ey town iscapture By Jonathan S. Landay and Mitchell Prothero McClatchy Foreign Staff

BAGHDAD — T h e I r a qi government claimed that its troops and Shiite Muslim mi-

litias captured a key Islamic State stronghold near Baghdad on Saturday in an operation to boost security for Islamic new year gatherings that apparently was overseen by an Iranian general. The fall of the town of Jurf

al-Sakhar — which couldn't be independently confirmed — would be the first major

success for Iraqi Prime Minis-

iteigted • Iraqi

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and persuade them to t urn

against the Islamic State. But the Jurf al-Sakhar operation could end up bolstering Sunni support for the Islamic State by reconfirming for Sunni leaders Abadi's dependence

ter Haidar al-Abadi, who took power with U.S. support in

on Iranian-backed Shiite militias that have committed unSeptemberand completed as- told atrocities against Sunnis

sembling his Shiite-dominated and operate beyond governgovernment only last week. ment control. The capture of the town The fighting for Jurf alwould bring under govern- Sakhar has raged intermitment control a hotbed of sup- tently since the Islamic State port for the Islamic State and began its offensive more than its predecessor, al-Qaida in four months ago. The town of I raq, Sunni m i l itants w h o about 80,000 people lies in a view Shiites as apostates and Sunni-dominated region that have slaughtered thousands of U.S. troops called the Triangle them. of Death during the 2003-11 The Sunni-dominatedarea occupation. controls a network of roads Thousands of Shiite milion which the Islamic State tiamen converged on the area and al-Qaida in Iraq in the to join Iraqi troops and police past routinely bombed and for a push that began at dawn attacked Shiite pilgrims mak- Friday, said Naim al-Aboudi, a ing their way from Baghdad spokesman for Aseab Ahl alto shrines in the sacred city of Haq, the most powerful Shiite Karbala to mark the new Is-

militia.

lamic year. The new Islamic year began on Saturday for Sunnis. It starts today for Shiites, beginning a 10-day period in which hundreds of thousands of Shiite pilgrims — including huge

The operation also involved fighters from two other Ira-

numbers of Iranians — de-

nian-backed Shiite m i litias,

the Badr Organization and Kata'eb Hezbollah, al-Aboudi said. "We've had great success up until now."

Iraqi security forces and

P

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I

P


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 3

TART TODAY

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

It's Sunday, Oct. 26, the 299th

day of 2014. Thereare 66days left in the year.

ESSAY: SCIENCE

A flying carthat's safe for air and ground?

HAPPENINGS EleCticllS —Ukraine and Brazil both go to the polls in key national races.

HISTORY Highlight: In 1944, theWorld War II Battle of Leyte Gulf ended in amajor Allied victory over Japaneseforces, whose naval capabilities were badly crippled. In 1774, the First Continental Congress adjourned in Philadelphia. In1825, the ErieCanalopened in upstate NewYork, connecting Lake Erieand the Hudson River. In1861, the legendary Pony Express officially ceasedoperations, giving way to thetranscontinental telegraph. (The last run of the PonyExpress was completed the following month.) In1881, the "Gunfight at the

O.K. Corral" took place in Tombstone, Arizona. In1921, the ChicagoTheatre, billed as the "WonderTheatre of the World," first opened. In1949, President Harry Truman signed ameasure raising the minimum wagefrom 40 to 75 cents an hour. In 1958, PanAmerican Airways flew its first Boeing 707jetliner from NewYorkto Paris in 8 hours and 41minutes. In 1972, national security adviser Henry Kissinger declared, "Peace is at hand" in Vietnam. In1974, five bombsexploded at business sites in midtown Manhattan andWall Street, injuring no one;the Puerto Rican separatist group FALNclaimed responsibility. In 1979, South KoreanPresident Park Chung-heewas shot to death during a dinner party along with his chief bodyguard by the head oftheKorean Central IntelligenceAgency, Kim Jae-kyu, whowas later executed. In1984, "Baby Fae," anewborn with a severeheart defect, was given the heart of a baboonin an experimental transplant in Loma Linda, California. (Baby Fae lived 21days with the animal heart.) In 1994, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin of Israel andPrime Minister Abdel SalamMajali of Jordan signed apeacetreaty during a ceremony atthe Israeli-Jordanian border attended by President Bill Clinton. Tee years age: TheFederal Communications Commission gave its approval to Cingular Wireless LLC's$41 billion acquisition of AT&TWireless Services Inc. Israel's parliament approved Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's plan for withdrawing from the GazaStrip and parts of the West Bank.Thefinal vote count in the Afghanpresidential election gave aresounding victory to interim leader Hamid Karzai. Five years age: A U.S.military helicopter crashedwhile returning from the scene ofa firefight with suspectedTaliban drug traffickers in western Afghanistan, killing 10Americans, including threeDEA agents; four more troops were killed when two helicopters collided over southern Afghanistan. One year age: APhoenix man went on a rampage,shooting to death four members of a family who lived next door to him, along with their two dogs, before turning the gun onhimself; authorities speculated that the incessant noise of barking dogs drove MichaelGuzzoto kill.

BIRTHDAYS Actress Shelley Morrison is 78. Author PatConroy is 69. TV host Pat Sajak is 68.Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary RodhamClinton is 67. Actor D.W.Moffett is 60. Actress-singer Rita Wilson is 58. Actor Dylan McDermott is 53. Actor Cary Elwes is52. Singer Natalie Merchant is 51. Writer-producer Seth MacFarlane ("Family Guy") is 41.Actor Jon Heder is 37.Olympic silver medal figure skater SashaCohen is 30. — From wire reports

Scientists must strike a balance between the search for knowledge and sensitivity to native groups.

By Hayley Tsukayama

to see what's behind them

The Washington Post

through a screen on the dash.

Let's be honest: it's 2014, and the automotive industry

No one wants to get into a lane-changing accident with

has utterly disappointed a

a plane, after all. It also has

generation of science-fiction lovers and futurists. Where

all the things you'd expect in

are our flying cars? Stepping into the void is Terrafugia, which bills itself as a "the flying car company."

belts and side-view mirrors that can see around the massive wings when in car mode and can be removed altogether for flight. Despite being street legal (with the wings up) the Transition is not exactly what you'd call a general-purpose vehide. To use both the flying and driving functions — and, if you're going to drop an anticipated $279,000 on a vehicle, why wouldn't you'? — you

a car, such as standard seat

It has announced an upcom-

ByGeorgeJohnson

after he aimed his telescope

ing model called the "Transition," which sports foldable wings that let the vehicle go from car to plane in about 20 seconds with the flip of a

at the skies over Padua and

switch.

found mountains on the moon and more moons orbiting Ju-

The upcoming Terrafugia Transition is not quite a flying Jetsons-esque car. The Terrafugia Transition is, more must have at least a sports piaccurately, a plane you can lot license. You're also going to need a drive rather than a car you can fly. That meansyou're not runway: The Transition still going to be able to hover away needs alot of roomand awide from abad traffic jam. berth to take off, which it can

New York Times News Service

Galileo knew he would have the Church to contend with

piter — and saw that the Milky

Way was made from "congeries of innumerable stars." The old order was overturned, and

dogma began togive way to science. But there is still far to go.

Congeries of stars have given way to congeries of galaxies,

But while it's unlikely that

'i'

but astronomy — one of the

grandest achievements of the human race — is still fendHollyn Johnson/ Hawaii Tribune-Herald via TheAssociated Press file photo ing off charges of blasphemy. Hawaii County Mayor Billy Kenoi, left, talks to protesters at Mauna These days the opposition Kea, Hawaii, earlier this month. Protesters halted a groundbreakcomes not from the Vatican, which operates its own obser-

ing and Hawaiian blessing ceremony for the construction of one of

the world's largest telescopes.

vatory, but from a people with very different religious beliefs. This month a group of Na- allegiance to different gods, tive Hawaiians, playing drums while the Sierra Club agonized and chanting, blocked the road over the fate of the Mount Grato a construction site near the ham red squirrel. top of Mauna Kea and stopped The astronomers prevailed, the groundbreaking ceremony as they have so far on Mauna

Baybayan, a Native Hawaiian, expressedhissupportfortheir efforts last year in an essay for a local newspaper. "Our ancestors," he wrote, "sought knowledge from their

for the Thirty Meter Telescope,

e nvironment, including t h e

often called TMT. Larger than any now on Earth, it is de-

signed to see all the way back to the first glimmers of starlight — a triumph in astrono-

my's quest to understand the origin of everything. But f o r

t he

Kea. But both episodes are reminders that it is not just religious fundamentalists who are

do once it gets to a speed of

you'll see the plane/car combo about 70mph. And that runreplace the minivan, the com- way can't be just anywhere, pany is trying to set an early because you can't just roll up standard forhow regulators to Reagan National Airport candealwithvehidesthatop- or Chicago's O'Hare and exerate both on the ground and pect to take off. You'll need in the air. to head instead to one of the "It's a first practical step," nation's approximately 5,000 said Terrafugia chief execu- general aviation airports. tive Carl Dietrich. "It's what One thing you won't need, we can do today with today's however, is a hangar. Wings existing infrastructure." f olded, th e T r ansition i s From a regulation stand- roughly the size of a Cadilpoint, Terrafugia has built in lac Escalade or a Ford F-350, safety measures mandated Terrafugia executives said. by both the Federal Aviation So it should fit in a standard Administration and the ¹ single-car garage. It also runs tional Highway Traffic Safety on normal premium unleadAdministration. So, for exam- ed gasoline and gets roughple, the Transition has both a ly 35 miles to the gallon on parachute and airbags. Since the ground. In the air, it gets it lacks a rear w indshield, slightly less — about 20 miles the Transition has a camera to the gallon if you're flying in the back, allowing drivers 100mph.

stars, to guide them and to give them a greater understanding

still wagingskirmishes against of the universe that surroundscience. ed them. The science of astronWhile biblical creationists omy helps us to advance huopposing the teaching of evo- man knowledge to the benefit lution have been turned back of the community."

pr o t esters, in case after case, American

dressedin ceremonial robes and carrying palm fronds, TMT has a different meaning: "too many telescopes." For them the mountain is a sacred

Indian tribes have succeeded in using their own religious beliefs and a federal law called the Native American Graves Protection and R epatriation

Act to empty archaeological and the Earth Mother coupled museums of ancestral bones and gave birth to the Hawaiian — including ones so ancient people. that they have no demonstraThey don't all mean that ble connection to the tribe demetaphorically. They c on- manding their reburial. The place where the Sky Father

sider the telescope — it will

most radical among them re-

be the 14th on Mauna Kea-

fuse to bow to a science they

the latest insult to their gods. Push them too far, the demon-

don't consider their own. A few even share a disbelief in evolu-

by spiritual outrage and how much by politics. Opposition to the Mauna Kea observato-

ries, which are run by scientists from 11 countries, has been going on for years and is tied inseparably with lingering hostility over colonization and

the United States' annexation of Hawaii in the 19th century.

A

'

chaeologists lament the loss of scientific information, Indian

ceremonial artifacts are also

up for grabs. While some ar-

• 0

5

In this turn back toward the dark ages, it is not just skeletal

remains that are being surrendered. Under federal law, many

strators warned, and Mauna tion, professing to take literally Kea, a volcano, will erupt in old myths in which the first revenge. people crawled out of a hole in It can be difficult to tell how the ground. motivated such protests are

A

-

a

creationism is tolerated out of a sense of guilt over past wrongdoings. Again the spiritual is inseparable from the political. Dismayed by all of this, I got

The new telescope is a pawn in a long, losing game. Adding more complications, in touch with Steve Lekson, a the indigenous protesters were professor of anthropology and allied w i t h

en v i r onmental curator of archaeology at the

activists denouncing the encroachment of what they call

University of Colorado Museum of Natural History. Lekson

"the international astronomy

is known as an outspoken icon-

industry, "asthough therewere greatprofitsto be made from studying black holes. Whether the target is a scientific installation or a ski area

oclast, and I was expecting to hear his outrage.

in the West, some environmen-

that complying with the arti-

talists have learned that a few

facts law was the right thing to do.

traditionally dressed natives calling for the return of sacred

lands can draw more attention than arguments over en-

"There's no question we are

losing information," he said. But he had become persuaded

"It's bad for

s cience, but

good (I suppose) for the Native American groups involved," he

dangeredspecies and fragile wrote in an email. "Given that ecosystems. In this marriage the USA was founded on two of convenience, there seems to great sins — genocide of Nabe little worry that the tactics

tive Americans and slavery of

moth construction project on vulnerable mountain terrain. The state's Board of Land and NaturalResources agreed with astronomers that the trade-off

creationism interfere with sci-

might undermine the credibil- Africans — I think science can ity of what may be perfectly afford this act of contrition and sound scientific arguments reparation." about the effects of a mamBut how is letting Indian

is worthwhile, and plans are proceeding. For many this was a familiar situation. A very similar drama unfolded in the 1990s on Mount Graham in Arizona, where the

entific research any different from Christian creationism interfering with public education

' •

'

o

'

ol l

— something that he would

surely resist'? Logically they are the same, Lekson agreed. But we owed the Indians. "I'm given to un-

derstand that the double stan-

construction of a complex of

dard rankles," he said. I left the conversation grate-

observatories (one is the Vat-

ful that in another part of the

ican's) was fought by a group world,astronomers are standof Native Americans swearing ing their ground. Chad Kalepa

• •

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• s • •

• • s


A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

IN FOCUS: MIDTERM ELECTIONS

Ear votin atersstrate ies By Michael R. Blood

permanent absentee has been on the rise. In the state's June LOS ANGELES — For primary, nearly 70 percent of over 1 million Californians, ballots were cast this way. the Nov. 4 election is over. Other states focus their early That's because they've al- voting efforts on placing pollready voted. ing booths in strip malls or othA growing throng of er convenient locations weeks early voters in the nation's ahead of Election Day. most populous state — perThe early voting trend has haps comprising half of all been underway for years in votes to be cast in Califor- many states, as voters seek nia's general election — has the convenience of filling out a stretched Election Day into ballot at their kitchen table, or weeks. Candidates who near where they work, shop or wait until the end to close take dasses, rather than travelthe deal with voters will be ing to a polling place on a partoo late. ticular day and waiting in line. "The election is not a oneAlmost 129 million people day event anymore. It's a voted in the 2012 presidential 30-day event," said veteran election, 35.8 percent of them Democratic strategist Bill before Election Day. Inthe 2010 Carrick, who is spearhead- midterms, when Republicans ing Kennedyclan member regained control of the House, Bobby Shriver's campaign roughly 3 out of 10 voters cast for Los Angeles County earlyballots. supervisor. More than 4 million people The Associated Press

mains the same, winning, but

the playing field is longer. That means just about everything must start sooner and be maintainedlonger,whether TV and

radio ads, phone calls to prospective voters or dispatching volunteers with clipboards to

knock on doors. Republican consultant Duane Dichiara, who is working on some hotly contested California legislative races, said the elongated voting periodhas increased the costof campaigning and made it more challenging for campaigns to sustain fresh advertising messages for voters. "It's a long haul for everybody in the business," he said. Chris Long, a retired schoolteacher, was hard at work on The midterm elections mailed inballots in 2012 in Cal- that job this week in a Demare just over a week away ifornia, up from about 3 million ocratic campaign office in and California is one of two years earlier. Los Angeles, where his eyes "Vote-by-mail in California toggled between a computer more than 3 0 s t ates in which some form of ad- used to be something reserved screen listing voters with mail vance voting is shaping the forpeoplewho had permanent ballots and the phone he was way campaigns must be disabilities, people who were using to reach them. conducted. In some rural out of town on vacation," said areasofthestate,8ofevery Paul Mitchell, vice president

Taylor McLamb, e regional field director for the North Carolina Republican Party, left, and student volunteer Seth Noble canvass registered voters in Cary, North Carolina. on Thursday.

Footso iers we -arme or Senate contro att e By Ashley Parker and Jonathan Weisman

For both major parties, finding and locking in early supporters has become essential. The goal in the election re-

about who exactly is trying to get them to the polls, there is good reason. Americans for Prosperity on the right

knocking on doors; it's people making phone calls out of phone banks; but the calculations that are determining

10 ballots cast could come

soldiers in the battle for con- and Planned Parenthood, latrol of the Senate come well- bor-backed Working America armed. With d ata-infused and the League of Conservasmartphones and tablets in tion Voters, among others, on hand, they have an unprece- the left are augmenting the rodented amount of information bust efforts by the campaigns about the potential voters they and the parties themselves. are trying to persuade and Americans for Prosperity, more money thanever in a financed by the billionaire midterm election to do it. brothers David H. and Charles This fusion of old-school G. Koch, is the most signifidoor knocking and an over- cant player on the Republican lay of data analytics has been side, providing far more clout changing elections for at least than either Tillis or the Repubthree cycles, but each advance lican Party. "As faras large-scale,smart builds on its predecessor with voters largely unaware why operations, nobody on our the canvassers know so much side compares," said Don-

which door and which phone aredifferent."

through the mail. search powerhouse that helps The s t r ategy-shifting campaigns identify and track dynamics caused by ear- voters. ly voting are coming into Early voting has changed play in states such as Flori- the timing of c ampaigns. da, where Republican Gov. Mitchell recalled a recent camRick Scott faces a tough paign that poured money into Free pipeinstallation estimates re-election challenge from a last-minute TV ad buy. "They Democrat Charlie C r ist, were advertising basically to and Iowa, where GOP Sen- ghosts, voters who had already

New Yorh Times News Service

RALEIGH, N.C. — The foot

about them. So now, even before Emma

ald Bryson, Americans for Prosperity's North C arolina

Democratic strategists con-

cede they have to do it better than Republicans, given the anger at the president.

"There's a lot more fluidity to the Democratic voting base than the Republican one," said Mitch Stewart, who ran turnout operations for Obama's

ramped up its commitment,

seatsthe party needs for a majority.

creating the "Bannock Street project," a multimillion dollar, data-driven effort to persuade, register and turn out voters. "The easiest way to look at

nization Americans for Pros-

verse," said Preston Elliott,

against them, Democrats' last

chance to hold their Senate majority comes down to a vigorous get-out-the-vote effort.

a campaign phone bank. "I really do think the best thing to do is vote early because if you wait until Election Day, I'm afraid it's going to be "The left is still ahead on the very busy," she told a likely ground — they just have more Hagan voter, before remindresources," said Tim Phillips, ing him of his neighborhood president of A m ericans for early voting location. Prosperity, referring more to Workers like Wellington and Noble are, in the end, crit-

ey. Yet the steeper climb is for ical to any ground campaign, Democrats, whose support no matter how sophisticated among young, female and data collection and targeting minority v oters h i storically modelsare,said Sasha Issendrops off in midterm elections. berg, author of "The Victory President Barack

O b ama's Lab: The Secret Science of

approval ratings are hovering near all-time lows, and Republicans have successfully persuaded their core supporters that the election is a referen-

In

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more machineish than just catching a wave and riding momentum."

soft sell. "Would you take a

operation in the past two presidential elections, have been spending tens of millions of dollars to improve data collection to achieve a rough parity.

turnout muscle than to mon-

Braley at campus polling places.

of voters who registered as

through an online call sheet at

Kay Hagan, a Democrat. With th e p o litical t i de

students to vote early for

Greensboro office. "It's a little

superior Democratic turnout

for voters to throw out Sen.

Just this week, first lady

Michelle Obama was in Iowa City urging college

nearly all the early voting is done by mail, the number

But the fight has changed. Republicans, outflanked by a

from rock bands to baseball teams. All fodder for her pitch

up one of the six additional

Hagan's campaign m a nager, in an interview in his

Republicans say they are catching up. In Raleigh, camtwo-question survey? Just two paign workers and volunteers questions?" Noble, 24, a North showed off a new smartphone Carolina State University se- app that helps canvassers nior working for the North target their door knocks. But Carolina Republican Party, Republican officials refused asked potential voters. Hagan to revealvolunteer numbers, or Tillis? Voting early or on paid staff totals, field office loNov. 4? cations or a tabulation of votThe night before in Chapel er contacts. Nor would they Hill, Pat Wellington, a Hagan allow reporters to recount the volunteer, worked her way phone-bank pitch, "the secret

from Facebook and Twitter,

voted," he said.

hopes to defeat Democratic Rep. Bruce Braley and pick

it is our strategy to winning is expanding the voting uni-

spent on turnout, dividends of-

ate candidate Joni Ernst

campaigns. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee

Benson, a field director for the director. conservative political orgaFor all the labor and money perity, knocks on a door, she ten pay out in the margins, afhas more than 700 data points fecting only a few percentage about the person behind it, points, but can swing a close like magazine subscriptions, election. car ownership (make, model, On Wednesday, Seth Noyear), propensity for voting, ble went door to door on Penand likes and dislikes mined ny Lane in Cary with a brief

with Political Data Inc., a re-

Winning Campaigns." "The great irony of the modern ground game is it's this meeting of incredibly modern analytics and data married to dum on him. very old-fashioned delivery In few states has the ground devices," he said. "It's people game been as intense as in

Toppriorities for asecondterm: The UrbanGrowth Boundary J CompletetheUGBexpansion remandwithin the

sauce," as they called it.

Democratic groups are also using smartphone technology

timelinesetbyCity Council to ensureBendprovides alfortfability f opportunity forallits'citizens.

to make canvassing more ef-

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ficient. On a Monday night in Durham, Ekundayo Akinloye, a field manager for Working

Continueandexpandourefforts to attract and support companiesin ourcommunity thatprovide living-wagejobs. Anenvironmentandculture where businesscanthrive andgrowis essential to the sustainabilify of ourcity andregion.

America, the community arm of the AFL-CIO, walked in an

upscale neighborhood. An iPhone app helped her choose which doors to knock, with

J

a goal of 20 to 30 an hour, as

well as a dozen "IDs" — a voter's key issue and which candidate he or she is likely to

support. When one votercited her t op concern

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a s "women's

rights, women's rights, women's rights," Akinloye imme-

into her phone, and it was sent to headquarters to refine targeting.

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North Carolina, where Hagan

is locked in a close race with Thom Tillis, a Republican. Maria Palmer, a Chapel Hill town councilwoman working a phone bank for Hagan, understands why, from her out-

reach to Hispanic voters. "Many of them were not planning on v oting," said Palmer, who is from Peru. "They're angry there has been no immigration reform. They're angry with a lot of things." Some of the grass-roots

campaign efforts have an underground dimension. Mysterious fliers with a grainy image of a l ynching have appeared in black neighborhoods, warning voters that if

Hagan loses, Obama will be impeached. A

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group is running online ads to draw young voters away from Hagan and to the Libertarian

candidate, Sean Haugh; the ads say, "Get Haugh, get high," promoting his position to legalize marijuana. And if voters are confused

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A5

UPDATE EBOLA OUTBREAK

After testing negativefor virus, quarantined nurse criticizes 'frenzy ofdisorganization' By Anemona Hartocollis and Emma G. Fltzsimmons

Doctors Without Borders tested

itI t ,i

New York Times News Service

v , "

I, >

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I

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nors of New York and New Jersey described the quarantines

Nj TRAUMA CENTER

A nurse who was being

positive for Ebola, the goveras a necessary caution. Some of the details of where travelers

quarantined at a New Jersey

hospital after working with Ebola patients in Sierra Leone

would be quarantined, wheth-

er at their homes or elsewhere, were still being worked out

criticized her treatment Sat-

urday asan overreaction after

QEI

AI I IULANCE

+

an initial test found that she did not have the virus.

Saturday.

• js/LW~

Asked about the nurse's essay while visiting Iowa, Gov.

"I am scared about how health care workers will be

Chris Christie of New Jersey

treated at airports when they

dedare that they have been fighting Ebola in West Africa," the nurse, Kaci Hickox, wrote

Robert Stolarik/New YorkTimes NewsService

said, "My heart goes out to her because she's someone who has been trying to help others and is obviously ill." "I'm sorry if in any way she

in an essay on the website of The Dallas Morning News,

A nurse, Kacl Hlckox, who worked with Ebola patients in West Africa, was placed ln quarantine at Rutgers University Hospital

in collaboration with a friend

upon her arrival stateside in Newark, New Jersey. Hickox became

who works for the paper. "I am scared that, like me, they will arriveand see a frenzy ofdisorganization, fear, and most frightening, quarantine." She described having been held in isolation for about seven

the first person to fall under the mandatory 21-day quarantine announced lateFriday by Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York and Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey.

hours at Newark Liberty International Airport Friday, left

female officer looked smug. 'You have a fever now,' she

alone forlongstretches and given only a granola bar when she had said she was hungry. Hickox, 33, was placed in quarantine under a policy announced Friday by the gov-

sald.

An oral thermometer showed

public is a much, much greater concern of mine," he continued. "I hope she recovers quickly, had contact with Ebola pa- and we're going to do everytients, but not fo r i solation, thing we can in New Jersey because a patient is not be- and in our public health system lieved to be contagious until to make sure that she does." In symptoms appear.But CDC a telephone interview Saturday officials said that states had night, Hickox's father, Leon the right to go beyond their Hickox, said his daughter "is recommendations. not ill in any way." On Saturday, in a sign of Doctors Without B orders growing concern about the said Saturday that "there is a

ernors of New York and New

her temperature to be 98, she

virus, Gov. Pat Quinn of Illi-

notable lack of clarity about the

nois, the home of O'Hare International Airport in Chicago,

new guidelines" and that it was concerned about the treatment

began a quarantine program similar to the one in place in

of Hickox, who worked with the organization. The N ew

New York and New Jersey.

York City doctor, Craig Spen-

Connecticut, which enacted a similar policy Oct. 7, has quarantinednine people who have so far showed no symptoms. White House officials met

cer, 33, remained in isolation

was upset at being held with no explanation," she wrote. "The

She was eventually escorted by eight police cars to University Hospital in Newark and taken to atent outside the building.

Jersey. All people entering the wrote. She added that the docUnited States through Newark tor felt her neck and rechecked Liberty and Kennedy airports the temperature. "'There's no will now be quarantined for 21 way you have a fever,' he said. days if they had direct contact 'Your face is just flushed.'" with Ebola patients in Guinea, Her complaints served as Liberia or Sierra Leone, even a broadside against the new if they show no symptoms of quarantine policy, which goes infection. further than recommendations On Friday night, New Jersey from the Centers for Disease health officials said the nurse Control and Prevention. The had developeda fever afterar- new policy has raised concerns riving, but on Saturday, they among some health experts said her blood had tested neg- and doctors that it will discourative for Ebola. Additional tests age people from going to West will be conducted. Africa to try to contain Ebola Hickox disputed that she had at its source. The World Health had a fever. She wrote that at the airport,a forehead scan-

Organization reported Satur-

be 101, but that came after four

cases in the three hardest-hit

day that there were more than ner showed her temperature to 10,000suspected or confirmed

Saturday to discuss whether

was inconvenienced, but incon-

venience that could occur from having folks that are symptomatic and ill out amongst the

at Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan on Saturday, with

officials saying he had "entered the next and more serious phase of his illness, as antici-

to revise nationwide policies pated with the appearance of regarding the return of health gastrointestinal symptoms." care workers from affected West African countries. An

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio continued his reassurance

official said the administra- tour Saturday, sampling most of the menu at a meatball shop although it wanted to avoid in Manhattan that Spencer visanything that would hinder the ited last week, as "a reminder ability to fight Ebola in West about some core truths about Africa. Ebola.... It cannot be contractOn Friday, the day after a ed through casual contact. It tion may take further action,

hours during which she had not countries. been allowed to leave. The CDC calls for self-mon- New York City doctor who "My cheeks were flushed, I itoring for travelers who have had workedin Guinea through

MOre than10,000 CaSeS —Thenumber of people infected with Ebola in threeWest African countries has exceeded10,000, the World Health Organization reported Saturday. A total of10,141 peoplehadcontracted the disease worldwide, the organization said in its latest update ontheprogress of the epidemic, and thenumber reported to havedied rose to 4,922. WHO acknowledged that its figures understated the reality of Ebola's spread. All but 27 of the infections andall but three of the deaths have occurred in theWest African countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, according to report. A fourth country, Mali, has reported its first confirmed Ebola case, the death of a2-year-old child from the disease Friday. The group said it was treating the situation as anemergency because the child wasdisplaying symptoms whenshe rode hundreds of miles by public bus from neighboring Guinea,which presented "multiple opportunities for exposures — including high-risk exposures — involving manypeople." Malian authorities haveisolated 43people, including 10 health care workers who hadcontact with the child in the town of Kayes, where shewastaken for treatment, WHOsaid. But the authorities face thedaunting task of tracing other people who were exposed to thechild during her lengthy journey, which included astopover of several hours in Mali's capital, Bamako. Mali, one of Africa's poorest nations, hadappeared to behighly vulnerable to aspillover of the Ebola virus from neighboring countries still struggling to contain the epidemic, which began nine months ago. It has limited infrastructure and afragile central government weakened byyears of internal conflict. EdOla SurViVOr — AshokaMukpo knew hereally was in trouble when he sawthe people treating him in full protective suits and hoods. The American video journalist is homenowafter recovering from Ebola hecontracted while working in the virus-ravaged West African country of Liberia. In aninterview with The Associated Press, hedescribed the fear he felt when medical workers appeared athis bedside in the heavy duty gear needed toprevent the spread of the deadly infection. "The only thing youcanseeis their eyes. And Mukpo they're dripping with chlorine," Mukpo said. "Youjust realize what abadsituation you're in when your caregivers haveto come in with such anincredible amount of protection." Mukpo contracted the virus after working for a month as a freelance cameramanfor NBCand other mediaoutlets. Herecounted the harrowing experiences heendured first with his diagnosis, then his treatment and atlast his recovery on Saturday at his Rhode Island hometwo daysafter the latest Ebola case inthe United States: the hospitalization of aNewYork City emergency room physician who hadworked in Guinea. The 33-year-old Mukpo recalled taking his temperature, seeing it read101.3, andfeeling "pure fear." Being diagnosed with Ebola, Mukpo said, forced him to confront the possibility of his own death, and madehim understand theterror and isolation so many West Africans aregoing through. Mukpo said hefelt as if his body was "at war" with the virus: he was in pain andweak, he hadafever that went as high as104 degrees, it was hard towalk and eat, and helost15 pounds in a week. Mukpoisn'tsurehow hecontractedEbolabecausehesaidhewas careful while filming. Mukpo was flown to theNebraska Medical Center Oct. 6, where he was isolated in abiocontainment unit, given constant fluids and an experimental Ebola drug. He is only one of ahandful of people whohave beentreated for Ebola in the United States. — Bulletin wire reports

is notan airborne disease,"he sald.

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

Groundwater

- s%L) -' ) i

:

t

Angela Jimenez/New Yorkrimes News Service

Carole Hinders works at her modest, cash-only Mexican restaurant that tax agents seized funds from last year, in Arnolds Park, lows.

Seizure

arette distributor that has been

said David Smith, a former fed-

Larry Salzman, a lawyer with the Institute for Justice who is

run byone familyfor27years. Continued fromA1 There are often legitimate "They're going after people business reasons for keeping who are really not criminals," deposits below $10,000, said eral prosecutor who is now a forfeiture expert and lawyer in representing Hinders and the Virginia. "They're middle-class Long Island family pro bono. citizens who have never had For example, he said, some any trouble with the law." grocery store owners in FraOn Thursday, in response to ser, Michigan, had an insurquestions from The New York ance policy that covered only Times, the IRS announced that up to $10,000 cash. When they it would curtail the practice, fo-

neared the limit, they would

cusing instead on cases where the money is believed to have been acquired illegally or seizure is deemed justified by"exceptional circumstances."

make a deposit. Hinders, said that she did

Richard Weber, the chief of Criminal Investigation at the IRS, said in a w r itten state-

ment, "This policy update will ensure that C.I. continues to

not know about the report-

ing requirement and that for decades, she thought she had been doing everyone a favor. "My mom had told me if you keep your deposits under $10,000, the bank avoids paperwork," she said. "I didn't actu-

focus our limited investigative

ally think it had anything to do

resources on identifying and investigating violations with-

with the IRS."

in our jurisdiction that closely align with C.I.'s mission and

Fighting theseizure

key priorities." He added that making deposits under $10,000 to evade reporting requirements, called structuring, is

al for depositors to be advised by financial professionals, or

occulYed.

the paperwork burden of its

Lawyers say it is not unusueven bank tellers, to keep their

deposits below the reporting still a crime whether the mon- threshold. In the Long Island ey is from legal or illegal sourc- case, the company, Bi-County es. The new policy will not af- Distributors, had three bank fect seizures that have already accounts closed because of

The IRS is one of several fed- frequent cash deposits, said eral agencies that pursue such Jeff Hirsch, the eldest of three cases and then refer them to brothers who own the compathe Justice Department. The ny. Their accountant then recJustice Department does not ommended staying below the track the total number of cases limit, so the company began pursued, the amount of money using the excess cash to pay seized or how many of the cas- vendors, and carried on for es were related to other crimes, more than a decade. said Peter Carr, a spokesman. More thantwoyears ago, the government seized $447,000,

Civil asset forfeiture

and the brothers have been

a Washington-based public

unable to retrieve it. Salzman, who has taken over legal rep-

interest law firm that is seek-

resentation of t h e

But the Institute for Justice,

b r others,

ing to reform civil forfeiture has argued that prosecutors practices, analyzed structuring violated a strict timeline laid data from the IRS, which made

Gorman said that in some areas the levels have dropped Continued fromA1 tween the m i d-1990s and by 20 feet, but nothing has Researchers d e termined mid-2000s, water levels near been "sharp or sudden" in the that some of the decline was R edmond declined by a s decline. likely caused by increased much as 14 feet. Water levels Doug Aiken, a water-well groundwater pumping. They in the Cascade Range rose driller in Central Oregon for also considered how irriga- by more than 20 feet from the 44 years, says he hasn't seen tion canals were being re- mid-1990s to 2000, but then any sharp declines over the vamped and not allowing declined by the mid-2000s. years either. "We're realfortunate here as much water to escape The study developed estithrough the bottom. mates of groundwater pump- in Central Oregon and CenAll three were found to ing by municipalities and ir- tral Washington," he said. have an influence on water rigation districts. The volume Aiken said he still drills to levels, said Marshall Gannett, increased by about 68 percent about the same level to hit waa hydrologist with the USGS between 1994 and 2008, ac- ter as he did early on. "That hasn't changed at all over the in Portland who worked on cording to the report. "We've been in a dry cy- years." the report. "We found, depending on cle and that natural climate The longtime driller dug where you are, these things signal gets exacerbated by a new water well for a small have different influences," increases in pumping," said water district west of RedGannett said. "Climate was Gannett. mond last week.

College

the biggest cause of decline." The report states that be-

She credits her parents, a

good guidance counselor Continued fromA1 and a company called "AcPicking a college is noth- ceptU" with helping her ing like it once was. find the appropriate school In 1980, there were 3,150 and prepare an attractive colleges and universities, ac- application. "You can't assess whethcording to the Department of Education, and a prima- er someone's going to get ry factor for many students in based on numbers," she was location. said. "It's not just luck, but Now, there ar e c lose everyone's different. There to 4,700 schools, many of are very, very capable stuwhich go out of their way to dents who don't get into top attract out-of-state students colleges, and no one really because of the money they knows why. It just happens bring. Many schools might ... But I think it's extremely seem more selective than important for students not they really are, and stu- to get fazed by other people dents worried about getting on the Internet telling them turned down apply to lots of they're not going to get in." schools as a way to hedge Among the new s ites their bets. is LinkedIn's "University Halle Lukasiewicz, 18, Finder," which pulls data said she remembers the day from its 313 million profiles Northwestern University, a to find out which schools private research university and degrees translate into in Illinois and her top choice, jobs at certain companies. began emailing acceptance For example, if you want to letters. A chatroom devoted study computer science and to Northwestern hopefuls work at a company like IBM on a site called "College someday, LinkedIn says Confidential" was b uzz- the majority of its members ing. Kids were posting their who fit that criteria went to grades and test scores and North Carolina State or the whether they had gotten in. University of Texas at Aus-

James Bozarth, a resident who uses the groundwater

there, shared some of his personal concerns about the water level being low. " They keep telling u s there's so much water here and wil l n e ver r u n o u t ," Bozarth said. "That's not a fact at all."

Gorman said a l though there is a general decline, the state does not intend to

change the amount being pumped because of the adequate supply. "That's not something at this point in time that the de-

partment is even looking at," Gorman said. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.com

in to a certain school. The site or system, because Linkedcan suggest other schools and In doesn't verify a person's say whether most students credentials. preferred one college over Parchment, StatFuse and another. Other sites, such as Stat-

other predictor sites can't take

into account a great applicaa d mission tion essay or interview, which c hances based entirely o n can matter more at some data released by 1,200 pop- schools than others. Parchular universities. Factors in- ment includes a confidence clude average grades and test rating with its predictions to scoresofstudentsaccepted. indicate schools that more The College Board, the heavily weigh these factors in same outfit that runs the SAT the application process. exam, saysitruns nearly 2 Sean Logan, director of million unique searches a college counseling at Phillips month on its site, which takes Academy in Andover, Massainto account grades and test chusetts, says he understands scores but also can consider the attraction of a search endesired location, size, diversi- gine or online chat room, esty and financial aid needs. pecially at high schools where While popular, these on- there might be one guidance line search tools have their counselor for as many as Fuse, predict

limitations. LinkedIn's University Finder is limited to professionals

1,000 students. But in the end,

he said, getting into college can be a frustrating process

who bother to set up an account with th e

that isn't always predictable, n etworking even for the best students.

"It's part science," he said, site and who complete a profile. It also works on the hon- "and part art."

Ilo ur Hands Hurt'V

L ukasiewicz, a n oc c a - tin. Both are near IBM resional lurker o n t h e s ite, search facilities. found she could not look Parchment, a c o mpany

away even though her mom begged her to stop. "My heart was racing," she said. Finally, an email s l id across her phone: accept-

that handles electronic student transcripts, uses a tech-

nique called "crowdsourcing." Students finalizing the college selection process agree to share with the site

N o r t hwestern such information as their freshman studying radio, grades, which schools act elevision and f i lm, L u - cepted them and where they kasiewicz said she's not sure chose to go. That informathe site added much value tion helps to predict another other than to stress her out. student's chances of getting ed. Now a

Do your hands turn white, blue, purple or transparent when cold? Are the back of your hands shiny with no lines on your knuckles? Do you have unexplained weight loss? Do you experience shortness of breath? Do you have swallowing difficulties or heartburn?

out in the Civil Asset Forfei-

639 seizures in 2012, up from ture Reform Act, passed in 114 in 2005. Only one in five 2000 tocurb abuses. The office were prosecuted as a criminal

case. The practice has swept up dairy farmers in Maryland, an Army sergeant in Virginia saving for his children's college

of the federal attorney for the Eastern District of New York said the law's timeline did not

If you areexperiencing any one ormoreof thesesymptoms, it may be anautoimmune diseasecalled Scleroderma.Call your doctor for an appointmentwith documentedsymptoms as soon aspossible to either rule out or confirm Sclerodermadiagnosis.

apply in this case. The federal attorney's office said that parties often voluntarily negoeducation and Hinders, 67, who tiated to avoid going to court has borrowed money, strained and that Joseph Potashnik, her credit cards and taken out the Hirsches' first lawyer, had a second mortgage to keep her been engaged in talks until just restaurant going. a few months ago. But PotashHer money was seized un-

"I don't think they're really

nal charges are filed. Law en- interested in anything," Potforcement agencies get to keep ashnik said of the prosecutors. a shareofwhatever isforfeited.

for moreinfovisit www.sclerodermalnlel.orl

nik said he had spent that time

der an increasingly controver- trying, to no avail, to show that sial area of law known as civil the brothers were innocent. asset forfeiture, which allows They even paid a forensic aclaw enforcement agents to take counting firm $25,000 to check property they suspect of being the books. tied to crime even if no crimi-

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Bi-County has s urvived Owners who are caught up in structuring cases often can- only because longtime vendors not afford to fight. The median amount seized by the IRS was

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have extended credit — one is

owed almost $300,000, Hirsch

$34,000, according to the Insti- said. 7wice, the government tute for Justice analysis, while

has made settlement offers that

legal costs can easily mount to would require the brothers to $20,000 or more. give up an "excessive" portion Under the Bank S ecrecy of the money, according to a Act, banks and other financial new court filing. "We're just hanging on as a institutions must report cash deposits greater than $10,000. family here," Hirsch said. "We But since many criminals are weren't going to take a settleaware of t h a t r e quirement, ment because I was not guilty." banks also are supposed to Army Sgt. Jeff Cortazzo

report any suspicious trans- of Arlington, Virginia, began actions, including deposit pat- saving for his daughters' colterns below $10,000. Last year, lege costs during the financial banksfiled more than 700,000 crisis, when many banks were suspicious activity reports, failing. He stored cash first which are reviewed by more in his basement and then in than 100 multiagency task a safe-deposit box. All of the forces. money came from his payThere is nothing illegal checks, he said, but he worried about depositing less than that when he finally deposited $10,000 unless it is done spe- it in a bank he would be forced cifically to evade the reporting to pay taxes on the money a requirement. But often a mere second time. So he asked the bank statement is enough for

investigators to obtain a seizure warrant. In one Long Island case, the police submitted

bank teller what to do.

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"She said: 'Oh, that's easy. You just have to deposit less than $10,000.'" The government seized

almost a year's worth of daily deposits by a business, rang- $66,000; settling cost Cortazzo ing from $5,550 to $9,910. The $21,000. As a result, the eldest officer wrote in his warrant af- of his three daughters had to fidavit that based on his train- delay college by a year. ing and experience, the pattern "is consistent with structur-

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Fan fiction

The authors of the original works, of course, have mixed reactions. Most notably: J.K.

Continued from A1 IhNIICWM W CI INSlt

What used to be a disre-

Rowling doesn't mind if you

garded copyright nightmare is a new youth-friendly approach for publishers. "Fan fiction has absolutely become part of the fiber of

are creative with her characters, but George R.R. Martin

what we publish," said Jen-

nifer Bergstrom, vice president and publisher of Gallery The Washington Post

A Belgian chocolate company is the latest to decide ISIS might not be such a good name — but it hasn't rebranded its website yet.

Chocolate company ISIS is rebranding By ishaan Tharoor The Washington Post

The ravages of the Islamic State have been one of the dominant news stories of 2014.

ters. "Had we known there was a terrorist organization with the same name, we would have never chosen that."

According to Reuters, the But before this year, few were chocolate company makes even aware of the organiza-

more than 5,000 tons of choco-

Books, a division of Simon &

Schuster. "This is changing at a time when traditional publishing needs it most." Copyright issues can be circumnavigated by changing names and details, polishing up the prose and voila! a book is in publishers' h ands that already has a

built-in audience. What was once "Twilight" fan fiction is reshaped into "the Gabriel

Trilogy" (850,000 copies sold, per the publisher), the "Beautiful Bastard" series (I million sold) and the infamous "Fifty Shades Of Grey" (100 million and counting). And that's just

much about how the author

self-identifiestheirwork."

"After" author Todd wa s insistent that Simon & Schuster stay loyal to her fan fiction base. At first, she tried

the start. Last week, Simon & Schuster took that boy band fan

main characters of "After" into their lives again, because are inspired by the five mem- we didn't get enough the first

on its first print run and in

its name late last year to ISIS,

bers of One Direction.

will publish before March. Paramount Pictures has al-

Libeert told Reuters.

whichalsohappenstobeanacThe company willnow be ronym popularl y used to refer called "Libeert," the name of to the Islamic State. Italo Suisse the family which owns and was the company's name since

1923, reflecting the European chocolate-making traditions it

runs it.

The chocolate maker is not the only ISIS to be forced into

sought to bring to Belgium. rebranding. Earlier this year, "We chose ISIS as that was a mobile wallet app, originalthe brandname of our pralines ly called Isis, renamed itself and tablets," Libeert told Reu- Softcard.

Properties

Separately, as the city is assembling a citizen task force

Continued from A1 to look in to the vacation home The city is currently assem- rental issue, new applicants are bling a citizen task force to look being more dosely scrutinized. into the various aspects of sin- Applications for city approval gle-familyhomes beingused as have surged since residents of vacation rentals, a practice that

neighborhoods most affected

has expanded rapidly in the by overnight rentals brought last two years. The houses are their complaints about noise, often marketed through online parking and a diminishing services like airbnb and VRBO. sense of community to the City But some residents of neigh- Council. borhoods where overnight Colin Stephens, the city's rentals are most prevalent have planning manager, said parksuggested they are degrading ing is increasingly a focus for neighborhood livability. his department. In some casAside from houses pur- es, the Planning Department chased using a mortgage with has learnedgarages claimed a second home rider,in other as off-street parking by vacainstances houses being used tion home rental operators are as overnight rentals were pur- filled with the owners' poschased using a mortgage with- sessions and not available to out a rider, but including lan- guests. Officially, an off-street guage requiring the buyer live parking space must be at least in the house for at least a year

story, called "After," is actu-

ally a special kind of fan fiction: "real person fiction." The

Written by

2 5 -year-old

Anna Todd, "After" was first published on Wattpad.com,

an online writing community where more than 75 million stories live. Copyright concerns are limited because, on that platform, Todd isn't profiting from her work. That's how fan fiction has livedforyears:separate from any exchange of cash or contract. Sites like Wattpad, Fanfiction.net and A r c hiveOfOu-

rOwn.org are overflowing with entries for n umerous

books, movies, TV shows and plays from Edgar Allan Poe to "The Baby-Sitters Club," "The Devil Wears Prada" to Peter Rabbit.

e r i n " B a tman." While the "7wilight" author was able t o t r ansform his story into a t h r ee-part bestseller, the othe r s w erewritingfanfictionin w o r lds that Hwang said were "too integral" to the story. In

abhors it. to keep the names of the One Traditionally, p ublishers Direction band members as other words, you can change hadn't been so hot for it either. her characters' names. the name of Hogwarts, but "Fan fiction wasn't really "I felt like, 'Are you sure everyone will still know it is a word we thought of," said we have to do this? Can't we Hogwarts. Hwang had those Shaye Areheart, who former- just give Harry Styles all the authors write original books ly oversaw a division at Ran- money?'" Todd said in an i n stead. The only way for fan fiction dom House and now runs a interview. publishing course at ColumBut before long, Harry w r i ters to publish work that bia University. "It's very diffi- became Hardin. keeps the inspiration in plain view is cult to say how you would get Z ayn w a s Z e d , , to gain appropriate to turn another person's in- Louis was Logan, "The line iS tellectual property into your Niall was Nate and fI pt C/ggr permissions. The own. Liam was Landon, estate of Agatha The exception was for au- and they were just Christie, for examthors who had been dead college f r i ends, in SPiratiOn ple, re c ently gave for long enough (70 years, not b a ndmates. gI7dfgri approval to writer for most) that their work be- The only o ther f ~ Sophie H a nnah /~ comes part of the "public do- copyright-cont o create a m y smain." William Shakespeare cerned change was Vat ymuCh t ery n o vel starring and Jane Austen are two of the tattoo on the g g DUg lIDM? Chr i stie's famous the most common examples. stomach of Harry ~l < detective H ercule ~i "The books we love the Styles. Poirot. "I don't know a SB lf-ICfBAklflBS In 201 3,Amazon most are the ones where you close the book and you're lot of 20-year-old t j7~if ~DI.k " mad e i t p o ssible still t h inking a bout t h ose men who have a to make money characters," said Carrie Be- butterfly tattoo, so — Ashieigh w r i ting fan fiction bris, author of the "Mr. and w e had to change Gar d ner, head through a po r Mrs. Darcy Mysteries," in that," Todd said. of content and tal called Kindle which the main characters of N ow it's a t r e e . publis h ing at W o rlds. B u t th e Austen's beloved "Pride and A t ree t hat w i l l Wattpad company only has Prejudice" solve mysteries to- appear in a book permissions to gether. "We want to be drawn with 80,000 copies publish submitted

tion. Originally a splinter of late annually. aI-Qaida, it has shaken foreign But the mayhem and slaughgovernments in ways its former ter carried out by Islamic State parent never could. militants has compelled ISIS Among those who hadn't chocolates to change its name. heard of the terrorist group "We had international customwas Desiree Libeert, market- ers saying that they could no ing manager of Belgian choc- longer stockour chocolate as olate company Italo Suisse. consumers had only negative The chocolate maker changed associations with the name,"

fiction story and published it in ink-on-paper form. The

c o n tent for 24 "worlds." And

three sequels to "After" that a lthough that list includes big

time." That's what has made fan

n a m es such as "Pretty Little L i a r s " and K urt V onnegut,

fiction popular, even among established authors. English

ready bought the rights to the 24 fandoms is an incredibly small number compared with movie. crime w r iter P .D. J ames' The best-known fan fic- t h e unlimited creations on Austen-inspired book "Death tion success story is "Fifty mo s t fan fiction sites. Comes to Pemberley" became Shades of Grey," which began S u p porters ar e h o ping a BBC TV movie. (PBS is air- life as a Twilight fan fiction t hat the "After" success stoing the two-part show today seriescalled "Master of the ry clears the way for more than just fan fiction romance and Nov. 2). Scottish crime Universe." "If you take away the wrap- writers. writer Val McDermid's take "We've been talking about on "Northanger Abbey" was pings of fandom, you have published in April. to make sure the story can w h a t c omes next incessantThese books don't typical- stand by itself," said Cindy ly " said Bergstrom at Simon ly market themselves as fan Hwang, vice president and & Schuster."Ifeellikehorror fiction. Instead, they're "inexecutive editor at Berkley w i l l be it, maybe urban legspired by" or "a retelling." Books, a division of Penguin ends. Really any genre could "The line is not clear be- Random House. be what comes next." t ween inspiration and f a n Hwang is working with And i f t h ose fan fiction fiction," said Ashleigh Gard- t hree writers who came from spinoffs sell l i k e "Fifty ner, head of content and pub- fan fiction. One started i n Sh a d esofGrey"did? "Then," Bergstrom said, lishing at Wattpad, where the "Twilight" fandom, one "After" was written. "It's very in "Harry Potter" and anoth- "long may they live."

Rated an overall 5 stars" two years in a row. The only overall 5-star plan in Central Oregon.

I

I

i

i

il

9 feet by 20, Stephens said, but

after the sale is completed. the city hasn't typically verified Lisa Morawski, spokes- the size or availability of such woman with the Oregon De-

spaces. Instead, the applicant's

partment of Consumer and

daim of available parking has beencomparedwith im ageson although lenders can declare Google Maps or the city's Geoborrowers in default for violat- graphic Information System ing the terms of their loanmaps. "That has not been our staninduding requiring immediate repayment of the loan — they dard in the past for these vaBusiness Services, said that

have little incentive to do so.

cation rentals," Stephens said.

ments on time, it may not be an

fine — now, there's a little more

issue," Morawski said. Morawski said it can be financially advantageous for a

scrutiny." City code requires one parking space per bedroom for va-

"In reality, if the borrower "For a number of years, we said is paying their mortgage pay- if you can park there, you're

borrower to misstate their in-

cation home rentals, however,

tentions when buying a property. Shesaid as ageneralrule, loansforafirstorsecond home carry similar interest rates,

up to half of that requirement

while a loan for an investment

space in the driveway and two

can be met with on-street park-

ing. A four-bedroom house with a single-car garage, a

propertywillhave a rate I to 2~/~ on-street spaces each at least percent higher. 24 feet long and adjoining the Kevin Christensen, govern- property would be in compliment affairs director for the Or- ance with the city standard. egon BankersAssociation,said Skidmore said that once the he imagines lenders would con- city has its roughly 15-member sider misrepresentation by bor- vacation home rental task force rowers on a case-by-case basis. in place, it can begin digging Thosewho are usingahouse as into the particulars of how the a full-time rental property in vi- city code might be changed. A olation of lending terms would cap on the number of overnight likely receive greater scrutiny rentals per block or per neighthan someone who rents their borhood could be considered, home out for a few weeks a he said, or a requirement that year, he said. overnight rental operators periChristensen said with t he odically renewtheir application housing crash and ensuing with the city. w ave of foreclosuresjusta few Skidmore said the city's legal years in the past, lenders aren't department has suggested that all that eager to go after bor-

a moratorium on new vacation

rowers who are making their payments.

home rental applications would open the city up to legal chal"After what we've come off lenges. He said the recent spike of, especially in Bend, I think in applications won't necessarithere's a high sensitivity to try- ly lead to a jump in the number ing to work with customers," of homes being rented nightly — many homeowners are Christensen said. Bend Assistant City Man- likely to find operating a rentager Jon Skidmore said the al property a bigger job than city doesn't get involved in the they're willingto take on. "It's an intense obligation, relationship between property owners and their lenders when and so I'm wondering if people considering a vacation home arelookingto obtainthe entitlerental application. ment and it's just an entitlement "That's a risk they're going to have in place — whether they to either be willing or not will- use it is another question," he ing to take, depending on their sald. relationship with their lender,"

he said.

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbuIIetin.com

A7

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AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

ur s' a

Parliamentary elections oin e en ence? show political turmoil

By Azam Ahmed and Clifford Krauss

gas with increasing amounts of cheaper gas piped from neighboring Kurdistan. Kurdish gas also could help Europe to reduce its dependence on Russian energy. So far the United States and

New York Times News Service

KIRKUK, Iraq — Roughly two dozen huge oil tankers are idly turning figure-eights around the Mediterranean or

on the high seas, loaded with oil pumped from wells in Iraqi

gain," said Carlos Pascual, the formerState Department spe-

on the brink of collapse. For many supporters of SVITLOVODSK, Ukraine the street protests that top— The f i rst shock came pled Yanukovych, the elecl ast month, when tw o o f tions were envisioned as a Ukraine's best-known jour- final step in transforming the nalists, Sergii Leshchenko governmentfrom an opaque and Mustafa Nayyem, in- kleptocracy beholden to the vestigative reporters with a president, his oligarch backseemingly boundless zeal for ers and the Kremlin, to a exposing corruption and hy- transparent, reform-minded, pocrisy at the highest levels pro-Western administration of government, announced with a parliament accountthey were jumping the fence able to the people. Events to run for parliament as part here, however, suggest that

cial envoy and coordinator for

of President Petro Poroshen-

transformation may take a lot

ing not to promote themselves

the industrial titans known

other nations have demurred

at the prospect of exporting Kurdish oil and gas, concerned that undercutting Baghdad's

Kurdistan but with nowhere to

legally offload it. The oil fleet is a costly gam-

authority will doom attempts

ble, to the tune of millions in

to keep the country together.

fees each month, by Kurdish officials who are desperately trying to sell the oil abroad, even asthe Iraqi government

"The calculus for the United States is to find a solution that

allows the Iraqi government as well as the Kurdistan region to

and the U n ited States are blocking their attempts.

Andrea Bruce/New YorkTimes NewsService

A water park on the outskirts of lrbil, Iraq, shows how oil revenue To Iraqi officials, the tankers has bolstered the economy and financed amenities. Kurdish are ~ g co n traband — oil officials are desperately trying to sell oil abroad, even as the Iraqi that by law should be marketed government and the United States block their attempts.

only by the Iraqi Oil Ministry, with the profits split: 83 percent

for the Baghdad government, U .S. officials wh o w a n t July, the Kurds took control 17 percent for the Kurdish au- Kurdistan to remain a part of of Kirkuk, a city with the second-largest oil deposits in the tonomous government in the Iraq, and want the Kurdish north. peshmerga to keep fighting country. Kurdish officials have Fearing that Iraqi Kurdis- Islamic State militants where said publicly that they hope tan will use oil profits to fuel a the Iraqi Army cannot, are to start pumping from those bid for independence, the Iraqi pressing the two sides to work fields, too. governmenthas threatened to things out. Negotiations are And there are potential buysue any country or company underway, but officials with ers, though few have signaled that buys Kurdish oil, and has knowledge of the talks say in publidy that they are willing to cut off national funding for the private that little progress has brave Americanire and Iraqi Kurdish region. been made. legal action to follow through. The Kurds have kept pumpKurdish politicians have givIn June, several news oring oil anyway, betting that en the new Iraqi prime minis- ganizations reported that one their American allies, who ter, Haider al-Abadi, roughly tanker offloaded its Kurdish have pressured them to abide another month to settle, re- oil at an Israeli port. And Iraqi by the Iraqi oil law, will soften storing payments and giving offici als say there have been their stance, and that buyers

them more freedom to market

will come forward. But as oil priceshave plummeted, and as

oil, or they will not participate in the Iraqi government.

Al-Abadi has said he is willing refused to budge, the odds are to compromise, but so must the getting longer by the day. Kurds. For now, Kurdish officials Though estimates of Kurdare stickingto along-term view ish oil reserves vary widely, the of the confrontation, despite its area under Kurdish control is high cost at a time when the believed to represent about 17 government is all but broke. percentof Iraq's oilreserves of They believe that, eventually, 141 billion barrels. the oil glut this fall will end, Kurdistan is exporting at and that international buy- least 280,000 barrels of oil per ers will need Kurdish crude day through apipeline to aport and support their nationalist and holding facility at Ceyhan, aspirations. Turkey, where the tankers have "The ships going out to the been loaded. Kurdish officials international seas are testing say they plan to increase that to the waters," said Khalid Salih, a half million barrels a day by a former senioradviser to the the end of the year. Iraq and the United States have

Kurdish Ministry of Natural

Resources. "Suddenly, you will see and hear breakthroughs."

After the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, swept

through northwestern Iraq in

black-market buyers for Kurdish oil, a tanker truck at a time,

the market for these exports to

but to defeat a candidate from as oligarchs, who finance their own party — a former the campaigns of parties and official in the Kiev mayor's candidates in exchange for office, whose place on the influence within the presiballot in this rural district dential administration and

see who might take them and at what price," Pascual said. "And the question is: Is this a

test of marketability of product to be able to increase leverage in negotiations between Irbil

and Baghdad, or is this the beginnings of a test to see if they might eventually obtain sufficient revenues to move toward independence?" Many Iraqi officials are convinced that the Kurds are seizing on the recent crisis, and the

longer dispute over oil, to edge closer to independence. Developments over the past

t r a ders w h o bear out that view. Kurdistan

has plowed through the objections of Baghdad to develop a ers had occasionally turned burgeoning oil industry, invitoff theirradio transponders, ing companies large and small suggesting that some may be to explore with generous terms secretly pumping their Kurdish that conflict with t hose oboil onto other tankers — a com- served in Iraq. "I think Iraqi Kurdish inmon oil-smuggling practice. That possibility makes the oil dependence is inevitable, at even more difficult to track or least eventually," said Michael Makovsky, a former Pentagon quantify. The Kurdish fields also official who dealt with Iraqi enproduce natural gas, another ergy policy during the George noted that several of the tank-

commodity of economic and

New York Times News Service

ko's coalition party. longer. An even bigger surprise is Ukrainian politics have how they have spent the final long been dominated by big week of the campaign: work- business interests, mainly

closely watch tanker traffic

political importance in the region. Turkey is increasingly dependent on gas for its energy needs,and it hopes to replace expensive Russian and Iranian

By David Herszenhom

international energy affairs, who left the post earlier this year. From the Kurdish perspective, "They are trying to test

in Turkey and Iran, among oth- few years, and the statements er places. of Kurdish officials, tend to S everal oi l

continuing in Ukraine

W. Bush administration. "They have natural allies in

the United States because of the oil companies involved in drilling there. And the 'Ihrks and

Europeans needtheir gas."

250 miles south of the capi-

tal, they say, was the result of corrupt back-room dealing approved by someone dose to Poroshenko, if not by the president himself. "We want to demonstrate

for control of some seats in parliament, called the Verk-

hovna Rada. The protests centered in

I n d ependence

Square, known as Maidan, did not change that, at least notyet.

"The voting system is the same as it was two years we are not going to tolerate ago," Leshchenko said. "Olithis corrupt c onspiracy," garchs in Ukraine did not Leshchenko said, sitting in give up after Maidan. They the passenger seat of a white are still v e r y i n fl uential SUV with a large red decal players." that said "Put a Stop to CorThe ballot today includes rupt Politicians" plastered on fresh options, and the parliaits front hood. Sounding gen- ment to be formed later this uinely torn, he added, "The year is expected to reflect most difficult part for us to ac- that. cept was that we were going There is a new party called to fight against Poroshenko." Self-Help, led by Andriy SaThat such infighting would dovyi, the mayor of Lviv, start so fast and so furiously the biggest city in western — even before today's voteUkraine, and Hannah Hopoffers a glimpse of just how ko, a young civic activist. tumultuous politics remain Some previously obscure in Ukraine eight months af- parties, like Civil Position, ter the ouster of President led by Anatoly Hrytsenko, a Viktor Yanukovych, with a former defense minister, and war against pro-Russian sep- the populist Radical Party aratists still simmering in the ledby aflam boyant lawmakeast, hundreds of thousands er, Oleh Lyashko, also have a of people displaced fromtheir chance of crossing the 5 perhomes, Crimea annexed by cent threshold for forming a Russia and an economy ever faction in parliament. to society and to our political party at the same time that

We've always talked, to our girls about the importance and Sigl l i f

e

i C B 7108 Of v o t i Il g .

s Ou,

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av e

to re qXster Xn to o ne 0 ~ the two major garties ju.st to have a voi,ce in the grimaries. The nu.mbers of geogle registering as Democrats and, Hepublicans are shrinking and the need for closed garty grimary elections is too. Im voting Ye S

0 < Me B s ll X' e

90

Kem TO dd So ~iss Con~r Small business development program administrator, Mother of 2

An Imyortant Message from Indeyendent Voters of Oregon

USZ YOU

VOTE TO GIVEEV YONE THZ RISHT TO VOTZ T o get i n v o l v e d

o fo v isi t

o

Connect with us!

i" f ormsi;ion,g independent oregon

us online at

IndependentOregon.org

+

OIndependentOreg

P aid For 3 y

qndependentvoting.org Jacqueline Salit, President 225 Broadway, Suite 2010, NY, NY10007


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

BRIEFING Reesor recovering from transplant Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Dan Reesor isslowly recovering from liver transplant surgery. The procedureFriday at Ronald ReaganUCLA Medical Center took more than12 hours, Vicki Kipp, a family friend and colleague,saidSaturday. He remains in theintensive careunit, is alert and knowswho isthere, according to aFacebook post from Reesor's sister, SharonTrue,who is at UCLAwith him. His progress is good,but it will be a"very slow long recovery andthings can change veryquickly. We are feeling goodthat at this time things are looking positive!" True wrote. "Thereare more tubes thanyoucould ever imaginewhich is normal after receiving a transplant." Kippemailed True's post to TheBulletin. "He's hanging in there. We're proudof him," Kipp said. Reesor wasdiagnosed with an inflammatory liver diseaseandliver cancerin Januaryand for the better part of five months fought to have his procedurecovered by county insurance. After the approvalcame through, hewas placed on the national transplant list Oct. 14, Kippsaid. He wasalreadyat UCLA for aprocedure to put a stent in abile duct in his liver whena liver becameavailable for transplantation.

DESCHUTES COUNTY

Ric ar sonma esappearanceat county's Repu lican hea quarters By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Gubernatorial candidate

Dennis Richardson made a quick stop in Bend on Saturday, rallying with supporters

win a record fourth term. While most polling has shown Richardson trailing Kitzhaber for most of the year, a recent poll conduct-

porte dly a partner in a scheme Richardson was jubilant. "What a day, what a day, to operate a marijuana grow site in northeast Washington, what a time in history," he said, and is suspected by some of shaking hands with supporters having violated state waving signs outside the Reethics laws to grow publicans' office. "We have a

gn,

Central Point, is seekingto

ed for Portland TV station KATU sugher environmental gested he may now consulting business be leading, at least NOV . 4 since Kitzhaber was among voters who say FLECTION la st elected in 2010. they've been closely Richardson, for his following the news part, has demanded about Kitzhaber's fiancee, Cyl- a federal investigation into via Hayes. possible ethics violations by Hayes recently admitted to K i t zhaber and Hayes. being paid $5,000 to marry an Arri v ing at the Republican

unseat Democratic Gov. John

Ethiopian man who was seek-

Kitzhaber, who is looking to

ing U.S. citizenship, was re-

at the Deschutes

County Republican headquarters 10 days ahead of the election. Ric h a rdson, a six-term member of the state House from Richardson

chance to restore our state!"

Inside, Richardson addressed a crowd of 40 to 50 for about half an hour. He took aim at Kitzhaber for the gover-

nor's part in the fumbled roll-

out of the Cover Oregon website and his failure to secure an

agreement with Washington leaders on a new bridge across h e a dquarters on Third Street the Columbia River. sho r tly after noon Saturday, SeeRichardson/B5

X-DERBY AT THE LIBRARY

Ll 1V

in

r

Small dogshave new place to play A new off-leash area for small dogs is openin Pine Nursery Park. It's a separate space within the BobWenger Memorial Off-Leash Area, according to a news releasefrom the Bend Park & Recreation

the Old Mill District. A

small dog is defined as less than 25 poundsand less than15 inchesat the shoulder, according to the park district. To view amapand list of all off-leash parks in Bend, visit to www. bendparksandrec.org. — Bulletin staff reports

ballot.

BALLOTS • County election offices are reporting the following ballot returns: Crook................... 16.3% Deschutes............14.0% Jefferson..............17.4% Oregon .................12.4% • Mail your ballot by Thursday, Oct. 30.

Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!

1Vl

Call n reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver.................541-617-7831 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347 D.c....................... 202-662-7456

Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-383-0367 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Submissions • Letters andopinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Mickel's Worth or In MyView P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditonals page inside. Contact. 541 383 0358

• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbul letin.com, with acivicCalendara inthesublect and includeacontact name and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School newsandnotes:

Meg Rouesos/The Bulletin

Connor Knapek, 12, places the derby car he built on the racing track at the Downtown Bend Public Library on Saturday. The High Desert Makers Mill provided the space and supplies for kids to build and race their cars.

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Nathaniel Mills and Connor Knapek hovered over a table

See video coverage on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.com/derbycnrs

scattered with dog toys, rubber ducks, clothespins and metal Kids and parents wandered bits of every variety, looking through the library's Brooks for just the right thing to com- Room throughout the afterplete their X-Derby cars. noon, building small cars and The X-Derby on Saturday racing them on a sloped, threeat the Downtown Bend Public lane track. Library, hosted by High DesBrees said the High Desert ert Makers, is similar to the M akers are aimingto provide Cub Scout's Pinewood Derby, an organization — and, hopebut with fewer restrictions, ac- fully soon, a physical space — where inventors, tinkerers, cording to High Desert Makers President Scot Brees. artists, hobbyists and others

who simply enjoy building and repairing things can come together. By sharing tools, expertise and ideas, Brees said the whole can be stronger than the sum of its parts. Back from a few test runs down the track, Nathaniel and Connor traded observations

and got to work on another round of modifications.

tried building anythingbefore Saturday. "It's really cool, because you justbuild whatever you want out of it, and there's all these weird supplies here," he said. Nathaniel, also 12 and from Bend, was starting over with an all-new car, crafted from a

smaller block of wood. Positioning the block in a mitre box

Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academicac hievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunioninfoto bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details onthe Obituariespage inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

• Community events: Email events tocommunitylife@bendbulletin comor click on "Submit anEvent" online at bendbulletin.com. Details on thecalendar page inside. Contact: 541-383-0351

to saw down the nose, he said

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries:

bristling with an assortment

carsseemed betterable to carry their speed across the flat

The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-633-2117

of purely decorative plastic parts. He said he hadn't really

part of the track. See Derby/B5

Connor, 12 and from Bend,

said he was lookingto add more weight to his car, already

he'd observed that the lighter

YESTERDAY

District.

The approximately 17,500-square-footarea is fully fencedandfeatures both turf andnatural areas. It is located atthe Wenger area'snorthwest corner bytheparking lot and pickleball court complexand isaccessiblevia NE Purcell Boulevardor YeomanRoad. It's the third of Bend's seven off-leash areas to have asection just for small dogs. The district's other small dog areas are atPonderosa Park in southeast Bend and Riverbend Park in

The Nov. 4 election serves as a general election for a variety of statewide offices. Local races and measures will also be on the

The Bulletin

Missing Bend teen is found A Bendteenager reported as arunaway Thursday wasfound about noon Saturday,according to BendPolice. Shannia Kay-Marie Martinez, 14, was spotted lying in afield near SE15th Street and Lostine Circle bya retired Bendpolice officer and his wife, whowere traveling in thearea. The teenwastaken to St. Charles Bendfor an evaluation. Shehadbeen reported ashaving run away from hersoutheast Bend homearound1 p.m. Thursday.Shehas mental health issues that require medication, police said.

NOVEMBER ELECTION

LOng ago, bOOZ e WaSthe deVil and NaZiSWere Our'friendS' Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

100 YEARSAGO For the week ending Oct. 25, 1914

An editorial by Oswald West, Governor of Oregon Oregon should go dry because there does not exist a single reason on earth why it should stay wet. The war news from Europe

booze. We boast we are the greatest nation on earth, and in our

efforts to preserve this position we boast we must strive constantly to raise, or at least

maintain, the standard of our citizenship, and to accomplish this end we must unceasingly fight organized greed and graft, stamp out poverty, vice and crime, protect the home

and make life more pleasant for those who have been less fortunate than others. It is

carnage, past, present and

idle, however, to talk of progress along those lines so long as King Alcohol occupies the throne. Who grabs the pay check

future, will not prove a drop

from the honest workman on

in the bucket compared with the ravages which are being made throughout the land by

Saturday night and makes his wife and little ones go hungry?

strikes us with horror; yet this great war, with all its

Mr. Booze. Who sows the seeds of pov-

devil I think of booze, and whenever I think of booze I

erty and distress everywhere? think of the devil, for the devil Mr. Booze. Who loads upon us most of

our tax burdens? Mr. Booze. The Wets protest against

our voting the state dry because it will close Paul Wessinger's brewery and be the equivalent to the confiscation of his property, but they

is booze and booze is hell. Old Booze is an outlaw who

has been long pursued but never subdued. At no time

and under no circumstances should he be given quarter, and it is the duty of every

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending Oct. 25, 1939

Germanyseeksreleaseof American vessel internedin Northern Russian port Germany emphasized Nazi friendship for the Americas today as the United States

good citizen to stand ready to sand-bag him whenever he senate neared a vote on the sticks his head in sight. All neutrality act revisions. do not tell you how the brewOregon will have a chance to In Berlin, it was disclosed sand-bag him on November 3, that the German government ery was built through the ruination of homes and the and for the Lord's sake let us is negotiating with Soviet Rusconfiscation of pay checks. make a good job of it. sia regarding the American They do not tell you that IF YOU BELIEVE WITH freighter City of Flint, capevery brick in the building GOVERNOR WEST, VOTE tured as a prize by a German represents a broken heart and OREGON DRY, 332 X YES warship in the Atlantic but the color of the building is emPaid advertisement by the taken to the soviet's Kola Bay blematical of the blood which Committee of One Hundred because of the allied North — 745 Morgan Building, Port- sea blockade. has dripped therefrom. Whenever I think of the land, Oregon. SeeYesterday/B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

SATURDAY'S STORM

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ENDA H

TODAY PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a petting zoo, hay rides, pony rides and train rides; free admission, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch. net or 541-548-1432. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN PATCH:An 8-acre Godzilla corn maze with pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkin cannons, zoo train, pony rides and more;

„Il I R RSR I

HGUSIWARWIRG

GIFTS-

f,,'/

$7.50, $5.50ages6-11,free ages

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Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Blustery winds raked Central Oregon on Saturday, blowing down trees such as this one that fell in the

morning on the Nicole Michelle Premier HomeDecor Boutique on Newport Avenue in Bend. Thewind and downed trees also took out power lines, creating scattered outages. More than1,700 Midstate Electric Cooperative customers were without power, as were nearly 750 served by Central Electric Cooperative. Wind gusts hit 54 mph at the Bend Airport at 2:35 p.m., 51 at Redmond Airport at about 1 p.m. and 45 mph at 3:25 p.m. in La Pine, according to the National Weather Service.

Yesterday

reorganization which saved hundreds of millions of dollars. He has left a legacy of

Steve Terzian grew up in the

Bay Area, and when the earth Continued from B1 started to move under his seat The United States had indi- literature which is profound. he knew what was happening. cated that a request would be Few public officials have been Even so, he was surprised at m ade to Russia for release of so vilified, yet he lived to see how long the tremor lasted. "The most frightening thing the freighter because it was his place in history as the in a neutral port and devel- great humanitarian securely to me was the duration. It wasn't one of those over-withopments indicated that the re-established." Nazis would not oppose such Hoover lived in Newberg quick type of things," Terzian action. during his boyhood. He at- said today after returning to A similarly friendly posi- tended Pacific Academy, now his job as a Bend firefighter. tion had been taken by Nazi George Fox College, in NewForeign Minister Joachim berg.He alsoresidedin Salem, Sunriver woman recalls'06 von Ribbentrop in his speech Hoover was honored by quake at Danzig, when he charged the community at a special More than 83 years have the British government with celebration marking his 82nd passed since Ethel Ferrin, then deliberately fomenting war birthday. a girl of 12, survived the great and assertedthat the French

While a resident of New-

people were opposed to the berg, Hoover lived with his unconflict. cle, Dr. Henry Minthorn. Ribbentrop had emphasized During the 1932 presidenthat a quarrel between the tial campaign, Hatfield disUnited States and Germany tributed Hoover campaign was "impossible." literature. Hatfield has since Ribbentrop's speech, nev- referred to it as his first politertheless, appeared to have

ended any immediate possibility of a new peace move in Europe. Germany was reported in London to be devoting all energies toward assuring a steady supply of raw materials

ical activity.

A bust of Hoover was pre-

San Francisco earthquake of

1906. But the sights, sounds and even smells of that long-ago event came rushing back to the 96-year-old Sunriver resident this past week.

"It was around 5 a.m. when it happened," recalled Ferrin of the 1906 quake which

sented to Hatfield at the Republican National Convention in San Francisco. The bust

killed hundreds and left about 300,000 homeless.

was a gift from the governor's

Ferrin's family was living in a third floor flat one block

staff on his 42nd birthday.

from soviet Russia and to have

agreed to help build up the so- Hoover was nostranger to

At the time of the quake,

on the fortunes of Jews last

Bend area

Pilot Butte Inn. Generally on

/

5 and younger for Corn Maize; $2.50 for most other activities;10 Andy Tullis/The Bulletin a.m.-7 p.m.,pumpkin patchopen A crate full of pumpkins, squash and gourds await visitors at Smith until 6 p.m.; Smith Rock Ranch, Rock Ranch. There's still time to pick up some autumn produce 1250 NE Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; and visit the Corn Maize and pumpkin patch. www.smithrockranch.com or 541-504-1414. "FREE FALL": Film screening and seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street MONSTERDASHSKRACE: Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., for LGBT Stars and Rainbow Featuring a 5Kand10K race and a 'Little Monster' mile, costumes Movie Night; $5; 6 p.m.; Volcanic Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, are encouraged;$20-$25for 5K Bend; www.ladyvalorfilm.com or and10K, $12 for Little Monster DANIEL BOLING:The folk musician 541-323-1881. mile, registration required;10 from New Mexico performs, a.m.; Highland Magnet School, "NATIONALTHEATRELIVE: with Bill Valenti; $15 suggested 701 NW Newport Ave., Bend; FRANKENSTEIN":Danny Boyle donation, registration suggested; www.fleetfeetbend.com/events/ directs this version of the classic 6:30 p.m., potluck starts at monsterdash or 541-389-1601. tale of Dr. Victor Frankenstein and 5:30 p.m.; The Glen at Newport his creation; $15; 7 p.m.; Regal "BOLSHOIBALLET:LEGEND OF Hills, 1019 NWStannium Drive, LOVE":Broadcast performance Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 Bend; houseconcertsintheglen© SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; from Russia of the balletabout bendbroadband.com or 541-312-2901. forbidden love and self-sacrifice; 541-480-8830. $18, $15 for seniors and children; 12:55 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium CIRQUEZUMAZUMA: AnAfricanstyle circus troupe performs; 16 8 IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse $27-$42 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; TUESDAY Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., "MURDER'S IN THEHEIR": A PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a Bend; www.towertheatre.org or murder mystery based on Clue pumpkin patch, petting zoo and 541-317-0700. in which the audience votes various activities; free admission, SLOW MOTIONCOWBOYS: The on the killer; $10 for Friday charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; California folk band performs; and Sunday shows, $30 for DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, Saturday dinner show; 2 p.m.; Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch. 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 net or 541-548-1432. Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook www.volcanictheatrepub.com or CLASSIC BOOKCLUB: Read 541-323-1881. Road; dramama©comcast.net or and discuss "The Tale of 541-706-1716. Genji" by Murasaki Shikibu; 6 MONDAY KNOW FRIGHT:BEYOND THE p.m.; Downtown Bend Public AMITYVILLE HORROR:Learn Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a about scary film fascination deschuteslibrary.org/bend, pumpkin patch, petting zoo and with Drew Beard, Portland State kevinb©deschuteslibrary.org or various activities; free admission, 541-312-1046. University film professor; free; charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; "AMERICANGOTHIC:A 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. JOURNEY INTOTHE SHADOWS Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch. deschuteslibrary.org/bend, OF AMERICANLITERATURE": net or 541-548-1432. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org or Alastair Morley Jaques will read 541-312-1032. CIRQUEZUMAZUMA: AnAfricansome of the scariest classic "REEFERMADNESS, THE style circus troupe performs; tales from American history and $27-$42plusfees;3 p.m.-SOLD MUSICAL":A musical comedy literature; $8 in advance plus fees, based on the1936film ofthe same OUT and 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, $10atthe door; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. name that takes a look at kids and 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. drug use; $22, $19 for students towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122.

from the Fairmont Hotel near

Chinatown. Everything in the pantry ended up on the floor. "My mother was running Such an agreement, proHerbert C. Hoover, ex-presviding Russia with needed ident of t h e U n i ted States around like a chicken with her mechanical aid, would be a who died today in New York, head cutoff,"recalled Ferrin. part of the price being paid was no stranger to the Bend Before long, Ferrin's family by Adolph Hitler for friend- country. — father, mother and 6-yearship with Moscow as his only After serving as 31st presi- old brother — were out on the hope of frustrating the allied dent, Mr. Hoover visited Bend street. The only thing they blockade. on a number of occasions, to carried away from the flat was fish on the upper Deschutes a clothes basket holding FerNazis raise tax on jews to 25 River, mostly in the Spring rin's favorite doll. percent River area. While here he To this day, Ferrin can't A 20 percentlevy imposed made his headquarters at the r emember what m ade h e r viet navy in return.

d

LEARN ABOUT TODAY'5 SOLUTIONS

FOR YOUR HIP/ICNEE PAIN

mother grab the basket with

November, in vengeance for

his fishing trips, he was ac- the doll instead of something the assassination of a N a zi companied by a guide. more valuable, and she still d iplomat, was raised to 2 5 There was no information laments the loss of the doll in a percent today in order that as to Mr. Hoover's luck on fireyearslater. "It was a terrifying thing," the total "fine" assessed on those trips. His good friend, J ews should reach the r e - the late Robert W. Sawyer, she said. "We were just so quired 1,000,000,000 marks e arly-day publisher of t h e scared we didn't know what ($400,000,000). B ulletin, instructed hi s r e - to do. The only thing we could The extra 5 percent is pay- porters not to interview the think of was to go down to the able November 15. ex-president. ferry." "He is here on a vacation The levy was imposed NoThough the fire had not yet vember 12, 1938 after the as- — let us not bother him," Mr. reached their area of the city, sassination at Paris of Ernst Sawyer said. as the family waited overvon Rath, German embassy But it was learned that Mr. night for the ferry, Ferrin resecretary, by 17-year-old Her- Hoovermade anumber ofnice calls smelling the rich aroma schel Grynszpan, a Polish Jew. catches on the upper river. But, of coffeebeans as the coffee mostly, he enjoyed the quiet of warehouses down by the bay drifting down the meandering burned. 50 YEARS AGO r iver and chatting with h i s Ferrin's family boarded a For the week ending companions. ferry and headed for Antioch, Oct. 25, 1964 Generally when in Oregon where the family stayed with on fishing trips, Mr. Hoover cousins for three months.

Hoover lived as a boyin Oregon

Oregon flags were flying at half-staff today in honor of former president Herbert Hoover,

who once lived at Newberg. Gov. Mark Hatfield said "as the only president who ever

also spent some time on the McKenzie.

happy towelcome him back for fishing and other special occasions.

"He fed millions of home-

After the family had ridden

the ferry out of San Francisco, the fire swept into Ferrin's

25 YEARS AGO For the week ending Oct. 25, 1989

had residence in Oregon, Mr. Tremors awe fans at selIes Hoover was held in especial Several Central Oregonian esteem here. We were always

::C

residents who were among the more than60,000 fans atCandlestick Park in San Francisco returned home Thursday

neighborhood, burning the family's flat and all of their belongings. Returning to the city after

three months, Ferrin re-entered a girl's school. Classes were held in a shack built among the ashes of the devastating fire. "When tragedy strikes there is no control over it," she

still awed at the experience

said. "It can come to anybody.

less after tw o w o rld w a r s, of ri ding out Tuesday's severe he blue-printed government earthquake.

We just have to make the best

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Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state. ol'.Us

Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral EuenRosenblttm, D 1162 Court St. NE

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

en ence

AROUND THE STATE

IYlBI18 e e

SOA OS OO

Medfordman dead after tree falls on tent — MedfordPolice officials said a mandied after a large tree fell on the tent where he was camping. Police andmedical personnel said they responded to a park in Medford at about 2:30 a.m. onSaturday after they were alerted about a tree falling on anoccupied tent. Authorities found a man insidethetent;hewaspronounceddeadatthescene.Themanwas identified as Joseph T.Jones. Officials said the incident was reported by two other people camping nearby. Theysay it appeared asthough the tree hadfallen due to the high winds overnight.

im

•TheDesertSundeveloper,whoonceli ved in Bend, was tostart a 10-year prisonterm

than seven years in prison. er penalty because he commitEgeland pleaded guilty to ted those crimes. He also was fraud charges in June 2010; he ordered to pay more than $13

The Associated Press

scandal and one of five facing

31 by a motorist he'd pulled

was one of 12 indicted in the

PORTLAND — A f o r mer over to assist. prison terms. Bend developer who was to The shooting broke a bone One of the first people to co-

start a 10-year prison sentence this summer in connection with a w i de-ranging Central Oregon mortgage fraud scheme wasarrested in Idaho after his son allegedly confessedhe shothisfatherto delay his prison term.

StOrmfOrCeS POrt OrfOrd CIOSure —A storm on the southern coast forced atemporary evacuation of Port Orford. The World newspaper reports the storm hammeredthetown's port on Saturday, destroying small buildings anddriving heavy waves crashing over the dock. After sandbagsdid not stop the waves, port authorities sent some fishermenand sightseers to the dry bluff abovethe port. No injuries were reported. Thepower of the wavesdid destroy a well-known seafood restaurant and mini-museum, as well as about 60feet of the boulder jetty jutting out into the bay. Asthe storm subsided, the port was reopened. Boatsmooredatthedockseemed unscathed.

million in restitution. Egeland was to report for

his prison sentence in May, but he convinced a judge to post-

in one of Egeland's legs and

operate when investigators be- pone his report date. gan probing Desert Sun's colThe Desert Sun fraud prilapse, Egeland began resisting marily involved two schemes, But investigators learned and trying to minimize his one centered on commercial that Egeland had taken out a role after he realized he would development projects and death an d d i smemberment have to plead guilty and go to the other a home construction-flipping scheme. policy just days before the prison, prosecutor said. shooting. After entering hi s g u ilty Desert Sun officials falsiThe Oregonian reports the Investigators also noted plea, Egeland got into more fied loan documents, securing U.S. Marshals Service ar- that the assailant who alleged- trouble: he was convicted in construction loans for projrested Shannon Egeland on ly shot Egeland did not steal Grant County of selling drugs ects that were never completThursday in Caldwell, Idaho, Egeland's wallet, cellphone or within 1,000 feet of a school ed and setting up investment after his teenage son con- BMW. and then perjured himself real estate portfolios. Egeland fessedthat his father ordered Egeland was vice president when testifying at his t rial, and Fitzsimons, the company the young man to shoot him in of the now-defunct Desert Sun resulting in another convic- president, used the ill-gotten the legs in July, a daybeforehe Development company, which tion. And last June, he was money to support luxurious was to report to prison. orchestrated tens of millions of convicted of theft for stealing lifestyles, prosecutors said. Egeland, 40, had moved to dollars in mortgage fraud be- $9 worth of goods from a Fred Egeland is lodged in the Caldwell from Oregon. tween 2004 and 2008. Compa- Meyer store. Multnomah County detention Egeland previously told au- ny president Tyler Fitzsimons At his sentencing in Janu- center, where he's being kept thorities he was shot on July was alsosentenced, to more ary, Egeland received a tough- on a federal hold. doctors later amputated one of his feet.

MOther arreSted — Police said they havearrested on criminal charges the mother of a 4-year-old boy who died in anapartment fire in the small Willamette Valley community of Keizer. Niya Breann Sosa-Martinez wasarrested early on Saturday on charges of second-degree manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, endangering the welfare of a minor, andsecond-degree child neglect. The 23-year-old Sosa-Martinez is also being held on a parole violation warrant. Authorities did not identify the cause of the fire or how Sosa-Martinez was involved in it. Officials had said the womanwas home with her son whenthe fire started, and shewas able to escape the flames. The4-year old was identified as Andre Joaquin Sosa. Preliminary results of an autopsy indicate the cause of his death was smoke inhalation.

Portland power lines downed — Strongwindsdownedtrees

Police puzzled bybiketheft increase in Corvallis

and power lines, cutting electricity to thousands of homes in the Portland metro areaand other parts of Oregon, officials said Saturday. About 28,000 customers lost power in Multnomah,Washington and Clackamascounties, Portland General Electric said. Another 12,000 customers lost power in Marion County. Officials said people and their pets should stay at least 30 feet from downedpower lines. If a power line falls on avehicle with people still inside, they should remain in the car as it may beenergized.

By Nathan Bruttell

lice Department in September,

Wood of the Corvallis Police

bike thefts reported to OSP in

DemOCratS fight fOr LegiSlature — Voters inMedford, Ash-

Corvallis Gazette-Times

more than doubling the 25 bicyde thefts reported to CPD in

Department.

September, down from 11 in

land, Corvallis and Albanyhave anunusually large amount of power in next month's election. Those cities form the core of two ultra-competitive state Senatedistricts that will help determine whether the Democrats can hold onto their control of the Legislature. A number of competitive districts in the Houseare also up for grabs, but Republicans face amuchtougher hurdle to grab the majority there. So all eyes are ontwo incumbents in the Senate: Democrat Alan Bates of Medford and Republican Betsy Close ofAlbany. Spending by thecandidates has already topped $1million in each of those races, and that doesn't count the moneyspent by independent groups. Several other races are also drawing big spending.

CORVALLIS — With thousands of students coming to

"It's not one specific area

September 2013. There were

September 2013. There were you can pin it down to. This is 22 bike thefts reported to OSP Corvallis in September, police 16 bike thefts reported to CPD a city-wide issue," he said. "It's through Oct. 21. expect some types of crime to through Oct. 16, on pace for 31, not like we're having a series To help curb the issue, the increase. But Corvallis Police which would be an increase of bike thefts in a particular CPD is planning to roll out a were surprised to see the num- from the 24bike thefts reported neighborhood." new electronic form that would ber of bike thefts double this to CPD in October 2013. One statistic complicating allow residents to take photos September compared to the While certain crimes tend the situation is that Oregon of their bikes and the serial same time lastyear. to occur in specific sections of State Police are reporting a de- numbers and registerthem There were 52 bicyde thefts the city, bike thefts occur all crease in bike thefts from calls with the police department in reported to the Corvallis Po- around the city, said Lt. Cord to campus. There were eight the event thebike is stolen.

92 is costliest measurein state history es to pay for children's health paign include natural foods P ORTLAND — A b a l l ot care. That measure failed. companies. Both the Califormeasure that would require Opponents of the GMO nia-based Dr. Bronner's Maglabels on genetically engi- labeling measure reported ic Soap and the nonprofit Cenneered foods is now the cost- $16.3 million in contributions, ter for Food Safety donated a liest ballot measure in Oregon w hich is m or e t han t w i ce little over $1 million. history. the contributions of supportSimilar measures in CalA $4.6 million contribution ers, who have received $6.6 ifornia and in Washington by an out-of-state agriculture million. state failed narrowly in recent giant has pushed the total past Their money comes most- years after millions of dollars the record set seven years ago. ly from large food producers were spent, mostly by labeling Both sides of the battle over and biotechnology compa- opponents. Measure 92 have raised and nies. According to f i l ings The anti-labeling camspent a record amount. Con- with the Oregon Secretary of paign spent about $45.6 miltributions to both campaigns State's office, the measure's lion in California, compared totaled $23 million — a num- single largest contribution to $8.7 million by labeling ber that's likely to grow in the — $4.6 million — was report- supporters. 10 days before the Nov. 4 elec- ed this week and came from In Washington state, where tion. The two sides reported Iowa-based ag r i businessthe ballot contest went on respending about $19 million. DuPont Pioneer. The St. Lou- cord as the costliest in state The previous record was is-based biotechnology firm history, opponents spent around $16 million collected Monsanto previously gave $4 about $22 million, compared and spent for a 2007 fight over million. to $9.8 million collected by the a proposed hike in tobacco taxBig donors to the Yes cam- pro-labeling groups.

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— From wire reports

-

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B4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

BITUARIES Susan Skinner Alves

DEATH 1VOTICES Charles D. Hoover, Sr., of Bend Aug. 29, 1924 - Oct. 15, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapetcom

Services: A private family service was held in Southern California. Contributions may be made to:

Westview Boys Home, 120 W. Broadway Street, Hollis, OK 73550.

Lyle Arthur Rorick, of Powell Butte Jan. 5, 1931 - Oct. 21, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will take place Friday, November 7, 2014 at 11:00 AM at Powell Butte Christian Church in Powell Butte.

Debi "The blue haired

barber" McCoy, of Prineville Dec. 3, 1962 - Oct. 15, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Debi's Life will be held Saturday, November 8, 2014, from 10:OOAM to1:00 PM, at the Prineville Vets Club, located at 405 N. Main Street in Prineville. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Clark H. Elliott, of Bend Nov. 18, 1946 - Oct. 15, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Per Clark's request, no services will be held. Contributions may be made to:

ALS Film Fund www.alsfilmfund.org

Richard Vinton "Dick" Finch, of Redmond Jan. 16, 1922 - Oct. 13, 2014 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to have served the family.

Please sign our guest

book at www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219. Services: At Dick's request he wanted no public service. His wife Jean of 72 years will hold a private family service at a later date. Contributions may be made

Brandon Michael Cole, of Milwaukie June 8, 1984 - Oct. 18, 2014 Arrangements: Omega Funeral and Cremation Service, 1-503-231-6030,

http://omegaservices.com Services: A memorial service will be held on November 1 at 2pm, Omega Funeraland Cremation Service 223 SE 122nd Ave., Portland. A second service will be held on November 9 at 2pm, Bend Masonic Lodge, 1036 NE 8th St., Bend.

Anthony Matthew Custer, of Redmond July 12, 1967 - Oct. 21, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will take place and will be announced at a later date.

to:

Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd Street, Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-548-7483.

Charlotte N. Allison, of The Dalles (Formerly of

Central Oregon) Jan. 27, 1924 - Oct. 22, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel & Gardens is handling the service and interment, 541-382-5592, www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: A memorial service will be held in Charlotte's honor at 11:00 AM on Thursday, October 30, 2014 in the Mausoleum Chapel at Deschutes Memorial Gardens in Bend,

Harold Wallace Palmer, of Madras Feb. 11, 1930 - Oct. 18, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private family gathering will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:

Hospice of Redmond 732 SW 23rd Street Redmond, Oregon 97756 www.hospiceofredmond.org

Scott D. Jackson

Jan. 4, 1960 - Oct. 16, 2014 S usan Alves, age 5 4 o f K lamath Fa l l s , Or e g o n , passed away on October 18, 2014 w it h h e r hu s b and, Robert Alves, by her side. Sue was born on January 4, 1960 in Phoenix, Arizona as an only child of Joan and

Leo Skinner. Sue grew up

in the M organ H i lls, Cahfornia area. On September 28, 1 992, S usan mar r i e d Rob e r t Alves in Reno, Nevada. Mr. and Mrs. Alves were longtime residents of the Bend/ Alfalfa, Oregon community. S he worked fo r o v e r t e n ears at t h e L e s S c hwab eadquarters in B end, Oregon. Her best times were always spent with her son, from r a i s in g ho r s e s t o helping him p a rticipate in h igh s c h oo l r o d eo . S h e loved team roping, leather work and beading projects, expressing her p assion of everything Western. Susan is survived by her husband, Robert G. A l ves; son, T r e v o r A l v es; steps ons, Anthony a n d C h a d Alves; t w o d a u g h ters-inl aw, K r i s t y A l v e s an d Mandy Alves; three grands ons, Colton, C a sey a n d C ory A l v e s ; a n d thr e e g randdaughters, W h i t n ey Brown, Whitlee Alves and Bentlee Alves. A celebration of life with friends and relatives will be p lanned fo r a l a t e r d a t e . D onations in l ieu o f fl o w ers can be made in Susan's honor at http://www.stjude. org. Further contact information available; call Kristy Alves 208-991-8555 or email alvesclan5lhotmail.com; or by mail, Robert Alves, 2509 Swan Lak e R d. , K l a math Falls, Oregon, 97603.

June 16, 1966 - October 16, 2014

DEATHS

Oregon.

Charles D. Hoover, Sr. Aug. 29, 1924 - Oct. 15, 2014 B orn i n Fai r y , Te x a s , C harles was r a i sed o n a ranch. Th e Dep r e ssion brought tough times to the f amily, w h ic h i n s t illed i n Charles a • dee p sense

of appre-

ciation for the simple t hings i n l ife, an d the importance of family and friends. Charles Hoover He served in Europe and th e P h ilippines in WWII w ith honor. A t the end of th e w ar , h e married Charlene Sidle, the l ove of h i s l i f e , an d t h ey enjoyed a blissful 62 years t ogether u n t i l Ch a r l e n e passed in 2009. Charles was a remarkable m an. He sh o w e red h i s family with love, and by his example taught the importance of l i ving w it h i n t egrity, e t h i cs , c o m p assion, e nerosity, k i n dness, a n d onor. E v eryone mattered to him. S t r a ngers became f riends, an d fr i e nd s b e came family. H e also found joy w o r k ing as a claims agent with Santa Fe Railway, serving the company and employe es with dedication for 4 5 y ears. In re t i r ement, h e was instrumental in b r i ngi ng Trader J oe's t o B e n d and, in recognition of his eff orts, wa s b e stowed w i t h t he honor o f c u t t in g t h e

Scott D o u glas J a c kson, survived by his loving wife D awn Jackson, f ou r c h i l dren an d t w o g r a n d kids, assed away c o m f ortably ast week in Bend, Oregon, s urrounded by h i s f a m i l y and Dec. 17, 1911 - Sept. 25, 2014 friends. Being near Bonnie (Pete) Ward, age Scott gave 1 02, passed away a t h e r everyone a h ome i n Be n d , O r egon. n ew apS he wa s b o r n i n Dee r reciation Trail, Colorado, the daugho r f in d ter of Joel and Susan Hunt. ing the silBonnie v er l i n i n g w as m a r in a l ong ried to Scott Jackson Atenos against Pete. They c ancer. He wa s n ev e r lived i n w ithout humor o r l o v e i n upstate every aspect of his day. New York Living his last years fully on a farm with his wife RV camping, f or sev - road tripping on their Hareral years. ley and laughing endlessly Bonnie Ward Atenos with best friends, he lived died February 1950. A few his life with intention, puryears later, Bonnie moved p ose, and a g i v i n g s p i r it to Bend w h er e he r s i ster t hat s h i ne s t h r o ug h h i s l ived. B o n ni e l a t e r m a r - children and grandchildren. ried Claud Ward who died He is respected and fondly in 2004. remembered by all who D uring her 55 y e ars li v enjoyed his company. i ng i n B end , Bo nn i e P lease join us fo r a c e l w orked a s a c l e r k , w a i t - ebration of his life 1:00 p.m. ress and office manager. Friday, October 31, 2014 at B onnie r e t i re d i n 198 0 6 2620 D i x o n L o o p Dr . , from Dr. Guyer's office. Bend, OR 97701. B onnie's f a v o r it e p a s t ime wa s b o w l i ng; w h i c h she was excellent at doing. She enjoyed audio books, c rafts, s e w i ng , qu i l t i n g , Contributions may be made to: One's favorite charity.

Bonnie (Pete)

Ward

ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world:

M onsignor W i lliam B . O'Brien, 90: Co-founder of Daytop Village, one of the first and most successful residential drug and alcohol treatment programs in the United States. Died on Oct. 19 in Scarsdale, New York.

Chen Ziming, 62: Chinese dissident and democracy advocate who was accused by

the government of fomenting the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989 and spent more

than a decade in prison and under house arrest. Died Tuesday in Beijing. Louise Daniel Hutchinson, 86: Scholar who gathered, documented and preserved African American history during13 years as director of research at the Smithsonian Institution's Anacostia Community Museum in Southeast Washington. Died Oct. 12 at

her home in Washington of vascular dementia. — From wire reports

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

lassifie 8

FEBRUARY rt> t 930 — OCTOBER r8> 2ot4

* ** * * * * * Harold Wallace Palmer of Madras, Oregon, passe dawa y eacefull p yathishomewithhisfamil yb yhissideon October 18,2014. He was 84.

Harold was born February 11, 1930 in Portland, Oregon, to Clarence and Lillian (Bradley) Palmer. In 1948, he enlisted in the USMC and proudly served until being honorably discharged in 1953. He then met and married Alta Mae Collinson in 1954, a union that lasted 48 years before her passing in 2002. In 2004, Harold married Dorris Sholes in Netarts, OR. Harold worked as a logger for 20 years, traveling up and down the West coast. After which time, he owned a number of businesses in the Willamette Valley; before opening Bud's Radiator Shop in Madras, OR in the early 1990s. Harold was an outdoor enthusiast and enjoyed hunting,

fishing and snowmobiling. He also enjoyed cooking, traveling, watching football and tying Ries. Harold leaves behind, his wife of 10 years, Dorris Palmer of Madras; five sons, Michael (wife Marylou) Palmer, of 1he Dalles, Jeffrey (wife Colleen) Palmer, of Redmond, Tim Kissler of North Dakota, David (wife Sheila) Kissler of Madras and Shawn (wife Rose) Kissler of Prineville; and two daughters, Linda (husband Patrick) DeClue of Las Vegas, NV and Christine (husband Bob) Crocker of Madras. Other survivors include 1 4 g r andchildren; one g reat grandchild and his faithful dog Mocha.

He was preceded in death by both parents and his first wife Alta Mae Palmer. Memorial contributions in Harold's memory may be made to

Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd St, Redmond, OR 97756. Autumn Funerals of Redmond is honored to serve the family. (541) 504-9485. www.autumnfunerals.net

Dolph Martin Ellingson September 15th, 1927Od:obev Zl, 2N4 Dolph was born Sept. 15th, 1927 to Alfred and Lols Ellingson ln Spokane, Washington. He was the youngest of three siblings. In Hermlston, Oregon he married Geraldine "Geri" Haynes on August 1, 1947. They had two children, Dennis Lee Ellingson and Laurie Jill Ellingson. In August of 2012 they celebrated 65 years of marriage. In their early years of marriage the young family lived ln a number of different places in Oregon. Dolph pursued a career with Safeway Grocery stores and worked for them for 39 years and was one of the most successful managers ln the district. When they retired they sold the family home, said goodbye to Oregon friends and moved to Green Valley, Arizona and never looked back at the snowy winters. They lived ln Green Valley for 25 years, the last two years at Silver Springs. ln their younger years they were avid cross-country skiers, and enjoyed riding blkes on long trips. Their other great joy was square dancing and danced across the country. One great accomplishment was hiking the Grand Canyon from the North Rim to the South Rim while ln their 60s! Dad loved the beach and laying ln the sun. Their church family was very important to them and they enjoyed spending a lot of time with them. He was preceded ln death by hls parents; hls wife, Geri; hls older brother, James Bradford; hls daughter, Laurie Ellingson Foley. He ls survived by his sister, Bette Lambler; hls son, Dennis Ellingson and hls wife Kit. Hls two grandchildren, Todd Ellingson and hls wife Lori, Wendy Wood and her husband Rob; one great grandson, Randy Wood and hls son-in-law Ridgeway "Dick" Foley. A private family memorial will be held ln Oregon at a later date. A memorial and celebration of life will be held at a later date at St. Francis of the Valley Episcopal Church, 600 S. LaCanada, Green Valley, AZ. There will be a reception to follow. In lieu of flowers donations can be made to the St. Francis Episcopal Church's Benevolent Fund.

Joseph Kesley 4ff arryman 1 912 - 2 0 1 4

playing card games and

s crabble. She was k n o w n for he r p o s i t iv e a t t i t ude, h er welcoming sm il e a n d her ability t o m ak e something out o f n o t h i ng. She t aught her family t o w o r k hard and laugh often. She was well loved and will be grand opening ribbon. His stories of his life were greatly missed. legendary a mong t h o se Bonnie was p r edeceased w ho k ne w h i m , a n d r e - by her parents, nine brothvealed the fascinating expe- e rs an d s i s t ers, a so n , r iences, j oys, a n d h e a r t - James Pete, a da u g h t er O livine K e lsey, an d f o u r b reaks that made him t h e grandchildren. man he was. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r The family deeply appredaughter, Clara ( R ichard) ciates the compassion and F ulkerson o f W a t e r t own, care provided by so m any in the medical community, NY, nine grandchildren, 14 11 including the Safeway Cen- great-grandchildren , great-great-grandchildren tury Drive pharmacy staff, fou r g r eat - g r eatDrs. Koch, West, Erickson, and r eat-grandchildren. S h i r Harris an d B r a i ch, a l o ng w ith their s t affs, an d t h e ey K i l p a t r ic k w as an doctors an d s t aff a t St . adopted daughter in spirit. Please send all donations Charles. to Heart 'n H ome Hospice Charles is survived by his sons, Charles Jr. and Peter; Li' Palliative Care, LLC, 920 t heir s p o uses, A v a an d S W E m k a y , S u i t e 1 0 4 , Pamela; and his grandchil- Bend OR 97702. d ren, R a ine, D a v id , a n d Brian. We are so grateful for the father and man he was. He blessed us all, and will live in our hearts forever. In lieu of f l owers, contri1000's Of Ads b utions may b e m a d e t o Every Day Westview Boys Home, 120 W. Broadway St, Hollis, OK 73550. Deschutes Memorial C hapel i s e n t r usted w i t h »ww.be»dt>utteti».com Mr. Hoover's arrangements.

Harold Wallace Palmer

In the early morning hours of October 12, 2014, Glenn departed this life to be ushered into his eternal home above. He was 43 years old.

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He lost his struggle against complications from Juvenile Diabetes at St. Charles Hospital ICU. Glenn was born in Greensburg, PA and was raised in Portland, OR, where he graduated Centennial High School in 1989. He furthered his education obtaining mi Associate Degree Mtd his Bachelor of Science. Glenn moved to Bend, OR in 2005 to be close to his parents in Camp Sherman. He worked for Lowe's for many years making lasting friendships with employees and customers alike. In June 2014, he began working for Bend Bulletin. He enjoyed being a part of the friendly staff. Glenn enjoyed reading and had a book collection, traveling, fishing, gardening and spending time with family and friends. He especially loved his long walks on the mountain trails with his beloved dog, Koda. He leaves behind fiancee, Heather Dames of Bend, OR, parents, Gene and Sharon Garton of Camp Sherman, OR, parents Ron and Melissa Chew of Windsor, CO, sister Laura Chew of Windsor, CO, brother Garrett Chew of Camp Sherman, OR, stepbrother Troy Garton of Redmond, OR and stepsistcrs Jessica and Stephanie Clark of Windsor, CO. 'Ihe family wishes to thank the staff at St. Charles ICU who took excellent care of Glenn. "Cometo rne, all ofyou B>ho are wearyand carryheavy burdens,and I willgiveyou rest." Matthew 11:28

Joseph Harryman, 102, of Saratoga, Wyoming, passedaway October15, 2014. oe was bornin Milner, Idaho on August , 1912 to William Hezekiah Harryman and Sarah Amanda Bradshaw. He left home atthe early age of six and worked for various farmers along the Snake River. He graduated from high school in Seattle, Washington. He later contracted polio and spent nine months in an iron lung. He worked his way down the coast to Southern California where he worked and managed Standard Oilgas stations. He then took advantage of an opportunity to work in Saudi Arabia building housing for the oil field workers, where he was paid in gold coins. Joe became friends with the King of Saudi Arabia, and they hunted gazelles in the desert. In 1939, he married Ferne Hawley in Richmond, Virginia, and honeymooned back to Saudi Arabia where their only child, Janet Harryman (Donelan) was born. In 1940, they escaped bombings of WWII and made it safely back to the United States and settled in Brentwood, California. Joe and a chemist friend started Olympic Paint and Varnish Company, where Joe thought up the idea of the paint-chip to aid in sales. Unfortunately he never patented the paint chip and never got the credit! Years following he ventured into the businesses of mobile home parks and liquor stores. Joe always enjoyed hunting, fishing, reading and walking. After the passing of his wife, Ferne, he relocated to Bend, Oregon and became an avid walker. He competed in the Pilot Butte Challenge Trail Run for many years and still holds the recordforthe 90+ age group! At the age of 95, he moved to Saratoga, Wyoming to live with his daughter, Janet Donelan. He continued his love of reading, but especially fishing, up to the end. He was precededin death by seven sisters and two brothers, his wife, Ferne, and grandson, Randy Donelan. He is survived by his daughter, Janet, two sisters, three grandchildren and eight yeat-grandchildren. Joe almost surpassed his yeat, yeat, great, great yandfather, David Harryman, who lived to be 103, in 1840! The family will hold services at a later date. Tributes and condolences may be offered online at www.carboncountyfuneralhome.com


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

BITUARIES

L ongtime r es i d en t o f C entral O r e g on , Na n c y R uel, surrounded by f a m i ly, p assed a wa y a t he r home in the Sunriver area on October 24, 2014, at the age of 71. A p r i v a t e m emo r i a l s ervice wil l b e h e l d a t a later date. Nancy w as b or n in Lincoln, NE, on December 1 9, 1942, t o L o u i e a n d Maxine Primeau. Nancy grew up with her paternal t win si s t e r an d t hr ee b rothers. She w a s a n u n with t h e S i s t er s o f St . J oseph o f Or a n g e , C A . While serving as a nun she attended several c o l l eges i n S o u t h er n Cal i f o r n i a e arning he r B a c helors i n Education. O n J un e 1 , 1 9 7 8 , s h e married Conrad M. Ruel in San Francisco, CA. Nancy worked as the Superintendent of Sundale School in California for many years. A fter mov i n g to t he Central Oregon area in 1 994, she w o r ke d a s t h e principal o f t h e N a t i o n al G uard's O r e g o n Y ou t h

Challenge Program in B end. N an c y enj o y e d reading, traveling, was the p resident o f th e DRR H Neighbors Club, and a past b oard m e m b e r o f t h e Sunriver Library. Survivors i n c l u d e her h usband; t w o s o n s , J o n

(wife,

Cha n d ra )

of

Redmond, OR, and James (wife, Kim ) o f L a n c aster, CA; h e r t h r e e b r o t h ers, John Primeau of Portland, OR, Tom Primeau of N ew Z ealand, and M i cha e l P rimeau o f E u g e ne, O R ; and t w o gr a n d c h i ldren. She is p r eceded in d e ath b y both h e r p a r e nts a n d her sister, Barbara. Memorial co n t r i b utions i n Nancy's n am e ca n b e m ade t o th e N ati o n a l G uard's O r e g o n Y ou t h Challenge Program, www.oycp.com Baird M e m o r ia l C h a p el i n La P in e i s h o n ored t o serve Mrs. Ruel's family.

By Gregory Katz and Sylvia Hui The Associated Press

LONDON —

"I think Central Oregon's going to be an important

Continued from B1

vote for the Republican cam-

paign," Knopp said. "He's of his address on education clearly got the momentum issues, restating his support now, so it's important for him for shop classes and trade to get out around the state schools, his proposal to fund and make his case." K-12 education before other John Philo, chairman of items in the state budget, and the Deschutes County Rehis opposition to the Com- publicans, said the Hayes epmon Core effort to estab- isode has given Richardson lish a nationwide standard an opportunity to present for what students at each himself as an alternative to grade level should be able to voters who are put off by polachieve in math and English. itics and politicians. "Central Oregon, I think Several local elected officials and candidates ap- what's obviously key for the peared at Richardson's ral- election is the nonaffiliated ly, including state Sen. Tim and independent voters that Knopp, R-Bend, state house are obviously disenchanted candidate Knute B u ehler, with the parties — I'd say, Redmond Mayor George En- both parties," Philo said.

Jack Bruce,Creamvocalist and bassist

Dec. 19, 1942- Oct. 24, 2014

Richardson Richardson focused much

FEATURED OBITUARY

Nancy Primeau Ruel

J ack B r uce

~ frs

was part Mississippi Delta and part Carnaby Street. In his glorious heyday as bassist and lead vocalist of 1960s power trio Cream he helped create a sound that combined Ameri-

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can blues and psychedelia to thrill audiences throughout the

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dicott, Bend City Councilor Scott Ramsay and Bend City

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world.

Bruce, who died Saturday of lrlP:„-N~"'-,jf j~g: .s,', -:":: ":) . ;4.:: r„'tv y;."-"~s"'. liver disease at age 71, enjoyed a long, respected solo career Peter Kemp/The Associated Press file photo after the band's acrimonious Members of the rock group Cream, from left, Jack Bruce, unidentibreakup, but will be best re- fied woman, drummer Ginger Baker and Eric Clapton depart from -:

membered for his stint with

Cream and for classics like "Sunshine of Your Love" and "I

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Heathrow Airport in London in1967. Bruce, best known as the bassist from Cream, has died. He was 71.

a liver transplant some years ago and continuedto suffer a

variety ofhealthproblems. A statement released by his and servedas lead vocalist.H e family said "the world of music also provided the intense bass will be a poorer place without guitarthat, with Ginger Baker's him but he lives on in his music explosive drums, underpinned and forever in our hearts." Cream's rhythmic, driving He was born to musical parsound. ents in Glasgow, Scotland, on

He left Scotland at the age of 16 and in 1962 joined his first

Clapton, but Bruce wrote many

important band, the influen-

of the band's signature tunes

tial Alexis Korner's Blues Inc., in London. The band featured drummer Charlie Watts, who

C ream, inducted into t h e Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

in 1993, played a mix of traditional blues songs, with long, often improvised instrumental

breaks, and their own tunes. Publicists LD Communications

said Saturday Bruce died of liver disease at his home in Suffolk, England. He had received

Council candidate Casey Roats.

a concentrated effort to win

In a qu e stion-and-an- the votes of nonaffiliated and swer session, Richardson independent voters. "Central Oregon is going addressed the recent KATU poll. to be key to the outcome of "Are those accurate'? I the election," he said. "We don't know if they are or not, have an independent spirit because polls can mean so that goes beyond parties and many things to different peo- politics. Central Oregonians ple," he said. "But, I like the want honesty and integrity trend." and transparency in their Knopp said the last few government, and they're not weeks of t h e c ampaign getting it in John Kitzhaber." should be encouraging for — Reporter: 541-383-0387, Richardson supporters. shammers@bendbulletin.com

Feel Free."

Much of the attention was focusedon guitar wizard Eric

In a brief interview before

he left Bend for Coos Bay, Richardson said he's making

later joined the Rolling Stones. Bruce was playing and touring with his Big Blues Band until recently. In 2012, he played in May 14, 1943. His parents trav- Cuba, and performed in Loneled extensively in Canada and don at the famed bar Ronnie the U.S., and the young Bruce Scott's. His 14th solo album, attended 14 different schools. "Silver Rails," was released earHe finished his formal educa- lier this year. tion at Bellahouston Academy He is survived by his wife, and the Royal Scottish Acade- Margrit, four children and a my of Music, to which he won granddaughter. Funeral ara scholarship for cello and rangements were not immedicomposition. ately announced.

Derby

Record with a t r ack more

Continued from B1 "I figured out it's harder to take weight off than it is to

put it on. So I'm going to try this," he said, holding up his new, smaller vehicle. The High Desert Makers will be hosting a similar race

than 300 feet long. Young people are an essential part of the "maker movement,"Brees said, as kids' brains work different-

ly than adults, and they can sometimes happen across solutions to problems that

elude older g enerations. Sometimes it takes somelibrary, even the slowest cars thing like a toy car race to in-

with a longer track — at the

Obituary policy

finished the run in less than

Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific

Qeadlines: DeathNotices areaccepted

guidelines must befollowed. Local obituaries are paid

until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30

advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin

p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication.

reserves the right to edit all submissions. Pleaseincludecontact information in all correspondence.

Obituaries must be received by 5

For information on any of these services or about the

submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor

obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Sundaypublication,and by9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication.

Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020

Fax: 541-322-7254

troduce them to simple tools

3 seconds — open to kids and and the creative process and adults on Nov. 15. The group's get them started down that 65-foot track made its first path, he said. "It's a sneaky way of getpublic appearance at Fall Festival in downtown Bend ting true education in the sciearlier this m onth, B rees ence and technology fields,"

p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second day after

said, and the organization is Brees said. looking at someday making — Reporter: 541-383-0387, a run at the Guinness World

Deadlines for display adsvary; please

shammerslbendbulletin.com

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

call for details.

Bend, OR 97708

TheBulletin

... ..............SO UTHERN LITHOPLATE/INLAND PRESS ASSOCIATION ........................................................................................

Print

B5

uality Competition Results IN THEBLACK AND WHITE CATEGORY

The Bulletin

a.

.4

IN THEBLACK AND WHITE CATEGORY FOR 10,000 TO 50,000 CIRCULATION

The Bulletin Judges remarked that the twoimages chosen for this year's competition were particularly challenging to print. Thejudges also agreed they had a hard time picking winners in several circulation categories because the entries reflected a commitment to maintain a high level of production quality for what continues to be theindijstry's coreproduct,its printed newspaper. 4 // i

We published the page at right in our printing processes. Such contests are the Classified section of the Oct. 5. edition just one way we strive to ensure the best of The Bulletin. In it we noted that this was possible printing results for our readers, a print quality competition and that we our advertisers and our commercial print regularly engage in quality tests in order to customers. ensure all processes we Use in crafting each We are proud to announce the edition of The Bulletin meet high standards. results of this competition. We are equally This particular contest allowed proud to call attention to the dedicated our results to be judged against those Bulletin staff that made this possible and

of newspapers across the nation. It also who produce award-winning caliber work offered a high-level industry evaluation of everyday.

e u ein

t

• a • + aa • + a a

• + a a • , I • • + aaaaa The full eolor photo:

Ths s a test of lour color web prmting The imagevnll be analized for sarhy (regstrabon and sharpness) bngMness andoverall pnnt quale pnnting a hur color image mquaes lourdNsmnt inhs being printed ane onlop of Ne other. The lourcolor inks am:CYAN,MAGEMA YELLOW and BLACIC

T he blaek an d w h lt e p h o t o : Ths is a test of blackee while welrpnnting. The imagevallbe analzed lor ils sharpness and tonal value or range of greys fromwhite to bhck.

2014 w E B

pR INT Q U A LITY T EsT I The B ulletin

We are running a print quality tesl. The sbove images will allow Us lo test our webpmsL We regularly engage in print quality tests in order to ensure all proceesas we use in crafting each edilon of The Bulletin meet high standards. Thie particular contesl allowe Us to compare our pint standards to those ot newspapers across the

nation. It aleo osers a high-level induslry evaluslon or our pri lins

pmcesses. This ee e just one way we slrivs e ensure the besl possible minlins results for our readers, our advsrhsers snd our commercial print cuslomers. We look forward to sharing the results ot our ento with you soon.

The Bulktin A WARD -W I N N I N C

N EWS COV ERACE, DESICN, ADVEllTISING R P l l l N T I N G

Serving Central Oregon since 1903 A W A R D -W IN N I NG N E W S C O V E R A G E , D E S I G N , A D V E R T I SI N G & P R IN T I N G


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

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TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures aretoday's highs and tonight's lows. Umatina Hood 63/39 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

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85/66/s 77/63/pc 56/32/r 72/46/c

69/58/r

60/40/I 82/53/s 28/18/c

61/38/c 61/29/s 71/57/r 62/46/I

77/52/s 65/47/s 59/41/s 49/26/sn 86/73/pc 86/65/pc 83/59/s 77/60/pc 85/61/s 84/56/s 60/48/s 62/54/sh 64/59/c 87/63/s 90/78/I 55/36/s 80/68/pc 59/42/s 64/48/I 53/31/s 89/65/I 90/69/s 83/64/s 44/27/pc

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62/53/sh 62/51/sh 61/43/pc 81/53/s

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60/55/r 73/55/s 71/51/s 70/60/pc 73/61/s 65/54/s 74/49/s 88/78/sh

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 47/36/0.16 44/35/c 43/24/s 80/51/0.00 82/62/s 76/46/pc 67/43/0.00 87/63/0.00 74/44/0.00 75/43/0.00 87/57/0.00 80/61/0.00 75/46/0.00 69/53/0.00 82/55/0.00 85/69/0.00 69/53/0.00 63/50/0.00 81/44/0.00 79/55/0.00 67/50/0.00 70/48/0.00 70/46/0.00 92/58/0.00 76/45/0.00 81/63/0.00 96/68/0.00 78/52/0.00 70/46/0.00

58/37/s

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104/81/0.00 100/76/s 71/51/0.04 72/46/s Montreal 55/43/0.04 50/40/sh Moscow 28/1 2/0.00 34/22/c Nairobi 82/60/0.00 82/59/pc Nassau 82/75/0.30 85/74/pc New Delhi 89/70/0.24 87/66/s Osaka 74/52/0.00 74/58/sh Oslo 52/49/0.22 55/53/pc Ottawa 57/36/0.10 49/37/sh Paris 59/52/Tr 61/45/pc Riu de Janeiro 77/71/0.00 80/69/sh Rome 70/54/0.00 68/50/pc Santiago 88/55/0.00 78/54/pc Ssn Paulo 79/63/0.00 76/62/I Ssppnrn 65/47/0.00 69/47/pc Seoul 68/43/0.00 68/37/pc Shanghai 76/55/0.00 82/62/s Singapore gons/o.oo 89n8/r Stockholm 50/48/0.57 54/51/pc Sydney 74/61/0.13 85/64/s Taipei 78/72/0.03 86/73/c Tei Aviv 83/56/0.00 83/68/s Tokyo 68/55/0.00 71/61/pc Toronto 61/48/0.00 54/35/pc Vancouver 55/48/0.26 56/43/sh Vienna 48/37/0.00 51/39/pc Warsaw 39/27/0.00 49/33/s

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Natural Grocer

Proudly offering Mary's Turkeys: • Fed a Non-GMOVerified Vegetarian Diet • NOAntibiOtiCS • NO Added HOrmOnes* • NO PreServativeS

• Free-Range Raised • Gluten Free

nongmoprjieC.org

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GNO FREE

4 Oryanic Turkeys p e r l b. Fed Oryanicall y Grown Food GNO FREE

Free Range Turkeys 2 per lb. 8NO FREE

Heritage Turkeys

p e r IS.

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79/56/pc 76/55/s 70/52/s 81/63/pc 81/50/pc 70/39/c 88/61/s 84/64/pc 77/57/pc 77/60/pc 73/56/s 82/65/pc 62/50/s 72/47/c 86/63/s 84/65/s Miami 82no/s 84/74/pc Milwaukee 59/47/s 69/49/c Minneapolis 63/51/pc 64/41/c Nashville 78/60/s 84/63/s New Orleans 83/62/s 83/67/pc New YorkCity 60/48/pc 61/53/s Newark, NJ 62/46/pc 62/49/s Norfolk, VA 70/50/s 68/53/s OklahomaCity 88/61/s 84/54/pc Omaha 78/54/pc 70/43/c Orlando 82/58/s 85/64/s Palm Springs 88/61/pc 87/62/s Psnrin 69/60/s 78/53/pc Philadelphia 64/45/pc 64/51/s Phoenix 96no/o'.oo 90/66/pc 87/62/s Pittsburgh 66/44/0.00 58/37/pc 68/58/pc Portland, ME 66/42/0.00 59/41/pc 57/40/pc Providence 66/43/0.00 57/41/pc 58/43/s Raleigh 71/39/0.00 75/42/s 75/53/s Rapid City 66/35/0.00 73/37/pc 55/29/pc Rsnn 67/48/Tr 59/31/pc 61/33/pc Richmond 72/40/0.00 73/42/s 71/53/s Rochester, NY 66/43/0.00 54/40/c 60/51/pc Sacramento 73/59/0.12 70/46/pc 73/46/pc SI. Louis 82/57/0.00 78/65/s 83/57/pc Salt Lake City 79/54/0.00 58/37/pc 51/33/pc Snn Antonio 89/58/0.00 87/64/s 87/68/pc Ssn Diego 77/67/0.00 74/61/pc 74/61/pc Ssn Francisco 73/63/0.10 73/58/pc 72/57/pc Ssn Jose 71/57/0.11 69/49/pc 70/48/pc santa rs 79/42/0.00 73/44/s 67/35/s Savannah 79/48/0.00 83/54/s 86/57/s Seattle 62/47/0.18 56/45/sh 57/50/r Sioux Falls 68/42/0.00 67/47/pc 58/37/c Spokane 69/44/0.01 53/35/c 50/37/pc Springfield, Mo 83/56/0.00 84/63/s 79/53/pc Tampa 81/59/0.00 82/61/s 85/66/s Tucson 95/64/0.00 89/63/pc 84/57/s Tulsa 88/57/0.00 88/65/s 81/55/pc Washington, DC 74/49/0.00 68/46/s 69/54/s Wichita 91/52/0.00 89/63/s 78/48/pc Yskims 58/48/0.01 60/32/pc 57/38/c Yumn 95/71/0.00 89/64/pc 88/63/s L

Amsterdam Athens

Yesterday Today Monday

City

Ssna/pc

rdf/RM

0

Hi/Lo/W 89/58/s 69/58/pc 57/41/s 71/44/s 37/25/s 85/59/s 64/52/s 85/64/pc 65/47/s 52/28/pc 85/60/s 56/33/pc 54/36/pc 57/44/s 61/50/s 60/54/pc 54/41/pc 47/33/pc 84/59/s 79/53/s 83/57/s 52/27/sn 74/54/pc 78/63/pc 70/61/pc 53/29/r 79/51/pc 84/56/s 86/56/s 75/62/pc 55/36/s

9/44

59/49/pc Boston 62/54/sh i Lanpd Mke ' min Auckland 64/56/c M;73/37 5 /4 w York Baghdad 86/63/s MOR /48 Bangkok 88/77/r 73/SS Precipitation: 1.22 ss/' ilndelphin eeijing 62/35/s Chi godth •Coi mb /45 Beirut 82no/0.00 82/69/s at Mount Shasta, CA an n cioco Omah Berlin 48/38/0.02 57/46/pc 73/58 I ngton LMRv MR u ao se Bogota 64/50/0.06 62/51/I Denver 79/ TS/Se KMMSMR Clfy51. Budapest 50/41/0.00 52/34/s 77/41 io 82/4/2 BuenosAires 88/64/0.00 86/72/pc TS/45 79/46 LMR An leo mn CitY L M ook Csbn Ssn Lucss 95/73/0.00 92/71/s * * NM 4P • SS/61 • • 8 /41 Cairo 91/72/0.00 87/67/s Phoen 8/60 • At Adlohol'M so Albuque Me Calgary 50/32/0.00 47/29/c • fm/fire o 35/2 II 0 77/51 82/5 Csncun 82/66/0.05 84/66/s air inghn 7 /Sf • nnlia Juneau Sl PM Dublin 55/48/0.05 60/55/c 83/ 9 89/ e/e Edinburgh 55/48/0.02 57/53/r 64/ss R* Geneva 59/45/0.01 62/41/pc • dlnndo Hsrsre 87/64/0.00 83/54/I d/63 O 8 ss Hong Kong 82/73/0.00 85/77/sh Honolulu Chihunhun O ~ . f Istanbul 68/63/0.14 63/55/r 87/73 ss/49 Ssinmi Jerusalem 77/55/0.00 76/56/s Monte y .e> 82/TB, 82/51 Johannesburg 80/55/0.47 70/50/pc 4 Lima 70/61/Tr 69/59/pc Lisbon 77/64/0.00 74/59/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 61/45/0.00 60/53/c T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 81/52/0.00 78/50/s Manila 91/75/0.00 90/78/I M ne /51

Variable cloudiness

Yesterday Today Monday

R R R R R ' 57/48

39'

Cloudy with a little rain

0

61'

41'

48 contiguousstates) National high: 98 at Death Valley,CA National low: 1B at Angel Fire, NM M

"'"

61'

Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W High 63 58 82' in 1 9 21 Abilene 89/65/0.00 89/64/s /42 lington 63/38 Portland Akron 71/43/0.00 58/38/s Low 41' 31' 14' in 1916 Meac am Losti ne 7/ 40 Albany 62/39/0.02 53/42/c • W co 51/33 Enternrlse PRECIPITATION dleten 46/3 he Daa Albuquerque 78/50/0.00 77/51/pc • • 50/31 e Tdlamo • • 60/ 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.09 CENTRAL: A passing andy Anchorage 36/29/0.00 35/22/s 57/48 Mc innvin Atlanta 77/48/0.00 82/57/s Record 1.14e in 2010 • He ppner Grande morning shower; P P • Condon 8/37 Atlantic City 67/42/0.00 64/47/pc 53 36 Month to date (normal) 0.43 (0.43 ) otherwise, variably Union Lincoln R R Austin 88/53/0.00 86/58/s 45/ Year to date (normal ) 6.16 (7.60 ) cloudy today. Partly Sale 57/50 Baltimore 71/43/0.00 64/40/s e pray Graniten B arometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29. 6 5 cloudy tonight. 59/4 • @~ Billings 65/36/0.00 60/41/pc a 'Baker C Newpo 45/30 • ~ 35 Birmingham 77/44/0.00 83/59/s SUN ANDMOON 9/45 57/49 • Mitch 6 51/30 Bismarck 65/36/0.00 69/40/pc Camp Sh man Red WEST:Mostly cloudy 52/33 Today Mon. n U Boise 78/41/0.00 56/35/sh 50/34 • John MU Sunrise 7:34 a.m. 7: 3 5 a.m. with showers today, 60/47 Boston 57/44/pc • Prineville Day 1/30 tario Bridgeport, CT 64/46/0.00 Sunset 6:04 p.m. 6: 0 3 p.m. mainly early in the 65/48/0.00 61/47/pc 54/32 • Pa lina 51/ 3 2 5 33 Buffalo 62/50/0.00 Moonrise 10: 21 a.m. 11 :19 a.m. day. Mostly cloudy Fl o ren e • Eugene 53/38/pc ' Se d e rothers Valen Burlington, VT 59/35/0.18 51/43/sh 5 8/4 9 Moonset 8:1 5 p.m. 9:0 8 p.m. with a shower in Su iVern 50/32 60/34 Caribou, ME 46/40/0.04 48/36/sh places tonight. Nyssa M 47/ 1 • La pine Ham ton MOONPHASES C e Charleston,Sc 78/48/0.00 83/55/s Grove Oakridge Charlotte 74/39/0.00 79/46/s First Fu l l Last New • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES 56/31 56/44 /42 Chattanooga 77/43/0.00 79/55/s • Fort Rock Riley 50/23 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 49/28 Cheyenne 74/39/0.00 69/36/pc 50/25 46/29 Chicago 72/53/0.00 61/50/s High: 76' Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 75/45/0.00 68/48/s Oct 30 Nov 6 N ov 14 N ov 22 at Pendleton Jordany Uey Beaver Silver 50/26 Frenchglen 62/47 Cleveland 70/48/0.00 56/40/s Low: 32' 52/31 Marsh Lake 52/29 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 78/46/0.00 75/41/pc 46/29 at Baker City 49/27 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 81/55/0.00 82/63/s T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 9/ a Columbia, SC 75/40/0.00 84/51/s 54/28 Mercury 6:06 a.m. 5: 3 2 p.m. • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 79/48/0.00 84/57/s Medfo d '48/32 Gold ach Rome Venus 7:36 a.m. 6 : 0 9 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 72/44/0.00 62/41/s 58/ 55/28 Mars 12:29 p.m. 9 : 0 3 p.m. Klamath Concord, NH 66/34/0.00 56/36/pc Fields • • Ashl nd Falls Jupiter 1:09 a.m. 3 : 2 1 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 85/61/0.00 85/68/s Bro ings 54/31 56/ 48/31 Saturn 9:15 a.m. 7: 0 7 p.m. 57/47 48/24 53/28 Dallas 88/64/0.00 89/63/s Dayton 75/49/Tr 64/45/s Uranus 5:17 p.m. 6: 0 1 a.m. Denver 80/44/0.00 77/41/pc Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Dss Moines 73/49/0.00 73/58/pc city H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prnc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Ln/W Detroit 69/44/0.00 59/40/s Portland 66/4 8/0.0557/48/sh 59/50/ c 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asfurin 60/53/0.76 59/46/sh60/51/sh Ls Grande 72/43/0.00 53/36/sh 53/34/pc Duluth 59/46/0.00 55/45/pc Baker City 69/32/Tr 51/30/sh50/26/pc Ls Pine 57/39/0.24 47/30/c 52/34/pc Prinevigs 66/ 3 9/0.0054/32/c 52/35/p c El Paso 85/55/0.00 86/60/s 1 NI~ 1 ~ 1~ N 1 ernnkings 59/55/0.6357/47/sh 59/51/pc Msdfnrd 6 8 / 50/0.14 58/42/c 63/43/pc Redmond 66 / 43/0.0053/31/c 56/37/pc Fairbanks 29/19/0.00 24/13/s The highertheAccuWsnihsrxmmUVIndex number, eums 65/32/0.00 50/23/c 50/23/pc N ewport 63/5 2 /0.38 57/49/sh 60/53/c Rnseburg 64/ 5 4/0.2762/47/sh 66/50/pc Fargo 62/40/0.00 65/41/c the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin protscgon.0-2 Lcw, Eugene 65/51/0.16 58/45/sh 63/49/pc North Bend 63/54/0.21 59/49/sh 63/54/ pc Salem 65/46/0.17 59/47/sh 62/51/c Flagstaff 69/36/Tr 64/30/pc 35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exirsms. Klnmnth Falls 58/47/0.05 48/31/c 53/30/pc Ontari o 59/41/0.00 58/33/sh 56/29/pc Sisters 64/43/0.01 52/30/c 55/36/pc Grand Rapids 67/44/0.00 58/39/s Lsksview 57/45/0.05 48/24/c 52/25/pc P endleton 76/ 4 5/0.00 60/40/c 57/42/pc The Dnges 6 0 / 51/0.05 60/43/c 61/44/pc Greeneny 66/50/0.00 56/43/pc Greensboro 73/39/0.00 75/44/s Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-psruycloudy, c-clnudy, sh-shnwers,t-fhundsrstnrms,r-rsin, sf-snnwflurries, sn-snnwI-ice,Tr-frnce,Yesterday data ssnf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 70/43/0.00 63/40/s G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hsrffnrd, CT 68/42/0.00 57/42/pc Absent Ab s ent Abs e nt Helena 56/36/rr 53/39/c Source: OregonAiisrgyAssocistss 541-683-1577 87/74/0.00 87/73/pc ~ t os ~2 08 ~aos ~dos ~50s ~eos ~708 ~aos ~gos ~toos ~ttos Honolulu ~ tos ~os ~ o s Houston 85/55/0.00 86/63/s Huntsville 80/44/0.00 79/58/s NATIONAL Indianapolis 76/50/0.00 66/51/s As of 7 n.m.yesterday MniPeg M R M R L R MO/ T nder aay Jackson, MS 80/48/0.00 86/56/s 4 'L 4 'L L 4 V M Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES R Rsn/4S R • 57 7 5 Jacksonville 77/47/0.00 82/53/s YESTERDAY (for the

C rane Prairie 311 0 8 56% 30'yo Wickiup 59995 Crescent Lake 5 5 9 78 64% Ochoco Reservoir 14972 34% Prineville 85314 57% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 190 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 39 Deschutes R.below Bend 576 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 654 Little Deschutes near LaPine 106 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 5 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 8 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 72 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 166 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 2

THUR SDAY

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

WEDN ESDAY

101/74/s 74/47/s 53/42/pc 38/31/pc 83/59/pc 86/76/s 88/65/s 68/46/sh 58/54/pc 53/40/pc 64/44/s 77/68/sh 67/50/pc 79/51/s 74/59/pc 52/38/r 59/34/s 71/58/pc 88/79/I 57/52/pc 88/59/sh 80/70/pc 81/68/s 73/52/pc 55/50/pc 54/46/r 52/37/s 53/32/s


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT

Andy Tullia/The Bulletin file photo •

Jenna Jones, of Bend, as Merida from Brave, was a winner in The Bulletin's 2013

costume contest. A Ferris wheel is the latest high-profile addition to the Seattle waterfront, where theaquarium and avariety of restaurants are just a fewsteps from the Pike Place Market.

Costume contest deadline Monday The Bulletin is hosting a Halloween costume contest. Winners' pictures will appear in The Bulletin on Friday. Costumesmust be family-friendly and will be judged on creativity and craftsmanship in three age categories:

Tossing fish around is atradition at the Pike Place Fish Market that has evolved into a show-stopping crowd pleaser for tourists and customers.

birth-4; 5-12; and 13

and older. Homemade costumes will be favored. Winners must be able to come to The Bulletin in costume for a photo shoot at 5 p.m. Tuesday. To enter, visit bendbulletin.com/ submitphoto and click on "Hal loween costume contest." Submit your photo and include the following information: full name, age, city of residence, costume description and phone number. Feel free to include any other relevant information about the costume. Entries must be received by 9 a.m. Monday.

Museum. Contact: www. deschutesbrewery.com/event / jungle-cross-warehouse-party or 541385-8606. — From staff reports

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By Christopher ReynoldseLos Angeles Times Photos by Mark Boater / Loa Angeles Times

he Pike Place Market Historic District covers 9 acres and includesmore than 200 vendors.The heart ofthe place for most tourists is just beneath the big orange

0470.

fiting the High Desert

LeeLauckharthasbeent eownero Firs and Pike Newsfor more than three decades.

The Singers' School of the Youth Choir of Central Oregon, open to children in first through fourth grade, begins Nov. 3. There will be two performances during the10-week session. Children will be taught choral techniques and behavior and stage presence, gaining new confidence while havingfunandmaking new friends, according to a press release from the YCCO,the nonprofit, community-based choir established in 1990. Rehearsals will be held from 5:15 to 6:30 p.m. Mondays at Sky View Middle School in Bend. Tuition is $150 for the session. For questions, enrollment and scholarship information, contact www. ycco.org or 541-385-

Along with hosting the River City Bicycles Cyclocross Crusade Races Nov. 1 and 2on its lawn, Deschutes Brewery, 399 SW Shevlin-Hixon Drive, Bend, will host "Jungle Cross," a jungle-themed party, from 8 p.m. Nov. 1 until 3 a.m. the following morning. Live music and stage performers include Chicago Afrobeat Project, DJ Professor Stone, DJ GlobalRuckus, BasssGhost and Prom Jim. Admission is $15, with proceeds bene-

At Radiator Whiskey, menuitems such as the tomato soupare paired with whiskey.

Choir for kids begins Nov. 3

Jungle party for after dike races

Public Market Center sign and clock. Do pose for a photo with Rachel, the bronze charity piggy bank. Keep an eye out for flying fish (Pike Place Fish Market is a short toss away) and listen for music; buskers love this spot.

Don't rent a car to get around down- have busy bars (Pink Door and Radiator Whiskey, for instance), most of the market area is idle by 10 p.m., and surrounding blocks can be sketchy. Don't expect pristine solitude in Victhe underground Westlake Station at town Seattle. Since 2009, Sound Transit's Central Link light-rail system has run trains from the SeaTac Airport to Fourth Ave. and Pine Street, about four

tor Steinbrueck Park at the north end

blocks from Pike Place. It's a 35-minute of the market. The views and totem trip. Trains leave every seven to 15 min- poles are impressive, but crowds are utes, $2.75 each way. often thick, and panhandlers and dope Don't go looking for night life at the dealers work the area hard. market. Although a few restaurants See Pike Place/C4

Ways to prevent — and fix — air travel blunders By George Hobica Airfarewatchdog.com

Did something go bump in the flight'? Here are some common air travel woes, and how to prevent, and fix, them.

• I was bumped from my flight:

How to prevent: Bumping (involuntary boarding) is relatively rare, but some airlines are worse than others, so avoid them (you can see recent bumping statistics, along with lost bag and airline on-time performance at http://

bit.ly/luo03Gt). JetBlue is the least likely to bump you (they don't overbook flights). Avoidingpeaktraveldays(Tuesday

this option — do a web search for"Rule240" — ifthere are

and Wednesday are the slow-

you're entitled to cash compensation (refuse to accept an airline travel voucher). To lessen the pain, askfor a free pass to the airline's airport lounge if you're notalready amember.

their contents can be pilfered

est) and peak holiday periods also helps. Don't be the last person to check in for your flight; get to the airport as early as possible, and if you have status in the airline's frequent

If you're on 7t/tritter, many air-

ables or electronics in checked

flyer program, that helps too. How to fbc Ask to be put on

lines try to fix bumping issues

bags, because airlines won't compensate for these if lost or

another airline's flight if that

will getyouto where you're going faster than your original airline (some airlines still offer

seats available). If you'llbe delayed more than an hour,

there (see httpJ/bit.ly/IvINDHN for their 7t/tritter "handles").

• My checked bags (or contents) were stolen:

How to prevent: Other than

airlines offer paltry compen-

not checking bags in the first place, there's no sure way to prevent theft. Bags and

sation for international travel.

by baggage handlers, TSA agents and even by thieves who hang around the luggage carousels. Locks help, but only so far. Never pack valu-

stolen. If traveling internation-

ally, consider buying "excess valuation" coverage from your airline (it's inexpensive), since

Make sure you have receipts for any expensive items in your bag. And make sure you don't lose your checked bag receipt. It's also not a bad

idea to keep your carry-on bag locked while it is in the overheadcompartment.

Also, some bags are taken from the carousel by mistake since they all seem to look

alike now. Getting a bag in a distinctive color (mine is lime green!) helps prevent errors. See Air travel /C7


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

M IQESTON

v Bendvr by For mv f o r e ngrrgementw,eddinganniversary vrbirthday announcements areavailableaI TheBvilerinI,777gyirChandlerAve emai l i n g m ilestones®bendbulletin com. Forms and photos mustbesubmittedwithinonemonthof the celebration. Contact: 541-633 2117.

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MARRIAGES

ENGAGEMENTS

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Janna Cabaand Michael Cheatum

EmilyBoehm and Wade Bessett

Caba — Cheatum

Resort.

Janna Caba and M ichael Cheatum, both of Bend, were

Tessa Cheatum, of Tacoma,

The groom is the son of

Boehm — Bessett

works at Interfaith Community Health Center.

Emily Boehm and Wade

married Aug. 15 at Mission

The groom is the son of Washington. He is a 2007 Bessett, both of A n acortes, Irene Messer and (the late) Don graduate of W i lson High Washington, were married Bessett, of Ephrata, Washing-

Church in Bend. A reception

School and a 2013 graduate

Sept.27 at Seafarers'Memori-

ton. He is a 1990 graduate of

followed. The bride is the daughter

of Central Oregon Communi- al Park in Anacortes. A recep- Ephrata High School and a ty College, where he studied tion followed. 1995 graduate of the Univerof Mike and Kathy Caba, of criminal justice. He works at The bride is the daughter sity of Washington, where he Bend. She is a 2008 gradu- Mike Huett Construction. of Peter and Diane Boehm, studied environmental health. ate of Mountain View High The couple honeymooned at of Bend. She is a 1995 grad- He works for Skagit County. School. She works as a guest Disneyland. uate of Mountain View High The couple honeymooned in services attendant at Tetherow They will settle in Bend. School and a 1999 graduate of Boston and New York City. Willamette University, where she studied art history. She

They w i ll Anacortes.

sett l e

in

Jenna Rentas and Travis Waiton

Rentas— Waiton

graduate with a masters in nursing in August 2015. She

Jenna Rentas and Travis Waiton, both of Bend, plan to

works as a registered nurse

marry July 11, 2015, at Widgi

at Bend Surgery Center. T he future groom i s

Creek Golf Club in Bend. T he future bride is t h e

the son of Walt and Chris

daughter of Jim and Jill

ra, California. He is a 2000 graduate of S a n M a r c us

Rentas, of Bend. She is a

2001 graduate of Mountain View High School and a 2005 graduate of Oregon Health and Science University, where she studied nursing. She attends Spokane University where, she will

Waiton, of Santa BarbaHigh School and a 2014 graduate of American Intercontinental U n i v ersity,

where he studied business finance. He works as a financial adviser at Edward Jones Investments.

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate

Py

• • •

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TheB u l letin

Find It All Online

v(

bendbulletin.com Elsbeth Centola and Richard Jayne

Trust Your Loved One's Care To EVERGREEN

Centola — jayne

erinarian at Gateway Veterinary Clinic. Elsbeth Centola, of CorvalThe groom is the son of lis, and Richard Jayne, of Ma- Rick and Valerie Jayne, of ple Park, Illinois, were mar- Hunlock Creek, Pennsylvaried Aug. 16 at Old St. Francis

nia. He is a 2007 graduate of

of Assisi in Bend. A reception followed at Deschutes Brewery. The bride is the daughter of Chad and Juli Centola, of

Lake Lehman High School and a 2012 graduate of Kutzt own U n iversity o f P e n n -

The oldest, most experienced in-home care service in Central Oregon

Kristen Horgen, of Bend, and John Arzner, of Albany,

sylvania, where he studied geology and e nvironmen- were married Aug. 15 at Gorge Bend. She is a 2006 graduate tal biology. He is a graduate Crest Vineyards in Hood Rivof Bend High School, a 2010 student at Northern Illinois er. A reception followed. graduate of Delaware Valley University, where he studies The bride is the daughter College, where she studied hydrogeology. of Ray and Joan Horgen, of zoology, and a 2014 graduate The couple plan to honey- Bend. She is a 2004 graduate of Oregon State University, moon in Cozumel,Mexico. of Bend High School and a

where she studied veterinary

They will settle in Maple

medicine. She works as a vet- Park, Illinois.

2009 graduateof Oregon State

University, where she studied

O

interior design. She works as an accountmanager at Commercial Design Systems. The groom is the son of Gus and Andrea Arzner, of

Lebanon. He is a 2001 graduate of Crawfordsville High School and a 2005 graduate

Theywill settle in Sherwood.

541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bend Metro Park 8 Recreation District The Bend Trolley

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If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers:

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MI LESTONE G UI

POTTERY SHOWCASE

Highland Elementary School, 701 NWNewport Avenue, Bend

BRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER 1355 NEHEMLOCKAVE. REDMOND,OR

The Bulletin

ClayGuild ofthe Cascades,PO.Box 172,Bend OR 977N

Saturday November 1, 10am - 5pm Sunday November 2, 10am - 4pm

A NI M A L CE N T E R

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small-business owner. They planto honeymoon in Europe in 2015.

BRIGHTSIDE

EVERGREEN

of Purdue University. He is a

WILDFIRE

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@ Sponsored by @

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Kristen Horgen and John Arzner

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Mason is a regal Doberman v Pinscher and German Shepherd mix. He's ready for some action! Mason was surrendered to BrightSide because his owner didn't have enough time for him. He is just 2 years old and weighs 106 pounds. He loves to play! And he would love to play with you. See more photos at brightsideanimals. org/adoptable-dogs ormeet Masonin person at the shelter Tues.-Sat., 10-5.

a-

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I ' a •

0 •

Lake Creek Lodge M.Jacobs McMenamins Old St. Francis School Northwest Medi Spa

Salon Je Danae Socailly Yours Taps Mobile Pub The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

T e ow- e isan c armo Provi encia, Coom ia our own and paddle out to Morgan's Head, a locally famous rockoutcropping named for pirate Henry Morgan, who used the island as a base for raiding Spanish colonies in

By Bart Beeson and Annalise Romoser • ~

Special to The Washington Post

c '~

e've spent the afternoon at the openair restaurant of a small fishing co-op

the late 1600s. It's rumored

that he hid still-undiscovered

I

that offers everything we've dreamed

treasures in Providencia, and

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the rock formation sits near an unexcavated pirate-era fort

of in Caribbean cuisine — fresh fish, fruit juices,

that exudes mystery. There's

coconut rice — and a little something we haven't:

great snorkeling just off the shore, and we spend a good chunk of time lazily paddling around before scrambling up the rocky cliffs and jumping

rondon, the island's prized dish of pig's tail, fish and snails.

into the clear water below. The co-op also sells sea-

food, and after eating our fill, we purchase a gorgeous fish

the nearestbeach. To get to Providencia, we

Peaceful days

first stop in nearby San An-

visiting our favorite beaches, reading on the porch at Miss Rose's and enjoying long meals at seaside restaurants.

We fill the rest of our days

dres, a larger and more comgrocery store on the way back m ercial island, where you can to our lodgings to pick up on- catch either a quick flight or a Bart Beeson/The Washington Post ions and coconut milk to saute catamaran to Providencia. Af- The water surrounding Providencia is called the Sea of Seven Colors. with mangoes for an accompa- ter landing at Providencia's minying creole sauce. nuscule airport, we jump into As we swerve up a steep the back of a pickup truckto our lodging to relax in the ly advises us on how to cook pico" means "peak"), picking hill on rickety old bikes, tak- the informal local taxi service shade. Given its off-the-beaten- up the snapper we bring home fresh mangoes as we go, we're ing turns holding the large red — that takes us to our hotel to path location, Providencia has from the fishing co-op. rewarded with a 360-degree "I really enjoy having peo- view of the island and the wasnapper by the tail, we have to drop off our bags. The open-air remainedlargely undeveloped wonder whether this is the best ride is a perfect introduction to — it has one upscale hotelple here, and I think gifts are ters below. But soon after we way to bring home dinner. But the island. We drive along the and like many visitors, we've an important part of life," she arrive at the top, dark, imposas we discover over the course main road, which traces the chosen to stay in a posada, a says. "People here have huge ing clouds roll in, and we have of a week in Providencia, Co- shore, zooming past colorful small home rented to visitors. hearts, hearts that are not to hurry down from our exlombia, that's part of the charm houses, several small towns Ours is Posada Mss Rose, found in the rest of the world. posed position to seek shelter of this Caribbean island, where and up and over hills with which sits on a verdant hill just It is the treasure of this island." from the lightning, if not the you're more likely to bring superb views of the sea. The off the main road and consists From our house, it's a drenching rain. home fresh fish to cook than water surrounding the island of a two-story, two-bedroom five-minute walk down a steep The next day, we return to serve yourself at a buffet, to is known as the Sea of Sev- wooden house with a kitchen, a hill to Almendra Bay, which Atanasio Howard for a guided grab a cold drink at a rustic en Colors, and it lives up to its front porch and a second-story cradles a small, secluded white snorkeling excursion. His son beachside hut than at a pool- name with spectacular hues of balcony with a partial ocean sand beach, surrounded by takes us out to explore parts of side bar and to bait your hook turquoise and blue set against view. One local resident com- rocky outcroppings and lush the nearly 20-mile-long Provwith a local fisherman than pristine white sand beaches. mended us on choosing a posa- green hills punctuated by a idencebarrier reef,one ofthe join a chartered excursion. da over a hotel. nYou learn how handful of colorfully painted largest coral reefs in the AmerWe've heard for years about Reaching the water islanderslive and where our homes and other wind-worn icas. It sits inside the Seaflower Providencia's beautiful beachEager to get on the water, we people will tell you all their houses. The only facilities Biosphere Reserve, a UNESes, great snorkeling and dis- find a guide, Atanasio How- stories," he said. "That's what at the beach are a few plas- CO Marine Protected area. tinctive culture, so we've final- ard, who runs a small hotel makes this Providencia. It's tic picnic tables and a small We take advantage of the ly decided to make the journey and arranges kayaking, snor- what makes us different, and shack, whose owner cheerful- trip to talk language, learning here. The island lies about 140 keling and fishing trips for why we will never compete ly serves up cold soft drinks, more from our guide about the miles off Nicaragua's Atlantic visitors. We'll be back in the with five-star destinations." beers (interestingly enough, local San Andres-Providencia coast, belongs to Colombia and, coming days to take him up on Old Milwaukee is quite popu- Creole, which mixes expreslargely because of its history as the latter two options, but on Personaltouches lar) and simple seafood dishes. sions from Spanish and Afria base for English pirates, is our first afternoon, we want Miss Rose, which goes for Like almost all of the beaches can languages. There'llbe time mostly English-speaking. The to go kayaking in Old Prov- about $75 a night during high in Providencia, Almendra Bay to talkfish after we surface extremely welcoming locals idence McBean Lagoon. We season (Christmas to mid-Jan- is ideal for swimming, which from the waters below, where move effortlessly between En- slowly make our way through uary, Easter week and mid- we do often, careful to avoid we encounter endless brain glish, Spanish and a unique tangled mangroves, home to June to mid-July), comes with stepping on the giant starfish and fan coral, a stunning array creole tongue, and throughout colorful crabs and elusive lit- hospitality included. Owner that dot the sea floor. of brightly colored fish and the our stay they are eager to point tle birds, to reach the lagoon. Luisa Canencia Britton lives dioccasional fluttering squid. us to a good local restaurant or There we take a break for a rectly behind the guest house, Island exploring Afterward, Howard's son quick hike up Iron Wood Hill, and every morning during our Each day we set out from drops us off at Crab Cay, a which showcases the tropical five-day stay, she provides us Miss Rose's on the somewhat popular day-trip destination dry forest on the eastside of with small island gifts: a bowl dilapidated bikes that we've that's smack in the middle of SOLUTION TO the island and provides a stun- of refreshing local plumlike rented for the week. On our the most brilliantly colored TODAY'S SUDOKU ning view of the turquoise sea. fruits, warm bread or books first full day, we bike around part of the surrounding waAfter kayaking, we return about the island. She also kind- the entire island, which you ters. The vista from its rocky 7 13 5 8 9 6 2 4 l could probably do in an hour if peak is mesmerizing. 6 25 4 3 7 9 1 8 you just kept pedaling, but we Another day, we rent kay8 49 2 1 6 5 7 3 take frequentbreaks, exploring aks and snorkeling gear on SOLUTION TO TODAY'S LAT CROSSWORD 4 7 8 'i 9 5 3 6 2 8 severalbeachesand stoppingin for dinner, then stop at a small

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Our favorite is El Divino Nino, a local institution on South

West Bay beach that serves a generous mixed platter of sea-

food that's supposedly for two but can easily feed three. For about $20, the platter comes

piled high with Caribbean delights: whole red snapper, lobster, crab claws, sauteed conch,

soup, coconut rice and fried plantains. From our outdoor table, we're able to watch the

weekly horse race, in which local youths ride speeding horses bareback down the white

sand beach, while seemingly half the island's population place friendly wagers and cheer the riders on. This is the only fast-paced event we experience in Providencia.

Despite its tiny size, the island keeps us busy but never overwhelmed. There are just enough options for us to feel that we accomplish something

each day but still allow us to have the relaxing beach vacation we were looking for. Before coming, we'd contemplated getting certified in scuba diving, but we decided to save that for another trip.

Still, we did pick up a new skill. And who knows? Being able to steer a bike with one hand while holding a snapper in the other might come in

handy some day.

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the town of Santa Catalina for

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Photos by Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times

Pike Place Market is the hub of Seattle, where fresh, local pro-

ABOVE: The barrel facade behind the bar houses the taps dispensing whiskey, cognac and other hard liquor at Radiator Whiskey, where fine liquor is paired with comfort food. LEFT: The Market

duce, seafood, specialty foods and crafts are bought andsold.

Theater gumwall in Post Alley has become apopular tourist stop.

Open since1907, the market is a bustling place where live music provides the backdrop to the hundreds of shops and thousands of

The brick walls in the alley are covered with chewing gum several inches thick.

visitors each day.

Pike Place

been at the market (in a purpose-built building) since 1985. Rooms for two are typically $199 to $500. For an over-thetop evening, ask about renting

the alley from the Alibi Room

bar. The gum bits started to accumulate in the 1990s and Do spend a few m i nutes got a big boost when National gawking at Pike Place Fish Geographic gave the site a twoMarket, where fishmongers page spread in June 2010. holler and fling their salmon, For Chinese food in a tight an elder statesman among uphalibut and other goods. space with a big view, do con- scale restaurants at the market. If you need some dead-tree sider Pike Place Chinese Cui- Dinner main dishes $28 to $47. reading — the latest Nome sine. Most main dishes run For a stiff drink (or half a Nugget newspaper, for in- about $15.95. smoked pig's head, if you dare), stance, or a European magaF or a stylish dinner in a do try Radiator Whiskey, an zine — ora postcard or stamp, buzzingroom,dotry Steelhead atmosphericbar that opened do stop at First 5 Pike News. Diner, where them enu isheavy in 2013 across from Matt's in If you'd like to see brick on seafood.Excellent chowder. the Market. Besides spirits, walls bedecked with recyded Main dishes $18 to $38. this place offers a short dinner chewing gum or you would Do climb up to Matt's in menu, with main dishes typilike to see a show at the Mar- the Market for a sophisticated cally $13 to $18. The half pig's ket Theater, do head to 1428 meal and view of the market head, which feeds two to three, Post Alley, which is beneath with Puget Sound behind it. is $48. the market proper and across Matt's, which dates to 1996, is If you need to sober up, yearold Storyville Coffee is down Continued from C1

thehall. To taste what the buzz is all

If you go Pike Place Market Historic District:85 Pike Place, Seattle; 206682-7453; www.pikeplacemarket.org SoundTransit's Central Link light-rail system: (www. soundtransit.org) Pike Place FishMarket: 86 Pike Place; 206-682-7181, www. pikeplacefish.com PikePlaceChineseCuisine:1533PikePlace;206-223-0292,no website Stselhead Diner:95 Pine St.; 206-625-0129, www.steelheaddiner.com Matt's in the Market:94 Pike St., No. 32; 206-467-7909, www. mattsinthemarket.com Radiator Wh iskey:94 PikeSt.,No.30;206-467-4268,www. radiatorwhiskey.com Storyville Coffee:94 Pike St., No. 34; 206-780-5777, www.storyville.com Rachel's GingerBeer: 1530 Post Alley; 206-467-4924, www. rachelsgingerbeer.com MetsksrMaps: 15111st Ave.; 206-623-8747, www.metskers. com De Laurenti Specialty Food & Wine: 1435 First Ave.; 206-6220141, www.delaurenti.com Market GhostTours:1499 Post Alley; 206-805-0195, www.ghostalleyespresso.com, www.seattleghost.com Lowell's: 1519 PikePlace; 206-622-2036, www.eatatlowells.com Green TortoiseHostel: 105 Pike St.; 206-340-1222, www.greentortoise.com Sisters EuropeanCafe:1530 Post Alley; 206-623-6723, www. sisterseuropeancafe.com Inn atthe Market: 86 Pine St.; 206-443-3600, www.innatthemarket.com LePanier Very French Bakery:1902 Pike Place; 206-441-3669, www.lepanier.com Pink Doer:1919 PostAlley; 206-443-3241, www.thepinkdoor.net Seattle Art Museum:13001stAve.; 206-654-3100, www.seattleartmuseum.org

about, do sample some of Rachel's Ginger Beer. Some people step up for a sweet refreshment, such as the blood orange ginger beer float with vanilla soft serve that I ordered. (Excellent, $8.) Others choose the $8 Montana Mule. Rachel's isn't cheap, but l i nes often

stretch out the door.

Rates typically $30-$36 per bed per night; private rooms $78-$82. Shaggy travelersfrom many lands share dormitory rooms (some single sex, some coed) with four to eight bunk beds.Breakfasts arefree,asis dinner three nights a week.

do need to duck into the Seattle

ample balconyand amazing Art Museum. On view through views of the market and Puget Jan. 11: "Pop Departures," feaSound. For breakfast with a French

turing the works of icons such

as Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenaccent, do try Le Panier Very stein, Robert Indiana and Claes French Bakery, which opens at Oldenburg. 7 a.m. and fills up fast. On the

scene since 1983. Good people-watching, great raspberry croissants ($3.25).

' NQRTHWEsT

For a romanticdinner, do head to the Pink Door, which dates to 1981. The menu is Ital-

CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

icin i u o n e By Andrea Sachs The Washington Post

Sniff. I started searching for the

r a r an iseo re n a a

ward. "Spider!" she half-whispered with fear. On the drive to Dougaldston

Estate, a whiff of chocolate

scent as soon as I landed at the

floated through the open win-

Maurice Bishop International Airport. For many people, the fragrance is redolent of Grandma's kitchen during holiday cookieseason or ofpotpourri.

dow.Iexcitedly announced my discovery to Edwin. "Maybe that guy was carrying some," he said, referring to a solitary man walking on the

For me, the blend of nutmeg,

side of the road. Hmm, maybe

cinnamon, mace and cocoa we should give him a lift'? smells of Grenada. Cocoa plantations typically Sniff, sniff. harvest the bean in September, I first visited this Caribbe- though this year, the season is an island more than a decade a bit behind schedule. (Target ago on a family vacation that month: November). However, fell somewhere between the at the 17th-century estate near U.S. invasion (1983) and Hur- Gouyave (French-ish for "guaAndrea Sachs 1 The WashingtonPost ricane Ivan (2004). My lasting va"), Edwin pulled out a drawer The view from Fort George, hIgh above St. George, the capital of memory of that trip was not of containing the drying beans. Grenada. the talcum-soft beaches or the

I crushed one between my fin-

snorkeling reefs rife with tropical fish. Rather, I remember how the air was seemingly perfumed with spice cake. Since then, I've inhaled the

gers, releasing the bitter odor of burnt chocolate. The facility sells bags of spicesfora few dollars apiece. But before I could shop for my-

aromas of many other islands.

self, I had to take care of the

They smelled nice enough, mosquitoes. though perhaps a bit heavy on the fish and rum. But my nose

always drifts backto Grenada. Snifffffff. Before departing for the southerly Winward Island, I

first checked my spice shelf, then contacted a tour guide (a former tourism department official) about a daylong outing. The country is a Gordian knot of squiggly streets, steep inclines, dense rain forest and utter confusion: Ivan swiped

most of the road signs, and the government is on a slow track to replacing them. The most

Grenville

The announcement r ang

walked along a stretch ofbeach ing light, and made the wise before entering a dense rain choice. forest. I'd fallen into step with Back at the parking lot, we a British woman who lived on the island and went by the

reliable guideposts are the AtAfter the sartorial rite of pas- Kim, aka Wet and Dry. We lantic Ocean to the east and the sage, the leader of the Grenada worked as a team to locate the Caribbean Sea to the west. Hash House Harriers, a local nests of paper under the darkchapter of t h e i n ternational ening sky. We stood in a baFollowing our noses hiking group, quiddy reviewed nana plantation overlooking During our planning ses- the rulesfor the Saturday af- the coastline and heard the sion, Edwin Frank and I as- ternoon trek. We would follow strains of music coming from sembled an itinerary that was trail markers, cirdes of shred- our starting point. We were heavily skewed toward spices, ded paper set on the ground. getting close. But the paper once the country's main indus- However, at three intersections, trail snaked back into the black try. We would visit a nutmeg the prankster planners had maw of the forest. We looked at processing center, a cocoa plotted false routes. If the path the road, glowing in the wanplantation and a chocolate fac- ended with an X, you'd chosen tory. If we moved like Kirani the wrong tine in the fork. In James, the Olympic sprinter addition, if we happened to lose who grew up in Grenada, we our way, we were instructed to could possibly squeeze in a yell, "Areyou?" and wait for the produce market and the Spice response, "On on." The newbies Basket, a cultural center with to hashingpracticed the call for the magic word in its name. help — twice. We had to make sacrifices, The group has been meetthough. My beach time would ing every weekend since 1985. be reduced to a blur of sand Typically about 250 to 300 hikand water seen through the ers and runners attend (we had half the numbers, due to the

We scheduled our excursion for Friday; I arrived on Wednesday night. After such a long absence from Grenada,

chikungunya virus), a roving

I couldn't wait another day. I startedthehunt fornutmegear-

thirst for Caribbeer is. We started the trek in the

I browsed through the aisles alongside shoppers dressed in scrubs, sweatshirts and

backpacks, the medical students from nearby St. George's University.

I found the t h ings-youspread-on-toast section and scooped up two jars of nut-

meg jam. In the bakery aisle, I grabbed a crusty baguettelest you forget, the French ruled Grenada in the 17th and 18th

centuries — though the bread was superfluous. A spoon was

all I needed. When I met Edwin, I quickly

.

g '"'

sj zed @ci~ity.

navigational dial on b) he could help us Bathway Beach. We ~U r/ep t~clgS f ind t he main road drove without inci- QU/gjrig ~jt/I (yes). We followed dent to Pearls Air- rIUts reSted his BMW a long twisty roads that port, site of an abandoned Russian plane Or! I4 OOder! sometimes swirled

and a Cuban passen- pe//ets

around trafhc ctr-

received a heroine's welcome.

ger aircraft that was ggd fj//ed

Then I was called to the front,

grounded after the

cles. W e were still unsure of our loca-

Quiet Sundays

T HE E

ed out the road that

acou. However, Bruno and Iris,

who run Cabier Ocean Lodge, warned me that I would spend a very lonely, hungry and thirsty three hours there. My Plan B: take a snorkeling tour of the Underwater Sculpture

Park, an aquatic Hirshhorn. Unfortunately, my rental car died on the side of the road, and

I missed the starting time. I hoofed it back to the lodge

I' •

stoppedandgotout ofhiscar.Hepoint-

patterns on the metal

pack of locals, expats, tourists,

university students and dogs. Athleticism is not required; a

tion when the man

we needed to folSundays on Grenada are shells. A grazing cow low, then directed as quiet as a congregation of manicured thegrassy grounds. our gaze acrossthe street:to a church mice; offseason, you We saw a sign to Belmont roastedcornstand. can barely even hear them Estate, a lavish property that I bo u ght two pieces from a squeak. growscacaoandprovidestours vendor. He handed me them Most Grenadians spend the of its operations. We stopped wrapped in banana leaves. day in services and/or with at a restaurant for a cold drink I g i n gerly placed the food in family. Museums and attrac- and a bowl of callaloo soup, the back seat, the earthy scent tions are dosed. Even the roads made from a leafy green vege- of roasted corn filling the inteare sparselypopulated. table. We still hoped to make it r i o r. We drove back to the hotel For my Sunday on Grenada, to the beach, but we got ridic- reekingof Grenada. I'd originally planned to ride the 90-minute ferry to Carri-

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ly Thursday morning. streets of Grenville, passing My lodging, the Flamboy- yipping dogs and residents ant Hotel, was a short walk to wavingfrom their porches. We Spiceland Mall (yes, I know). I hugged the side of the gnarled road, hopping between speeding cars and land crab holes. Inside the IGA supermarket,

and mulled alternate plans ulouslylost. Wedrovepastthe while the company fixed the same woman selling fruit four vehide. I roped in the other t imes. two guests, Felicia and Kim, Thr o ughout my stay, I'd seen who were lazing around on v endors selling roasted corn the beach. We decided to take alongthesideoftheroad. Since a Sunday drive and make the we weren't getting anywhere most of the empty fast, I stopped to roads. If I s trayed inquire about a cob. from the l eft, or At g rI Utmeg The c o ok had just Brit-Grenadian side pr OCeSSing warme d t he grill; ~ of the road, to the ETAofeatingwasa half-hour. right,or Yankeeside, StBtlOrI ... Brl I had little fear of e m p /Oyee /eQ Kim as k e d a bumping into another SIX OfUS Or! y " an car. an ice cream cone The three of us e t O U" Of t /I e whe t her a) the flaset off in a northerly yygre/IOUSevor w a s n u tmeg

hashtag Mucky Drawers. (So- where a small crowd doused 1983 overthrow of S helVeS that ciety members use nicknames.) me with beer. I was no longer a the prime minister, C/lmtIed/j7Ce Participants can choose be- Grenada hash virgin. MauriceB'shop.Ve tween two routes: hiker or runetation created artful t)eBrIStB/ks'

through the parking lot of a ner. Mucky and I chose the latsecondary school in Grenville: ter,which she said was longer Anyone with new shoes must (four miles vs. three) and more approach the podium. I looked challenging. at my sneakers, caked with The two of us scrambledover mud from yesterday's rain, and rocks,leaped across stteams smiled. Agirl nevertells the age and climbed hills sloppy ofher footwear. with mud. We used roots and A handful of folks, howev- branchesas ropes. Ifollow ed er, walked up to a small pile of Mucky's lead, listening for her singleshoes,one footbare or warnings: "Mind the thorns," socked, took a deep breath and "Mind the hole." then proceeded to chug beer Midway through the hike, out of the athleticvessel. we picked up a third person:

car window.

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my olfactory memories. The island didn't smell as nutmeggy as it hadbefore.Heassured me that my nose wasn't delusional. "The hurricane was devas-

tating," he said. "We lost 83 percent of our nutmeg trees. But we have planted a more resistant variety and are en route to

returning" to the No. 2 position. s etback, th e

farmers are sticking by the brown nut.

At a

n utmeg processing

station in Grenville, the sec-

ond-largest town in Grenada, an employee led six of us on a tourofthew arehouse-sized facility. Burlap bags bulging with nuts rested on wooden pallets

and filled shelves that climbed like beanstalks. An employee described the life of the nutmeg, which reads like a dating profile: "Me, slightly nutty and very sweet, likes hills and standing in the rain. My ideal age: 100 years young." In the shelling area, he encouraged us to go up the stairs and take a seat at the counter with two holes per station — one for

the shell, the other for the nut. I stood beside another guest who

peered into one of the openings and quickly stumbled back-

' •

admitted that I was questioning

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A full-capacity sign alerts visitors in front of the Toy Story Midway Mania ride at Hollywood Studios

Disney that only guests with a prearranged Fastpass are being allowed onto the popular ride.

DAILY BRIDGECLUB

sunday, october 26,2014

Felonious acts By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

I found Cy the Cynic in the club lounge, staring at a blank sheet of paper. "I'm making a list," Cy told me, "of the top 10 things men understand about women." "How long have you been at it?" "Two hours," Cy growled. "How about listing the top 10 mistakes at bridge," I said. At length, the Cynic came up with this: 10. Trumping partner's ace. 9. Preempting, then bidding again. 8. Drawing trumps too soon. 7. Leading into strength. 6. Failing to cover an honor. 5. Finessing against partner. 4. Passing a forcing bid. 3. Doubling the opponents into game. 2. Taking a "phantom" sacrifice; and ... 1. Giving declarer a ruff-sluff. Some "felonies" can amount to winning play. At today's four spades, South ruffed the second heart, led a club to dummy and returned a trump to his jack. West won and was reluctant to concede a ruff-sluff by leading a third heart. He tried a club. South won indummy and led a trump to his ten, losing to West's king. He could win the diamond return, draw trumps and claim, making four. Giving declarer a ruff-sluff isn't even a misdemeanor ifhe has no losers to sluff. If West leads another

heart at Trick Five, South goes down. South canruffin dummy and lead a second trump but has no winning play when East shows out. If South takes the ace and leads the ten, West wins and leads another heart, and South must ruff in his hand, losing control. If instead South leads side-suit winners, West scores his last low trump plus his king. North dealer E-W vulnerable

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ample, kids frolic in an indoor playground until buzzers alert their families it's time to board

Disney said it doesn't have the Dumbo ride. Disney also immediate plans for an ap- added a second Dumbo carpointment-only ride, but the ousel to handle more riders. test was designed to gauge A big part of the strategy, whether more guests were however, is allowing a certain able to ride Toy Story using number of people to skip lines FastPass only and to see how altogether. visitors reacted. Disney has taken a difh a v e ferent approach to this than

its primary competitor here, en waits, or at l east make Universal Orlando. Universal them less boring, analysts visitors can pay for Express say. Guests leave happierPasses or get them by staying and are more likely to return. in the resort's luxury hotels. Shorter lines at popular rides They start at $35 for a basic mean tourists have more time one-park deal, but unlimited line-skipping for both parks to visit secondary attractions. And time not spent in line can reach up to $150 on peak means more cash at the reg- days. isters in a park's shops and Universal's program uwas restaurants. designed based on feedback "People standing in lines from our guests and a great aren't spending money," said deal ofresearch from our Duncan Dickson, a f o rmer team," spokeswoman AlyDisney executive who teach- son Lundell said in an email. uIt helps guests experience es at the University of Central Florida's Rosen College of everything ou r d e stination Hospitality Management. has to offer at their own pace Jim MacPhee, Walt Disney during their visit." Parks and Resorts senior vice At Disney World, the empresident, said in an emailed phasis is on good planning. statement that Disney is ula- Anyone can request up to ser-focused on enhancing the three free FastPasses at a experience of our guests, and time for select rides. They are tests in the parks are one of assigned one-hour windows many ways we gain insights" during which they can walk to help do that. into the ride in almost no time. The FastPass experiment isn't the industry's first try at

fighting lines. A few years ago, Disney created an underground center in which employees mon-

wood Studios' most popular

attractions and has a reputation for painfully long waits of more than an hour.

On a Tuesday afternoon, its characteristic snaking l ines

were gone. Guests booked F astPasses that day a n d walked on i n t w o t o t h r ee minutes.

For some, though, change brought confusion. Jennifer Franch, of Dublin, Ohio,

snagged a Toy Story reservation on her smartphone but

lost FastPasses for two shows in the process. Lisa Hulman, o f

H u n t s-

ville, Alabama, had trouble reserving a time for her family online. Even after getting one with the help of a Disney employee with a tablet, she remained frazzled. uI don't like it," she said. uI

was about in tears." Rather t ha n

a r e s e rva-

tion-only ride, Dickson said, one possibility could be an extra track for Toy Story that

would be solely accessed by FastPass users. No matter how Disney or its competitors tinker with their

crowd-management systems, don't expect to see a lineless

theme park anytime soon. Usher guests through too many attractions too quick-

Disney has shunned the

ly, and a new set of problems

idea of charging for the passes because "they felt it would disenfranchise a group that couldn'tafford to upgrade," Dickson said. "They just felt

is created. Visitors might get

itor crowds via computer and

that within their culture, it just video camera,then decide didn't fit."

which c o n gestion-fighting Instead, Disney has tried to weapons to deploy. A ride encourage more widespread might launch more vehicles, use of the passes through its for example, or a restaurant MyMagic+ billion-dollar techcould open more registers. nology project. Guests can Early access for hotel now reserve rides and shows guests also helps. Visitors up to two months before their who stay on Disney and Uni- visits. And the number of atversal Orlando property get to tractions eligible for FastPassenjoy the parks exclusively for es has doubled.

bored if they see everything too fast. And during busy times, crowds could end up

clogging stores, restaurants and avenues instead of queues. "The flow within a park assumes a certain number of people will be standing in line, more so during peak periods than nonpeak periods," said Joni Newkirk, a former senior vice president at Disney who

runs a consulting firm called Integrated Insight. uYou take them out of line, and where do n they go?

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ovated Fantasyland, for ex-

ervations for anyone boarding the Toy Story Midway Mania

so when they could reserve them only in the park. Because so many people already use FastPasses, many didn't mind the brief change at Toy Story Midway Mania. The 3-D ride is one of Holly-

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when it required FastPass res-

FastPasses now, c ompared with fewer than half who did

REALIZE YOUR AMBITIONS

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hang out at their hotels in the afternoon. T he parks' a rsenal of crowd-control tactics also includes distractions, which have grown increasingly elaborate. At Disney World's ren-

S eventy-five percent o f Walt Disney World guests use

46

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of theme parks' biggest challenges: finding ways to ease the pain of waiting in line. Disney's Hollywood Studios tried something unusual for a few days this month,

plenty of motivation to less-

"GIVE IT A GO" By 78 Mayberry SOI 108 Remove forcibly MELANIE MILLER Campbell 109 Bangladesh 79 Hr. portions neighbor ACROSS 80 Super-small 110 IRS I LIke many 81 Holier-than-thou requirement for

player Adams 50 Moderate pace 51 Kid's comeback 52 Horse and buggy 53 Slip 54 Suppressed 56 Belief system 57 '70s extremist gP. 58 Newspaper issue for arrogant readers? 60 Lacking manners 6I Muslim leaders 63 Place for worms? 64 Places for outlets 65 Chilean lady 67 Google an African nation'? 7I ShoP you drop 74 Striped cat 7S Grammywinner Lena 76 Radio station, say 77 Excitement

gives them more incentive to

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Paddington Bear film inspires city-wide trail By Jill Schensui

don's mayor, Boris Johnson.

The Record (Hackensack, N.L)

Actor Michael Sheen's cre-

ation, Paddington Shakesbear unbearable. (combining his love for the Because of well... Bard and the bear, he said), — bears. was recently unveiled. Paddington bears, specifiThe bears will be installed cally. Fifty 5-foot-tall statues near museums, parks, shops of Paddington in a variety and landmarks that are Padof outfits will be installed dington favorites. Bonneville all over the city, making up points out that "Paddington the Paddington Trail, which is an explorer — this trail is opens Nov.4. a wonderful way of bringing London could soon become

Way in time to foment excitement and even more buzz

this to life, and I hope it makes

people look at London with for "Paddington" the movie, fresh eyes." which premieres Nov. 28 in You will be able to downthe U.K. and on Christmas load the trail map (along with Day here in the United States. suggested minitrails) at VisThe British have definitely itLondon.com/Paddington. gone overboard on this proj- You'll also be able to upload ect. They are,afterall,used to your own photos of sites along treacle. the trail — selfies at SelfridgAnd I believe 50 Padding- es, anyone? ton statuesdressed in everySelfridges is the trail's "rething from sparkles to Eliza- tail partner" and will be sellbethan puffy shirts qualifies ing miniatures of the statues as treacly. That's before all the (for those who can't afford signage, the paw prints, the the life-size version). They, souvenirs. too, are going all-out, with a They're taking Paddington, dedicated Paddington c ona veritable icon of the city (de- cept store (The Paddington spite being from Peru), for all Curiosity Shop) showcasing a he's worth — not even waiting variety of Paddington-related for the movie to come out be- products and artifacts. The fore touting the movie-related merchandise will also help tourism products. raise funds for the National Society for the Prevention of A history of Cruelty to Children. film-inspired tourism Anything that raises funds Then again, VisitLondon for a good cause is fine with a nd VisitBritain h ave h a d

me. Even if I'm not a fan of

some experience with these this particular bear, I respect movie-related travel frenzies. his massive draw — 50 milThe "Harry Potter" series, for lion books sold worldwide, instance, spawned all man- his own line of Baby Gap ner of attractions and themed clothing, postage stampstours. A 2012 study by Oxford

a nd Prince W i l liam

Air travel

How to prevent: Every U.S.

Continued from C1 How to fix: Even if your bag arrives at the bag daim safely, it's a good idea to open the bag and check the contents. If

there's a problem, file a claim with the airline before leaving the airport. Airlines are required to cover up to $3,400 for domestic travel, but much less for international flights,

and they will depreciate the value of the contents. If the air-

line denies your daim or pays only part of the bag's value, check your credit card: Most cards offer lost or damaged bag insurance for free, even for carry-on bags, and some

ten faster to use Twitter rather

domestic flight is required to than waiting in line at the airhave anon-time performance port. If all else fails and you score assigned to it, and some have to stay overnight, ask, flights are more prone to can- nicely, for hotel accommodacellations or delays than oth- tions (airlines are not required ers. For example, in August, to provide rooms or meals, but United flight 5714 from New many do). Again, your credit York JFK to Washington Dull- card may include free comes was canceled 6 percent of pensation (usually $100 per the time and on-time (defined day) if you incur expenses due as within 15 minutes of sched- to a delay or cancellation. ule) 45 percent of the timenot very reassuring if you're • I couldn't find seats next to making a connecti on. Some my traveling companion(s): airlines, such as United, post

How to prevent: Book seats

this information online, or you as early as possible.Ifyou're can call the airline and ask for traveling with a child 12 years its on-time and cancellation of age or younger, be sure to numbers. Avoid flights with indicate that when you make dismal performance statis- your reservation since aireven cover electronics such tics, and naturallyyou up your lines do attempt to sit children as cameras and computers, chances of success by avoid- together with companions if as long as you paid for the trip ing connecting flights. they know the child's age. Or

with the card.

How to fix: Have a Plan B.

Keep a list of alternate flights, • My flight was canceled or even if on a competing airline, delayed: and ask to be rebooked. It's of-

one ise

IC

e es

get to the airport super early and ask for seat reassignment. And if that doesn't work, bring along some Starbucks gift certificates or movie passes to "bribe" passengers to switch seats with you.

• I can't find frequent flyer seats for the dates I went: How to prevent: The best

strategyis to look for seats way ahead, or at the last min-

ute. Airlines open up frequent flyer seats close in to departure if it looks as if they won't

be able to sell them. How to fix: If all else fails, don't hesitate to call the air-

line's frequent flyer service number rather than just looking online. Ask them to look

for seats on partner airlines. And check for seats often, call the airline's reservation since inventory changes frenumber andrequest adjacent quently as people holding seats. seatsrelease them or change How to fix: If all else fails,

their plans.

one eserves a n ever.

Get 4 lines and1OGB of data for just'140 a month. We'll even pay off your old contract.

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Economics, one of the world's and wears a Paddington-patleading providers of economic terned apron! I'm sure it's just analysis and advice, estimated the me who finds PadU.K. film industry F i f t y dington a bit overg enerates abo u t exposed to the pub$3.4 billion in tour 5- f O Ot t lic. Obviously most ism revenues annu- StBtUes Of of the w o r ld can't ally. The U.K. has pgdding get enough of the the movie-site maps bear from deepetY and apps producest, darkest Peru. tion down pat. O f OUtf ltS Will St i l l, I'm imagining And when you Qe jn S tg aed t he newest w a ve c onsider the n e w

of Pad-mania. I re-

P addington f i l m has more t h an Ci t y, m a king

member 10 years

294,000 "likes" on

a spin around the

F acebook and i t hasn't come out yet, I guess the Pad- Trail, Which d ington Trail can't p p e n S Oy 4 miss. (Its producer and its special ef-

shops at Heathrow

fects team are Pot-

ago, maybe, taking before d eparting for h o me, and stopp i n g to consider the shelves full of Paddington plush toys. I hadn't read the

ter alumni);

books, but I'd understood he Riddling city streets with was as iconic as, say, Big Ben, artistically decorated statues in these parts. Maybe buying isn't much of a gamble, either. a bear was an imperative. The idea of enlisting artists to Maybe Iwould look back on personalize one model statue this ursine purchase in the — usually an animal — be- years to come with fondness, gan with the "cow parade" a flood of memories of the in Switzerland in 1998. They

livened up the place, and after the show was over, the statues

were auctioned to raise money for a charity.

time spent in London.

I looked at the bears, in fireman outfits, bobby uniforms, adventurer tans and

greens. There were small ones, nubby-fabric ones, plaid the Paddingtons when they ones. Boxed sets of two. Snow are removed at the end of De- globes, I think. Every one was cember; proceeds will go to cute. Cute, cute, cute. So many the National Society for the artfully cute bears that, after Prevention of Cruelty to Chil- about five minutes of paradren, a U.K.-wide charity. lyzing indecision, I realized looking at the parade of PadCelebrity backing dingtons was actually an unBut the number and sheer pleasant experience. celebrity power behind the I left empty-handed. My Paddington Trail project puts heart belongs to Winnie — the this effort in a class by itself Pooh ceramic soup bowl and and is sure to raise pounds Hunny socks still make me and pounds of funds, not to smile,even a dozen years afSuch will be the case with

mention interest in London, the movie and more plush toys

ter they were purchased.

(and the latest merchandise). The organizers — VisitLon-

Heathrow is what I fear will

The Paddington overload at

happen in London. Everywhere tourists go, the bear is dioCanal, a co-producer and sure to be there already. Like distributor of movies and TV Zelig. Or Chucky. Don't laugh. The first trailin Europe — have enlisted an amazing roster of celebrities ers for "Paddington" seem to provide inspiration and de- to be shaking up the bear's sign ideas for the bears. There longstanding image: Many are the stars from the film, who have viewed the live-acof course, Hugh Bonneville, tion version of Paddington, P eter Capaldi, Nicole K i d who looks a lot more like the man, Julie Walters and Ben real spectacled bear species to Whishaw. which he supposedly belongs Additional designers come — say Paddington gives them from all fields — former soc- the creeps. Of course, there's cer player David Beckham, now a "Creepy Paddington" fashion designers Christopher meme, loved and/or friended Kane and Lulu Guinness, di- by legions. Which might not only help rector Guy Ritchie, musicians don has partnered with Stu-

Nick M a son

a n d F r a n k ie with th e o versentimentality of the trail, but could also redancer Darcey Bussell, artists mind us that really, what the M atthew W i l l iamson, I n k heck is a bear doing in Lon-

Bridge, Royal Ballet principal

ie, Tom Phillips and Hannah don with an upscale family Warren, explorer and survival of humans'? I mean, you don't expert Bear Grylls, the Chel- keep wild animals in apartsea soccer team, the England ment buildings. rugby union team and LonI smell a sequel.

Get ATaste For Food, Home Sr Garden ~ • TheBulletin -

C7

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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

' ta er'star oves actin — an riva TV SPOTLIGHT

"Look at the people who are

ByFrazier Moore

But everybody's interested in

er-skewing action films he wanted to produce. He signed her. Once again anovice in a new game, "I was absolutely terrible," Maggie declares.

The Associated Press

their lives. I don't understand that. I never understood when

believe they call you a talent,'

in the news," she says, point-

"Stalker" 10 p.m.Wednesdays, CBS

ing to gossip-media royalty. "I don't find them fascinating. I think they're a bunch of idiots.

NEW YORK — For Maggie Q, her new series, "Stalker,"

"I had people tell me, 'I can't

it was happening to ME."

hits close to home. But not too

and I couldn't disagree with them. I didn't fall in love with

That was in Asia more than

close, if Maggie can help it. She sees privacy, and guarding her personal space, as vital to her freedom. Even so, she has had her

a decade ago, when, to her acting until my third film, a chagrin, she realized she had really bad film called 'Manpunched her way to fanzine hattan Midnight' (2001)." fame as a b r eakout action Today, Maggie (whose credstar. its include "Live Free or Die Why were celebrity rags Hard," the recent "Divergent" dogging her'? "I don't find MY- and, in 2006 with Tom Cruise,

own brush with a stalker.

"He thought he had a rela-

tionship with me that wasn't

SELF that interesting!" she

"Mission Impossible: III," her

happening," she says, recalling the delusional fan. "I didn't

says. As she discusses that inva-

first U.S. production) is widely recognized as an "action

KNOW that person!" As a past star of A sian-

sion during a recent interview in Manhattan, Maggie, 35, is

star," which, she concedes, has a pejorative ring, "like I

petite but still in fighting trim

do pushups for a living, not acting." (That said, "Stalked" distances her from the rock'em, sock-'em genre. The job

based action films, after which she played the title

in snug black slacks, a leather character of the CW t h r i ll- Maggie Q hopes "Stalker," which stars Maggie and Dylan McDerjacket and a stylish black feer "Nikita" for four seasons, mott as detectives who investigate stalking incidents for the Threat dora. She was born Margaret Maggie has done her best to Assessment Unit of the LAPD, can help people to safeguard their Denise Quigley to an Amerievade off-screen attention of privacy in real life. can father and a Vietnamese all kinds. mother, and after growing Monty Brinton / Courtesy CBS via The Associated Press

Now, in th e early weeks

of her new series, which airs Wednesdays at 10 p.m. on

reminder that everyone can take steps to safeguard his CBS, she has braced for an private life. "With social media today, even greaterchallenge to her goal of staying out of the pub- all our lives are more accessilic eye. ble and on display," she says. On "Stalker," she and Dylan "There's an immediacy in our McDermott star as detectives

who investigate stalking inci-

culture now, where whatever you feel at this moment enters

your head and comes out your ment Unit of the Los Angeles fingertips into your phone and Police Department. Maggie into the world." hopes her series will shine Unless, that is, like Maggie, a light on the trauma of be- you disrupt the flow. "I'm very bad on social meing stalked and serve as a dents for the Threat Assess-

dia," she says with a laugh. "I

of Detective Beth Davis is to

crack cases, not skulls.) "When I started in action

films," says Maggie, "the idea of action was the (Steven) Seagals and the (Jean-Claude) Van

up in Hawaii with an athletic bent, she worked as a model

in Hong Kong to earn money stagram, and I've never had for school. (Her lifelong love Facebook." of animals seemed to signal a She does limited tweeting career as a veterinarian.) "At first, I was terrible," she to publicize her show, just as she's happy to submit to on- admits. "I was shy. And I was point interviews. But years unaware of using looks and ago, a magazine asked to sexuality to your advantage, shoot photos with her in her which, at the end of the day, is home. what modeling is." "I said, 'Are you kidding? Her modeling career didn't rn No way! last long. Jackie Chan was Maggie finds celebrity wor- scouting for newcomers to apship bewildering. pear in a new slate of youngpost nothing. I don't have In-

eat Iea raises atin ou ts

Dammes, who aren't A-list ac-

tors, not by any means. And the genre was associated with that level of acting.

"Now every A-list actor in Hollywood is doing what I've been doing for 17 years. Because, guess what'? It's the funnest job, the most exciting

job! Tom Cruise knows it." So does Matt Damon, she adds. "And they're real actors!"

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • I/tovie times are subject to change after press time. f

Dear Abby: A wonderful man,

than that, then I'm afraid my an-

"Frank," said he was interested in

It could be that the airfare is more

swer is yes — to which I'll add one developing a relationship. The prob- more "minus": your inability to dislem'? He is a super-neat freak. A per- cuss your misgivings with HIM. son could live in his garage — it's Dear Abby: Recently, I went to THAT clean. The floor is spotless, the funeral of a family member. As and everything is in its place. Frank we were leaving the chapel, a relwashes and shines ative asked me if I his car every second was aware that the day. When there is a f uneral h a d b e e n DFP,R delivery to his house, live streamed. I was ABBY he makesthedelivery appalled. After all, people remove their going to a funeral alshoes before entering. lows us a chance to I'm neat, but not to that extreme. say goodbye to the deceased and

than some relatives can afford, or that health problems make travel

When I'm at Frank's house, I am on

taken the bus, this is the first time

to be there to support the surviving

difficult. In some cases, streaming

the service or memorial is a practical solution so that everyone can be included. Dear Abby:A new family moved down the street. They have two

young kids who take the bus with my son. What is annoying to me is their daughters are always late for the bus, which makes the bus late

to school. Should I say something or let it go'? In all the years my son has

pins and needles if I leave a glass on a table that might leave a ring and terrified I'll drop something on his carpet. Frank has never said

family and friends. I don't believe this has happened. Thanks for the that live streaming can accom- advice. plish either of those missions. Am I —Late for School in Ohio wrong to think that this was really Dear Late: Talk to your son's anything, but I wonder what he's inappropriate? teacher, because his tardiness to thinking. — Baffledin Boston class could reflect poorly on his I like Frank a lot, but when he DearBaffle: You may be passing grades. The teacher — or school comes to my apartment, I notice his judgment too quickly. These days principal — might send a note to the 360-degree gaze around the rooms. many funerals and memorials are parents "reminding" them that chilAnother possible problem — he has live streamed, but are not available dren must be in their classrooms by no interest in culture or the arts. Am to the general public. To view them, a certain time, that the bus schedI right in seeing more minuses than one needs an access code. ule is fixed and cannot be adjusted pluses in such a relationship? While I agree that the purpose to accommodate each student, and — Neat Enough in Pennsylvania of a funeral is to comfort the living if it continues to happen, the drivDear Neat Enough:If what you (as well as pay respects to the de- er will have to leave without their want from the relationship is just ceased), whatyouhaven't takeninto daughters. friendship, I don't see a problem. account is that there maybe individ— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com However, if you're looking for more uals who may be unable to attend. or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

have the drive and energy to achieve your goals. In some sense, you will be hard to

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

stop onceyoudecideto headdown a cer-

tain path. You could become increasingly strong-willed in order to achieve what you want. If you are single, you could become involved in a relationship where you put

this person ona

I

I

5 p.m. on NGC,"Mammoth Unearthed" —This gripping new two-hour special chronicles a

desperateracebypaleontologist Trevor Valle andarchaeologist Tim King to secure and research frozen mammoths that have begun to emerge from the melting Siberian permafrost. It's a herculean undertaking, as the two must cope withnot only a hostile environment but also superstitious natives, uncooperative Russian officials and gangs that dig up mammoths to sell their tusks at exorbitant prices. 7p.m.on2,9, Movie:"Star Wars Rebels: Spark ofRebellion" —An outgrowth of the animated series "Star Wars Rebels," this adventure features something in its broadcast debut that its earlier cable showings didn't: an extra scene that restores the voice of James Earl Jones to villain Darth Vader. Thestory finds a renegade starship crew helping to initiate a rebellion against the sinister Galactic Empire. Also in the voice castare Freddie Prinze Jr., Vanessa Marshall, David Dyelowo

and JasonIsaacs. 8 p.m.on6,"Madam Secretary" — A request to the president (Keith Carradine) to help resolve a troublesome situation in Western

Africa hassurprising, not-pleasant results for Elizabeth (Tea Leoni) in the newepisode "The Call." Oscar andEmmywinner LouisGossettJr.,whohasbeen getting back into television in a big way — aswith his recurring role on "Extant" — guest stars as a clergyman who is party to the diplomatic trouble. Tim Daly, Bebe Neuwirth and Zeljko Ivanek also star. 10 p.m. on FOOD,"Cutthroat Kitchen" — Cue the music from "Raiders of the Lost Ark!" In the new episode "The Undertater," one chef tries to outrun a giant boulder made of aluminum foil, but two chefs set aside their competitive spirit long enough to cook for each other. Finally, a chef is forced to play a memory game to retrieve lost ingredients. 10:01 p.m. on 2, 9, "Revenge"Emily (Emily VanCamp)might not be all the wayback to squareone, but she's certainly had setbacks in her scheming — sosheinitiates a rebootin the newepisode"Repercussions." Victoria andDavid Clarke (Madeleine Stowe,James Tupper) are both major factors in Emily's need to rethink her strategy.Josh Bowman, NickWechsler and Gabriel Mannalso star. O Zap2it

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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

source of the gripe is. Reach out to a friend who is much more visible than you are. Tonight: All smiles.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

** * * You might want to get some Stsrs showfhe kisrf Pedestal. The Prob- errandsdone and ma ybe watch a movie. of tfsy yoo'I hsve lem is that he or You could discover that a close loved one ** * * * D ynamic she eventually will is on the war path. Your first reaction ** * * p ositive fall off of it. If you might be to avoid this person. If you do, it ** * Average are attached, the will onlygetworse. Tonight: Relax. Think ** So-so two of you need to "tomorrow." demonstrate more * Difficult LEO (July23-Aug.22) give-and-take.lf ** * * * O thers might become more you do, you will enter a very romantic phase. SAGITTAR- serious or argumentative. You can put a situation on the back burner for only so IUS might be too much of a risk-taker for long. You might not want to discuss what your taste. is going on, so keep atalk as light as posARIES (March21-April19) ** * * You finally could choose to take sible. Try to help someone sort through action regarding a longstanding problem. his or her confusion. Tonight: Out late. Others naturally will respond positively to VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) your ideas. Listen to your intuition as well, ** * Tension builds on the homefront. even if what it tells you is contrary to your Get down to the real problem, which decisions. Tonight: See past the obvious. seems to surround a child or loved one. Be open and have what could be a hard TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * S pend time with a loved one. conversation. You are going down a path where you might eliminate a problem. ToYou might find yourself caught up in a discussion where you will be able to iden- night: Allow in more fun and laughter. tify with this person's perceptions and LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) choices. Listen to your inner voice about ** * * You are likely to see a situation someoneyou look upto.Tonight:Confudifferently after having an animated chat. sion marks your plans. Be willing to make anadjustment, even if you have to make anextra effort or GEMINI (May 21-June 20) change your immediate plans. A discus** * * Defer to others, as you will be sion with a partner will give you a different flooded with ideas and suggestions. A perspective. Tonight: Chat over dinner. complaint might be headed your way as well. You could wonder who the real SGORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

when dealing with a neighbor or sibling. Thispersonalsocould be demanding.Be aware of the anger that is likely to build between the two of you. Perhaps some distance from each other would help. Tonight: Grab a treat on the way home.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You could be more in touch with your feelings than you have been in a while. Others will sense a change in you, and they will start responding differently to you. You might find that you'll really enjoy yourself. Tonight: Whatever makes you smile.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * Be more in touch with your needs. You will become combative if you are not careful. Note that this tendency could last for a few weeks. Do not let anger build; instead, discuss your feelings before that happens. A partner will sense the difference. Tonight: Take awalk.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh.18) ** * * Friends surround you, and you might be overwhelmed by all their attention and invitations. Decide what you want to do. You could feel angry or frustrated regardless. Askyourself where the real source of your feelings is coming from. Tonight: Paint the town red.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * I f you feel so strongly about a long-term desire, why not take an active role in making it happen? A friend could push your buttons while you attempt to handle key responsibilities. Find out what is going on. Tonight: Choose a favorite stressbuster. © King Features Syndicate

4eaaa Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271

30"Range

• TAKE METO THE RIVER !PG)5:30 • THETWO FACESOF JANUARY !PG-13)7:30

IIR

Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SW OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777

rt/tcR31308/ttNLarge oven, splllsaver top

• • • •

DRACULA UNTOLD(PG-13! Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 FURY (R) 12:45, 3:30, 6: I5, 9 JOHN WICK (R) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 THE JUDGE !R! 12:50, 3:40, 6:30, 9:20

. "'359 HNsoN

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Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THEBESTOF ME!PG-13)3:30,6 • FURY(R) 3,5:45 • GONE GIRL (R) 2:30, 5:30 • THE JUDGE !R! 2:45, 5:30 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • ANNABELLE (R) 12:10, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10 • THE BESTOF M E!PG-I3)2,4:25,7 • THE BOOKOF LIFE !PG)Noon,2:10,4:30,6:50 • THE EQUALIZER (R) 1:20, 4, 6:40 • THE JUDGE !R! 12:50, 3:50, 6:45 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THE BOXTROLLS (PG) 1, 4, 7 • THE JUDGE !Upatairs — R) 1, 4, 7:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GG! Magazine

LILY

My name is Lily and I am a beautiful and very spunky 7-1i2 year old Calico. I arrived here as a stray and was sadly never reclaimed. The staff has quickly learned that I am all about the head scratches and attention. If you think I am the perfect lady for you, stop on by and fall in love with me today! HUMRNCS OCIETVOF CENTRA LORf GON/SrrCA 61170 S.E.II7th St., BEND (541) 3$r-3537


Scoreboard, D2 Sports in brief, D2 Golf, D3

NHL, D3

NFL, D5

MLS, D3 Preps, D5 College football, D4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

COLLEGE FOOTBALL Cowboys,Outlaws In pestseesen Crook County and Sisters haveearnedbids to the Class 4Afootball postseason, and both will take on Skyline Conference foes in next week's play-in round. The Cowboys earned ahome play-ingame against Klamath Union by finishing second in the Tri-Valley Conference. Crook County (4-1 TVC, 6-2 overall), which suffered its lone league setback to top-ranked Gladstone, would reach the state playoffs for the first time since1997 with a win. ThePelicans went 2-3 in Skyline Conference play and2-6 overall, placing fourth in the leagueandfinishing 22nd in the final Class 4A rankings. Sisters (3-2 Sky-Em League, 4-4 overall) is ranked 19th in the 4A as it seeks to return to the state playoffs for the first time since 2007. TheOutlaws were fourth in the Sky-Embut received anat-large bid and will play a play-in game at Henley of Klamath Falls. TheHornets placed third in the Skyline Conference with a 3-2 record (5-3 overall)

RUNNING

eavs con inue s ru es By Antonio Gonzalez The Associated Press

STANFORD, Calif. — Oregon State entered Saturday's game at Stanford still in control of its destiny in the Pac-12's North Division. It left looking like a team that had

better worry about just becoming bowl-eligible. QuarterbackSean Mannion passed for a career-low 122 yards as the Beavers were beaten 38-14 by a rejuvenated Stanford team

Nextup

long time," Beavers coach Mike

Oregon State vs. California When:7:30 p.m., Nov.1 TV:Pac-12Radio: KICE-

Pac-12) is all but out of the race to

Riley said. Oregon State (4-3 overall, 1-3 make the conference championshipgame now.Mannion and the Beavers struggled to move the ball against the league's top-ranked

AM 940, KRCO-AM 690, FM-96.9

defense, scoring one touchdown after an interception and another

that dominated the game in almost

every area. "It was one of the worst days of

against Stanford reserves with the game decided. SeeBeavers/D4

football that we have had in a long,

Inside • No. 3 Ole Miss upset. Top 25 roundup, D4

• Utahwins wild one vs. USC. Pac-12 roundup, D4

a matter of timing for elite runners By Lindsey Crouse New York TimesNews Service

When Paula Radcliffe won the New York City Marathon in 2007, nine months after

giving birth to a daughter, Isla, Radcliffe was considered an anomaly. Her intense training through her pregnancy, which included twice-a-day sessions and gruelmg hill

final 4A regular-season rankings. Dates and times for the Crook County and Sisters contests have yet to be announced, but the OregonSchool Activities Association

workouts, were scrutinized and criticized.

Seven years later, maintaining both a running career and a family has become relatively common. About a third of the women in the professional

stipulates that the

field of 31 for the New York City Marathon next Sunday have children. SeePregnancy/D5

games be played onor before Nov. 1. — Bulletin staffreport

PREP VOLLEYBALL

WORLD SERIES

Culver, Trinity Lutheran win The Bulldogsand Saints each wontheir conference district tournaments on Saturday by sweeping their final matches. Prep roundup,

%3

v

c

1

DS

Photos by Joe Kline I The Bulletin

Oregon State's Ryan Hearon dives while going for a ball with Dominican's Dylan Acevedo during their game in the Five Peaks Fall

The Associated Press

• College lacrosse tournament highlights local fields, brings talent to Central Oregon

10

By Beau Eastes

37

University of Montana, mid-

2

fielder Joe Kirkendall has endured his share of unfavor-

No.20SouthernCal 21

able weather. The Grizzlies

No. 25 UCLA

are no strangers to snow and single-digit temperatures.

Colorado 3 7 (20T) Oregon St. Stanford 14 TOP 25 No.1 Mississippi S . Kentucky 31

lacrosse team is one of 12 college squads in Bend this weekend for the inaugural Five Peaks Fall Shootout. "We're used to adverse conditions. But that wind today, I've never

played in anything like that."

No. 24 LSU

Saturday's late-afternoon windstorm was about the

No. 3 Mississippi 7

What:Five Peaks Shootout college lacrosse tournament Where:CampFraley Ranch polo fields, 60580 Gosney Roadoff Rickard Road southwest of Bend When:9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today Adrnisiio:Free Wehsite: www.5peakslacrosse.com

"We live in Montana," said Kirkendall, whose dub

20

No. 5 Auburn S outh Carolina

42 35

coach Joe Kerwin, the Five Peaks Fall Shootout includes

No. 8 Michigan S . Michigan

college teams from Montana,

New

0

No. 13 Ohio St.

1

2 4(20T)

o. e r asa Rutgers No. 1Clemson Syracuse

24

Jersey's Jordin Tootoo, left, knocks the helmet

off of San Jose's Andrew

6

No. 22 West Virginia 3 Oklahoma St. 10 No. 23 Marshall Florida Atlantic

ROYALS 2, GIANTS 2

immaculate."

for a loose ball during their game Saturday.

As lacrosse continues to grow in Central Oregon and elsewhere in the state, the

The two-day tournament

at the Camp Fraley Ranch polo fields southeast of Bend

day on the beautifully manicured fields. "This is hugely awesome," said Jacob Bak, one of eight officials working the event.

continues at 9 a.m. today.

"I've never seen a better

Teams play two games each

field. Actually, awesome is

quality of play is improving. Players at schools such as Oregon State, Oregon and Port-

land are entering college with increasingly more stick skills and game experience. SeeLacrosse/D2

Game1: Giants 7,Royals1 Game 2: Royals7,Giants2 Game 3: Royals3,Giants2 Game 4: Giants 11,Royals 4 Today at San Francisco 5 p.m. Tue. at KansasCity 5 p.m. x-Wed. at KansasCity 5 p.m. x-if necessary

27

Texas Penn St.

First, Pablo Sandoval's single set up Hunter Pence to score the tying run in the fifth inning. SeeWorld Series/D3

an understatement. They're

/

Oregon's Jake Marcy andMontana's Preston Stewart, right, fight

rave reviews from the players, Oregon, Washington, Idaho offici als,coaches and specta- and Northern California. Bend High School lacrosse

for some Panda-monium.

V,H I

tourney that did not receive tors. The brainchild of current

A botched grounder led to a three-run deficit, and they were in danger of falling behind the Kansas City Royals. Instead of panic, it was time

"I

only aspect of the Five Peaks Tennessee

SAN FRANCISCO — The

World Series was slipping away from the San Francisco Giants.

Ifyougo

The Bulletin

Playing lacrosse for the

Texas Tech

to tie series By Ronald Blum

PAC-12

N . 19 Uta

Pablo, Pence pace Giants

Shootout on Saturday at CampFraley Ranch in Bend.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

W ashington St.

former top runner at Duke, the day before her third child was born in November 2013.

Pregnancy

COLLEGE LACROSSE

and finished ninth in the

Washington

Clara Peterson via The New York Times

Clara Horowitz Peterson, a

16

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

Devils the lateststop onTootoo's longjourney By Jeff Z. Klein New York Times News Service

Desjardins

NEWARK, N.J. — It is a

durlng

long way from Nunavut to

suicide, struggles with alcoholism and eight seasons as a fast-living fan favorite with

a recent game.

Newark. For Jordin Tootoo, that un-

Julio Cortez I The Associated

usual journey took him from the tundra through junior

the Nashville Predators. Now Tootoo, the only Inuk to play in the National Hockey League, is a little-used 5-foot-9 forward trying to extend his

hockey stardom, a brother's

career with the New Jersey

Press

Devils. He tells the story of that journey in "All the Way: My Life on Ice," an autobiography written with the prominent Canadian sports writer

Inside • Devils top Senators on somber night.

Stephen Brunt that was pub-

NHL

lished this week. SeeTootoo /D3

D3

roundup,


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY FOOTBALL

NFL, Detroit at Atlanta NFL, Seattle at Carolina NFL, Philadelphia at Arizona NFL, Oakland atCleveland NFL, GreenBayat NewOrleans SOCCER England, Tottenhamvs. Newcastle England, Manchester United vs. Chelsea Men's college, Indiana at Michigan Men's college, UCLAat Oregon State Men's college, Wisconsin at PennState Women's World CupQualifying, third place Women's college, Missouri at Tennessee Women's college,UCLAatOregon Women's college, Alabama at Auburn Men's college, SanDiegoState at Washington Women's World CupQualifying, final MLS, NewYork at KansasCity TENNis Swiss Indoors, Valencia Open,finals

Time TV/Radio 6:30 a.m. Fox 10 a.m. CBS 1 p.m. Fox 1:25 p.m. CBS 5:20 p.m. NBC 6:30 a.m. NBCSN 9 a.m. NBC 9 a.m. Bi g Ten 11 a.m. P a c-12 11 a.m. B i g Ten noon FS1 1 p.m. ES P NU 1 p.m. Pa c -12 1 p.m. SEC 3 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.) 3 p.m. FS1 5:30 p.m. ESPN2 6:30 a.m. Tennis

VOLLEYBALL

Women's college,KentuckyatTexasA&M Women's college,ArkansasatAlabama Women's college, UCLA at California Women's college, Southern Cal atStanford

9 a.m. 11 a.m. 3 p.m. 5 p.m.

SEC SEC Pa c -12 Pa c -12

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Martinsville GOLF PGA Tour, McGladreyClassic Champions Tour,AT&TChampionship

10:30 a.m. E S PN

11 a.m. 2 p.m.

Golf Golf

5 p.m.

Fox

BASEBALL

World Series, KansasCity at San Francisco

MONDAY TENNis BNP Paribas Masters SOCCER England, QueensPark vs Aston Villa

3 a.m.

Tennis

1 p.m.

N B CSN

5:15 p.m. E SPN

SPORTS IN BRIEF SKIING Shiffrin, Fenninger Share win in WOrldCuPGS— Mikaela Shiffrin and AnnaFenninger shared victory in the season-opening women's World Cupgiant slalom on Saturday. TheAmerican teenager, who led after the first run, and thedefending overall champion from Austria both finished in atwo-run combined time of 2 minutes, 39.85 seconds. It was Shiffrin's first win in GS,adding to her nine victories in slalom. Fenninger earnedher fifth straight win in the discipline after winning the last four GSraces last season. Austrians Eva-Maria Bremand Kathrin Zettel camethird and fourth, respectively, 0.66 and 0.67 off the lead.

Miller SkiPS SeaSOn-OPenerWith daCk injury — Bode Miller is sitting out the season-opening men's World Cup giant slalom today because of apersistent back injury. U.S. Alpine director Patrick Riml said Miller is getting treatment on aspinal disk and is expected to join the teamagain for training in Colorado in November. Miller, who turned 37 this month, returned last season from ayear off to recover from kneesurgery.

TENNIS Serena, HaleP to meet in final —SerenaWjijams wjii get a chance to avenge ahumiliating loss against Simona Halepafter they both advanced to the championship match of the season-ending WTA Finals with victories in contrasting style on Saturday in Singapore. Williams beatCaroline Wozniacki in a thrilling contest 2-6, 6-3, 7-6 (6j to remain on course for a third-straight title, while Halep swept aside AgnieszkaRadwanska6-2, 6-2 to put herself in a position for the biggest title of her career. Halepbeat Williams 6-0, 6-2 in the group stage, inflicting the American's heaviest loss in16 years, andtheRomanianhasdroppedonly27gamesacrossfourmatches against top-eight-ranked opponents.

MIXED MARTIAL ARTS Aldo beatSMendeSat UFC179 to keePhiStitleBrazilian Jose Aldo beatAmerican ChadMendes by unanimous decision to successfully defend his featherweight title in UFC 179 at Maracanazinho Arenaearly this morning. With the victory, Aldo remained the only champion the division has knownand extended his winning streak to15, one short of Anderson Silva's record of16 straight victories from 2006 to 2012. Aldo knockedout Mendeswith a powerful knee strike to his facewith a second left in the first round. — From wire reports

Lacrosse

don't always get to play," said

Continued from 01 "The key is the youth leagues," said Mike Cath-

Stelling. "We've only had eight practices so far this fall,

Oregon State coach Chad

so this is a great chance to l o n gtime l acrosse get everyone some (playing)

coach and player from West time and see what they can do." Linn, who was in Bend to watch his son, Kevin CathProceedsfrom thetournacart, play for Oregon State. ment, hosted by Five Peaks "Kids are coming into high Lacrosse of Bend, will go to school wit h m o r e s k i l l s. local high school lacrosse Those kids are then coming programs. Many of the playinto the club teams as better ers from those high school players." teams are helping with stagThree games ran simulta- ing the games, and Saturday neously Saturday at Camp before the storm, youth playFraley. Several hundred ers were everywhere playing spectators took in the la- catch and running around. "This is great," Cathcart crosse extravaganza before the wind and rain took over said about th e y ounger the tournament. The l a st players being able to watch round of the first-day games, the college athletes. "A kid which started at 3:30 p.m., comes back from this, gets finished just after the storm excited about lacrosse and passed through. grabs a s t ick a n d s t arts "We love getting over here, practicing." out of the (Willamette Val— Reporter: 541-383-0305; beastes®bendbulfetin.com. ley), seeing some teams we

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGU

AH TimesPDT

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T PclPF PA

Tuesday Boys soccer: Bend at Sisters, 4 p.mcSummit at MountainView,7 p.m.; Madrasat CrookCounty, 4p.mcIrrigonatCulver, 4 p.m. Girl ssoccer.RedmondatBend,3 p.mcSummitat MountainView,5p.mJLaPine at Creswel, 4p.m. Volleyball:ClassSAplay-in, MountainViewat Sandy, 5:30p.mcLiberly atSummit, 6p.m. Sistersat Indianapolis Bend,5:30p.m. Houston Tennesse e Thursday Jacksonvile Boys soccer. Sistersat Summit, 4p.m.

South W L T 5 3 2 l

2 4 5 6

0 0 0 0

PctPF PA . 7 14 216 136 . 4 29 155 t50 fzt t72 . 286 . 1 43 105 tgf

Friday FoelbaH:MountainViewat Bend, 7p.m.; North Salem at Summit7, p.m.; Redmondat Ridgeview,7p.m.; La Pine at PleasantHil, 7 p.m.; Stanfield atCulver, 7p.mcButteFals atGilchrist, 2 p.m.

5 3 4 3

2 2 3 3

0 1 0 0

PclPF PA .7 1 193 4 tgd . 583 134 t40 . 571 154 162 . 500 140 t39

6 5 3 0

1 3 3 6

0 0 0 0

PctPF PA . 8 57 224 142 . 625 205 t49 . 500 142 121 . 00092 158

Saturday Cross-country:Statechampionships at LaneCommunity College,Eugene,Class4A girls, 11:t5 a.m.; Class 4A boys, ft:50 a.m.;Class5Agirls, I:15 p.m.; Class5Aboys, I:BOp.m. Volleyball:ClassSAplayoffs: Bendvs. TBD.Class4A playoffs:CrookCounty, Sisters vs.TBD

BASEBALL MLB playoffs MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL AH TimesPDT WORLDSERIES (Best-ot-7; ifnecessary) Saturday'sGame SanFrancisco11,KansasCity 4,series tied2-2 Today'sGame KansasCity(shieldst48) at SanFrancisco(Bumgar ner 18-10),5:07p.m. Tuesday'sGame x-San FranciscoatKansasCity,5:07p.m. Wednesday'sGame x-San FranciscoatKansasCity,5:07p.m.

Giants11, Royals 4

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis notresponsible forlatechanges madeby TVor radio stations.

cart, a

Monday Boyssoccer. La Pineat Cresw ell, 4 p.mc Class 3A/2A/1ASpecial District 6 playoffs, Damascus ChristianatCentral Christian,B:BOp.m. Volleyball: Class 4Aplay-in, Scappooseat Madras,6 p.m.; Harrisburg at LaPine,6p.m.

Saturday'sSummary

FOOTBALL

NFL, Washington at Dallas

ON DECK

KansasCity San Francisco ah r h hi ah r hbi AEscorss 5 0 1 0 GBlanccf 5 3 2 0 AGordnlf 5 1 1 0 Panikzb 4 2 2 2 L .cainrf 5 1 2 0 Poseyc 3 1 I I H osmerfb 5 t 3 1 Pencerf 5 2 3 3 Mostks 3b 3 t 0 0 SandovlSb 5 0 2 2 T icgnsp 0 0 0 0 Beltfb 30I I Infantezb 4 0 1 2 J.Perezlf 4 0 1 1 S.Perezc 4 0 3 1 Bcrwfrss 5 1 1 0 JDysoncf 3 0 1 0 Vglsngp 0 0 0 0 J Vargsp 2 0 0 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 Frasorp 0 0 0 0 MDuffyph t 1 1 0 D Duffyp 0 0 0 0 Y.Petitp I 0 1 0 Aokiph 1 0 0 0 Ariasph 1 0 1 0 Finngnp 0 0 0 0Aff eldtp 0 0 0 0 Nix3b I 0 0 0 Morseph 0 1 0 0 R omop 0 0 0 0 Ishikawph t 0 0 0 Strcklnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 38 4 124 Totals 3 8 f t 1610 Kansas City OB4 OBB OOO — d San Francisco 101 023 40x — 11

Denver SanDiego KansasCity Oakland

5 4 3 1

2 3 3 6

0 0 0 0

North W L T

Weal W L T

.7 1 187 4 t54 . 571 135 t42 . 500 147 138 . 1 43 12t t85

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T PctPF PA Dallas 6 l 0 . Bbr 196 147 Philadelphia 5 1 0 . 8 33 183 132 N.Y.Giants 3 4 0 . 4 29 154 t69 Washington 2 5 0 . 286 l51 t83 South W L T PctPF PA Carolina 3 3 1 . 500 158 t95 NewOrleans 2 4 0 . 333 l55 165 Atlanta 2 5 0 . 286 171 199 TampaBay 1 5 0 . 1 67 120 204 North W L T P ctPF PA 5 2 0 . 714 140 105 5 2 0 . 714 199 147 3 4 0 . 4 29 157 trf 2 5 0 . 286 120 t60 Weal W L T PctPF PA Arizona 5 1 0 . 8 33 140 t19 SanFrancisco 4 3 0 . 5 7t158 t65 Seattle 3 3 0 . 500 l59 141 St. Louis 2 4 0 . 333 129 176

Today'sGames Detroitys.Atlantaat London,6;30a.m. St. Louisat KansasCity, I0 a.m. HoustonatTennessee,10 a.m. MinnesotaatTam paBay,t0a.m. SeattleatCarolina,fga.m. BaltimoreatCincinnati,10 a.m. Miami atJacksonvile,10a.m. ChicagoatNewEngland, tga.m. BuffaloatN.Y.Jets, lg a.m. PhiladelphiaatArizona, 1:05p.m. Oakland at Cleveland,1:25p.m. Indianapolisat Pittsburgh, I:25 p.m. Green BayatNewOrleans,5:30p.m. Open:N.Y.Giants, SanFrancisco Monday'sGame WashingtonatDalas, 5:30 p.m.

America's Line

Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog Today 4 3 '/ r dtp/r Lions Falcons 2H zr/r 42'A BUCS Vikings 6 '/r 6 51 ' / x PATRIO TS Bears E—Ti.collins (1). DP —San Francisco1. LOB Br/r 7 44 CHIEFS Rams Kansas City 9, SanFrancisco t1. 2B—A.Gordon (2), Seahawk 3'Ir 5'/r 44'/r PANTHE s RS Hosmer(t), Panik 2 (2), Pence(2). SB—A.Gordon JETS 3 3 40' A Bills 5 6 4 2r / x (I), G.Blanco (I). S—Panik. SF—J.Perez. Dolphins JAGUAR S IP H R E R BBSO Texans I 3 4Z/ r TITANS KansasCity -3 lr/r dff~/r Ravens BENGAL S J.Vargas 4 6 3 3 2 3 CARDS 2H 2 48 ' A Eagles Frasor 1-3 1 1 I 0 0 Colts 3 3 49 STEELE RS D.Duffy 2-3 t 0 0 1 1 BROW NS 7 7 43 ' / r Raiders FinneganL,O-I 1 5 5 5 2 0 SAINTS 1 2 55' A Packers Ti.Collins 2 3 2 2 l 2 Monday San Francisco COWBOYS 9 9 '/z 49'/z Washington 22-B 7 4 4 1 2 Vogelsong 1-3 0 0 0 l l Machi Y.PetitW,1-0 3 2 0 0 0 2 INJURYREPORT Affeldt H,t 1 t 0 0 0 0 DETROITLIONS atATLANTA FALCONSRomo 1 1 0 0 0 1 LIONS:OUT : TEEric Ebron(hamstring), TEJoseph Strickland 1 1 0 0 0 1 Fauria(ankle).DOUBTFUL: RBReggie Bush(ankle), J.Vargaspitchedto I batterinthe5th. TE BrandonPettigrew (foot). QUE STIONABLE: WR Finnegan pitchedto2 batters inthe7th. Calvin Johnson(ankle), T LaAdrianWaddle (conWP—J.Vargas. cussion). PRO BABLE: DEEzekiel Ansah(toe), RB T—4:00.A—43,066 (41,915). Theo Riddick(hamstring). FALC ONS: QUESTIONABLE: DTJonathanBabineaux(foot), WRHarry Douglas(foot). PROBABLE: GJustin Blalock(back), WRJulio Jones(ankle), LBPrinceShembo (knee). SOCCER ST.LOUISRAMS atKANSAS CITY CHIEFS —RAMS:OUT:CTimBarnes(shoulder), CBBranMLS don McGee (foot). QUESTIONABLE: CBJanorisJenkins (knee),CBTrumaine Johnson(knee). PROBAMAJORLEAGUE SOCCE BLE: WR K enny Britt (ankle),RBBenny Cunningham AH TimesPDT (knee), LB Jo-LonnDunbar (toe), DEWilliam Hayes (illness), STJ. McD onald (concussion), GRodger EasternConference W L T Pts GF GA Saffold(knee),DEEthanWestbrooks(hand)rKGreg Z uerlein (illness). CHI EFS: OUT: WRDonnie Avery y-D.C.United 1 7 9 8 59 52 37 CBChris Owens(knee). QUESTIONABLE: x-NewEngland I 7 t 3 4 55 51 46 (groin), ingway(hamx-SportingKansasctty14 12 7 49 48 39 S Eric Berry(ankle), WRJunior Hem BABLE; RBCyrus Gray (hand), LBJusx -Columbus 13 1 0 1 0 49 50 41 string). PRO tin Houston (ankl e ), TE T ra vi s Ke l c e (ri bs), CBSean x-NewYork t2 tg tt 47 53 50 (groin). Philadelphia 10 fl t2 42 50 49 Smith HOUSTONTEXANS atTENNESSEE TITANS TorontoFC fl 15 8 4) 44 54 TEXANS: OUT : CBDarryl Morris (ankle), LB Houston t f t r 6 39 39 58 — Jeff nian (knee).QUE STIONABLE: LB JadeChicago 6 to t8 3B 41 51 veonTarpi Clowney(knee), LB Brian Cushing(knee), Montreal 6 18 10 28 38 58 LB BrooksReed(groin), LB JohnSimon (ankle). WealernConference BLE: LBAkeemDent (wrist), DETimJamison W L T Pts GF GA PROBA y-Seattle 20 10 4 64 65 50 (groin), WRAndreJohnson (ankle), CBJohnathan Joseph (knee), LBMike Mohamed(calf), NTJerrell x-LosAngele s t r 7 10 61 69 37 x -Real SaltLake t5 8 t 1 56 54 39 Powe (shoulder). TITANS:DOUBTFUL: CBCoty pson (knee). x-FCDallas tg t2 6 54 55 45 Sensabaugh(knee), TETaylor Thom UESTIO NABLE: LBQuentin Groyes (ankle). PROBx-Vancouver 1 2 8 td 50 42 40 Q ABLE: RB Sh onn G re ene (h am st r i n g), QB JakeLockPortland t 2 9 1 3 49 61 52 er (righthand),DERopati Pitoitua (hand). Colorado 8 t8 8 32 43 62 MINNESOTAVIKINGS atTAMPA BAY BUCChivasUSA 8 19 6 30 28 61 CANEERS —VIKINGS:OUT:TE Kyle Rudolph SanJose 6 15 12 30 35 49 a bdomen, groin).DOUBTFUL:LB Gerald Hodges y- clinchedconference hamstring). QUE STIONABLE: GVladimir Ducasse x- clinched playoff berth (knee), SAntoneExumJr. (ankle), CBJoshRobinson (ankl e ). PRO BABLE: DTSharrif Floyd(ankle), Saturday'sGames TE Chase Ford (foot), CBJabari Price(hamstring), Seattle FC 2, LosAngeles0 SHarrisonSmith (ankle), CJohnSullivan (concusMontreal1,D.C.United1, tie sion), DE CoreyWootton(back). BUCCANEERS: NewEngland1,Toronto FC0 OUT:LB BrandonMagee(knee).QUESTIONABLE: Portland2,FCDallas 0 LB JonathanCasilas (hamstring), TAnthony ColVancouver 1, Colorado0 lins (knee),SDashonGoldson (ankle), WRVincent Today'sGames Jackson(rib), QBJosh Mccown(right thumb),S Philadelphiaat Columbus, 1 p.m. Keith Tandy(hamstring). PRO BABLE: CBJohnthan SanJoseatChivasUSA,1:30 p.m. Banks(neck). NewYorkatSporting KansasCity, 5:30p.m. SEATTLESEAHAWKS at CAROLINA PANEnd ofregular season THERS —SEAHAWKS: OUT: RBDerrick Coleman (foot), DTJordanHill (ankle), CB ByronMaxwell (calf), TEZachMiler (ankle), CMaxUnger (foot), CONCACAF Women's LB BobbyWagner (toe), WRBryan Walters (conChampionship cussion).PRO BABLE: DEMichael Bennett (toe), S KamChancellor (ankle), RBMarshawnLynch (not AH TimesPDT injury related),CBTharold Simon(ankle), RBRobert Turbin(shoulder), DTKevin Wiliams (not injury Today'sGames TE LukeWilson (groin). PAN THERS: OUT: Third place:TrinidadandTobago vs. Mexico, related), CB BeneBenwikere (ankle), LB ChaseBlackburn noon knee), WR Phi f fy Brown (concussi o n), G Amini Championship:Costa Ricavs. United States, ilatolu (calf), GTrai Turner(knee), RBFozzyWhit3 p.m. taker (thigh), RB DeAngelo Wiliams (ankle). QUESTIONABLE: RBChris Ogbonnaya(groin), LB Jason Williams(hip). PRO BABLE: TByron Beff(elbow), T TENNIS NateChandler(thigh), LBThomas Davis (not injury related), S RomanHarper(not injuryrelated). BALTIMORERAVENS atCINCINNATIBENWTA GALS —RAV ENS: OUT: DTChris Canty (wrist), WTAChampionships TE OwenDaniels (knee).PROBABLE:T Eugene Saturday atSingapore Monroe(knee),GKelechi Osemele(knee), WRSteve Semifinals Smith Sr.(not injury related), LBDaryl Smith (not Serena Wiliams (1), UnitedStates, def. Caroline injury related). BENG ALS: OUT:LB Rey MaualuWozniacki(8), Denmark, 2-6,6-3, 7-6(6). ga (hamstring).DOU BTFUL: WRA.J. Green(toe). SimonaHalep(4), Romania, def. AgnieszkaRad- QUESTIONABLE :DT Brandon Thompson (knee). wanska (6), Poland,6-2, 6-Z PROBA BLE: RB Giovani Bernard(ribs), TEKevin Brock (neck), LB VontazeBurfict (neck), DERobert Geathers(toe), DEWallaceGilberry (eye), CBLeon ATP Hall (back), LBEmm anuel Lamur(shoulder), T Davidoff SwissIndoors MarshallNewhouse(back), GMike Pollak (knee),T Saturday atBasel, Switzerland AndreSmith(shoulder). Semifinals MIAMIDOLPHINS atJACKSONVILLEJAGDOLPHINS:DOUBTFUL: SJimmyWilson DavidGoffin (7),Belgium,def. BornaCoric, Cro- UARS — atia, 6-4,3-6,6-3. hamstrinE) g).QUE STIONABLE: LBKoa Misi (ankl C(arlees). RogerFederer (1), Switzerland, def.IvoKarlovic ROBAB LE: TBrandenAlbert (elbow), TECh (8), CroatiaT-B , (8), 3-6,6-3. Clay (knee),DEJohn Denney (knee), CBCortland Finnegan(neck), CBBrent Grimes(groin), DT JarValencia Open ed Odrick (neck), CSam son Satele (hamstring), Saturday atValencia, Spain TE DionSims(neck), LBPhilip Wheeler (shoulder, Semifinals thumb).JAG UARS: OUT: CBAlan Ball (biceps), DE Andy Murray(3), Britain,def. DavidFerrer (1), AndreBranch(groin). QUE STIONABLE: CBDwayne Spain,6-4, 7-5. Gratz (hip flexor). PRO BABLE: C Luke Bowanko Tommy Robredo,Spain,def.Jeremy Chardy, (ankle), RBTobyGerhart (foot), S Craig Loston France, 7-6(7), 7-6 (2). (hamstring).

CHICAGOBEARS atNEW ENGULNDPATRIOTS —BEAR S:OUT:SDannyMccray(knee). DOUBTFUL: LB JonathanBostic (back), LBLance Briggs(ribs). QUESTIONAB LE:TJordanMills(foot). PROBABLE:TEMartegus Bennett(ham string), SChris Conte (shoulder), CBKyle Fuller(hip,hand), DTJeremiahRatliff (notinjuryrelated), WRChrisWilliams(igness),PATRIOTS:OUT:DEChandler Jones(hip). QU ESTIONABLE: GDanConnoly (concussion), DT DominiqueEasley(shoulder,knee),SNateEbner finger), T Cameron Fleming (finger), WRMatthewSlater shoulder),CBryanStork(concussion),RBShaneVereen illness).PROBABLE:QBTomBrady(ankle), CBBrandon Browner(ankleLB ), JamieCollins(thigh), LBDont'a Hightower (knee), SDevinMccourly(rib). BUFFALOBILLS atNEW YORK JETS — BILLS: OUT:RBFred Jackson (groin), LB Ty Poweg (ankle). DOUB TFUL: WRMarquiseGoodwin(hamstring). QUESTIONAB LE:WRMarcusEasley (knee), SAaronWilliams neck).PR OBABLE: CBRonBrooks(groin), LBBrandon pikes(ribs),WRSammyWatkins(groin), DEMarioWilliams(thumb). JETS: QUESTIONABLE: LBTrevor Reigy knee),WRGregSalas(wristr ankle). PROBABLE: GOday oushi(shoulder),CBPhillip Adams(groin), LBAntwan Bames(knee), GWillie Colon(knee), WREric Decker hamstring),LBDavidHarris(shoulder), RBChrisJohnson ankle),CNickMangold(shoulder), RBBilal Poweg(foot), CBDarrinWalls(knee). PHILADE LPHIA EAGLES at ARIZONA CARDINALS —EAGLES:OUT:WRBrad Smith(groin). QUESTIONAB LE:CJasonKelce(hernia), LBMychal Kendricks (calf), RB Darren Sproles (knee). PROBABLE: RBChris Polk (ham string), LBDeMeco Ryans(groin), CBJaylen Watkins (wrist). CARDINALS: OUT:TETroyNiklas(ankle). QUESTI ONABLE:DECalaisCampbell(knee).PROBABLE: WRJohnBrown(ankle), RBAndreEffington (foot), SRashadJohnson(knee), DEFrosteeRucker(calf). OAKULNDRAIDERS atCLEVEULND BROWNS —RAIDE RS: OUT:TEDavidAusberry (foot), WRVincent Brown(hamstring), CBKeith McGig(groin), DELaMarr Woodley(biceps), SUsama Young (knee). QUESTIONABLE:TKhalif Barnes(quadriceps), RBMarcel Reece quadriceps),CBCarlos Rogers (knee), DEJustin Tuck knee) .PROBABLE:GAustinHoward(neck).BROWNS; UT:WR RodneySmith(hamstring), NTPhil Taylor(knee). QUES TIONABLE: SJimLeonhard (ankle), DEBilly Winn quadriceps). PROBABLE:DEDesmond Bryant(wrist), LB rkevious Mingo(shoulder), DEAhtybaRubin(ankle),CB KWaun Williams(concussion). INDIANA POLIS COLTSat PITTSBURGHSTEELERS —COLTS:OUT:WRReggieWayne(elbow).QUESTIONA BLE: TEJack Doyle (knee), RBTrent Richardson (hamstring).PROBABLE:CBDariusButler(ankle), DEArthur Jones (ankle). STEELERS: OUT:NTSteveMcLendon shoulder),CBIkeTaylor (forearm), SShamarko Thomas hamstring).DOUBTFUL; TMarcusGilbert(concussion). PROB ABLE: DEBrett Keisel (not injury related),SMike Mitchel(not l injury related),STroyPolamalu (not injury related),LBRyanShazier (knee). GREEN BAYPACKERS at NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — PACKERS:OUT:DEDatoneJones(ankle). DOUBTFUL :CBSam Shields(knee).QUESTIONABLE:S MorganBurnett (calf). PROBABLE: RBJamesStarks(ankle).SAIN TS:OUT:CJonathanGoodwin(knee,ankle), LB KyleKnox(ankle), RBKhiryRobinson(forearm), RBPierre Thomas (rib, shoulder). QUESTIONABLE: NT Brodrick Bunkle(con y cussion),TEJimmyGraham(shoulder), LB RamonHumber (ankle), CBKeenan Lewis (knee, shoulder).PROBABLE:CBPatrickRobinson(hamstring). WASHINGTONREDSKINS at DALLAS COWBOYS —REDSKINS: LIMITED: S Ryan Clark (ankle, shoulder),QBRobert Griffin gl (ankle), CBTracy Porter (hamsking).FULL:NTChris Baker (thigh), RBAlfred Morris(ankle),TTylerPolumbus(knee),LBPerryRileyJr. (knee),TTrent Williams(knee).COWBOYS: DNP:DEJack Crawford(calf),TDougFree(foot). LIMITED:DEAnthony Spencer (knee,foot). FULL:WRDezBryant (shoulder), LB Bruce Carter (thigh), SJakar Hamilton(not injury related), TJermeyParnel (chest), QBTonyRomo(back).

!

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPDT EASTERN CONFERENCE

Montreal Tampa Bay Detroit Boston Ottawa Florida Toronto Buffalo

AtlanticDivision GP W L OT Pte GFGA 8 7 I 0 14 2 5 2 2 9 8 10 6 7 8 9

5 3 1 ft 4 2 2 10 5 5 0 10 4 1 1 9 2 2 3 7 3 4 1 7 2 7 0 4

27 18 26 16 10 21 ft

23 17 24 13 16 25 29

LPGA Blue BayLPGA Saturday atJian LakeBlueBayGolf Course, Hainan Island,China Yardage: B,TBO; Par: 72 SecondRoundLeaders Lee-AnnePace 67-66—1SB 66-67—133 JessicaKorda 68-66—134 ChegaChoi 67-68—135 Shanshan Feng 67-68—135 BrittanyLang 67-68—135 MichelleWie 68-68—136 DanielleKang 67-69—136 CarolineMasson 71-66—1BT AustinErnst a-Wanyao Lu 69-68—137 70-68—t38 BeatrizRecari BelenMozo 72-67—139 JenniferJohnson 70-69—139 LydiaKo 69-70—139 MariajoUribe 69-70—139 I.K. Kim 68-71—139 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 67-72—139 Dori Carter 71-69—t40 SunYoungYoo 70-70—140 GerinaPiler 69-71—140 DewiClaireSchreefel 68-72—140

Champions Tour AT&TChampionship SaturdayatTPCSanAntonio,

ATJLT Canyons Course Yardage:B,923;Par72 SecondRoundLeaders 65-67—132 MarcoDawson WoodyAustin 68-65—133 67-67—134 WesShort,Jr. MichaelAllen 70-65—135 68-67—135 ScottHoch 67-68—135 Jay Haas 67-69—136 Kirk Triplett 71-6B—137 BernhardLanger 70-67—t37 FredFunk 65-72 — 137 JohnCook 72-BB—138 TomPerniceJr. 68-70—138 KennyPerry 68-70—138 DavidFrost

MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR-Sprint Cup Goody'sHeadacheRelief ShotBDBlineup Afler Fridayqualifying; racetodayat MartineviHe Speedway, Ridgeway, Va. Lap length:.B2B miles (Car num berin parentheses) 1. (1)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 99.905. Z22) JoeyLogano,Ford,99.605. 3. (20) MattKenseth,Toyota,99.318. 4. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 99.297. 5. (1t) Denny Hamlin, Toyota,99.266. 6. (2)BradKeselowski, Ford,99.24. 7. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 99.23. B. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota, 99.209. 9. (3t) Ryan Newman,Chevrolet,98.836. lg (41) KurtBusch Chevrolet 9862 11. (99)Carl Edwards,Ford,98.553. 1Z (t5) ClintBowyer,Toyota,98.328. I3. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet, 98.841. 14. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet, 98.815. 15. (47)AJAffmendinger, Chevrolet, 98.81. I 6.42Kyle Larson,Chevrolet, 98.646. l7. 55 I IBrianVickers,Toyota,98.625. 18.(17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,98.589. 19. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,98.466. 20. (t3) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 98.466. 21. (16)GregBiffle, Ford,98xM6. 2Z (51)JustinAffgaier, Chevrolet, 98.338. 23. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 98.333. 24. 5) Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet, 98.282. 25. (9)MarcosAmbrose, Ford, 98.2t6. 26.TBMartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,9B.Z 27.I43IAncAlmtrola, Ford,98.114. 28. (40)LandonCassiff, Chevrolet, 98.089. 29.34DavidRagan, Ford, 98.073. 30.(tg)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 97.906. 31. (36)ReedSorenson,Chevrolet, 97.886, 32. (23)AlexBowman,Toyota, 97.876. 33. (4)KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 97.835. 34. (38)DavidGigiland, Ford,97.785. 35. 98)JoshWise,Chevrolet, gz729. 36. (26)ColeWhitt, Toyota, 97.694. 37. (7)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 38. 93)ClayRogers,Toyota, Owner Points. 39. (33)TravisKvapil, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 40. (83)J.J.Yeley,Toyota, Owner Points. 41.(44TimmyHill, Chevrolet,OwnerPoints. 4Z 32(KyleFowler, Ford, Owner Points. 43. (66)MikeWallace,Toyota, Owner Points.

MetropolitanDivision GP W L OT Pts GF GA N .Y. Islanders 8 6 2 0 12 3 2 2 7 W ashington 7 4 1 2 10 2 3 1 5 N ew Jersey 8 4 2 2 10 2 5 2 5 Pittsburgh 7 4 2 1 9 25 19 Columbus 7 4 3 0 8 2t 20 N.Y.Rangers 8 4 4 0 8 22 26 Philadelphia 8 3 3 2 8 26 30 Carolina 7 0 5 2 2 14 29 DEALS WESTERN CONFERENCE CentralDivision Transactions GP W L OT Ple GFGA BASEBALL Nashville 8 5 1 2 12 1 9 1 6 American League Dallas 8 4 2 2 10 2 9 2 9 KANSAS CITY R OYALS— Claimed OFMoises Chicago 7 4 2 I 9 20 13 Minnesota 6 4 2 0 8 19 6 Sierraoffwaiversfromthe Chicago White Sox. DesSt. Louis 7 3 3 1 7 16 15 ignatedRHPLiamHendriks for assignment. National League 8 2 4 2 6 19 27 Colorado PITTSBU RGH PIRATES — Acquired INFJustin Winnipeg 7 2 5 0 4 13 20 Selle PacificDivision GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 8 7 1 0 14 2 9 1 5 Los Angeles 7 5 1 1 f t 17 1 0 10 5 4 1 f t 26 2 2 Calgary SanJose 9 4 4 1 9 28 27 Vancouver 7 4 3 0 8 23 24 Arizona 7 3 3 I 7 18 25 Edmonton 8 3 4 1 7 23 32

Saturday'sGames Buffalo2, SanJose1 Boston 4, Toronto I Montreal3,N.Y.Rangers1 NewJersey3,Ottawa2,OT N.Y.Islanders7, Dalas 5 Philadelphi4, a Detroit 2 St. Louis3,Chicago2 Pittsburgh 3, Nashville 0 Minnes ota7,TampaBay2 Arizona2,Florida1, OT Waashington 3,Calgary 1 Today'sGames ColoradoatWinnipeg,noon Columbus atLosAngeles,1 p.m. OttawaatChicago,4p.m. SanJoseatAnaheim,5p.m. Washi ngtonatVancouver,6:30p.m. Monday'sGames Minnesotaat N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. MontrealatEdmonton,6:30p.m.

GOLF PGA McGladrey Classic Saturday atSeaIsland Resort, Seaside Course, St. Simone Island, Ga. Yardage: 7,005;Par: 70 Third RoundLeaders AndrewSvoboda 66-66-66—198 65-68-65 —198 Will MacKen zie 68-63-68 —199 RusselHenl l ey StewartCink 69-69-63 —20t Andrew Putnam 68-67-66—20t Chris Kirk 68-67-66—20t FabianGomez 67-66-68 —20t 68-64-69—201 BrendondeJonge 67-69-66—202 KenDuke Scott Piercy 67-67-68 —202 MarkWilson 67-66-69 —202 BenMartin 70-68-65 —203 KevinKisner 69-68-66—203 70-67-66—203 Hudson Swafford 67-70-66—203 RorySabbatini MichaelThompson 65-71-67 —203 Cameron Tringale 68-68-67 —203 WilliamMcGirt 68-67-68 —203 RobertStreb 69-66-68 —203 71-67-66—204 StuartAppleby 67-70-67 —204 Brendon Todd DanielSummerhays 68-68-68 —204 Bill Haas 69-66-69 —204 Carl Pettersson 68-67-69 —204 Kevin Chappeff 67-61-70—204 69-71-64—204 SeanO'Hair 71-67-67 —205 TonyFinau 71-67-67—205 JasonBohn SungJoonPark BB-71-68 —205 Eric Axley 67-70-68 —205 Matt Kuchar 67-70-68 —205 70-69-66—205 NicholasThompson 71-69-65—205 JamesHahn Erik Compton 65-70-70—205 DerekErnst 68-67-70—205 Dayid Lingmert h 68-67-70—205 BrianHarman 65-61-73 —205

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd WVHhd Bonneville 28 4 95 199 t18 The Daffes 395 1 3 6 838 382 McNary 5 9 8 114 839 325 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd WVHhd Bonneville1,149,3BB185,868 322,340 129,060 TheDaff es 770,2t3 t32,831 252,509 99, 512 John Day 641,178 t15,699 195,784 T4,383 McNary 603,713 108,459 203,488 72,509


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

GOLF ROUNDUP

NHL ROUNDUP

MacKenzie'sacegives himshare of lead

Senatorslosein hockey's

The Associated Press

somber return to Ottawa

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — Will MacKenzie made a hole-in-one that hardly any-

one saw and finished with a 45-foot birdie putt that gave

him a 5-under 65 on Saturday and a share of the lead with Andrew Svoboda going into today's final round of the McGladrey Classic. Svoboda, playing in the same group with MacKenzie, rallied from a careless double

bogey with three birdies over with his hand that it was in his last six holes for a 66. the hole. MacKenzie holed out with Also on Saturday: an 8-iron from 178 yards on Korda, Pace tied at Blue Bay the par-3 sixth hole. LPGA: HAINAN I S L A N D, He said it was his third ace

China — American Jessica

on the PGA Tour, and one he'll never forget, mainly be-

Korda rebounded from an opening double bogey for a

cause of the reaction. There wasn't one. MacKenzie didn't even know it was in the hole until he looked around the

share of th e second-round lead in the Blue Bay LPGA. Korda shot a 5-under 67 to match South A f rica's Leegreen and couldn't find his Anne Pace at 11-under 133 at ball. A s p ectator indicated Jian Lake Blue Bay.

Dawson'shot start puts him in front: SAN ANTONIOMarco Dawson birdied four of the first six holes and shot

a 5-under 67 to take a one-

The Associated Press OTTAWA, Ontario — Jar-

least one point. Bruins 4, Maple Leafs1: TO-

stroke lead in the Champions

Tour's AT&T Championship. Olesen up by 3 in Perth:

omir Jagr scored a power-play RONTO — Patrice Bergeron goal 3:39 into overtime, and earned his 500th point on the the New Jersey Devils beat first of his two assists and

PERTH, Australia — D en-

the Ottawa Senators 3-2 on an

Tuukka Rask had 32 saves in

emotional Saturday night in Canada's capital.

Boston's first game since cap-

mark's Thorbjorn Olesen shot a scrambling 5-under 67 at Lake Karrinyup to take a three-stroke lead in the Perth International.

tain Zdeno Chara was side-

lined by a left knee injury. game since the shooting death Canadiens 3, Rangers 1: of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo at the MONTREAL — L a r s E l ler National War M emorial on broke a tie midway through Wednesday. A touching trib- the second period, and Max ute took place prior to puck Pacioretty scored in the third drop as players and fans unit- to lead Montreal. ed to commemorate the loss Islanders 7, Stars 5: UNIONof Cirillo and Warrant Offi- DALE, NY. — Frans Nielsen It was the Senators' first

cer Patrice Vincent, who was

scored three goals in the third

killed in a hit-and-run attack

period for New York. Coyotes 2, Panthers 1:

Monday near Montreal.

Marek Zidli cky and Damon Severson also scored for the Devils, who snapped a fourgame winless streak. Cory Schneider had 33 saves.

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Oliver Ekman-Larsson scored at 2:20 of overtime, and Mike Smith stopped 23 shots for Arizona.

Flyers 4, Red Wings 2:

Also on Saturday:

PHILADELPHIA — Michael

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Sid-

Penguins 3, Predators 0:

Raffl scored two goals for Philadelphia, and Brayden

ney Crosby had a goal and two

Schenn netted th e

w i n ner

during a power play with 8:55 ed Nashville its first loss in remaining. regulation. Sabres 2, Sharks 1: SAN Blues 3, Blackhawks 2:ST. JOSE, Calif. — Cody Hodgson LOUIS — Jaden Schwartz, and Nicolas Deslauriers each Ryan Reaves an d D m i t rij scored their first goal of the assists, and Pittsburgh hand-

Ii yP.

Jaskin scored, and St. Louis

season early in the third peri-

stopped a two-game losing streak.

od, andBuffalo ended a fourgame losing streak. Wild 7, Lightning 2: S T . Capitals 3, Flames 1:CALPAUL, Minn. — Jason Zucker GARY, Alberta — Joel Ward had two goals to power Min- scored twice — including the nesota to the big win. Zach game-winner — to lead WashPariseand Marco Scandell a ington. Ward's second of the each had a goal and an assist, night 5:31 into the second periand 13 Wild players had at od broke a 1-1 tie

®g, ~a pa

Tootoo

"To be honest, I haven't met anyone else in the pros who can

Continued from C1 say that," he said. "I am very honored to be a At 14, he moved to Alberrole model for the North and

ta and boarded with a family

for the aboriginal community," to play bantam hockey. With Tootoo, 31, said during an inter- Brandon of the Western Hockview after a Devils practice last ey League, Tootoo became a week. "And for me to open up star. He was chosen for the and tell my story may inspire 2003 Canadianjunior team and others from small towns or in

became a national celebrity

the North who face some of the during its run to a silver medal same problemsI'vehad." at the world junior tournament. k

After spending most of the last season with the Detroit

r

4sa .*

David J. Phillip/The Associated Press

San Francisco's Hunter Pence runs past Kansas City catcher Salvador Perez after scoring on a sixth-inning single by Brandon Belt on Saturday during Game 4 of the World Series. The Giants won the home game11-4.

Red Wings' American Hockey made it to the minor league East League affiliate in Grand Rap- Coast Hockey League, drank ids, Michigan, Tootoo made the and partied heavily. When JorDevils' roster this month after din was 19, Terence committed a training-camp tryout. In 11 suicide. "All the way," which beNHL seasons, he has 49 goals, came the title of Tootoo's book, 134 points, 71 fights and 821 was a phrase Terence used in penalty minutes in 545 games. his suicide note. He was urging He has not scored an NHL goal Jordin, then a Nashville prossince February 2013. pect, to reach the NHL. "I know I'm a

World Series Continued from C1 Then the 2012 Series MVP

followed with a go-ahead, two-run single in the sixth

i/ '

that sent the Giants surging

2i

past the Kansas City Royals 11-4 Saturday night at AT&T Park. The Series is tied at two

games apiece, ensuring the title will be decided at Kan-

San FrancIsco s Buster

hand," Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Posey scores on

the NL champions with three

a two-run RBI single by Pablo Sandoval durlng the sixth Innlng. Matt Slocum/ The Associated Press

sas City's Kauffman Stadium next week.

"We never give up, that's the thing," said Sandoval, who shook off a stomach bug Madison Bumgarner tries after starting to feel ill Friday. to put the Giants ahead to"We've been doing it all year night when he starts against in these situations. We know Royals ace James Shields in how that feels." a rematch of the opener, won Pence, eyes ablaze, had by the Giants 7-1. "This was a great ballthree hits, three RBIs and a nifty sliding catch in the game, I thought, especially ninth inning, and Joe Panik the way we came back," Gihit a two-run double in a four- ants manager Bruce Bochy

took medication.

postseason. "The way Petey threw to-

night saved our bullpen. He was our MVP tonight for me," San Francisco pitcher

Jeremy Affleldt. Yost stayed with starter Jason Vargas into the fifth, removing him after Panik's lievers had been 7-0 in the postseason, but Yost couldn't

"No one was taking me out get to hi s h ard-throwing of the lineup," he said. "I play HDH triad of K elvin H ergiving my heart and soul to rera, Wade Davis and Greg the team." Holland. Lost in the torrent of runs was the earlier fit of pique

by Bochy, who threw his hat to the dugout floor when his team botched a third-inning

sard.

on 16 hits in a marathon of exactly 4 hours.

single to center that put the Giants ahead 6-4.

there even were scattered

scratch and claw," Panik said.

after batting practice and

ation right in the palm of our

"We're going to battle and

innings of scoreless, two-hit relief to improve to 3-0 in the

leadoff double. Royals re-

grounder and the Royals "We had to win this game Sandoval, who batted just burst ahead 4-1 against Votonight no matter what," said .199 right-handed during the gelsong with the pitcher's Giants starter Ryan Vogel- regular season but came up help. He failed to step on first song, knocked out after 22r3 with his first two-hit game while covering and trying to innings. from that side of the plate catch Brandon Belt's throw San Francisco scored 10 since Aug. 25, emphatically on Eric Hosmer's tapper. Orunanswered runs and piled tossing his bat after lining a ange-clad fans quieted, and run seventh.

But Yusmiero Petit settled

boos. "I thought we had the situSandoval said he vomited

Jason Frasor and Danny

Duffy combined to allow the tying run in a two-run fifth. And Brandon Finnegan, the

first player to appear in the College World Series and World Series in th e

same

year, allowed Sandoval's two-run single and Brandon Belt's RBI's single in the sixth.

"Oh, man,

s omewhere

inside of me secretly I had

hoped that it would go seven games for the excitement and the thrill of it," Yost said.

"Sure looks that way."

MLS ROUNDUP

Throughout t h a t p e r i od, Tootoo and his brother, who

f o urth-line

In the book, Tootoo wrote

player in the NHL, and I accept that he still had dreams in that totally," Tootoo said. which Terence was with him Coach Peter DeBoer said this but hangingback. "He'll wave at me and say: month that when Tootoo was on the ice, "you know there's 'Go ahead. Go ahead,'" Tootoo probably going to be contact," a told Brunt. compliment for a player on the After his brother's death, fringes of the lineup. Tootoo kept drinking and parNevertheless, Tootoo is a su- tying, raising the ante when perstar in the Far North, where he got to Nashville in 2003. He he returns every summer. He was a good-looking young athrepresents alot there, not just as lete with an unusual back story the only one of Canada's 60,000 and a charismatic personality. Inuit ever to play big-time hock- 'When I was drinking, I was ey. He is also someone who has selfish because of my addiction been affected by some of the to popularity and being out in same problems — substance the public eye," Tootoo said. "I dependency and suicide — that used that as a mechanism to have troubled native communi- create commotion with everyties across the continent.

Tootoo's story begins in

one. And if I got into trouble away from the rink, I made it

up on the ice. I'd be in a game, get in a couple of scraps, and shore of Hudson Bay. He was life is good." taught to hunt and fish on the In December 2010, at the trackless land and ice by his Predators' r e quest, T o otoo Inuit father (his mother is a entered the substance abuse Ukrainian-Canadian). program run jointly by the "The land — it's a sense of NHL and the players union. peace," said Tootoo, whose mid- He said he had been sober ever dle name, Kudluk, is a form of since, and last summer he was Rankin Inlet, a remote town of about 2,000 on the northwest

the Inuktitut word for thunder.

married.

Jordin and his older brother

batant. It's in my blood. It's al-

"You respect the land; it reTootoo's NHL career has spects you. For us, hunting and been marked by fights, two fishing is survival up north. suspensions for illegal play and You take nothing for granted accusations of dirty play from because you don't know the some opponents. Does he think next time you're going to see about the toll all the fighting another caribou or seal. You could take on his health? "Since I've sobered up, I have could get lost when a storm brews up in an hour." darity and a better understandB ut Tootoo's father a n d ing of how things work and mother also drank heavily, what the consequences are," he which led to a tense home life said. "But at the end of the day, for the three Tootoo children. if need be, I am a willing com-

Timbers winseasonfinale, but missout on playoffs

Terence got out of the house as ways going to be in my blood." often as they could, spending That may sound like a rethours every day at the town rograde attitude as fighting rink. in hockey is falling deeper "We were two peas in a pod," and deeper into disrepute. But

The Associated Press

Tootoo said.

Tootoo said he had to fight

There was no organized hockey in Rankin Inlet — just a house league and frequent pickup games, at which the two Tootoo boys excelled. Jordin did not play organized hockey until he was 14.

throughout his life, one way or

knocked the Timbers out of the playoffs. lington Nagbe and MaxiPortland (12-9-13) needed miliano Urruti scored to lead the Whitecaps (12-8-14) to tie Portland to a 2-0 win over FC or lose to Colorado in order Dallas on Saturday night, to reach the postseason. but Vancouver's win over Nagbe scored in the 43rd Colorado later in the evening minute, on a long-distance F RISCO, Texas —

Dar-

shot that ricocheted off deSounders 2, Galaxy 0: SEfender Zach Loyd and drifted ATTLE — Second-half substiinto the upper left corner of

tute Marco Pappa scored in the

the goal. It was his first MLS regular-season goal since

85th minute and again in stoppage time, and Seattle won the

Oct. 6, 2013. Urruti added his

MLS Supporters' Shield for the first time in the six-year MLS

10th goal in the 82nd minute. Also on Saturday:

history of the club.

another, to get to the NHL.

"It has been a long, tough journey from a small town in Nunavut to where I am now," he told Brunt. "And so far I'm

the only one who made it."


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

OLLEi"E FooTBALL COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD FBS All TimesPDT

Pac-12 North Division Conf Overall W L W L PF PA 3 1 6 1 305 166 3 2 5 3 206 100 2 3 4 3 291 269 1 3 5 3 239 197

Oregon Stanford California Washington Oregon St. 1 3 4 WashingtonSt. 1 3 2 SouthDivisiou ArizonaSt. 4 1 6 Arizona 3 1 6 Utah 3 1 6 SouthernCal 4 2 5 UCLA 3 2 6 Colorado 0 5 2

3 178 184 5 245 245

1 256 177 1 284 198 1 251 151 3 270 186 2 286 242 6 255 310

Saturday'sGames

Arizona59,Washington State 37 Stanford 38,OregonState14 UCLA40,Colorado37,20T Utah24,Southern Cal21 ArizonaState24,Washington10 Saturday,Nov.1 Washington atColorado,10 a.m. Southern CalatWashington State,1:30 p.m Stanfordat Oregon, 4:30p.m. Californiaat OregonState, 7:30p.m. Arizona at UCLA,7:30 p.m. Utah at ArizonaState,8 p.m.

Saturday'sSummary

Stanford 38, OregonSt. 14 OregonSt Stanford

7 0 0 7 — 14 1 414 7 3 — 3 8

First Ouarter Stan—McCaffrey42passfromHogan(Wiffiamson

kick), 11:45.

OrSt —Brown5 run(Romainekick), 2:03. Stan —Hogan37 run(Wiliamsonkick),:34. SecondDuarler Stan—Prat 37 passfrom Hogan(Wiffiamson kick), 12:06. Stan—Skov1 run(Williamson kick), 2:49. Thrrd Ouarler Stan—Montgomery 50 punt return (Wiffiamso n kick), 12:04. FourthOuarter Stan —FGWilliamson 33,11:33. OrSt —Haskins1run (Romainekick), 354. A—48,401.

EAST CentralMichigan20, Buffalo14 GeorgiaTech56, Pitsburgh 28 Navy41,SanJoseState31 SOUTH BostonCollege23,WakeForest 17 GeorgiaSouthern 69,GeorgiaSt.31 Louisiana Tech31, Southern Miss20 Marshall35,FAU16 NorthCarolina28,Virginia 27 UCF34,Temple14 TexasState22,Louisiana-Monroe18 MIDWEST Ball State35,Akron21 glinois28,Minnesota24 Miami(Ohio)10,KentSt.3 Missouri24,Vanderbilt14 Northernglinois28, Eastern Michigan17 Toledo42, UMass35 WesternMichigan42, Ohio 21 Wisconsin52,Maryland7 SOUTHWE ST Arkansas45, UAB17 Memphis48, SMU10 Rice41,NorthTexas21 UTEP34,UTSAO FARWEST

ColoradoState45,Wyoming31 Stanford38, OregonSt.14 UtahState34, UNLV20 Nevada atHawaii(n)

BIG SKY

Saturday'sGames Cal Poly41,Montana21 IdahoState46, NorthernColorado12 NorthernArizona28,EasternWashington 27 PortlandState30, Weber State17 SouthernUtah35, NorthDakota17 Saturday,Nov.1 Sacramento StateatMontana,11a.m. NorthernArizonaatWeber State, noon NorthDakotaat EasternWashington,1 p.m. NorthernColoradoat UCDavis, 3p.m. IdahoStateat Portland State, 3:30p.m. Montana Stateat CalPoly,5p.m.

Division II GREATNORTHWEST

OrSI Stan 12 22

TOP 25 No. 1Mississippi State45, Kentucky31 No. 24LSU10,No.3 Mississippi 7 No. 4Alabam a34, Tennessee,20 No. 5Auburn42, SouthCarolina 35 No. 8MichiganState35, Michigan11 No. 10TCU82,TexasTech27 No. 11KansasState 23,Texas0 No.13 OhioState31, PennState24,2OT No. 14ArizonaState24,Washington10 No.15Arizona59,Washington State37 No. 16Nebraska42, Rutgers24 No.19 Utah 24, No.20SgouthernCal 21 No. 21Clemson16, Syracuse6 No. 22West Virginia 34,OklahomaState10 No. 23Marshall35, FAU16 No. 25UCLA40, Colorado37,2OT

No.24LSUu setsN0.30e Miss ~4 N t ' > 8+ J

The Associated Press

LSU tight end

BATON ROUGE, La. — Bo ed by Ronald Martin in the fi-

Logan Stokes scores the game's only

nalseconds,andNo. 3M ississippi lost for the first time this

touchdown in a 10-7 win

Wallace's pass was intercept-

season, 10-7 to No. 24 LSU on

Saturday night. Ole Miss was lining up for a potential tying field goal from 42 yards, but was called for delay of game. So the Rebels decided to run a play instead and Wallace threw his first interception in a South-

over Mis-

' /~

))'

SIsslppl In

'

Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Saturday

rlr .t

tk $c•

night. Gerald Herbert/ The Associated Press

eastern Conference game this

season. Anthony Jennings' short touchdown pass to tight end

FCS

Logan Stokes gave LSU the lead late in the fourth quarter. Also on Saturday:

No. 1 Mississippi State 45, Kentucky 31: LEXINGTON, Ky. — Dak Prescott accounted for three touchdowns, and

Josh Robinson ran for two scores for Mississippi State.

Langford ran for 177 yards and three touchdowns for Michigan State. No. 10 TCU 82, Texas Tech

No. 4 Alabama 34, Tennes- 27: FORT WORTH, Texas see 20: KNOXVILLE, Tenn.

proving defense led the first shutout of Texas since 2004 to keep the Wildcats unbeaten in Big 12 play. No. 13 Ohio State 31, Penn

-

yards and a touchdown, Ammon Lakip had three field goals and Clemson won its fifth straight. No. 22 West Virginia 34,

State 24: STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Quarterback J.T. Bard own passes, and T C U rett scored twice i n o v er- Oklahoma State 10: STILLshowcased a new fast-paced time to help Ohio State es- WATER, Okla. — Wendell touchdowns for Alabama. offense by scoring the most cape with a double-overtime S mallwood ran f o r a c a No. 5 Auburn 42, South Car- points in s chool history. vlctory. reer-high 132 yards for West olina 35: AUBURN, Ala. Boykin was 22 of 39 for 433 No. 16 Nebraska 42, Rut- Virginia. Nick Marshall ran for three yards while setting a career gers 24: LINCOLN, Neb. No. 23 Marshall 35, Florida touchdowns and passed for a high in passing yards for the Ameer Abdullah ran for 225 Atlantic 16: HUNTINGTON, score for Auburn. second week in a row. yards and three touchdowns WVa. — Devon Johnson No. 8 Michigan State 35, No. 11 Kansas State 23, Tex- and set a Nebraska record rushed for a s chool-record Michigan 1 1: EAST L A N as 0: MA N HATTAN, K a n with 341 all-purpose yards. 272 yards and four touchSING, Mich. — Jeremy — Kansas State's rapidly imNo. 21 Clemson 16, Syra- downs for Marshall.

— Amari Cooper caught nine passes for a school-record 224 yards and scored two

— Trevone Boykin threw a school-record seven touch-

cuse 6: CLEMSON, S.C. Cole Stoudt threw for 209

-

Saturday'sGames 29-12 35-151 AzusaPacific 52,SouthDakotaMines30 2 09 2 8 7 Dixie State 28,Menlo 6 18-38-0 19-30-2 HumboldState t 38, Central Washington20 52 68 Western Oregon27,SimonFraser16 9-38.1 5-34.8 Saturday,Nov.1 1-0 4-0 Lincoln(Mo.)atCentral Washington,1 p.m. 8 -67 3 - 20 HumboldSt t ateat SimonFraser, 1p.m. 28:05 31:55 SouthDakotaMinesatDixieState,6 p.m. WesternOregonatAzosa Pacific, 6 p.m. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —Oregon St.: Ward13-34, Brown 4-20, Bolden 3-10, Haskins1-1, Team1-(minos 2), Mannion7-(minus51). Stanford: Sanders5-43, Division III Young4-42,Hogan 4-39,McCaff rey 3-19,MontNORTHWE ST gomery2-16,Wright 9-8, Seale2-3, Skov2-1,Rector 1-(minus 5), Team3-(minos15). PASSING —Oregon St.: Mannion14-30-0-122, Saturday'sGames DelRi o 4-8-0-87.Stanford:Hogan18-28-2-277, Linfield59,Lewis8 Clark7 Crower1-2-0-10. Pacific 36,George Fox0 RECEIVING —Oregon Stz Vigamin5-45, Jarmon Lutheran 56,Wilamette14 3-87, Bolden 2-18, Hamlett 2-9, Dockery1-15,Ortiz Pacific Sound30 1-9, Ward1-8,Brown1-7, Smith1-7, Wark1-4.Stan- Whitworth62, Poget Saturday,Nov.1 ford: Montgom ery6-73, Hooper3-19, McCaffrey2-52, George FoxatWhitworth,12:30p.m. Cajuste2-50, Pratt 1-37,Taboada1-34, Stallworth Willamette atLinfield, 1p.m. 1-10,Trojan1-9,Sanders1-5, Owuso1-(minus2). Pacific Lutheran atPoget Sound,1 p.m. Pacific atLewis&Clark, 2p.m. Saturday'sGames First downs Rushes-yards Passing Comp-Att-Int ReturnYards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

TOP 25 ROUNDUP

-

NAIA FRONTIER

@tGOtt

Saturday'sGames Carroll 20,MontanaTech12 EasternOregon70, MontanaState-Northern 21 Montana Western20,RockyMountain17 Southern Oregon66,College ofIdaho16 Saturday,Nov.1 Collegeof IdahoatMontanaWestern,11 a.m. Carroll atMontanaState-Northern,11 a.m. Montan aTechatEasternOregon,noon RockyMountainat SouthernOregon,1 p.m.

PAC-12 ROUNDUP

Wilson scoreslate TDas Utah shocksSouthern Cal The Associated Press SALT LAKE CITY — Travis Wilson threw a 1 -yard touchdown pass t o K a elin

Clay with 8 seconds left to give

McDonagh leads Vikingstowin OGDEN, Utah — Kieran

No. 19 Utah a 24-21 victory over No. 20 Southern Califor-

MCDonaghthrew for two touchdowns and ran in a

nia on Saturday night. Wilson put the Utes (6-1, 3-1 Pac-12) in position for the winning touchdown when he was flushed from the pocket and scrambled 19 yards. D evontae Booker w a s stopped just short on the next play before Wilson's touchdown pass on a sprint out to the right side — a catch that

third to lift Portland State

also was reviewed before it

was confirmed. After Adoree' Jackson returned the kickoff to the USC

28, the Trojans' last-gasp effort was snuffed when Cody

to a 30-17 victory over winless WeberState on Saturday. Portland State (3-5 overall, 2-2 Big Skyj took the lead for good with a 41-yard field goal from Jonathan Gonzales in the second quarter, and put the gameawaywith McDonagh's touchdown run from the 8 with 2:25 left. MCDonagh finished 14

of 23 for172 yards. Steven Long had118 yards on 21 carries for the Vikings.

Kessler was sacked by Nate — The Associated Press Orchard and Hunter Dimick on the final play. Also on Saturday: yards without an interception. No. 14 Arizona State 24, Terris Jones-Grigsby added Washington 10: SEATTLE107 yards rushing for Arizona.

George Nlkltin/The Associated Press

Stanford's Christian McCaffrey outruns Oregon State's D.J. Alexander for a touchdown in the first half of the Beavers' 38-14 loss Saturday at Stanford, California.

Beavers

late-season run. "The year T h at's Stanford every year,"

Continued from 01 The Cardinal outgained Oregon State, 438 yards to

crashing down around us The C a r dinal's captivat- Christian McCaffrey and 37 once again, we won eight i n g performancebringsalot yards to Jordan Pratt in the straight and went to the Rose more intrigue into Eugene, first half. He also kept the Bowl. It's a long where H eisman ball on a read-option play and season. There are Trophy h o peful ran 37 yards for a touchdown, a lot of things that It Wa s One Marcu s Ma r i o ta stiff-arming a defender to the happen." appears healthier ground to finish the longest pf (ge )ArpiSt S tanford s t i l l d t han he w a s f o r and arguably most impresf h ad its share of last season's game sive run of his career. mistakes, though, fO Otball that at St a n ford. Stan- "I think it's good recognizshowing that the We hgVe hqd ford ha s b e aten ing this team's different perturnaround is not Oregon the past sonnelwise. You got to adapt <> quite c o mplete. two years on the to your personnel," said HoHogan tossed two lOAg time way t o Pa c -12 ti- gan, who still provided some interceptions, a tles and Rose Bowl head-scratching moments. 1$ t/t/gS Ben Rhyne punt b erths, bu t t h i s The redshirt junior's secyear's C a rdinal ond interception was thrown was blocked, and Jordan William- a / I the Way have loo k ed f a r into a crowd of d efenders, son made just one ar Ound from tho s e jugger- picked off by Michael Doctor of two short fieldnauts of the past and returned to the Stanford goals tries. — Oregon State f or most of t h e 5-yard line to set up Chris

221.

"It was bad football all the way around," Riley said. The Cardinal (5-3, 3-2 Pac12) controlled the game from start to finish, showing more diverse looks than they have

all season — just like coach David Shaw had promised after a perplexing 26-10 loss at Arizona State last week

took Stanford out of The Ass ociated Press poll for t h e

first time in four years. Kevin Hogan passed for

Taylor Kelly threw two touch-

Washington State's Connor

two touchdowns and ran for

down passes after missing

Halliday, the nation's leading passer,completed 56 of 79

another,and Ty Montgom-

more than a month with a foot

injury, the second a 7-yarder to Gary Chambers with 3 minutes left. Armand Perry

passesfor489 yards, with four

ton's Troy Williams attempt-

37: BOULDER, Colo. — Brett

ed a desperation throw on

Hundley had an 8-yard touchdown run in double overtime

touchdowns and two interceptions, and became the leadreturned an i nterception 61 ing career passer in school yards for a touchdown with 52 history. seconds left when WashingNo. 25 UCLA 40, Colorado fourth-and-25.

No. 15 Arizona 59, Wash- to lift UCLA. UCLA (6-2, 3-2 Pac-12) squandered a 17-point lead in the fourth quarter, and

ington State 37: PULLMAN, Wash. — Anu Solomon threw five touchdown passes to lead

Colorado tied it on Will Oli-

Arizona. The freshman quar- ver's 35-yard field goal with 36 terback was 26 of 38 for 294 seconds remaining.

e ry returned a punt for a score as Stanford's sporadic

before, when the world was

But for most of

M a n n ion said.

coac h Mike Rileyseason.

Hogan threw touchdowns

of 42 yards to freshman

Brown's touchdown run.

offense busted out of a sea- the game, the CarShaw s h o ul- The Cardinal overcame sonlong slump. The victory dinal cleaned up dered the blame those mistakesto carry a 28-7 sets up a date with No. 6 Ore- their act. for his offense's struggles lead into the half and put the gon next Saturday in Eugene Hogan completed 18 of 28 last week and said he would game away early in the third for first place in the Pac-12's passesfor277 yards. Stan- take strong measures to get quarter behind Montgomford's running-back-by-com- the problems fixed. He did ery's latest highlight. North Division. "I told our players, 'The mittee approach racked up j ust that, practically abanThe All-America kickoff last time ou r c o nstituents 151 yards rushing, including doning Stanford's smash- returner p a t iently w a i t ed were nervous about us and a 1-yard touchdown run by m outh style and mixing in a for blocks and zigzagged no-huddle offense, read-op- through a wall of defenders not sure what we were going fullback Patrick Skov. to do, we won three straight Mannion was sacked six t i on runs and spread-style for a 50-yard punt returngames and went to the Rose times. Oregon State had just passing attack to get the his second punt return for a team's best p l aymakers touchdown this season — to Bowl,' " Shaw said, recall- 12 yards rushing. "They aretough up front. more involved. ing last season's improbable give Stanford a 35-7 lead.


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE

D5

PREP ROUNDUP

Sea aw s stum e over ac o sac s Bulldogscruiseto Nextup

By Tim Booth The Associated Press

back we have to make them pay," Avril said. "The ball is coming out kind of quick, but for us we have to keep chopping away, keep getting better and everything will play itself out."

Seattle at Carolina When:10a.m. today was the ability to wreak havoc TV:CBS RaNo:KRCO-AM690, FM-96.9 on quarterbacks. RENTON, Wash. — One of the hallmarks of the Seattle S eahawks' Super Bowl r u n Whether it was Cliff Avril,

Michael Bennett or

Much of the burden has fallen on Avril and Bennett. Last

C hris

Clemons — to name a few-

the Seahawks were constantly putting opposing quarterbacks under pressure.

This season, Seattle's pass rush isn't close to matching its effectiveness from last year. "It's the combination of

guys getting clean on their rushes off of play actions in the early downs, getting in the back field. Also, us covering a guy down, making the quarterback hold the football for an extra beat so that works handin-hand," Seattle coach Pete

Carroll said. "Just in general, w e have not been as effective with the t h ings that w e've

done to rush the passer and pressures and stuff like that." Seattle is tied for 27th in

land and St. Louis have fewer sacks, but having Seattle near

season, Seattl e's defensive line had enough depth that the

can get there. It's just not go-

CBC district title

ing that way right now. We'll be all right."

Bulletin staff report

ed No. 6 Hosanna Christian

Behind 22 kills and 10 digs by Shealene Little and 41 assists by Margie Beeler, Culver rolled through Heppner 25-19, 25-17, 25-6 for

25-23, 25-17, 25-23 to win the tourney title at Triad. Against

Offenses this season are

also being smarter against what the Seahawks do so well. Instead of pushing the ball downfield and challenging the likes of Earl Thomas and Richard Sherman, quarterbacks are content to throw

playing time for both was de- shorter, underneath passes, creased and the pair was able especially when th e Seatop 10 last season. to stay fresher throughout the hawks are playing zone coverIt's also having a trick- season. age. That doesn't give Seattle's le-down effect on the number There are several reasons pass rush an opportunity to ofturnovers Seattlehasforced for the drop in Seattle's sack get to the quarterback. so far — only five through six numbers. So far this season, 31.6 pergames. After six games last Avril and Bennett are play- cent of completions against season, Seattle had 16 sacks ing significantly more snaps Seattle's defense have been and had forced 17 turnovers. this season and Bennett has thrown within six yards of the If ever there was a game yet to be as effective as an in- line of scrimmage, a percentfor Seattle's pass rush to get side rusher. According to Foot- age that's up slightly from last healthy it would be today ball Outsiders, Avril has been season. On top of that, Seattle against Carolina. The Pan- in for66.3 percent ofSeattle's is giving up more yards after thers are banged up on the defensive snaps this season the catch. "This year it's just a little offensive line and Carroll said and Bennett is at 81.5 percent. there would be adjustments Last season, Bennett played different," Bennett said. "Evmade to the pass rush this 57.5 percent of the snaps and eryyearis a differentdynamw eek. Whether that i s d i f - Avril 52.3. ic. We're at the perfect part of the bottom is surprising after the Seahawks ranked in the

"If you watch film, we've hit the quarterback a few times," Avril said. "We feel like we

ferent rotations or more blitz

the NFL with just seven sacks packages remains to be seen. "For us, when they do step through six games. Only Oak-

Pregnancy

•)

the season to figure out where

we want to be at as far as rushing."

I'

Continued from 01 York, basically leading from

j

the starting gun to the fin-

ish tape, and afterward she picked up her baby," said

Clift had seven kills, and Em-

ily Eidler chipped in with six kills. Mariah Murphy had five digs, and Allison Jorge totaled 20 assists. In the championship, Katie Murphy led the

the Columbia Basin Con-

ference volleyball district title at Weston-McEwen on Saturday.

"It was great," Bulldogs way with 14 kills, and Eidler coach Randi Viggiano said. had six kills. Clift and Mariah "We felt like this was a Murphy each had seven digs, game to just show that we and Allison Jorge had five aces definitely are theundefeated and 27 assists. The Saints (13-0 league champions. This was MVL) earn a first-round bye in kind of a formality to get the Class 1A state playoffs and there, so I'm glad we went in return to action for the second there and got it done." Lynze Schonneker to-

round next Saturday. BOYS SOCCER Umatilla 13, Culver 1: UMA-

taled 12 kills and 10 digs

TILLA — The visiting Bulldogs (0-7-1 SD4, 3-8-2 overall) in league play, while Emma lost to league co-leader UmatilHoke racked up 18 digs and la in the Class 3A/2A/1A Spethree aces. Andrea Retano cial District 4 match. Carlos had four kills, two digs and Martinez scored the lone goal two block kills for the Bull- of the game for Culver while dogs, and Jenny Vega fin- participating in his third difished with three kills and a ferent varsity event in as many pair of block kills. days — all in Umatilla County. With the win, Culver se- On Thursday night, Martinez cured a home match in the played cornerback for the footfirst round of the 2A state ball Bulldogs in their game playoffs, which are slated to against Weston-McEwen at begin next Saturday. Athena. And on Friday, the verfor Culver, which is No. 2 in Class 2A and went 10-0

satile senior posted the fastest

time for the Culver boys at the thstnct cross-country championships in Pendleton.

Lutheran walked away as

Mountain Valley League

can marathoner. "I realized I

re 'w.'

can do both. And I want to do both."

district tournament cham-

' l

Goucher, 36, finished third in the 2008 New York City Marathon, and this year she

Butte Falls, Katie Murphy had eight kills for Trinity, Megan

ond straight year, Trinity

4I

Kara Goucher, a top Ameri-

-

In other Saturday action: VOLLEYBALL Saints take title: KLAMATH FALLS — For the sec-

'I •

"I watched Paula win New

ATHENA

pions. After putting away Butte Falls 25-20, 25-19, 2518, the No. 7 Saints defeat-

i I

will run the New York race for the first time with her son, 4-year-old Colt, cheering her on. When she contemplated having achild,Goucher engaged in the careful strategizing common to elite female

TOUCHMARK

WINDOW TREATS

SINCE 19SO

7%1SW10th • Redmand • (541) 5484616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com

•J

athletes, who consider pre-

cisely when to become pregnant so as not to risk missing

out on an Olympic opportunity or sacrificing a corporate sponsorship. Elite female distance run-

s;.mssR .

The New YorkTimesfile photo

ners now run competitive

Paula Radcliffe holds her daughter, Isla, after winning the 2007 New York City Marathon. As athletic peaks for top runners have overtaken fertility peaks, the decision to combine motherhood and training

times well into their late 30s.

has become increasingly unavoidable.

"I lost 45 pounds!" F

The average age of a top fem ale marathoner is 30, and

• • • . •

.

II i - i

19 women in next Sunday's But in terms of your career, professional field are that age there's still the feeling that if or older. you say you want to have a As athletic peaks for these kid, you're saying you don't high-level runners have over- want to be an athlete." taken fertility peaks, the deciI t does not help that so sion to combine motherhood m any people seem tohave an and training has become in- opinion on the matter. After creasingly unavoidable. Com- Alysia Montano, a 2012 Olympetitive careers are stretching: pian,ran an 800-meter race in The American Deena Kastor, June during her eighth month expected to be another high of pregnancy, her decision finisher next Sunday, is 41. became the subject of intense "I always wanted to have a public scrutiny. "I wanted to help clear up child," Goucher said, "and I didn't want to wait until I was the stigma around women done, because I don't really exercising during pregnancy, see an end date on my career. which baffled me," Montano I wanted more in my life than

s • •

sald.

family in her mid-20s, aiming women's physical resilience for a racing peak afterward. during and after pregnancy Now 30, she is pregnant with has also developed in recent her fourth child. years. "I think if I'd chosen to train

LOSE

"We still don't have good

at altitude and log 120-mile

science to guide us," said Dr. weeks, I could have made it to Aaron Baggish, associate the Olympics," said Peterson, director of the cardiovascuwho typically runs 80 to 90 lar performance program at miles a week when not preg- Massachusetts General Hosnant. "But that comes with

pital in Boston, which coun-

sacrifices; you put your career sels elite athletes through first, and before you know it, pregnancy. "But unequivoyou're28, maybe confronting cally I think women should fertility issues. I always felt like exercise through pregnancy, having children was more im- both for their baby and their portant to me than a running own health. The body has career." evolved that way. Your baseStill, Peterson ran right up

UP

to

POUND S' "NEW , YEARS VP'7 Ta e The MRc

10Wee Challenge!

line fitness level is the best

"People sometimes act like until the births of her first three guideline: Elite athletes start just running. But the details of how you do that can get in- being pregnant is a n ine- children. She qualified for the out with a higher threshold, credibly complicated." month death sentence, like 2012 U.S. Olympic marathon so they can do more." Elite runners often try to you should lie in bed all day. trials just four months after desqueeze in a pregnancy and I wanted to be an example livering her second child, and recovery i n t h e 1 6 - month for women starting a famishe logged a 2-hour-35-minute window between world track ly while continuing a career, time at the race four months championships in years with whatever that might be. I was later. "I trained hard through that no Summer Olympics. This is still surprised by how many one such year, and pregnan- people paid attention." pregnancy," Peterson said.

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Maternity leave in p r ofessional running is rare. A pregnancy is still frequently

"Kara (Goucher) and Paula (Radcliffe) showed

if they do not compete for six months. During that period,

of the 'fragile woman' who can't be both a

that PregnanCy dOeSn't neCeSSarily need to treated as if it were an injury, and women can experience be an imPediment to the athletiC Part Of Our a pay cut or not be paid at all CareerS, and bleW UP the VeStigeS Of the myth top athlete and a mother. But in terms of your Career, there'S Still the feeling that if you Say tracts that can last upward you Want to haVe a kid, yOu're Saying you dOn't of six years. Because the athletes are independent con- want to be an athlete." they often remain bound to

sponsors in exclusive con-

tractors,theyare notcovered by laws that protect employed women in pregnancy.

— Bend resident Lauren Fleshman

"You can tell when you're Montano's daughter was born in August. pushing it. You get twingy, "Givingbirth is a very athlet- or feel t e ndons pulling, on and a professional runner who lives in Bend, switched to ic activity, like going through so I backed off w hen that a women's-oriented sponsor, intervals on the track," Mon- happened." therunning apparelcompany tano said. "Like contractions, To bounce back for the Oiselle, before giving birth to intervals can start out easy t rials, Peterson s aid, s h e a son in June 2013. and progress as they get hard- breast-fed her second child Referring to Goucher and er. There's sometimes a point for only five weeks — findR adcliffe, F l eshman s a i d : where you wonder, 'Can I do ing that the hormones related "Kara and Paula showed that one more set?' But you know to breast-feeding made her pregnancy doesn't necessari- you're going to make it. And feel sluggish — and dropped ly need to be an impediment then you kickto the finish." the 20 pounds she typically to the athletic part of our caOther women have chosen gained during pregnancy in reers, and blew up the vestig- different paths. eight weeks without dieting. es of the myth of the 'fragile Clara Horowitz Peterson, (She breast-fed her third child woman' who can't be both a former standout runner at for six months.) a top athlete and a mother. Duke, focused on starting a T he u nderstanding o f Lauren F l e shman, an NCAA 5,000-meter champi-

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D6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL

R

I

I

QUKSTION: Every time I have a mammogram, the technician comments on the density of my breasts (making it tougher to get a good mammogram) and mentions the term "Fibrocystic". What is this, and what can I do about it? ANSWKIut Fibrocystic breast syndrome (FBS) is known to most women simply as having "lumpy breasts." The cause of FBS is increased estrogen production. 20-40% of menstruating women have FBS, most having lumps or cysts in both breasts. Because FBD is a risk factor for breast cancer, seeking treatment is a good idea. There are a few natural .P. things that one can do to help and prevent fibrocystic breasts. Increase consumption of complex carbs and fiber. FBS has been linked to constipation and to diets low in fiber. Ground flax seeds can be a great form of fiber. Regular bowel movements help the body eliminate toxins and hormones more efliciently. Decrease consumption of methylxanthines a component of coffee, chocolate, black tea, and cola drinks. In one scientific study, 97% of women who completely avoided caffeine showed reduction in size and sensitivity of breast cysts. Results were seen after 4 months of avoiding caffeine and were most significant in severe cases of FBS. Consider

checking thyroid levels and taking iodine an important mineral necessary for healthy thyroid function. Iodine may also decrease breast tissue sensitivity to estrogen. Consider taking Vit E, Vit B, and evening primrose oil (EPO) which may help the body process hormones more effectively and increase progesterone production to balance excess estrogen. Vit E may relieve FBS and PMS symptoms by normalizing circulating hormone levels in the body. EPO supports progesterone production in the body. B vitamins improve liver function, which is where estrogen is processed and eliminated from the body. Controlling estrogen is key. For more information or a more personalized treatment plan, call to schedule an appointment.

QUEBTIDN: If I need surgery, how do I

QUKsrloN: Are the results of C00ISculpting permanent? My sister dropped 2 dresssizes!

choose a surgeon? ANswER: Meet with th e surgeon and have a consultation to make sure you are comfortable. The first question to ask is whether the surgery is necessary J anavanAmburg, and what o t h e r o p t i o n s y o u h a v e. M.D.,PAcs

Have the surgeon give you a thorough and understandable explanation of the surgery. If you choose surgery as a course of treatment, you have a choice as to which surgeon you will see. Ask the surgeon how many times in their career they have performed th e p a r t i c ul ar

surgery and how the number compares to other surgeons. Ask the surgeon what their success, complication and failure rates are for the particular surgery. Find out i f t h e surgeon is board certified by contacting the A m erican Board o f S u rgery at

215-568-4000 or check online at www.absurgery.org. Surgeons must pass written and oral exams and they must be accepted by their peers to become board certified.

Your Health Your Choice Our Expertise

Answer: "Yes! CoolSculpting is a safe, successful and FDA approved treatment a vailable a t t h e L e ffe l C e n ter t o peiTnanently remove fat. Each treatment is one hour in Dr. Linda Leffel's plastic Dr Li"da I surgery office without needles, without anesthesia and with no downtime. Our patients, immediately after treatment, have headed to Mt. Bachelor to ski! When you maintain your weight, the long term results are stable and permanent. If you are considering CoolSculpting, please be evaluated by a board certified plastic surgeon, or physician with expertise and training i n b od y c ontouring. Before CoolSulpting, you should have a consultation and exam by th e t reating doctor t o t h oroughly assess your general health, skin quality, and fatty areas to assess if CoolSculpting is the best treatment for you. CoolSculpting is a medical treatment and should be performed in a doctor's office. Don't settle for anyone but a plastic surgeon for CoolSculpting for the best results. For more information or questions please call our office 541-388-3006 or visit www.leffelcenter.com.

HAWTHORN D r. Kerie R a y m o n d

J ana M . V a n A m b u r g , M D , F A C S

39 NW Louisiana Ave, Bend, OR N sattsaARTS CNNINN I

QUKsTIoN:I have worn glasses and contact lenses for several years. I lead an active lifestyle including cycling and skiing, and the contact lenses are getting increasingly inconvenient. I was once told I was not a good candidate for LASIK. Are there any new treatment options for LASIK? Ida Alul,

ANBWER; L A S IK tech n ology h as continued to advance over the last several years with the development of Wavefront technology. Wavefront technology allows us to treat a broader range of near-sightedness, far-sightedness and astigmatism than we used to be able to. Precise Wavefront technology improves our chances for optimal outcomes. With newer laser technology we can treat patients who were previously not candidates including those with high refractiveerrors or thinner corneas. Your eye care provider can preform tests to determine if you are a candidate for laser vision correction through a simple eye exam. At Infocus Eye Clinic we offer complementary LASIK evaluations.

m

2275 NE Doctors Dr., Bend OR97701 541-323-2790 www.vanamburgsurgery.com

G O S M E T I G , B R EA S T A ND L A S E R S U R GE R Y

V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e

Hawthorn Healing Arts Center 541-330-0334 www.Hawt hornCenter.com

L EFF E L C EN T E R

Sur g e r y

Ca r e

QUEBTioN:What is Permanent Makeup? ANswER: Permanent Makeup is a form of cosmetic tattooing used to enhance facial features and as a finishing touch to surgical procedures. The benefits of this procedure are being discovered by more and more women. Susan Gruber, Older w o men w i t h p o o r e y e sight and unsteady hands find permanent makeup most beneficial. Women who travel, swim or c amp l ike the freedom of l o o king their best even under the most active conditions. And handicapped people, those with a llergies and just everyday, busy women want to look their best. What could be better than to wake up looking as good in the morning as you di d i n t h e evening? Whatever procedures are desired, eyebrows, eyeliner or l i p s, Permanent Makeup color can create a polished look or something subtle and natural.

Dr. Linda J. Leffel, MD 1715 SWChandler Ave. ¹100 Bend, OR 97702 541-388-3008 www.leffelcenter.com

QIIRSTioN: Is there help for my B a t Wings? I have a lot of loose hanging skin on my arms and want to know if there is anything that can help. A NswKR: C o n t o urin g t h e up p e r arms i s a n ex t r e mely s u ccessful I Adam p P~ Angeles, ' M.D.

p r o c e d u r e . B a t w is, n gh a n g i n g s k i n fro m t h e u p per a r ms, i s r e m oved to provide a smooth an d y o u t hful contour. This procedure is known as

a brachioplasty. You will be trading loose skin for a scar, but in the hands of a Board Certified Plastic

Surgeon it can be well hidden, and you will be back to wearing short sleeve shirts in no time.

Feel free to call with any questions you might have or to schedule a free consultation. The results are priceless.

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2400 NE Neff Rd., Suite B• Bend, OR 97701

Ask one of our Health Professionals on the following

categories:

Dentistry • Urology • Eye Care • Plastic Surgery • General and Specialty Surgery Dermatology • Holistic Medicine • Physical Therapy • Pain Management Chiropractic • Health & Beauty Send your questions to: Ask A Health Professional The Bulletin By fax: 541-385-5802 • Email: kclark@bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, Oregon 97708 My question is:


Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

'Homeland'

Finding the balance of sharing leadership

brings woman's

calligraphy to light

By Sarah Max New York Times News Service

Mark McDonald and Josiah Humphrey are not terribly concerned with conventional wisdom. The men, Australian entrepre-

By Jonathan McFadden The Charlot te Observer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. +s

neurs, started developing and optimizing websites as teenagers, skipped college and started their web and mobile app company,

-

Lori Sparacio's handiwork *

is etched on a 25-foot chalkboard at The MAYOBIRD, a Charlotte, North

Carolina-based chicken salad eatery. Her "swoops and swirls"

Appster, in 2011 when

they were not yet 20. They shunned outside funding

have been inked on the bottoms of a bride's high-

and put what little money

heels, between the thread-

they had into office space, setting up shop in down-

The view from Sherrie and Ron Rhoden's10,400 square-foot home at Western Sunsets Ranch northeast of Prineville includes

next to Google and IBM. And while many

ing of 100 baseballs used as wedding favors and on a bundle of volleyballs given to players as keepsakes. But her biggest claim to

town Melbourne, right

several Central Oregon cities and the Cascades.

co-founders eventually

fame came last fall when a

claim different spots on their company's organi-

message she wrote in Hebrew sat on an office desk

zation chart, McDonald

on Showtime's TV series

Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

"Homeland."

and Humphrey settled into their shared role as chief executives.

So far, the arrangement seems to be working. In three years, the co-CEOs haveledthecompany to $10 million in annual revenue and 110 employees, and they are adding 50 to

„, ///r/

60 employees this quarter.

• More than a dozen properties are on the market inCentral Oregon

They have just opened an office in San Francisco, and theyhave a team ofex-

Diedra Laird /The Charlotte Observer

Lori Sparacio, of Waxhaw, North Carolina, owns her own business, The Write

ecutives and board members that includes a former chief financial officer of PayPal, David Jaques. While the men are not opposed to bringing in a professional CEO eventually, they say there are

Occasion Calligraphy. Her

more benefits than pitfalls

to see it," said Sparacio, who since 2010 has run her

work was featured on the Showtime TV series "Home-

land" last season.

"Stop the action and get

close to the TV if you want

to working side by side for now. "We think we've

achieved these results because there are two of us, not in spite of it," McDon-

ald said. Some of the advantag-

es of having two people in charge are practical, namely having two people to tackle a growing company's endless to-do list. There is an emotional ben-

efit as well. "Having that support, especially in the early days, is critical," Humphrey said. "You've got that one person in the

business, TheWriteOccasion Calligraphy, from her

By Joseph Ditzler •The Bulletin

home. "It was there."

ing board." Of course, with the shared responsibility come complications. "What you lose is agility,"

Danes as bipolar CIA

Agent Carrie Mathison

lives there.

and Mandy Patinkin as Carrie'smentor, Saul Ber-

"We can actually watch the Fourth of July fireworks in Bend, Redmond and Prineville from our upper deck," she said recently. The Rhodens, Sherrie and Ron, will part with the view, along with their

co-chiefs until August

and her husband decided it's

when Adamowsky left,

time to downsize. Theywould probably find a smaller home in Oregon, she said, but "our kids are grown, and they live

amicably, to pursue another business. See Management/E5

Getting her work on

"Homeland," a political thriller starring Claire

How impressive? Ask Sherrie Rhoden, who

Eric Adamowsky to start Credit Card Insider in 2012. The two worked as

teamed up with his friend

Sparacio, 52, charged $350 for the piece.

Mountains northeast of Prineville, is impressive.

10,429-square-foot home and 320 acres that surround it, if and when the right buyer comes along. Western Sunsets, aformer cattleranch,is for sale with a listingprice of $1.9 million. Sherrie Rhoden said she

said John Ganotis, who

entire 12-episode season.

elevation 3,400 feet at the edge of the Ochoco

company who has the same level of leadership and can be a real sound-

It stayed there for an

The view from Western Sunsets Ranch,

in otherplaces, and we'd like tobe closer to them." The Rhodens'property is among 15 farms and ranches for sale in Central Oregon, totaling more than 16,000 acres

and a combined askingprice of $26.7 million, according to broker listings. Much of that

property,8,000-plus acres' worth, lies in Crook County. Real estate and agricultural

experts say having that much land for sale is not out of the

ordinary. The timing of those prop-

.I

The Rhodens'10,429-square-foot home at Western Sunsets Ranch includes this living room and an indoor pool. The listing price: $1.9 million.

erties becoming available marks a turning point in

Central Oregon agriculture, however. Some properties

belongto agingranchers and farmers looking to retire, but the economics of ranching dictate that passing the operation to the next generation often isn't feasible.

That creates an opportunity for individuals or corporations with deep pockets who want to checkoff anitem on

their bucket lists or consoli-

date their operations.

enson, didn't result in a ton of new business. But Sparacio said the experience reminded her why marketing is critical. A picture of the "Home-

land" piece is No. 29in a gallery of 48 pictures on

Sparacio's website, thewrite-

"Most of my sales are coming from, primarily, retiring ranchers and farmers," said Jerry Hicks, a

occasioncalligraphy.com. "I really didn't advertise

broker with Montana-based real-estate firm Fay Ranches

I don't think I everput it on Facebook. So, did it affect

Inc. "If you don't have good estate-planning, between the ... inheritance tax and try-

ing to split the equity among successors, it's usually the downfall of that ranch or farm."

SeeRanch land/E2

that as much as I should,"

she said."It's onthe website. (business)? Probably not." Now, Sparacio is working to bolster her social media and marketing presence by getting the word out about her TV

experience. SeeCalligraphy/E5

ar 0 e S ar u ri eS e ec ric-ve ic e wave By Jonathan McFadden The Charlotte Observer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Dis-

this year to assemble and sell

best bet for survival amid a nationwide automotive industry

stored in batteries and no gas components. Yet the Condor's

crisis in 2008.

creation comes just as analysts

He listened.

question the long-term viability of the nascent electric-vehide

electricpickups. The Condor is a strategic response to what Agnew said

vehides. Agnew said. It took more than Agnew said EV Fleet's 13 500 attempts to perfect the employeesmanufacture four Condor's design — from the trucks a month. Byyear's end, Agnew said chassis, to the frame, to the cab, Agnew said. he hopes to expand the facility More than 60 potential and add 13 more employees buyers — mainly, fleet and who would produce nearly 300

u,l

he didn't see on the market

— pickup trucks built with motors that ran on energy

llldustry.

An original creation

transportation managers for municipalities and private

Jeff Willhelm/The Charlotte Observer

Ben Agnew, right, and Barry Robinson, left, created the Condor 2015, an a all-electric pickup truck designed to haul fleet and deliv-

eries, conserve energy andsave buyers thousands in fuel costs.

ry bird, the Condor drives more

ofhauling 1,000pounds and reachingup to 80 miles per

than 100miles on a 14-hour charge, said Stewart Mallard,

hour, the truck was produced

EV Fleet's director of sales.

EV Fleet built its own truck

after Agnew andhis partners spent more than $5 million over eight years, buildingpro-

totypes and converting cars to electric-powered vehides. Those cars, while operational, experienced a variety of supply

trucks each month.

businesses — have gone on

More charging stations

testrides.The company has

While automobile sales slumped nationwide during the recession, Agnew said demand for electricvehicles never went away. "We provide a truck that works as hard as a gas-pow-

already started taking orders. The trucks sellat$43,000after a federal rebate that awards up to a $7,500 tax credit to elec-

tric-car buyers.

Named for the large predato-

sands in fuel costs. Capable

switching to electric-powered

focus in product development,

turing startup Agnew formed

tressed automakers in Detroit feeling the burn of fuel prices gave Brooks Agnewthe push he needed. Forgetaboutthegas-powered automobile, they told him. Building electric cars was his

Agnew,60, recently debuted the Condor 2015, an all-electric pickup truck designed to haul fleet and deliveries, conserve energy and save buyers thou-

chain issues prompting a re-

in Charlotte, North Carolina, by EV Fleet Inc., a manufac-

Agnew estimated that small fleet owners — those who

manage 25 trucks or so — can eliminate up to $625,000 over

fiveyears ingasoline costs by

eredtruck and you can drive it

for less than 2 cents a mile," he said. "It makes sense." SeeElectric car/E3


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

B USINESS

END A R

Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.

TODAY

TUESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

Aipenhimmel Creative Arts

Retargeting — How to Use Digital Media to Reach Your Potential Customer: Learn about programmatic online advertising and how your business can best utilize it, led by Kent Malo of Simpli.fi; $25 Chamber members,

Vision 2015 — Global Effects

BNI Chapter Deschutes Business Networkers: 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road;541-610-9125. CCB License Test Prep: Two-day live course meets the educational requirement to take the test to

EmporiumOpen House: Free; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; Alpenhimmel Creative Arts Emporium, 392 W. Main Ave., No. 3, Sisters; 541588-0931, alpenhimmel©gmail. com or www.alpenhimmel.com.

$30 nonmembers, register

BusinessFundamentals

Bootcamp— Management: Series of workshops for anyone interested in tuning up or starting up an organization; call to register; $10 per course; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; COCC — Crook County Open Campus, 510 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-4476228.

Economic forecast breakfast featuring Tim Duy, professor of practice at University of Oregon; and Mark Kralj, principal at Ferguson Wellman Capital

Management; $49 Chamber

online; 11:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org.

MONDAY

on the Local Economy:

SCOREfree business counseling: SCORE business counselors conduct free 30-minute oneon-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.SCORECentralOregon.org.

members, $55 nonmembers, register online; 7 a.m.; The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. Green Drinks: Learn about other businesses, sustainability efforts and network; free; 5-7 p.m.; Sunlight Solar, 50 SE Scott St., Building 13, Bend; 541-385-6908,

sara©envirocenter.org or www. envirocenter.org.

become a licensed contractor

in Oregon; meets Friday, Oct. 31, and Saturday, Nov. 1; $305, includes Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual, registration required; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7290, ccb©cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/ccb. Nonprofit Grant Writing: Learn to identify grant funding sources, write successful applications and

more; Fridays Oct. 31-Nov. 7; $89, registration required; 9 a.m.noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. Search Engine Strategies ii: Learn to understand how code, content and credibility affect search engine results, Fridays Oct. 31-Nov. 14; $99, registration required; 9-11 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.

Ashwood Road, Madras; 541383-7270.

MONDAY Nov. 3

SATURDAY

Microsoft Certification Prep — Excel 2013: Mondays and Wednesdays Nov. 3-12; $159 plus testing fee, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend;541-3837270. BusinessFundamentals

Nov. 1

Bootcamp — HumanResources: Series of workshops for anyone

Beginners QuickBooks Pro 2014: Learn to do your own bookkeeping; $85, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Madras Campus, 1170 E.

interested in tuning up or starting up an organization; call to register; $10 per course; 6:308:30 p.m.; COCC — Crook County Open Campus, 510 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-447-6228.

$379,900 • Parsons Construction Inc. to Michelle R. andDerrick P.Johnson, Partition Plat 2011-3, Parcel 2, $475,000 •KennethW .MorganJr.andAshley Morgan to Bradley C.and Birgit Show, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Inc., Unit 4, Lot 34, Block 32, $184,500 • John and Cindy Santos to Bryan Edwards, Lindsay M. Kuzaraand Irene Del Rio, Tamarack Park, Lot18, Block 2, $198,000 • Hayden Homes LLC to Christina

M. Dampier, Emily Estates, Lot11, $153,128 • Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation to Scott P. andKathleen M. Woodford, Elkhorn Estates, Phases 9and10, Lot120, $319,500 • William M. and Theresa L. K. Campbell, trustees of the Campbell Revocable Inter Vivos Trust, to Robert S. Graham III and SarahA. Graham,Foxborough, Phase 5, Lot 249, $269,000 • Steven K. Smith to Dianne E. Norwood, Mountain Peaks, Phases 3 and 4, Lot 63, $224,500

DEEDS Crook County • Mark R. and Deborah L. McManigal to Richard D. and Linda C.Smith, Partition Plat 2003-07, Parcel 1, $359,000 • Brasada Ranch Development LLC to Thomas S. andLois R. Johnson, Brasada Ranch 8, Lot 600, $184,500 • Robert L. and Carol Childers, trustees of the Robert L. andCarol Childers Trust, to Robert W. andKim C. Lundquist, Township14, Range14, Section 36, $635,000 •SteveE.and Diane Baumanto Peter V. Middlesworth and Cheryl J. Lerback, Partition Plat 2001-04, Parcel 3, $282,000 • HSBC Bank U.S.A., national association, trustee etc., to Scott R. and Holly J. Wilson, West Powell Butte Estates, Lot 27, $725,000 • Jerold C. and Carol Ann Parker to Hank E.andStephanieM .W est, Partition Plat1992-02, Parcel1, $190,000 • Steven W. Stahl and Kelly A. Salisbury, who acquired title as Kelly

A. Stahl, to William R. Espinoza, Township15, Range16, Section 28, $165,000 • C. Bradley and Julie G. Waibel to Molli Lang, Brasada Ranch 5, Lot 532, $389,000 • Bruce L. and Kristi A. Dunlap to Terry F. andKaren T. Barker, Partition Plat1997-32, Parcel 1, $700,000 • Arlene M. Stauning to Edward G. and Trudy J. Edgerton, Highlands Subdivision, Unit2, Lot18, Block5, $210,000 • Gutierrez Cattle Company to Hamilton Ranch LLC,Township 15, Range 22, Sections 21, 25, 29, 31,34-36; Township16, Range22, Sections 2-3, 9, 11-12, 14-17,19-23, 25-27, 29-30, 33, 35, 36; Township 16, Range 21,Sections 23, 25, 27, 3536; Township16, Range 22, Sections 31-32; Township17, Range21, Sections 1-3, 11;Township 17, Range 22, Section 5-6; Township16, Range 23, Section 30-31, $14,400,000 • Todd, Courtney, Dominic and Jennifer Albertini to Patrick Clark, Brasada Ranch 2, Lot 225, $285,000

Ranch landdonanza

Theu —

About15 large ranchesare currently for sale in Central Oregon. Several of the larger available

parcels are shownhere, aswell as the 21,500-acre Gutierrez Ranch

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l}liedfoid ' wayaw rails

McKay CreekRa'nch

Re'dmon'd ~

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$19M

', 5z2'1jacres,

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7,242 acres, $5r4M

0

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Cre e k

Gut i errez Ranch

2 38 acres $14M

S OLD

Rsnsh

21, 5 00acres,$14.4M

I

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p@4'

boodt, Oregon State University extension agent in Crook

ing reserve, a virtue brokers advertise aspartoftherecre-

Continued from E1 Hicks, who's based in Prineville, brokered the sale

County.

ational aspect of ranch life.

of the Foley Butte Block-

a going cattle operation, said

Not many locals have the means to buy and maintain

Dry

Cre e k

H unt i n g

Reserve,

a

1,741- a cre

$18.5million for 32,475 acres

Scott Cooper, former Crook

County judge. During his to a Fay Ranches brochure, tenure as the county adminis- comes with t h r ee h u n ting trator, he predicted that buy- tags for mule deer and three ers who acquired ranches at for elk, for example. "The big thing about these age 55 or 60would find in 10 years that ranching was a lot parcels are people tying up of work. Plus, he said, Crook their own hunting block," County property has always said Mike Warren Sr., abroattracted outside interest. ker with Crook County Prop"We did a study of land erties, Prineville. " A lot of ownership patterns in the east these ranchessold in the past county; almost that entire part for just that reason." of the county is out-of-county Oregon guarantees landownership,"he said. owners tags for deer, elk and Hicks said California and pronghorn antelope hunting Texas send the most pro- that others acquire through spective buyers to Oregon; a lottery. The l andowner t he other states "are i n a receives tags based on the dead heat." A ranch property acreage he or she owns, said in Central Oregon typical- Michelle Dennehy, spokesly spendsat least a year on woman for the state Departthe market, he said. Pricing ment of Fish and Wildlife. A a large ranch also can be a rancher with 10,000 acres, l ittle more difficult than a for example, is entitled to six house in a residential neigh- tags for each hunt. borhood, where recent nearThe owner may not sell by sales provide comparable the tags. However, a propervalues. Often, ranch prices ty owner may sell accessto get reduced. hunters who have their own "Most of them are going to tags, Dennehy said. peoplewho had a bucket list The landowner preference and wanted to have a small program is meant tocompenranch in their later years. sate landowners for the damThey owned a construction age done to their property company forever and always by wildlife and to recognize wanted to go back to the farm their support of wildlife, she or ranch," Hicks said. sard. Those for s ale in Cr o o k Foley Butte came with a County range in size, from handful of tags, too, said about 60 acres to more than Warren. "It's a big deal," he said, 3,000, and in price, from around $600,000 to $ 3 . 2 adding that the cost to hunt a million. trophy animal may reach into Ranches and farms have the thousands. value as private hunting and Warren said p r ospective fishing retreats, too. Land- buyers from outside Oregon owner preference hunting havebeen interested foryears tags mean a large property in Central Oregon property. functions as a virtual huntDryden said prospective

Salem.

The previous owner, Arturo Gutierrez Sr., a Boston-area real estate developer in his

70s, bought the 21,500-acre spread in 1988. He decided to sell as his attention shift-

ed closer to home, said Roger Dryden, of Crook County, who brokered the sale. "It was just time," said Gutierrez'sassistant,CarolJones.

"He's getting older." Dryden and other brokers said the time is right to sell as

real estatemarkets recover valuelost in the recession. He also sees a generational shift

in ranch ownership. "A lot of big ranch owners have been at it a long time,

and they're long in the tooth," Dryden said. "If the kids don't want it, they'll have to selL"

Record high beef prices make ranching an attractive prospect. The retail price of

choice-grade beef climbed to $5.92 per pound in September, according to the U.S. De-

partment of Agriculture. But ranching can be a tough proposition, especially if the new owner takes on some debt to make the purchase. The costs of fertilizer,

power for irrigation systems, hay and other expenseshave also increased, said Tim De-

I R D

CtOr

h ear b ad

things about what people think of America, people un-

•a

i

I'

"game-hunting ranch" northeast of Prineville, according

— to Stafford Ranches LLC, a corporation formed by the

gust for $14.4 million to the owner of a chain of senior living communitiesbased in

• Backflow Testing • Full Sprinkler System Servicing R l I • Licensed and Bonded Seiee • Landscape License ¹8092

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Ranch land

Gutierrez Ranch, sold in Au-

" Much as w e

• Full Service Landscaping • Paving Stones • Water Features • Ornamental Pruning • Lawn Maintenance

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

3,570 acres, $2.3M

Sources: Fay Ranches, Mason & Morse, Deschutes, Crook & Wasco county GIS

Crook County property, the

egon. He declined to identify the clients except to say they represented a company interested in "developing cattle and other food sources." The Chinese like the proximity of Central Oregon ranches to the port of Portland, he said.

ment," Dryden said.

McGrath=Ranch

Q~

ty. Another l a rge, h istoric

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derstand this is a solid invest-

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Stafford family of lo ggers and ranchers in Crook Coun-

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ty. He spent three days showing Chinese clients several

I

g> >< ' <~v~l~ " "'"'~ , sz-„~e(~

WINTERIZE I4OW!

terest in the Gutierrez proper-

Qry CreekHunting Reserve

------- 396~acres;$1vBM--'

the David A. andKathryn L. Bauch Trust, Foxborough, Phase 4, Lot194, $271,000 • Jeffrey A. and Janice L. Staudenrausto Rogerand Janet Kooistra, Phoenix Park, Phase 3, Lot 46, $290,000 • Lucil le B.LopeztoJamesA.and Shirley M. Mapes, ThePines at Sisters PUD, Lot 70, $165,000 • Julie A. Shaw, Roberta J. Lewis and Teresa L. Irick, trustees of the Robert R. and Doris Brouillette Family Trust, to Thomas andMelora Banker, Indian Ford Meadows, Lot12, Block 4, $575,000 • David A. and Bernadette M. Delany to Calvin Mann andGretchen Weaver, Brookside First Addition, Lot19, Block1, $254,900 • Brent K. and Joy Maxwell to Jeffrey D. Floyd, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 45, Block U, $308,000 • Edmond and Carol J. Billingsley, trustee of the Billingsley Family Trust, to Jeffrey T. andHosannah B. Eager, Hollygrape Subdivision, Lot 22,

buyers from South Africa, Russia and China showed in-

Shaniko

'.--'abqlavP' t'" " ~'', ' n o fI~e ' ~ Bgnd

that sold in August.

;

• East Tricopro LLC to Corina M. and Robin L. Wright, Barron's Subdivision, Lots 4 and 5, $169,900 Deschutes County • James L. Huntington to David and Dana Quivey, Crescent CreekNo.2, Lot 81, $217,500 • Brian D. and Tracy L. Rileyto Jhamie J. C. Lee,Sierra Vista, Phase 2, Lot 28, $219,500 • Gilberto and Maria Silva to Kyle D. Taylor, Tamarack Park East, Phase3, Lot 3, Block 5, $215,500 • Third Division Properties LLC to Bend Auto Mall LLC, Virginia Park, Lots1-4, B, Tract 2 andA, $10,500,000 • Casey M. and Kyle C.Bischoff to Andrew V. Canfield, Partition Plat 1990-13, Parcel 1, $197,671.36 • Caldera Springs Village LLC to Bella Villa Homes Corporation, Caldera Springs, Phase 3, Lots 5, 6, 14, $260,000 • Peggy A. Spencer, trustee of the Peggy Spencer Trust, to David A. and Kathryn L. Bauch, trustees of

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

E3

Entrepreneur takesriskwithmarijuana-in sed syrups By EvanBush eThe Seattle Times

employees. After a run to the grocery store, they drizzled the syrup

SEATTLE-

over a bruschetta, on pan-

amie Hoffman pours a mixture of what looks

cakes and as part of a vinaigrette for a Waldorf salad.

like pond scum into a cheesecloth bag set

Then they held a photo shoot to entice retailers. Hoffman and Ward are de-

up to strain over a plastic measuring bucket

veloping a series of recipes that retailers can share with consumers. If you overheard their

below.

conversations, you'd think the

"We are mad scientists!" she says to her

two were producing a cookbook, not marijuana edibles.

employee, Calvin Kingsly Ward, before letting out

Hoffman also has the ad-

vantage of being one of the

a cackle.

first t o m a r ket. Statewide, justseven edibles processors

have had products approved by the Liquor Control Board.

Wearing white lab coats My God" with emphasis on and surrounded by beakers, "Gee-Ahd." She studied marthe two wouldn't look out of

"The edible market is still

place in a science-fiction film. versity and founded a rooftop The green substance, though, and wall-gardening business isn't algae being tested in a lab called ChicagoEarth. — it's a mixture of marijuana th trim and ethanol. Licensed A leapoffai recently by Washington state

lagging behind. We are getting gouged on edibles," says

keting at Northwestern UniMRT 303 (JOOML) STRJSJSRRRT /tRttRROOSR RRT SOS (JOOMLI

retailer Muridan. Hoffman's 3

affordable compared to some edibles out there."

Last May, Hoffman took

as a pot processor, Hoffman a leap of faith. She cashed in is converting the green slime CDs and savings accounts, into THC-laden oil.

Then, she and her employ-

s old furniture and pu t h e r condo on the market with one

goal: to fund her foray into Wallingford n e ighborhood Washington's s t ate-licensed of Seattle will begin infusing pot industry. flavored simple syrups with Then she packed many of the oil. Among the flavors are her remaining possessions Bagley Ave. Brew, a coffee and into her Volkswagen Tiguan chicory variety, and Walling- and set out for Seattle. e es at Craft El ixirs i n t h e

ford Wanderlust, which fea-

An experienced entrepre-

tures fresh strawberries and neur, Hoffman also knew a peppercorn. She expects bot- bit about pot — she'd been tles with two servings of THC experimenting with edibles in to sell for about $30. her Chicago condo for several What are you supposed to years. do with pot-infused syrups'? Still, Hoffman said, starting Add them to pretty much Craft Elixirs has been an Mexanything, says H o ffman. cruciating process." She's had Drop a couple of tablespoons difficulty finding real estate into sparkling water for a initially. Construction costs soda-type beverage, drizzle soared to $100,000, about douthem on toast or cook with ble what she projected. At one them inabarbecue glaze. point, she became so impatient For now, though, the green with the licensing process that liquid drips into the bucket, she sent a case of Lou Malnaand the plant matter separates ti's deep-dish pizza from her from the ethanol loaded with

THC, the psychoactive chemical in marijuana that gets you high. "It is pretty geeky, right?" Hoffman says. "I love it." Hoffman, 49, is a Chicago native who pronounces "Oh

I(IRJ": L ,..'eR

' .

'.

hometown to get the Liquor Control Board's attention.

Hoffman, who is self-financing her business, said her creditcards are maxed out, and this month will make or break her business. She's us-

ing the last of her money to

product is "going to be very

Steve Ringman /The Seattle Times

What are you supposed to dowith pot-infused syrups?Addthem to pretty much anything, says Jamie Hoffman, creator of Craft Eiixirs.

buy marijuana trim — stems, of oil that was high in THC, leaves and other waste left her second was a disaster. over after the plant's more She'd never worked with a valuable flower has been full pound of pot before. Nor removed. had she used trim. Everything "I haven't bounced a check went wrong. since I was 22," she says. But First, the mixture got caught "if I don't have money coming in a charcoal filter. Much of it in October, that'll be it." turned black and was ruined. The good news: Pot retailers Then, when she transferred are excited about her syrups. the remainder to a hot plate, "Her product stands out," it began to boil too high. To said retailer Don Muridan, make matters worse, Hoffman whose business is one of at said, the gloves she was wearleast 20 that have ordered ing still had marijuana trim from Craft Elixirs. clinging to them and some of The bad news: She's work- the dry pot brushed off into ing through some growing her mixture. "It was a mess," Hoffman pains in production. Because M the state requires edibles to be says. I'm embarrassed to say consistent throughout, Hoff- I wasted a pound by accident."

Hoffman's determined ener-

As a woman and outsider, Hoffman brings a different perspective to the nascent industry. "Men (in the pot industry) are using sexuality to promote their business," Hoffman says. She wants to appeal to what she sees as pot's "new market — people that have

gy and creative spirit will see given themselves permission herthrough. and think it's OK now to en"I don't t h in k I ' v e s een joy marijuana. Not medical. someone so productive," says Not guys who want to get reJoseph Harris, Craft Elixirs' ally high." office manager. "She'll find She also brings a sense of a way to effectively utilize style and flair for detail. anything." When Hoffman hired Frida Instead of buying a secure Clements, a local artist and compartment required for designer, she asked Clements transporting pot, he said, to "create a bottle of syrup Hoffman built one with scrap that would look like you're metal. bringing a bottle of wine to a When her freezer ran out friend's home." of space, Hoffman added a Clements delivered. Craft vacuum sealer to the shop- Elixirs bottles would look at ping list. They'd try to com- home on Pinterest or Etsy. press their pot and save space During the holidays, elixthat way. irs will come to r etailers When retailers said they wrapped in holiday tissue man had to hire a consultant Hoffman remains undaunt- weren't sure about her prod- paper. and learn a new process for in- ed."I learn from my mistakes," uct because they didn't think She hopes consumers this fusing pot. She's still refining she says. "I expected them." customers would know what h oliday season will t a k e her technique. to do with her syrups, she a chance on her syrupsAlthough she successfully High energy,creative spirit held an impromptu "food and reward her for taking a produced a small first batch Friends and colleagues say p orn" day w it h he r t w o chance on pot in Seattle.

Struggling

But after three years of back-

Why? "Just about anybody in the and-forth trips to Washington, D.C., dealing with lawmakers automobile business knows and lobbyists, and filling out the consumer is going to make paperwork, he decided to refo- a space for electric vehicles," cus his funding efforts. Agnew said, adding that the M I didn't give up," he said. "I major manufacturers likely just decided I'm not going to won't follow suit. "It has to spend any more money chas- come throughan independent ing after grants, low-interest company like ours."

d.'i.& "'.

3

O.

to hear? Call for your

loans and all the things the

HEARINGTEST.

government said they wanted to do."

~eses f I'-,

• T he i n v estors are o u t

there. Agnew instead started seeking investors to back his projects, looking for people who had similar interests and would benefit from his compa-

SI

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itate a meeting between the two. "I can tell you the kind of in-

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EV Fleet CEO BrooksAgnew makeswire harnesses for the prototypes of the Condor 2015.

Electric car

vehicles years before he start-

Continued from E1 American car buyers pur-

A fter a s t int i n t h e A i r Force, he studied chemistry

ed makingthem.

and mathematics in college. 2013, up from 33,868 in 2012 He recalls paying his way and 17,425 in 2011, according through school by working to CNW Research, an automo- on cars and doubling as an tive research firm. By August engineering consultant. He chased 46,739electric cars in

vestor we were not looking for, and that was an oil company," Agnew said laughing. "And forecast for the electric-vehicle that's exactly who financed industry is still cloudy. us.

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" It started at zero a f ew

years back," Whiston said, and "it's come a long way since then." But Whiston cited

figuresfrom market research firm IHS estimating that production of

e l ectric vehicles

will equal only I percent of cles had been sold. (CNW said in Six Sigma, which indicates global automobile production statistics don't include elec- mastery of analytic tools used in 2020.

this year, 51,999 electric vehi-

later obtained a certification

tric vehicles made by Amer-

to i mprove m anufacturing.

ican company Tesla, which launched in 2003.)

In the 1990s, he built electric cars as a hobby. He moved to O ne reason b ehind t h e Charlotte while working for surge is convenience. Elec- Toyota. tric-car owners can plug their As gas prices soared, Agcars into e l ectrical o utlets new said his colleagues in Deoutside their homes or in their troit told him he should focus garages. his talents on electric cars. Ag"There are more electric new saw his opportunity. outlets than there are gas staHe started companies fotions," Mallard said. "More cused on making electric

IHS A u tomotive a n alyst Ben Scott said new electric

market.

Agnew is optimistic, saying EV Fleet is marketing to fleet

drivers tired of fluctuating fuel prices. "Those drivers have already established that they will buy

a small pickup truck, and they charge stations are being company, Vision Motor Cars, will use it as a daily driver installed." unveiled the Everest pickup or business vehicle," he said. There were 2 0,138 car- truck. However, Agnew said "They will never give it up." charging stations nationwide shoddy material from manlast year, up from 6,310 by Jan- ufacturers in China delayed Fundinghisproject uary 2012, according to Recar- the truck's deployment. That's Two lessons Agnew said he go, a software company push- when EV F leet decided to learned when seeking funding ing plug-in car innovation. build an original truck "from for EV Fleet: the street up," he said. Con• The government route was Opportunity and optimism struction on the Condor start- not for him. When Agnew beAgnew, who began a "love ed in March. gan building electric cars, he affair" with cars as an adolesDespite numbers showing thought he would be able to cent racing go-karts and mo- sales growth, Morningstar an- get federal loans and grants to torcycles, toyed with electric alyst David Whiston said the help him finance production. and more of the actual quick-

State Representative

cars produced by BMW and Volkswagen make this year critical for legitimizing the

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Calligraphy

V s • s iI

Center of Charlotte. A rabbi there helped her interpret the

Continued from E1

phrase and write it on paper

• s s •, $ ',i

When'Homeland' came calling

s

Management

- • ss ii Ii il • s s i I iil!

Continued from E1

s•gI

Although the partners were

careful to divide responsibilities, "there are always going to be gray areas," Ganotis said. "It's hard to know who should have the final say."

.is s .

f ounded Nurse N ext

decoratorfor "Homeland," scoured the Internet to find

have attracted more clients had she added, "Calligraphy, as you

a scroll.

will see on 'Homeland'" to her

company's organization chart, Josiah Humphrey, left, and Mark

ter," she said. "I think it was

McDonald, co-chief executives of Appster, have settled into their

just part of his inner prepa- fice, Sparacio placesenvelopes, more than it was worth. ration for Saul." notes and letters on a lightbox, But he also said it's not easy To fulfill the actor's re- inserting inside of it a transpar- for small-business owners to quest, Eubanks searched ency sheet that helps keep her focus their efforts on promotfor local calligraphers who writing aligned. She uses a line ing themselves. "They wear so many hats, were fl exible and unflappa- projector for opaque materible in the face of the show's als. She writes it all by hand. It it's hard to have enough time tight deadlines. She found takes her about two minutes to to focus on any one thing," he The Write Occasion Cal- finish one page. sard. "I always say, 'there's no ligraphy website. She liked For Sparacio, the "Homewhat she saw and contacted backspace on calligraphy,'" she land" experience was more Sparacio. SBld. about fun than exposure. "I do thousands of enveThere was no way SparaCalligraphywas anacquired cio, who says she never skill for Sparacio, who 25 years lopes and place cards a year," loses her cool even when ago wanted calligraphic writ- she said. "Something like clients panic, was going to ing on her wedding invitations. (the show), it's kind of a fun turn down this offer. But all She took a 10-week class to diversion."

provide private home care to Jim Wilson /The NewYork Times

shared role as chief executives, saying there are more benefits than piffalls to splitting CEO duties for now.

company, which was founded in 2001, has 300 corporate em-

ployees, two company units and someone had to be the and more than 90 franchise CEO," said Smart, who had units. no qualms about deferring to "On the softer side, I can't Gordon. tell you the number of times I Initially, the decision was a wanted to quit, and John said, technicality. Today, however, 'No,' or he wanted to quit and I the founderssay that a clear said, 'No,'" Sim said."There are chain ofcommand has been times when you're in a deep, essential to building the busidark hole, and your business ness, which has nine compapartner is the only person who ny-owned locations, five francan understand." chise locations and 50 units in Yet, eventually "the cracks development. "We're still equal started to show," DeHart said.

in a border drawn to look like

Though many co-founders eventually claim different spots on their

D oor

other," DeHart said. Today, the

partners," Smart said, "but we

As the company expanded, have one clear voice at the top the leaders found they were at of the organization communiodds on many decisions, from cating with the rest of the team. how to manage cash flow to For us, it eliminated the possiwhere to expand. bility of people in the organi"There was no right or zation playing us against each wrong answer, just different other." views," Sim said. At Appster, the co-CEOs This might not have been an have developed a system for issue had theirdebates been dividing responsibilities and settled quickly and behind letting everyone know who is dosed doors, but their dis- working on what. "With a lot of co-founder agreements tended to spill over to the team.

situations, you have one who On that point, the co-CEOs fits in sales and another who is were in agreement. In 2011, more technical. But since neithey created a board of advis- ther of us fits exactly in those ers to help them figure out a buckets, we figured out how solution. Ultimately, Sim hand- to work together," McDonedthe reins to DeHart and took ald said. "At the start of every an advisory role on the board.

quarter, we agree on w h at

objectives we want to have completed and who is going to 'own'what."

In the most recent quarter, for example, McDonald focused on introducing two

products, restarting two sites and hiring a head of sales and a chief marketing officer. Humphrey focused on preparing documents for the company's first go at raising outside capital, bolstering marketing events and taking a closer look at their customer relationship

management software. They post their assignments on an internal platform that

is used by everyone in the company to track progress and collaborate. And when it

comes to far-reaching company decisions, they make them together. "If we don't agree, our poli-

equal partners," Sim said. "But

at the end of the day, one person has to have the final say." Greg Smart and Tom Gordon made the same call in Fay-

The text was never central to the storyline of the show, Eu-

From a bedroom-turned-of- land" sold fo r

the New York native knew about Hebrew was that it's written right to left, instead

K

ofleft to right. She had a week to finish thejob. "So, I was going to learn the whole darn language if it killed me," Sparacio said. Afraid she would sever words or phrases if they

If something cannot be tested,

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$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR

10. 7 0 16 1 .4 143 . 1 8.91 53.2 73.9 2.1 3 49.3 4.5 2.8 1 44.6 14.6 0.3 2 43.2 -16.5 4.73 40.5 26.2 4.42 38.5 36.7 0.5 1 370 -2.1 0.72 2 8 . 6 17.0 4.93 28.4 2 a4 2.41 2 73 21.6 7.71 2 70 14.8 1.1 7 24.1 2 2.2 2.89 24.1 39.8 3.44 23.5 15.4

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396.12 -0.77 3077.81 +6.40 1053.54 +0.76 8532.09 -1 3.99 19495.68 +60.70 47849.61 -255.06 -3.31 1358.57

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17.1 Layne Christensen

Reinventin I s'der Who he Is: Executive Vice President of Technology and Transformation, Panera Bread Hls Inslght: Reimagining Panera in a competitive market

Blaine Hurst

to bOOStPanera'S SIOWing SaleS growth.

When do you expect all Panera cafes to be converted to the 2.0 format? We're not sure yet. It will be into 2016. The question is, does it go beyond 2016? We have internal things we're working through. When we invest In a cafe, we have to retrain everybody. We change the way that cafe operates dramatically. We're going to push thls as hard and fast as it makes sense. But we've got to make sure we're ready.

BlaIne Hurst, Panera's executive vice president of technology and transformation, said the company is on track to convert 100 of Its 1,800 locations by the end of the year. Investors are looking for progress as the company'sstock has declined 4 percent this year. Hurst shared insights on how the transformation is going.

Do you see sales increase slgnlflcantly after stores are revamped? We run into a point WIth the 2.0 cafes where we see the sales truly outpace the non-converted stores. We're not talking specific numbers, but we're seeing high single-digit differences in comparable sales.

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Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mId); greater than $8billion (large).

Panera Bread is revamping its restaurants to make it easier for customers to order and plck up thelr food. Among the changes in the store design called "Panera 2.0" are klosks to accept orders on touchscreens, and shelves where diners can pick up to-go orders that were placed ahead of tlme. The changes are seen as a critical way

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etteville, Arkansas, in 2004, soon after starting Slim ChickSouthern comfort food.

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Sparacio sought help from the Jewish Community

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'

weren't written correctly,

tremendousrespect for data." their rule of thumb is simple: "If one of us is absolutely op-

s ubstantially

' •

cy is to test both ideas," Humphrey said. "We both have

C A S E Y

"You can have a company with co-founders who are

COMPANY

her to pen their certificates. It's possible Sparacio would

show. Eubanks chose a version ofthe message scrawled

business cards and fliers, said Dr. Steve Cox, a Queens Unifancy, italic Hebrew text banks said. "The camera never versity of Charlotte marketing that would sit o n S aul's panned across it so the audi- professor. desk. Patinkin came up ence could read it," she said. "I Association with the show with the idea. did see it in some shots." automatically adds interest, "He felt like it was good Cox said, noting that the Charinsight into Saul's charac- Hobby turnedbusiness lotte home used on "Homesomeone who could pen a

Home Care Services in Vancouver, British Columbia, to seniors. Early on, the setup had advantages. "We probably wouldn't have grown as fast as we did if we didn't have each

her to write the script on her invitations. Some time later, her

four different designs to the

spotlight came last spring. Summer Eubanks, set

John DeHart and Ken Sim

learn the basics, which enabled

properly. job at the time at the Culinary Sparacio submitted at least Institute of New York asked

Sparacio's moment in the

came to a similar conclusion nearly a decade after they

E5

— Thomas Szkutak,chief financial officer of Amazon.com, in a conference call with analysts after the company released disappointing third-quarter earnings

If you're able to handle a hlgher volume of orders, doesn't that pressure the kltchen and increase the chance for mistakes? The dirty little secret of most restaurants Is that 10 to 15 percent of orders are inaccurately made. In the cafes, you can take it up and we fix it. You take It In the bag and you go home, that doesn't work. As we started talking about online and digital ordering, we also looked at production and how we improve accuracy. Little things like the prep table bar. Normally, there's a button workers push that says "next" (after they make

"next" button. If there's a change, they press the "modify" button. By the simple mental note that I have to press the "modify" button, it triggers my mind, "Did I make that modification?"

the Order). Well, We haVe two buttOnS.

You're testlng "small order" deliveries of $5 or more. When does It make sense for a food chain to get into the delivery business? There are two things. The average Panera delivery order Is over $20. It's also our product. Our products travel well. I don't necessarily want french frles delivered to my house. But a Panera salad? A Panera sandwich? Our soups? They're packaged to go.

One says "modify,"one says "next." If there's no change to the salad you're making, the worker presses the

Interviewed by Candice Choi. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, October 24, 2014

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+789.71


E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

UNDAY D

By Terry Box The Dallas Morning News

R

in ano -roa niC e Ba vi rationissLie nee ssecon look

Nobody crowded me in the

big blue Power Wagon — a glaring, heavy-metal masher

By Brad Bergholdt

on your recent pulling while braking symptom.

that looked as if it had just lum-

I w a nted to Q •• Hello, k now w h a t c o u l d

Tribune News Service

bered out of a swamp. Gray camouflage graphics clung to the pickup's giant flanks like radioactive mud, while a huge hook from its Warn Winch hung ominously from a slot in thebumper. A toothy grille larger than some g a r age

be causing this vibration I feel when I'm driving. When I'm driving on the highway at 60 mph or faster, my wheel is very shaky. When I come down a ramp or decelerate when coming to a stopping point, it is really bad. The wheel is shaky and the driver's side

• I 'u

REVIEW doors gave the truck a hungry look — as if it might soon need a little snack of Sentra or Yaris. Even parked, it d ripped

Try to locate a shop that

employs a Hunter Road Force Touch GSP9700 balancing machine. This device loads the tire with a r oller, simulating the road surface, and measures radialforce varia-

tion, wheel and tire runout, and lateral force. A tire can

be strategically remounted so the stiffest section of the

tires feel very loose. You

tread corresponds to the lowest point of the wheel and the

can hear and feel it.

tires/wheels can be matched

m enace like sweat from a

I have taken it to my local dealer, and they have

side to side on the vehicle to minimize tire pulling. Your

street fighter. I thought the pumped-up, sky-high 2014 Ram Power Wagon might just be the per-

checked everything on my symptoms are puzzling but suspension and said ev- solvable! erything is tight as it can — Bergholdt teaches automotive be on that end. My tires technology. Email questions to

Courtesy Ram /Tribune News Service

For truck lovers, the 2014 Rem 2500 Power Wagon is another stellar addition to Rem's lineup of vehicles.

fect commuter vehicle.

are new. I have had wheel

Once you pull yourself into place in the lofty 7,100-pound

and balance and alignment done, all within the

beast — Irecommend a runn ing start c o mbined w i t h

a small ramp — it quickly clears the fast lane on a scenic

expressway. As you may know, the Power Wagon is one of those gigantic specialty pickups vaguely similar in some ways to Ford's highly successful F-150 Raptor desert-runner. But how much of a market can there possibly be for a pickup built to crawl over rocks in the back country — a truck that won't fit in many garages, parking lots or budgets? More than we might imag-

2014 Ram 2500 PowerWagon Base price:$49,725 As tested:$56,040 Type:Full-size, four-wheeldrive, five-passenger pickup Engine:6.4-liter Hemi V-8 with 410 horsepower and 429 pound-feet of torque

when asked for more speed above 75 — possibly nature's way of governing 3.5-ton Power Wagons. Don't ask about fuel economy because heavy-duty pickups aren't required to disclose

A massively square gray dashboard maintained the exterior's design theme, wrap-

ping over a black instrument panel and around a large center stack. The seats were stitched in

their city and highway num- gray cloth with patterned cenbers. The truck I had averaged ters that matched the plastic between 12.3 and 13.1 miles doorpanels and grayheadliner. per gallon most of the time. As you might guess, legroom Though the Power Wagon and headroom inthe big-bodenjoys a solid reputation for its ied pickup was immense, able off-road abilities, I had to take to easily swallow a couple of seemed more Peterbilt than that as gospel. NFL felons in back. ever, bristling with angry Some folks might fault all chrome bars and pushing hard Huge insideandout the hard surfaces inside the against fairly conventional The closest I could come to high-dollar Power Wagon, but headlamps. something challengingto dimb they felt to me as if they would ine, I suspect. Like it or not, we Mirrors far bigger than Jay was the guard shack at The be comfortable wearing mud are a nation of pickup truck Leno's head hung from over- Daily Planet, and that seemed a and rock dust. drivers, with the Ford F-series, sized front doors. bit extreme. (Besides, I couldn't So where exactly does the Chevrolet Silverado and Ram A raised hood added to the remember whetherthe guards brutal, bold Power Wagon fit occupying the No. 1, 2 and 5 truck's dramatic bulk. I can't are armed these days.) in our increasingly timid unirankingsforsaleslastyear. tell you much about the pickNonetheless, I drove it like verse? Wherever it wants, I (The Toyota Camry and up bed because I never saw it. most people probably willguess. Honda Accord were sand- Height restrictions — my own using it during the week as Moreover, the Power Wagwiched in between, in the No. 3 — prohibited it. my primary transportation to on's Big Bend persona gives and 4 spots.) If you seek subtlety, though, w ork and other placeswhere it the rapidly growing Ram And with pickups also the the Power Wagon might be a would fit. brand another stout dash of industry's most profitable vehi- bad choice. Like the Raptor, the Power credibility. cles, every niche can be a mini Besides its block-out-the-sun Wagon doesn't make you pay gold mine. stance and bright-blue paint, heavily for driving around in a Actually, the Power Wagon my truck shouted "Power Wag- pickup bigger than some barns offers a bit more practicality on" in three-inch tall letters on in Arkansas. than you might expect from the lower portion of the doors. While its ride lacked some of something looming 6 feet 10 And then, of course, gray ca- the refinement in the Raptor, it inches above earth. mo-graphics covered each rear stretched out reasonably well Based on a R a m H e avy fender like acid burns. on smooth pavement, feeling Duty four-wheel-drive pickup, Personally, I thought the just slightly fidgety. the Power Wagon has a two- strutting truck begged for one On some ofthe moonscape inch lift for even more ground of Ram's growling Cummins streets around downtown Dalc learance, B i l stein m o n o - diesels. las, though, it could get bouncy tube shocks and knobby 28 U nfortunately, th e C u m - and stiff. 5/70 tires on polished 17-inch mins adds too much weight Also, forget s creeching wheels. to a truck that already lugs a around corners in a truck tall But the one I had recently t rail-flattening load when it enough to use as a platform also came with satellite radio, goes off-road. for d eaning s econd-story Chrysler's UConnect system Instead, Power Wagons get wmdows. L et's just sa y t h e P o w and integrated voice command R am's truck version of t h e 6.4-liter Hemi V-8, produc- er Wagon shuffles through with Bluetooth. Still, let's be honest here: Big ing 410 horsepower and 429 curves like a typical pickupBlue might not be all that com- pound-feet of torque. with all-American confidence, fortable at a prim-and-proper It was bolted to a six-speed not competence. dinner party. automatic and spun 4.10 bigStill, the steering felt preboy gears in the rear. cise, moderately quick and Driving large The truck moved away from well-weighted, delivering pretO ccupying most of m y stops pretty smartly, acceler- ty good amounts of heft and 1 955-vintage driveway, t h e ating to 60 in about 8 seconds, feel. four-door, crew-cab truck had accordingto Car and Driver. I also thought the Power all the gritty bulk of a steel-mill In city driving, the engine Wagon's gray interior fit its take-no-prisoners personality locomotive. felt torquey and willing. Its upright big-rig grille But it seemed to strain some nicely.

Ar

past six months. Recent-

ly, I have noticed that my wheel is steering towards t he right w hen

I come

to a stop. What could be wrong'? — Brittany

A •• needs a fresh set of Wow, this situation

eyes, and right away! I'd recommend an alignment/

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

II.

JOHN COSTA

Thank you, Ben Bradlee

,J

g ., +

S ights

fffe want

41Sa

<Ni time OUR.t,l„,.

gh''lli-.

r

%on. .C 4I 'IC

~g TH R+~ Ben Bradlee, legendary executive editor of The Washington Post, died

last week. As part of a brilliant career, he was the editor of the Post who oversaw

the coverage of Watergate andthe impeachment and resignation of Pres-

Ruth Fremson /The New York Times file photo

JimWilson /The New YorkTimes file photo

ident Richard Nixon.

Itwas coverage,largelyby Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, that

was both courageous and right. The story of the three is the stuff oflegend, well-documented inbooks and a movie — "All The President's

Men" — starring Jason Robards, Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman. Many journalists believe that the

stories renewed intense interest in investigative reporting and created not just a little cynicism about the

government. That was certainly the case. But there is another press vs. gov-

• Viewing the economy in ageneralized manner— asonly good or only bad— simplifies a complexreality andpreventsthe crafting of specific solutionsfor specific problems

ernment encounter, involvingboth The WashingtonPostand The New

York Times, that arguablywas just as courageousand didatleastasmuch to breed public suspicion of government of that era.

It focused on the Pentagon Papers.

a

Written in part by a fellow named Daniel Ellsberg, these contained the

full story — public and secret — of our decision-making in the Vietnam War.

Ellsberg, a brilliant analyst who had access to the most sensitive se-

crets of the war, also was one of the few individuals with a complete set of the papers. Frustratedby what he perceived to be lies about the war, he leaked the

-

•~ ~

!

papers to The New York Times. The lies, as author Rick Perlstein has written, went back to the Truman Administration and persisted princi-

r. kj

pallythroughEisenhower,Kennedy and Johnson. The Nixon administration, for rea-

sons still difficult to understand since the documents did not reflect on his administration, sought and received

from a federal judge an order to stop publication by the Times. The administration's argument was

that national securitywas at stake. To makealong and complicated story shorter, The Washington Post,

which secured its own set of papers, then started publishing, and the issue was off to the Supreme Court.

The court ruled 6-3that the government could not stop publication and, as Perlstein writes, Justice William

Brennanwrotethatembarrassingthe government was precisely what a free press was all about. "For the first time in 182 years since the founding of the republic," Brennan w rote, "thefederalcourtsareaskedto hold that the First Amendment does not mean what it says..."

It was a remarkably audacious step for the Post to publish with an order existing against the Times. Wewere allluckytohave Bradlee at thehelmbutalsoblessedthat The Washington Post was ownedby Kath-

arine Graham, who didnotflinch, even though her decisionputher company atrisk

Inadditiontothispotentialabrogation of the First Amendment, what was

so disappointing about this whole potentiallydemocracy-changing moment

Stephen Crowley/The New York Times file photo

Above: President Barack Obama at Cross Campus, a collaborative workspace for startups and business event venue in Santa Monica, California. Obama

spoke and answered questions about the economyduring the visit. Top left: Demonstrators march in NewYork on Oct. 16 in protest of the wages and conditions for workers at Wsl-Mart and other retail outlets. Organizers of s group called OurWalmsrt hope to change labor practices in low-wage industries such as fast food and retailing, arguing that businesses squeeze their own customers by not paying workers a living wage. Top right: Pump jacks extract oil

in Williston, North Dakota, where wells have proliferated. Falling oil and gasoline prices havesent oil companystocks tumbling, but experts say the boomin American energy production shows nosigns of slowing down. By Zachary Karabell Special to The Washington Post

he economy is a mess. It's

thing many Americans T one and political candidates of all stripes seem to agree on. While it

may be somewhat less of a mess than five years ago, the thinking goes, the current administration

It'S a POWerful narratiVe. But iS it true? HaS the WhOle middle ClaSSStagnated While a tiny SliVer at the tOP

reaped rich rewards?Is the jobless rate low only beCauSe milliOnS haVe CeaSed lOOking fOr WOrk and henCe Shrunk the SiZe Of the StatiStiCal labOr fOrCe?IS "the eCOnOmy" really getting WOrSe?

tial national security argument. After all, the government was his dient. That

and Congress have done little to address the crushing challenges faced by large swaths of the doned the middle class. President American public. Obama may have done better We know this from poll after than the Republicans would have, but "when the going got tough, poll and from the rhetoric of political candidates across the country. his economic team picked Wall Gallup's daily U.S. economic poll Street," Sen. Elizabeth Warren, still shows 51 percent of Ameri- D-Mass., said last week in an incans believe that economic condi- terview with Salon. And now, even tions are getting worse. In state af- as the jobless rate dips to lows not ter state, challengers assail incum- seen since the mid-2000s, many bents on the grounds that the un- point to the stagnation of wages, employment rate is too high and the shrinking labor force and the job creation is anemic. In Georgia, lack of tenable jobs. And then both Democrat Jason Carter — grand- sides point to the White House.

washisjob.

son of the former president — ac-

was the role of amannamed Erwin

Griswold. Griswoldwas abrilliant lawyer and former dean of the Harvard Law Schoolwith aresumeof afmmplish-

ments andintellectualpedigreethat was hard to match.

Hewas appointed Solicitor General of the United Statesby President Lyndon Johnson and keptby Nixon. Rep~ gthe governmentbefore the Supreme Court, hemadetheessen-

ington Post,"Ihavenever seenany trace of athreat tothenationalsecurity

cused the Republican governor of "watching this economy in Georgia leave the middle class behind."

from the publication" of the Pentagon

In North

Papers. Even coming from an otherwise distinguishedman, I have longthought thatwas the core of deceit. Good thing we had Bradlee, Graham

challenger Thom Tillis attacked incumbentSen.Kay Hagan as emblematic of failed policies: "Government kills jobs."

Years later, he wrote in The Wash-

and the leaders of the Times around. — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta®bendbulletin.com

It's a powerful narrative. But

is it true'? Has the whole middle class stagnated while a tiny sliver at the top reaped rich rewards'? Is

C a rolina, Republican the jobless rate low only because

millions have ceased looking for work and hence shrunk the size of

Meanwhile, both the tea party and Democrats find themselves

the statistical labor force? Is "the economy" really getting worse'? Obama has pressed a vigorous defense. In a widely touted series

unexpectedly aligned around the

of speeches, he cited trends from

e mployment to growth in t h e a rescue for Wall Street and aban- gross domestic product to make

thesis that the financial crisis saw

five years (which has barely been dentedby the recent sharp moves down), from tax codes that privilege investments, and from a global capital system that sees capital enriching itself. But while those trends are un-

equivocally true, there are other unequivocal truths that are just

as accurate, statistically. For instance, that the jobless rate in the his point. Judging from recent polls, Americans aren't buying it.

center of the United States from North Dakota to Texas is less than

And the turmoil in financial mar-

5 percent and has been below the

kets in the past weeks has only

national rate for five years. It is

reinforced the widespread sense

low there largely because of the boom in hydraulic fracking and

that all is very much not well in the economic world. Still, i n

before that the boom in agriculturm a n y r e spects, the al prices. All of those states except

guiding narrative is wrong. Not because many of the specifics

Kansas also have GDP growth

are wrong but rather because the

percent. It is true that wages and home prices in the greater Washington, D.C., area have been growing for years, even as Detroit has been imploding, just as Houston has been thriving, even as swaths of

generalization is. Those generalizations simplify a complicated reality and reduce this thing called "the economy" to something binary: It's good or it's bad; it's getting worse or it's getting better.

well above the national rate of 2

It is unequivocally true that tens the Central Valley in California of millions of suffering Americans have been struggling. Women cannot find work or can find only with a college degree find a favorpoorly paid work and are unable able labor market close to what to meet basic needs such as health economists consider "full employcare and a living wage. It is un- ment." Young African-American equivocally true that a small num- males with a high school degree ber, a few million perhaps, have or less are well above 20 percent reaped incrediblerewards from unemployment, with a high incarthe flourishing of capital, from ceration rate. the rise in stocks over the past SeeEconomy/F5


F2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

aes ou u mone in o e era oress

RORNSKR %Et II WE USKD TO LOYE%5 Q% OF YEAR>

ot enough forest restoration gets done on Oregon's

. /'

federal forests. Oregonians pay the price in increased wildfires, destruction of habitat and loss of clean water, recreation and income. One report prepared for the state estimated in 2012 that the restoration work needs to double on the U.S. ForestService-managed forests in eastern and south central Oregon or we will never catch up. That means going from working on about 129,000 acres a year now to 258,000 acres a year. A few years ago, Gov. John Kitzhaber tried something different. Rather than waiting and waiting for the Forest Service to do m ore, he helped it do more. He included $2.88 million in the 2013-15 budget to accelerate the Forest Service's work. Oregon'smoney went to three general areas. It went to support the work of forest collaboratives. Collaboratives bring together timber industry representatives, conservationists and others to figure out what timber projects they can agree on. These collaboratives don't make all the disagreements go away. But they have been successful, for instance, in helping move projects

forward, such as around Phil's Trail near Bend. Some of the money went to research projects to better resolve scientific questions that might help prioritize areas for treatment. And the state also used some of the money for state employees to do work required for federal timber sales. The Oregon Departmentof Forestry is proposing to increase the contribution from $2.88 million to $6.5 million for the 2015-17 budget. Is that going to lead to the doubling of the restoration work that's needed on Oregon's federal forests? No, it's not. That might cost another $40 million, according to one estimate. But if Oregon can afford to increase its contribution to $6.5 million, it's a great investment in improving clean air, clean water, habitat, recreation and income for rural communities.

The Bulletin's election endorSementS ere are The Bulletin's endorsements for th e N o v. 4 election. The editorial board interviews candidates only in contested races. Ballots must be returned to county clerks' offices by 8 p.m. on Election Day. To read the full endorsements online, please go to www.bendbulletin.com/endorsements.

• Bend City Council Position 5:Mark Capell • Bend City Council Position 6: Casey Roats • Bend City Council Position 7:Scott Ramsay • Sisters City Council:David Asson, Nancy Connolly, Bob Wright • Sisters legalize medical marijuana dispensaries: No • Sisters school bond:Yes • Redmond City Council:Tory All-

Federal

man, Anne Graham, Jay Patrick

• Senate: Monica W ehby • House District2:Greg Walden

Stu Martinez

H

• La Plne City Council:Don Greiner, • Cloverdale Rural Fire Protection

State

District bond:Yes

• Governor: Recent news events have postponed our endorsement for governor.

Crook County

• House District 54:Knute Buehler

• Newberry Estates Special Road District dust-abatement levy:Yes

• Crook County Court: Seth • House District 55:Mike McLane • Measure 86 — Tuition endowment Crawford • Bowman Museum levy:Yes fund: No •Measure 87— Judges employment: Jefferson County Yes

• Measure 88 — Driver cards:Yes • Measure 89 — Oregon ERA:No • Measure90 — Top-two open primary:Yes • Measure 91 — Recreational marijuana: No • Measure 92 — GMOlabels: No

• Jefferson County Commission Positlon 1:Tom Brown

• Madras City Council:Richard Ladeby, Jim Leach, Bill Montgomery • Culver City Council:Daryl Lonien Editor's Note:We will give

priority to election-related My Deschutes County Nickel's Worth and In My View • Deschutes County Commission Po- submissions, publishing as many sition 1:Jodie Barram as possible before Election Day.

~n

"g„-

~.~ ~

4e

• g

M 1Vickel's Worth Reject marijuana legalization

"Later this month, we'll launch a

youth prevention campaign that encourages kids not to risk damagFor our children's sake, please ing their growing brains by experivote no on Measure 91 — legaliza- menting with marijuana." tion of "recreational" marijuana. Robert Perry Some greedy legalization propoRedmond nents are salivating at big bucks to be made while ignoring societal Vote no on Measure 91 costs and potential human damage.

Lancet Psychiatry Journal (September 2014) warns: Teenagers using cannabis daily are 60 percent less likely to complete high school or get a degree than peers who have never taken the drug. They're also nearly seven times likelier to attempt suicide and almost eight

It astounds me how many people use marijuana or do not use mari-

times likelier to use other illicit

deal with the consequences.

juana and are for this measure as

Where are our environmentalists on this issue? Check out what happened to the city center of Upper

Lake, California. Let your no vote for other drugs be heard. Judy Steele Prineville

Don't believeadsfavoring legal pot I would like to respond to the ads

the polls say. The world's social ac- that urge you to vote yes on Meacepted behavior does not make it sure 91. First of all, most arrests for right. For some reason the minori- possession of pot are made by paty in our nation are swaying public trol officers, or by special anti-drug opinion, but the entire nation has to units, so these arrests do not take the regular detectives away from

drugs later. Tolerance knows no boundaries. their normal cases of homicide, rape Marijuana has been associated But when their behavior affects my or missing children. As a retired Euwith lower test scores and lower ed- quality of life, it is time for the silent genepolice off icer,Ihaveworked on ucational attainment. It reduces am- majority to vote and say enough is patrol, as well as being a detective, bition and provides an escape from enough. and in all of my 28 years as such, I challenges and responsibilities. CerIn The Bulletin's Oct. 11 issue, have seen too many lives ruined by tainly not what we need to improve Gary S. Thompson, retired judge, the "recreational" use of marijuana. Oregon's lackluster public education Prineville, states very well the pros Some peopleare able to handle results. and cons of the issues. Read the the drug, but way too many othThe Oregon district attorneys article. Be informed. Big bucks ver- ers can't, and in those cases, they and state sheriff's a ssociations sus quality of life. I did the finan- ultimately end up using the pot as both oppose Measure 91. Clatsop cial reporting for the Drug Court a steppingstone to other, more adCounty D.A. Josh Marquis stated: in Prineville for many years. The dictive drugs. Measure 91 specifies "There's going to be a huge trickle strides forward the D ru g C ourt that it would regulate the recredown to youth" from adults as the achieved in this community were ational use by adults. What kind of drug is seen as more acceptable. far-reaching. Approval of Measure assurances do we have that the drug Regardless of your feelings about 91 would mean many steps back- would not end up in the hands of adult use of marijuana, he said: ward for all the social ramifica- minors? "would you want your kids, while tions not only in Prineville but all of When I was on the narcotics team they are learning, to be affected Oregon. for Lane County, it was not uncomby a powerful drug'?" (Oregonlive. The social costs/ramifications mon for us to find the adults in a com, July 30) of approving this measure are family we were arresting actually Let'slearn from Colorado's ex- far-reaching. The media paid by big providing their kids with it as well. perience.Gov. John Hickenlooper bucks is leading Oregonians down So choose your vote on 91 wisely, cautions other states to "go slow" the wrong path. Check out their and take what you are hearing and on recreationalmarijuana because agenda thoroughly. seeing in the TV ads with a grain of they don't know the impact on Also, I love the article re: doesn't salt. They just aren't true. youth. Dr. Larry Wolk, Colorado pass the smell test in the Oct. 18 Ron Coffman Public Health, recently announced:

Bulletin. How about groundwater'?

Bend

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P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

An unusual benificiary of legal pot: Our forests By Charlie Burr Oregon is home to some of the most beautiful forests and natural areas anywhere on the planet. It's

time to protect them from illegal marijuana cultivation that trashes

our public land, harms wildlife and endangered species and dumps toxins into our rivers and streams. As Oregonians fill out their bal-

lots, they should join the Oregon League of Conservation Voters and others fighting for a healthier environment by voting yes on Measure 91, a common sense approach to regulating and taxing marijuana production. From Umatilla to Siskiyou, our forests face a scourge of unregulated marijuana harvesting operations that threaten some of our state's most special places. In fact, last year

saw law enforcement uncover illegal marijuana grow sites in 72 na-

tional forests spanning 22 states.

In 2011, officials found 91,000 marijuana plants worth r oughly $180 million growing in Wal-

IN MY VIEW

ly eliminate these rogue operations. Nobody risks a felony conviction to

grow tobacco on federal land, bedangered steelhead saw sediment, cause tobacco is regulated and legal. lowa-Whitman National Forest, the pesticides, fertilizers and s olid But as long as marijuana remains largest grow operation in Oregon's waste dumped into the water. illegal, dangerous marijuana operhistory. In addition to the obvious wildfire ations will pollute our forests and Beyond the eye-popping scale, the danger, illegal growing operations threaten sensitive habitat. operation highlighted the enormous threaten public safety. The growMarijuana prohibition puts our environmental cost of unregulated, ers on the Wallowa-Whitman site forests at risks, but for what? During illegal marijuana cultivation. Law were armed with pistols and an Uzi the past two decades, youth mar— one of the reasons that Oregon ijuana use hasn't decreased. Each enforcement uncovered more than 500 pounds of fertilizer, as well as Department of Fish and Wildlife's year, we spend millions enforcing nasty pesticides and herbicides number one warning to hunters is harsh marijuana laws while divertbanned in the United States. Grow- the danger of stumbling onto an out- ing law enforcement from more viers had doused their plants with "su- law grow site. That's unacceptable. olent crime. per-toxic" rodenticides that not only These lands belong to all of us. It's Oregonians with felony marikill rodents, but also slowly poison time to protect our natural heritage juana convictions struggle to find their predators, including the en- for current and future generations employment, housing and a shot at dangered northern spotted owl and by driving these illegal operations a better life. The nearly 13,000 marPacific fisher. off our public lands and wild places. ijuana arrests and citations in OreMiles of plastic tubing littered the Measure 91would remove incen- gon each year simply aren't worth site as growers diverted stream wa- tives to hide marijuana cultivation the coststo our forests,streams and ter for irrigation. Nearby streams in national forests and would near- wildlife. designated as sanctuaries for en-

Oregon doesn't have to accept the

environmental or societal price we pay for this failed policy. We can do more to protect taxpayer land from threats to w i l dlife, water quality

and public safety — starting with reclaiming our forests from the epidemic of illegal grow operations. Let's regulate and tax marijuana production and put an end to these

destructive operations. There's a broad and diverse coalition of senior advocates, labor orga-

nizations, business leaders and parents calling for sensible reform. The Oregon League of Conservation Voters supports Measure 91 as an important step in the broader fight to protect forests and public lands.

Vote yes on Measure 91 for a healthier environment and strict, smart c o n t r ol s on mari j u ana cultivation. — Charlie Burr lives in Portland.


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

u rnewmissieso t

n October 1962, America worried

whether an untried young president, John F. Kennedy, could keep

us safe from nuclear-tipped missiles

from nearby communist Cuba. Today's October worries are more insidious: the Ebola virus, the maca-

bre Islamic State, a tottering stock market, a bellicose Russia and a crisis of confidence in our government.

Much of what the Obama administration and the Centers for Disease Control initially swore about the Eb-

olavirusproved false.Thevirusreally did infect Americans at home, despite assurances that there was "no

significant risk." There always was a danger of infected West Africans entering the U.S. The CDC protocols

did not protect nurses from infection by Ebola patients. Banning all travel from West Af-

rican countries where the virus is epidemic may not stop Ebola from spreading throughout the U.S. But the administration still cannot offer convincing reasons why we should not try just that. Instead, a purely medical decision seems hopelessly embedded in the administration's

usual politically correct spin. The U.S. is even more inept in dealing with the Islamic State. That terrorist virus, too, could have been

VICTOR

DAVIS HANSON

of hospitalized veterans. The National Security Agency lied about monitoring the communications of average Americans. Almost nothing in Obama's lec-

c o er was also knee-deep in the Solyndra controversy — has no health care experience, much less any experience with epidemics. Klain was picked only because he is a veteran partisan

tures about the new unaffordable brawler who understands that the Affordable Health Care Act proved Obama administration sees Ebola for good reason. A record number of accurate. as more a political liability than a Americans have dropped out of the U.S. Immigration and Customs health challenge. workforce. The quiver of traditional Enforcement cannot come clean The administration is waging a priming — zero interest rates, mas- about the nation's utter lack ofborder halfhearted effort to destroy the Issive deficit spending, huge govern- enforcement with Mexico. lamic State because Obama has in ment stimulus — is now empty. Yet The once-hallowed Secret Ser- the past damned just such pre-empthe economy still remains weak. v ice s e em s in c ompetent a n d tive bombing in the Middle East. Six years of piling up more debt, scandal-ridden. Now, an embarrassed Obama relies raising taxes, issuing more regulaAttorney General Eric Holder's on the Bush administration's 2002 tions, perpetuating deficits, slashing Justice Department has picked and military authorizations to use the defense, expanding socialprograms chosen which laws to enforce largely sort of force in the Middle East that and creating vast new bureaucracies out of partisan considerations. he used to decry. have only stifled economic growth. NASA is hardly recognizable. Its Russia is ascendant largely beBarack Obama has no interest in try- director said that the agency's first cause of the State Department's loud ing something other than boilerplate concern was not our continued reli- boast of resetting the Bush adminisKeynesian borrowing. ance on Vladimir Putin's space rock- tration punishments of Putin's past Russian President Vladimir Putin ets, but Muslim outreach. aggressions. is portrayed around the world as a Even the Patent and Trade Office The Obama administration sees merciless tiger, while Obama is car- hounded the Washington Redskins government agencies as political icatured as a frail kitten. Much of about their supposedly politically in- tools to further its agenda, as we once pro-Western Eastern Europe is correct logo by canceling the team's have seen with NASA's new Musnow lining up with Putin. They cut trademark registration. lim outreach, the IRS hounding of deals with Russia rather than be left Whether the Obama administra- conservative nonprofit groups and high and dry by a sermonizing but tion shuts down U.S. travel to and the patent office's antagonization of otherwise appeasing West. from a foreign airport is not pred- the Redskins. The October missiles Once-unimpeachable fe d eral icated on national security threats of 1962 were never launched, but the agencies now appear as 19th-centu- but political correctness. Ben-Guri- crisis still forced JFK to adopt a new ry tribal fiefdoms. on International Airport in Tel Aviv realism about the Soviet Union. No one much trusts the IRS any- not that long ago was put off limits to In contrast, for Obama to meet more. Partisan politics seem to de- U.S. airlines despite offering far less these current October threats head-

contained, had we just kept some peacekeepers in the mostly quiet Iraq of 2011. But once again politics, not strategic logic, explains why the termine whether A m ericans are administration pulled all troops out audited. of Iraq — a recklessness that turned The Department of Veteran Afup as 2012 campaign talking point. fairs covered up callous — and occaThe stock market is wobbly, and sionally lethal — treatment of scores

hazard to Americans than the con-

on, he first would have to admit they

necting flights to the airport in Mon- were largely self-created. rovia, Liberia. The new Ebola czar, Ron Klain-

the former Fannie Mae lobbyist who

— Victor Davis Hansonis a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.

OPEC likely not viable with oil demands By Joe Nocera

$80 a barrel would have been more than satisfactory for OPEC members, but those days are long gone. Venezuela's budgetary needs require that it sell its oil at well above $100 a barrel. The Arab Spring

New York Times News Service

orty-one years ago this month, the Arab oil embargo began.

F

The countries that were part

of it belonged, of course, to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries — OPEC — which had banded together 13 years earlier to

with international oil companies. The embargo led to widespread shortages in the United States, high-

er prices at the gas pump and long lines at gas stations. By the time it less where OPEC wanted them. ended, the price of oil had risen to

As it happens, the title of that For-

$12 a barrel from $3. Perhaps more important than

eign Policy article was "The End of OPEC." Jaffe and Morse are global energy experts — she is the executive director of Energy and Sustainability

the price increases themselves was

the new world order the embargo signaled. The embargo "set in motion geopolitical circumstances that

eventually allowed (OPEC) to wrest control over global oil production and pricing from the giant international oil companies — ushering in an era of significantly higher oil prices," as Amy Myers Jaffe and Ed Morse notedin an article in Foreign Policymagazine that was published last year at the 40th anniversary. 7wice a year,

OPEC's oil ministers would meet in Vienna, where they would set oil policy — deciding to either hold back or increase oil production. There was always cheating among members, but there was usually enough discipline in the ranks to keep prices more or

at the University of California, Davis,

and he is the global head of commodities research at Citigroup — who say that if America plays its cards right, OPEC's dominance over the oil market couldbe over. Ithinkthat daymay

have already arrived. "OPEC is not going to survive another50 years," Morse told me. "It probably won't even survive another 10. It has become extremely difficult

for them to forge an agreement." When Morse and Jaffe wrote their article last year, the price of oil was

m ore than$100 a barrel.Today,the per-barrel price is in the low- to mid$80s.It has dropped more than 25 percent since June. There was a time

reason is that the shale revolution in

as capital's unofficial slogan, a due

New York Times News Service

to its proudly subversive soul. And a

nstagebefore thousands of fans,

am Smith sang "Stay With Me," beseeching his partner in a one-night stand for a few minutes

gatheringofbare-armed, bare-legged lovers of song and smokers of pot on a gigantic field brings to mind Woodstock, not Austin Ventures, which

more, and I half wondered if the two provides financing to startups, and of themneededthe extratimeto finish RetaileNot, which distributes disbottles of Miller Lite, because a print- count coupons. Those firms, too, were ed plug for the beer hovered over his sponsors of stages. head. Someone shoved a free sample of Performing " Summertime Sad- Cinnamon Toast Crunch cereal at me ness," Lana Del Rey told a lover to on my wayin.Someone else handed "kiss me hard before you go." Would out free beer cozies advertising Impeshe be texting him later with a Sam- rial, a brew on sale at the event. Plassung Galaxy, the smartphone for tered all over the place were posters which the stage on which she ap- for "Not That Kind of Girl," the new peared was visibly named? memoir by a certain "Girls" creator. And while I'd never thought about The festival had been misnamed. This any car in connection with the musi- was Lenapalooza. cians in the band Interpol, I came to I kept thinking of another writer, picture them caroming from gig to David Foster Wallace. His novel "Ingig in a Civic or an Accord. "Honda" finite Jest," published in 1996, imagfloated over them as they gave their ines a tomorrow in which time itself concert. is auctioned off to the highest bidder For every stage, a different sponsor. and thecalendarbecomes abillboard. Behind everybeat, a differentbrand. There'sthe"Yearof the Whopper," the This happened in early October. I "Year of the Whisper-Quiet Maytag was at the Austin City Limits Music Festival, and I was at the limits of my

Dishmaster" andeventhe'Yearof the Tucks Medicated Pad" — a 12-month patience. I hadn't expected all of these paean to posterior discomfort, 52 corporatecome-ons, so pervasive in weeks in honor ofhemorrhoids.

of us from commercials on television,

the pope: Lessons in leadership eading the papers these days

R

I find that the two world leaders who stir the most passion

in me are Pope Francis and Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia. One is everything you'd want in a leader, the other everything you

wouldn't want. One holds sway over 1.2 billion Roman Catholics, the oth-

er over nine time zones. One keeps surprising me with his capacity for empathy,the otherby how much he has become a first-class jerk and thug. First, the pope. At a time so many

leaders around the world are looking to promote their political fortunes by exploiting grievances and fault lines, we have a pope asking his flock to do something hard, something outside their comfort zone, pushing them

to be more inclusive of gays and ¹i vorced people. Yes, Francis was rebuffed by conservative bishops at a recent Vatican synod when he asked them to embrace the notion that "homosexuals

have gifts and qualities to offer to the Christian community," adding, "Are we capable of welcoming these people, guaranteeing to them a fraternal space in our communities'?"

The pope asked that rejected language be published for all to see, while also cautioning against "hostile inflexibility — that is, wanting to

close oneself within the written word, and not allowing oneself to be sur-

prised by God." "Hostile inflexibility'?" Whose leadwas indirectly involved in downing

Arabia and the United Arab Emir-

expert at Southern Methodist Uni-

a Malaysian airliner over Ukraine,

ates— toincrease budgetary spend- versity, oil production in the United ing to keep their own populations States is up 60 percent. That's an quiescent. According to the Interna- additional 3 million barrels a day. tional Monetary Fund, the United Within a few years, predicts Morse, Arab Emirates needs a price of more America will overtake Russia and than $80 to meet its budgetary obliga- Saudi Arabia and become the world's tions. That's up from less than $25 a largest oil producer. What's more, according to another barrel in 2008. Not long ago, Venezuela asked article Morse wrote, this one for Forfor an emergency OPEC meeting to eign Affairs magazine, "the costs of discuss decreasing production. Iran finding and producing oil and gas in has said that such a meeting is un- shale and tight rock formations are necessary. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia steadily going down and will drop has made it clear that it is primarily even more in the years to come." In concerned with not losing market other words, the American energy share, so it will continue to pump out industry might well be able to withoilregardless of the needs of other stand further price drops easier than OPEC members. This is not exactly OPEC members. cartellike behavior. The next OPEC W hen I got Jaff e on the phone,I meeting is scheduled for late Novem- asked her if she thought OPEC was a ber, but there is little likelihood of an spent force. "You can never say never," she replied, and then laid out a agreement. And why does OPEC suddenly find few dire scenarios — mostly revolvitself in such disarray? Simply put, ing around oil fields being bombed or the supply of oil is greater than the attacked — that might make supply demand, and OPEC has lost its ability scarce again. But barring that, this to control the supply. Part of the rea- is a moment we've long been waiting son is a slowdown in global demand. for. Thanks to the shale revolution, China's economy has slowed, and so OPEC has become a paper tiger.

scoreboard was not to be co~ They're now nestled among the trail- with the Bud Light scoreboard or the ers at movies. They flicker on the Pepsi scoreboard. screens in taxis. When Americans talk about how They're woven so thoroughly into crass contemporary life can seem, sporting events, from NASCAR rac- this advertising onslaught is part of es to basketball games, that it's hard what they're reacting to. And their to imagine an era they weren't omni- growing chilliness toward corpopresent. But in a story this year on the rations and sense of capitalism run website Consumerist, Chris Moran amok aren't just about the salaries of reported that 20 years ago, one of the chief executives and the tax dodges in Major League Baseball stadiums had play. They're about the way huckstera corporate moniker: Busch Stadium ism invades everything, scooping up in St. Louis. everyone. the restof our lives are awash inads.

In contrast, 20 of the 30 stadiums now have sponsors.

It's the same with football, may-

be worse. On the weekend after I got back from Austin, I went to watch the

New York Jets play, and within five minutes of my arrival at MetLife Stadium, I was confronted with all sorts

of subsponsors. Near the Verizon gate, I spotted a VIP section called the Hertz suites

Matthew McConaughey is at his

without the help of Russia. By ex-

panding NATO at the end of the Cold War, when Russia was weak,

we helped to cultivate a politics there that would one day be very receptive to Putin's message that the West is

ganging up on Russia. But, that said, the message is a lie. The West has no intention of bringing Ukraine into NATO. And please raise your hand if

you think the European Union plans to invade Russia. Yet Putin just exploits these fears

for two reasons. First, he has a huge chip on his shoulder — no; he has a wholelumberyard there — of resentment that Russia is no longer the global power it once was. But rather

than make Russia great again by tapping its creative people, the rule of law and consensual politics to re-

alize their full potential, he has opted for the shortcut of tapping his oil and gas wells and seizing power from his people. And instead of creating a Russia that is an example to its neighbors,

he relies on the brute force that his oil and gas can still buy him. While he rails against NATO, he is really afraid of EU expansion — that Ukrainians would rather embrace the EU market and democracy rules than

their historical ties to Russia because they know that through the European Union, they can realize potentials

that would never be possible with Russia.

By seizing Crimea and stoking up nationalism, Putin was not protecting Russia from NATO. He was protect-

inghimself from the viruses of EU accountability and transparency. Normally, I

w o uldn't care, but

it behind the wheel of a Lincoln and

Russia's borders, and not collaborat-

peddling luxury cars the way Beyonce has pushed Pepsi all these years. Sellers keep finding new, willing vessels for their logos everywhere

ing to promote order in the Middle East, is a real problem.

from San Francisco to Northern Cal-

rosoft Surface as the official tablet of

ifornia across the Gulden's Mustard Bridge, for a hike in the Wells Fargo

the NFL. I resolved to check out the

Redwood Forest?

Inside the stadium, the Verizon

and his KGB has not only been trying to take a bite out of Ukraine but also is nibbling on Estonia, Georgia and Moldova, all under the guise of protecting "Russian speakers." I opposed NATO expansion because I believed that there are few global problems that we can solve

when the world is dividing between zones of order and disorder, and the

and saw signs that identified JetBlue they turn. Will we someday travel as the official airline of the team, Toyota as its official vehide and the Mic-

ership does that describe? Look at Putin's recent behavior: His military

career's summit, with a recent Oscar for "Dallas Buyers Club" and a splendid performance in "Interstellar" (to be released next month), and what's he doing with this dout? He's putting

It's a vendor's world. We're just restmoms for an official toilet paper. (Note to Cottonelle: I did, and there's pawns in it, even when all we want to other precincts, to be assaulting me Is that future so far off? While re- an unclaimed opportunity for you, if do is hum a simple tune. here of allplaces. cordingdevices have liberated many you canbeat Charmin to the punch.) — Frank Bruni is a columnist for "Keep Austin Weird" is the Tex-

Putin and

OPEC members — including Saudi

In a vendor's world, commercialism runs amok By Frank BrunI

FRIEDMAN

North America is changing the supply-demand dynamic.Since 2008, says Bernard Weinstein, an energy

prompted a number of i mportant

strengthen their ability to negotiate

has its voracious appetite for oil. Japan, meanwhile, is increasingly turning to natural gas and nuclear power. But an even bigger part of the

THOMAS

The New York Times.

world oforder needs to be collaborat-

ing tostem and reverse disorder,the fact that Putin is stoking disorder on

That is why Putin's leadership mat-

ters, and so does the pope's. America, too, has plenty to learn from the pope's humility, but say what you will, we're still focused on trying to strengthen the global commons, whether by protecting people from jihadists in Iraq or fighting Ebola in Africa. We could do more. Putin needs to do a lot more. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


© www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Oct. 19. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "Leaving Time" by Jodi Picoult (Ballantine) 2. "Burn" by JamesPatterson and Michael Ledwidge (Little, Brown) 3. "Deadline" by JohnSandford (Putnam) 4. "Edge of Eternity" by Ken Follett (Dutton) 5. "Mr. Miracle" by Debbie Macomber (Ballantine) 6. "SomewhereSafewith Somebody Good" by Jan Karon (Putnam) 7. "Personal" by LeeChild (Delacorte) 8. "Paris Match" by Stuart Woods (Putnam) 9. "Winter Street" by Elin Hilderbrand (Little, Brown) 10. "The Lost Key" byCatherine Coulter (Putnam) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "Killing Patton" by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Hold) 2. "Not That Kind of Girl" by Lena Dunham(Random House) 3. "As YouWish" by Cary Elwes (S8S/Touchstone) 4. "Agents of the Apocalypse" by David Jeremiah (Tyndale) 5. "You Can,YouWill" by Joel Osteen (FaithWords) 6. "The Innovators" by Walter Isaacson (Simon 8 Schuster) 7. "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande (Metropolitan) 8. "Choose YourOwnAutobiography" by Neil Patrick Harris (Crown Archetype) 9."Thug Kitchen" by Thug Kitchen (Rodale) 10. "Plenty More" by Yotam Ottolenghi (TenSpeed)

ri i n

FallOD PiCture dOOk

inspired dy daughter Forgive Jimmy Fallon if his new book is astory of wishful thinking. The host of NBC's "The Tonight Show" has adeal with Feiwel and Friends for the picture book"Your Baby's First Word Will Be Dada." Fallon says hewas inspired by his daughter, Winnie Rose, whose first word, alas, was "Mama." The publisherannounced Monday that the book is scheduled for release in June. Feiwel and Friends is an imprint of Macmillan. — From wire reports

is 17 days when the men have no contact with the outside world and no idea whether

By Colette Bancroft

they will ever be freed. When a drill bit crunches through the ceiling of the room called the Refuge where many of them are gathered, they bang

Tampa Bay Times

madly on it with wrenches to

In 2010, when 33 men were t rapped thousands o f f e et

signal their presence to the searchers on the surface. It's an exhilarating scene — but

underground by a massive rock fall in a mine in Chile,

there are 52 days to go before they will see daylight. Tobar skillfully tells the stories above ground as well, of the camp of families and

the news went global — and

stayed that way for 69 days, until their astonishing rescue. One of th e countless re-

markable things about their story was a pact the miners made while still t r apped: "They will not reveal, individJose Manuel de la Maza/Chilean Presidency via The New York Times ually, what they suffered as a Then-President Sebastian Pinera of Chile, with white hard hat, emgroup. That story is their most braces Florencio Avaloa, the first miner rescued from the San Jose preciouspossession,and itbe- Mine, after he reached the surface in a rescue cage at Esperanza longs to all of them." Camp in Copiapo, Chile, on Oct. 13, 2010. A new book details the Until now, the world has 69 days the men spent in the collapsed mine until their rescue, not known that full story. which was seen around the world. Journalist Hector Tobar tells well, in "Deep Down Dark: and the Miracle That Set

erage, in flawed moments as

Them Free."

well as heroic ones.

Based on hundreds of hours

He begins before the disaster, as the men on the A shift gather at the remote San Jose

and others, the book is a gripping thriller as well as a deep- copper mine, set in a surreal ly human story. Tobar, a novel- desert landscape and marked ist (The Barbarian Nurseries) by a long history of "cutting

Segovia is there for an extra tense efforts ofthe rescue overtime shift, and for Carlos team, which included advisMamani, a B o livian i m m i- ers from NASA. grant, it's his first day on the And he follows the men af-

job. Tobar's description of the mine's collapse and the men's discovery of their situation is

North ICorea rom theeyes o a teacher "Without You, There Ia No Ua My Time With The Sons Of North Korea's Elite"

By Evan Ramstad Star ryibune (Minneapolis)

woman come out of a house s t udents, sons of the elite, is

understand our students, who c o mplex: often protective but had never been able to do anywhen ordered back inside by always wary. When a student thing on their own," she wrote. one of the mindo ver a lu n c h "The notion of following your e rs. Kim, w h o c onvers a t i o n heart's desire, of going wherhad comfortably %/tlrorrt %u, . spo k e to her of ever you chose, did not exist v isited No r t h a fondness for here, and I did not see any way Korea s e veral rock music, he to let them know what it felt e<e b o U8 to look at them, then r etreat

For a country as closed and times, suddenly intimidating as North Korea felt "a paralyzis, the number of memoirs by ing fear" in that people who briefly lived there moment. "I was is surprisingly large — at least afraid of g et-

quickly looked

one a year since 2000, accord-

for th e

a round to

e xp l a n a t i o n

ting stuck here.

ing to a list by the Seoul-based I was afraid of website NK News. the mi n d ers

r e ac-

tion, she writes, was "a sort of

The books fall into two cate-

who could order

ingrained fear

gories. In the first are those by authors who clearly wish to be allowed back. They pay little mind to the absence of basic freedoms for North Koreans

the old woman to go away,

that I could never fathom." But she

and the speed

like, especially since, after so

s e e little time in their system, I had

who else heard him. The only

lost my own sense of freedom." — Evan Ramstad was Korea correspondent for the Wall Street Journal from 2006 to 2013. He and Sufzi Kim were in a group of 80Americanjournalists who accompanied the New York Philharmonic to Pyongyang in 2008.

Suki Kim, a Korean-American immigrant, author of the

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widely praised 2004 novel "The Interpreter" and maga-

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visits to the North, is in the

their own businesses; others struggle with post-traumatic stressdisorder. And some

are back underground — not in the San Jose, which is shut down, but at other mines.

Ariel Ticona tells Tobar, "The first day, I felt a little strange." But, he says, "The fourth day, I was starting to like it."

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ter their rescue, as they go to Disney World and the Holy Land, quarrel with and support one another. Some take

See us also for:

with which she listened," she would.When Kim and her colwrote. "I recalled the way my leagues went to bed early each and dismiss the restrictions students stiffened at the sight night from exhaustion, they they experience themselves. of (minder) Mr. Ri. Theterror reasoneditwa sbecause ofthe They are not alone: A sizable here was palpable." effort it took to constantly cennumber of academics, busiH er r elationship t o her sor themselves. "We began to nesspeople and journalists apply the soft bigotry of low expectations to North Korea

other supporters at the mine,

middle-aged family men and the corporate dodging and regulars on the crew. Dario political wrangling, the in-

corners" and shoddy condi-

and a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, fleshes out fully the

The Untold Stories of 33 Men Buried in a C h i lean M ine, men we glimpsed in news cov-

of interviews with the miners

workers. Most of t hem are

breathtakingly, horrifyingly vivid. "A single block of diotions. Some of them live in rite, as tall as a forty-five story nearbyCopiapo,others travel building, has broken off from as much as a thousand miles the rest of the mountain and for a difficult, perilous sev- is falling through the layers en-day shift. of the mine, knocking out enTheir jobs pay well in a tire sections of the Ramp and shaky economy, enough for causing a chain reaction as the many of them to own homes mountain above it collapses, and send their kids to college, too." and they are proud, skilled What follows underground

it, and tells it extraordinarily

pages)

Amazon and Simon & Schuster have come to terms in negotiations over book sales, according to a report at Publishers Weekly. This arrangement is similar to the negotiations that publisher Hachette and Amazon have been battling over since May. Although the exact details of the agreement between Simon & Schuster and Amazon have not been revealed, it is thought that the publisher and bookseller will move to an agency model for e-books beginning Jan 1. Traditionally, publishers sold e-books to Amazon differently, using a wholesale model. The publisher would set the wholesale price and then the bookseller would set the retail price. When this was the only model, Amazon often set its retail e-book prices at below wholesale, $9.99. Publishers and retailers movedtoanagency model when Apple launched the iPad and iBookstore. The agency model, based on Apple's retail model in iTunes, allows publishers to set the end price for e-books, from which retailers took a fixed percentage. For Simon 8 Schuster and Amazon to agree to new agency-style terms is, for industry-watchers, quite interesting. Hachette's dispute with Amazon over e-book pricing is ongoing.

a sun e r r oun

"Deep Down Dark: The Untold Stories of 33 Men Buried in a Chilean Mine, and the Miracle That Set Them Free" By Hector Tobar (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 320 pages)

by Suki Kim (Crown, 304

BRIEFING Simon 5 Schuster, Amazon come to terms

a eo

Com p l e m e n t s

H o m e I n t er i or s

541.322.7337

••

g )

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

second group, those who don't care whether they return. Her new book, "Without You, There Is No Us," is a vivid,

SHAREYOUR INNER SUPERHERO!

uncompromising and intensely personal account of the six months she spent teaching at a

Pyongyang university in 2011, a period that happened to end on the day dictator Kim Jong

Il's death was announced. Her last experience with students was seeing them completely overcome with grief. The book will anger the regime of Kim's son, Kim Jong Un, and the school's Korean-American leadership and

There are hundreds of United Way Superheroes in our community. From the staff and volunteers that work directly with clients, to the agencies that help ensure services are available when needed, to our donors that make it all happen. Join us on Facebook and share who your favorite United Way superhero is.

benefactors. She changed the

names of all the students and

Capes encouraged but not reguired.

teachers — and even the North Korean government minders

who shadowed them — for

GREAT THINGS HAPPEN PYHENPYE LIVE UNlTED.

protection from reprisals. The need to do so becomes

clear on the first sightseeing

LIVE UNITED

outing she and the other teach-

ers took one weekend shortly after their arrival. When their bus passed a construction site, she writes, the workers be-

came visible "with hollowed eyes and sunken cheeks, c lothing

t a t t ered, h e a d s

shaved, looking like Nazi concentration camp victims." She

glanced at another teacher who "mouthedthe exactword that struck me at that moment:

'Slaves"?" Taken to a farm to use an outhouse on the way home,

the teachers saw an elderly

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United ~~~ > Way ~

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United Way of Deschutes County

PO Box 5969 Bend, OR 97708 (541) 389-6507 www.liveunitedco.org w w w.facebook.com/liveunitedco


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN F 5

Economy Continued from F1 Generalizing from these huge disparities in race, education, gender and geography should be impossible. Yet that is what our statistics — and

As was true 50 years ago, far too many people struggle mightily in a country that remains one of the world's richest. That is not the same, however, as saying that only the wealthy are doing well.

'When MysticalCreaturesAttack!' dazzleswith humor, imagination "When Mystical Creatures

"How the Minotaur Changed the Legal Drinking Age to16," "How the Unicorn .

then our national conversa-

Attack!"

tion — do all the time. If a bar

gone to the other extreme

is full of working-class people earning a mean income of $45,000 a year, and Bill Gates walks in, the per capita income would soar millions of

from where we were 50 years

ago. Then, Lyndon Johnson announced a War on Poverty because he believed it was in-

tolerable that 20 percent of the country lived in poverty and ing number would tell us very remained invisible. Today, the little about the actual compo- 15 percent who are officially sition of the workers in that below the poverty line and bar or whether they are flour- the 30 percent of the populaishing or suffering, yet we still tion who dip that low at some use "percapita income" as a point, along with tens of milgauge of national affluence. lions of others who struggle, Even the preferred census are not invisible. In fact, they measure of "median" income are brightly visible. tells us only what the midpoint But 50 years ago, far greatis, and then very little about er attention was paid to what distribution. The same is true was working in society ecowith a national unemploy- nomically. There was no nament rate, or inflation gauge, tional business media reportneither of which gets to the ingnumbers weekly and comnitty-gritty of just how varied pelled to simplify the story. the experience and numbers Political campaigns hinged of individuals can be. on more than j ust p ocketEven the accepted expla- books, with issues ranging nation these days that wealth from the Cold War and race dollars per person. The result-

has accrued to the wealthy

safety, personal freedoms, housing — those have improved significantly for more people than not. Sweeping those facts to the side is as egregious in its way as ignoring poverty was in the 1950s. If we acknowledged the variety and complexity, maybe we could think of ways to boost and support where such support is needed. We could use some of the tens of billions of dollars we spend on a safety net for the unemployed and the tens of billions more on disability payments and find meaningful work for those people. That was one of the undisputed successes of the New Deal: deploying the underutilized labor of millions to work on the commons, to lay roads, revitalize cities, help

with schools. Yes, we are lightyears from that seeming possible today, in part because we

don't even try. women's rights. We have amWe could recognize, for inple problems today; we had stance, that cycles of poverty a mple problems then. B ut have everything to do with our national narrative now mass incarceration of young is largely dominated by one males, and especially young perspective. m ales of color,often for drug That is a problem because it crimes. Some states have beprevents us from crafting ef- gun to change, but perhaps fective answers, whether in the more would happen more form of national or local pol- quickly if we recognized this icies. If our media and politics as an economic problem of the can only encompass one reali- first order. That's just one thing. The ty at a time — economy good; economy bad — then we can't list is long. If we stopped with possibly craft specific solutions the fiction of a binary econto specific problems. Instead, omy that either points up or we are left for one-size-fits-all down, we might start discusspolicies. But we don't have one- ing our economic challenges size-afflicts-all problems. and thinking of solutions in As was true 50 years ago, more creativeand effective far too many people strug- ways. But we are locked in gle mightily in a country that this cage of our own making, remains one of the world's boxed in by national numbers richest. That is not the same, that are loose averages at best, however, as saying that only and by a political and media the wealthy are doing well. conversation that is seemingIncome is not, and never was, ly incapable of complexity in a the sole gauge of living stan- complex world. to safety, the fate of cities and

and left the rest of the country behind isn't quite as it seems.

Yes, the wealthy (especially the top 1 percent) have reaped almost all the income gains in

the past six years and much of the gains in the decade before that. But the top two

income quintiles saw annual gains of a percent to a percent and a half until 2008. That isn't what it was in the 20th century, but we tend to forget that the 20th century

also saw much higher inflation. And we forgot that just as income growth has slowed, the costs of many basic goods and services also dropped. In 1950, food represented 32

percent of a family's budget, according to federal statistics;

today, it accounts for less than 15 percent. Energy use has seen similar declines, along with clothing and basic necessities. Health care costs more, but that in part is because we

are living longer. Education eats up more costs, but many more people are going to college. In some sense, we have

dards; and while it i s h ard to measure standards of liv-

ing, in multiple ways — from health, to life expectancy, to

education, literacy, personal

— Zachary Karabell is head of global strategy for Envestnet. His latest book is "The Leading Indicators: A Short History of the Numbers That Rule Our World."

By Kathleen Founds (University ofiowaPress,206pages)

.

.

Stabbed Danny Ramirezin the Heart Seven

Times, Which Is What He Deserves for

By Jim Higgins Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The opening of Kathleen Founds' "When M y s tical Creatures Attack!" dazzles.

Responding to their English teacher's assignment, high school students deliver one nutty story after another

Breaking Up With Me Like That," "How the

Giant Squid Made Me Stop Being Pregnant." Their stories live up to those titles.

is — and it is a veritable handaide in a nursing home; and book of comic literary strateabout their favorite mystical Cody Splunk, a highly imagi- gies — it probes dark territory creatures solving "the great- native lad with a massive, un- in the story of Freedman, the est sociopolitical problem of requited crush on Gibbs. young English teacher. Her our time": "How the Minotaur Gibbs and Splunk have the Bllsslllg drary rs a r unnmg Changed the Legal Drinking kind of relationship that Bella joke early in the book, but Age to 16," "How the Unicorn Swan and Jacob Black have, when Founds reveals its conStabbed D a nn y R a m i rez if only Bella were more like tents later, it portrays a lonely in the Heart Seven Times, Daria Morgendorffer, and Ja- woman, struggling with the Which Is What He Deserves, cob were a comic book geek. legacy of her mother's death for Breaking Up With Me Like "We deserve a little danger and her own mental illness, That," "How the Giant Squid slash fun. A little dangerfun," and over her head as a new Made Me Stop s he tells h i m teacherin aTexashigh school. She's observant, sizing up Being P r egd uring on e n ant." Th e i r adventure. a student: "Janice Gibbs, a fe"I've never ral child with excessive eye stories live up to those titles. beenahugefan shadow and stringyblack hair No writer or of dangerfun." thatobscures her face.I feel "That's why a daily urge to take scissors r eader c o u l d keep that pace •s you're a virgin." to it. She has an anti-authori"When tarian complex that would be u p fo r 200 If pages. But the Mystical Crea- interesting were it not so ill-inrest of "When tures Attack!" formed." She also judges herMystical Creawere a soccer self harshly. An October entry, smart teen who works as an

tures Attack!"

match, it would

delights as well, induding the surprising ending, which reminds me of the visionary conclusion of a

Flannery O'Connor story. Founds calls her book, winner of the University of Iowa

Press' annual John Simmons short fiction award, a novel-in-stories, a designation I

normally find either precious or a desperate marketing attempt to appeal to book

buyersafraid of short-story collections. But here, the hybrid designation fits. Three characters unify Founds' wild collection of episodes: Laura Freedman,

a young English teacher and daughter of a suicide, hurtling toward her own breakdown;

Janice Gibbs, a rebellious yet

two months into her teaching

be one remark- career, reads: "Have not yet able free kick been able to heal and transand set piece form any kids in the deep and after another: powerful way they need to be Forms angrr- healed and transformed. Get ly filled out by Freedman at on it, teacher-face." In "Faux the anti-therapeutic mental Rose," Founds take us through institution where her brother this poor woman's nightmarhas stashed her; bitchy black- ish days after she gives birth, mailing emails exchanged by which reflect a real form of Gibbs and her father's fiancee; postpartum psychosis. "Recipes for Disaster," a fundThis tonal shift from earlier raising cookbook with deli- chapters shocks and saddens cious asides compiled by the but doesn' tfeelforced or graMethodist Women of Piggott, tuitous. The outrageousness Kentucky; and "In the Hall of of the human condition is Old Testament Miracles," an what connects them, just as it absurdly over-the-top horror connects the students' comic story by Splunk, set in a wax essays and Freedman's menmuseum where the figures tal illness in "When Mystical come to life and featuring Creatures Attack!" bloody combat between bibFounds is a former student lical heroes and America's of George Saunders; readers founding fathers. who enjoy his fiction would be As funny as Founds' book smart to pick up her book.

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ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014 • •

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NOW Genuine maple wood. 258 - Travel/Tickets "QUICK CASH the right to publish all Mossberg 300A 12Ga 1-800-871-2983. Includes matching 350 - Horseshoeing/Ferriers 259 - Memberships CA King Henredon SPECIAL" ads from The Bulletin with 2 barrels: one 22" (PNDC) bench.$1,100. 358- Farmer's Column 1 week3lines 12 260- Misc. Items Sleigh Bed with Ornewspaper onto The modified; & one (541) 598-4674 days, 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing or' ganic Mattress and 261 - Medical Equipment Bulletin Internet web181/2", $250. 255 or (541) 923-0488 e e eke 2 N 383- Produce andFood Bedding. It's magsite. ~ 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. Background check evenings. Computers Ad must nificient. $4500 required. Please call 263- Tools include price of Cash only. The Bulletin 541.389.3694, Iv msg. T HE B ULLETIN r e Serving Central Onttoesince tkts eo ie temotkooo 541-390-7109 208 208 ~ 260 quires computer ador less, or multiple 240 Pete & Supplies • P ets & Supplies Wanted: Collector seeks verlisers with multiple Misc. Items items whose total King size mattress, exc. high quality fishing items ad schedules or those Crafts & Hobbies does not exceed cond. fits on pedestal & upscale bamboo fly Australian S h epherd Shih Tzu, AKC female selling multiple sys- 12-ft artificial Christmas $500. b ed, $ 3 0 0 obo . rods. Call 541-678-5753, tems/ software, to dis- tree, beautiful, $100. puppies. AKC/ASCA puppy, $300. 541-382-0217 AGATE HUNTERS or 503-351-2746 Excellent Bloodlines. Call 541-788-0234 close the name of the 541-389-9352 Call Classifieds at ponshers • Saws or 541-548-0403 business or the term Born 10/1 4/1 4. Microwave, GE slide-in, 541-385-5809 • k 247 "dealer" in their ads. Are you in BIG trouble $650-$1200. Reserve Standard Poodle AKC white, good cond, works www.bendbul!etin.com Repalr & Supplies Sporting Goods Private party advertis- with the IRS? Stop Now 541-815-9257 male pup 8 wks, choc. well. $35. 541-633-0563 ers are defined as wage & bank levies, - Misc. 1st shots, de-wormed, NEED TO CANCEL those who sell one liens & audits, unfiled Check out the 202 $800 5 4 1-754-9537 YOUR AD? computer. tax returns, payroll isclassifieds online Long Arm Quilting MaEasy Rider Kayak, Want to Buy or Rent Coivallis. del. poss. The Bulletin sues, & resolve tax $150. chine, Husqvarna/Viking, www.bendbulletirbcom Classifieds has an 257 debt FAST. Seen on Yorkie pups AKC, 2 girls, 10-ft bed, computerized, 541-593-0312 CASHfor wood "After Hours"Line Updated daily CNN. A B BB. Call 2 boys, baby dolls! Shots, Musical Instruments $8500 541-416-0538 dressers 8 wood bar Call 541-383-2371 'I -800-989-1278. training, health guar. Where can you find a Elk Hunters tent 5' walls, stools. 541-420-5640 Cavalier King Charles pony 24 hrs. to cancel 241 (PNDC) Spaniel Pups, AKC $700 & up. 541-777-7743 sheepherder stove, exc. helping hand? your ad! Bicycles & Wanted: $Cash paid for Champion Pedigree, $500 541-546-7144 210 From contractors to Bird feeder w/cage to vintage costume jew- health guarantee, Tri, Accessories SOFA dark brown keep out squirrels. 19e T eliy. Top dollar paid for Blenheims. $1000Furniture & Appliances It's hunting season and I yard care, it's all here $15 obo. 541-548-4674 l eather, Hita c h i Gold/Silver.l buy by the $1800. 541-848-7605 have 2 new rifles for sale: in The Bulletin's brand, l i k e n ew, Estate, Honest Artist 1) Ruger Hawkeye 7mm "Call A Service Buylng Dlamonds $500; and matching Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Chihuahua pups, 2 girls, A1 Washers8 Dryers Rem Mag. s t ainless 2009 Beautiful $150 ea. Full warchair and ottoman /Gold for Cash long hair, parents on site, ranty. matte finish, grey lami- Professional" Directory Lowrey Free Del. Also 205 like n e w, $300. Saxon's Fine Jewelers $250 each. 541-420-9474 nated stock, VXII 3x9 Adventurer II Organ wanted, used W/D's 541-280-0892 541-389-6655 scope. Gun has never Huffy free s t anding Absolutely perfect Items for Free 541-280-7355 Dog ramp, holds up to 70 been fired; asking $850. basketball hoop. $75 condition, not a lb. dog, great shape, BUYING LA Beach Cruiser 2) Browning X-bolt hunter obo. 541-382-6806 Burgundy leather love- $40 obo. 541-548-4674 scratch on it, about Lionel/American Flyer 325 WSM, beautiful wood Custom made, seat & 0/S chair w/otto4-feet wide, does gun, blued finish, fired 246 trains, accessories. man, in qood condition, Donate deposit bottles/ one of a kindeverything! Includes 541-408-2191. maybe 10 rounds. 40 rds FREE. 541-815-2042 no 2 alike! Health 8 cans to local all vol., a nice bench, too. included;asking non-profit rescue, for Excellent condition. ammo Beauty Items $450 obo. BUYING & SE LLING $750. 541-419-8901 Clean moving boxes, & feral cat spay/neuter. Fun, fun, fun! 541-385-5685 All gold jewelry silver materials, keep check- T railer a t Jak e ' s Tempur-Pedic® $850. M arlin 917V 1 7 c a l Lowest P r ices on and gold coins, bars, ing! 541-791-1934 D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Antique table: Contour Elite King 541-749-8720 H MR, 3x9 sco p e Health & Dental In- Back to School SALE! roundgs i wedding sets, Petco (near Wal-Mart) engraved with sailsize mattress 8 foundacustom thumb hole surance. We have the class rings, sterling sil208 25% - 35% OFF in Redmond; or doing ship on top and tion, BRAND NEW. S chwinn Mirada 1 8 stock, 5 magazines best rates from top aff music equipment. ver, coin collect, vinPets & Supplies nate M-F a t S mith has an old oak capNew cool model. speed bike, $ 100. 3 750 rounds of 1 7 companies! Call Now! Bend Pawn & Trading Co. tage watches, dental Sign, 1515 NE 2nd stan base. very Purchased; then spent 54'I -549-9383 877-649-6195. Fl e ming, HMR ammo. $2000. 61420 S. Hwy 97, Bend gold. Bill Portable dog carrier ken- Bend; or CRAFT in heavy, Very unique summer in Alaska, and 541-382-9419. 541-728-1 900. (PNDC) 541-317-5099 nel, 23" D x 15e H x 15eW, Tumalo. Can pick up piece. Asking $500 242 it was past time to large amts, 389-8420. $15. 541-408-4528 541-419-6408. return to store. Exercise Equipment www.craftcats.org Paid $3600; sell for $2600. The Bulletin recomGerman Shepherds Aero Pilates performer 541-548-3810 mends extra caution www.sherman-ranch.us M arePiXtaBendblletil).CO m w/ rebounder, DVD's. when purc h asQuality Germans. $200 541-610-6035 ing products or ser541-281-6829 TheBulletin Bowflex Power Pro vices from out of the recommends extra ' weight sys., very good • New, never fired area. Sending cash, Purebred Labs, not pa l caution when pur- cond, $95. 541-389-2167 Weatherby Vanpered, 1st shots and checks, or credit inchasing products or • S2, synthetic wormed, vet checked, f ormation may be services from out of I Schwinn 20-yr old exer- guard stock, cal 30-06.$550. b londe an d b l a ck subjected to fraud. t the area. Sending t cise bike, like new, $120 • New, never fired For more informa- $400. 541-416-1175. Beautiful Oval Table ' cash, checks, o r ' obo. 541-410-3425 Howa,wood stock, cal tion about an adverSolid walnut, handl credit i n f ormation .300 Win Mag.$725 245 tiser, you may call crafted by an Amish may be subjected to Must pass backthe O r egon State Golf Equipment artisan for Schanz l FRAUD. For more ground check. Please Attorney General's P eople g iving p e t s Furniture Co. Excellent information about an c call 541.389.3694, Office C o n sumer away are advised to condition w/lovely patina. advertiser, you may I CHECK yOUR AD leave message. be selective about the 27" H, top 30" L and 20" l call t h e Protection hotline at Ore g onl new owners. For the wide. Graceful curved 1-877-877-9392. ' State Atto r ney ' e Co protection of the anilegs with 2-1/2 Oregon Trail l General's O f f i ce hand-turned center mal, a personal visit to Gun Show, The Bulletin Consumer Protec- • Setttiett t:eettel Onyoe since t9IS Central Oregon's the home is recomsupport. Orig. $649; t ion ho t l in e at I Original & Largest mended. sell $350. i 1-877-877-9392. on the first day it runs 541-385-4790 GunShow Adopt a rescued cat or The Bulletin to make sure it is corNov. 8th & Nov. 9th kitten! Altered, vacciServing Central Oregonsince tkt8 > TheBulletin > eSpellcheck e and rect. Couch, black leather w/ SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 Serving Ceorret Oregon sincetette nated, ID chip, tested, / recliners, like new. human errors do oc- Deschutes Co. Fairgrounds more! CRAFT, 65480 Queensland Heelers 2 $400 obo. 541-408-0846 cur. If this happens to Buy - Sell - Trade Standard 8 Mini, $150 212 7 8th St . , Ben d , $8 Admission, your ad, please con& up. 541-280-1537 Daniateak offi Sat/Sun, 1-5. ce desk, Antiques & 12 8 under free! tact us ASAP so that www.rightwayranch.wor 54 ewx23ed, keyboard 541-389-8420 corrections and any For info: 541-4041890 Collectibles dpress.com www.craftcats.org p ullout tray and 2 adjustments can be drawers; 2-drawer leRem. 700 30-06, Leop. made to your ad. Rottweiler pup, female, gal size Dania teak Cabbage Patch doll; por3x9 $550; Ruger M77, 541-385-5809 parents on site. $550. f ile c a binet. T e a k celain "baptismal" doll, M ark II, 3 0 0 W i n . Call 541-923-2437. $50 both. 541-617-7486 The Bulletin Classified Aussie pups mini/toy, sectretary chair, very mag, with 3x9 scope all colors, 1st shots, Scotty AKC pups, ready comfortable all items KitchenAide 3-bowl elec. Custom made golf clubs $450; Rem. 760 30-06 $360 cash. now! Mom/Dad on site, in exc. condi. $180 all mixer, old, but works & bag, call for details, L eop. 2x 7 $4 5 0 . 541-678-7599 1st shots. 541-771-0717 3 items. 541-3887397. great! $40. 541-617-7486 $50. 541-617-7486 541-475-1202 •

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

G2 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014•THE BULLETIN

T HE N E W

YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D

WHY NOT?

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BY DAVID PHILLIPS /EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ ACROSS

46 -Magnon I Headed for some 49 ¹1 item at Dairy serious pain? Queen? 7 Gives the third 52 Cool and then some degree 55 Single starter? 13 Arab nobles 57 "Where the Wild 20 How some stir-fry Things Are" dishes are served author 21 Site claiming to be 58 See 90-Across "the front page 60 Back up, as of the Internet" a backup 22 Pygmalion's 6 1 Solne footballgear beloved 63 Shepherd 23 Body of art 64 Pre-K enrollee 24 Elvis's heroes? 65 Author who wrote 26 Settles through "Do not meddle an angry in the affairs of confrontation wlzal ds 27 Sigmoid curve 66 Dance routine 28 2011 purchaser of 68 Gujarat or Punjab, the Huffington dresswise'? Post 71 Direccidn sailed by 29 Somewhat, Columbus informally 72 Salnple text? 30 N.Y.C.'s first subway co. 74 Whiz 31 Park in N.Y.C., e.g. 75 Deliver, as a punch 32 Beauty 77 They're game 34Morales of "La Bamba" 78 Keys with the ¹I hits "My Boo" 35 Editor's "undo" and "Fallin' " 37 Embarrassed person's comment 79 Impersonate after getting off an 80 Marks gotten in electronic scale'? Spanish class? 42 Kind of soup in 82 Dietitian's stat Southern cuisine 83 Pull a classic 44 Genre of My Internet prank on Chemical 85 Wicked poker bet? Romance 88 Sci-fi drug 45 Real estate option 89 Group of atoms: Online subscriptions: Abbr. Today's puzzle and more 90 With 58-Across, than 4,000 past puzzles, miffed nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 91 Certain demon

94 Two concerns of a secretive voodoo practicer? $9 First of a Latin trio 100 " never work!" 102 See 107-Down 103Rescue-party prompter 104 L emo n of "30 Rock" 105 Lefty of the old Dodgers 106Many years 108 Court inits. 109 George P. 1980s secretary of state 112Lack of logic and a frostycoating? 116 Shot from above 117Tangle 118 Reach for the sky 119 Big nalne in environmental advocacy 120Condescended 121Hair piece 122 Amalgamates DOWN

I Expression of disapproval 2 Dig up 3 Subordinate of a board chair'? 4 Not watch live, say 5 Beige relative 6 Active ingredient in Off! 7 Sit shiva, say 8 View froln Aqaba 9 Important vows 10 Bad cholesterol, in brief

11 'The Simpsons" second grader 12Moe, for one 13 P eppe r 14 Cry of triumph 15 Bass druln? 16 Debonair 17Turner memoir 18 Gucci competitor 19"Game of Thrones," e.g. 25 Left by plane 31 Soprano Licia, singer at the Met for 26 years 33 Cry like a baby 36 Big 12 sch. 37 Studentin a uniform 38 Be offensive, in a way 39 Pat. off. concerns 40 Stew dish known in Thailand as "suki" 41 First class 43 Some temp takers 46 "I've had enough of this patio furniture!," e.g.'? 47 Engrossed 48 Post-1968 tennis period 50 Irish novelist O'Brien 51 Unfair condemnation 53Move, in agent lingo 54 Set, as a price 55 Arriviste 56 Wood in Hollywood 5$ Latin phrase of inclusion

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79 Plaintiff, e.g. 80 Spot to watch 81 Set (on) 84 Shake 86 Not go on 87 Roomy ride 92 Exercise piece $3 Is hot, hot, hot $4 Model builder's activity

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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

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Misc. Items

Misc. Items

CRYPT at Deschutes Memorial G a r den Meadow Pond space 4D4 - dbl depth lawn crypt, full grave for 2. B uyer w il l ne e d granite & bronze dbl interment ma r k er plus interment costs. $1500. For more info c all K e l lie Al l e n 541-362-5592 or seller, 207-582-0732

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476

Hay, Grain & Feed

Employment Opportunities

INSTANT GREEN McPheeters Turf Lawn Fertilizer

Garage Sale Kit

54'I -312-6709

Natural gas Ruud lankless water heater, brand new! 199 BTU, $1600.

Misc.ltems

How to avoid scam Reduce Your Past Tax and fraud attempts Bill by as much as 75 Percent. Stop Levies, YBe aware of internaLiens and Wage Gariional fraud. Deal lonishments. Call The cally whenever pos-

sible. Y Watch for buyers who offer more than your asking price and who ask to have money wired or handed back to them. Fake cashier checks and money orders Just bought a new boat? are common. Sell your old one in the YNever give out perclassifieds! Ask about our sonal financial inforSuper Seller rates! mation. 541-385-5009 YTrust your instincts and be wary of DID YOU KNOW 7 IN someone using an 10 Americans or 158 million U.S. A dults escrow service or agent to pick up your read content f r om newspaper m e d ia merchandise. each week? Discover The Bulletin the Power of the PaSe~vmg Central Oregonsrnce 1903 cific Northwest Newspaper Advertising. For Advertise your car! Add A Picture! a free brochure call Reach of readers! 916-268-6011 or Call thousands 541-385-5809 email cecelia©cnpa.com The Bulletin Classi86ds

266

Sales Northeast Bend

Open to the public.

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269

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 740 NE 1st

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortga063 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

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267

Fuel & Wood

Bend Habitat RESTORE

Can be found on these pages:

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486- Independent Positions

265

Building Materials

Tax DR Now to see if you Qualify 1-800-791-2099.

(PNDC) The Bulletin Offers Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 3 days

In Sunriver area. 530-938-3003

What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'

• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

The Bulletin

542-389-9663

Prompt Delivery Rock, Sand & Gravel Multiple Colors, Sizes Instant Landscaping Co. 541-389-9663

** FREE ** Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad

• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

270

Lost & Found

Found: bunch of tools. Call 541-548-4950

and describe.

PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

The Bulletin

serv nscentral oreyon since $03

servlns central oreyonsince fRB

Look at: Afl YearDependable REMEMBER:If you Bendhomes.com Firewood: Seasoned; have lost an animal, Lodgepoie, split, del, 541-385-5809 don't forget to check for Complete Listings of • Private Party Only B end 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 The Humane Society Area Real Estate for Sale • Total of items adver2 for $365. Call for Bend tised must equal $200 New Schulie ventilated or discounts! 541-382-3537 wire closet shelving wl multi-cord or Less 541-420-3484. Redmond hardware, $450 val; make FOR DETAILS or to 541-923-0882 reas. offer. 541-382-4026 PLACE AN AD, Dry split delivered Madras Call 541-385-5809 $160 cord (La Pine) 541-475-6889 Fax 541-385-5802 541-876-7426 266 Prineville Heating & Stoves 541-447-7178 Wanted- paying cash Pine & juniper Split or Craft Cats for Hi-fi audio & stuNOTICE TO 541-389-8420. dio equip. Mclntosh, ADVERTISER PROMPT DELIVERY JBL, Marantz, DySince September 29, 542-389-9663 naco, Heathkit, San325 Want to impress the sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 1991, advertising for Hay, Grain & Feed used woodstoves has relatives? Remodel Call 541-261-1806 269 been limited to modyour home with the Gardening Supplies 1st Quality mixed grass Wilson golf clubs RH, 3 els which have been help of a professional hay, no rain, barn stored, drivers, 8 irons, putter, certified by the Or& Equipment from The Bulletin's $250/ton. carry cart, g loves, egon Department of "Call A Service Call 541-549-3831 mens shoes sz 10, Environmental Qual(PNDC) Men's M suede / sheep- balls & tees, $100. ity (DEQ) and the fed- BarkTurfSoii.com Professional" Directory Patterson Ranch, Sisters eral E n v ironmental skin coat, like new, $100. 541-549-9363 Premium orchard grass, 541-617-7466 Protection A g e ncy PROMPT DELIVERY barn stored no rain, Call a Pro 263 262 (EPA) as having met 542-389-9663 1st cutting $225, 2nd Whether you need a Men's XLT black leather • Tools smoke emission stanSales Northwest Bend $250, delivery avail. car coat, like new, dards. A cer t ified fence fixed, hedges Call 541-420-9156 or $100. 541-369-9352 C ommercial Delt a w oodstove may b e For newspaper XTREMEII GA R A GE 541-948-7010. trimmed or a house Unifence table saw, identified by its cerlifidelivery, call the SALE. 8 a m-?? Mikasa "Just Flowers" 6 e xtended built, you'll find ben c h , cation label, which is Circulation Dept. at Indoors (FRI-SUN Quality Orchard/Mixed piece place setting for 12, router, new lift, com- permanently attached 541-385-5800 Grass hay, between 10/24-26) 1436 NW professional help in over 80 pcs total, $300 piete grip m a ster. to the stove. The Bul- To place an ad, call Bend & Redmond. William Clark Street The Bulleiin's "Call a cash. 541-389-7170 Many extras. $1500. letin will not know541-385-5809 O Lemhi Pass and Mt $230/ton, small bales. Deliv. avail. 541-260-7781 Service Professional" New Schulte ventilated 541-923-6427 ingly accept advertisor email Washington. See ads classified@bendbLsletin.com for the sale of and pics on Craigslist! Wheat Straw For Sale. Directory wire closet shelving w/ Scroll Saw, D r emel, ing F OLLOW BRIT E hardware, $450 val; make Model 1671, 16" 2-spd, uncertified The Bulletin SIGNS!! 541-3B5-5B09 also weaner pigs woodstoves. serving cantreloreyan since t9ls reas. offer. 541-382-4028 $80. 541-406-4526 541-546-6171

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 bendbulietin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulietin.com

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p portunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline

341

Horses & Equipmen

at 1-503-378-4320

• ., • ® Siiverado 2001 5th wheel 3-horse trailer 29'x8', deluxe showman/semi living quarters,lots of exlras. Beautiful condition. $21,900.OBO 541-420-3277

For Equal Opporiunity Laws c ontact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.

The Bulletin 541-385-5809

The Bulletin js your

Employment Marketplace

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Call

541-385-5809 to advertise.

421

Schools & Training HTR Truck School REDMOND CANPUS Our GradsGet Jobs!

www.bendbuiietin.com

The Bulletin

1-888<38-2235

serving central oregon sincelsat

WWW.HTR.EDij

*Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)

InCludeS UP to 40 WOrdS

Of teXt,2" in length, With bOrder, full COIOrPhoto,

bold headline and price.

Item Priced at:

Your Total Ad Cost onl:

• Under $500 ----.

$29 $39

• $soo to $eee .... • $1000 to $2499 • $2500 and over

The Bulletin 541- 5 - 5

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$59 ARCTIC SLEO

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• The Bulletin, • ce n t i'al or e g on Marketplace • The central oregon Nickel Ads ® bendbulletin.com 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, RVs, moforcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Some restrictions apply.

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

G4 SUNDAY OCTOBE R 2 6 2014 •THE BULLETIN

BOATS&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 andCampers 890- RVs for Rent

AUTOS& TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts andService 916- TrucksandHeavyEquipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - AutomotiveWanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique andClassic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940- Vans 975 - Automobiles 745

860

Motorcycles & Accessories

Legal RV space with Canyon views between Redmond & Terrebonne. $300/mo., incl water & sewer. 541-419-1917

West Side - 4 BR, 1 bath, 1242 sq ft ranch home.

op gggg [pp

541-408-3393

Wood stove, fenced yard, covered porch, rear alley access, 50'x100' lot. 3 blocks to Columbia Park. $309,900. Broker owned. Call 541-389-3364 or 750

Redmond Homes

744

I

3 bdrm 2.5 bath custom Executive Single-Level home on 1.48 ac in TerHome on the Hillin rebonne. 2450 SF, Mtn South Redmondviews, canal, shop, with $385,000. room. By owner, Great for entertaining! bonus $365,000. 541-923-4995 2340 sq ft, 3 bdrms, 2 bathrooms, den with Looking foryour next built-ins. 3-car garage. emp/oyee? Huge great room and Place a Bulletin help dining with new carpet. Gourmet kitchen with SS, wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 granite, and new wood floors. Large master suite readers each week. Your classified ad with dual sinks.Open will also appear on Sunday, 1-4. 3338 SW bendbulletin.com 35th St. 541-504-7055 which currently receives over Open 12-3 1.5 minion page 2379 NW views every month Droulllard Ave. at no extra cost. NorthWest Crossing Bulletin Classifieds Engaging New Get Results! Home Call 385-5809 or Alison Mata, place your ad on-line Broker at 541-280-6250 bendbulletin.com Thesarnersroup.com

756

Jeffer son County Homes

541-420-3910

Theearnereroup.com

~g IZhffjjffI Open 12-3 61263 Morning Tlde PI.

908

916

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Four Winds 2008 18' travel trailer used very little

Laredo 30'2009

Harlev Davidson 2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today

FSBO, Quick Escrow, In by Thanksgiving! Quality, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sq. ft. Madras home, $205K. Showings by appt. 541-279-8783 775

F-

hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated and painted. $23,500

$8500.

Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by

541-403-2465

Tom, 541.788.5546

8.3 Cummins with 6

speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077

Heartland P r owler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & l a r ge closet, 15' power awning, power hitch & s tabilizers, 18 g a l . water heater, full size

2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition,$23,500

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

New DreamSpecial 3 bdrm, 2 bath $50,900 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp The Bulletin's pump, 4-3" h oses, "Call A Service camlocks, $ 25,000. Professional" Directory 541-820-3724 is all about meeting your needs.

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

Call on one of the professionals today!

$22,500

541-419-3301

Motorhome + Dinghy! Looking for your 2011 Georgetown 34' by next employee? Forest River. 14,900 mi, Place a Bulletin help 503-646-1804 2 slides, 5.5 KVA genHarley Davidson ad today and erator, In Motion satellite, wanted reach over 60,000 883 Sportster auto leveling, 7-yr/50K mi 2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like 1998, 20,200 miles, each week. warranty. Immacu- readers new, ActiV hull, safe ext'd Your classified ad exc.cond., late, always garaged. lock canister, 15HP will also appear on $3,800. Jeep Wrangler, 47K Yamaha w/ t r olling2007 bendbulletin.com 541-548-2872. mi, exlnt cond, tow ready. plate, 6 gal Transom which currently reBoth for $83,000tank, less 30 hrs, 2 ceives over 1.5 milor motorhome only, chest seats, full Bimini lion page views evtop, Transom wheels, $71,000.541-420-5139 ery month at no cover, RV's special. extra cost. Bulletin $5500. 541-923-6427 Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 Ads published in the or place your ad Harley Fat Boy 2002 "Boats" classification on-line at 14k orig. miles.. Exinclude: Speed, fishbendbulletin.com cellent cond. Vance & ing, drift, canoe, Providence 2005 Hines exhaust, 5 house and sail boats. Fully loaded, 35,000 spoke HD rims, wind 882 For an other types of miles, 350 Cat, Very vest, 12" rise handle watercraft, please go Fifth Wheels clean, non-smoker, bars, detachable lugto Class 875. 3 slides, side-by-side gage rack w/ back 541-385-5809 • refrigerator with ice rest, hwy pegs & many maker, Washer/Dryer, chrome accents. Must Flat screen TV's, In see to appreciate! Serwn Centra/O~e on sfnie 1903 motion satellite. $10,500. In CRR area 875 $95,000 call 530-957-1865 541-480-2019 Watercraft Alpenlite 26 ft. 1987, HDFatBo 1996 new appliances, ds published in "WaRV everything works, tercraft" include: KayCONSIGNMENTS good shape. aks, rafts and motorWANTED Includes queen Ized personal We Do The Work ... bedding, micro, watercrafts. For You Keep The Cash! "boats" please see DVD, hitch, tripod. On-site credit $4500. Class 870. approval team, 541-977-5587 Completely 541-385-5809 web site presence. Rebuilt/Customized We Take Trade-Ins! 2012/2013 Award CHECKYOUR AD Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Winner BIG COUNTRY RV Showroom Condition Bend: 541-330-2495 880 Many Extras Redmond: Low Miles. Motorhomes 541-548-5254

The Bulletin

$15,000

541-548-4807 ~

'~

~

-

king bed, hide-a-bed sofa, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $17,500

541-548-5254

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spencheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

-

o ema

541-419-0566

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

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THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM

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Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center, 5 miles 20878SE Golden GatePlace,Bend of walking trails. Tour a Dirvc11orrs:From theparkuay, eut variety of single level and on Reed/ r/arket,southon 15th,then 2 story plans. fo!Ioiiisfgiu.

Hosted 6 Listed by:

TEAM DELAY

Homes Starting Mid-$200s

Ql

Principal Broker

EDIE DELAY R 8

now: 8 7 7-955-5505.

(PNDC)

• •

i Call 54 /-385-5809

to romote

Landscaping/Yard Care

Adoption

i l

I,

Also Cleanups j& Cleanouts' ~ : •:

I

Handyman

I DO THAT!

Handyman/Remodeling Residential/Commercial Small Jobs to

All American Fainting • Interior andExterior • Family-Owned • Residential R Commercial • 40 years experience • Senior Discounts Aiik about our FAIL SPEC1/tLI

Catt 541i 337.6149 CCBii195960

Enlire RoomRemodels

Garage Otganrxation Home Imspectron Repairs Quality, Honest Work

Dennis 541-317.9788 ccsnns7sBovdednnmmd

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway.

MARTIN JAMES European Professional Painter Repaint Specialistl

This advertising tip brought toyouby

Oregon Llcense

The Bulletin

541-815-2888

¹186147 LLC

58NIAQCNtbBI OKgtN SIIKQ ISB

I

Experience T u s c an living with a C entral O regon t w i st . T o u r the exclusive estate, learn about available

20781 NE Comet Lane

under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention Directions:North on Boyd Acres,

given to allow for tons of IIigh! on Sierra, Le ft on Black Pmder, natural light & much more. Right on Comet Lane. Looirforigns. Come by the model home for starting in the low more information and plans.

$200,000s

R E A L T 0

Painting/Wall Covering

• 5 year Warranues

Homes starting in the Iow

541-30G-0939

• Fall Clean up • Weekly Mowing & Edging • Bi-Monthly& Monthly Maintenance

NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone L/LltfDSCAPIjtfG who con t racts for • Landscape Canopies 8 Campers construction work to Construction be licensed with the Skamper 1990 8-ft pop- Construction Contrac• Water Feature up cabover camper, im- tors Board (CCB). An Installation/Maint. maculate, many extras, active license 3-burner stove, heater means the contractor • Pavers w/thermostat, hot water is bonded & insured. • Renovations heater, oversized pres- Verify the contractor's sure water s y stem„ CCB l i c ense at • Irrigations Fantastic Fan, lots of Installation storage, sleeps 4, $3750. www.hirealicensedcontractor.com 541-617-0211 or call 503-378-4621. Senior Discounts The Bulletin recommends checking with Bonded &lnsured o the CCB prior to con- 541%1%4458 tracting with anyone. Lcsrr8759 Some other t rades also re q uire additional licenses and NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law certifications. (ORS 671) requires all businesses that adGet your vertise t o pe r form 908 Landscape Construcbusiness Aircraft Parts tion which includes: p lanting, deck s , & Service fences, arbors, a ROW I N G water-features, and installation, repair of irwith an ad in rigation systems to be The Bulletin's l icensed w it h th e "Call A Service Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit Professional" number is to be inDirectory 1/3 interestIn cluded in all advertisements which indiColumbia 400, cate the business has Financing available. Debris Removal a bond, insurance and $150,000 workers compensa(located @ Bend) tion for their employ541-288-3333 ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 FIND IT! or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to BUY IT! check license status SELL ITr Will Haul Away before contracting with The Bulletin Classifieds the business. Persons + FREEW lan d scape For Salvage rr", doing maintenance do not , Any Locatlon r equire an LC B l i cense. . 4Removal

SAT. R SUN. 11AM-5PM

Hosted 6Listed by:

MAI1VTEltfAltfCE

885

THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM $200,000s. Brand new homes in Bend with the quality pahlisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with

our service

PREGNANT? CON S IDERING ADOP TION? Call us first. Living exp e nses, housing, medical, and ssllvlNeCENTRAL OREGON s<nce 2003 continued support af Residential & Commercial terwards. C h o ose a doptive family o f Spnnkler Blow-Out your choice. Call 24/7. SprinklerRepair 855-970-2106

Building/Contracting

541-548-5254

Broker R E A L T 0

• I s J Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own air- Meet singles right now! c raft. 1968 A e r o No paid o perators, just real people like Commander, 4 seat, you. Browse greet150 HP, low time, ings, exchange mesfull panel. $21,000 sages and connect obo. Contact Paul at live. Try it free. Call 541-447-5184.

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

RHIANNA KUNKLER

541-420-24y50

541-403-2465.

(PNDC)

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

HD Softtail Deuce 2002, broken back forces your ad, please consale, only 200 mi. on 2007 Winnebago Winnebago 22' tact us ASAP so that new motor from Harcorrections and any Outlook Class "C" 2002 - $28,500 ley, new trans case 31', solar panel, Cat. adjustments can be Chevy 454, heavy theeamereroup.com and p a rts, s p o ke made to your ad. heater, excellent duty chassis, new wheels, new brakes, 541-385-5809 condition, more exbatteries 8 tires, cab n early all o f bi k e tras.Asking $58K. The Bulletin Classified & roof A/C, tow hitch brand new. Has proof Ph. 541-447-9268 w /brake, 21k m i ., of all work done. ReCan be viewed at more! 541-280-3251 850 movable windshield, Western Recreat/on T-bags, black and all Find exactly what Snowmobiles (fop of hill) chromed out with a In Prinev///e. you are looking for in the 4-place enclosed Inter- willy skeleton theme CLASSIFIEDS state snowmobile trailer, on an caps and covFreightliner custom $8500. 541-379-3530 ers. Lots o f w o rk, 5th wheel puller, heart and love went sleeper cab, rebuilt USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! into an aspects. All Ready to makememories! engine with 20k miles, done at professional Top-selling Winnebago 6.5 generator, 120 cu. Door-to-door selling with shops, call for info. 31 J, original owners, non- ft. storage boxes - one fast results! It's the easiest Must sell quickly due Allegro 32' 2007, like smokers, garaged, only 8' long. Gets 10.9 to m e d ical b i n s,new, only 12,600 miles. 18,800 miles, auto-levelway in the world to sell. mpg, many more Prineville $8250. Call Jack at Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 ing jacks, (2) slides, up*** OPEN HOUSE' ** features. An in good 541-279-9538. transmission, dual ex- graded queen bed, bunk shape. See to appreThe Bulletin Classified Sunday, noon —4pm haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- beds, micro, (3) TVs, ciate (in Terrebonne 541-385-5809 LIKE NEW! eling system, 5kw gen, sleeps 10! Lots of storarea). $24,000. 1291 NE Wilshire Dr., power mirrors w/defrost, age, maintained, very 503-949-4229 860 Priced Below Market 2 slide-outs with aw- clean!Only $67,995! Ex1/3 interest in wellOchoco Point subdivi- ltlotorcycles & Accessories nings, rear c a mera,tended warranty and/or fi- Hitchhiker 28' 1995, w/ equipped IFR Beech Bosion, Popular Pinetrailer hitch, driyer door nancing avail to qualified slide-out, good cond.; nanza A36, new 10-550/ hurst model by Pahl- 1985 Harley Davidson HONDA SCOOTER w/power window, cruise, buyers!541488-7179 1996 Ford pickup ext'd prop, located KBDN. isch Homes, 3 bdrm, 1200C with S portster 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. exhaust brake, central cab, diesel, $10,500 for $65,000. 541-419-9510 3 bath, corner lot, AC, frame and '05 Harley cond., $975 obo. (541) vac, satellite sys. Asking 881 both. 541-389-9352 www. N4972M.com 3 car garage, fenced crate motor. Rat Rod 593-9710 or 350-8711 $67,500. 503-781-8812 Travel Trailers and landscaped, and look, Screaming Eagle tips, leather saddlebags, much more! KAWASAKI Motivated Sellers! e xtras. S acrifice a t KLX125, 2003, $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, 458-206-8446 (in Bend). good condition. 745 $1100. Homes for Sale 541-593-8748 Keystone Raptor, 2007 1/5th interest in 1973 2007 Jayco Jay Flight 37 toy hauler,2 slides, Cessna 150 LLC NOTICE Beaver Marquis, 29 FBS with slide out & generator, A/C, 2 TVs, Yamaha V-Star, 250cc 150hp conversion, low All real estate adversatellite system w/auto 1993 awning Turn-key ready 2011 motorcycle, new time on air frame and tised here in is sub40-ft, Brunswick to use, less than 50 to- seek, in/out sound syscustom seat for rider, engine, hangared in ject to th e F ederal tem,sleeps 6,m any extal days used by current floor plan. Many Honda Goldwing vinyl coating on tank, Bend. Excellent perFair Housing A c t, 2001 owner. Never smoked in, tras. $29,999. In Madras, extras, well main1800cc w/2005 Cali2 helmets included. formance & affordwhich makes it illegal no indoor pets, excellent call 541-771-9607 or tained, fire supfornia side car trike Gets 60mpg, and has able flying! $6,000. 541-475-6265 to advertise any prefcond., very clean. Lots of conversion, 40K acpression behind 3,278 miles. 541-410-6007 erence, limitation or bonus features; many tual miles, every opAsking $4700, firm. refrig, Stow Master have never been used. discrimination based Need to get an tion imaginable! CD, Call Dan 541-550-0171 5000 tow bar, Asking $18,000. C a l l on race, color, reliad in ASAP? cruise, has 5' $22,995. Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r gion, sex, handicap, AM/FM, 865 Brake, side rails, some 541-383-3503 You can place it more info / more photos. familial status or nariding gear. Well serATVs tional origin, or intenonline at: viced. located in Mt. tion to make any such Dutchman Denali www.bendbulletin.com Vernon, OR. Trailer Yamaha 350 Wolverine, preferences, l i mita32' 2011 travel optional. $22,500. 2006, excellent cond, 1974 Bellanca tions or discrimination. trailer. 2 slides Ev$2100. 541-548-4667 541-350-5050 541 -385-5809 We will not knowingly 1730A erything goes, an accept any advertis870 kitchen ware, linens ing for r eal e state 2180 TT, 440 SMO, etc. Hitch, sway Boats & Accessories which is in violation of Fleetwood D i scovery 180 mph, excellent bars, water & sewer this law. All persons 40' 2003, diesel, w/an 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, hoses. List price condition, always are hereby informed options 3 slide outs, like new, 135hp I/O, low $34,500 - asking hangared, 1 owner that an dwellings ad- 2005 HD Heritage Soft- time, Bimini top, many satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, $26,800 Loaded. for 35 years. $60K. vertised are available Tail, Big Bore kit, lots of extras, Karavan trailer etc., 32,000 miles. Must see to appreci- Kit Companion 26', '94 on an equal opportu- extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt with swing neck current Wintered in h eated ate. Redmond, OR. 1 slide, new stove/fridge, In Madras, nity basis. The Buneshop. $82,000 O.B.O. registrations. $7000. cond., $9750 firm 541-604-5993 Gd for huntinq/camping! call 541-475-6302 tin Classified 541-447-8664 541-350-2336 541-318-8668 $2500 541-389-5788

Great Family Home Community Pool JanfsGrout, Broker 541-948-0140

SEMI-DRY VAN

53' long x102" wide, good tires, no dings,

$8500.

Open Road 36' with 3 slides!

The Bulleti

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T

2006 Bayliner 185 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. queen bed, l a rge — fuel injected V6 shower, porcelain sink — Radio & Tower. & toilet. Great family boat HOLIDAY RAMBLER $25,000or make offer. MONTANA 3585 2008, Priced to sell. VACATIONER 2003 exc. cond., 3 slides, 541-999-2571 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, $11,590. king bed, Irg LR, 541-548-0345. workhorse, Allison 1000 Arctic insulation, all RV 5 speed trans., 39K, options - reduced by CONSIGNllllENTS NEIV TIRES, 2 slides, $3500 to $31,500. WANTED Onan 5.5w gen., ABS 541-420-3250 brakes, steel cage cock- We Do The Work ... pit, washer/dryer, fire- You Keep The Cash! lace, mw/conv. oven, On-site credit ree standing dinette, approval team, was $121,060 new; now, web site presence. 2007 Bennington $35,900. 541-536-1008 We Take Trade-Ins! Pontoon Boat

541-516-8684

Open Houses

Hidden Hills

882

17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $1 2,500541-815-2523

Homes for Sale

Zero Energy Home DavidSailors, Broker

881

675

Open 12-3 61076 Ruby Peak Ln.

880

RV Parking

IIo

870

R S

homes and land 11050NEVineyardWay, holdings an d m eet Terrebo n n e the ranch develoPers. pirectioss:Ifiiiy, g7, traue/ past ranchatrhecanyons.com Terrebonne I mi!4 turn rlgiit onyy Auenuc trave/1.2 mile following the Hosted & Listed b3': roclr wags IoI!ie main gate.

PATRICK GINN

gI gicyy ppp


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26 2014

925

933

935

935

935

Utility Trailers

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Je~epatriot 2014

1 Cord Trailer, Dodge pickup bed. $200. 541-593-0312

2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer.

(4) 225/60R-17 studded tires off Honda CRV, less than 1000 miles on them, $350. 541-350-2336 4 Hankook Winter Pike studded tires, 225/60R x17, $80. 541-923-3146 (4) LT-245/75R-16 studded tires, 6-hole Chevy mount, low miles, $320. 541-410-5959 (4) M&S-rated winter tires, Toyo 225/45-R17 94H, very good tread, $275. 541-788-2056 4 t i re s 2 2 5x55Rx18 $100 for all. 541-593-8749 '65-'66 Mustang original bucket seats, completely rebuilt, better than new. 1957 DeSoto 341 cu. in. dis. headers, unused. 390 Ford cu. in. dis. headers, just like new. Plus other older Ford & Chevy parts.

BMW X335i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg.

Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170

541-408-7826

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Subaru Forester Premium AWD 2014,

Buick LeSabres, 2002 132k $3999; 2005 179k $4999. 541-419-5060

Ford Focus SES 2008,

541-548-2138 www.wrighffordinc.net

only 7k miles a lot of vehicle for $16,977 Vin¹619102 ROBBERSON eo ~

mazaa

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 10/31/2014

$8,999

541-548-2138 www.wrightfordinc.net

W~

Ford Fusion SE

Shop automotive 6hp 60-gallon special vertical air compressor tank, $600

2011 Has everything, seriously!! Vin¹301832 $49,977 ROBBERSON ~

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©

JEEP WRANGLER 2001 Royal Blue, BLK Hard top, 4x4, Manual, 82K, RV Tow Pkg, Trailer Hitch, New Tires. $7,950 PH. 305-304-7891

2012. Low miles-

high miles per gallon $15,977 Vin¹302474

Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 10/31/14

I I N c 0 L II ~

(exp. 10/26/1 4) VIN ¹292213 $2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in

Two new studded VW Bug tires, $75/pair 541-504-0707

Chevy Silverado Chevrolet Trailblazer 2012 4x4 Crew Cab 2008 4x4 39K miles, Automatic, 6-cylinder, Tick, Tock White Diamond paint, tilt wheel, power wincover, leather dows, power brakes, Tick, Tock... Tonneau heated seats, running air conditioning, keyboards, tow-ready, less entry, 69K miles. ...don't let time get new tires (only 200 Excellent condition; away. Hire a miles on them), like tires have 90% tread. new inside and out! professional out $11,995. $31,500 Call 541-598-5111 of The Bulletin's 541-350-0775 "Call A Service Say "goodbuy" Dodge Ram 1995 3500 Professional" 4x4 V10 Club Cab, to that unused Directory today! Laramie SLT, 63k mi., exc. cond, l o aded, item by placing it in Winter Cat radial SST, $7,950. 541-549-0891 The Bulletin Classifieds studded tires, snow groove, 2 6 5/70R16, Ford Explorer Sport setof4, $350 Trac 4x4 2007, 541-385-5809 541-382-4144 Vin¹A11547 $16,999 932 541-548-2138 Che Trailblazer Antique & www.wrighffordinc.net Classic Autos

W~

Ford F-150 1991 Chevelle Malibu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.

Good runner 4x4

Only $4,998 Vin¹A10401

(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)

ROBBERSON LINcoLN~

IM ROS

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 10/31/14

®

Van 2011, (exp. 10/26/1 4) Vin ¹126159 Stock ¹44535A

541-385-5809

®

$22,500.

S Ua A R U

Chrysler Pacifica

877-266-3821 Dlr¹0354

Nissan Juke AWD 2013,

$12,979 or $169/mo.,

$2500 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in

Vin¹219560

$18,999

541-548-2138

www.wri htfordinc.net Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside out, one owner, nonsmoker,. loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.

®

- 8P'-

Ford F250 1984 4x4 Kinq Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift

541-548-2138

www.wrighffordinc.net

Chevy El Camino, 1965

Infiniti I30 2001 great condition/ well maintained,

(exp. 10/26/1 4)

Vin ¹B21115 Stock ¹83028A

$17,979 or $199/mo.,

$3500 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in pavment.

©

s u a A Ru

1999 runs good! Vin ¹715926 Bargain Corral price $3,977 ROBBERSON oi ~

na m a

®

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price

good thru 10/31/14

E

Nearly perfect! Must see! vin¹ 142671

oi ~

Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 10/31/14

Stock ¹83015

$13,979or $195/mo.,

$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in

Mercedes300E

payment.

®

s u a aau 8USARUOBSEMD.OOII

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

1993 sharp, well maint. Vin¹857877 Bargain Corral Price $3,977 ROBBERSON I I 8 c 0 LN ~

$11,977

good thru 10/31/14

LIIICOLII ~

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Find It in Beautiful 2010 Camaro, 877-266-3821 Ths8sllstiaglassiffstls! 29K riil, V6, Red Jewel, Dlr ¹0354 new tires, $18,000. 1 owner. 541-771-8920 Ford Expedition XLT 4x4 2014, GMC Sonoma 1991 4x4 Vin¹F02476 Ext. Cab, 6-cyl, AT, runs $33,999 great, new radiator, AC, 541-548-2138 power, tow pkg, bedliner, 155K, must see! $4500. 541-385-4790

Vin¹418558

$11,999

~

541-312%986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 10/31/14

541-548-2138

www.wri htfordinc.net

Ford Explorer XLT 4x4 2013,

1965 Mustang

Vin¹C91416

Nissan Frontier 2013, (exp. 10/26/1 4) Vin ¹717729 Stock ¹83155

$29,999

541-548-2138

www.wri hffordinc.net

RIOHT

$3900 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License

GMC Suburban 1997, fully loaded, daily driver, extra clean, $2250. 1997 Chevy Astro, runs good, $1150. 541-410-4596

$23,999

541-548-2138 www.wrighffordinc.net Honda Pilot 2005, (exp. 10/26/1 4)

Vin ¹520644 Stock ¹44661 B

Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 155 K m i les, $11,500. 541-549-6407

Mercedes 450SL, 1975 97K Miles $8999. 541-504-8399

$9,999 or $169/mo.,

$1000 down, 60 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -

proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

Toyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. payment. CrewMax, 2011 - Only ® s u a A Ru 29,700 miles & loaded! 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 381hp, TRD off road pkg, 877-266-3821 Bilstein shocks,18" alioys, Dlr ¹0354 sunroof, rear s l i ding window, backup camera, Jeep Cherokee 1995 12-spkr JBL sys, running with tan leather brds, hitch/trailer sway green kg, 10-way adj leather interior. Good shape, td seats, dual climate no damage history. control, sonar, 6-disc CD, $2200 or best offer. 541-410-1135. Bluetooth, more!$37,900.

1 955 C h e vy, c l a s s ic . R e a l beauty. Powerful engine. 15,000

miles. Always garaged. $4,000. 555-9999

541-390-6616 935

Jee Libert 20 1 2

Sport Utility Vehicles 2000 Mercury MountainV W CONV. 1 9 78 eer, 1 14,783 m i les, $8999 -1600cc, fuel $2200. 503-504-0590 (in injected, classic 1978 Crooked River Ranch) Limited Edition. Volkswagen ConvertPRAYING FOR ible. Cobalt blue with SNOW! Vin¹149708 Take care of a black convertible 21,977

top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399

your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

GENERAL: 1. BP 321 to 10/30/14 at 2 :00

p .m. I s sued b y : Mortenson Construction. Tony Copley, 10/17/14. Tony Cop-

ley, Project Manager. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TO SELL CITY OWNED REAL PROPERTY

T he B e n d Ci t y Council will hold a public hearing on November 5, 2014 during the regular meeting of the Bend City Council at 7:00 p m. at t h e C i t y Council Chambers at Bend City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon.

RIOHT

C ouncil will t a ke public testimony on the desirability of the proposed sale of a fee simple interest in a 1.3 acre parcel of real property located at corner of Daggett Lane and Full Moon Lane. The City considers it necessary and convenient to sell this p roperty a s th e property has previo usly b ee n d e clared surplus and the proposed sale would be for an affordable h o u sing development, cons istent w it h th e City's aff o rdable housing goals.

LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE CITY OF BEND PLANNING COMMISSION P ROJECT N U M B ER: 14-85 5 ; APPLICANT: CITY O F BEND. N A TURE OF THE APPLICATION: Adopt a Collection System

payment.

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tion. ADDENDUM A, October 2014. THIS ADDENDUM MUST BE ACKN O WLEDGED ON THE BID PACKAGE BID FORM. This adden-

541-388-5517

and title i ncluded in

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Jeepster Commando 1968 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, comNissan Frontier pletely restored. $12,000 SV 4x4 2013, obo. 808-430-5133 or 541-382-6300 Vin¹727518

provements. Owner: C ity of Bend. E n g ineer: HDR Engineering, I nc . C M / GC: Mortenson Construc-

Robyn Christie City Recorder City of Bend

$26,977or $339/mo.,

®

LEGAL NOTICE CITY O F BEND PROJECT ¹ WA0902 SURFACE WATER IMPROVEMENT PROJECT. WATER FILTRATION FACILITY. BID PACKAGE 321 — Site Im-

At the hearing, the

Nissan Altima 2.5 S 2010,

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SUMkUO1%SHD.OOM

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 10/31/14

2011 Get there for less, low miles. Vin ¹ A15581 $21,977

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205. pricing

na m a

541-312-3986

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2

PT Cruiser '07, 5spd, 80K, 32mpg hwy, new tires, $8000. 541-433-2026

(exp. 10/26/14) Vin ¹535474

1000

Legal Notices

bid date will be moved

Lx

Dlr ¹0354

Dodge Avenger2013,

1000

Legal Notices

$11,977

54'I -420-3277

muter. Vin¹154827

LlllcoLN ~

Dlr ¹0354

ROBBERSON

$5,900 obo.

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Great MPGs make this a great com-

ROBBERSON

877-266-3821

dum forms a part of the Contract Documents and modifies the original bidding documents only to the extent spe c ifically shown and noted below. All other conditions shall remain the same. Acknowledge receipt of this Addendum in the space prov ided o n t h e B i d Form. Failure to do so may subject the Bidder to disqualification.

127k miles.

E A PE HYBRID

Ford Escape Limited2010,

Ford Ranger XLT 4x4 2008, Vin¹A42234 $17,999

v

payment.

Nissan Murano 2012, (exp. 10/26/1 4) Vin ¹229346 2002 LS 4x4, 121k Dodge Caravan Stock ¹83013 miles, au t omatic, SXT 2013, power steering and $15,979 or $199/mo., Vin¹551692 $3800 down, 72 mo., brakes, power win$17,999 .49% APR o n ap dows, t il t w h e el, 4proved 541-548-2138 credit. License Sirius XM satellite www.wrighffordinc.net and title i ncluded in radio, tow package, payment. and brake controller SUaARu $5,995. 541-383-2429 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-382'I 975 Dodge Durango '01 4WD, Dlr ¹0354 Automobiles 1 owner, clean, runs gd., $2400. 541-382-1561 Subaru Forester Ford Focus 2010

kit, 90% tires, good wood truck! $2000 or best offer. 541-279-8023

2005, (exp. 10/26/14) Vin ¹315989 Stock ¹44375A

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

541-419-5980

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Honda Accord SE 2006, 4-cyl, great mpg, non$22,979 or $279/mo., smoker, well maint'd, $3000 down, 64 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p 95K miles, very clean. 1 proved credit. License owner $8950 obo. and title i ncluded in 480-266-7396 (Bend) payment.

2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt & cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.

s U a ARu

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

Sell them in

Stock ¹83014

$13,979 or $195/mo., The Bulletin Classifieds

ChevyExpress Cargo

©

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541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205.Price good thru 10/31/1 4

ways garaged, all

maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

Just too many collectibles?

Chrysler 200 LX 2012,

Vans

rrv

$8,999 or $152 mo.,

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payment.

541-385-9350

Vin ¹609121 Stock ¹44515A

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 10/31/14

Dlr¹0354

JEEP WRANGLER

(exp. 10/26/1 4)

ROBBERSON

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821

541-312-3986

Subaru Outback LLBean Edition 2004,

payment.

S Ua A R U .

940

h

$1000 down, 60 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

and title i ncluded in payment.

Chevy S i l verado 1500 2 0 1 4, L T , 4 WD, crew c a b , short box, 5.3L, new Feb. 28, 2014. Not driven since June 2014. Gar a ged. Loaded, brown tan cloth interior, 4900 m i., $34,9 9 0 . 541-480-5634 gythrpOgmail.com

G5

Vin¹170238

Chevy Malibu 2012, Lots of options; sunroof, 6 speed trans with manual option, bluetooth, o n Star, Sirius satelite, VIN Touareg Diesel heated seats, pw, 2012, (exp. 10/26/1 4) pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech Vin ¹004148. engine, 20 MPG city, Stock ¹83142 35 MPG hwy, USB $31,999 or $395/mo., port, Ipod r eady, $3900 down, 64 mo. at $14,900 OBO. 4 .49% APR o n a p - 541-504-6974 proved credit. License

Cadillac Escalade

541-447-7272

Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

975

$24,999

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

Automatic trans., runs. Was being restored; has many parts to help compiete restoration. Clean title. More photos on Bend's craigslist.$4000. Call Greg, 503-551-3827

975

Vin¹447079

931

CHEVELLE MALIBU 1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $13,500. 541-788-0427

975

3.SSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com

Public Facility Plan (PFP) for the City of Bend urban growth boundary (UGB). The Coll e ction System PFP covers an area within the existing Bend UGB. The city is amending Chapter 8 of the Bend Area General Plan to adopt the Collection System PFP as the City's Goal 11 public facility plan for sewer. APPLICABLE CRITERIA: Statewide Planning Goal 11, OAR 660-011, Bend Development Code Section 4.6 . 200, and the applicable plan policies of the Bend Area General Plan are available in City Hall or at the Community Development Department portion of the City's w ebsite. D A TE TIME PLACE AND

LOCATION OF THE HEARING: November 10, 2014, 5:30 p .m. at 7 1 0 N W Wall Street, Bend, O R, in C i t y H a l l Council Chambers. A DDITIONAL IN FORMATION: The application, all documents and evi-

dence submitted by or on behalf of the applicant and t he applicable criteria are available for inspection at City Hall at no cost and will be provided at a r easonable c o s t . Seven days prior to the hearing a copy of the staff report will b e sim i larly available. C ONTACT P E R SON: Wendy Robinson at (541) 38 8 -5598, wrobinson©bendoregon.gov. Send written testimony to the Planning Commission c/o GMD, 7 10 NW Wall S t . 97701, or attend the meeting and state y our views. T h e hearing will be conducted in a c cord ance wit h B D C Section 4. 1 . 500. Any party is entitled to a h e a ring o r record continuance. Failure of an issue to be raised at the hearing, in person or by letter, or failure t o pro v ide statements or evidence sufficient to afford the decision maker an opportunity to respond precludes appeal to the Land Use Board of Appeals on that issue. LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE CITY OF BEND PLANNING COMMISSION P ROJECT N U M B ER: 14-85 6 ; APPLICANT: CITY O F BEND. N A TURE OF THE APPLICATION: Adopt a Stormwater Publ ic F a cility P l a n (PFP) for the City of Bend urban growth boundary (UGB). The St o rmwater PFP covers an area within the existing Bend UGB. The city is amending Chapter 8 of the Bend Area General Plan to adopt the Stormwater PFP as the City's Goal 11 public facility plan for the collection and treatment of stormwater. A P P LICABLE CRITERIA: Statewide Planning Goal 1 1 , OAR 660-011, Bend Dev elopment C o d e Section 4.6 . 200, and the applicable plan policies of the Bend Area General Plan are available in City Hall or at the Community Development Department portion of the City's w ebsite. D A T E TIME PLACE AND LOCATION OF THE HEARING: November 10, 2014, 5:30 p .m. at 7 1 0 N W Wall Street, Bend, O R, in C i t y H a l l Council Chambers. A DDITIONAL IN FORMATION: The application, all documents and evidence submitted by or on behalf of the a pplicant and t h e applicable criteria are available for inspection at City Hall at no cost and will be provided at a r easonable c o s t . Seven days prior to the hearing a copy of the staff report will b e sim i larly available. C ONTACT PE R SON: Wendy Robinson at (541) 388 - 5598, wrobinson©bendoregon.gov. Send written testimony to the Planning Commission c/o GMD, 7 10 NW W all S t . 97701, or attend the meeting and state y our views. T h e hearing will be conducted in a c cord ance wit h B D C Section 4. 1 . 500. Any party is entitled t o a h e aring o r record continuance. Failure of an issue to be raised at the hearing, in person or by letter, or failure t o pro v ide statements or evidence sufficient to afford the decision maker an opportunity to respond precludes appeal to the Land Use Board of Appeals on that issue.


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

G6 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2014•THE BULLETIN

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?

11 I

1 1 '»I

II II

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The Bulletin

To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.


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